Summit Racing–Anderson strong and confident on first day of New England Nationals

Anderson strong and confident on first day of New England Nationals
 
EPPING, N.H. (June 20, 2014) – Greg Anderson is feeling like his old self again this weekend at the 2nd annual NHRA New England Nationals at historic New England Dragway. Anderson, now competing in his sixth race of the season, wheeled his white Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro to a speedy 6.512 at 213.10 mph to move into the No. 7 position in the lineup. The run was a familiar feeling for Anderson, who has been working hard to return to form following a late start to the year that included missing the first five races.
 
“We definitely took a step in the right direction, and that’s the best run I’ve made since I’ve gotten back into my Summit Racing Camaro,” said Anderson, who is battling hard for a position in the top 10 in the Mello Yello Series Pro Stock standings. “The KB Racing team goes to bed smiling tonight, and that’s a good thing.”
 
Anderson clocked a respectable 6.570 at 212.13 mph in the first session, and when the conditions at the sea-level facility cooled considerably for the night session, the environment was ripe for improvement. Anderson’s Summit Racing team eagerly took advantage of the situation to put together a strong top half run.
 
“The racetrack here is very good after the first 10 feet, and with the clouds coming, it started to get cooler and everyone was able to get nicely out of that first 10 feet,” said Anderson. “Now we have to figure out how to do that on a sunny day like it should be on Sunday. Tomorrow we’ll have two more runs to try and make sure we have that down, and then we’ll have to see what happens on Sunday.
 
“But for tonight, we have lots of good things, lots of positive things to focus on. We made a big step forward this week, and now we just have to keep chipping away at it. The Summit Racing team plans to be smart about it and right now we’re pretty happy.”
 

Mopar Racing–Mopar’s Coughlin Sets Track Speed Record in Provisional Pro Stock Qualifying at NHRA New England Nationals

Mopar’s Coughlin Sets Track Speed Record in Provisional Pro Stock Qualifying at NHRA New England Nationals

·         Mopar teams and drivers in action this weekend at 2nd Annual NHRA New England Nationals, in Epping, New Hampshire
·         Jeg Coughlin sets New England Dragway speed record in both Friday Pro Stock qualifying sessions
·         Allen Johnson won Pro Stock title at the inaugural event in 2013
·         Last week’s Funny Car title winner, Tommy Johnson Jr, leads DSR Mopar entries with fourth quickest qualifying effort
 
Epping, New Hampshire (Friday, June 20) – Near perfect track conditions on Friday evening provided Mopar teams and drivers the opportunity to make it a record breaking weekend in a return to New England Dragway this weekend for the 2nd Annual NHRA New England Nationals, just north of Boston, in Epping, New Hampshire,.
 
On both Friday Pro Stock qualifying runs, Mopar’s Jeg Coughlin Jr. set the track record for speed in the JEGS.com Dodge Dart, first with a 213.94 mile per hour pass, and then raised the bar in cooler evening temperatures at 214.25 mph. His first elapsed time run of 6.519 seconds put him second on the score sheets behind competitor and points leader Erica Enders-Steven, who lowered the e.t. track record to 6.514 seconds. Coughlin dropped to fifth after the second session behind provisional pole sitter Shane Gray who bettered the track record with an e.t. of 6.485 seconds.
 
Coughlin, however, is on a roll with two wins, a runner-up and a semifinal in the four events leading up to the New England Nationals and a 13-2 round-win record since the Atlanta event last month. New England Dragway remains only one of just two active national event facilities (along with Norwalk) where the Mopar driver has yet to win a race. He had a semifinal finish at the inaugural event in 2013.
 
“I’d love to add a win there to my résumé,” said Coughlin. “Still, what you’ve done in the past and the various places where we’ve won doesn’t give us any sort of advantage heading into a fresh race. We all start at zero, and we’re OK with that.”
 
The defending Pro Stock title winner, Allen Johnson, was a bit conservative in his first lap, driving his “Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar” Dodge Dart to a 6.538 sec (212.79 mph) pass and the fifth quickest run of the session. His second attempt however was thwarted by an electrical issue and with improved conditions and quicker times run by most entries, it dropped the HEMI-powered driver to the 11th spot on the qualifying sheets.
 
“We made a pretty decent pass on the first run and left a little on the table but then had a malfunction on the second run that has us scratching our head a little,” said Johnson who has combined with Coughlin to win three of the last four national event. “It’s good luck that we have the issue now instead of Sunday because we’re looking to defend our win. We love it here. The track, the air and especially the fans make this such a great event. Conditions won’t be quite as perfect for tomorrow’s qualifying but the morning session might be close and we should make up some spots. Sunday is what counts.”
 
Fellow HEMI-powered Dodge Dart driver V. Gaines saw his 6.551 second (211.89 mph) run put him 12th.
 
In Funny Car action, last week’s Thunder Valley Nationals title winner, Don Schumacher Racing’s Tommy Johnson Jr., finds himself third in points and carried the momentum from his victory into this weekend by driving his Mopar to a provisional fourth place qualifying spot with a 4.033-second e.t. at 318 mph on his second run. 
 
Teammate Jack Beckman was sixth in his Dodge Charger R/T with a best pass of 4.061 second (313.80 mph) to put him just ahead of Mopar Express Lane driver, Matt Hagan (4.083 / 2297.61), who hazed the tires on his second attempt and sits in seventh spot.
 
After starting the year with runner-up finish in Pomona, Calif., Hagan has five first-round losses weighing on him. However, after advancing to a second semifinal round of the season last weekend at Bristol Dragway, he is feeling better about the progress the team is making.
 
“It’s time to win, there’s no doubt about that,” said Hagan who finds himself tenth in Funny Car points standings but within striking distance of fifth place with a few more round wins. “Our performance in Bristol really got confidence back in our team which was huge. It’s no secret that we’ve just kind of been hit or miss this year and we’re going to hit our stride soon. We’re 10th and we need to make up some ground. We need to go rounds and pick up a trophy here in this four-race stretch. It’s definitely doable. We’re all close in points so it’s possible to make a big jump.”
 
Mopar teammate Ron Capps also saw a lack of traction cost him a chance to better his 4.102 second first run and has him ninth overall in qualifying which was led by provisional pole sitter Robert Hight with a 3.988 (321.58 mph) effort.
 

John Force Racing–HIGHT ROCKETS TO No. 1 AT NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS

HIGHT ROCKETS TO No. 1 AT NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS

 

EPPING, NH– The Auto Club Ford has been dominating the winner’s circle this year with four wins but on Friday at the 2nd annual Auto Plus New England NHRA Nationals Robert Hight got back to his dominating qualifying roots. The 2009 Funny car champion has 45 No. 1s in his career but none in 2014. Tonight he raced to the top of the Funny Car field with a track record elapsed time of 3.988 seconds at 321.58 mph. It was not a surprise to Hight that his Auto Club Mustang ran so well.

 

“That was pretty awesome. We made a nice run the first run. Mike Neff told me when we were going up there we were not going to be cowards tonight. We are going to get after this thing. He honestly figured there would be a few other cars running in the 3s. He said he was tired of all those guys having all the fun,” said Hight in the pressroom.  “It wasn’t like we didn’t know how to do it. We ran some 3.98s in Pomona. Neff is not a real aggressive racer. He doesn’t get a lot of no. 1 qualifiers. He goes a lot of rounds because he races smart. Tonight he said he was just tired of it and we put a different super charger on it. It was unbelievable. It was one of those runs where it is so fast and so smooth that you don’t know how fast it was going. I crossed the finish line, hit the chutes, glanced at that scoreboard and saw that 3.98. That was pretty exciting.”

 

It was total team effort to get to the top spot. Track specialist Lanny Miglizzi was instrumental in keeping all the JFR crew chiefs up to date on the improving track conditions throughout the day. Miglizzi was raving about New England Dragway as far back as last year during the inaugural event.

 

“Lanny (Miglizzi) told us that last year that this was a really good race track but there were some issues last year with the heat. He said this year if we got good air we would run fast. We saw the Pro Stock cars running track records and I think you will see track records in Top Fuel here. It is a great race track and the air is unbelievable. We wanted to put on a good show for these fans here in Northern New England. We have AAA of Northern New England with us this weekend. We have to show off for them a little bit,” said a thrilled Hight.

 

“We knew last year that if conditions were good you would see awesome runs. I told all the fans last year that they should be very proud of having one of the best race tracks in the country here. We just didn’t have good conditions because it was so hot. The cool weather gave the fans a real treat. The fans should be really proud right here in their backyard they have one of the greatest tracks in the country,” added Hight.

 

When Hight was asked about improving on his record run he reverted to his team mantra of racing smart. The team has been consistent in qualifying but on race day they have been nearly unstoppable racing to six straight final rounds earlier this season.

 

“Jimmy Prock, John Force’s crew chief, is one of those guys that picks every single run apart. Mike Neff will look at that run for a few minutes and move on to tomorrow. Tomorrow’s conditions will be different. It will be warmer. Tomorrow is really what we will be faced with on Sunday. Tomorrow is the big day. Mike Neff won’t be picking this run apart.”

 

Courtney Force is picking up where she left off last year at New England Dragway and continuing her success at this track. Force, who is celebrating her 26th birthday today, posted two strong runs on the first day of qualifying putting her in the No. 3 spot going into Saturday.

Last year’s inaugural New England NHRA Nationals event winner posted a 4. 129 ET at 310.20 mph in the opening session today, briefly setting her in the No. 8 spot.

 

“It feels good to be back here in Epping where I got the inaugural win in Funny Car last year. It feels great to come back to a track that’s familiar to me and my team. We had a good day of qualifying. We made a good pass the first run out, but I’m glad we could improve on it,” said Force.

 

The winner of the 100th professional event win for women in the NHRA came back in the second session to top her previous numbers. The now 26-year-old driver posted a 4.031 ET at a track speed record of 323.35 mph. By the end of the day, that run would be good for the No. 3 spot and one bonus point for third-quickest of that qualifying session.

 

“On the second run, everyone was going for it. We had great conditions out here. I think it was a great show for the fans. We ran a 4.03. That wasn’t exactly what my crew chief wanted to run, but I was happy. All eight of my birthday candles were lit! But Ron Douglas was hoping to run in the 3’s. It didn’t quite make it there, but I think we have a good race car. Definitely can’t be unhappy finishing third in qualifying today, picking up a bonus point and setting a track speed record on my birthday. It’s definitely a cool feeling to know you’re in the top half. I’ll be able to sleep better tonight. We’ll see what we can bring to the table tomorrow,” said Force.

 

John Force and his Castrol GTX High Mileage Mustang made a strong run on the second qualifying session. His 4.092 second pass run at 311.70 mph down the historic New England Dragway put the veteran Funny Car pilot solidly in the field in the No. 8 spot. The 16-time NHRA Mello Yello World Champion has been struggling the last few races and on his first qualifying run, the massive Goodyear slicks lost traction about 100 feet past the starting line.

 

“We smoked on that first pass but Jimmy Prock (crew chief, Castrol GTX High Mileage Mustang) and the rest of the guys tuned up my old hot rod before the second session. We know it would have run faster than 4.09 but Jimmy wanted to be conservative so we could make a good clean run,” said Force, runner-up at the inaugural New England Nationals last year.

 

Now that the Castrol GTX High Mileage Mustang is qualified in the top-half of the field, the team will try to step up the performance during the two qualifying sessions on Saturday. Under the watchful eye of Jimmy Prock, he we try to step up Force’s 8000-horsepower Mustang even more.

 

“The 4.09 pass on that second session wasn’t as good as we wanted to run but we needed to get down the track. We’ve been struggling a little bit and on the first run, it just smoked the tires and part of the reason was the clutch issues. But, we can work on it and we’ll improve on that performance,” said Jimmy Prock, crew chief, Castrol GTX High Mileage Mustang Funny Car.

 

“I’ve got a lot of changes in my operation right now but everyone is running very good so New Hampshire is starting out good. With this being Courtney’s birthday, it would be great if she was number one qualifier but Robert Hight ran that big number and set the track record,” said John Force.

 

Of all the drag strips on the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series schedule, New England Dragway is like going back in time with its vintage timing tower and bleacher grandstands. The fans are probably some of the most passionate and that fuels John Force even more.

 

“I raced up here in Epping with Castrol over 25 years ago and we won a lot of races before they had the big nationals. The fans are great and we did a great autograph session over at our midway trailer. The lines were long but the fans here are awesome,” said John Force.

 

At last year’s NHRA New England Nationals, John Force would end up qualifying number one and would go all the way to the finals in which he would face daughter Courtney. She would go on to defeat her father that day but John Force is hungry for his 140th career victory and a win this Sunday at New England Dragway would be a nice addition to hi
s already impressive career.

 

Brittany Force and her Castrol EDGE Dragster made two great qualifying runs today and showed the fans and the competition she’s ready for her first win. The Castrol EDGE Dragster was hitting on all eight and pumping out 10,000 horsepower as it blasted the fans in the stands with an impressive 3.776 second run at 325.45 mph during the evening session. Even though she wasn’t the quickest, she was the fastest race car in the pits at New England Dragway and grabbing the fourth qualifying spot. 

 

“I was excited to get the car down there, it made a good clean pass and it ran a 3.77 so I’m very excited about that. This probably our best chance to run a good number and out it on the board because the weather and track conditions were excellent and we did just that. We moved up to the number four spot so I’m very happy,” said Brittany Force.

 

In the first session, Brittany had run 3.830 seconds at 321.58 mph that place her in the eighth spot. Crew chief Todd Smith and Dean “Guido” Antonelli wanted to play it safe on the first session and make a good clean run.

 

“I was really excited after our first run. The 3.83 pass was solid and I knew we would step it up and improve from there,” said Brittany Force.

 

The Castrol EDGE team had only made five runs down New England Dragway last year so it was critical to get some good data from the first run so they can make the necessary adjustments and improve Brittany’s qualifying position going into the evening session.

 

“We wanted to have a conservative approach going into that first session so we tuned to run a 3.81 or a 3.83 and it did. We made some adjustments as we knew the conditions would improve in the second session,” said Antonelli.

 

After Brittany’s disappointing first round loss last weekend at Bristol, she’s been pumped about coming to Epping. She’s motivated her crew and knows that they are ready to get that first Top Fuel win for Castrol EDGE and John Force Racing.

 

“Coming to Epping for the second time, the playing field is definitely pretty level. Because all the teams including us have only been here twice, we basically have the same amount of runs and data in our books to tune from. We’re all starting at the same place so the Castrol EDGE team has the same chance as some of the other teams who have been racing for years,” said Brittany Force. 

 

Dyson Racing Team Bentley–Successful Inauguration Day

ELKHART LAKE, WI – It was a successful debut for Dyson Racing Team Bentley and the new Bentley Continental GT3 in today’s Pirelli World Challenge race here at iconic Road America.  Butch Leitzinger finished sixth in the twin-turbo V-8 powered entry, fourteen seconds off of first place. He set the second fastest race lap which means he will start on the outside of the front row for tomorrow’s second race of the weekend.

The race was a forward march for Leitzinger. He made up 13 positions in the 50 minute race.  While the race was run under dry conditions, this morning’s wet qualifying session was cancelled and the grid was based on points.  With this being the first race for the team in PWC, no prior championship points put Leitzinger in the 19th starting position.

Leitzinger summed up his race: “It was great. The car performed well and I had fun racing with people.  It is great to be able to dice with people and go wheel to wheel and everyone was very fair.  No one was giving anything and that is how you want to race people. The track changed quite a bit between the rain and the NASCAR rubber that was put down, and it looked like everyone was struggling for grip.  We learned a lot and Bentley has produced a great race car and Dyson has done a great job of bringing it to the race track.  We are going to have fun with this car the rest of the year.”

Chris Dyson, Vice President and Sporting Director of Dyson Racing, commented that “It was a good inaugural race for our Anglo-American partnership. The car has run trouble- free this weekend and Butch, as usual, worked the traffic well in the race.  We have been made to feel very welcome by everyone in Pirelli World Challenge, and it is great to have the team back at a race track, doing what they do best.”

“It is probably the most sorted new car that I have driven,” added Leitzinger talking about the Continental GT3. “The Bentley people and the M-Sport people had done a great job of putting together a good package.  Plus we had Guy Smith who helped with the development on the car, so everyone deserves a lot of credit for producing a good baseline car.  We have not had to chase the usual new car teething problems and from the very beginning the Bentley has felt solid.

“I am very impressed with the feel and capabilities of the car. Normally a GT car is all mechanical with very little aero, but this car has good aerodynamics.  Their wind tunnel work shows as you can feel the downforce on the car.”

Peter Weston, the race engineer for Dyson Racing, also found a lot to like about the new car. “The chassis is stiff and racy which opens up a lot of doors to the engineer as far as how he can set the car up. Butch found the same thing from the drivers’ seat that he can bring a lot to the table as a driver and use his full repertoire of race craft. Normally with GT cars, there is only one way to drive them, but with the new Bentley, the driver can drive it how he wants to go quickly. The car is actually quite nimble and is a flexible platform from both engineering and driver’s viewpoint.”

Chevy Racing–Sonoma–Jeff Gordon

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
SAVE MART 350
SONOMA RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 20, 2014
 
 
JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 PANASONIC CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Sonoma Raceway and discussed road course racing, how he works with his spotter, aggressive driving at Sonoma, and more.   Full transcript:
 
TALK ABOUT WHAT IT TAKES TO REALLY BE SUCCESSFUL HERE AT SONOMA: “It’s been a little while since we won out here, so I feel like you constantly always have to challenge yourself, and just push the limited of your car. Yet, here at Sonoma, you have to be very careful not to overdrive it of course as well.  Same ingredients apply; a great race car always helps. Teamwork and communication – like for instance this weekend. We’ve got a really good car; very happy, but, I know that we have to make it better. In order to do that, I have to recognize the areas that we need to improve the car and try to articulate that to the team to find….I know they can help me in those areas, but I’ve got to be able to describe it in a way that they can understand it. Then, put those pieces together around the track.
 
“Once you get the green flag here on Sunday, there are very few adjustments you can make. So, it is really up to you to maintain the durability of the tires; they are really soft and fast in the beginning, but they are falling off quite a bit on the longer runs. So, wheel spin and trying not to lock-up front tires – managing that. As I mentioned, staying on course and being there for the finish when it counts.  I am pretty comfortable this weekend, and I’m really happy with the way things are going. I’m excited to have Panasonic on board.”
 
HOW IS YOUR BACK NOW? HAVE YOU HAD TO DO ANYTHING SINCE CHARLOTTE THAT YOU DON’T NORMALLY DO TO MAINTAIN IT? “Since that incident in Charlotte, of course I had the cortisone shots – that was the biggest difference in things that I hadn’t had to do before.  Then there was waiting for that to wear off to see what happens.  In between that, I’m just doing a lot of ice, some TENS, the stimulation – the electric stimulation, and then my normal stretching and exercise routine that I always do. Just trying not to push it too hard. I’ve really gotten into bike riding this year, and was in great shape right before that happened in Charlotte. I’ve had to stay off the bike, but I’m looking forward to getting back on it. It feels pretty good out here. I’m happy as hard as you are braking, and all the shifting you are doing out here, I was a little concerned, but it has gone really well. The plane ride out was harder than anything, sitting there for five, six hours.”
 
WOULD YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR RECEPTION AT SONOMA AS COMPARED TO OTHER TRACKS? “I got asked earlier this morning if this was my home track, and I had to think about it because it’s the closest track to my home, and a lot of my family is still here. But, I never saw this race track until 1993 when I drove my first Cup race. I mean, I drove by it; I knew of it.  It is hard to say it is my home track, but this is home for me. I love coming out here, and yet had I not moved to Indiana, I don’t know if I would be here today, and get the reception we get out here, which is a fantastic one. It is awesome. Even my truck driver was saying that the truck parade that was last night in Sacramento, he saw 24 hats everywhere. That is not necessarily the case in Johnson City, Tennessee. It is unique, and it is different. Of course the success we’ve had out here helps to contribute to that.   People like to pull for the hometown boy, or the old guy these days.”
 
TALK ABOUT THE AGGRESSIVE NATURE OF THE ROAD COURSE RACES NOW, AND SECONDLY, YOUR COUSIN IS RACING IN THE K & N RACE; HAVE YOU SPENT ANY TIME WITH HIM? “As far as the first part of the question, definitely road course races we’ve always seen aggressiveness, and sometimes mistakes by people trying to be overly aggressive and making mistakes. That has always been the nature of this track and road course racing because there are two opportunities to really pass, and you try and take advantage of those opportunities. Then when they did the double-file restarts – that is what really changes things. It changed things on the ovals too, but it really changed things on the road courses because it gives you that extra opportunity to be aggressive, to get the position and take some extra chances to try to get that position. Or maintain a position and causes a lot of incidents. We see a lot of people running into one another. But it has also made the road course some of the most exciting races that we have now on the circuit.
 
“As far as James (Bickford), yes I am excited for him. This is his first season in K & N, he’s young, he’s 16 years old and he’s doing really, really well. I know he was nervous about running his first road course. He’s never had to shift, or downshift on a road course before. We were here for a tire test earlier in the year, and I spent a lot of time talking to him. It looks like him doing fairly well, before I left the truck, looks like he was ninth on the board so that is pretty good.  I haven’t had a chance to talk to him because when I am off the track, he is on the track and when I’m on the track, they are off the track. We’ll see if I can catch up with him before his race.”
 
REGARDING THE PANASONIC SPONSORSHIP, WILL YOU BE DRIVING THE CAR FOR THE ENTIRE TIME OF THE SPONSORSHIP?
“I love it. I love it.  We have a lot of sponsors signed for long periods of time. And I know I’ve said in the past that’s how we kind of dictate when I’ll be in the car or I won’t be in the car. But Panasonic has been with Hendrick for a number of years. They’ve just never been on the car and this is a great extension of that for Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 24 car. It doesn’t necessarily say or mean anything of how long I’ll be in the car driving. But I don’t plan on quitting any time soon. Don’t push me; don’t talk me into something I’m not ready to do (laughs). I was smiling when I said that. Just wanted you to know in case I came across too sarcastic. (laughter).
 
TALK ABOUT YOUR SPOTTER
“We depend on our spotters so much at the ovals; sometimes too much, in my opinion. We blame it on the spotter when we’re still in control of the car. And so I think on a road course, when you know there are blind areas out there and that they have bad angles as well and they can’t see everything, you take that into account. Obviously in the closing laps you’re going to take more risk and you expect them to take more risk, but what I normally do here is I talk with my spotter before race day. And I ask where he’s having trouble or where he can see really good and where he can’t. So, in those areas, when somebody is in that blind spot in that area, I’ll probably give a little bit more, or just know it’s at risk in those areas.”
 
HAVE YOU DEVELOPED ANY SUPERSTITIONS OVER THE YEARS? DO YOU PUT A LOT OF STOCK IN THAT?
“Yeah, I can’t say I put a lot of stock into things like that. I think if my routine were to be broken up, and my routine is the schedule comes prior to getting to the race track that weekend. I look at it. I glance at it. And I have an idea of what the expectations are going into each day, especially on race day. If that changes at the last second, it does get me off; and so, we try to make sure that doesn’t happen. Other than that, I like to get dressed at a certain time. I like to have our team meeting at a certain time and get to the car at a certain time and all those things. But, that’s just routine. I don’t feel like it’s any superstitious thing. It’s just preparation for what you have in store for that day.”
 
CAN YOU PUT THE FANS BEHIND THE WHEEL TO DESCRIBE DRIVING A ROAD COURSE?
“It’s always hard to describe whether you’re at Da
ytona or Bristol or at a road course. I love it when I get to talk to people within our sport, or our fans, or anybody out there who gets a chance to get behind the wheel because they’re always blown away at what it takes, and the focus, and how hot it is, and their heart rate and all those things. But on a road course, especially this track in particular, you want to really charge into those corners and brake as deep as you can, but you have to be extremely careful of braking too hard and shifting the weight balance to the front. It really creates a light feeling in the back of the car where the tires start to skip and hop.
 
“And then probably the toughest thing is that braking and matching the rpms and the downshifts. We don’t have paddle shifting and some of the technology that’s out there in cars on the street. So, all that happens through a rhythm and timing of how you go about it. The fuel injection has really helped that quite a bit. It’s just more precise and crisp, so that’s nice. And then the next challenging part is handling the wheel spin. We’re 860 horsepower with a tremendous amount of torque in these engines and not a lot of grip once the tires start to fall off. I could spin the tires in probably every gear if I wanted to.
 
“So it’s just trying to maximize the rear grip and just feed that throttle like there’s an egg underneath it and try to maintain that grip and then go up through the gears. You’re bouncing off curbs. It’s sort of like controlling something that’s completely out of control is how I like to describe it on a road course because it’s pretty amazing that we throw these big heavy cars with so much power around at a track like this, and yet keep it on the course.”
 
REGARDING THE HENDRICK ENGINES, DOES THE TALK ABOUT THAT ACTUALLY DISCREDITS THE EFFORTS & SKILLS OF THE DRIVERS?
“We’re driving great cars. So, I think that Rick (Hendrick) does an excellent job of hiring quality people and I think that’s behind the wheel as well as the people that work on the cars, all the way from crew chiefs to the people that build the engines and chassis. Yeah, I think you’d be discrediting all those efforts and across the board. To go down the straightaways, you’ve got to get through the corners pretty good, too. And right now, I think we’re doing both. So I’m pretty proud of that. And a lot of effort has gone into that. I definitely saw some cars at Michigan last week that were not Hendrick, that didn’t need to be complaining about their engines. They were getting down the straightaway plenty good. We were beating them in the corner, though.
 
“All I know is that over the years when other teams are complaining about us, that’s usually when things are going really well for us. It’s like getting booed. When you’re getting boos, that’s usually a good sign. So, we’re just going to focus on what we’re doing and continue to try to maintain that high level of competition on the track.”
 
EVERYONE HAS BEEN TALKING ABOUT THE HENDRICK ENGINES AND THERE IS NO QUESTION THAT THE TEAM IS REALLY ON A ROLL RIGHT NOW.  WHEN YOU HEAR SOME OF THE OTHER DRIVERS SAYING ABOUT HOW HARD IT IS TO BEAT THE HENDRICK ENGINE DEPARTMENT RIGHT NOW DO YOU FEEL LIKE THEY ARE ALMOST DOWNPLAYING THE SKILLS OF THE DRIVERS?
“We are driving great cars.  I think that Rick does an excellent job of hiring quality people and I think that is behind the wheel as well as the people that work on the cars.  All the way from crew chiefs to the people that build the engines and chassis.  Yeah, I think you would be discrediting all of those efforts and across the board.  To go down the straightaways you’ve got to get through the corners pretty good too.  Right now I think we are doing both.  I’m pretty proud of that.  A lot of effort has gone into that.
 
“I definitely saw some cars at Michigan last week that were not Hendrick cars that didn’t need to be complaining about their engines.  They were getting down the straightaway plenty good.  We were really beating them in the corner though.  All I know if over the years when other teams are complaining about us that is usually when things are going really well for us.  It’s like getting booed.  When you are getting boos that is usually a good sign.  We are just going to focus on what we are doing and continue to try to maintain that kind of high level of competition on the track.”
 
CHEVROLET HAS BEEN IMMENSELY SUCCESSFUL AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY.  CAN YOU SPEAK ON WHY THAT IS?
“It must be all that horsepower.  I just think that Chevrolet has great teams.  We are certainly seeing that this year and a lot of others are going to focus on the Chevrolet’s.  That is fine, that is great.  Certainly they deserve that.  But I think and I’ve seen this throughout my career, you also have to look at the depth of the teams.  I think that Hendrick has a lot of depth, Stewart-Haas has a lot of depth and Richard Childress Racing has a lot of depth.  All of the Chevrolet teams that are out there are just doing a really good job and have some great components to work with.   When you get to Indianapolis you need all of those ingredients.  You’ve got to get down the straightaways, you’ve got to get through the corners, you have got to have good pit stops and Chevrolet teams right now are leading the way in all those departments and have a lot of momentum and I am looking forward to hopefully another Chevrolet being in Victory Lane there.”
 
YOU ARE THE ONLY DRIVER WHO HAS COMPETED IN EVERY SINGLE BRICKYARD 400 WHAT DOES THAT RACE MEAN TO YOU?
“To me as a kid even when I lived her in California and I was racing here it was sprint car racing and the Indy 500 beside the quarter midget racing that I was doing that was what I dreamed about.  It’s what I followed and when we traveled back to Indiana when I was racing quarter midgets visiting the Stanley family we would go over to Indy.  I was just in awe of the museum, the track, the race and so to get that chance to race there is unbelievable.  To know I have won it four times and look at those trophies sitting on my shelf at home is something I am very proud of.”
 
YOU WERE SAYING IT’S BEEN AWHILE SINCE YOU WON HERE, BUT IT’S ALSO BEEN AWHILE SINCE YOU WERE THE POINTS LEADER.  CAN YOU TALK ABOUT WHERE YOU ARE RIGHT NOW IN YOUR CONFIDENCE IN WHERE YOU ARE IN THE STANDING AND HOW THAT WILL DICTATE WHAT YOU WILL WANT TO DO AND HOW YOU RACE?
“I mean we are very strong team right now with great cars.  I think we have had one of the best starts to the season that I can remember possibly ever having.  When you are in the position that we are in we are happy with that, but at the same time we know we have to keep pushing hard and hard because we have Jimmie Johnson right there next to us with two more wins than us.  We know that we need to get to Victory Lane a few more times and I think we are capable of doing that.  I think that we are a team that can be very consistent and yet also be a real threat to win.  This year the way my cars are running everywhere we go I’m excited to get in it, push the limits of it and I’m having a blast. Every time they drop the green flag I feel like we have a car that can compete for a win. That is very exciting and I’m proud of the effort that has been put in to make that happen.”
 
 

Chevy Racing–Sonoma–Tony Stewart

 
NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
SAVE MART 350
SONOMA RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 20, 2014
 
 
TONY STEWART, NO. 14 MOBIL 1/BASS PRO SHOPS CHEVROLET SS met with media and discussed the first practice session, drivers on the road course, tire maintenance, how much he likes road course racing, and more. Full Transcript:
 
HOW IS YOUR CAR THIS WEEKEND?
“I think it’s hard to gauge this early. A lot of guys didn’t do any qualifying mock runs so, we did one there; so I’m not sure exactly where we’re at. We’re just trying to get the car balanced and I think if we get balanced, the speed will be there during the race.”
 
HOW DO YOU THINK THE NEW QUALIFYING FORMAT IS GOING TO WORK HERE ON A ROAD COURSE?
“By looking at practice, I think everybody will be mindful of whether guys are on lap and guys are trying to come in and cool everything off. So, there’s plenty of places where you can over. So, I think everybody will be fine. It’s going to be a lot more work for the drivers than what it used to be, just from the standpoint that you’re going to try to be courteous; and once your lap is over, you’re going to try to make sure you don’t mess somebody’s lap up.”
 
TALLADEGA AND DAYTONA USED TO BE THE WILDCARDS. BUT WITH THE CHASE FORMAT WHAT IT IS NOW, DO YOU CONSIDER THE ROAD COURSE RACES THE PLACES WHERE GUYS WILL GAMBLE MORE FOR THAT WIN?
“I don’t think so. It’s always the same old debate on whether we’re going to do it in two stops or three stops, so I think we’ll see here this second practice and see if guys do long runs, how much the tire falls off and I think that will give us a better read on what we’re going to do tomorrow. And then I think that will answer your question when we know that.”
 
DO YOU FEEL LIKE THE ROAD COURSE RACING HAS GOTTEN MORE AGGRESSIVE IN RECENT YEARS?
“It’s gotten more chaotic, that’s for sure. You’ve got first gear corners here that have really wide entries, so if there’s a hole, guys fill it and it creates a lot of problems. There are other guys that just are back in 20th and they don’t care; they’ll just bounce off somebody to get a couple spots. You definitely want to be in the top five on a restart and try to get away from a little bit of that group before you get down to (Turns) 4 and 7. If you can get through (Turn) 7, I think you’re all right. It just seems like getting down to Turn 7 on a restart is where all the action is.”
 
THE LAST FOUR WEEKS, YOU SEEM TO HAVE BEEN FAR MORE CONSISTENT THAN WHERE YOU FINISHED EARLY IN THE SEASON. DO YOU SENSE PROGRESS BEING MADE? ARE YOU HEADED IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION?
“Yeah, I think so. I value the consistency more than I do having a couple top 3 finishes and then running 20th the next week. So, I do. I feel a lot better about where we’re going right now and the direction across the board; our cars are getting more consistent with all four teams. That’s really what I’m basing how we are as a company right now and I think it translates to each individual team, as well.”
 
DO YOU FEEL THAT YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF A PLACE LIKE THIS WHERE YOU ARE USUALLY GOOD?
“If we can get a balance, I feel like I can for sure. This is one of the places I love coming to each year. So, if we get it close, I feel like I can get something done here.”
 
WHY DO YOU LOVE COMING HERE SO MUCH?
“It’s just a road race. We’re not at an oval like we were last week. It’s just something different.”
 
REGARDING HIS CRASH LAST WEEK AT INDIANAPOLIS
“We blew a tire. It destroyed the car, so it was a good hit.”
 
INAUDIBLE
“I think more times than not it’s accidental. I think the intention is to get in there and take a lane away and then try to gain a spot. A lot of times though, the intentional part is they get down there and they are over-committed or the door starts closing when they get there and can’t get out of the scenario they’re in. I think more times than not, especially late in the race, I think that’s not intentional. But there are guys who will get their feelings hurt on Sunday and they’ll take it out on somebody.”
 
ON THE BLOWN TIRE AT INDY
“I’m not sure what the cause of it was. I’ve asked them what the cause of it was, but that’s part of tire testing. That’s why you go to the test. I’m sure they’ll learn something from it and go on.”
 
WHAT IS THE CHALLENGE OF TIRES HERE?
“The Cup series, it used to be years ago, that was the challenge every week. This is a track where you have to budget your tires. You can’t just go run 100 percent every lap and make it run to the end. And that’s what makes this place so fun is you can’t just flog the tires and run a flying lap every lap and expect to do well. You have to budget your tires. It is a challenge. It’s fun where you get in that scenario where there’s times when you want to be that guy on older tires and up front so you don’t have to worry about the chaos on the restarts; and then there’s time when you want to be that guy who has fresh tires that might restart 10th or 12th with ten or 15 lap laps to go and be able to charge your way up through there. I think the biggest thing that becomes the question mark, is what happens on the restarts and what happens behind you the whole time. That dictates whether having those fresh tires work or not.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK QUALIFYING WILL BE LIKE?
“I think it’ll be a big drama. Like I said, I think all the drivers will be pretty courteous. Even in practice, nobody knew who was trying to make qualifying runs and nobody knew who was on tires, so I saw a lot of guys that were being pretty patient, which is kind of uncharacteristic for here, but I thought everybody in practice showed a lot of patience and a desire to work with each other to make sure they’re not messing each other’s laps up. I think it will be that way in qualifying as well.”
 
ON KYLE LARSON LAST WEEK AT MICHIGAN
‘He’ll learn it’s not a good idea, too. If he didn’t learn it last week, he’ll learn it in the next couple of weeks. We had a really good car. We had a top 5 car for sure, and a top 3 car in my opinion according to listening to our lap times what the leaders were running. And then on a restart, he swerves over to block us and puts a big hole in the nose that we’ve got to come in and fix. By the time we get it fixed we’re buried so far back at the end of a race like that, we couldn’t do anything. So, I think he’ll learn, just like we all learned when we were rookies, one way or the other. He’ll either slow down enough and think about what he’s doing or he’ll be forced in a situation where he’ll have time to think about it and they’ll still be cars on the race track.”
 
WITH SO MUCH AGGRESSION ON THE ROAD COURSES THAT’S DIFFERENT FROM THE OVALS, WHAT DO YOU THINK IS ‘OVER THE LINE’? WHAT CAN PEOPLE GET AWAY WITH?
“This is one of those places where most of the time you shake your head when you’re leaving here going thank goodness it’s over. The first half of the race is a blast because everybody is being patient and they’re driving like they have sense. The closer to the end of the race, the more that goes away and the more guys just try to take advantage of every situation and every hole that’s available.”
 
HOW PHYSICAL IS IT TO RACE HERE WITH THE HEAT?
“You’re busy. You just don’t get any chance to rest. You go to a track like Pocono and you spend 90% of the lap driving in a straight line and resting. You can actually think about what you’re going to do. Where here, you really only have probably 2 or 3 seconds during the lap that you’re actually not doing something, whether it’s turning or shifting, upshift, downshift; so it gives you plenty to do here. It makes it fun because you can’t let your guard down.”

Chevy Racing–Sonoma–AJ Allmendinger

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
SAVE MART 350
SONOMA RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 20, 2014
 
AJ ALLMENDINGER, NO. 47 KINGSFORD/CLOROX CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Sonoma Raceway and discussed racing Sonoma, progress team is making and other topics.  Full transcript:
 
YOU ARE A NATIVE OF LOS GATOS, CALIFORNIA. SONOMA COULD BE A PERFECT OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU TO PICK-UP A WIN THIS WEEKEND. TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT BEING HOME IN CALIFORNIA AND BEING AT SONOMA:
“It is always good to come back to Sonoma. I missed it last year for a good reason, I was winning at Road America (Wisconsin – NASCAR Nationwide Series), so we will just put that out there (laughs).  I missed being here. Being a home race for me, it is nice to see my family, and some friends and all that. But it is one of those things that you have to split up between doing your job, and then seeing all your friends and kind of hanging out and catching up.  A good opportunity to try and get a win. But, you can’t put too much pressure on yourself getting here saying this is the only race we have a shot to win at. Just kind of taking the weekend as it comes, and really going from there – step-by-step. Really proud of this team so far where we have gotten. Excited to announce that Clorox signed up for three more years, so that is good to have that on our race car and to get that solidified. By the end of their contract, I think it will be 20 years that they have been with this race team. Just a great brand to have on this car. Good things going into this weekend and hopefully we can build on that and have a good weekend all together.”
 
DO YOU REALLY LOOK AT THIS AS AN OPPORTUNITY WITH ALL OF YOUR ROAD COURSE EXPERIENCE TO MAKE IT INTO THE CHASE WITH A WIN HERE?
“I would be lying if I said I didn’t come in here with the mindset that we have a shot to win this thing. But at the same point, the Sprint Cup Series every weekend, it is so tough now. It is a lot different than 10-15 years ago when I thought you looked at the series and said maybe there are five, or eight or ten guys at most that can win on a road course race. Now it is so deep and everybody has gotten so good at road course racing in general. We tested here for two days, which was big because I felt like what we started here with at the test, we would have been way off if we had come back and hadn’t tested. It was a good two-day test. I don’t want to walk into this weekend saying ‘If we don’t win this race, then it is a disappointment’.  We just need to have a solid weekend, and if we can run inside the top-10, good.  And, if we can be inside the top-five and have a shot to win it, then it’s a great weekend. That is how I look at it.”
 
THE LAST COUPLE OF WEEKS, YOU HAVEN’T HAD GREAT RUNS, ARE YOU IMPROVING?
“You have to look at the nature of our team, it just doesn’t happen overnight. Last year this team was 30th or 31st in points. I feel like the Series itself has gotten deeper with everybody stepping up their level of competition. We are going to have those weeks, up and down.  We’re not a Hendrick team.  It is what it is.  We are a one car team that is slowly building. I think if you look at RCR as a whole, just the general from the alliance to RCR itself, we’re all a little bit behind. It’s not like the RCR cars are dominating, and we’re hanging on to the back. We’re all pretty close together. I think it has opened the question, are we good? We have the potential of being good. Are we there yet? No. On our best weekends like this, can we go win a race? I think we can, but are we going to have weekends to where the last couple of weeks we just struggled to run 20th. That is the nature of it. I was kind of….you look at it last week, and I was frustrated after we got done with the race and thinking ‘man, we are struggling’. Then you look at the guys I was racing around during the race – Denny Hamlin, Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle – those type of guys.  It is tough in this series right now. We just have to keep getting better each weekend. We’re going to have our ups and downs. We’ve had some great runs this year. We’ve had some runs that you would expect from a single-car team that is trying to build. So, the good thing is our team owner, Tad Geschickter, he is the most patient person, and I’m not. So, I get done and I’m like “we’ve got to fix this’. As he told me when we started this, ‘this isn’t a one-weekend, a one-race, a one-year thing.  I’m in this team for a long-term period’. We just have to keep getting stronger together.”
 
HAVE YOU USED THE STRONG RUN AT TALLADEGA IN MAY TO PROPEL THE TEAM FORWARD AT DAYTONA IN JULY?
“The good thing is our ECR engine has a ton of power when it comes to the superspeedway races.  A lot of that is based on luck too. I thought we had a fast car, but I had to miss all the wrecks, too.  I was around about three of them, and that is just part of it. I look where we are strong and we are weak…our superspeedway program. At Daytona, we had a fast car, and we had a mechanical failure. At Talladega, obviously as you said, finished fifth. Our short-track program has been pretty good.  I think the places we struggle are really the mile-and-a-half race tracks.  I feel like those are the tracks where you really see the bigger budgets really come out because aerodynamics are so critical there. Just having those extra resources, and that extra testing that those teams do, really help them on the mile-and-a-half race tracks.  So I feel like that is where our weakness is. We got to Daytona in a couple weeks. Hopefully it is off of a couple of really great runs here and at Kentucky next week. We’ll just play it out and see how it goes. The way I look at those races is you just have to put yourself in the right place. If it goes wrong when you are in that spot, then it goes wrong. As you are not the cause of the big one. That’s all you can do.”
 
HOW MUCH OF AN UNKNOWN IS QUALIFYING HERE?
“It will be interesting. I think out of all the places we have been to, this will be…I won’t say crazy, but I think it is hard to determine. The spotters and the teams I feel like throughout the course of the qualifying, they’ve done a good job.  You don’t want to get in anybody’s way. You don’t want anybody to get in your way. I’m sure there are people who have gotten blocked for a lap or two, but for the most part I feel like qualifying has worked out where teams are nice to each other, and spotters work with each other to get their driver a clean lap.  Here it is hard to do. You can sit here on pit road and say ‘okay, there is nobody coming into (turn) 11 for 10 seconds, roll out there and have a clean lap. Well, by the time you get back to 11 to start your lap, how many more cars could have rolled out. And that is something you don’t want to use your tires on your out-lap. You kind of want to get them up to temp, but you don’t want to over abuse them. I think those are what is really going to be critical, especially the first group. As you start getting less cars, it’s not as big of a deal. But the first group you are going to have a lot of cars that are maybe on a cool down lap, or are trying to get their tires in when somebody is on a hot lap. It’s hard to hide around here. You can’t really hide and get out of the way.  I think that is what will be the most critical. Hopefully we have good speed out in practice, and we see that and can go out in the first group and can nail a lap, and then just sit and wait and let your tires cool down. It will definitely be interesting.”
 
HAVE YOU NOTICED THE RACING HERE GETTING MORE AGGRESSIVE HERE IN THE LAST FEW YEARS?
“I think just the competition level has stepped up. It’s not like if you are fast, you kind of blister through the pack and you have a few guys you are racing.  You look at how deep the field is now at t
he road course races, that’s why it is aggressive, because it is hard to pass. Everybody is so close. If you get kind of stuck in the back of the pack, it is hard to go anywhere. You look at Marcos (Ambrose) last year at Watkins Glen – he was leading the race, and pit strategy worked out where he restarted 20th, and it was hard for him to go anywhere, and he dominated that race. It just shows how deep the field is especially around this place. It is so tight. The double-file restarts are some of that. Before when it was single, everybody was kind of in line and then if you made a pass, you made a pass.  You go through these first how-many corners side-by-side and that is when you can really make your most time. So it’s definitely gotten more aggressive and I think the competition level has just gotten higher, and that is what it relates to everybody being so aggressive. Also around this place, your fenders don’t matter as much as Watkins Glen, so people seem to use them up a little bit more.”
 
WHAT IS THE MOST CHALLENGING PART OF THIS COURSE FOR YOU, AND WHY?
“The biggest thing to me is just saving your rear tires. That is something that this place – especially with how much horsepower these cars have now – just being able to save your rear tires. You’ve seen in these races the person that is able to have better forward drive as the run goes on; the first few laps the tires have a lot of grip and everybody is kind of getting after it. But after about five, six, seven laps the rear tires really start to off and you see the cars that have better forward and lateral bite off of the esses and off of 11 here; those are the good cars. In practice it is really forcing on getting good forward drive and saving the rear tires. Then in the race, when you are behind someone, that is really the critical thing is to not fall into their tempo and their mistakes, and using your car more trying to get around them.  It is real easy to see a guy make a mistake or just try to be aggressive, and you quickly burn your rear tires off, and then you are done the rest of the stint. I think that is what everybody works on here, and that is what they focus on is trying to get the forward drive. If you don’t have that, you aren’t going to win the race, so it is the most critical part of this race track to me.”
 
WHEN YOU GO TO WHERE YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY ARE NEAR HERE, DO YOU CRUISE AROUND, OR WHAT DO YOU DO?
“I hated high school, so I definitely don’t go back to high school. My goal of high school was just getting through it.  I had to have a 3.0 to make sure I got through it so I could race every weekend. That was it. I made the mistake one time, it was during the winter. I always found my grades going into the winter were better because I wasn’t racing go karts all winter.  I made the mistake one time and thought I would see how good I could get my grades, and I got a 4.0, and my Mom was like ‘hmmm, okay I see now’.  I don’t go back to high school. I wouldn’t even say I roll through my old town. Nobody really knows me, and that is the way I like it. I sneak under the radar, and nobody really knows me, that is my happiest moment. I actually don’t get back much. I am fortunate enough that my parents come to a lot of races; they come to all the west coast races. They still live in Hollister, and they come to at least 10 or 12 races. I only come back really for Christmas.”
 
TALK ABOUT KENTUCKY – THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THAT RACE TRACK AND THE CHALLENGES:
“It is definitely the most unique mile-and-a-half race track that they had. It is definitely bumpy. It is kind of wavy. It’s not like harsh bumps, but there are a lot of waves in the race track. I think one and two is way different than three and four the way you drive them. It is unique. It makes it a lot of fun. There is not a top of grip on the race track; I think that is why we see such good racing there. The line kind of moves out and the tires go off, but it is a tough place to set your car up for. It is one of those weekends if the weather is right where you practice during the day, and then you go into the night, and it makes it critical to try to guess what the setup is going to do as you go into the nighttime. It is a fun race track. I never got to run a lot of trucks or Nationwide there. I didn’t do any races. Only tested there a little big, so it’s been a lot of fun when we race there.”
 
 

Chevy Racing–Sonoma–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
SAVE MART 350
SONOMA RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 20, 2014
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Sonoma Raceway and discussed his recent trip to his hometown of El Cajon, California, his assessment of what qualifying will be like tomorrow and many other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
YOU HAVE HAD A BIG WEEK HERE IN CALIFORNIA TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT COMING BACK TO CALIFORNIA AND RACING HERE AT A ROAD COURSE FOR THE FIRST TIME THIS SEASON:
“Definitely excited to be back in California.  We had three or four days down in the San Diego area.  I had an amazing experience on many levels.  Very successful Jimmie Johnson Foundation golf tournament we raised $650,000 which we will be able to distribute in Southern California, Oklahoma and the Charlotte (NC) area.  We had a new venue at Torrey Pines and played their south golf course over there.  To have the views and the golf and the scenery and to know this history of golf on that course and watching some of those awesome battles myself, made that experience all the sweeter.  Then Tuesday I guess it was went back to El Cajon and I knew we were having an event in El Cajon, but I had no idea it was going to be that big and they were going to make so many amazing things happen.  They gave me a guitar to the city instead of a key to the city.  Named it Jimmie Johnson day, the senator was there so it was not only for El Cajon, but the whole state of California.  Just a crazy experience and fans were everywhere.  I couldn’t believe how many people showed up.  It was just an awesome experience.  I got up here yesterday relaxing and enjoying this nice warm weather.  I’m looking forward to some left and right hand turns.”
 
CAN YOU PUT FANS BEHIND THE WHEEL AND DESCRIBE THE ELEMENTS YOU THINK OF AND STAND OUT TO YOU WHEN YOU RACE A ROAD COURSE LIKE THIS?
“This track is way different than anything we run on because of the elevation changes and then how narrow the course is.  Our cars are so big and heavy we need a lot of real estate to slide our vehicles around.  It makes a huge challenge and at the end of the day the tires take all the abuse and that is really the magic around here.  One – developing a set-up that is easy on the rear tires and then two – being patient with the car and not running the rear tires off of it.  Hopefully, we have that magic, but there are blind corners where you crest the hill and you are just looking off into the brown grass or whatever that stuff is hoping you’ve got the right angle.  There are marks in the asphalt that you remember from past experiences here where another road ties in and that’s a breaking reference point.  Just a very cool track to make laps around.  On an oval you probably have three to four moments that really get your attention so corner entry and then occasionally out by the wall.  Here with 11 corners around this track every braking zone you are on edge and then with it being so narrow track out points you are usually if your left-side is in the dirt at least once around here a lap.  It makes for a fun lap.”
 
HENDRICK IS GOING FOR SIX WINS IN A ROW, WHAT IS THE LIKELIHOOD OF THAT HAPPENING AND WHICH DRIVER DO YOU THINK MIGHT BE ABLE TO PULL THAT OFF?
“It’s been such a different race the last five or six years when you look at the winners.  People you might not put into that road course ringer category, myself included.  I won, Martin (Truex, Jr.), Clint (Bowyer), Kasey Kahne was in there at some point.  More traditional oval guys, so I think this is the hardest race to pick yet.  Then when you add the fuel strategy that typically plays in that shakes it up as well.  I think all four of our Hendrick cars will be capable of it and we certainly want to keep the streak alive, but I can’t pick a favorite here.  I could probably pick a favorite, but I don’t think there is a safe bet on a winner.  I think there are 20, 25 cars that could win here.”
 
OUT OF ALL THE ACCOLADES, HAVING A STREET NAMED AFTER YOU, JIMMIE JOHNSON DAY WAS THERE A MOMENT THAT STOOD OUT TO YOU?
“I guess the moment would have been leaving and getting back on the interstate and driving out of there with all that took place.  We all know you go back home the memories come up in your mind and you think of what happened here, what went on there.  All these stories start to emerge in your mind.  To have that feeling of being back home and then to leave the event with all that they gave me and the huge fan support, friends that were in attendance and old school teachers.  A lot of my friends their parents are still in El Cajon and they made a trip out, faces I haven’t seen in 20 years.  Leaving there and to feel the pride that El Cajon has for what I have done on the track and the respect they paid me that all tied into driving out of there and had a very cool moment.”
 
WHAT DO YOU EXPECT IN QUALIFYING?  THIS IS OUR FIRST ROAD COURSE QUALIFYING UNDER THE NEW SET-UP ARE YOU GUYS DOING A LOT OF BACK AND FORTH STRATEGIZING AND TRYING TO FIGURE OUT WHAT TO DO?
“This track has a high wear aspect so I think keeping the laps down is going to be key especially to get the pole.  The variable that we can’t control is cars on their out lap and cars on their in lap.  That is going to be tricky.  We do it in practice and we are able to accommodate each other and take care of things.  Hopefully, everybody is plenty polite and the spotters are on top of it sending word down where a fast car is.”
 
THERE ARE A LOT OF DRIVERS WHO CAN WIN HERE THAT DO NOT HAVE WINS YET THIS YEAR.  DO YOU START THINKING ABOUT THEIR DESPERATION LEVEL?  WOULD YOU WANT TO KNOW IF THEY ARE BEHIND YOU?
“Yes, restarts I think we know that there is going to be chaos.  In (turns) seven and 11 you go in there and you just put your head against the back of the headrest waiting to get drilled from behind.  Once you get spread out and get going, this track once you get through the opening lap or two we get spread out and it’s really an individual race.  You are challenging yourself and your car and just getting in that zone and go.  But restarts just bread so much chaos around here.  No one is safe.  I have seen guys in eighth or 10th pull out of line to pass and wheel hop and clean out the guy in second or third.  There is nowhere safe on this track on restarts.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE AGGRESSIVE NATURE OF ROAD COURSE RACES IN RECENT YEARS?
“When there are only a couple of passing zones on the entire track everybody up and down the line is trying to set-up a pass.  So there are moments where you have worked hard and been patient and you are making your move and you don’t realize that the car behind you has set-up a move on you.  Or maybe in the process of getting alongside someone you have slowed down your section of the road and now everybody back behind you is thinking wow I can go three-wide, four-wide or the line stops too quick just like in bumper-to-bumper traffic.  All of a sudden the line stops too quick and the person fourth or fifth in line just the reaction time isn’t there and ‘pow’ you’ve turned somebody around.  It’s wild.  I think what aggravates most is the blocking.  After a restart or two or a few laps of blocking you just have to make that decision.  Are you going to tolerate it or are you going to send them?  It’s turned into sending them lately.”
 
WHAT HAS BEEN THE DIFFERENCE FOR JEFF (GORDON) AND HIS TEAM AND CREW THIS YEAR?
“Honestly, I think they have been finishing where they have been running.  The last two, three, four years it seems like fast cars, laps led and running well. But not the finishes that we hoped that he
would have or that he would hope he had based on the first half of the race.  They are finishing off the races, which there have been small mechanical issues and bad luck. That stuff has seemed to kind of fade away fortunately.”
 
THREE DRIVERS SINCE 2004 HAVE RUN EVERY CUP RACE SINCE THEN AND NOT FINISHED LAST.  TWO OF THEM ARE HENDRICK DRIVERS. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE IMPORTANCE OF THE DURABILITY OF HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS EQUIPMENT AND HOW IMPORTANT IT IS AT A ROAD COURSE?
“It definitely is important and I think championships probably speak more to durability than kind of that finishing stat.  In some cases I wish I would have been 43rd so I could have gone home earlier, didn’t have to ride around and finish 42nd (laughs).  That stat speaks more to the guys getting the car fixed.  I think all these crew members they are supposed to delicately work on the race car and take care of it.  When there is crash damage they are looking for the biggest hammer and the biggest saw and just looking forward to cutting stuff up and trying to get you back out.  I’ve got a group of guys that love to swing hammers and run saws.  They do a nice job of getting us back on the road.”
 
ON A TRACK LIKE THIS HOW IMPORTANT ARE YOUR SPOTTERS?
“They are very important for sure.  I think awareness inside the car is also important.  A lot of us come from a form of racing where you didn’t have spotters.  There seemed to be a lot less incidents when you are aware of your surroundings and not solely relying on spotters.  Good awareness in the car is important here as well.”

Chevy Racing–Sonoma–Jamie McMurray

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
SAVE MART 350
SONOMA RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 20, 2014
 
JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 CESSNA CHEVROLET SS met with media and discussed the new qualifying format, opportunities for making the Chase, how he likes road course racing, and more. Full Transcript:
TALK ABOUT YOUR THOUGHTS OF THE WEEKEND HERE AT SONOMA RACEWAY
“I always look forward to coming out here. First off, it’s a really pretty environment to be at and it’s also maybe one of the more comfortable tracks for me on the circuit. I came here and tested in 2003 and it’s just been a great place for me. I’ve qualified exceptionally well here. I think I finished second here once. But it seems like every year something has happened to us in the race. We had a flat tire last year with 40 laps to go or something and lost a bunch of track position and could never regain it. But it’s just a fun race track. I really enjoy road course racing. It’s a little different than Watkins Glen because the speed is so much slower and it’s so hard to get drive off the corners. But, it’s a fun track and a fun environment and I always look forward to it.”
 
IN RECENT YEARS, WE’VE SEEN A LOT MORE AGGRESSION HERE, ESPECIALLY IN THE LATE RACE RE-STARTS. WHY IS THAT? DO YOU EXPECT IT TO BE THE SAME ON SUNDAY?
“To me, when I look back, when we used to have a lot of the road course ringers come in, I wouldn’t say it was aggressive as much as just poor decision-making. Turn 4 and Turn 7 on a re-start here are horrible. And when you have a guy that’s in 12th or 15th and just makes a complete dive-bomb; at least when I would watch a replay there’s like no way their going to make the corner. They would wipeout somebody that was having a good day. Those are really frustrating. But now, I feel like it’s really aggressive, but its guys making moves that seem realistic. And sometimes it doesn’t always work out. But I feel like everyone has gotten smarter about road course racing and making sure they make it to the end. Maybe it’s because there are more regulars now. We just don’t have as many of those guys coming in that don’t race with us every week. Yeah, to me, the road course races are some of the best we have all year long. I wish that we had more of these on the schedule. It just always turns out interesting with fuel mileage, and then the restarts are just crazy.”
 
HEADING TO DAYTONA HERE AND KNOWING YOUR SUCCESS ON RESTRICTOR PLATE TRACKS, WHAT ARE YOU AND YOUR TEAM DOING TO PREPARE FOR THAT RACE?
“Well, there’s a lot of effort that’s put into the Daytona 500 because we do the testing and then we’re in Daytona for two weeks preparing for that race. But I would say honestly, from my side, I don’t really think about speedway races until we get there that week. There’s really not a lot you can to the car once you get to the track, so the team prepares the car. I think our speedway car is already done, sitting there, maybe waiting on an engine or getting an engine put in it. To me, when I look at Daytona and the races, it kind of is what it is and you know what to expect. Qualifying was so much different at Talladega than what we had had before. And we didn’t even make it to the second round, which was deflating. With this new qualifying process, if you don’t advance. At Daytona and Talladega now, it’s kind of about getting in that right pack to run that qualifying lap. So, to me, I’m more thinking about qualifying and not really thinking about the race right now. I’m just trying to get a good qualifying effort in and make sure we get with the right group there.”
 
DO YOU HAVE ANY PARTICULAR SUPERSTITIONS OR THINGS THAT YOU DO ROUTINELY BEFORE A RACE?
“Well, I’ve been superstitious sometimes. I maybe still am a little bit. But I’ve also had really good days when a $50 bill appeared or the green sharpie. And then I’ve had really bad days when I think I did everything correctly. So, I’m maybe not as superstitious as I used to be. But I am really structured in everything that happens before the races. But I think that’s just kind of my life in general. I tend to do the same thing every day. I wake up around the same time and have the same routine, whether it’s working out or going to the shop. I don’t know. I’m just not big into changing things. So, I’m maybe a little superstitious in just kind of wanting to do the same thing each week.”
 
WITH THE NEW RULES ABOUT A WIN AND GETTING INTO THE CHASE, HAVE YOU ENVISIONED WHAT A LATE-RACE RE-START WOULD BE LIKE HERE?
“Yeah, first-off, you hope you’re in that position that you can be one of those guys (to contend for a win), but you never know here if you’re going to have a late-race restart. So, I really haven’t put much thought into that. And when we get to the races, you don’t get to decide if you have a good short-run car or a good long-run car. So, that changes your mentality on the restarts because sometimes you have a car that’s great on restarts and you’re like oh, I hope we have that because maybe I can advance my position. And then there are other instances when your car is not good on restarts and so you’re dreading that to come out. Until you get out and you kind of get into the race, it’s hard to worry about those things.”
 
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON QUALIFYING HERE? WHAT ARE YOU EXPECTING?
“Well, I think that it the talk in the garage right now. There are some unknowns. I guess we have 30 minutes and then a break and then 10 minutes maybe. Initially they talked about that this would be three segments but now it’s only two. And this is one of those tracks where somebody could get in your way and really kill your lap. And for the first run, the sticker tires are going to worth a lot versus going out on the scuffs. I don’t think you’ll see anybody go out on scuffs and knock anyone out because the tires are so important here. But really, we’ve talked about it for a week now. Do you want to go right out? Or, do you want to wait and let some of the guys run and then the track be cleaner? I don’t know. I don’t think anyone really has the answer right now. I think the ideal situation would be to go right out on the track. That being said, it’s a big race track. I think they blow it off; I don’t know if they do. But you don’t know if there’s a corner that’s going to be covered in dust from wind or from a car that has run off late in practice. So, it will be interesting tomorrow to see how that works out and what guys’ strategies are.
 
“Also, where you draw dictates a lot of when you go out. If you draw number 1; you know we spent the last 30 years in NASCAR wanting the biggest number we could get when they draw because you wanted to go out late because it would be cooler. Well, now everyone fights to get the first pull, so that you have the option to go right out or to wait. So pit road gets blocked up when everybody backs out and pulls down there. If you draw in the 20’s, you know that you’re not going to make the first wave out on the race track. So, some of that is depending on what your draw is.”
 
REGARDING QUALIFYING, HOW DOES THE NEW FORMAT AFFECT HOW AGGRESSIVELY YOU TAKE EACH LAP?  YOU WON THE POLE HERE LAST YEAR. AND THEN YOU HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT TIRE WEAR.
“I think you’ll see most guys run one lap and that’s going to be your fast lap. When we looked back to last year, it was about a second a lap slower your second time on the track. So, it’s all about getting that perfect lap. And that’s what makes the road course pulls so special is that it’s hard to make a perfect lap here and have the best lap. Last year I think I barely beat Marcus (Ambrose) for the pole. And I think about the places where I could have been better and I’m sure he thinks about where he messed up at, right? But road course racing, the qualifying is tough. It’s a little different now because last year they started the European qualifying where you got
to have multiple laps. But, your best situation is to put the most tape on the car for just one lap and the air pressure, so that for only one lap you can put it all on the line. Even though you have the option to run more, I think the pole guy will do it, is to put the most tape on in his first time by.”
 
HOW MUCH OF AN OPPORTUNITY DOES THIS RACE GIVE YOU THIS WEEKEND FOR MAKING THE CHASE? THE DRIVERS THAT HAVE BEEN WINNING A LOT THIS YEAR NORMALLY AREN’T GOOD HERE. HOW MUCH OF AN OPEN DOOR IS THIS FOR YOU?
“Honestly, I thought we had a car capable of winning last week at Michigan and then I did a terrible job on a restart and we struggled a little bit to get fuel in the car. But honestly, I look at each week as a chance to win. I don’t use Sonoma as like the opportunity for other guys. There is so much that can happen here with fuel mileage and the way the cautions fall and the way you pit. The whole race can change in a matter of four or five laps if the caution falls at the right or wrong time for guys. So, I don’t look at this as a better opportunity. I really feel like each race between now and Richmond, we’ll have the chance to win if we make all the right decisions. So yeah, I think this weekend is as good as any.”
 
WHY DO YOU THINK WE’VE HAD NINE DIFFERENT WINNERS IN THE PAST NINE RACES HERE?
“I don’t know. I remember the year that Kasey Kahne won here; it was kind of a surprise to everybody. But I think that all of us have gotten so much better at road course racing over the years that if you put someone in the right position in the end, they’re capable of winning. And MWR has been really good here. I think they’ve won the last two races here. I love Clint Bowyer to death, but I would never have put him in winning a road course category, right? But when you look back, he’s done really well at road course racing. So, yeah, it’s kind of circumstantial. You’ve got to have a really good car. We are so limited. We go and test at all these road courses for Sonoma or for Watkins Glen, and it seems like the set-ups you develop don’t work when you get here. So, we’re so limited on time, like we only have three and a half hours of practice today. That’s not a lot. That’s not a lot of tires. So, you don’t really get to try a lot of stuff. And I think when the teams get here and they unload and they’re close, that’s a huge advantage. And if those guys can call the right race, then they have a chance to win. But it is interesting. It seems like there’s a surprise winner here a lot.”
 
ON QUALIFYING, THIS YEAR WE’VE SEEN A FEW TEAMS HAVE ISSUES (LIKE) NOT GETTING OUT AND GETTING THEIR LAP STARTED BEFORE A SESSION ENDED. WE’VE SEEN GUYS HAVE FLAT TIRES AND ARE UNABLE TO CHANGE THEM TO ADVANCE TO THE NEXT ROUND. WE SAW YOUR TEAMMATE WITH A DEAD BATTERY, UNABLE TO ADVANCE. HOW MUCH OF A CONCERN IS THAT FOR YOU WHEN YOU’RE TRYING TO DECIDE IF YOU WANT TO GO EARLY OR LATE?
“Qualifying has turned into an incredible 50 minutes, I think, for all of us. It’s like another race, I feel like. I feel like every weekend you get in the car and you know you’re probably going to be sitting there for the next hour. And the emotions that happen over the first 30 minutes, especially if you’re right on the bubble, or if you’re only in by a three or four positions. You sit there for the next 15 or 20 minutes while your call cools down. And then you’re waiting for the next guy that hadn’t advanced in, to go. You want to see if the track is faster. At Michigan last week, people could go quicker on their second run. So, qualifying has turned into what was exciting for 30 seconds at a place like Atlanta or Texas, to an hour of an emotional roller coaster for all of us (as to) whether you’re going to advance or not.
 
“I look back at Fontana and (Greg) Biffle bumped me out with one second to go. And I was 25th and he ended up being 24th. So, I was just devastated. I left the track mad. I didn’t even pay attention to the rest of qualifying. He bumped me out with one second to go and then to go for the next round, his tires were hot and he wasn’t any good, right? And when the race started on Sunday, he started one row in front of me; he was like 24th. And I’m like why did I get mad over that? I would have been in the same position if I had been the guy that made it in. So, it’s interesting how we all want to win. We all want to be on the pole. And you have like really three chances now and it’s really interesting how the guy that’s fastest in the first round is not guaranteed to be on the pole. He might not even make it to the third round at some of the tracks. So, it’s a lot of fun. I like qualifying. I think it’s great.”
 
HOW INVOLVED ARE YOU IN RACE STRATEGY – WOULD YOU RATHER HAVE A TWO-STOP STRATEGY WITH OLD TIRES OR WOULD YOU RATHER HAVE THREE STOPS WITH THE POSSIBILITY OF FRESH TIRES? ALSO CAN YOU TALK ABOUT HOW PHYSICALLY CHALLENGING THIS TRACK IS?
“On the strategy, that’s really left up to the crew chief. You have to see the track position you have. I think every driver would prefer to have the best tires on the track. It’s a helpless feeling when you’re the last one to pit and everyone behind you has tires. But it depends on how the car is, how the cautions fall. So I leave all that up to the crew chief and let him know what the car is doing.
 
“I think Watkins Glen is way worse than Sonoma. I’ve looked at the weather and it’s not going be hot here, which is great. This is one of the places we come to where you’re doing a little more work than we did on the ovals. The cars are hotter; you’re not going as quick so there’s not as much air moving around. So that is a place that can be a little hot and tiring. But it will be only like 75 degrees on Sunday so it should be really good.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE GROWTH YOU’VE SEEN FROM YOUR TEAMMATE KYLE (LARSON) JUST FROM THE START OF THE SEASON TO NOW. HE’S FROM NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND HAS NEVER RACED HERE. WHAT KIND OF ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE HIM FOR THIS RACE?
“He’s done an awesome job. Kyle has done a great job all year long. He’s a great kid. I really enjoy having him as a teammate. We were in the hauler a few minutes ago going over the track and was telling him the little things I think about when I come here and what I look for – shifting points and just things to look for on the track. He’s done a great job. This will be his biggest challenge all year long – to come here and not really practice in a limited amount of time we have on the track. He’ll figure it out. Kyle’s best quality is that he is able to put it all together at the end of the race. Even if things don’t go well at the end, he seems to be able to find a way to finish well. That’s why he is where is in the points because they’ve been able to pull all that together. So yeah… great teammate and great kid. He’s done an awesome job.”
 
THEY GAVE HIM THE KEY TO THE CITY IN HIS HOMETOWN. DID THEY EVER GIVE YOU THE KEY TO JOPLIN?
“I don’t believe so! I knew that Kyle was from California. But I have to be honest… is it Elk Grove where he’s from? I couldn’t point on a map where Elk Grove is or how big it is!”
 
A LOT OF ROAD COURSES BRING OUT THE ROAD RAGE IN SOME DRIVERS. ON THE HIGHWAY, WHAT’S YOUR BIGGEST PET PEEVE?
“My pet peeve on the highway is people who don’t want to go the speed limit in the faster lane. When I drive down the interstate – even if I’m speeding slightly –  and I see someone coming faster than me behind, I’ll get out of the way. I also hate people that try to become the police in their car when maybe you’re passing them on the shoulder leaving the track… the guy who pulls over to cut you off. If a guy wants to go on the shoulder, let him go on the shoulder. I don’t really have an issue with that.”
 

Follow A Dream–Success at Lebanon Dragway

Marstons Mills, MA -June 19, 2014-For the second year in a row and the third time in five years, Jay Blake’s Permatex/Follow A Dream team won Top Alcohol Funny Car at the Lebanon Valley Dragway regional. After setting low e.t. of the semifinals with a 5.69 and low e.t. of the entire event with a 5.58 in the first round, driver Todd Veney survived a wild final against Dan Pomponio that had both cars all over the track.
Pomponio lost traction right off the line and Veney opened a two-car lead in low gear, but the race soon devolved into a free-for-all. “Right at the 1-2 shift, way after the point where you’d usually shake or smoke the tires, the car turned left,” Veney said. “Lifting is the last thing you’d ever want to do – especially in the final round – but the car was about to get over the centerline. Every time I’d get back on the throttle, it would get sideways again. I never saw him so I kept getting back in the throttle, and right when I started to think we had it, he blew by me and I thought we lost.”
Pomponio actually did cross the finish line first, 6.11 to 6.33, but a post-race inspection of the track revealed that he’d crossed the outer boundary line and disqualified himself. It was an hour later, well after Pomponio had the trophy in his hands and gathered with his crew for winner’s circle pictures, when the call finally was made.
“Dan came over to hand us the trophy in person, and that shows a lot of class,” Blake said. “He and that whole team have always been a class operation, but that was really something special.”
After a weekend off, the Permatex/Follow A Dream heads west for three races in two weekends – the Jegs Allstars race and the Route 66 Nationals in Chicago and the Summit Racing Equipment Nationals in Norwalk, Ohio.

HPD Propels OAK Racing Team Asia To Successful Le Mans Debut

Utilizing a production-based Honda HR28TT V6 engine from Honda Performance Development, paired to a new Ligier JS P2 chassis, OAK Racing Team Asia finished seventh in the competitive LMP2 class Sunday at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

The all-Chinese driver lineup of Ho-Pin Tung, Adderly Fong and David Cheng produced a solid, consistent run in changeable weather conditions, including a sudden downpour in the second hour that sent several other cars off track and out of the contest. 

Of the driver trio, only Tung had previous Le Mans experience.  The Onroak Automotive Ligier JSP2 chassis was equally new, making its World Endurance Championship debut at Le Mans, as well as its first race with the Honda HR28TT V6 engine, a proven component that had previously powered the HPD ARX-03b chassis to the LMP2 victory at Le Mans in 2012.

The HPD-developed Honda engine used at Le Mans – and in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship –is derived from the Honda “J35” series of production V6 engines and includes relevant twin-turbocharger technology, along with the efficiency provided by direct fuel injection. Key production-based components utilized in the HR28TT include block and heads, direct injection fuel system, valve train components, drive-by-wire throttle, alternator, sensors, fasteners, etc. The engine even utilizes a stock Honda oil filter.

HPD’s prototype racing efforts have resulted in more than 60 victories and multiple American Le Mans Series championships.  HPD won the LMP2 title in the inaugural 2012 World Endurance Championship and won the LMP2 category at the 24 Hours of Le Mans inboth 2010 and 2012.  In 2013, HPD-equipped Strakka Racing claimed the LMP1 class win at the 24 Hours of Le Mans for private team entries.

For its debut event, OAK Racing Team Asia’s goal was to avoid unnecessary risks and successfully complete the 24 hours.  After the rain showers departed at dusk, the Ligier-Honda combination continued a nearly faultless run, delayed by only a minor off-course excursion in the third hour, a punctured rear tire just after midnight, and a brief pit stop to replace the paddle-shift compressor in the early morning hours.

As a result, the team steadily advanced through the LMP2 field, moving to 10th in class in the fifth hour, and eighth as the 12-hour mark approached, a position the team held through the remainder of the night and into the morning hours.

In the run to the checkers, the Ligier-Honda gained one more position to finish 7th in LMP2.  Late-race attrition in the quicker LMP1 category also saw OAK Racing Team Asia move up in the overall order, just missing a top-10 result with an 11th-place overall finish.

This weekend’s 24 Hours of Le Mans was alsothe third round of the 2013 World Endurance Championship.  The WEC now takes a three-month break before traveling to the United States for the Six Hours of the Circuit of the Americas, September 20 in Austin, Texas.

Ho-Pin Tung(OAK Racing Team Asia Ligier JS P2 Honda) finished 7th in LMP2 and11th overall: “First of all, I would like to say that was an amazing job by OAK Racing and HPD.  Just a few weeks ago, this car was just a monocoque in the workshop, without anything else attached.  In just a few weeks, they managed to build a car that was fast and reliable.  We had no issues at all during the 24 hours, so it’s really unbelievable!  For me, it’s a great result.  I think I did almost half the race, and I enjoyed every single part of it.  This is my first finish at Le Mans.  Next year, the target is going to be different; we’re going to go for [podium] positions.”

Allen Miller(Prototype Project Leader, Honda Performance Development) on this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans:  “We’re quite happy with the outcome of our first venture with the Onroak organization and the Ligier JS2 chassis.  They’ve built a very nice car that has proven to be both quick and reliable. To debut a new chassis-engine combination at the 24 Hours of Le Mans is a huge task, yet we made it through the race pretty much ‘untouched’.  The Ligier-Honda combination definitely has more potential, and our race laps were as much as two seconds quicker than qualifying.  So we expect to see significant improvement in future races.  Other than our planned pit stops, we had only a few small issues – such as two cut tires –throughout the 24 hours.  The all-Chinese driver team did a great job of avoiding trouble in an incident-filled race.  Congratulations to them, everyone at OAK Racing Team Asia, and all the associates at HPD involved in this program.”

Dyson Racing–Historic 24 Hours of Le Mans Finish for Dyson Racing Junior Development Driver Matt McMurry

Historic 24 Hours of Le Mans Finish for Dyson Racing Junior Development Driver Matt McMurry
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY – With the drop of the green flag on June 14th, 16-year-old Matt McMurry became the youngest starter in the long and storied history of the 24 Hours Le Mans, breaking the record for the French endurance classic set by Ricardo Rodriguez in 1959. And on the 15th, when the checkered flag finally waved, he entered the record books as the race’s youngest finisher, beating fellow American Gunnar Jeannette’s finish in 2000. The #42 Caterham Zytek-Nissan, which McMurry shared with Chris Dyson and Tom Kimber-Smith, finished tenth in the competitive LM P2 class on the Circuit de la Sarthe.  Fielded by Greaves Motorsports, the car traveled over 2,700 miles in the 82nd running of the toughest endurance race in motorsports.
 
“This is a massive accomplishment for Matt McMurry, the McMurry family and for the Dyson Racing Junior Development program,” said Dyson, Vice President and Sporting Director of Dyson Racing.  “Congratulations to Matt’s dad, Chris, on this Father’s Day achievement. To come over here and break two significant records is a notable success. I know Matt is going to be hungry to come back here.  This is such a wonderful international event and no matter how many times we race here, we always look forward to coming back.”
Matt was just ten when he first saw the race with his dad and 12 when he set his sights on becoming the youngest driver to race in thhe event. Speaking after the race, Matt observed that “everything about Le Mans was new, big and incredible. I’m so happy to have had the chance to experience everything about it, the whole week long. Our team did a great job, I learned a lot from Chris and Tom, and we got a good result — we ran all 24 hours and had a respectable finish. I arrived with an eye on becoming the youngest driver ever at Le Mans, and thanks to everyone I’m now also the youngest finisher.  It was a memorable day for Dyson Racing, Greaves Motorsport and me. Thanks to all the people over the years – and there were a lot of them – who made this possible for me.”
 
Tom Kimber-Smith has won the LM P2 class twice at Le Mans. “It’s an achievement simply to finish such a challenging race,” he said. “There as so many things that can go wrong, so many opportunities to make that little mistake with the big consequence. We had a lot of goals going into the race but number one was to support Matt’s quest for the record and I’ll tell you, he did a great job. His first stint was in the rain, which wasn’t easy. But as a racing driver he’s mature beyond his years – he looked as if he had been driving on wet tracks for years. It’s incredible he’s only 16.
 
Kimber-Smith also noted that “Chris drove fantastically all week, never putting a wheel wrong and he did the stints you’d expect to see from a two-time ALMS champ. It whas a real pleasure to drive with these guys and I cannot wait until the next event.” And that next event won’t be long in coming. The trio will be back in Europe next month, driving the Greaves Motorsports Caterham entry in the third round of the European Le Mans Series at the Red Bull Ring in Austria, July 19-20.

Dyson Racing–Bentley Motors Returns to North American Motorsport with Dyson Racing Team Bentley

Bentley Motors Returns to North American Motorsport with Dyson Racing Team Bentley
Dyson Racing Team Bentley debut race slated for June 20 at Road America
Butch Letzinger To Pilot Continental GT3 in North America Debut
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY/HERNDON, VA – After an absence of more than a decade, Bentley Motors is competing again on the racing circuits of North America again, beginning this weekend at the Road America race track in Elkhart Lake, WI. Dyson Racing Team Bentley is fielding a Bentley Continental GT3 in the Pirelli World Challenge with Butch Leitzinger, a championship-winning driver with long-time connections to both halves of the new Anglo-American motorsports partnership, at the helm. Bentley will be taking on the competition in a pair of no-holds-barred sprint races (June 20-21) at one of the continent’s classic road-racing venues.
“Motorsport is an integral part of Bentley’s DNA and we’re excited to return to the racetrack in North America,” said Christophe Georges, President and CEO, Bentley Motors, Inc.  “We’re thrilled to work with the successful Dyson Racing organization.  Like Bentley, they have an established and valued history in motorsports.  The team has been hard at work preparing for this first race and we are excited for our customers and fans to see and hear the exhilarating Continental GT3 on the track.”
This marks the return of Bentley Motors to North American racing for the first time since the 12 Hours of Sebring in 2003 when the company’s pair of Bentley Speed 8 racecars took first and second in the Le Mans GTP class.  This will also be the Dyson team’s first race in the 2014 season, having most recently competed with a Lola prototype sports car at the ten-hour Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta in October 2013.  
In April, Bentley Motors announced a multi-year agreement with Dyson Racing to support the company’s motorsport activities in North America. Dyson Racing Team Bentley will compete with Bentley’s Continental GT3 in the second half of the Pirelli World Challenge in preparation for a full season of competition in 2015.  
“Racing a production-based car is a new challenge for our team,” noted Chris Dyson, Vice President and Sporting Director for the team. “And we’re proud to be taking up this task in conjunction with our new partners at Bentley Motors. We know we’ll be facing strong competition in the Pirelli World Challenge, but our first test with the Continental GT3 went very well and we’re confident we’re bringing an excellent race car to Elkhart Lake.”
Road America will also mark the return of Butch Leitzinger to the Dyson Racing roster.  He has shared 20 years of history with the team and first drove for Dyson Racing in the 1995 24 Hours of Daytona. Leitzinger has a strong record with Bentley, racing for the British team in the 2001 and 2002 24 Hours of Le Mans. 
“Working with both Bentley and Dyson together is a happy development for me,” said Leitzinger, whose lengthy professional racing career includes numerous victories in both prototype and production-based race cars. “Chris and Rob (Dyson, the team’s founder and president) had been speaking with me about an undefined project they had in mind and I was of course interested in renewing my relationship with them and the team. I also knew that Bentley was getting back into racing, this time with a racing version of the Continental. To my surprise these two projects turned out to be the same – and happily, I’ll be driving.”
Leitzinger noted that the well-established relationship he has with the Dyson technical staff will help get the effort up to full speed quickly despite joining the series near the mid-point of the season.
Driving assignments for the four race meets following Elkhart Lake will be shared among Leitzinger, Dyson and Guy Smith, who has been a “Bentley Boy” since he won the 2003 24 Hours of Le Mans in the Bentley Speed 8.  Smith also drove one of the Speed 8s at their last American appearance at Sebring in 2003.  In addition, Smith was a development driver for the Bentley Continental GT3 program and races a Continental GT3 in the European Blancpain Series. He drove the winning car at the series’ most recent round at Silverstone, giving Bentley their first-ever win at the famous track and Bentley’s first victory since Le Mans in 2003.
“Selecting the drivers for this Anglo-American program was the easy part,” Dyson said. “Both Butch, who’s American and Guy, a Brit, have strong and enduring ties to Bentley and to Dyson Racing. Most importantly, they are both experienced veterans who are fast and who know how to win. The Pirelli World Challenge races are all sprint events, so the racing is flat out from the start and a driver has to be able to get to the front quickly and still bring the car home in one piece. Both Guy and Butch can do that. They are a formable pair for sure.”

Dyson Racing–Dyson, Kimber-Smith and McMurry Ready for History Making Le Mans

Dyson, Kimber-Smith and McMurry Ready for History Making Le Mans
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY – With the momentum of solid finishes at Silverstone and Imola to their credit, Tom Kimber-Smith, Matt McMurry and Chris Dyson are looking forward to a strong run at the 82nd running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans June 14-15 in the #42 LM P2 Caterham Zytek-Nissan fielded by Greaves Motorsport.
All three drivers share the common goal of a class win, but each of them also brings his own agenda to the world’s most prestigious sportscar race.

Kimber-Smith is aiming for his third LM P2 victory in six starts, (and fourth class win, including victory in GT2 in 2006.)  “Le Mans is a special race which anyone in motorsport would love to attend and compete at,” Kimber-Smith said.  “I have been extremely fortunate to have won the race three times now. (2006: Panoz Esperante GT2; 2011: Zytek/Nissan LMP2; and 2012: HPD/HPD LM P2).  I still have the same, if not more desire to win this race. It’s such a special feeling to stand on the top step of that podium looking down at thousands of spectators. LM P2 this year is very competitive. Probably the most competitive it has ever been. The race will be flat out as always and the winner will be the team that makes the least mistakes.”

For McMurry, a 16 year-old high school student and the initial Dyson Racing Junior Development Driver, it’s about becoming the youngest starter in the 91-year history of this twice-around-the-clock classic, the youngest finisher and the youngest winner.
“I went to Le Mans in 2008 when I was ten when my father raced there,” recounted McMurry.  “When I was twelve, we had a school project where we were asked what we wanted to accomplish before we graduated.  I said that I wanted to race at Le Mans, and now four years later, the dream is about to become real. I have been getting good advice from my teammates, Chris and Tom on how to get into a rhythm and stay calm.  Greaves Motorsport has a very good record at Le Mans and I am glad I will be part of the team’s effort to have another successful race at Le Mans.”
When he climbs into the car for the first time following the green flag on June 14, McMurry will displace the legendary Mexican driver Ricardo Rodriquez, who was 17- years old when he started the 1959 edition of the race.

Dyson, a two-time IMSA American Le Mans Series driving champion, made his first start at Le Mans in 2004, coming home first in the contingent of American drivers. His focus on State-side competition has curtailed Dyson’s participation in European sportscar racing, at least until this season.
“It was a thrill racing at Le Mans for the first time, ten years ago,” Dyson said.  “I wish my schedule made it possible for me to race there every year, but our team’s primary focus has needed to be on our U.S. schedule.  But the fact that I don’t get to race at Le Mans every year – this will be my third start – makes the opportunity to do it this year all the sweeter.  Plus, it’s great to be doing this race with Tom, who is a good friend, and Matt, who I believe is destined for a truly great driving career.  That’s why we made him our first Dyson Junior team member.”

Dyson also paid tribute to the team that is fielding the car. “We’ve got a great entrant in Greaves Motorsport,” he noted.  “TKS won with them in 2011 and Greaves was on the podium last year as well.  They’re known for fielding cars that are solid, reliable and well prepared for the task of surviving 24 straight hours of racing. We’re not taking anything for granted, but our goal is to win LM P2 and I don’t think our optimism is misplaced.”

Tim Allison Update

This weekend was another 2 days of racing Friday and Saturday.  The weather was great again!  Friday night we were at Limaland Motorsports Park.  We drew dead last for the heat and ended up finishing 3rd which qualified us for the feature with the inversion of the draw that put us starting in the starting 9th position.  The race went non-stop and we ended up finishing 7th in the end.
 
Saturday night we went over to Indiana to Montpelier Speedway for the first time in 15 years and the first time the sprint cars have been back at the track in many years.  We started in the 2nd heat and finished 2nd and that got us qualified for the feature again.  With the inversion for the feature we started 5th and the race went non stop again and we fell back to 9th at the start but came on like gang busters at the end and got very close to the leaders.  We ended up finishing in the 5th position as the laps wound down, again another great solid night and a good finish and we have now moved into the 5th position in points.
 

Summit Racing–No. 4 in standings, Line going after more at New England Dragway

No. 4 in standings, Line going after more at New England Dragway
 
MOORESVILLE, N.C. (June 18, 2014) – Jason Line has wheeled his bright blue Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro to victory once in two final rounds already this season, and sitting in the No. 4 spot in the tight Mello Yello Drag Racing Series Pro Stock standings is sure nice, but Line is in no way satisfied. This weekend’s 2nd annual Auto-Plus NHRA New England Nationals is on his radar as an event where he can make gains and keep climbing closer to the top as NHRA’s Countdown to the Championship nears.
 
Last season, at the inaugural event at New England Dragway, Line qualified in the No. 5 position and beat Larry Morgan in round one before getting into some trouble in the quarterfinals. This year, Line intends on lengthening his track time on Sunday, and with weather conditions projected to be pleasant and crowds predicted to be surging, the vibe surrounding the event is electric.
 
“One of the reasons we’re really looking forward to going back is because there was such a great crowd there at New England Dragway last year,” said Line. “It’s only our second time going back, but we already know that it’s a great place and a fun venue. It’s still new, and that makes it a challenge because we don’t have years of experience there – but no one else does, either, so it’s more of a level playing field. We maybe could have done better there last year, but we’re certainly planning on having a better outing this time around. It should be a lot of fun.”
 
Line has claimed 32 national event titles since making his NHRA Pro Stock debut in 2004, and he has sailed to victory in the category at 16 NHRA sanctioned facilities. Epping is one of only five racetracks on the current tour where Line has yet to claim a win in the professional category – the others are Denver’s Bandimere Speedway, Brainerd International Raceway, Lucas Oil Raceway at Indianapolis, and Gateway Motorsports Park in St. Louis.
 
“Our Summit Racing guys have really worked hard this year. We have had some great moments out there, and this weekend we are going to be looking for more of those,” said Line. “It’s a big opportunity to get to a racetrack where only one other guy has his name in the record books with a win. We want to have a New England Dragway win on our scorecard, too, and we want to accomplish that for the KB Racing team, whether it’s my Summit Racing Camaro or my teammate Greg Anderson’s getting that last win light on Sunday.”
 

Summit Racing–Anderson plans to seize the opportunity to go fast at New England Nationals

Anderson plans to seize the opportunity to go fast at New England Nationals
 
MOORESVILLE, N.C. (June 18, 2014) – This weekend’s second annual Auto-Plus NHRA New England Nationals is set to be another exciting event on the 2014 NHRA tour, and Summit Racing Pro Stock driver Greg Anderson sees plenty of opportunity in returning to the newest thumbtack on the Mello Yello Series map. The sea-level location at New England Dragway could very well provide prime conditions for fast racing, and that is just what the doctor ordered for Anderson and his tireless crew.
 
“It was such a neat deal last year to get to race our Summit Racing Chevy Camaros at New England Dragway for the first time,” said Anderson. “We had a blast up there, and the crowd was humongous – of course that always gets you excited. The racetrack is still new to us, so we’re all looking forward to getting up there again. To tell you the truth, I can’t wait to go back. Those sea-level conditions are what we Pro Stock racers particularly love. If everything goes as planned, you could see some great racing up there.”
 
Last season in Epping, Anderson qualified in the No. 6 position and won his first-round match with Steve Kent before being stopped by eventual finalist Mike Edwards in the quarterfinals. For Anderson, a return to Epping means another opportunity to gain the points he needs to push his way into the top 10 in NHRA’s Mello Yello Series Pro Stock points. Anderson is currently No. 13 in the standings and just five rounds away from that No. 10 spot.
 
The driver of the white Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro came into the season at a disadvantage after missing the first five races of the year, but he quickly made up ground and gave himself a fighting chance by visiting two final rounds in the first four races. Anderson’s performance in Englishtown earlier this month was his best so far this season; his second final round appearance of the year complemented a top-half qualifying effort. The KB Racing team is headed towards Epping with heated intentions of getting their driver up where he needs to be.
 
“Any weekend could be the weekend that we really and truly see a tremendous turn towards excellence for this team,” said Anderson. “We have a great program, and we are constantly working to make it better – we just have to tap into what we know is there. That’s always the trick. We have to crack the case and figure it out, and then we’ll be fast again. As a team, we’re seeing that we can be fast; we just have to keep digging. Hopefully, this weekend in Epping will be the weekend it all comes together. Once we really tap into it, there shouldn’t be any stopping us.”
 

Kasey Kahne Racing–June 11-June 18

Kasey Kahne Racing – Results Recap
June 11 through June 18

Brad Sweet and the SureTest Supplies team brought home Kasey Kahne Racing’s series leading 12th win of the season while at Knoxville last Saturday night. It was their first win at the famed 1/2 mile oval, which is also the site of the biggest Outlaws show of the year: the Knoxville Nationals in August.

The previous night in Jackson, Minnesota all three KKR teams once again finished in the top 10.

The next World of Outlaws event is scheduled for this Friday at River Cities Speedway in Grand Forks, North Dakota and then the following night at I-94 Speedway in Fergus Falls, Minnesota.

John Force Racing–FOCUS ON CONSISTENCY FOR HIGHT HEADING INTO NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS

FOCUS ON CONSISTENCY FOR HIGHT HEADING INTO NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS

EPPING, NH (June 17, 2014) — On the heels of a tough outing last weekend at the Ford Thunder Valley Nationals Mello Yello Funny Car points leader Robert Hight and the Auto Club team are looking to get back to early season form at the 2nd annual New England Nationals. With four wins to his credit already in 2014 Hight wants to add a fifth win and extend his points lead.

“Last year we lost in the first round in Epping. I don’t want a repeat of that this season. We went to six straight finals earlier this season and I know we can get back to that kind of consistency with one good weekend,” said Hight.

Last year Hight and the Auto Club team qualified No. 5 before being upset in the first round by veteran Del Worsham and the DHL Funny Car from Kalitta Racing. His JFR teammates went on to battle it out in the final round with sister-in-law Courtney Force earning the win over 16-time Funny Car champion John Force. Hight would like to make this year’s final an all JFR affair again.

“it is always fun when you can race your teammate in the final round of a race. It takes all the pressure off and you can just go up there and let it all hang out. We had a pretty good streak of final round appearances for the team snapped a few races ago so I would like to get that streak going again. It is tough to win in this category so we know our work will be cut out for us,” said Hight, the 2009 Funny Car champion.

John Force Racing had a streak of fifteen races with at least one JFR Funny Car in the final broken in Englishtown. For Hight his road to a second Funny Car championship will be an uphill battle. He has had a string of six consecutive final round appearances so far this season and only two first round losses. Over that stretch of six races he picked up four wins including three in a row. The Auto Club team has a commanding lead in the Mello Yello point standings but Hight and the rest of the team are not looking at the scoreboard they are focused on the finish line.

“We have gotten off to fast starts before but we didn’t finish. This season is all about focus and finishing strong. I have a great crew chief in Mike Neff along with the other JFR crew chiefs and we are racing smart. I have a lot of confidence and we are just racing as hard as the track allows us,” said Hight, a 33-time national event winner.

The John Force Racing Funny Car trio led by Hight at the top of the points followed by 16-time Funny Car champion John Force in second place and a surging Courtney Force are all solidly in the Top Ten as well as locked into the prestigious Traxxas Nitro Shootout. Every year of Hight’s career he has won multiple national events and he has only not led the points at least one week of the season only one time in the past decade.

“I have had great equipment and great teams behind me since I started racing in 2005. You don’t win 33 times without a great team and I don’t take mine for granted. I know how hard they all work and as a former crew man I know how hard these cars are to work with. We all work together on this Auto Club team to do everything right so there are no fire drills and no panic. The focus we have as a team comes from being confident in the teammate beside you and that is one of the things that is great about JFR we are all one team working together,” said Hight.

For Immediate Release

JOHN FORCE IS READY FOR AN EPPING FINAL ROUND REDO  

John Force and his Castrol GTX High Mileage Mustang are locked, loaded and ready for Epping. The 16-time NHRA Mello Yello World Champion has been anticipating heading back to New England Dragway for the second annual Auto-Plus NHRA New England Nationals. He has also been looking forward to having an opportunity to go to the final round, this time for a win. The 16-time NHRA Mello Yello World Champ would like to get his 140th career victory while adding the NHRA New England Nationals to the impressive list of events he has won in his fabled career.

“The New England Nationals is a great new market for NHRA and Mello Yello. The event also brings in many fans from Canada, which is also very cool. Auto Club is also up there, so I’m excited to be coming back to Epping,” said John Force.

During the inaugural Auto-Plus NHRA New England Nationals, and for the fourth time in John’s illustrious career, he squared off with one his daughters in the final round. This time, it was Courtney Force, and neither driver showed the other any mercy as their 8,000 horsepower Team Castrol Mustang Funny Cars flew down New England Dragway side-by-side. When the clutch dust and nitro fumes cleared, it was the 2012 NHRA Rookie of the Year who crossed the finish line first just ahead of her dad.

“Last year, we came off a win at Bristol on Father’s Day weekend and went into Epping thinking I could get another win but Courtney beat me in the final. I had beat her earlier at Bristol, so I guess it was revenge for my little girl,” said John Force

As the 2014 season reaches the halfway mark, the reigning NHRA Mello Yello Funny Car champ knows he needs to start going rounds and winning races if he’s going to a 17th Mello Yello World Championship. They also know they can’t continue going down the path of first round defeats if they are going to stay in the hunt for the NHRA Mello Yello Countdown to the Championship.

Legendary racer John Force is on the case, and hopefully this weekend’s second annual NHRA New England Nationals will be race where he turns it around.

“We have all the horsepower in the world, and I have a great team. We’ve put aside our first round defeat at Bristol last week and have moved on and addressed the problems, so we’ll turn it around at Epping,” said John Force.

The 16-time NHRA Funny Car Champ is working even harder in chasing another world title, and shows no signs of slowing down. However, the competition has been tough and when you combine this with the mechanical gremlins the Castrol GTX High Mileage team has been chasing for part of this season, it’s easy to see that it has been a challenging first half of the 2014 NHRA Mello Yello season for John Force.

“We’ve been struggling with our hot rod, but I’ve got Jimmy Prock (crew chief), Danny DeGennaro (assistant crew chief) and the rest of the guys sorting it out. We need to keep our sponsors like Castrol, Auto Club, Traxxas, Ford, Mac Tools, Peak and BrandSource happy, and that’s what we’ll do,” said John Force.

John Force is still in second place with 640 Mello Yello Championship points. He trails his teammate, son-in-law and current leader, Robert Hight, by 265 points. More important, John Force knows the gap between him and the rest of field behind is tightening up, so he knows it’s imperative that he goes rounds at this weekend’s NHRA New England Nationals.

With his win at this year’s NHRA Winternationals, and final-round appearances at the NHRA Gatornationals in Gainesville, Florida and the NHRA Four-Wide Nationals in Charlotte, we’re confident we’ll be rooting Mr. Force on to victory this weekend.

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Summit Racing–Anderson puts Bristol red light behind him to focus on game plan for days ahead

Anderson puts Bristol red light behind him to focus on game plan for days ahead
 
BRISTOL, Tenn. (June 15, 2014) – On raceday at Bristol Dragway’s 14th annual NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals, Greg Anderson did something he typically does not do; he saw the red-light as he left the starting line in the second round. The mishap, however, is one that Anderson will have no trouble putting behind him as he shifts focus to working out the details to a brighter future for the Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro.
 
Anderson qualified in the No. 11 position in Bristol after four runs of working to learn the characteristics of the racetrack that was a bit of a handful at times as the hot and greasy racing surface set forth a challenge for tuners and drivers.
 
In the first round of eliminations, Anderson powered his Summit Racing Camaro off the starting line way ahead of opponent Rodger Brogdon, clocking a .034-second reaction time to a .095. The advantage allowed him to race ahead for a holeshot win, 6.712 to 6.702, and the victory came with a ticket to the quarterfinals and a meeting with Erica Enders-Stevens. When Anderson left the starting line in their meeting, the red-light tripped in his lane, officially recording a .005-second foul. Enders-Stevens got the automatic win and posted a 6.697 to 6.732.
 
The foul-out was by no means a regular occurrence for Anderson, whose most recent red light was in 2013 at the Sonoma race in California.
 
“I’m still surprised by it,” admitted Anderson. “I don’t know what happened there. I swear I saw the light, I don’t know if I just got staged a little bit deeper than usual or what happened, but the clock says it was a red light, so that’s what it was.”
 
Anderson remains No. 13 in NHRA’s Mello Yello Series Pro Stock points. He is only five rounds outside of the top 10, and later this week the tour will venture to Epping, N.H., for the NHRA New England Nationals, allowing Anderson the opportunity to get right back to work on gaining points.
 
Although there were struggles for the team in Bristol, Anderson turned his focus toward the positive elements experienced throughout the weekend.
 
“We were disappointed with what happened on the racetrack because we really wanted more for the team and our Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro, but there were also a lot of really great moments for us out here,” said Anderson. “We’re here to race and we’re here to win, but this weekend we had our team owner, Ken Black, here and being that it’s Father’s Day and he is like a second father to all of us, that was very cool. Pretty much everyone on the team had their families here, so it made for a very special weekend.
 
“I wish we could have had a better day on the track, but we are going to make a game plan for the next couple of days before Epping. We need to find the performance with our car that we know should be there, so that’s what we’ll do.”
 

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