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New Hampshire Race Information

June 24, 2009 by admin 1824Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F24%2Fnew-hampshire-race-information%2FNew+Hampshire+Race+Information2009-06-24+21%3A41%3A05adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1824

lenox301logo
Race:  Sunday, June 28, 2009 in Loudon, NH
Title Sponsor:  Lenox Industrial Tools
Scheduled Green Flag (approx): 2:15pm/et

 

Television Coverage/Re-air/TV Team

Television Coverage:  TNT 12:30pm/et

SPEED’s NASCAR Raceday Pre-Race Show:  
10:30am/et with John Roberts, Jimmy Spencer, Kenny Wallace

Scheduled Race Re-Air Dates/Times:
Wednesday, July 1 at 12:00pm/et on SPEED

Announcers:  Bill Weber, Wally Dallenbach Jr., Kyle Petty
Pit Reporters:  Matt Yocum, Marty Snider, Ralph Sheheen, Lindsay Czarniak
TNT’s Revolving Studio:  Marc Fein and Larry McReynolds

TV Listings, Links and Info:
Jayski’s TV Listings Page
NASCAR on TV
Race Fan TV

 

Radio Coverage/Shows/ Team

This Week – Performance Racing Network (PRN) and XM Sirius Satellite
goprn.com
sirius.com

 

Practice Dates/Times/TV

Practices:
Friday, June 26, 12:00 – 1:30 pm/et, TV-SPEED
Saturday, June 27, 9:00 – 9:50 pm/et, TV-SPEED

Happy Hour ‘Final’ practice:
Saturday, June 27, 11:45am – 12:45pm/et, TV-SPEED

 

Qualifying Information/Times/TV

Qualifying Draw: Friday, June 26, 11:00am/et

Qualifying:  2 laps for positions 1-42, Friday, June 26 at 3:10pm/et, TV-SPEED, re-air at 9:30pm/et and 2:00am/et;
AND live via radio at PRN Radio and Sirius XM Satellite NASCAR Radio.

 

Live Leaderboards

Fox Sport’s Racetrax
Nascar.com Leaderboard
Yahoo.com Live Chat and Leaderboard

In Car Audio

Sirius Satellite Radio:
#14 Tony Stewart Ch. 121
#88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Ch. 125
#24 Jeff Gordon Ch. 126
#48 Jimmie Johnson Ch. 127
NASCAR Officials Ch. 130
#?? Fan’s Choice Ch. 113

Voting for the Lenox Industrial Tools 301 closes Friday at 5 pm ET

Nascar TrackPass:
Scanner
PitCommand
RaceView

Filed Under: Jeff Gordon News Tagged With: lenox industrial tools 301, new hampshire, race information

Sonoma In Car Audio

June 21, 2009 by admin 1789Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F21%2Fsonoma-in-car-audio%2FSonoma+In+Car+Audio2009-06-22+02%3A57%3A17adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1789

June 21 – – Kasey Kahne held off Tony Stewart on a series of late race restarts to win his first career road course race in the Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway. Jeff Gordon’s prospects were hindered by a pit road speeding penalty that put him back in 32nd place. He rallied back with a strong effort in the final 20 laps as he gained 15 spots during the closing stages. A green/white/checkered flag finish allowed Gordon to move up from 13th to 9th at the checkered flag.

source: gordonline.com

Race Results
Standings

In Car Audio

MP3 Direct Download
[audio:http://www.scannerbytes.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/Jeff-Gordon-2009-06-21-Toyota-SaveMart-350-Sonoma.mp3]

Photos





Post Race Quotes:

STEVE LETARTE, CREW CHIEF, NO. 24 DUPONT IMPALA SS – Finished 9th:

“The DuPont Chevrolet just wasn’t as fast as we really needed to be all weekend. We made some changes for the race. I don’t think that made it any better. So he (Jeff Gordon) battled real good. We pitted one time we probably shouldn’t have. We worked the first caution really well. We got a little track position and then we had kind of a poor pit stop, and got caught speeding all at the same time and had to go to the back. But the guys kept their heads up and we raced all the way and that’s what you’ve got to do at all these races. So to come home with a top 10 was really impressive.”

DOUBLE FILE RESTARTS ON A ROAD COURSE, DID THEY WORK TODAY?

“It looked like it was a good race, so yeah. The question is, what is work? So I thought it was great. There were some passes and there was some excitement. Some guys were probably disappointed that they lost track position, but it gave us an opportunity. We started 33rd there with about 30 or 35 (laps) to go and we got all the way up to ninth. So I’m a big fan of it at the moment.”

DID JEFF GORDON SAY ANYTHING ABOUT HIS BACK? HE MENTIONED IT MIGHT BE A CONCERN ON A ROAD COURSE

“He didn’t say anything to me. I just saw him and he looked fine to me. I think his back is a whole lot better than the car we gave him.”

Filed Under: Feature, Race Audio Tagged With: audio, In Car Audio, Infineon, sonoma

Jeff Gordon Press Conference – Indy Test

June 17, 2009 by admin 1774Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F17%2Fjeff-gordon-press-conference-indy-test%2FJeff+Gordon+Press+Conference+-+Indy+Test2009-06-17+18%3A22%3A33adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1774

June 16 — Four amateur shot video clips of Jeff Gordon’s press conference after his test session at Indianpolis Motorspeedway.

Jeff comments on the test results:
httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSk0wCj2iy4

Jeff asked about the tires “falling off”:
httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6qqZfIvak4

“How important is a good race at Indy?”:
httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N3PM5Y7gHKU

Jeff and Greg Stucker, Goodyear Director of Race Tire Sales:
httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vq_QotmntWk

 

Transcript of Press Conference

JEFF GORDON: I’m very pleased with the results. I was very surprised to see how much rubber was on the track yesterday when I arrived, and just to see how the tires are reacting from a grip level with the car as well as how it’s wearing the tire, heat in the tire. I mean, everything looks great at the Brickyard 400 and go out there and run hard, and tire wear is not even going to be in the back of our minds.

It might be whether or not we can stay out and how far we can push it, if anything. They’ve done an excellent job. I think a lot of obviously credit goes to Goodyear, all the hard work, effort, time, money that’s been spent to make it right, but obviously there’s been a lot of teams, and I have not been one of them so I don’t get the credit, but there’s been a lot of teams that have contributed to put in a lot of laps in here to get it to where it is today.

So thankful for those guys. I got to kind of come in at the end and have the proven great product and just be able to go out there and put laps in, which is what Goodyear asked us to come here to do.

Q. The guys earlier were talking about falloff rates. What did you see, and are you going to be happy with the amount of falloff to make it a racing race?

JEFF GORDON: Yeah, I like to see falloff, and even with as great as this tire is, this track is so abrasive that you’re going to have falloff. I saw falloff, and I like the grip level from the beginning, I liked how it does gradually fall off. It’s not a huge drop. And I felt like it was enough to where it’s going to make the racing really, really good.

I think it’s always important to have a certain amount of falloff so that you can tune on the car, you can change your line as a driver. You still want enough grip to where if you slide off line a little bit, you can recover. All those things I saw while we were here.

Q. How important is it to have a good tire here, a good race here based on what happened last year?

JEFF GORDON: I think that’s why they spent as much time here testing and all the effort has been put in there. I think that this is an incredibly important race to motorsports in general and to all the companies that are involved, especially Goodyear.

Last year was something that none of us wanted to see what happened last year, and I think that it was determined I think probably before that race was over that it’s not going to happen again. You know, I just really hate that Goodyear took so much of the blame because this track is extremely abrasive. This car we’ve seen wears tires more. There’s a lot of things that have contributed to what happened.

Unfortunately Goodyear took the brunt of it, and because none of the other things changing, they had to really work hard to come up with the compound and this tire. I give them a lot of credit for taking that on head on and resolving it.

You know, it is important to have a good race here. There’s a lot of fans that travel from all over to come to this race, and we know how many people are watching at home, and this is an important event, and we want to go out there and put the race on that we possibly can.

Again, I’m confident this year we’re going to be able to do that.

Q. There’s a lot of fans out there that are holding onto their money probably to see whether or not this thing is going to happen and the way we’ve become accustomed to seeing the 400. Can you guarantee that we’re not going to see a repeat of what happened last year?

JEFF GORDON: I can. I will guarantee it. I’m 100 percent confident. I ran this tire as hard as I possibly could, put numerous laps on them. It’s a dead issue. This is going to be a race here it might come down to fuel mileage, it might come down to a lot of different factors, fastest car, not the fastest car, track position, a double fire restart with ten to go, but it’s not going to come down to a ten lap shootout on whose tires can last.

I told Stu Grant earlier, they’ve actually made it too good, it’s that good. And I’m 100 percent confident, and I can promise all the fans out there that if they want to come to the Brickyard and see a great race and be confident that the tires are not going to be an issue, you can trust me. I hope that’s enough for them. But they’ve got it resolved for sure.

Q. You and Tony are one two in the battle, and you both kind of cut your eye teeth around here. What is your first memory of Tony, and how often did you actually race against him before he came to NASCAR?

JEFF GORDON: I don’t ever remember racing against him. I think somebody said that maybe we raced buns at the Hoosier Dome race, the midget race that they used to do there that was sort of an invitational race.

But I knew of Tony Stewart because I remember when I was leaving USAC and going to run stock cars, I know Bobby was one of them, but I think there were a couple others that had mentioned Tony Stewart’s name and said that he had a bright future, really talented race car driver.

So when I started seeing him on Saturday Night Thunder and hearing his name and seeing his name in the papers, then it was no surprise to me because I remember hearing that name.

He certainly has lived up to all those expectations. He’s a terrific race car driver, great talent, and I think this year even shows his talents to a whole ‘nother level, to be able to change teams, be involved with the ownership side of it and restructure and go to a team that really was not that successful and then be able to have the year that they’re having.

It’s not just Tony’s talent on the racetrack, it’s what he can attract. To me that’s how you really measure what somebody’s value is, what their talent level is, and it’s pretty impressive what they’ve been able to pull off over there.

Q. Earlier this week they suggested that maybe cutting some horsepower, 50 or 100 horsepower might help with the tire situation in general. Can you maybe give your thoughts on that?

JEFF GORDON: That’s somebody that doesn’t drive a race car because that’s just absolutely backwards. The more power that we take away from the engines, the faster we go through the corners. We’ve seen it in the Nationwide Series, we saw it years ago at New Hampshire when they had some of the tragedies there, tried to slow the cars down, take power away, and we went through the corners faster.

You know, just because you cut horsepower down doesn’t mean that it’s going to slow your speed in the middle of the corner down, and that’s where most of the tire wear and abuse comes from is how you lean on that tire through the middle of the corner and the corner speed.

I always say, give us more power, because the more power that we’re going to have, the more difficult it’s going to be to control it, and the car is not going to handle as good, we’re probably going to carry actually less speed. But I definitely am very much against taking power away from the cars.

Now, if you take downforce away, you take grip away, you do a lot of other things on top of the power, then maybe, but just the power is definitely not the answer.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: indianopolis, test session, Video

Infineon Race Information

June 17, 2009 by admin 1762Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F17%2Finfineon-race-information%2FInfineon+Race+Information2009-06-17+18%3A10%3A08adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1762

SaveMart350-logo

Race: Sunday, June 21, 2009 in Sonoma, CA
Title Sponsor: Toyota/Save Mart
Scheduled Green Flag (approx): 5:16pm/et

 Jeff Gordon to make an appearance.

Television Coverage/Re-air/TV Team

Television Coverage:  TNT 3:30pm/et
SPEED’s NASCAR Raceday Pre-Race Show: 1:30pm/et with John Roberts, Jimmy Spencer, Kenny Wallace
Scheduled Race Re-Air Dates/Times:  Wednesday, June 24 at 12:00pm/et on SPEED
Announcers: Bill Weber, Wally Dallenbach Jr., Kyle Petty
Pit Reporters:  Matt Yocum, Marty Snider, Ralph Sheheen, Lindsay Czarniak
TNT’s Revolving Studio: Marc Fein and Larry McReynolds

TV Listings, Links and Info:
Jayski’s TV Listings Page
NASCAR on TV
Race Fan TV

Radio Coverage/Shows/ Team

This Week – Performance Racing Network (PRN) and XM Sirius Satellite
goprn.com
sirius.com

Practice Dates/Times/TV

Practices:
Friday, June 19, 3:00 – 4:30 pm/et, TV-SPEED
Saturday, June 20, 12:30 – 1:15 pm/et, TV-SPEED

Happy Hour ‘Final’ practice:
Saturday, June 20, 1:50 – 2:50pm/et, TV-SPEED

Qualifying Information/Times/TV

Qualifying Draw:  Friday, June 19, 2:00pm/et
Qualifying: 2 laps for positions 1-42, Friday, June 19 at 6:35pm/et, TV-SPEED, no re-air scheduled;
AND live via radio at PRN Radio and Sirius XM Satellite NASCAR Radio.

 

Live Leaderboards

Fox Sport’s Racetrax
Nascar.com Leaderboard
Yahoo.com Live Chat and Leaderboard

In Car Audio

Sirius Satellite Radio:
#14 Tony Stewart Ch. 121
#18 Kyle Busch Ch. 125
#24 Jeff Gordon Ch. 126
#42 Juan Pablo Montoya Ch. 127
NASCAR Officials Ch. 113
#?? Fan’s Choice Ch. 130

 Fan’s Choice voting closes Friday at 5 pm ET

Nascar TrackPass:
Scanner
PitCommand
RaceView

Filed Under: Jeff Gordon News Tagged With: Infineon, race information, sears point

NASCAR loses it’s Drawl – Gordon to Blame?

June 15, 2009 by admin 17501 Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F15%2Fnascar-loses-its-drawl-gordon-to-blame%2FNASCAR+loses+it%27s+Drawl+-+Gordon+to+Blame%3F2009-06-15+20%3A31%3A22adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1750

jeff-gordon-classic

I am a bit irrated after reading this article about how NASCAR has lost it’s roots and the author says it all started with Gordon because he did not fit the mold of the the stereotypical driver from the Deep South and because he was from California.   While I do agree to some extent that NASCAR has lost its edge and is now a “plain vanilla” sport, I certainly don’t think Gordon started the downfall.   I blame the leadership of NASCAR for it’s current state.   I miss the drivers of old that voice there opinion, now we have 43 PR robots on the track that are afraid of saying something that is “detrimental to stock car racing” and losing championship points.

Here’s and excert from the article I’m referring to:

And a lot of the blame, or credit, goes to Jeff Gordon.

In many ways, Gordon broke the NASCAR mold. Before he arrived in the early 1990s, most drivers cut their teeth racing on short tracks, slowly working their way up through the sport. Gordon was a child prodigy, groomed by his stepfather in midgets and sprints from the age of 5. Raised in Vallejo, he looked and sounded West Coast, and his bold driving made him very influential. 

It still amazes me how the hillbilly NASCAR dolts, yes I’m talking to you Talladega Earnhardt fanatics, continue to shower their hatred on the 24.  Go back to your “black #3” painted double wide and pour one out in the front yard for the 3 car and get over it.  Someone came along and gave your god a run for his money.  Gordon is the closest thing to an old school driver NASCAR has along with Kyle Busch and Tony Stewart.  Oh and those guys are from Las Vegas and Indiana, not exactly Deep South either.

source: pressdemocrat.com

Agree or Disagree?  Voice your opinions and comments below!

Filed Under: Commentary, Feature, Jeff Gordon News Tagged With: Commentary, history, nostalgia, young guns

Jeff’s Post Race Press Conference Video – Michigan

June 15, 2009 by admin 1744Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F15%2Fjeff-gordons-post-race-press-conference-video-michigan%2FJeff%27s+Post+Race+Press+Conference+Video+-+Michigan2009-06-15+05%3A19%3A09adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1744

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUk9T4PIX-U

Jeff Gordon talks about his 2nd place finish in Sunday’s Lifelock 400 at MIS.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: lifelock 400, michigan, Video

Michigan In Car Audio

June 14, 2009 by admin 1708Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F14%2Fmichigan-in-car-audio%2FMichigan+In+Car+Audio2009-06-14+21%3A30%3A19adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1708

 

June 15 – – It wasn’t a victory for Jeff Gordon at Michigan Speedway, but after starting last to begin the day, he posted a solid top-5 finish. The overall lack of caution flags — there were only three in the race — forced the team to make adjustments on the fly.

Gordon started at the rear of the field due to an engine change on Friday. He gained three spots on the opening lap, and moved up to 32nd on lap 5. He picked off two more spots on lap 6, and another pair on lap 8 to run in the 28th position. His upward climb continued as he moved to 22nd on lap 16. Gordon entered the top-20 on lap 19 and moved up three more spots by lap 26. He moved up to 15th on lap 40 before a round of green flag pit stops. When the stops cycled through, Gordon ran in the 16th position.

A debris caution on lap 73 brought the field to pit road. Gordon restarted in 18th and gained four spots by lap 86. At the halfway point he ran in 13th, but was distantly behind race leader Jimmie Johnson. Gordon moved into the top-10 with a pass on Dale Earnhardt Jr on lap 110. A cycle of green flag pit stops ensued with Gordon holding onto the 10th spot. The second caution for debris came on lap 121. Gordon stayed on the track and moved to 8th on the restart. He took 6th from Tony Stewart on lap 133 as he closed in on the top-5. A caution for David Stremme’s crash on lap 152 slowed the field and set up pit stops. Gordon departed in the 5th position knowing that he would make it if the race went green until the finish.

He restarted in 5th on the inside line and immediately fell to 6th. He took the 5th position from Juan Pablo Montoya on lap 163. Gordon battled Denny Hamlin for position in the closing stages and took 4th place with 7 laps to go. At the front of the field, Johnson passed Greg Biffle for the lead with 5 laps to go, but ran out of fuel on the final lap. Gordon moved up to 3rd when he went around Johnson and then took 2nd when Biffle ran out of fuel on the backstrech. However, Gordon was several seconds behind race winner Mark Marin. The runner-up finish was Gordon’s best effort since his victory at Texas in early-April.

source: www.gordonline.com

Standings
Results

Post race press conference video can be seen here.

In Car Audio

In Car Audio Direct MP3 Download[audio:http://www.scannerbytes.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/Jeff-Gordon-2009-06-14-Lifelock-400-Michigan.mp3]

Pit Road Interview MP3 Download
[audio:http://www.scannerbytes.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/Jeff-Gordon-2009-06-14-Lifelock-400-Michigan-Post-Race-Interview.mp3]

Photos




Filed Under: Feature, Race Audio Tagged With: audio, In Car Audio, lifelock 400, michigan, runner up

Jeff to Start from the Rear Again in Michigan

June 13, 2009 by admin 1701Leave a Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F13%2Fjeff-to-start-from-the-rear-again-in-michigan%2FJeff+to+Start+from+the+Rear+Again+in+Michigan2009-06-13+05%3A11%3A56adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1701

mich-qual

June 12 – – For the second time in three races, Jeff Gordon will start at the rear of the field. Gordon’s engine expired a few minutes into Friday’s practice session at Michigan Speedway, thus requiring him to start at the back of the field to begin Sunday’s race. Gordon will drive the same National Guard NCO/DuPont Chevrolet that he took to victory lane at Texas earlier in the season.

source: www.gordonline.com

 

TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

JUNE 12, 2009

JEFF GORDON, DRIVER OF THE NO. 24 DUPONT/NATIONAL GUARD ‘YEAR OF THE NCO’ IMPALA SS met with the media at Michigan Speedway and discussed rumors about changes In Chevrolet support, double-file restarts, losing an engine in practice and other topics. Full transcript:

WE HAVE DOUBLE-FILE RESTARTS COMING UP NEXT WEEK ON A ROAD COURSE. I BELIEVE IT IS REALLY GOING TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE. WOULD YOU AGREE WITH THAT? “Absolutely. I think NASCAR knew that trying it at Pocono and at Michigan were two good tracks to test it out and get some of the bugs worked out. I think its going to create some havoc at Sonoma and I am just anxious to get through it and see how it turns out and see if we need to………the only way to know what you have is to race with it and while I’m not sure if we need it at a road course they are pretty adamant to do it there and we’ll see how it turns out.

“You know sometimes it’s a combination of as drivers we have to rethink how we have raced in the past because now we have to figure out how to get through the first corners of the first lap with the double-file restart, but at the same time we have been put into a position that you have to fight even harder and be more intense and sometimes that causes more accidents and mistakes.”

IS THERE A PREFERRED POSITION THERE TO BE ON THE INSIDE OR THE OUTSIDE? “You know, I have played it both ways just in the restarts out there and that first kink to the left doesn’t look like much but it is a pretty decent turn. And I think that’s the thing that its not so much the guys on the front row but it’s the guys behind them that are trying to get that track position because it’s so valuable there. Its slick out there and there is not a lot of grip out there, you are going uphill, and you are downshifting but I’m not sure right now what the preferred line is for the restart. The good thing is that whoever the leader is, he restarts the race, so I like that.

IS THERE A LOT OF PRESSURE ON THE DRIVER TO COME FROM THE BACK LIKE YOU WILL HAVE TO DO ON SUNDAY? “It is, but I feel like there is always a lot of pressure on anybody on this team to step up and do their part and I’m just one of those guys. We all make mistakes including myself and you have to support everybody on the team when it happens. Then you have to go out there and do your best not to overdrive or panic or anything like that and slowly but surely work our way back to the front. You saw what a great job Tony Stewart did last week coming from the back and it’s the same thing for us because we know we can do it and we’ve got the car and the team that can do it and we have to make good decisions all day long.

ITS HAPPENED NOW FOUR TIMES THIS YEAR WHERE THE WINNER HAS COME FROM THE BACK. IS THAT ENCOURAGING TO YOU? “I was excited at Dover but that didn’t quite work out for me there either. You know I think that we are seeing that there are certain teams that are strong that are able to pass, and are able to work their way to the front and sort of separate themselves from the competition. I think at this track more than any you are capable of doing it.

REGARDING INCIDENTS ON PIT ROAD, ARE THERE MORE OF THOSE THAN USUAL? IF SO, WHY?

“If I had to guess, of course the longer studs are causing a little bit of it in the pit stops, but also, track position is just so important. You’ve got crew chiefs making split-second decisions whether to do two tires or four tires and so all those things add pressure to the pit crew and everybody has to be mentally prepared and really flawless. And when you look at how many pit stops we make, there are more chances to make mistakes. But I think as intensity grows, whether on the track or on pit road, that always puts people in a position to make more mistakes and that’s when we see problems happening.”

 

HAVE YOU DRIVEN OTHER TEAM’S RACE CARS? WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?

“You’re asking the wrong guy. I’ve pretty much only driven Hendrick cars. I’ve been with him for 17 years. I didn’t need to go anywhere else because I feel like we have the best stuff and you always have to find a way to rise to the top. These days, the cars and bodies and everything being so close, and pretty much identical, it’s the little details that really make a difference. Our engine program has always been top notch. And they’ve worked really hard to give the drivers what they need in the power range. I can see where Tony (Stewart) could certainly make some comments about that, but he’s the best guy to ask since he’s driven for Gibbs, one of the other top teams out there and now he’s driving our cars. But his team deserves a lot of credit. They’ve done a great job with the information that we share with them as well as how they are preparing those cars to get to the race track.”

 

ANY REACTION TO REPORTS THAT GM IS PULLING OUT OF THE NATIONWIDE AND TRUCK SERIES?

“I think we all have been watching and waiting to see the reaction and I think it is no surprise that there are going to be big cutbacks. And as a dealer as well as a race car driver, we’re doing everything we can to keep our business going strong and doing everything we can to support them in the decisions that they’re making so that we see a great company, whether it’s smaller than it was before or not, come out of it with continued good products out there and giving the customers what they want as well as thinking that NASCAR racing is important to them from a marketing standpoint. So, you know they’re going to make cutbacks and it’s unfortunate for those that have to deal with that. We’re involved with that with the Nationwide Series with JR Motorsports and Hendrick Motorsports being involved with that. So, it’s unfortunate, but those guys have to make decisions and do the best they can to keep their business and we’re going to stand by them.”

DO YOU HAVE ANY INDICATION IF OR HOW MUCH IT MIGHT AFFECT THE CUP SERIES? WILL YOU HEAR MORE NEXT WEEK DO YOU THINK? “I have no idea yet. I rely on Rick Hendrick. He has his finger on this way better than I do and I’m focused on the driving side of it primarily right now. Supporting my sponsors which is also Chevrolet, being a Dad and doing what I can for the race team. That is my responsibility. While I touch base with Rick every week to see what is going on, I have my trust in him to stay on top of it and to lead us the way we need to be lead.”

DO YOU BELIEVE THAT RACERS ARE VERY RESOURCEFUL?

“Oh, yeah. The people that are here had to work really hard to get here. They’ve had to fight hard along the way. These individuals here in this garage are fighters. They’ll dig down deep to do whatever it takes to continue to race. And also, it’s turned into a big business. And so you have to treat it as a big business. You have to make good, solid business decisions and so do others. It’s important to somewhat try to be prepared on how to react to those because the timeframe is important. And that’s probably the toughest thing right now is that there is a lot of uncertainty. We’re going to be resourceful and we’re going to fight hard and do everything we can to stay out there and stay strong. And we’re also going to be supporting GM; especially as a dealer, they’ve got some of the best products that I’ve ever seen. And our dealership is plugging away strong right now. We’ve got a huge car sales business that has done a fantastic job making up for some of the changes that are going on. And I’m pretty proud of that.”

 

REGARDING WINNING, HOW MUCH REVOLVES AROUND HAVING A GREAT CAR AND HOW MUCH AROUND HAVING A GREAT DRIVER?

“It depends on the race track. Every track is different. I think everywhere we go, it takes a great team. There is no doubt about it. I’ve never been one to say that a driver makes all the difference. You’ve got a lot of great drives in this series now and you’ve got a lot of good teams as well. To me, the team is what stands out more than anything. At a track like this, when it comes to qualifying, the car means a lot but the driver’s got to push hard. It’s a big, fast race track, so aerodynamics and mechanical grip and attitude and horsepower are pretty key. But once you get into the race and the car is starting to move around and the groove widens out, then the driver plays a role in searching around and making things happen. But if you go to Martinsville, there is probably more involved with the driver, or Sonoma. But if you come here or Daytona or Talladega, the car’s playing a much bigger role.”

 

HOW MUCH DO YOU KEEP UP WITH FUEL MILEAGE?

“We keep up with it a lot. I think that every lap of the race and every lap time, they are constantly calculating fuel mileage from the drop of the green flag; and when cautions come out and how many green flag runs you run, and how many pit stops. I think the first scenario is if it goes green the whole way, how far can we go and how many stops do we have to make? We know that’s almost impossible to happen, and so we start factoring in how much fuel are we saving during cautions and how far can we go with each caution lap. So yeah, they’re paying attention to it. I think we’ve got our program in our computer on the box there keeping track of it. And you know, the crew chief has a tough job. They’ve got to keep on top of a lot of things (like) the car, the pit crew, working with the driver, and keeping up with not only changing conditions, but fuel mileage, especially at a track like this.”

Filed Under: Jeff Gordon News Tagged With: Qualifying

Jeff’s Appearance on the Regis & Kelly Show

June 11, 2009 by admin 16931 Commenthttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F11%2Fjeffs-appearance-on-the-regis-kelly-show%2FJeff%27s+Appearance+on+the+Regis+%26+Kelly+Show2009-06-11+05%3A42%3A31adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1693

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=og2pZnZWa2w

Jeff Gordon vists the Regis & Kelly Show on Jue 9, 2009

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Appearance, regis and kelly, tv appearance

Michigan Lifelock 400 Race Information

June 10, 2009 by admin 16832 Commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F2009%2F06%2F10%2Fmichigan-lifelock-400-race-information%2FMichigan+Lifelock+400+Race+Information2009-06-10+21%3A11%3A11adminhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.scannerbytes.com%2F%3Fp%3D1683

michigan_193
Race: Sunday, June 14, 2009 in Brooklyn, MI
Title Sponsor: LifeLock
Scheduled Green Flag (approx): 2:16pm/et

Television Coverage/Re-air/TV Team

Television Coverage: TNT 12:30pm/et
SPEED’s NASCAR Raceday Pre-Race Show: 10:30am/et with John Roberts, Jimmy Spencer, Kenny Wallace
Scheduled Race Re-Air Dates/Times: Wednesday, June 17 at 12:00pm/et on SPEED
Announcers: Bill Weber, Wally Dallenbach Jr., Kyle Petty
Pit Reporters: Matt Yocum, Marty Snider, Ralph Sheheen, Lindsay Czarniak
TNT’s Revolving Studio: Marc Fein and Larry McReynolds
TV Listings, Links and Info:
Jayski’s TV Listings Page
NASCAR on TV
Race Fan TV

Radio Coverage/Shows/ Team

This Week – Motor Racing Network (MRN) and Sirius XM Satellite Radio
mrn radio
sirius.com

 

Practice Dates/Times/TV

Practices:
Friday, June 12, 11:30am – 1:00 pm/et, TV-SPEED
Saturday, June 13, 11:00 – 11:45 am/et, TV-none

Happy Hour ‘Final’ practice:
Saturday, June 13, 12:20 – 1:20pm/et, TV-SPEED

 

Qualifying Information/Times/TV

Qualifying Draw: Friday, June 12, 10:30am/et
Qualifying: 2 laps for positions 1-42, Friday, June 12 at 3140pm/et, TV-SPEED, re-air at 1:00am/et;
AND live via radio at MRN Radio and Sirius XM Satellite NASCAR Radio.

Live Leaderboards

Fox Sport’s Racetrax
Nascar.com Leaderboard
Yahoo.com Live Chat and Leaderboard

In Car Audio

Sirius Satellite Radio:
#14 Tony Stewart Ch. 91
#18 Kyle Busch Ch. 122
#24 Jeff Gordon Ch. 125
#48 Jimmie Johnson Ch. 126
NASCAR Officials Ch. 130
#?? Fan’s Choice Ch. 127

Fan’s Choice voting closes Friday at 5 pm ET

Nascar TrackPass
Scanner
PitCommand
RaceView

michi-feat

Filed Under: Jeff Gordon News Tagged With: lifelock 400, michigan, race information

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FORD SHOP & SERVICE MANUALS

 Ford service manuals

JEFF’S FINAL IN-CAR AUDIO

FINAL CAREER STATS

23 Seasons
797 Starts
4 Championships
93 Wins
325 Top 5's
475 Top 10's
249,929 Laps Led
$153.7 million Earnings
Avg Start - 10th
Avg Finish - 12th

JEFF GORDON 2015 STATS

Last 5 Races     2015 Stats  
Talladega 3   Starts 36
Martinsville 1   Poles 4
Texas 9   Wins 1
Phoenix 6   Top 5 5
Miami 6   Top 10 21
      DNF's 1
         
Next 5 Races     2014 Stats  
Daytona 2016 2/21   Starts 35
Atlanta 2/28   Poles 2
Las Vegas 3/6   Wins 4
Phoenix 3/13   Top 5 14
Fontana, CA 3/20   Top 10 22
      DNF's 0

FINAL 2015 STANDINGS

Rank +/- Driver Points
1 +2 Kyle Busch 5043
2 -1 Kevin Harvick -1
3 -1 Jeff Gordon -5
4 -- Martin Truex Jr. -11
5 -- Carl Edwards --
6 -- Joey Logano -8
7 +1 Brad K. -21
8 +1 Kurt Busch -35
9 +1 Denny Hamlin -41
10 +2 Jimmie Johnson -53
11 -- Ryan Newman -54
12 -5 Dale Jr. -58
13 -- Jamie McMurray -73
14 -- Paul Menard -106
15 -- Matt Kenseth -134
16 -- Clint Bowyer -193

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