Chevy Racing–Tuesday Teleconference–Kasey Kahne

 
KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 FARMERS INSURANCE CHEVROLET SS, WAS THE GUEST ON THIS WEEK’S NASCAR WEEKLY TELECONFERENCE.
 
BELOW IS THE TRANSCRIPT:
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  Good afternoon, everyone.  Welcome to today’s NASCAR teleconference with Kasey Kahne.  Kasey has two wins and eight top‑five finishes this season and has scored four consecutive top‑10 finishes at Kansas. With two of your best tracks coming up at Kansas and Charlotte, is this a time when you think you can make a comeback in the championship hunt?
 
 
KASEY KAHNE:  I think it’s a stretch where we can run well.  They’re a couple tracks that we’ve been able to run up front at every time we go to them. Looking forward to that.  Just trying to get back on track, finishing up the season strong.
 
 
I feel like the leaders in the points, they’re kind of in their own race.  We’ll just do what we can to finish off our year, and hopefully we can get a win or two at some of our best racetracks.
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll now go to the media for questions for Kasey Kahne.
 
 
Q.  With this new tire at Kansas, what is your prediction on how it’s going to perform on a newer racing surface?
 
 
KASEY KAHNE:  I guess that’s why we’re going Thursday for some laps, try to see how it performs, how it holds up.  It will be interesting.  I thought it worked fine at Atlanta.  Hopefully here it will work good, too.
 
 
That tire we were on at the start of the year was just really hard and didn’t wear out a lot.  There were a lot of two‑tire stops you would do.  I would imagine this would be similar just with the fresh surface, a lot of load in the tires.  You know the right side is going to be really hard.
 
 
I would think it would be pretty close to what we raced.  Hopefully it wears out more.  We’ll have to slow down on runs, like what they’re trying to shoot for.  I don’t know if it will or not.  I would think it will be real similar to what we had.
 

Q.  Do you think we will start to see lap times begin to fall off this weekend or has it just not reached that stage yet when you were last on it in April?

 
KASEY KAHNE:  Kansas City is a pretty tough area, part of the country.  The weather is cold and hot, things like that.  A lot of heat and real cold.  If not this one, it will definitely be the next one, I would think.
 
 
The temperatures are going to be really cool on Sunday, so there probably won’t be quite as much falloff.  You’ll still have a lot of heat in the tires, you’ll start slowing down some.  If you have a good handle on the car, you’ll be able to drive by the other guys.  The track is really wide.  I think Kansas is a great racetrack.  Hopefully this weekend we’ll put on a great show.
 
 
Hopefully it will clear out with the sun and we’ll be able to move around quite a bit.
 

Q.  What did you feel like your demeanor was or what was the feeling of the team going into Dover last week knowing you were so far behind in the Chase compared to the week earlier at New Hampshire?

KASEY KAHNE:  It’s a bit different.  I think once you realize your chances at a Sprint Cup are over with, it changes the feeling a little bit. But, you know, the guys stepped up and they did a good job.  We had a good car.  Just a little problem throughout the race, so it didn’t go our way for a better result.
 
 
Still, to finish where we did with what we battled, it was a pretty respectable day.  It will keep getting better.  We have a strong team.  We’ve been one of the best cars at times throughout the whole season.  Hopefully we can hit on it again these last seven races and at least finish strong and get back in the top 10.  I think at this point in time that would be a successful year for where we’re at right now.
 

Q.  I assume there’s no good way to fall out of Chase contention.  Do you view what happened at New Hampshire, at least you kind of did it to yourself rather than being circumstance, is there any sort of different feeling when it’s kind of self‑inflicted?

KASEY KAHNE:  I mean, there’s probably a different feeling.  But I think the way I look at it is, you know, I’m the one that made the mistake.  I feel bad for the guys on that front.
 
 
We work together all season long.  Things happen, whether it’s to the car, driver error, a pit stop error.  I mean, all those things happen.  As long as you’re always together as a team during any of those things, you just recover and you move on.
 
 
When it’s not your season, it’s not your season.  But I definitely take full responsibility and felt bad after screwing up and spinning there,taking us out of the Chase, yeah.
 

Q.  Kasey, you certainly had your share of ups and downs this season.  As far as those circumstances, it’s obviously a part of a racecar driver’s life, because you can’t win every time.  Once you go through a big disappointment, does it make it easier on you after you recover from that to go forward?

 
KASEY KAHNE:  I don’t think so.  I think one of my biggest disappointments this year was the Darlington incident.  I felt like going into the season I had a few goals, and one of them was to win Bristol, one was to win Darlington, one was to make the Chase.  We got Bristol, and I had Darlington, but Kyle got me. That was disappointing, set you back.  We recovered from that and moved on.  Then something else happens, you recover and move on.  I spun at New Hampshire.  Recover and move on.
 
 
I think they’re all about the same.  I don’t know, you just want to run better.  It’s been a tough season all year really.  As soon as you start feeling good, something happens.
 

Q.  Although it’s not very likely, come Talladega, there is a potential that the top three guys could be in one crash.  Does that change your strategy at all or you just go race after race?

 
KASEY KAHNE:  Yeah, race after race.  There’s a possibility I’ll hit something there, too.
 

Q.  Obviously you’ve raced in different series, different points systems.  When you look at the Chase, Dale Jr. is eliminated, Logano is eliminated, you’re eliminated, is it time to look at something different with the points?  Is there anything that can be done?  If you’re trying to help people who have mistakes early in the Chase, is that monkeying around too much with the points system, and essentially the Chase should be about the strongest survive?

 
KASEY KAHNE:  Yeah, I like the fact that 12 and sometimes 13 drivers get to start the Chase and have a chance to win a championship with 10 races to go after a lot of things can go on.  We had a lot of ups and downs, but we had a lot of really strong races, so we made the Chase.  Then we have a chance to win the Sprint Cup.  I like that side of it.  I like how NASCAR has done that.  I hope they keep that around.  It just opens up for the final 10 races.
 
 
Once you get in those final 10, if you keep having an up‑and‑down year, you’re not going to win a championship.  If you can pull it together, you can have a shot.
 

Q.  There shouldn’t be a way to rescue teams that have problems early in the Chase?

 
KASEY KAHNE:  No.  At that point you’re just controlling it way too much.  At some point consistency and winning races and running up front week after week, at some point that has to come into play.  You get y
our Sprint Cup champion from that.  You can’t (indiscernible) things four times in 10 races and still have a chance to win a Sprint Cup.
 

Q.  Kasey, can you talk about your upcoming 5 Kahne 5K race.

 
KASEY KAHNE:  Sunday morning, October 13th, at 10 a.m., right after the Charlotte race, two weeks from now, we’re looking forward to having our fourth 5K, starting at the Hall of Fame, ending at the Hall of Fame, running 3.1 miles.  It’s been growing each year.  It’s been cool to watch it grow, watch the people come out and really enjoy themselves, get a good run in in the morning, hang out.  We have Great Clips there cutting hair.  There’s different prizes.  There’s a kids’ race after the 5K is over.  It’s a cool day.  I enjoy it.  I hope a lot of people come out and enjoy it again.  You can go to www.KaseyKahneFoundation.org and sign up. Sunday morning after Charlotte weekend, October 13th, it’s going to be a good time.
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  Thanks, Kasey.  That’s all the questions we have today.  Best of luck this weekend at Kansas.
 
 
KASEY KAHNE:  Thanks.
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  Thank you to the media for joining us, as well.

Chevy Racing–CORVETTE RACING AT VIR: GT Championships in Sight

CORVETTE RACING AT VIR: GT Championships in Sight
ALMS manufacturer, team titles within reach in next-to-last round
 
DETROIT (Oct. 1, 2013) – Twelve months ago, Corvette Racing and Chevrolet celebrated a championship weekend at Virginia International Raceway (VIR). Now let’s fast-forward to the present day – Chevrolet and Corvette Racing are on the verge of securing a repeat championship titles in the American Le Mans Series… once again at VIR.
 
The Oak Tree Grand Prix on Saturday, Oct. 5 could see the ALMS GT team and manufacturer championships wrapped up. The two yellow Compuware Chevrolet Corvette C6.Rs have five victories between them: three for the No. 3 of Antonio Garcia and Jan Magnussen – Laguna Seca, Baltimore and Circuit of The Americas – and two for Oliver Gavin and Tommy Milner in the No. 4 Corvette – Sebring and Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.
 
All Corvette Racing needs to win its 10th ALMS team championship is for either of the two cars to finish sixth or better in class at VIR. A victory for either Corvette would secure Chevrolet’s 10th manufacturer title with one race left in the season. That’s what happened in 2012 – Gavin and Milner’s triumph landed them the drivers’ championship, Chevrolet clinched the manufacturers’ crown and Corvette Racing wrapped up the team title.
 
In the drivers’ standings, Garcia and Magnussen are in the midst of a remarkable run of three wins and two podium finishes in the last six races. That streak places them in the lead of the championship despite coming away from the season’s first race at Sebring with no points.
 
Saturday’s race is set for 2:15 p.m. ET with live coverage on ESPN3 beginning at 2 p.m. ESPN2’s coverage airs at 5:30 p.m. ET on Sunday.
 
VIR, which opened in 1957, has been a happy hunting ground for Corvette’s stable of four drivers. In addition to his GT victory last year with Gavin, Milner also won in GRAND-AM competition in 2005. The Virginia native made his professional debut in GT racing a year earlier and claimed pole position.
 
Magnussen also is a past winner at VIR in Rolex Series competition having taken a Daytona Prototype victory in 2007. This will mark Garcia’s fourth straight year competing at the venue, and he posted the fastest GT lap of the race in 2012. He and Magnussen placed eighth in class last season.
 

Honda Racing–Honda, AcuraRacers Claim Five Titles At SCCA National Championship Runoffs

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. (Sept. 30, 2013) – Honda and Acura racers won five Sports Car Club of America national titles, including a second consecutive Formula title and the closest finish in SCCA transponder-era history, in the SCCA National Championship Runoffs at Road America.

A total of 61 Honda and Acura racers, the largest participation in recent history, traveled to the classic Road America road course in Wisconsin September 16-22 for this year’s celebratory 50thAnniversary Runoffs, taking part in 11 of the 28 classes.

Twelve Formula F drivers, exactly half of the 24-car starting field, used the HPD L15A7 engine at this year’s Runoffs, a record for the manufacturer in this open-wheel, training-ground category.  Tim Kautz, who made history in 2012 as the first Honda-powered Formula F National Champion, successfully defended his title after a race-long battle with Reid Hazelton. 

“It was a great race, the whole race,” Kautz said. “We [Kautz and Hazelton] were battling a little harder than we should have at the start. Then, I could see Reid decide ‘Hey, there’s too many people coming out to play, let’s pull away a little.’ So, we worked together, and the last couple of laps the gloves came off. I think the last lap I went from first to second to first to second to first. So that’s a fun race, a real fun race.”

Behind the lead pair, Jeffrey Bartz finished third in his Honda-powered Van Diemen, with former national champion Scott Rubenzer fourth in his Spectrum-Honda and Cliff Johnson fifth in another Piper-Honda. 

In Touring 3, Chad Gilsinger took his Acura TL SH-AWD to victory, despite final lap drama that saw his relatively comfortable lead of more than eight seconds nearly wiped out when he encountered a slower car – and yellow flags for a separate incident at Turn 12 – less than a mile from the finish. 

“I was basically in cruise mode at that point, but came up on a lapped car.  He was going overly slow and was pointing me by,” Gilsinger recounted.  “But as I got alongside him, I noticed a yellow flag [for the incident at Turn 12].  I didn’t want [a penalty for passing under yellow] to screw up the win, so I almost stopped to let him back by, until we could get past the incident and I could [legally] pass him.  It was almost a bad situation, but luckily it turned out okay.” 

Gilsinger’s victory was his second Touring 3 national championship.  He also won the category in 2010, driving a Honda S2000.

In the production categories, Acura Integra drivers finished first and third in F Production after an exciting race-long battle that also included the Mazda Miata of Eric Prill.  Mark Carpenter took his 2nd Runoffs championship in the class, with Kevin Ruck finishing third in his Integra.

Officially, Carpenter led all 13 laps around the four-mile Road America circuit in his first Runoffs appearance since winning in 2009, but Prill pulled along side several times, and Ruck was never far behind. 

“Our decision to go racing didn’t happen until June of this year,” Carpenter said. “It’s a little different feeling this time around. In such a short period of time, my guys did a great job getting the car together, even on the trailer, to get it out of the garage. I was tripping over it in my garage for two years. Even though I’ve been out of the driver’s seat, I’ve still been at the track,working in pro racing [as an engineer] for the last couple of years. I’ve learned a lot of things that have helped my driving. There’s a lot I’ve picked up on. It’s different this time around, but it feels just as sweet as 2009, for sure.”

The fourth Honda championship of the weekend came in H Production, where Lawrence Loshak won his fourth title – and second with Honda after winning E Production in 2006.  Loshak startedfrom the pole and was ahead of a multi-car, first-lap crash that briefly stopped the race. 

On the restart, a missed shift dropped Losak’s Honda CRX down to fourth.  But by mid-race, Loshak reclaimed a lead he would maintain to the finish.  Jay Griffin finished third in his CRX to add to Honda’s podium total for the weekend, with 2011 champion Greg Gauper taking fourth in his Honda Civic.

“You know, sometimes when you get a run, you gotta go,” Loshak said of his recovery to retake the lead. “You follow them around, kind of get a judge of character of who you’re racing with, and these guys have been awesome. You gotta do it, especially at the National Championships. It worked out.”

The weekend closed out with one of the most exciting races of the weekend and, with a seven-thousandths-of-a-second margin of victory, the closest Runoffs finish since the SCCA began using transponders, as Chris Bovis took his Honda CRX Si to victory lane for the second time in his career in GT Lite. 

Bovis, who previously won GT Lite in 2007, started this year’s race from fifth on the grid, and spent the first nine laps battling multi-time champion Kent Prather for second place.  With three laps remaining in the 13-lap contest, Bovis finally had Prather in is rear-view mirror, and set fastest race lap as he chased down the Nissan of race leader Bobby Lentz.

On Lap 12, the pair was running nose-to-tail, and sometimes side-by-side, as they fought for the lead.  Coming out of Turn 12, they again ran side-by-side, rubbing fenders, through the fast right-hand Turn 13.  Lentz nosed ahead after the contact, but Bovis “squared-up” the final Turn 14 and pulled alongside Lentz as they exited the left-hander, setting up a drag race to the finish where Bovis prevailed, literally, by inches. 

“The difference between Bobby’s laps and mine was just a matter of a few feet here and there. I was trying to figure out where I was quicker. I was just marginally quicker,” Bovis said. “The best turn I had was [Turn] 13, which is a terrible place to do anything. I’d love to tell you I had a plan, but I consciously thought going into [Turn] 3, this is just going to happen somewhere. Road America is a very important place for me. I grew up here. I’ve seen a lot of drivers run here. I just know sometimes here, if somebody is diving really hard into the corner, you can square the corner up, cut back, and just lengthen the straightaway up, and sometimes it works. That’s honestly the only option I had. It was the [last turn of the] last lap.”

Honda Performance Development [HPD], through the Honda Racing Line, offered contingency awards of up to $2,500, along with additional support to help offset travel costs for the racers.  HPD also hosted catered, trackside hospitality exclusively for Honda/Acura competitors and their team members, providing buffet lunches September 17-21 and a Friday night ice cream social in celebration of the Runoff’s 50th Anniversary.

Founded in 1993, Honda Performance Development (HPD) is the technical operations center for high-performance Honda racing cars and engines, and operates at race circuits around the world from its headquarters in Santa Clarita, California.HPD offers a line of race engines for track applications from prototype sports cars to karting; and showcases “fun” products for professional, amateur and entry-level efforts.

Launched in 2009, the Honda Racing Line is a program targeted at licensed participants in sanctioned amateur and entry-level professional racing.  The Honda Racing Line was formed to provide its members with a direct connection to Honda Performance Development and its unparalleled record of success at the highest levels of motorsport. 

Richard Childress Racing–AAA 400

AAA 400
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Dover International Speedway    
September 29, 2013
 
Race Highlights: 
Richard Childress Racing teammates finished sixth (Kevin Harvick), 14th (Jeff Burton), and 18th (Paul Menard) in the AAA 400.
Following the event at Dover International Speedway, Harvick is fourth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings, 39 markers behind the leader, while Menard is 17th and Burton sits 20th.
The No. 29 Chevrolet SS team ranks fourth in the Sprint Cup Series owner championship point standings, with the No. 27 team 18th and the No. 31 team 21st.
According to NASCAR’s Post-Race Loop Data Statistics, Harvick completed 53 Green-Flag Passes, 39 of which came while running in the top 15 (Quality Passes), positioning him second and third in the loop data categories.
Harvick was the seventh-Fastest Driver Late in a Run, eighth in the Closers category after gaining two positions during the final 10 percent (40 laps) of the race, had the eighth-fastest Speed in Traffic, spent 95.5 percent of the laps in the Top 15, ranking him ninth, and was the 10th-Fastest Driver Early in a Run.
Burton gained one position during the final 10 percent (40 laps) of the race, placing him the 10th in the Closers category and was the 10th-Fastest Driver Late in a Run.
Menard completed 37 Green-Flag Passes during the 400-lap event.
RCR teammates Burton, Harvick and Menard posted nine of the Fastest Laps Run with four, three and two laps, respectively.
Jimmie Johnson earned his fifth victory of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season and was followed to the finish line by Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Joey Logano, Jeff Gordon and Kyle Busch.
The next Sprint Cup Series race is the Kansas 400 at Kansas Speedway on Sunday, Oct. 6. The 30th race of the 2013 season is scheduled to be televised live on ESPN beginning at 1 p.m. Eastern Time and broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Satellite Radio, channel 90.
 
   
Menard Finishes 18th at Dover International Speedway
 
 Paul Menard started the 400-mile event at Dover International Speedway from the 21st position and struggled with handling issues throughout the day to finish 18th on Sunday afternoon. A long green-flag run in the early laps of the race, coupled with a loose-handling condition, caused Menard to fall a lap down to the leader at lap 130. The No. 27 pit crew made a variety of chassis adjustments during the ensuing pit stops in hopes of providing some relief to the Eau Claire Wis., native. After a lap-231 pit stop for four tires, fuel and multiple chassis adjustments, Menard was running in 18th and relayed to the No. 27 crew that the car was the best that it had been all day and the loose-handling condition was tightening up. Continued long green-flag runs and persistent handling issues contributed to Menard falling two laps down to the leader toward the latter portion of the race. The Richard Childress Racing driver and team never gave up and Menard was running lap times comparative to the leader, but the caution flags never fell in his favor. Unable to gain any laps back, Menard ultimately finished the 400-lap event in the 18th position and sits in 17th in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings heading into Kansas Speedway.
 
Start – 21         Finish – 18          Laps Led – 0          Points – 17
th 
 
 
PAUL MENARD QUOTE:
“It was a tough day for the No. 27 CertainTeed/Menards crew. We struggled with handling all weekend at Dover (International Speedway), and never seemed to hit on the right setup until the end of the race. The crew worked hard making adjustments all day to try and get the car to handle better. Track position is everything at Dover. Once you fall a lap down to the leader it’s hard to gain any ground, especially with the long green-flag runs we had today.”
 
 

Harvick Finishes Sixth at the Monster Mile
 
Kevin Harvick and the No. 29 Budweiser team finished sixth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Dover International Speedway on Sunday afternoon after battling handling issues throughout the race. The California native started the 400-lap event from the 12th position and maintained a spot in the top 15 while battling a simultaneously tight and loose-handling red and white machine during the early laps. The Gil Martin-led pit crew made adjustments to the Budweiser Chevrolet during scheduled four-tire pit stops throughout the first half of the race, but Harvick continued to battle an ill-handling machine. As the race progressed, the pit crew continued to work to improve the handling of the Richard Childress Racing entry, allowing the 21-time Sprint Cup Series race winner to gain valuable track position, crossing the finish line sixth and picking up his 15th top-10 finish of the 2013 race season. Following the 400-mile event, Harvick gained two positions and now sits fourth in the Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings.
 
Start – 12         Finish – 6         Laps Led – 0         Points – 4th
                      
KEVIN HARVICK QUOTE:
“This was a tough one for us. We struggled most of the weekend to find the right balance on the Budweiser Chevrolet and battled handling issues during the race. The team did a great job bouncing back today and it resulted in the solid finish we needed.”
 
 
 

Burton Finishes 14th at Dover International Speedway
 
Jeff Burton and the No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet team battled back to a top-15 finish of 14th at Dover International Speedway on Sunday afternoon. Starting the 400-lap event from the 25th position, the 21-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race winner battled a tight-handling condition on his black and yellow machine early, entering the top 20 just before lap 100. On two occasions, the Richard Childress Racing driver was trapped one lap down to the leader during long green-flag runs, receiving the “Lucky Dog” free pass award both times when the caution flag was displayed to get back onto the lead lap. Restarting with a top-20 position on lap 236, Burton struggled throughout another long green-flag run and once again dropped one lap down to the leader. The Caterpillar team didn’t give up over the course of the race, making several air pressure and chassis adjustments to remedy the tight-handling condition and Burton cracked the top 15 with less than 100 laps remaining. The South Boston, Va., native maintained that top-15 running position for the remainder of the event and brought home a 14th-place finish. Burton remains 20th in the Sprint Cup Series driver championship point standings.
 
Start – 25                      Finish – 14                   Laps Led – 0                 Points – 20th
 
JEFF BURTON QUOTE:
“Everyone on this Caterpillar Chevrolet team put in a solid effort all weekend. We weren’t where we needed to be on the speed chart, but we never gave up throughout the race and ended up with a top-15 finish. When things are tough, you find out what people are made of. I am proud of these No. 31 guys.”
 

Summit Racing–Anderson Goes to Semis, Moves up Two Positions in St. Louis

Anderson Goes to Semis, Moves up Two Positions in St. Louis
 
Madison, Illinois, September 29, 2013 – Summit Racing Pro Stock driver Greg Anderson used tremendous driving skills to make important moves on Sunday at Gateway Motorsports Park’s second annual AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals. Anderson, who entered the event ninth in the series standings, vaulted up two spots to seventh at the St. Louis area facility and put the points leader on the trailer en route to a semifinals finish.
 
“I had a good run going today,” said Anderson, who easily halted a traction-troubled Vincent Nobile in the first round with a powerful 6.537 at 211.16 mph before recording a psychic .005-second reaction time at the starting line in his streaking white Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro to defeat Jeg Coughlin with a stunning holeshot in the second round.
 
“It was almost a great day, but unfortunately I came up .007-second short in the semifinals. Luck was on my side much of the day, but we just couldn’t quite get it done. That win over the yellow car really was great, though; that helped my Summit Racing teammate Jason Line tremendously points-wise.”
 
Following a win in Dallas last week, Line was in sole possession of the points lead. An early exit in St. Louis, however, allowed Coughlin to briefly move into the top spot. Anderson’s impressive lashing just one round later helped prevent the competitor from leaving St. Louis as the No. 1 driver in the standings.
 
In the semifinals, Anderson had the opportunity to further aid his teammate’s cause. As he was in each round of eliminations, Anderson was out of the gate first – this time with a remarkable .011-second reaction time to Mike Edwards’ .035 – and recorded a 6.560 in the less-desirable lane. Edwards’ 6.529 got the nod by the slim margin.
 
“I’m disappointed I wasn’t able to win that one, but we almost had it,” said Anderson. “The bottom line is that it is very, very tough out here, and we need to keep digging and fighting the good fight to win as a team. I’m not completely out of the running for the championship, but we’ll see what happens. Jason is No. 3 in the points right now with his Summit Racing Camaro, and he has a very real shot at securing a championship for KB Racing. This class is tough. You just have to continue to strive for perfection, and that is exactly what we will do.”
 

Chevy Racing–Dover–Post Race 2

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
AAA 400
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST RACE DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPTS
SEPTEMBER 29, 2013
 
 
Jimmie Johnson Becomes All-Time Winner at Dover with Victory in AAA 400
Johnson’s Third Straight Top-Five Finish in Chase Moves Him to Second Overall
 
DOVER, Del. – (September 29, 2013)  – Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s/KOBALT Tools Chevrolet SS, won the 44th Annual AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway today and further etched his name in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) history books.  The win was his eighth at the one-mile speedway, which broke a tie he held with Richard Petty and Bobby Allison at seven.   It was also the five-time champion’s 65th career NSCS victory, fifth win of 2013, and his third consecutive top-five finish in the 2013 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. With the win, Johnson moves up to second place in the standings, just eight points behind the leader after three Chase races.
 
“Two (tires) worked good for us in practice,” said Johnson. “And believe me, I wanted to see four tires line-up in the fourth or fifth row. When they lined up right behind me, I thought I was going to have my hands full. And I really did. Junior drove a whale of a race and track position really gave me the advantage I needed to hold him off. It’s good to get this KOBALT Tools Chevrolet in Victory Lane. I’m very excited.
 
“To do anything that Bobby (Allison) or Richard (Petty) has done, is quite an accomplishment. We’ve had a few sneak away from us here, too, over the years. I’m just so happy to get that done and be the sole leader of race wins here. It’s a very special day.”
 
Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr., posted his sixth top-10 finish in 28 races at Dover.  The driver of the No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet SS moved up one position in the point standings to 10th with his 16th top-10 finish of 2013.    Jeff Gordon had another strong finish in his No. 24 Axalta Chevy SS, bringing home a fourth –place finish to give Chevrolet and Hendrick Motorsports three of four of the top five finishers.   The finish moves Gordon up three positions to fifth in the Chase. 
 
Two other Chevrolet Chase contenders had top-10 finishes as well at Dover.  Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet SS, came home in sixth place, his 15th NSCS top-10 finish of 2013.  Harvick moved up two spots in the standings to fourth.   Ryan Newman started third and led twice for six laps before finishing eighth in his No. 39 State Water Heaters Chevrolet SS for Stewart-Haas Racing.  He also moved up two positions in the standings with his 14th NSCS top-10 finish of the year.
 
Other Chevrolet SS drivers in the Chase championship battle finished as follows:  Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Farmers Insurance Chevrolet SS – 13th (13th in points), Kurt Busch, No. 78 Furniture Row/Denver Mattress Chevrolet SS finished 21st after experiencing a loose wheel early in the race, and fell two spots to ninth in the Chase standings.
 
Joey Logano (Ford) finished third and Kyle Busch (Toyota) was fifth to complete the top-five finishers.
 
The Series moves next to Kansas Speedway, Kansas City, Kansas on Sunday, October 6th, 2013 for Chase Race Number Four.
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS – RACE WINNER
 
CHAD KNAUS, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS – WINNING CREW CHIEF
 
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll continue our post‑race media availability.  We welcome race winner Jimmie Johnson.  This is Jimmie’s 65th victory, fifth victory of 2013, eighth victory at Dover which breaks a record with Richard Petty and Bobby Allison.
 
Talk about the moment, Jimmie.
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  It’s really cool.  I’m not sure I’ve ever done what Richard Petty hasn’t.  To get this eighth win here is very, very special.  Truthfully it was the first thought that went through my mind when I crossed the finish line.  It wasn’t long after I thought of the impact of winning in the Chase, wondering where the 20 was.
 
Big day.  I came so close in the spring to getting this eighth win here and had that slip away, it was nice to get it done today.
 
THE MODERATOR:  Also joining us is crew chief Chad Knaus.  Talk a little bit about being here with Jimmie, this win, only eight points behind Matt now.  Shaping up to be a bit of a battle.
 
CHAD KNAUS:  Yeah, this is obviously a great racetrack for us.  Jimmie has really taken to this place starting back in 2002 when we first came.
 
It’s pretty spectacular every time I hear Jimmie’s name mentioned in the same sentence as guys like Richard Petty, Bobby Allison, Dale Earnhardt, Sr., all the guys that have done so well throughout the history of our sport.  To be able to one‑up those guys right now is pretty spectacular.
 
Very proud to be part of the 48 team.  Had a great racecar.  Wasn’t the easiest weekend for us.  We had to work hard.  Jimmie used a lot of his knowledge and veteran knowledge to get us to where we are today.
 
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll start with questions.
Q.  Chad, this is the first time in seven races that you guys have outscored Kenseth in a race.  I know you have both said, Look, it’s about how you’ve run at times, it’s not about all the finishes.  At the end of the day, what kind of significance is there in the sense that you’ve actually beaten him in a race head‑to‑head for the first time in over a month?
CHAD KNAUS:  What are you talking about again?  Just kidding (smiling).
 
No, it’s good.  The fact of the matter is this:  I feel like in Chicago if we hadn’t had a botched‑up little pit stop there at the first part of the race ‑ some of our doing, a little of assistance ‑ I feel like we could have won the race in Chicago, which we’re hoping to do at some point before I retire.
 
I feel like last week in Loudon if we could have ever gotten control of the event, which we had great opportunity.  Got jumbled up on some restarts, couldn’t get to where we needed to, we could have beaten him there.
I feel we had cars capable of winning the first two races, like the 20 and 18.  Coming into this event we felt we had a good racecar.  Brought the same racecar we had in the spring.  We obviously ran really well in the spring.
 
Being able to come in here, qualify respectably, go out and lead the most laps, win this race, speaks volumes about this team.
 
What we’re doing right now is we are just trying to establish a foundation and set ourselves up for the second half of the Chase.  As long as we do that, we’re going to be where we need to be.
Q.  Chad, when you realized behind you was somebody on four tires, I assume you were thinking there was going to be a bigger buffer, did you feel like you had enough laps that they wouldn’t factor in?  Did you think, We’re screwed?
CHAD KNAUS:  Second part (laughter).
 
No, here is the situation.  If you look back over the history of this race, we even saw at the beginning of the event today, the 18 car was able to go out there on two tires, establish a lead on two tires versus the guys on four, took 27 laps for somebody to catch the 18 car and pass them.  We felt like with 20 something laps to go in this race, we would probably be okay if we could make it happen.
 
Now, fortunately enough for the 88, they were able to get broken free of the guys who were on two tires pretty quickly.  But we did a lot of due diligence yesterday trying to understand where our car was, what we needed to do with the KOBALT Chevrolet to make it fast for Jimmie if we did get ourselves in a position where we needed to do two tire
s.  We understood what we needed to do.  We made those changes.  Jimmie told me after the race, he felt like that was the best the car was on the short run.
 
We ran our fastest laps right there at the end of the race, on two tires.  We ran some twenty‑three fifties which was really fast.  We worked hard and tried to understand what we needed to do for strategy, and fortunately it paid off for us.
 Q.  Are you surprised more people didn’t go with that?
CHAD KNAUS:  I was surprised.  I thought more people would have taken two tires towards the end of the race.  We saw guys early in the race take two tires, get track position, maintain that without having clean air.  So I expected a little bit more of a buffer.
 
I’ll be honest, when Stevie and those guys took four tires, I felt like, Damn, that was a missed opportunity, we should have taken four.  But it definitely paid off for us.
Q.  Jimmie, a similar question, but if you could talk about what was going through your mind knowing that Junior had the four tires, said this is one of the best cars he’s had all season.
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, he was fast.  I’m not sure how much pit road early in the race, that couldn’t have helped their overall cause.  He worked his way back around, up into the mix of things there.
 
What I saw of his car on four tires earlier in the race, he was pretty quick.  That was really our weakest point, was the first five to ten laps, then our car would come in and was incredibly fast at that point.
 
I didn’t want to lose control at the end of the race with 20 some to go and all that.  So the pressure was on.
 
I ran my guts out to stay ahead of him.  Any switch I could flip in the car that was a fan that might help the car turn my brake bias, everything and anything I could twist, turn, pull, push, I did, then just drove the shit out of that thing.  Was able to keep him at bay for 10, 12 laps.  At that point I was able to stretch a little bit and get back to running a smart race.
 
That opening 10, 12 laps was a pressure‑packed situation.
Q.  Not only is Jimmie the all‑time winner here, he’s the all‑time winner at seven tracks.  Can you talk about what that speaks to?
CHAD KNAUS:  The man’s got a lot of skills. It’s been an honor to be able to work with Jimmie over the course of the years.  I think he’s able to pull out some things that are pretty spectacular.  He’s able to dig deeper, pull out his cape, make things happen in winning moments of these races that other people cannot do.  It’s pretty spectacular.
 
I’ve seen a lot of great drivers, worked with a lot of great drivers.  Knowing what we’ve got sitting behind the seat is always a little bit of confidence, knowing if you get close, if you make the right call at the right time, he’s going to be able to carry the ball.
 
Once again, I think Jimmie is probably the most underrated champion we have in this industry.  He is by far and above the most powerful driver over the course of the last 25, 35 years in this sport.  It’s pretty fun being able to work with him.
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Thanks, man (laughter).
Q.  Jimmie, for a while you, Kyle and Matt were top three.  For most of the race y’all were somewhere in the top five.  Either part of that motivational, give you more drive to do better?  Was any part of that a cool factor?
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I was thinking about it when I was in the car.  My whole thought process was just how tough this championship’s going to be.  They’re bringing their best and doing their best.  You’ve got to deliver.  That was my mindset when I was racing with both of those guys for three‑quarters of the race.
 
It didn’t surprise me.  It just confirmed what I think we’ve all been kind of feeling and thinking about, is that those guys, they’re both in a great position, and in it for the long haul.
 
For myself, from a mental standpoint, that’s the area where I thrive, when we get into long runs, a tough, demanding track.  It’s not easy to get around this place.  A long, tough championship.  I really feel like I operate better.  The more painful it is, the harder it is, that’s where I seem to do my best work.
 
I don’t like it.  I don’t enjoy that experience.  But I’ve always done a better job and have surprised myself through those moments.  It was like that in this race today.  I think it’s going to be more so of that into the coming races to the checkered flag in Homestead.
Q.  In that light, how important was it for you to win on a day it appeared you had a little better car than both of them?
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, I mean you’ve got to win when you’re at your best track.  That being said, we had to win here today.  I think any points on the 18 or the 20 would have been a very good day.  Max points, it’s an awesome day.
 
Again, it’s just relative.  It’s a little early to play that game too much right now.  There’s a point in the season where you just worry about who’s leading, who’s behind you if you’re the leader, beating them.  So that mindset would have been there if we ran second to Junior today.  Still would have been happy to outrun the 20 or the 18.  We need to win at our best tracks, and we did that.
Q.  About the mistake Junior had on pit road, he said that might have been the difference of him having the clean air and being up front at the end.  Do you think that was really significant?  Did you feel also you pissed off a lot of people today by beating Junior?
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  It doesn’t matter, I piss them off regardless.  Just me breathing pisses some of them off (laughter).
 
It certainly affected his day.  To lose track position like that, without a doubt it affected his day.  I’m not sure at the end with strategy how things would have played out.  I think he was second behind us on that run.
 
It’s hard to say if it really would have made a difference, but it didn’t help him, help his cause at all.
Q.  The fact that you guys share a shop with the 88, Junior says these were the best his cars have ever been.  Do you feel the same way, your cars are right at the top right now?
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Bristol, no.  Richmond, no.  Dover, yes.
 
It’s funny, because each track has its own demands.  I feel like here, the way we performed at Martinsville earlier in the year, we’ve been able to refine and hone in on specific tracks.  The bigger, faster tracks, I feel really good about our equipment.
 
The way we ran in New Hampshire, as Chad pointed out, we had an awesome pit stop, came off pit road in third, the 9 and the 15 stayed out, put us in a position of having control of the front row.
 
I think we could have won is what I’m getting at.  If we even lined up fourth, had a bad stop, I think we would have gotten through those guys and had a chance to win.
 
The short tracks, Loudon, Phoenix, have been a concern for us.  The way we ran in Loudon, we honestly feel we had a shot to win there.  That will carry over to Phoenix.  We have a good lineup of races ahead.
Q.  Jimmie, I don’t know if this makes up for what happened in the spring, but does it make it feel a little bit better just to come back to the same place where you were so disappointed and pissed?
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  It doesn’t change that too much.  It’s nice to win, not have something like that take it away.  I’m just happy there’s been a rule change to the restarts.  It was a long time coming and needed to happen.
 
That situation can’t happen again.  I’m happy about that.
 
But it still stings.  I can remember the major
ity of the races we should have won.  I think drivers are like that.  You just hate little stupid things that keep you from getting to Victory Lane.
Q.  You both have competed against Matt in previous Chases.  This is the first time you’ve competed against him with him at Gibbs.  Can you talk about what you see, if anything, different about him this season and how that is shaping up in this championship battle.
JIMMIE JOHNSON:  He’s always been incredible at scoring points and getting the most out of his racecar on a given weekend.  It doesn’t let emotions rattle him much.  That part of Matt has always been a consistent thing.
In his previous life at Roush, there were certain tracks you went to, you wouldn’t think about him.  Martinsville would be one.  I would tease and harass him about how he looked on the track.  We were there testing one time, had some good laughs about it all.  I say that, we go there this spring, I think he ran top five or something.
 
The change has been good for him.  Is it equipment?  Is it a personnel thing, working with someone new and different, that relationship?  I don’t know where it lies.  But I think the bottom side, the tracks Matt struggled at, for whatever reason, that has risen, and he’s more competitive on those tracks than he was at the Roush side of life.
 
CHAD KNAUS:  Matt’s good.  He is.  He’s good.  There’s no doubt about it.  I really enjoy racing with Matt.  He’s a good driver.  He’s a clean driver.  He understands where he’s at on the racetrack.  At different points today we were faster than him, he understood.  He really gets it.  He gets it more than most of the drivers out there.  He knows when to get the hell out of the way.  He knows when he has the best car.  He needs to take advantage of that.  He knows what to do.
 
I had a lot of respect for Matt when we finished second in the championship to him a few years ago.  His father and Matt both came up to me and said, Man, we wanted to win, but you definitely were the best.  Matt is a good dude.  I like racing against Matt.
 
I think going to Gibbs has given him better equipment.  I think the Roush equipment isn’t as good as what they’ve got at Gibbs.  It’s going to be interesting to see that dynamic between Kyle and Matt further down the road.  If Matt keeps beating Kyle, it will be fun to see.
 
And write something positive, Jim.  Don’t write about how the ratings are down, all that kind of stuff.  Let’s see something positive from Jim this week.
 
THE MODERATOR:  On that note, congratulations on your win today, guys.
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED SECOND
 
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll get started with our post‑race press conference.  We welcome our second‑place finisher Dale Earnhardt, Jr., currently 10th in points.
 
Talk a little bit about the race out there starting from the pole, finishing second.
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:  Yeah, we had an awesome car.  Two weeks in a row we’ve had two fantastic racecars.  We’re proud of Steve and Ken, my engineer, all the guys for bringing such good cars to the racetrack.  It certainly makes my job easier, gives us opportunities to win like this.
 
Trying to look on the bright side.  A little disappointed we didn’t pull off the win.  Felt like we had the perfect strategy.  Had maybe the best car, arguably the best car, today.  With those four tires I thought we could get it done.
 
We left everybody in the mirror.  We were clicking off some laps, but just not fast enough to get to Jimmie.
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll open it up to questions for Dale.
Q.  Can you talk about the two pit stops, the one where you blew past the commitment line, then the last one where you got caught up in traffic?  Are you glad neither of those cost you?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:  Yeah.  If you really look at the race as a whole, they did cost us a little bit, at least the mistake I made missing pit road completely.  We had the lead, gave up the lead.  Jimmie had the lead and was able to take advantage of that clean air when it counted.
 
If I had not given up that track position, had a smart enough race to keep the lead when it counted right at the end, we might have won the race.  It would have been hard to get by us, just like it was to get by Jimmie.
 
I think missing the commitment cone was a big factor in us not finishing one spot ahead of where we are.  But the other pit stop wasn’t that big a deal.  I came on pit road about as hard as I could.  The 14, Mark, was running maybe 5, 10 miles an hour slow in the first couple segments.  I don’t know that cost us a ton of time.
Q.  Dale, do you have any sense for how long it would have taken for your tires to produce more of an advantage?  Did you feel like you were starting to track him down?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:  Yeah, definitely.  I knew for sure over the entire run, if we could run 80 laps, four tires are definitely going to be better than two.  We were guessing around 35, 40 laps the difference would start to show.
 
I felt like as we got the traffic, Jimmie was starting to struggle a little bit in the last couple of laps.  My car actually got better the longer I ran and drove better, did what I needed it to do in the corner as we ran.  It wasn’t quite clicking just yet.  Our car was starting to come around.
 
I think the difference in the tires between our two cars was about to show.  But the race is 400 laps.  That’s the way it is.  They did a good job.  Real proud of the company.  We were going to have a helluva party if we could get to him.
Q.  Dale, Jimmie said you drove a whale of a race.  Second place, when you’re going up against Kenseth, talk about hitting your head against the wall.
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:  Well, I think we won’t do that.  I feel like in the last couple of weeks, we’ve been able to really show what our team’s capable of.  We’ve been really quick on the sheet every day, fast in practice.  The changes we’re making, everything seems to be working right, going in the direction you want.  I feel like when we get it right, we can compete and we can win.
 
We came really close today.  I don’t feel like today was a highlight for us.  I think this is how it’s supposed to be every week.  I know that competition’s difficult and tough, Jimmie being one of the best drivers the sport has ever seen.  Running at one of his better racetracks, it was going to be a challenge.  But I felt like we had enough car and tires for sure to beat him.
Q.  Coming off the last restart, you were with Jimmie for a little bit, then seemed like you moved up on the high side, he got away from you.  Would that not have mattered?  Did you give up more time than you necessarily wanted to at that point?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:  I was just trying some different lines, seeing what might work.  I ran the high line, gave up about four car lengths to him.  Realized I needed to be back on the bottom.  Went back down there and focused again.
 
His car was good.  I mean, I had to run perfect laps to maintain the pace that he had, just to not let the lead get any bigger, just hope that he’d start coming back to me there at the end.  It was just a little bit too late.
Q.  Dale, even though he’s your teammate, does it still kind of suck to lose to Jimmie because he always wins everything?
DALE EARNHARDT, JR.:  I’ll be honest with you, it sucks to lose regardless of who wins (smiling).  It’s probably harder to run second th
an it is fifth or tenth.  When you have a car like we had today, you don’t get good cars every week, you like to capitalize.
 
It doesn’t bother me that it was Jimmie.  I know Jimmie is going to be good here.  Plus he’s my teammate.  I want to see him do well.  When he does well, it indirectly affects us and benefits us.
 
I wasn’t hoping he was going to blow a tire or anything there at the end; I was just trying to catch him.  If I could get to him, I thought I would be able to get by him.  We just couldn’t do it.
 
THE MODERATOR:  Dale, thank you for your time this afternoon.  Congratulations.
 
 

Mopar Racing–Beckman Tops Team Mopar Effort with Runner-Up Finish at St. Louis

Beckman Tops Team Mopar Effort with Runner-Up Finish at St. Louis

Mopar Express Lane Dodge Avenger driver and defending Pro Stock champion Allen Johnson falls in the quarterfinals but remains within striking distance of a repeat title
Madison, Ill. (Sunday, September 29, 2013) – Don Schumacher Racing (DSR) driver “Fast” Jack Beckman muscled his Mopar-powered Dodge Charger R/T NHRA Funny Car to a runner-up showing on Sunday at the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals in suburban St. Louis, advancing to his third final of the year. The defending Funny Car king took a giant step towards recapturing his crown, moving to third in the NHRA Countdown to the Championship Funny Car standings, and also brightened up an otherwise tough outing for the Team Mopar contingent at Gateway Motorsports Park.

The No. 8 seed heading into Sunday, Beckman bested Alexis DeJoria to start eliminations, posting a 4.079-second elapsed time at 312.78 mph to DeJoria’s 4.110/310.70. Next up for Beckman was an all-Mopar second-round showdown with his DSR teammate, pole-sitter and Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar Dodge Charger R/T driver, Matt Hagan, who knocked out No. 16 Daniel Wilkerson in the first round. Beckman triumphed in the HEMI vs. HEMI grudge match, notching a 4.088/308.64 to Hagan’s slower 4.187/304.53.

In a wild semifinals battle against Del Worsham, in which both racers struck the tires, Beckman was able to get back in the gas of his Dodge Charger R/T first, taking out his foe thanks to a 4.546/253.47 run. Beckman lined up against John Force in the final in search of his first win of the season and was first off the line, but Force had a little more at the top end. Beckman’s 4.127/309.84 was solid but short of Force’s winning 4.097/310.13 pass.

“The problem is we keep opening the door wide open for ourselves and then we fail to take full advantage of it,” said Beckman after the final. “We have to win a race if we are going to win the championship. We are probably going to have to win two of the last three races. I guess the upside is we have a car that can do it.”

“Fast” Jack’s Mopar-powered DSR teammate Ron Capps exited in the second round against Force, his 4.108/308.99 mark not enough to overcome Force’s quicker 4.095/312.21 pass. No. 12 qualifier and DSR Dodge Charger R/T racer Johnny Gray came out on the losing end of a first-round match with Worsham, and Jeff Arend, who was unable to drive his Dodge past Robert Hight, also was unable to advance past the opening round.

JEGS.com/Mopar Dodge Avenger pilot and No. 3 qualifier Jeg Coughlin Jr. was dealt a hard-luck second-round defeat at St. Louis. After posting a 6.541/211.39 run to advance in round one against Greg Stanfield, who drew a red-light foul after leaving too early, Coughlin squared off against Greg Anderson in  a fight of past Pro Stock champs. Coughlin recorded a solid .039 reaction time paired with a 6.539/210.57 pass, but Anderson’s near-perfect .005 reaction off the starting line and 6.571/210.47 run provided him the margin for the upset holeshot win. Despite the quicker-than-desired exit, Coughlin is second in the NHRA Countdown to the Championship Pro Stock playoffs standings, just 10 points behind leader Mike Edwards.

The top qualifier for the third time this year in his Mopar Express Lane Dodge Avenger, Allen Johnson knocked off Larry Morgan to open the day on the strength of a 6.527/212.03 pass to Morgan’s 6.566/209.98, recording the second-quickest pass of the session. In a quarterfinals race with Rickie Jones, Johnson came out on the wrong end of an excruciatingly tight contest, coming up short by a one-inch margin, or three ten-thousandths of a second on the timing lights. Johnson reacted first off the line with a .037 time to Jones’ slower .043, but A.J.’s 6.543/211.86 effort wasn’t enough to best the 6.537/211.83 laid down by Jones.

Johnson fell one spot to sixth in the Countdown standings, but in the wide open chase for the Pro Stock title he will leave St. Louis closer to the leader than when he entered. Coming into the event Johnson was 74 points behind first, but is now just 69 points behind new leader Edwards.

 “We’re going to leave here in not much worse condition than how we came in, but the races are dwindling down,” said Johnson, the defending Pro Stock series champion. “The biggest thing is that we have a really good car, a really good engine package. Losing close races is part of racing, but we’ll leave here with a strong the car. The engine program’s really good – we were the quickest car in about 75 percent of the runs here this weekend. We head to Reading very upbeat.”

No. 2 qualifier V. Gaines was also the victim of a holeshot loss, falling in the first-round to fellow Mopar-powered Pro Stocker Matt Hartford, who was unable to get by Edwards in the quarterfinals. Vincent Nobile, a member of the J&J Racing trio that includes Johnson and Coughlin, lost to Anderson in the opening round, and Dodge Avenger driver Deric Kramer met his match in round one versus event winner Erica Enders-Stevens.

John Force Racing–JOHN FORCE WINS AAA INSURANCE MIDWEST NATIONALS

JOHN FORCE WINS AAA INSURANCE MIDWEST NATIONALS

 

ST. LOUIS —- John Force, the winningest driver in NHRA history, continues to add to his expanding legacy. Today at the 2nd annual AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals Force defeated long-time rival Jack Beckman in a final for the ages taking the win light by .013 seconds or six feet to capture his 136th career Funny Car title. This was Force’s sixth final round in the last twelve races and his first win with crew chief Jimmy Prock.

“You have to start with Jimmy Prock but it is the brain trust. Jimmy gave me a good hot rod,” said Force, a three-time winner at Gateway Motorsports Park. “I was losing some races but Robert worked in that cockpit with me to get me comfortable. I have been guilty of getting overloaded and not focusing on my race car. Now I have people like Just Marketing, Octagon, and Rogers & Cowan working for me so I can focus on winning. You have to live this race car every day.”

Force moved into second place in the Mello Yello Funny Car point standings just six points behind points leader Matt Hagan. This is the highest Force and the Castrol GTX team has been in the point standings since Force won his 15th Funny Car championship in 2010.

Earlier this year Force won at Bristol’s Thunder Valley Raceway with Mike Neff as his crew chief but since that win on Father’s Day the 15-time Funny car champion has been shut out of the winner’s circle.

“It has been a little bit of a drought since we won in Bristol earlier this year. Robert said when we made the switch that these guys are great guys and they are unbelievable. He said when Jimmy Prock get hot he will get fast,” said Force. “The whole brain trust has been working together from Mike Neff to Ron Douglas, Dean Antonelli, John Medlen and Dan Hood to get these Funny Car running. We are working as a team and it is really cool.”

“I gave away two trophies for this win. I gave one to Jim McGrath, the president of AAA Missouri and one to Jimmy Prock. I want to thank AAA for their commitment to JFR. We have a long range deal with Traxxas for Courtney. We are not dead yet and I am not dead yet. We are going after wins and corporate America.”

In the final Force was racing Jack Beckman who has had the upper hand on Force for most of his career. Beckman has a commanding 21-8 record against Force. They are now 2-2  in final rounds. Force has never lost to Beckman at Gateway Motorsports Park, with a 2-0 record now.

“Beckman is a great racer. He taught my kids at Frank Hawley driving school. He has taught me some lessons too. At the end of the day our old hot rod went down the race track and we gave the fans a show. That is what it is all about,” said Force

This is the twenty-first season for Force to win at least two races in a season. He needed a pre-race pep talk from his wife Laurie today. The couple celebrated 32 years of marriage this weekend.

“I talked to my wife this morning and she said you need to get back to winning because winning fixes everything. She got my head right this morning,” said Force, a 222-time finalist. “I need to start winning races and I know how to do that. I don’t know if I will win another championship or another race but I will be in the fight with these young kids.”

Force started the day taking out rookie Chad Head in the first round before dispatching Ron Capps in the second round. In the semi-finals for the second race in a row he had to race teammate and son-in-law Robert Hight. For the second race in a row he also took out Hight. The 2009 Funny Car champion had nothing but word of support for his leader at the end of the day.

“I told John after the semi-finals that he needed to win this race. We are running well we just need to quit running into John in the semi-finals. We are making up ground every race on Hagan and now we are only 48 points out of first place,” said Hight. “We can get that under two rounds with a good qualifying effort in Reading. This AAA Insurance Mustang was great today we took out two tough competitors in (Jeff) Arend and (Tim) Wilkerson and lost to the guy that won the race. We are not hanging our heads. We’ll be in Reading ready to get after it.”      

Courtney Force qualified in the No. 4 spot with lane choice going into race day, this was her ninth top five start of the 2013 season. Her Traxxas team accumulated a total of four bonus points throughout Friday and Saturday for the qualifying efforts.

Today, Force moved up one spot and around competitor Johnny Gray to seize the No. 7 position in the NHRA Mello Yello Funny Car point standings. She finished in the quarterfinals when she beat Tony Pedregon, later falling to Del Worsham in the second round.

“First round we faced Tony Pedregon and had a pretty stellar pass of a 4.056. We were the second-quickest of the session next to my dad, who one-upped us again. But we’re just excited we were able to get past Tony in round one. The fact that we won in the opening round and Johnny Gray lost in the opening round was big because we moved back up a spot in the points to No. 7,” said Force.

This was the first ever match-up between the youngest daughter of John Force and fellow Funny Car driver Tony Pedregon.  The pair left the starting line at about the same time, but Force pulled away and turned on the win light. She posted a 4.056 second run at over 318 mph to his 4.143 at 296 mph and had lane choice going into the semi-finals.

Force went on to compete against No. 5 qualifier Del Worsham. Once again, both drivers were off the starting line together, but Force took an early lead shortly before striking the tires at about 200 feet out and had to back off the throttle. Worsham took the win with a 4.119 ET at 311.77 mph and Force sat out the rest of the day to watch her father walk away with a Wally.

“We got lane choice in the second round against Worsham. We were really trying to run it hard and put a good number on the board after we saw Robert go up there and run a 4.07, but it was a tough match-up. Del got down there with no problem and ran a 4.11, but we struggled a little. We spun the tires and I had to pedal it. We went over a spot on the track that didn’t have any rubber on it and I think that kind of killed the run for us in that left lane. Those things happen,” said Force.

With only three national events left, Force will go to Reading 135 points out of first place in the No. 7 position in points.

“We have a great race car and I think we proved that this weekend; that we can run low 4.0s in the heat and in the cool air. I’m excited that we’re moving in the right direction,” said Force.

Brittany Force and her Castrol EDGE team continued to make strides as they wrapped up the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals Sunday at Gateway Motorsports Park.

The Automobile Club of Southern California Road to the Future Award contender qualified fifth for the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series national event. This was the fourth she has qualified in the top half of the field this season and second time since the Chevrolet Performance US Nationals. Force also ran the quickest elapsed time of her career at 3.79 seconds during the second qualifying session under the lights Friday night.

Going into round one of Sunday’s eliminations, Force would face fellow competitor Brandon Bernstein for a second time this season. Running a 3.825 ET at 317.34 mph, the 27-year-old from Yorba Linda, California would advance to the quarterfinals as Bernstein hazed the tires and lifted off the throttle. Second round for Force would prove to be tough as she prepared to compete against Al-Anabi Racing’s Khalid alBalooshi. With a reaction time of 0.090 seconds, the Castrol EDGE dragster was making a run for the win light, but unfortunately fell short of the victory has her tires went up in smoke
, forcing her to shut off the engine early.

Force walks away 13th in the championship points standings and with another round win under her belt. She believes her team is moving in the right direction and is proud of what they have accomplished thus far.      

“Overall, we had a great weekend here in St. Louis,” Force said. “We had a good race car and I ran my best ET Friday night with a 3.79. We ended up qualifying No. 5 and even went into the second round, so I think overall it was a great weekend. We’re packing up and going home early, but this Castrol EDGE team is anxious to get to Reading and hopefully go some more rounds.”

Chevy Racing–Dover Post Race

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
AAA 400
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST RACE NOTES AND QUOTES
SEPTEMBER 29, 2013
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS – RACE WINNER
IT’S YOUR EIGHTH VICTORY AT DOVER TODAY. TALK ABOUT THE LAST RUN. I’VE HAD CREW CHIEFS TELL ME THAT TWO TIRES WILL NOT BEAT FOUR TIRES. HOW DID YOU HOLD OFF YOUR TEAMMATE, DALE EARNHARDT, JR.?
“Two (tires) worked good for us in practice. And believe me; I wanted to see four tires line-up in the fourth or fifth row. When they lined up right behind me, I thought I was going to have my hands full. And I really did. Junior drove a whale of a race and track position really gave me the advantage I needed to hold him off. It’s good to get this KOBALT Tools Chevrolet in Victory Lane. I’m very excited. I’m very happy to have Mr. Hendrick here. I wish that I had my family here. I want to say hi to my girls at home. Thank you to all the fans and to Sprint. This is just an awesome day and awfully timely in the scheme of things.”
 
YOU ARE ONLY EIGHT POINTS BEHIND MATT KENSETH NOW. HOW STRONG IS THIS TEAM, GOING FORWARD, FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP?
“It’s good. All these things are great. When you put the No. 18 (Kyle Busch) and No. 20 (Matt Kenseth) up there, it’s going to make it a very difficult deal. And I think it’s going to be fun for the fans to watch. We came to a good track and we got what we needed to, done. I know that No. 20 is going to be awfully strong for the rest of the stretch, and I look forward to racing with him.”
 
TALK ABOUT YOUR PLACE IN THE RECORD BOOKS NOW. IT USED TO BE YOU AND RICHARD PETTY AND BOBBY ALLISON TIED FOR THE MOST WINS AT DOVER. NOW IT’S JUST YOU:
“It’s incredible. To do anything that Bobby or Richard has done is quite an accomplishment. We’ve had a few sneak away from us here, too, over the years. I’m just so happy to get that done and be the sole leader of race wins here. It’s a very special day.”
 
TALK US THROUGH YOUR DAY AND THIS DOMINATE RUN THAT YOU HAD:
“Just a very fast race car.  I think we were a little vulnerable on stickers and new tires to get going for five to eight laps.  Then after that this KOBALT Tools Chevrolet was really strong.  I was fearing cautions at the end.  Of course we had one.  I felt like two (tires) was good for us.  We knew that it was going to work well for us.  I wish that four (tires) was going to start further back.  When I saw four was the car right behind me I knew I was going to be in trouble.  (Dale Earnhardt) Junior drove a whale of a race.  He kept me super honest there at the end.  So a very strong day.”
 
GIVEN THAT YOU WEREN’T AS GOOD ON THE SHORT RUNS AND YOU HAD TWO TIRES WHAT MADE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN YOU AND DALE EARNHARDT, JR. RIGHT THERE AT THE END OF THE RACE?
“I think really just track position.  He had a great race car all day long.  I think really between the No. 88, the No. 20 and the No. 48 we seemed to have all the speed to be the three fastest cars.  I saw him miss pit road early in the race.  I’m sure that was tough to rebound from.  He finally got back up to the front there and was awfully strong.  It has just been a track that I’ve adapted to since the beginning and I’ve really enjoyed running at.  The longer the run the better I perform here.  This track isn’t easy to drive.  You’ve got to be up on the wheel for four hundred laps around here and I enjoy that aspect too.”
 
10 POINTS THAT YOU KNOCKED OFF OF MATT KENSETH’S LEAD IS THIS THE POINT THAT JIMMIE JOHNSON AND THE LOWE’S TEAM STARTS TO MAKE THEIR MOVE?
“I still think it’s too early to say somebody can make a move.  You just don’t want to give points up.  Today we got max points so we didn’t leave any on the table and we will go to Kansas next week and see what we can do.”
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED SECOND
YOU CAME UP ONE SPOT SHORT WHAT WAS THE DIFFERENCE AT THE END?
“Well, Jimmie (Johnson) was just that good.  I thought that four tires were going to be enough to get to him and get him out of the way, but he is just that fast around here.  That track position is really important and I gave that up early in the race with that mistake coming onto pit road.  And it cost us a shot at the win there.  We still had it.  My crew gave me a good enough car to get us back into it, so I’ve got to thank them, National Guard, Diet Mountain Dew, Time Warner Cable and all of our partners.”
 
HOW DID THE RACE TRACK CHANGE THROUGHOUT THE DAY TODAY?
“The balance moved around a little bit not quite as much as we have seen here in the past, but I think we just brought a better race car this time.  That is why we had a better time of it.”
 
YOU WERE THE FIRST CAR WITH FOUR TIRES ON THAT LAST RUN. DID YOU THINK THAT WOULD BE ENOUGH TO GET IT DONE?
“Yeah, I did. That’s real disappointing there; but Jimmie (Johnson) is really that fast. He’s that good around this place. I thought we might be able to get to him and I was definitely going to do whatever I could to win if I could get within reach. But I just couldn’t get to him. So, I’m just real disappointed. We’ve had a couple of good weekends. These are two of the best cars I’ve had all year. I’ve got to thank the team. But, running second is no better than running 10th. I’d like to get a trophy here soon.”
 
YOU HAD A COUPLE OF ISSUES ON PIT LANE TODAY. DO YOU THINK ULTIMATELY THAT HAD ANY AFFECT ON WHERE YOU FINISHED?
“Yeah, I take responsibility for getting a little too eager coming onto pit road for that green flag stop. We’re lucky we didn’t have more trouble through that whole deal.  I didn’t know what the heck the rules are for that, so I was figuring we got off pretty light. But I had a fast enough car to get back to the leaders, but you’ve got to be the leader on that last start. You see most of these races are won by the guy leading it at the last restart or after the last round of pit stops. That wasn’t us today. I’ll take responsibility for that mess-up coming on pit road for sure.”

JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 AXALTA CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED FOURTH
DESCRIBE THE WAY THINGS WENT THIS AFTERNOON FOR YOU ON THIS TOUGH RACE TRACK:
“It was definitely tough.  Our Axalta Cromax Pro Chevrolet was very good.  We had moments where I felt like we had the best car and there were moments where I felt like we were one of the worst cars.  Man, I did not want to see that last caution. I felt like we were really in the perfect position fuel mileage wise, tires, speed of the car, we were just sitting there riding trying to get to the end.  Then we had to make a decision on two tires, four tires.  I felt like two was going to be the right thing.  It worked out for Jimmie (Johnson) to win it.  Congrats to him, but just didn’t work out for us.  Our car just didn’t take off very good there.”
 
YOU HAD A GREAT CAR AT TIMES. IF THIS RACE HAD STAYED GREEN THE REST OF THE WAY, WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU HAD FOR THEM? YOU WERE ALSO SAVING FUEL FOR A WHILE:
“I think we definitely had that strategy nailed. We came in; stretched it as far as we could and the team did an excellent job getting it full of fuel. I was saving (fuel) most of that run. So, we were four short. But it doesn’t matter. The caution came out and we just did not have a short run car. We took two (tires) to get track position, which won the race. But it just didn’t work for our car. All in all, it was a great day for the Axalta Chevrolet. I was very happy with just the overall performance of everybody. And I was having fun. Congrats to Jimmie (Johnson). He’s so tough here. It’s no surprise that he won. It was a great job by (Dale Earnhardt) Junior, too; that was fun to watch.”
 
YOU
GAINED IN THE POINTS AND TECHNICALLY TIED FOR FOURTH, BUT YOU ARE IN FIFTH. LOOKING AT THE BIG PICTURE AND MOVING ON TO KANSAS, WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR CHANCES?
“Oh, well, if we keep performing the way we’ve been performing; a driver can’t slide into the pit stall too far, and we’ve just got to keep knocking out good pit stops and having good race cars like we’ve had. I’m very excited and motivated by how well this team has stepped-up ever since the Chase has come around. I can’t wait to get to the next race.”
 
KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 BUDWEISER CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED SIXTH
TELL US ABOUT YOUR RACE:
“That was a long day.  All in all, all the guys on our Budweiser Chevy did a good job of just kind of keep pounding away.  That is what you have to do here at Dover as you get towards halfway it just kind of seems like you can make up positions by just staying in the game.  We just kept ourself in the game today.  We didn’t have a great car, but we still have some work to do to get the performance a little bit better.  We have got to fix pit road.”
 
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON WHERE YOU STAND AT IN THE CHASE RIGHT NOW?
“We beat the points leader so we probably didn’t gain any points, but we didn’t lose any either.”
 
RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 STATE WATER HEATERS CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED EIGHTH
“Our day started out really well, the car was great for the first 100 laps or so. It got tight after that and we never could make the right adjustment to get it handling like I needed it to. I think we finished eighth, but I know a lot of the guys we’re in the chase with finished ahead of us. All in all, it wasn’t a bad day for the State Water Heaters Chevrolet. We got another top-10 finish, which means everyone can go to Outback Steakhouse and get a free Bloomin’ Onion, and we paid 10 mortgages with Quicken Loans’ “Bring it Home” promotion.”
 
KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 FARMERS INSURANCE CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED 13TH
HOW WAS YOUR CAR TODAY AND WERE YOU GUYS HAVING A MECHANICAL ISSUE?
“We don’t know yet.  Something was wrong and we lost a lot of power.  Didn’t seem like the engine, maybe it was something else like tail pipes or something. We are not real sure.   We just salvaged a good finish and we didn’t pit there and got a top-15.  So that was good for what we had and what we were dealt with.”
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW/DENVER MATTRESS CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED 21ST
ON HIS RACE:
“A loose wheel did us in. We were way off at the start, but after the first pit stop we made some good changes and started to make a move. But once again we had an issue with a loose wheel (right rear, Lap 156) and that put us a couple of laps down. And with the lack of cautions we couldn’t make it up. This is the Chase and you can’t afford to have these problems. We need to regroup and get it together for Kansas next week.”

Summit Racing–Anderson to Face Nobile in St. Louis First Round

Anderson to Face Nobile in St. Louis First Round
 
Madison, Illinois, September 28, 2013 – Greg Anderson is ready to put qualifying behind him and bring his A-game to the table for the first round of eliminations at the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals at Gateway Motorsports Park near St. Louis. The four-time Gateway finalist last earned a win at the facility nestled in the shadow of the famous St. Louis arch in 2004, and he is good and ready to return to the winner’s circle this weekend in his Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro.
 
“I like this facility, and I really enjoy the fans here; they’re just great,” said the Mooresville, N.C.-based Anderson. “We didn’t give them the show we wanted to yet this weekend, but we’ve got tomorrow to make up some ground. Right now, everyone on the Summit Racing team is focused on preparing our Camaros for a better day. We’re digging in tonight, and we expect it to show tomorrow.”
 
Anderson and Team Summit pushed as hard as they could during qualifying to edge up the ladder. His best time of 6.566 at 210.47 mph was recorded in the third round of qualifying in the cool morning air on Saturday and was sixth-best of the session. Ultimately, Anderson’s time was good for a start from the No. 11 position with 20 drivers vying for one of 16 raceday spots.
 
In the first round, Anderson will race Vincent Nobile, a driver he most recently met in the first round in Charlotte just a couple of weeks ago. In their most recent meeting, Anderson got the nod with a stout 6.59 to his opponent’s traction troubled pass.
 
“There is no question about it, we will have a challenge tomorrow,” said Anderson, who entered the event 9th in the Mello Yello Drag Racing Series Pro Stock standings. “But the Summit Racing team is eager to rise to the challenge. There is no time like the present to show what we are capable of.”
 

Summit Racing–Line Pumped to Regain Points Lead on Raceday in St. Louis

Line Pumped to Regain Points Lead on Raceday in St. Louis
 
Madison, Illinois, September 28, 2013 – Jason Line made four passes in the 6.5-second zone during qualifying for the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals and earned a raceday start from the No. 10 spot at Gateway Motorsports Park. Dallas winner Line, as the most recent Pro Stock winner on NHRA’s 2013 Mello Yello Drag Racing Series tour, expected a higher starting position but heads into Sunday with a positive outlook and a Summit Racing Chevrolet Camaro that is capable of winning again.
 
“We certainly proved last week in Dallas that we have a car that can win, and you can bet that the Summit Racing crew is going to be working overtime tonight to get back to form,” said Line, who had sole possession of the points lead entering the event and was tied for first place at the conclusion of qualifying.
 
Line came to St. Louis owning both ends of the Gateway Motorsports Park track record (6.496 and 213.47 mph), and no driver was able to exceed his spectacular numbers during qualifying. Line clocked a qualifying best time of 6.555 at 211.83 mph on Friday night in one of the best sessions of the weekend, and starting tenth, the driver who raced to the final round in St. Louis in 2009 will be paired with Mike Edwards in the opening act on Sunday.
 
“It really doesn’t matter who is in the other lane, we’re going to have our work cut out for us without lane choice,” said Line. “We’ll need a little luck, and we’ll need to resurrect what we had in Dallas last week so that we can get the job done again tomorrow. I’m not a huge fan of sharing the points lead, but if things go as planned on Sunday, I’ll get it back.”
 
A third KB Racing Chevrolet Camaro is being piloted this weekend by young Buddy Perkinson, the No. 8 qualifier who will race Rickie Jones in round one. Perkinson made his debut in the KB Racing entry in Charlotte.
 
“It’s exciting to see Buddy doing well out here in his second race in a KB Racing Camaro,” said Line. “It’s a lot of fun, and we want to see him do well.
 
“We’re putting in the hours tonight, and tomorrow should be interesting. It certainly has the potential to be a very good day for Summit Racing.”
 

Mopar Racing–Johnson and Hagan Lock Up Top Spots at NHRA Midwest Nationals

Johnson and Hagan Lock Up Top Spots at NHRA Midwest Nationals

Madison, Ill. (Saturday, September 28, 2013) – Mopar Express Lane Dodge Avenger driver Allen Johnson, the defending series champion, made sure the rest of the NHRA Pro Stock field didn’t forget that fact, firing up his title defense by earning his third No. 1 qualifier spot of the season and 31st of his career today at the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals, held at Gateway Motorsports Park in suburban St. Louis. Matt Hagan will also lead the NHRA Funny Car field into eliminations, thanks to a track-record run on Friday in his Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar Dodge Charger R/T.

Johnson locked down the No. 1 qualifier spot on Friday with a 6.512-second elapsed time at 212.29 mph in a night session that offered favorable track conditions. The qualifying charts didn’t see much shake-up on Saturday with Johnson keeping his grip on the top position, although the defending champ did take full advantage of the opportunity to score extra bonus points. Johnson was third-quickest in Saturday’s first qualifying round (6.555/211.93), banking one extra marker, and second-quickest (6.572/210.60) in his final effort, scoring two more points and bringing his grand total to nine bonus points for the weekend. The Greeneville, Tenn., native will face Larry Morgan in the opening round tomorrow.

“We gained at least ten points on the frontrunners, including little (qualifying bonus) points and (our) qualifying position, so we made up a little ground there,” said Johnson, who will look to make his second-straight final round appearance at Gateway Motorsports Park tomorrow and score his first career win at the venue. “Hopefully tomorrow we can take the Mopar Express Lane Dodge to the final and make up some more.

“We’ve got a real good combination now with all three cars. We’ve got all three of the (J&J Racing) Mopars in the top six, and then V. (Gaines) is there, so four of the top six positions are Mopars.”

Gaines (6.526/211.96) will start tomorrow from the No. 2 spot and draw another Dodge, No. 15 qualifier Matt Hartford, in the first stanza. Johnson’s J&J Racing teammate, Jeg Coughlin Jr., who qualified No. 3 in his JEGS.com/Mopar Dodge Avenger based on his 6.527/211.20 pass from Friday, also earned three bonus points with the low elapsed time (6.545/211.49) of the first qualifying session on Saturday, and is now tied for the overall Pro Stock points lead with Jason Line. Coughlin will square off with Greg Stanfield to begin his Sunday, while fellow J&J Racing stable mate and No. 6 qualifier Vincent Nobile (6.535/211.46) will meet former Pro Stock champ Greg Anderson. Mopar-powered driver Deric Kramer (6.603/209.30) will start No. 13 and meet Erica Enders-Stevens in round one tomorrow.

Hagan roared to his fifth pole of the year and 15th of his career thanks to his Friday night run in his Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar Dodge Charger R/T, unleashing a 4.001/320.20 number to set the elapsed time and speed track records at Gateway Motorsports Park. No driver could better that mark on Saturday, including Hagan, who posted a solid 4.092/315.64 pass in his final qualifying attempt. The 2011 NHRA Funny Car champ will battle Daniel Wilkerson first on Sunday as he seeks to pad his points lead and secure his fifth victory of the season.

“It’s tough to lead,” said Hagan. “It’s easy to chase, but tough to lead. Anybody that’s ever led will tell you the same thing. Everybody is after you, their gunning for you, and you know that you have to bring your ‘A’ game. But what’s great about this team is they bring their ‘A’ game every weekend, and it always seems to work out really well. I’ve got all the confidence in the world in (crew chief) Dickie Venables.”

Hagan will be joined by his three Mopar-powered Don Schumacher Racing teammates in the elimination rounds, with each of the trio making their best qualifying runs and improving positions in their final attempts. Ron Capps (4.058/310.05) jumped to No. 6 and will duke it out with Bob Tasca III in the opening stanza. Defending Funny Car champ Jack Beckman (4.070/313.66) moved to eighth and will race Alexis DeJoria, while No. 12 Johnny Gray (4.098/311.77) will meet Del Worsham. Dodge Charger R/T racer Jeff Arend (4.196/280.95) will start 15th and go heads up with John Force Racing’s Robert Hight.

Elimination rounds are scheduled to begin tomorrow starting at 11:00 a.m. (CT). Qualifying highlights from the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals at Gateway Motorsports Park in suburban St. Louis are scheduled to be televised from 3:30 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. (ET) on Sunday, Sept. 29, on ESPN2 and ESPN2HD. Three hours of eliminations coverage will be broadcast on ESPN2 and ESPN2HD starting at 8:30 p.m. (ET) on Sunday, Sept. 29.

Chevy Racing–Chevrolet Wins 2013 GRAND-AM Rolex Series Daytona Prototype Engine Manufacturers’ Championship for the Second Consecutive Year

Chevrolet Wins 2013 GRAND-AM Rolex Series Daytona Prototype Engine Manufacturers’ Championship for the Second Consecutive Year
 
LAKEVILLE, Conn. – September 28, 2013 – For the second consecutive year, Chevrolet has won the GRAND-AM Rolex Series Daytona Prototype (DP) Engine Manufacturers’ Championship. Today’s win by Wayne Taylor Racing in the season finale at Lime Rock Park capped the championship-winning effort by the seven Corvette DP teams.
 
“Winning the GRAND-AM Rolex Series Engine Manufacturers’ Championship for the second consecutive year is a tribute to the hard work and dedication of the Corvette DP teams and drivers,” said Jim Campbell, U.S. Vice President Performance Vehicle and Motorsports. “Our partners at Earnhardt-Childress Racing along with our Powertrain team worked each and every week to deliver the right combination of power, fuel economy and durability. It was truly a team effort. “
 
On the way to winning the coveted title, Chevrolet’s Corvette DP teams and drivers won eight of the 12 races held during 2013 season.
 
“With the efforts of Earnhardt-Childress Racing, the technical support Pratt and Miller provides, as well at the expertise from GM Racing Powertrains, Chevrolet Racing in the Rolex Series has accomplished a great deal this season,” said Mark Kent, Director of Chevrolet Racing.  “As a new chapter is set to begin with the debut of the Tudor United SportsCar Championship in January, 2014 at Daytona International Speedway, we are honored to leave the final event of the GRAND-AM Rolex Series as a champion.”
 
The Chevrolet Corvette Daytona Prototype team and driver roster that contributed to Chevrolet capturing the Manufacturers’ title are: Wayne Taylor Racing – Max Angelelli and Jordan Taylor. GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing – Jon Fogarty and Alex Gurney; Spirit of Daytona Racing – Richard Westbrook and Ricky Taylor;  Action Express Racing (two cars) – Christian Fittipaldi, Joao Barbosa, Brian Frisselle, and Burt Frisselle and 8 Star Motorsports (two cars) Enzo Potolicchio, Stephane Sarrazin, Michael Valiante, Sebastien Bourdais and Emilio DiGuida.
 
“Congratulations to our Chevrolet teams and all of our technical partners on winning the 2013 GRAND-AM Rolex Series DP Engine Manufacturers’ Championship,” said Jim Lutz, Chevrolet Racing Program Manager, GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series. “The level of cooperation and dedication among our Corvette Daytona Prototype teams, in addition to the tremendous support from our technical partner were the key components of this championship-winning effort. I am very proud of the contributions made by everyone involved in this program, and celebrate this achievement for Chevrolet as we move to the Tudor United SportsCar Championship in 2014.”
 

John Force Racing–FUNNY CARS FLYING AT AAA INSURANCE NHRA MIDWEST NATIONALS

NHRA Midwest Nationals the three John Force Racing Ford Mustang Funny Cars set the pace of the field provisionally qualifying No. 2, No. 3 and No. 5 after two sessions. Led by 2010 AAA Insurance Midwest Nationals champion Robert Hight with a 4.022 second run the JFR Funny Cars made a strong impression on the near capacity crowd.

Hight smoked the tires in his first run and was relegated to run early in the second session. The AAA Insurance Funny Car made the most of their opportunity on a well prepped track blasting to the top of the field with a 4.022 second run that established the track record for elapsed time. Only Matt Hagan was quicker running 4.001 seconds in the last pair with JFR teammate Courtney Force.

 “That was a good run. There is no one hanging their head over here. We didn’t get down the track the first run and we wanted to put up a good number that session. We are excited and ready for tomorrow. Tomorrow will be the time to get a race day combination. That 4.02 run puts us in a great position and we are happy with it. It was great to see all our Funny Car run up close to the top,” said Hight.

Right after Hight ran to the top of the field team leader John Force made his strongest run of the day with a 4.023 second pass. The winningest driver in NHRA history powered his Castrol GTX Funny Car to the provisional No. 3 spot and is ready to make a run at his unprecedented 16th Mello Yello Funny Car championship.

All three JFR Funny Car drivers earned qualifying bonus points today to keep Hagan the point leader within reach.

After day one of the NHRA Midwest Nationals at Gateway Motorsports Park, Courtney Force and her Traxxas Ford Mustang team are holding onto the No. 5 qualifying spot and have tucked away one bonus point for their Friday efforts.

The youngest daughter of John Force was third quickest of the first session with a 4.127 and had the second-best speed at 310.20 mph.

“For our first hit today here in St. Louis, we ran a 4.127 and went to the top spot with top speed at over 310 mph. After a couple more passes, we got knocked down two positions by Matt Hagan and Jack Beckman, but we were able to pick up a point for being third-quickest of that session so we were happy to have that. We were actually going for a 4.10 elapsed time on that run, but had to back it down a little once we saw everyone going up in smoke. We were happy where we were at with that 4.12 right off the bat,” said Force.

The second qualifying attempt brought a 4.062 to the Traxxas Ford Mustang camp and put the 25-year-old driver in the No. 5 spot going into day two of qualifying tomorrow.

“Our Traxxas team was able to improve on that last pass. The conditions were good and we got the car down there running a 4.06. It put us in the No. 5 spot. We’re excited about it. It was on a good run. I’m in the top half of the field with my dad and my brother-in-law and we’re hoping we stay up there through tomorrow.”

“We’re hoping that during qualifying tomorrow we can see some consistent runs out of our car through the heat so we can be ready for race day,” said Force.

Automobile Club of Southern California Road to the Future Award candidate Brittany Force put on a show for fans Friday night as she ran her career best 3.79 elapsed time at a national event after two rounds of qualifying.  

Force ran a 4.19 ET in round one of qualifying after smoking the tires, forcing her to shut off the engine of her Castrol EDGE dragster early. Despite not making a full pass, the Top Fuel pilot knew the team had one more chance to make a good run.    

“First qualifying run we went out there and went up in tire smoke,” Force said. “We only ran a 4.19, so we didn’t get the car all the way down the track. It wasn’t what we had hoped for, but after the run we didn’t hurt any parts so we’re okay with that. We also knew we were going to have one more run at the end of the night. Being later in the night, the temperature drops and the track conditions get better, so we were getting ready for that next run.”

Going into the second qualifying session, the track temperature became cooler, which makes for faster runs. That was exactly what she did. Force raced her way to a career best 3.79 ET at a national event, ultimately landing her fifth in the field at the end of the night.

“The Castrol EDGE team put together a fast race car,” said Force. “We ran a 3.79 and that’s my best ET I’ve run this entire year. I did run it once last year in testing, but never at a national event. It’s completely different. I’m so proud of my team. I’m anxious for tomorrow. We get two more runs and we’ll definitely be in the top half of the field going into Saturday. We’re excited and ready to see what this weekend has going for us.”

Mopar Racing–Team Mopar Racers Johnson and Hagan Run to Provisional No. 1 Spots in Friday Qualifying at NHRA Midwest Nationals

Team Mopar Racers Johnson and Hagan Run to Provisional No. 1 Spots in Friday Qualifying at NHRA Midwest Nationals

Allen Johnson leads a Mopar 1-2-3 sweep of the top three spots in Pro Stock qualifying
Matt Hagan sets both ends of the track record in his Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar Dodge Charger R/T to capture the provisional NHRA Funny Car pole
V. Gaines is No. 2 and Jeg Coughlin Jr. No. 3 in their Mopar-powered Dodge Avengers
 Madison, Ill. (Friday, September 27, 2013) – Team Mopar NHRA Pro Stock driver Allen Johnson raced to the provisional pole on Friday at the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals at Gateway Motorsports Park in suburban St. Louis, keying a sweep of the top three spots by Mopar-powered  drivers. Meanwhile, in NHRA Funny Car qualifying, Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar Dodge Charger R/T driver Matt Hagan set both ends of the track record en route to the preliminary pole.

After quick exits at the previous two events, Johnson entered the St. Louis race more determined than ever to jump start his title defense, as well as fired up over an engine package honed in previous test sessions at Gateway Motorsports Park. The defending Pro Stock champion wasted no time in demonstrating why he felt so confident about his Mopar HEMI engine, tripping the timing lights with a 6.556-second elapsed time at 210.90 mph in his Mopar Express Lane Dodge Avenger to stake his claim to the No. 1 spot.

With falling track temps in the night session at Gateway Motorsports Park offering better conditions and quicker times, Johnson was pushed out of the top half by the time he made his second run in the final Pro Stock pair of the night. Johnson shrugged off the pressure and reclaimed his position as top dog, ripping off a 6.512/212.29 to take back the provisional pole and earn three more critical bonus points, giving him a total of six for the day.

“The Mopar Express Lane Dodge Avenger hit on something last weekend,” said Johnson, who scored a runner-up finish at the St. Louis event last year. “Our guys have got a combination now that’s going to be pretty bad to the bone the entire Countdown. We’re just a couple of rounds back, and that can turn around real quick. I think we’re really close with the car and the set up.

“We’ve got a great team in Mopar, all the people there are behind us. Our team and Jeggy’s (teammate Jeg Coughlin Jr.) team are working together real nice.”

Mopar-powered Pro Stockers swept the top three Friday qualifying spots, and four of the top six. V. Gaines moved up to No. 2 in the second session with a 6.526/211.96 nighttime run. Johnson’s J&J Racing teammate Coughlin, already a winner in the Countdown playoffs with a “W” at the Charlotte race, posted his JEGS.com/Mopar Dodge third with a 6.527/211.20. The third member of the Mopar-fueled J&J Racing trio, Vincent Nobile, improved from 11th to No. 6 with a 6.535/211.46. Matt Hartford (6.600/209.52) and Derick Kramer (6.608/207.80) were ranked 16th and 17th, respectively, in their Mopar Dodge Avenger Pro Stock cars heading into Saturday.

Matt Hagan, sporting the Magneti Marelli Offered by Mopar colors on his Dodge Charger R/T, soared to the No. 1 spot in the first session of NHRA Funny Car qualifying with a 4.112/307.93 pass, but was far from done. Hagan cued up a 4.001/320.20 mph run in the night session, claiming both ends of the track record in the process and running his total to six qualifying bonus points on the day.

“It was just an amazing run,” said Hagan, the current points leader. “I wish I could say I was in there driving the wheels off it, but, man, it was just smooth as silk. It’s just a great feeling and a great deal to be able to go No. 1 for now. Obviously that could change tomorrow, but it’s looking real good for us.”

Hagan’s Mopar-powered Don Schumacher Racing (DSR) teammate Jack Beckman (4.113/310.41) was listed No. 11 after Friday qualifying, with fellow DSR Dodge Charger R/T pilot Ron Capps (4.144/303.84) in the No. 13 spot and another teammate, Johnny Gray (4.475/201.73), No. 15 in his Dodge. Jeff Arend (6.236/106.40) was listed No. 16 in his Dodge Charger R/T.

The first of the final two qualifying sessions will begin tomorrow starting at 11:45 a.m. (CT). Qualifying highlights from the AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals at Gateway Motorsports Park in suburban St. Louis are scheduled to be televised from 3:30 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. (ET) on Sunday, Sept. 29, on ESPN2 and ESPN2HD. Three hours of eliminations coverage will be broadcast on ESPN2 and ESPN2HD starting at 8:30 p.m. (ET) on Sunday, Sept. 29.

Chevy Racing–Dover–Dale Earnhardt Jr.

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
AAA 400
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
SEPTEMBER 27, 2013
 
 
DALE EARNHARDT JR. WINS POLE AT THE MONSTER MILE FOR CHEVROLET
FIVE TEAM CHEVY DRIVERS QUALIFY IN TOP 10
 
 
DOVER, DEL. – September 27, 2013 –  Dale Earnhardt, Jr. powered his No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet SS into the pole position with a track-record lap of 161.849 mph in 22.243 seconds for Sunday’s AAA 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Dover International Speedway. It was his 13th career pole win, his second of the 2013 Cup season, and first on the mile-long, high-banked concrete race track for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup contender.
 
“The car had really good speed and a really good balance right off the trailer, and it felt like we were really competitive, more so than we’ve been here in the past, especially in practice,” said Earnhardt, Jr.
 
“I think I did a good job driving it, but most of the credit goes to (crew chief) Steve (Letarte) and the guys for preparing the car throughout the week. I thought they did a really good job giving me a great chance to go out and trust that the car is going to be right there, and run a good lap.”
 
Ryan Newman, also a Team Chevy Chase contender, posted the third quickest qualifying lap in his No. 39 State Water Heaters Chevy SS, giving Chevrolet two of the top five starting spots.
 
Jamie McMurray, aboard his No. 1 LiftMaster Chevrolet SS qualified in the seventh position, seven-time Dover winner, Jimmie Johnson, qualified eighth in his No. 48 Lowe’s/KOBALT Tools Chevy SS and Kurt Busch qualified ninth behind the wheel of his No. 78 Furniture Row/Denver Mattress Chevy SS; to give the Bowtie Brigade five of the top 10 starting spots.
 
Chase contenders Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet SS and Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Axalta Chevy SS will roll off from the 12th and 16th positions, respectively, in the 400-mile race.
 
Rounding out the top five qualifiers were Matt Kenseth (Toyota) – second, Carl Edwards (Ford) – fourth, and Aric Almirola (Ford) – fifth.
 
The third event in the 10-race Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup will take the green flag on Sunday, September 29th at 2:00 p.m. EDT and aired on ESPN and MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
 
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – POLE WINNER
 
TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT YOUR RUN OUT THERE TODAY:
“Yeah, the car had really good speed and a really good balance right off the trailer.  Felt like we were really competitive, more so than we had been here in the past, especially in practice.  When we put the car into qualifying trim, made a couple of mock runs, the car showed again really good speed.  It wasn’t quite the fastest car, but the way the car drove was really relatively easy and to make the runs we were making wasn’t very challenging and the grip in the car was just really over the top.  I was expecting to put a good lap down.  I thought we would be competitive enough to get inside the top 10 pretty easily.  We just made a couple of changes that we typically make in between practice and qualifying and went off to run the lap.
 
“Made a couple of just small errors driving the car, but you never drive every lap perfectly.  Always kind of wish you could have done things a little differently.  I think the car had maybe another half a tenth or a tenth in it.  It was really just a really good car.  I think I did a good job driving it, but most of the credit goes to Steve (Letarte, crew chief) and Kevin (Meendering, engineer) and all the guys just for preparing a car throughout the week that unloaded so close.  That makes everything so easy when the car is close especially for practice before qualifying.  You are going out there and you are making these laps right on the edge and when you are not really moving the balance a whole lot or making a ton of changes the driver can narrow down what he needs to do and minimize the errors that he is going to make and I thought that they did a good job giving me a great chance to just go out there and trust the car is going to be right there and run a good lap.” 
 
TO MAKE UP GROUND IN THE LAST EIGHT RACES YOU PUT YOURSELF IN AN EXCELLENT POSITION.  IS IT AT ALL A LITTLE DISHEARTENING TO KNOW THAT THE GUY YOU ARE CHASING WILL BE STARTING ALONG SIDE YOU ON THE FRONT ROW?
“Yeah, not really.  I expect our competition to be tough every week.  Nothing really surprises me when they perform well.  We are not really going to count points and I’m not going to sit here and figure out how far I’m behind and come up with some equation that I need to perfect to gain points each week.  I’m not going to sit here and do that.  We are just going to show up and try to run hard and be smart.  If we can unload great cars like this it makes that all easier.  We are going to try to win some races before the year is out.  I would be really disappointed if we don’t win a race this season because I think we are a better team than we were last year.  I felt we’ve came so close so many times so we would just like to get out there and get some trophies.  The points will take care of themselves when you are doing that.”
 
WHEN YOU GOT OUT OF THE CAR IT SOUNDED LIKE YOU FELT YOU HAD LEFT A LITTLE BIT OUT THERE.  WERE YOU SURPRISED THE LAP HELD UP?
“Yeah I was.  I watched the tracker on a couple of guys.  The No. 99 they were a tenth and a half better than us by the time they got into turn three or the middle of (turns) three and four.  Yeah, I think there was a good amount of time left out there for a lot of guys myself included.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT HOW IMPORTANT TIRES WERE? I KNOW YOU GUYS WERE CHANGING TIRES A LOT AT THE END OF PRACTICE:
“Well we practiced and used our tires how we typically do every week.  We ran the beginning of practice on a set of tires. We ran a couple of race runs to get ourselves a good idea of where we were for tomorrow to try to anticipate improving the car. That saves us a little bit of time tomorrow.  If we waited until tomorrow to find out what we could learn today you know it’s just saving us a little time doing that.  Then we have two sets of tires left to go out there and make one mock run and make another mock run.  We thought scuffs weren’t too bad actually and we have rolled the lefts in here before.  We put the qualifiers on and rolled the lefts in a little bit, left the rights off the car and then we made our last run on the last set of tires.  It was just what we normally do every week aside from the scuff for the lefts which you do on occasion depending on the track.”
 
ANY SPECIAL SIGNIFICANCE TO SETTING A TRACK RECORD AND KNOCKING SOMEONE LIKE JEREMY MAYFIELD OUT OF THE RECORD BOOK?
“Well this car has been faster everywhere we have been this year so I anticipate seeing the lap records kind of fall throughout the season.  I don’t know how many that we have broken this year, but it has to be a significant amount compared to past years.  This car has got a lot more downforce and has been a good bit quicker everywhere we have been with it this year.  But it’s a good feeling you know we have won two poles this year.  If we don’t get one at Daytona or Talladega we usually don’t get one at all.  This feels pretty good.”
 
YOU JUST MENTIONED TWO POLES THIS YEAR THAT IS THE FIRST TIME YOU HAVE HAD MORE THAN ONE IN A SEASON SINCE 2002.  IS THAT A REFLECTION OF WHERE THE PROGRAM IS?  IS THAT A REFLECTION OF COMFORT IN THIS NEW CAR?  HOW DO YOU EXPLAIN THAT?
“I would say it’s a reflection of where the program is.  Just how Steve (Letarte, crew chief) and I since we first started working together we have
gotten better each year.  One of the things we started focusing on last year was qualifying and I think that has rolled over into this season.  We continue to put importance on that and try to improve on that.  The racing and the cars and the speed the cars have in the races has also improved.  We really focused on qualifying last year and even more so this year.  He and I are working better together.  The longer we work together the better we get at it and the more we understand each other and the more he understands what I need in the car.  We have also kept the majority of the team intact from the beginning.  That is so important to keep that together if you can because everybody sort of learns what they can about each other.  Steve is really good… he has made me a better race car driver.  He makes his engineers better.  I mean he is really good at his job.  So he deserves a lot of credit for us improving and being able to get these poles and just qualifying better.”
 
STEVE (LETARTE) SAID HE HAS NEVER SEEN AN UNHAPPY RACE CAR DRIVER IN A FAST CAR IS THAT ACCURATE?
“That is true.  When the car is fast usually the driver is not talking or complaining.  I mean I know that even the guy leading the race has got something he would like to fix on his car.  Or something about the car it could do better.  Yeah, when you run well you definitely are a happier guy.  I mean just look at how we were after last week’s qualifying effort compared to this week.  I thought we had a good car last week.  I don’t know we just didn’t get the job done in qualifying and I was so disappointed.  When you’ve got the car and you know the potential and you go out there and realize it like we did today it makes it a lot easier.”
 
HAVE YOU TALKED TO MATT (KENSETH) AT ALL?  IS HE KIND OF HAVING ONE OF THOSE ‘PINCH ME’ TYPE OF SEASONS?  OR IS HE HAVING ONE OF THOSE THAT HE KIND OF EXPECTED EVERYTHING TO FALL INTO PLACE SEASON?
“Matt (Kenseth) never would expect things to go this well.  I’m always having to pump him up, tell him how good things are going to be.  He’s always a worry wart I guess is the best way to describe him.  I’m sure he is enjoying the success and knows how talented his team is around him.  Every time I see him even when his car is fast in practice he might say his car is not that good.  He is one of those guys, but he’s having a great year.  Hopefully we can beat him.  We want to get up there and regain our ground and get back into this thing if we can.”
 
 
RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 STATE WATER HEATERS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED THIRD
 
A GREAT RUN FOR YOUR TEAM HERE AT DOVER:
“Yeah, we came off the truck really good and we were in qualifying trim and basically stayed real close to where we were.   I just sharpened up the pencil as far as driving the race track and it all kind of stayed the same for us.  It was obviously close and I think we were fifteen-thousandths off of the pole – which is always close here.  But nevertheless a good start for our State Water Heaters Chevrolet and good pit selection.  No matter what though, it’s still a tough pit road here and we will see how it all works out.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR HUNTING TRIP THIS WEEK, DID YOU GET ANYTHING AND WHAT WAS IT LIKE HANGING OUT WITH CLINT (BOWYER) IN THE WILD?
“Yeah, he only went to the hospital once.  It wasn’t that big of a wound, and I didn’t hit him quite where I wanted to.   But nevertheless, we had a lot of fun and I want to thank Bill Jordan and everybody at Realtree for giving us the opportunity to just get away and relax.  Obviously that takes and understanding wife and couple kids at home that got sick and had to get through all that stuff.   In the end, he killed an elk and I didn’t.  I was close and had a questionable shot and used better judgment.  I will go back when gun season comes in and I am able to fit that into my schedule.
 
“I had a blast and it’s beautiful country.  I have been under the weather since Monday and was fighting some flu symptoms with fever, aches and pains, and stuff.  In the end we had a lot of fun and I am thankful for the people that gave at least Clint and I the opportunity to do that.”
 
WHY WOULD THE QUALIFYING TIME BE ALMOST FOUR MILES AN HOUR FASTER HERE TODAY THAN IN JUNE?
“We are just trying harder (laughs).  No, I think a lot of it has to do with the temperature.  A lot of it also has to do with us getting a better package with the car for a track that is this sensitive let’s say.  With the bumps in turn three and that everybody has sharpened up on the aero side of this track.  The track is super-fast and I think everybody is making more downforce.  I think everybody has gotten things a little more fine-tuned and that makes a big difference. 
 
“You see how close everything is here.  It’s not like one team is four-tenths quicker.   We are all a good bit quicker.  I think a big part of it is the conditions and it definitely wasn’t as hot here today as it was in the spring.  And then obviously just the race cars.”
 
THE TRACK RECORD IS LIKE NINE YEARS OLD BEFORE BEING BROKEN TODAY.  ANY PARTICULAR REASON IN GOING BACK THAT FAR?
“I don’t know. We could change the tire and break the track record by six miles an hour tomorrow and that is not so much the deal.  We used to have tires that would fall off a lot and now the tires don’t fall off that much and the cars are faster.   I think that it is what it is, and it’s a coincidence. That’s my answer.”
 

Chevy Racing–Dover–Qualifying

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
AAA 400
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
SEPTEMBER 27, 2013
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – POLE SITTER
HOW WAS YOUR LAP?
“The car has been excellent all day and I just overdrove (Turn) 1 a little bit and didn’t really trust the car as much as I should have off of (Turn) 4. The car is a lot faster than that. But hopefully it will be a good qualifying run.”
 
THAT WAS A GOOD LAP:
“I think we could have done a few things different and had a better lap.  I over drove the entrance to turn one a little bit and should have trusted the right rear a little bit more off of four.   The car has been great all day so you have to give Steve (Letarte), Kevin (Meendering, engineer), and all the guys all the credit.”

RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 STATE WATER HEATERS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED THIRD
TRACK IS GETTING QUICKER?
“No, I just tried harder (laughs)”
 
OH, I’M SURE YOU DID. ONE HUNDRED PERCENT?
“Actually I was 118 percent that time. The State Water Heaters Chevrolet was good off the truck. The car is very similar; the track was actually very similar to how we practiced. I just kind of had to capitalize on everything. Obviously it wasn’t quite good enough, but it’s a good place to start here in Dover.”
 
YOUR EXPECTATIONS BEFORE THE LAP AND HOW THE LAP ACTUALLY TURNED OUT?
“Good and good.  I thought we had a shot at it.   I think during the last fifteen laps in practice the track got a good bit faster.  We had the car basically how we unloaded it, other than one small change.  The State Water Heaters Chevrolet SS was good and Matt (Borland) and the guys did a good job.   Especially off the truck and we only made a small change all practice.  Hopefully we will stay in the top five.  The 20 and the 22 are going to be stout as well, but happy to be where we are at after 34 cars.”
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED EIGHTH
YOU ARE JUST AHEAD OF KURT BUSCH RIGHT NOW. DO YOU THINK THERE’S ENOUGH FOR THE POLE HERE TODAY?
“We’ll see. It’s so early it’s hard to tell. And if you can outrun the No. 78 in Q-trim, you’re doing a good job. So, I feel that’s a good marker. Inside the car, it felt pretty good. (Turns) 1 and 2, I was off a little bit, but I really nailed (Turns) 3 and 4. We’ll just see. Hopefully it’s in the top three or four so we can get a nice pit stall on pit road. But it’s a good start for this KOBALT Tools Chevrolet.”
 
HOW WAS YOUR RACE CAR ON THAT LAP?
“Pretty good.  I am real happy with our KOBALT Tools Chevrolet and it wasn’t so bad really.  We will see how things go and I think from the temperature standpoint it’s going to be pretty equal through the field.  So we stand a good chance of having our time hold up.   There is a lot more rubber down from the Nationwide practice, and that is going to throw some guys a challenge. So I think we did a good job, and we’ll see if we can stay on top.”
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW/DENVER MATTRESS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED NINTH
ON HIS QUALIFYING LAP:
 “The track has changed a little bit and it just seems like it’s tougher to get the grip out of the front tires, but the rears are right on edge too.  It was a decent lap, and I don’t think we will miss the top 10 with a lap like that but we will see where it stacks up and keep track of the changing track conditions.  The track will continuously get darker and darker and get rubbered-in more and more so we will try and stay on top of it.”
 
YOU HAD AN EARLY DRAW, BUT THIS CLOUD COVER…..DID IT HELP?
“It helped us and we will see how it balances out throughout the session, but our Chevy is fast and we just need to keep up with the track conditions.” 
 
KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 BUDWEISER CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 12TH
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR QUALIFYING LAP?
“It wasn’t bad.  We were a touch too tight right there, but we had been edgy throughout the whole day and we improved on our practice time.  A lot of guys are slowing down so I think that it will be a decent starting spot.”
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 13TH
HOW WAS YOUR QUALIFYING LAP?
“It was okay.  We were a little too loose through the middle so I couldn’t get to the throttle the way I needed to, but it was okay.  I wanted a little more, but sometimes here you try to get a little more and you end up screwing up.  So for what we had, it’s pretty good.”
 
JEFF GORDON, AXALTA CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 16TH
SOME DRIVERS WERE SAYING THE TRACK WAS A BIT DIFFERENT FROM PRACTICE TO QUALIFYING.  DID YOU FEEL THAT AT ALL?
“Well its felt a lot worse here in the past and the last time we were here the conditions changed dramatically.  So things change a little bit, and you get cloud cover and I am hoping that sun comes out and saves us.  It wasn’t our best lap and the balance just wasn’t quite there and we didn’t make a very good lap in my opinion.”
 
KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 FARMERS INSURANCE CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 20TH
AFTER THE NATIONWIDE CARS HAVE BEEN OUT HERE, DOES THE TRACK FEEL THE SAME AS IT WAS IN PRACTICE?
‘I felt a little bit looser than what I had in practice earlier. I felt like the track was freer because tightened up and I was still pretty similar. So I don’t know; it’s hard to say how that will be. We beat a couple of cars that were in front of us, but I would think you’re going to need to go a little quicker than that if you’re going to qualify first today.”
 
HOW WAS YOUR LAP AND HAS THE RACE TRACK CHANGED FROM PRACTICE?
“We tightened our car up quite a bit and it still felt kind of similar to what it was.  Maybe a little bit.  Still seemed a little loose and it still seemed like an alright lap and we will see kind of where that goes.  I don’t know.  Not sure how it was.”
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 31ST
DO YOU KNOW WHERE THE TIME WAS LOST?
“Looking back at qualifying here, it doesn’t usually go faster. And on average, it was a tenth slower last time. So, I didn’t expect to go a lot faster but I also didn’t expect to go three-tenths slower. So, it was really loose and I can definitely attribute some of the time lost to being loose. There is a lot of rubber out there, but it feels slippery. And/or, we just freed it up too much for qualifying. I can’t blame the boys for trying, though.  I might maybe be just fine for the race, but at this point in time we’re definitely disappointed that we went so much slower. But hopefully that’s a trend here.”

BIGFOOT Heads Down Under!

BIGFOOT Heads Down Under!


 
St. Louis, MO (September 27, 2013) – Almost 40 years ago, a man named Bob Chandler modified his brand new F-250 to promote his 4×4 business. As the parts bills increased, the truck grew bigger and bigger and became the world’s first monster truck. Now, after over 3 decades of thrilling millions of fans around the World, acquiring numerous Guinness World Records, and debuting 20 different BIGFOOT® monster trucks, a brand new BIGFOOT is set to be unleashed in Australia. And it is guaranteed to thrill a whole new audience of monster fans around Australia and New Zealand.

That’s right! An all new BIGFOOT truck will be based on QLD’s Sunshine Coast, under the control of Clive Featherby and the Monster Truck Promotions Australia crew, and will be seen extensively around Australia and New Zealand. BIGFOOT is the true legend of Monster Trucks, and its pending arrival Down Under is by far the biggest and most exciting news ever for monster truck fans in Australia.

BIGFOOT will make its Debut on 12 October 2013 in Brisbane and will be driven by long-time BIGFOOT driver and winner of 3 US championships, Rick Long. Rick and BIGFOOT will start off in Gosford, New South Wales on October 12th and then on to Whyalla, South Australia, and many more from there. Check www.monstertruckpromotionsaustralia.com for a detailed schedule of events.

BIGFOOT will sport the new style BIGFOOT off-road body, as seen on Bigfoot 18, in a custom new color scheme with blue, orange and bkack, making this one of the best looking monsters ever seen.

BIGFOOT’s first Australian challenge will be a car crushing, car jumping contest against the Aussie champion “Outback Thunda” in an all out contest for the Australian car jumping record.

Chevy Racing–Dover–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
AAA 400
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
SEPTEMBER 27, 2013
                                                       
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Dover International Speedway and discussed racing this weekend at Dover, his current position in the Chase, the new restart rule and other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT COMING INTO DOVER THIS WEEKEND:
“Excited to be here it’s obviously a great race track for the No. 48 team.  Good time in the year for us to come to a strong track.  We will just kind of see what happens.  I know it’s a good track for the No. 18 and historically Matt (Kenseth) has been strong here when I think back to some of the Roush days years ago, they are not too far back.  I think with how he has been running this year he’s going to be tough to beat and we will just get out there and race hard and get every point we can.”
 
AT THE END OF THE RACE LAST WEEK YOU SAID THAT YOU LEFT A LITTLE BIT ON THE TABLE.  IT JUST DIDN’T SEEM LIKE YOU TO BE SAYING THAT LIKE NORMALLY THE NO. 48 AND YOU DON’T DO THAT. IS THERE ANYTHING REALLY SORT OF UNUSUAL ABOUT HOW THINGS ARE GOING RIGHT NOW OR DO YOU FEEL THAT IT’S JUST PAR FOR THE COURSE AND YOU JUST HAVE TO ADAPT TO THE RACES THAT AREN’T SO GOOD?
“I think that is really the requirement for a Cup team, Cup driver is you have to be able to adapt to situations.  At the end of the race (last week) we had that inside lane on two occasions and that is where our opportunity slipped away.  We had a great pit stop and came out and thought we were going to be the leader and the No. 15 and the No. 9 stayed out so that put us in third position on the inside.  On that particular start Matt (Kenseth) started fourth and with that outside lane was able to get by the No. 9 right away and by the No. 15 and take control of the race at that point.  I really feel like if we would have had a slow stop and came out fourth we would have been in that position ourselves or if those two hadn’t pitted.  So that was really the opportunity in the race for us to take control and not by our own circumstances or design it just didn’t happen.  Then the next restart we were on the inside again and rallied our way back to fourth I guess it was.  Each one of those restarts you kind of lose a little ground and then have to work my way through and that is where opportunity missed us.”
 
HOW DO YOU VIEW THE STANDINGS AT THIS POINT?  HAVE YOU LOOKED AT IT AND DO YOU THINK IT’S A THREE MAN RACE AT THIS POINT LIKE A LOT OF PEOPLE ARE SAYING?
“I mean it’s easy to look at it that way, but I’m not putting my guard down.  We still have Talladega and a lot of these tracks can take out multiple cars.  You have that risk here if something happens you usually take a car or two with you.  I don’t know.  I’m certainly looking forward and there are only two guys that I’m paying attention to right now, so in that mindset, sure you can call it a three man race.  It’s still way too early to count many out yet.”
 
DO YOU HAVE ANY LESS OF A MENTAL HURDLE COMING IN HERE KNOWING THE RESTARTS RULES HAVE CHANGED AND DO YOU HAVE ANY FEEL OF WHAT HAPPENED HERE IN JUNE MAYBE PLAYED A ROLE IN NASCAR CHANGINGS THE RULES?
“Oh yeah, it definitely had a role in that.  I think it was three or four restarts I was a part of that helped shaped the rule that we have now.  I think it’s a good fix.  I think it’s a good compromise between protecting second on a lot of these mile and a half’s where we have an apron that drivers can shoot down onto and make a pass.  I think it’s protecting second place from that situation.  At other race tracks and like what happened to me here, where the leader doesn’t go, it takes that away from the leader.  So I think it’s good.  I think it’s a good compromise for what the drivers and the front row have to manage.  I’m glad that it’s in place.  I hate that it took so long, but I think it’s a good change.”
 
IT’S ONE THING FOR THE FIVE-TIME CHAMPION TO HAVE ONE CAR AHEAD OF HIM IN THE POINT STANDINGS IN THE CHASE, BUT ARE YOU CONCERNED THAT THERE ARE TWO JOE GIBBS RACING CARS AHEAD OF YOU AND WHAT DO YOU THINK HAS TURNED THE TIDE FOR THAT ORGANIZATION?
“We have known for years and years and years that they are strong organization.  When you peak is very important in our season and I think that the No. 20 and the No. 18 are really coming to the top of their game right now at this point of the year which is good for them.  Arguably and there is still racing left so I hope this is wrong, but so far our peak was probably about the third mark of the year, third to three eighths mark of the year.  I feel like we are trending back up with our two top fives and heading in the right direction, but time will tell how high we rise and where we get to.  They have always had good equipment and they have always had fast cars. I really feel like Matt (Kenseth) and the relationship that he and his crew chief have and what they have been able to bring to the table has helped elevate them to Joe Gibbs the next level.  The experience that Matt brings in, the smarts, the knowledge, the consistent driving that is a nice kind of rock within that organization that without a doubt has helped them.”
 
ON KYLE BUSCH, HE’S GOTTEN OFF TO TERRIBLE CHASE STARTS AND HASN’T PUT TOGETHER A CHASE. NOW THAT HE’S GOTTEN OFF TO THIS TYPE OF START, HOW FORMIDABLE OF A CONTENDER DO YOU THINK HE WILL BE FOR THE LONG HAUL IN THE CHASE?
“He has the ability. We’ve all seen it week in and week out. We’ll see if he can keep it together over the course of 10 weeks. We all have something out there that media, fans, and competitors hold against you and make you think about from time to time and they always bring up a question. His question is can you hold it together for 10 weeks. And we’ll see. I believe that he has the ability to do it. He’s shown at different points in time, he wins in anything and everything he drives at all types of tracks.  So, it’s in there. It’s just finding it; and finding it at the right time amongst all the pressure that it put on a team and driver in the Chase. But, he’s definitely on his game this year.”
 
YOU HAVE BEEN FORTUNATE TO BE DRAMA-FREE IN YOUR CAREER. BUT REGARDING PEOPLE LIKE CLINT BOWYER OR PERHAPS JEFF GORDON WHO GOT THRUST INTO THE CHASE AT THE LAST MINUTE, HOW DOES IT AFFECT THE MENTALITY OF THE TEAM? CAN THAT WEAR YOU DOWN AS OPPOSED TO JUST BEING ABLE TO STAY THE COURSE THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE CHAMPIONSHIP RUN?
“I think Gordon’s situation is helpful. There is a lot of positive behind that. I don’t see that wearing on him or his team. They feel like they have a second shot in some ways in their opportunity to win a championship. I feel like they have, on their own merit, earned their way in to win the championship and circumstances kind of changed that. So, they’re in the right spot, mentally. For Clint, that whole situation is really tough. And we all know him well and know how positive of a person he is and the charisma he has and that outward excitement he has. To carry around the load and burden of what’s gone on, I don’t know for sure. But I have to imagine it’s tough on him. It’s got to take a toll to some degree, and test him and his team more than I’m going through in the Chase. I’m just focused on going out and running well. They’ve got an extra force out there weighing on them. Without a doubt, I bel
ieve it’s weighing on them.”
 
INAUDIBLE:
“We’ll see how far he can fight back, but it’s only going to make him stronger. And I’ve lived through it under my own circumstance with (crew chief) Chad (Knaus) being thrown out of the 500 that year and how we came back and were able to win races and the championship and be a stronger team as a result. If you look at the current point in time, it’s tough. It’s hard on you. But you fast-forward six months to a year from now, Clint Bowyer and his team are stronger, for sure.”
 
YOU MENTIONED THAT EVERY DRIVER HAS A LINGERING QUESTION THAT FANS BRING UP. WHAT IS YOURS? WHAT DO PEOPLE BRING UP TO YOU?
“For me, it’s the two-year dry spell. Like it’s been an eternity since I’ve won a championship. So, that’s the question that I seem to get.
 
 

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