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A Window On The Reality Of NASCAR
Oct 27th, 2011 by Journo

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Superspeedway racing tends to bring out the worst in everyone and this weekend in Talladega was no different. We had accusations of team orders, then subsequent denials, crew chiefs telling drivers to wreck on purpose, blatant cheating and complaints from everyone on track about the driving. There has been shock and outrage from the NASCAR press corps and the sport’s fan base. After all, who knew any of this went on?!

We’re Shocked Someone May Have Been Cheating

SBNation’s Jeff Gluck posted a story yesterday with audio from #48 crew chief Chad Knaus. Knaus is heard telling Jimmie Johnson to “crack the back of the car” if they win. Presumably they were beyond the allowed tolerances for whatever reason.

Knaus admitted the intention saying he was, “ Just being proactive, I just told Jimmie, ‘Look, man – we’ve just got to make sure there’s a tire mark or some type of visible damage.’ Just because cars do move when you race them like that.”

This ended up being the story du jour on Wednesday. It was unbelievable that a team could be working in the gray area – no one does that! Of course we already knew Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus were cheaters…

The Roush Team Orders

Jack Roush telling his drivers to stick with Ford teams!? Ridiculous.

This was the outrage of the weekend after word seeped out that Ford and Roush had, at the very least, made it clear that their teams should stick together at Talladega.

Ford and Roush both denied “orders” were issued, but it was pretty clear what the expectation was.

The way the talk was this weekend though you would have thought Roush was the only one that made this expectation clear. Of course anybody with two eyes and a basic understanding of the sport could see every other team on track had done the same, and why wouldn’t they? As I wrote on Monday, you draft with who brought you.

You Feel Double Crossed?

Tony Stewart and Jeff Gordon were both beside themselves after the race Sunday. They had committed dancing partners who they felt abandoned, or sabotaged them in favor of teammates. It’s a cruel world.

Stewart told SB Nation:

“It’s a shame, because I’ve never seen more politics in a race go on in my life than what I saw this weekend…I think the car owners are to blame, the manufacturers are to blame and the fans don’t deserve that.

Gordon echoed Stewart, saying after the race:

“I don’t think [Trevor Bayne] really ever had any intentions of pushing me, and if he did, the Ford folks told him to do something different. It’s politics, that’s part of it.”

As they say, it’s business, it’s not personal. And of all people I would expect Gordon and Stewart to know that. It’s true it’s unfortunate for the fans, it stinks for those who got the shaft, but the fact is it’s reality. Welcome to NASCAR boys.

Hey Trevor, Cool It With The Hyperbole

Speaking of distraught, Trevor Bayne. He’s young and apparently doesn’t know when to go light on the hyperbole. In an interview with SceneDaily he said:

“I was caught in the worst situation I could have ever been in.”

Devastating. I’ll bet there was some cringing at Roush after that interview.

He did go on to say that he wasn’t forced to switch drafting partners but felt it was his role as Kenseth’s teammate. Either way, nobody can fault him for making the decision he made – not even Jeff Gordon. He’s in a precarious position at Roush and needs to do what he has to do to keep the bosses happy and his butt in a ride.

A lesson though (not for our interests but his own) when you’re trying to make a good impression, toe the company line.

This whole week has left me shaking my head and rolling my eyes. While we don’t necessarily get to be witness to some of this stuff on a weekly basis, it happens that often. No one should be surprised about ANY of this. Consider this week a window into NASCAR reality.

Now on to Martinsville and a decidedly less controversial setting.

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Draft With Who Brought You
Oct 24th, 2011 by Journo

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Ford and Jack Roush made waves this weekend after word seeped out of the camp that the teams were directed to draft exclusively with their manufacturing counterparts. With two Roush Fords in serious contention for the championship it wasn’t a surprising edict – especially not from Jack Roush.

At the end of the race we saw what appeared to be the edict in action as Trevor Bayne gave up drafting with Jeff Gordon to draft with Matt Kenseth. The move was bad news for Gordon who ended up finishing way back in 27th. Bayne and Kenseth finished 15th and 18th.

The help kept Kenseth in contention, moving him to second in the points just 14 back from teammate Carl Edwards. And after everything, not doing damage is the most important thing at a place like Talladega.

The track serves as THE wild card race in the Chase where literally anything can happen. That uncertainty leads teams to do everything they can to control the things they can. This is why you see teams like Roush and manufacturers like Ford letting their drivers know where loyalties need to lie.

In this instance there seems to be some surprise that Bayne switched dancing partners choosing a teammate over a potentially better pairing. But it makes sense when considering what was at stake: a championship, a precarious future and a whole lot of money. Would you not have done the same?

Success in this sport involves reliance on those who are around you. That goes for the Ford teams, the Chevrolet teams, the Dodge teams and the Toyota teams. While the Roush and Ford team orders are the only ones that made the press this weekend there were no doubt similar understandings at organizations throughout the sport. Consider the other teams on track. Who was working with whom?

The Fords were with the Fords, the Chevrolets with the Chevrolets and on and on.

At superspeedways you draft with who brung ya – it’s true for EVERY manufacturer and EVERY team. While it’s unfortunate for those left out, it’s a cold hard fact.

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Better Cup Prospect: Bayne or Stenhouse?
Aug 11th, 2011 by T.C.

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Now that the future at Roush Fenway is becoming more clear, we can begin to look at the other RFR drivers awaiting their fates.  If the #99 seat was vacated, it was assumed that Trevor Bayne or Ricky Stenhouse Jr. would be in line to fill it.  But since that now won’t happen, Bayne and Stenhouse’s futures are unclear.  USA Today’s Nate Ryan wrote yesterday that Bayne expects to run a similar schedule next season as he ran in 2011.  And Stenhouse told ESPN’s David Newton that there is no current definitive plan for him next season, but that he’d like to run another full NNS schedule and possibly Cup races for Richard Petty Motorsports (which has room to expand).  With these two young drivers in the pipeline, RFR looks to be in a good position.  But the situation begs the question, who’s the better Cup prospect?

Looking over their young careers, the two drivers have very similar statistics.  Stenhouse’s NNS numbers (two wins and more top five and top ten finishes) are a tick better than Bayne’s, but both of their average finishes are right near 16.  Stenhouse only has one Cup start (11th at Charlotte) versus Bayne’s 12 starts.  But outside of his Daytona 500 win, Bayne’s best finish is a 16th at Michigan.  In a close decision, advantage Stenhouse in the performance department.

In saying that however, I think it’s important to point out that Bayne missed time this season due to illness, and he’s in his first season with crew chief Chris Andrews.  Both have played a factor in his performance this season.  Stenhouse on the other hand has had significantly more time with veteran crew chief Mike Kelley.

Being successful and having a long career at the Cup level isn’t just about performance though.  Marketability is becoming ever more important in the era of tough to get sponsorship dollars.  Bayne has a clear advantage over Stenhouse in this area.  An emotional win in the famous #21 at the Daytona 500, the media opportunities that followed, and Bayne’s personality all contribute.  Stenhouse isn’t as well known despite his success, and he isn’t anywhere near the fan favorite Bayne is.  During driver introductions, Bayne’s cheers rival that of perennial most popular driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.

All things considered, I think it’s very difficult to say one driver has more potential than the other.  They both have long, successful careers ahead of them.  I’m curious though, if you were a team owner with one open Cup ride, who would you pick?

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Long Busy Weekend Ahead For Some Pit Crews
May 19th, 2011 by T.C.

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It’s always nice for the teams when we get to this part of the schedule, because with all three series racing in Charlotte, it means most get to sleep in their own beds.  But a crowded weekend schedule, along with a trip to Iowa for the Nationwide cars, means some will have a very busy couple of days.

As we’ve talked about here many times before, there are some individuals and some full crews that pit race cars across multiple series.  A few do it within their own companies, and others pit cars for many different race teams.  You’d think Charlotte races would make for an easier weekend, but that isn’t necessarily the case.

Consider this example.  The five guys that pit Trevor Bayne’s Cup car are also the same guys that pit Carl Edwards’ NNS ride.  With their commitments between both cars, they will be pitting race cars four straight days.  The Daytona 500 win made Bayne eligible for the All Star race, and his crew eligible for the Pit Crew Challenge.  So his guys will spend Thursday at Time Warner Cable Arena for the Challenge.  Then, they will head out to Charlotte Motor Speedway on Friday because qualifying for the All Star race includes that all important pit stop.  On Saturday, the team will be busy working the All Star race.  And they will close out their weekend with a nice short trip out to Iowa to pit Edwards’ Mustang on Sunday.  Whew, I’m tired for them.

Besides this group, there are other guys and crews who will work Friday night’s Truck race, Saturday’s All Star race or Showdown, and then fly out to Iowa for the NNS race.  The backup teams for the likes of Red Bull Racing and Hendrick Motorsports will have weekends similar to this.  And many of these guys will be right back to their shop or other jobs on Monday morning.

Thanks to weekends like this, it isn’t uncommon for some guys to pit race cars in 70+ races a year.  It can be extremely grueling and tough on the body over the course of a 10 month season.  But for those that are willing to hustle, there is experience to be had and some nice money to be made.

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Plate Racing Is The Great Equalizer
Apr 21st, 2011 by T.C.

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Love it or hate it, restrictor plate racing has created some ridiculously close finishes over the years.  This last weekend at Talladega was just another example.  Why?  Because choking off the engines levels the playing field.  Squeezing a restrictor plate in between the carburetor and intake has certainly slowed the cars down, but in the process it has also spawned a level of parity that we don’t see at any other race track.  Underdogs and back markers are suddenly not so.  And guys like Trevor Bayne and Dave Blaney become stories.

To this point in 2011, we’ve run two of the four plate races for the season.  And through those two races, only three drivers have finished in the top ten in both: Carl Edwards, Mark Martin…  and David Gilliland.  Wha?!  Yep, that’s not a typo.  David frickin’ Gilliland.  Driving the under supported, we can’t afford sticker tires, #34 Ford for Front Row Motorsports, Gilliland is suddenly a contender at plate tracks.  In both events he qualified in the 39th position, but was able to stay out of trouble and draft his way to the front.  And the restrictor plate on his engine made it possible.

One of the more interesting story lines from Sunday’s Aaron’s 499 was that of Dave Blaney.  Blaney drives the #36 for Tommy Baldwin Racing, where usually he has to pull off the track early in races with perfectly good race cars.  With very few sponsors, TBR and Blaney are forced to start and park so they can afford to race full events here and there.  At ‘Dega, they brought Golden Corral on board and had one of their best days to date.  While the possibility of a good finish was ruined by a spin off the nose of Kurt Busch’s car late in the race, Blaney ran up front and was even able to lead 21 laps.  There are no moral victories, but what happened to Blaney and TBR would be the closest thing to one.  Hopefully it helps them secure more funding for future races.

The opportunities that plate racing provides are not just limited to the Cup Series.  Joe Nemechek was able to work with another underdog, Mike Wallace, and fight his way back from being a lap down to finish third in the NNS race at Talladega.  Wallace was also on his way to having a season making day, but was the main victim of the last lap crash that resulted in his car taking a tumble down the backstretch.

When we head to Daytona in July, you can be sure that you’ll hear the usual from the media about tandem drafts, deal making, and spotters.  But by the end of the weekend, there is a good chance that the story of an underdog driver will be part of the headlines.  And it will all be because of a thin piece of aluminum.

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Sponsorships Don’t Grow On Trees
Apr 5th, 2011 by Journo

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You know that old saying, “money doesn’t grow on trees”? Well the same can be said for sponsorships. And in a tough economic environment that’s never been more true.

We get questions around here every now and then about why a team isn’t able to find sponsorship. This question has popped up recently with the difficulty the Wood Brothers have had securing All Star Race sponsorship for Trevor Bayne. People are asking, “he won the Daytona 500, why can’t they find sponsorship?”

There is often a sort of paradox on the business development side of motorsports where competitiveness (or even wins) doesn’t always lead to success in finding sponsorship. Look at RCR and Kevin Harvick – they were closing gaps in their sponsorship right up to the start of the season. Or how about Earnhardt Ganassi Racing and Jamie McMurray last season – they closed the gap with sponsorship from McDonalds the week after he won the 500.

The important lesson from the above cases though is that these deals came to fruition through months of effort and relationship building, not a few weeks of fleeting success and/or wishful thinking. Remember Cup Series sponsorships for a whole season run upwards of $20 million and beyond. Single races can run anywhere from $600,000 to $1 million. Neither figure is chump change and spending that kind of money, even for a Fortune 500 company, requires a vetting process that can take a considerable amount of time.

No real sponsorship deal (and I’m talking about those that are actually valuable, not a partnership with the Days Inn Martinsville) is born over night, or even over the course of just a few weeks.

In the case of Trevor Bayne consider that the Wood Brothers entered this season with the intention of running the young driver in just a handful of races. No one would have guessed he would pull a great upset and win the Daytona 500. They just weren’t prepared to find sponsorship to run Bayne in additional races, and didn’t have that nice lead time enjoyed by others doing the same thing.

The Wood Brothers and I would imagine their friends at Roush Fenway Racing are doing all they can to secure funding for Bayne. The fact is though, these things take time. And as much as we like instant gratification, it just doesn’t fit the reality here.

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Trevor Bayne Interview
Feb 23rd, 2011 by Vinny

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An interview with: TREVOR BAYNE Daytona 500 Winner

Picture of Trevor Bayne with Daytona 500 winning car

Trevor Bayne Interview - Picture Courtesy of NASCAR

Here is todays interview with Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne
ASHLEY JONES: Good afternoon, everyone. On Sunday Trevor became the seventh driver to earn his first win at the Daytona 500, doing it in just his second NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start. Trevor also became the youngest winner in Daytona 500 history just one day after his 20th birthday. Trevor also recorded Ford’s 600th victory.

Trevor, you’ve had a couple of days to let this victory set in, so how has your mindset changed since you took the checkered flag on Sunday?

TREVOR BAYNE: Haven’t had a lot of time to let it sink in yet. We’ve been go, go, go. As soon as I get 10 seconds to slow down and it starts to hit me, it’s crazy. I never knew it would be this big. I knew the 500 was huge and it’s been my dream since I was five years old. But, man, this is a really cool deal that I’m getting to experience.

ASHLEY JONES: How is your energy level? What has been the high point of this day and a half? What do you feel like the perception will be among your fellow competitors when you walk through that garage gate at Phoenix later this week?

TREVOR BAYNE: Well, you know, at first I was just in shock. I didn’t know what to say. I was nervous in my interviews because I wanted to do it justice, just explain how big of a deal this was for the Wood Brothers and Donnie Wingo. I was scared to take any credit because I felt weird coming in winning our first one with all the other drivers that have been doing this for so long. Now after seeing their support, they helped me realize we did earn this thing. I’ve been working at it since I was five years old. This team, there’s nobody that deserves it more than Leonard, Eddie, Glen, Len Wood, and Donnie Wingo, his 31st Daytona 500. Now it’s starting to set in a little bit. We’re so excited about it. I don’t know how to thank them enough for the opportunity to drive that racecar, be in that position to win. I mean, it’s taken its time to sink in.

The high point was when the White House called and said the President was going to want to talk to me in the next couple days. I haven’t talked to him yet. I had no idea who it was. Just a private number came up on my phone. Jimmie Johnson called, Jeff Gordon. All of them have been showing their support, but that one was the one that shocked me the most.

Q. Trevor, the question of the day is now that NASCAR has basically defined what would happen if you chose to deselect Nationwide and select Cup, have you had any more thoughts about that? Have you decided what you’re going to do now since we have Phoenix on the horizon?

TREVOR BAYNE: No, I think I’m going to stay with Nationwide. I think it’s a great thing they’re doing for the sport, for the young drivers there, to be able to rise up as champions. Nothing really changed. The only thing that changed is we get to be the Daytona 500 champions, which is really, really incredible. I think we’re still going to have an awesome year at Roush Fenway running for that Nationwide championship. Obviously they still have a blank car. I’d love to get some partners on it. As for now, we’re still running full-time. The Wood Brothers only have 18 races, 17 with Ford Motorcraft, and Quick Lane and Ford.com. But the 18th race is the one we’re going to run at Martinsville due to the funds we won at Daytona. I’m still not full-time Cup, still going to run for the championship at Nationwide. I don’t regret any of our decisions there. We’re still off to a great start in both series with a win in the first.

Q. Trevor, years ago I talked to Richard Petty. He said, We run for two championships in NASCAR. I said, How so? He said, You run for the championship in points and then you run to win the Daytona 500. Do you have the sense of like you’ve done something that’s of championship quality right now?

TREVOR BAYNE: I mean, I’m starting to take that in a little bit just because of all the hype around it. I’ve always known, like I said before, that this is an incredible thing, an incredible race. But it’s an even bigger deal than I even expected. I always wondered what it was that separated the Daytona 500 from all the other races, why it was that it meant so much to Mark Martin that he hadn’t won one yet, or when Dale, Sr., finally got his win, what was that defining factor. Now I’m starting to see it.

The Daytona 500 is a big deal. It’s so cool to win it. I feel so blessed, man. To have that good of a racecar, that I was in the position to be able to make the moves I made, to be guided, I can’t describe how crazy it is that God surrounded me with these quality people, quality equipment, made it come together that perfect in our first-ever attempt.

Q. Trevor, over the past day and a half you’ve been on a whirlwind situation. How much fun has it been for you and your family to get into the limelight for the last day and a half?

TREVOR BAYNE: You know, I’m finally starting to enjoy it a little bit. At first, like I said, I was nervous. I didn’t know what to do, what to say in all the interviews. I’m just learning just to be me on them because I’m thankful for everything that’s happened. I want to stay humble.
Now I’m having a good time with all the people, cutting up. It’s starting to become a lot of fun. I’m actually getting to enjoy this win a lot more than I expected in these last few days.

My family, unbelievable how they’re taking it in, too. There’s reporters in Knoxville calling my friends, my little brother, mom and dad, interviewing them. It’s fun to see them get some credibility from it, because they’re the supporting factor, the guys and girls that keep me sane off the track. There’s going to be pictures and billboards in my hometown of Knoxville, congratulations on it, movie theaters, my elementary school, all kinds of stuff. Just to see the hometown support and also the national support, I can’t describe it. It’s way more than I ever expected it to be.

Q. Trevor, these are really hard times. A lot of people can identify with you as an underdog whose hard work and persistence all paid off. Could you offer some words of encouragement to folks, whatever their walk, who are low on hope.

TREVOR BAYNE: There were times when I was down. There was a six-month period when I was out of a racecar and I thought it was going to be the most crucial year of my career. I thought that my 17- and 18-year-old years were going to be very, very crucial, and they were. But God had a plan for them all. When everything was falling apart last year, I didn’t know what was happening. Had I not just followed His path, there’s no way I’d be sitting here today as the Daytona 500 champion now.

It’s like the prayer we said right before the race: Whether we have good results, bad results, whatever, grow us closer to you. If we were only going off of these results, wins, championship performance, the opinions of everybody, there’s no way we’d ever feel good enough. When you have something like that to lean on, know that God is growing us closer to Him, even when we don’t think they’re good experiences, if we can take that out of it, we’re never going to have a crash day. I’m not going to say I have a bad day and things go wrong, because they do. But there’s something greater to it if we’re just faithful.

Q. Trevor, can you explain to the people what was going through your mind with one lap to go. Here you are out there with a chance to win, yet there were also drivers out there that had been doing this for years. You actually must have said to yourself, Who and what do I watch out for?

TREVOR BAYNE: Yeah, I mean, I had been watching the other races all weekend long, the Truck race, the Nationwide race. All the races I watched were won by a different driver than the one who was leading on the last lap. I was concerned about that. I didn’t want to be the guy who was leading, the guy who was pushing him was able to make a move. I didn’t want the second pack to come up behind us and catch us.

I really couldn’t have planned it any better. I didn’t plan it that way. To be honest with you, I planned it totally different. It probably wouldn’t have worked.
The way it all happened with the 47 car, Bobby Labonte giving us that incredible push out to the lead, Carl Edwards breaking up 42 and 22 cars, breaking up the little pack that they had together, drafting us, catching us, Carl making the move to the inside, I was able to wait till he got inside the 47, then pull down, be able to hold him off.

Had the 47 not left a little bit of room down low, Carl might not have been able to fit in, he might have went high. There’s a lot of different scenarios that could have happened. But I’m just so thankful it played out the way it did and we were able to hold everybody off.

Q. Trevor, last October I wasn’t sure if I was going to get to interview you because you’d been dropped from Waltrip Racing. Had to struggle to find your hauler in the Nationwide garage. Just the fact that you went from that place to winning the Daytona 500 a few months later, how does that underscore your belief in what you told me that day, is that this is bigger than racing for you?

TREVOR BAYNE: It is. You know, before this ever happened, I had a meeting with some of the people that are running my business stuff, running my financial and everything. My dad was involved. We sat down and we said, What is the goal of Trevor Bayne as a company, as a person, as anything? I told them, I said, The goal, this is going to sound weird, but it’s not to be the best racecar driver, the most marketable, the most popular, but it’s to build a platform and let God use us on the platform that He’s building, which might require me to become the best racecar driver or be the most marketable or most popular, whatever it is. I just want to stand on the platform He’s putting under me. That’s our goal. If that’s our goal, our highs and lows are going to be a lot more manageable.

Q. Trevor, where are you calling from? What was it like being at ESPN yesterday, kind of being the center of attention up there?

TREVOR BAYNE: That was really cool going to the ESPN studios. I actually got to go last year. This year I didn’t feel like I was interrupting their shows for something. I actually felt like they wanted me there a little more, so that was cool. I am in a car on the way to the airport to fly to San Francisco. We left a little meet-and-greet with all the people from Chicagoland Speedway, some fans. But now we’re getting ready to fly to San Francisco to be presented in Ghirardelli Square with an ice cream sundae. I don’t know exactly what is going to happen, but we’re going to San Francisco, which is cool.

Q. You’ve raced several times at the track in Newton, Iowa. Want to get your perspective about it. I see you’re committed to coming back here for a couple runs. What’s been your impression of that track over the years?

TREVOR BAYNE: I think Newton, Iowa Speedway, is really cool. I love those kind of tracks. I remember the first time I raced there, felt like it was so much bigger than all the tracks I’ve been racing on. Now when I go back, it feels like a short track. It’s such a neat track. I mean, it’s really competitive. We see great races there. Fans always love it. Pack out the place. The fans get more excited there than I’ve ever seen anywhere else. That’s a really good market for NASCAR. I’m glad that everybody enjoys it so much.

Q. Trevor, I know about three years ago you spent a lot of time in the K&N series in New England. Talk about the time you spent racing around the tracks up here like Thompson. Talk about your experiences there and how it shaped you as a driver going forward.

TREVOR BAYNE: Yeah, even before that we raced up in Lake Erie, Poughkeepsie. We ran all around the Pennsylvania, New York areas, Chapel Hill. That was in go-karts, awesome legacy, like I said. Then in the K&N series, we raced Thompson. That was my first-ever NASCAR win. It wasn’t a top-three series, but it was a NASCAR win. That was my only win that year in the series. We took the pole as well. Where else did we race? Adirondack there, had a great run, finished second.

The Northeast has been really, really good to us. I always like coming up in the area. I’m looking forward to coming up that way some more to Loudon, doing that stuff. Loudon was actually really good to us last year. We finished I think third at Loudon or fifth or something like that, top five. Like I said, the Northeast has been really good to us.

Q. Trevor, what are you expecting out of the June 4th Nationwide race at Chicagoland Speedway? Are you really into a lot of history with NASCAR, having the Wood Brothers as your Cup team owners?

TREVOR BAYNE: Well, first question, I am excited about Chicagoland. I found out today I’m running all three races there. That’s really neat. I spent some time with the promotors, the other track people today. They were really, really good people. Really happy about the fan support they’re getting now.

About the history, I mean, I definitely have watched a lot of highlight footage. Ever since I’ve been with the Wood Brothers, they are big history people. They have a lot of history. They’ve taken me through their shop. I’ve talked to David Pearson, met Richard Petty, hung out with him for a while.
You have to love this sport. NASCAR is one of the sports that stays true to its foundation. They have the Hall of Fame, David Pearson being inducted this year. They have a lot of history stuff going on. I really appreciate that from him, remembering the people that founded this ground that we’re walking on now.

Q. Trevor, could you talk about what it means to pull off such a popular win? Even though the Daytona 500 was your second start, the biggest race of the year, you had so many people who were so happy for you. Can you talk about what it means to pull off a win that has been really well-received with both the drivers and fans.

TREVOR BAYNE: I can’t thank them enough. Like I said, I was kind of worried about that at first, thinking I was a punk 20-year-old kid to steal their thunder. To see the driver support is huge to me. They’ve taken to me well and helped me out. If it wasn’t for Jeff Gordon, Bobby Labonte, David Ragan, Carl Edwards, Martin Truex, Jr., there were so many guys I worked with in that race, if it wasn’t for them, there is no way I could have won it. A lot of this goes to them as well.

Also because I think a lot of guys like to see that Wood Brothers car back in Victory Lane. That’s a big part of NASCAR history. I mean, the Wood Brothers are one of the greatest families in NASCAR still. They deserve it. Donnie Wingo as my crew chief, everybody loves him. We have a great group surrounding us. Everybody is really pumped for us. I think it’s well-deserved for the Wood Brothers. I’m just glad that I was fortunate enough to be the one to get them back in Victory Lane.

Q. Trevor, we’re all enjoying following your bright smile. Everywhere we go I run into people who aren’t huge NASCAR fans, talking about the kid who won the Daytona 500. I don’t know if you’re feeling any of that. Also if you could talk about your crew chief, Donnie Wingo. He’s back preparing the next car.

TREVOR BAYNE: Yeah, I mean, this has been so well-received by everybody. We’ve had media outlets that have never been interested in NASCAR. I don’t know if it’s because it’s such an underdog story, the history, the oldest team with the youngest driver. Everybody has taken to this so well. I’ve had so many people come up to me and say it’s exactly what the sport needed.

Like I said before, I’m glad I got to be the lucky one in that situation. Donnie Wingo you were asking about, what a great guy. He’s one of the best crew chiefs I’ve worked with. Just really calm all the time. Doesn’t get real excited. Even when I asked him after the race, I said, Did you think we could do this? He said, Yeah, I knew we could. He never doubted it. We had great guys, awesome parts and engines, Ford coming onboard to support us to begin with. He knew we had everything it would take. I know he believes that for every single race this season. We have to manage our expectations and know we can’t do this every week. It’s only our first year, our third race coming up at Phoenix.

As soon as the celebrations were over there Monday morning, he was back at the shop working hard, getting ready to go to Phoenix. Can’t thank him and everybody in our group enough for being so dedicated to running good this season.

Q. Your new found celebrity, do you feel prepared? How do you expect to handle things like if you get in a fender-bender now? If you get a girlfriend, that’s now news. Things off the track that people wouldn’t have even made a big deal about before now can be a big deal because you’re the Daytona 500 winner.
TREVOR BAYNE: Well, I think that can be good and bad both ways. That’s where I have to be true to who Trevor Bayne is. I don’t want to have anything to hide. I want to be as public as possible and truthful as possible and be the same person I am in the media as I am away from it. I’ve tried to do that, try to stay humble through it all. It is crazy how much attention has been drawn to this. I never expected it. I’m so thankful for the fact that this might help our race teams be able to find partners to go on these racecars. I had that solid white suit on for the Roush Fenway Nationwide car. That thing was not looking good. I hope this draws some more interest.

You’re right, it does draw some attention that might be a lot to handle, but I know that God is not going to give me more than I can handle. Might be too much for Trevor Bayne to handle, but never too much for Him to handle. There’s going to be days before I made this decision to run for the Wood Brothers in Cup this year, I prayed whatever would happen would be something that would draw me closer to Him. I thought it would be because of struggles, because it would be tough. Now it’s because of the success. So just have to manage the mountaintops, know there might be bad days ahead, but be excited when we do get them because this is really good for the sport and we’re really excited about everything.

Q. Trevor, I believe NASCAR is off the week before Bristol. Peyton Manning has mastered the art of getting back to Knoxville under the radar. Will you try to get back here at all? How much more challenging will that be to live a normal life in your native hometown than it was maybe last year?

TREVOR BAYNE: Oh, man, I can’t wait to get back to Knoxville. I wish I was there this week. All my friends have been sending me pictures of billboards, movie signs, school signs. I can’t thank Knoxville enough for the support they’ve given me through the years, not just for this win, but all along I have people that I grew up with, from church, family. I’m sure I’m going to try to get back. I don’t know when it’s gonna be. Like I said, I wish I was there this week to celebrate with everybody because I hear it’s pretty awesome in Knoxville right now. I love that town and can’t wait to get back.

Q. Trevor, the whole celebrity experience, I know it’s been only a couple of days, but have you met anyone that kind of gave you a ‘wow’ factor?

TREVOR BAYNE: You know, I haven’t crossed paths with anybody yet. We’ve been doing media tours and all kinds of stuff. When we were at ESPN, they asked who I’d like to meet and I said Troy Polamalu and Tom White. They said, We’re sure that can happen. You can meet whoever you want to now. I thought that was kind of cool. Obviously, when the White House called and said the President would like to speak to us within the next couple of days, whether that will happen or not, I don’t know. That was cool they called. I was blown away by that.

Q. The Daytona 500 being as stressful as it is just to be in it, but talk about the new two-car draft situation. How was that?

TREVOR BAYNE: Well, you know, when we went out to qualify and qualified third, I think that changed a lot of drivers’ perspectives, their ability to work with us. They knew we had a fast car. I think that made them more willing. Jeff Gordon hooking up with us, letting us push him around, that rubbed off on all the other drivers. If Jeff Gordon has trust in this kid, maybe I should too. I think that’s what happened in the 500, so many drivers being able to work with us. Obviously the experience I got in the Nationwide Series on Saturday definitely translated and helped me in the Cup Series on Sunday.
I loved being the pusher. I felt like I could stay out of trouble more. I talked to Joey Logano one caution and said I’d love to push you. We didn’t end up working with each other because we both wanted to be the pusher for the same reason.

I planned on pushing till the end, but it ended up we were the ones being pushed. Definitely cool the way it played out. I loved the kind of racing it was. I loved watching it in the first Duel. I wasn’t in that. As a driver it was cool to watch because I knew how much was going on in the racecars, how the air worked. I thought it was fun to watch, and I hope it was for the fans.

Q. A lot of the drivers, particularly Darrel Waltrip during the broadcast, Junior spoke about you afterwards, a lot of the drivers that did talk to you, can you remember did anyone give you advice as you were driving around Sunday that stuck in your head?

TREVOR BAYNE: Yeah. Talking to David Pearson, it was small, simple advice that a lot of people would tell me. Just with him it stuck. He was just saying, kind of jokingly, they asked him on ESPN if he had any advice. He said, Be careful. Do the 21 car some justice. That stuck out.
I entered that race with a totally different mindset than I normally had. As a 19-, 20-year-old, you manage a lot of your things off of performance. You want to be the guy that leads every lap, you want to make a statement, you want to do everything right. You put a lot of pressure on yourself.

When he said that, I went into the race in kind of survival mode for the first 150 laps thinking, I have to get to the end of this, avoid any crashes, push, not be pushed, just be smart the whole time. That was crucial because that kept me calm, that kept me patient when we would drop to the back on some of the restarts to push back up to the field. Then at the end, just to make smart moves.

Hopefully we did the 21 car some justice like he asked us to do. I think seeing him back in Victory Lane might have done it for him, so I hope so.

ASHLEY JONES: Trevor, thank you so much for your time. 
TREVOR BAYNE: Thank you.

Trevor Bayne Interview is a post from: Awesome Race Fans


Trevor Bayne Says He’s Sticking With Nationwide Championship Run
Feb 22nd, 2011 by Bob Zeller

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Whoever wins the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup series championship, his name won't be Daytona 500 champ Trevor Bayne.

The 20-year-old rookie, who became the youngest winner of the Daytona 500 Sunday, said he's sticking with his original plan for the season -- a full-time Nationwide series run for the championship and a part-time Sprint Cup campaign.

"I think I am going to stay with Nationwide," Bayne said Tuesday on the weekly NASCAR teleconference. "Nothing has really changed for me other than that I am the Daytona 500 champion, which is really incredible.

"I think we are still going to have an awesome year for Roush Fenway running for that Nationwide championship. Obviously we still have a blank car and I would love to get some partners on it, but as of now we are still running for it full time over there. I am still not full-time Cup and I am going to run for the championship in Nationwide. I don't regret any of our decisions there."

Bayne will also run at least 17 more races in Sprint Cup for the Wood Brothers.

As they have for the past several years and for most of their long and storied history in NASCAR, the Wood Brothers are running only a partial schedule.

 

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Was That What You’d Hoped For?
Feb 21st, 2011 by T.C.

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The opening weekend of the 2011 NASCAR season is in the books.  We saw spectacular finishes, a lot of action, and even some controversy.  So from Friday’s wild Truck Series race, all the way through Sunday’s incredible finale, was Daytona what you’d hoped for?

After Thursday’s Duel races, I can’t lie, I was afraid we might be in for a very boring 500.  The tandem drafting created a completely new style of superspeedway racing, and there really was no telling what kind of finish we’d see.  But if Saturday’s Nationwide Series race was any indication, we were going to be in for a treat on Sunday.

The Truck Series races at superspeedways are always full of drama and action, and the Friday night premiere did not disappoint.  We saw our first close finish of the weekend with Michael Waltrip just sneaking by Elliott Sadler for the win, and we also had our first controversy.  It was discovered after the race that the spoiler on Waltrip’s truck had laid down, due to a part malfunction.  NASCAR is taking the pieces back to the R&D center, and if any penalties are levied, expect them to be announced Tuesday.

Saturday’s NNS race kept the streak of close finishes going, with T0ny Stewart beating Clint Bowyer back to the line by only a few thousandths of a second.  And while Cup drivers dominated the show, it’s nice to see that the current top five in NNS points is Landon Cassill, Reed Sorenson, Jason Leffler, Ricky Stenhouse, and Trevor Bayne.

As for the Daytona 500, it was a shame that we had so many wrecked race cars, but the finish was unbelievable.  It was fantastic watching the #21, with a retro paint scheme, go to victory lane with young Trevor Bayne at the wheel.  The Wood Brothers have so much history in the sport, and it was fun to watch that team celebrate a Daytona 500 win and add another chapter to their story.

Who’s ready for Phoenix?!

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Daytona 500 Winner Trevor Bayne Living a Dream at 20
Feb 21st, 2011 by Holly Cain

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Trevor Bayne

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Flashing his dimples, and looking even younger than his 20 years, Trevor Bayne grinned broadly, laughed and fidgeted as he conducted his first news conference as the youngest Daytona 500 winner in history.

One day after celebrating his 20th birthday Bayne drove the legendary No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford to victory Sunday in NASCAR's biggest race -- sharing the honor with the team's previous Daytona 500 winning drivers, A.J. Foyt, Cale Yarborough, Tiny Lund and David Pearson. Bayne wasn't even born when Pearson claimed the Wood Brothers' last Daytona 500 trophy in 1976.

Explaining how grateful he was for the opportunity, thankful for his good fortune and appreciative of his team's efforts, the good-looking, well-spoken Bayne sounded as mature and poised behind the microphone as he was behind the steering wheel in holding off three series champions and a handful of other veterans on the last two laps of Sunday's race.

The Knoxville, Tenn., native's biggest smile, however, seemed to come when he found out that his Twitter account expanded from 6,000 followers to 16,000 by the end of the race. And, he modestly conceded, he was going to need a friend to drive his Ford truck home. Seems that while most of Bayne's competitors flew in private jets to the race, he drove his Ford F150 pickup truck from Tennessee to Florida.

 

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