Ford Brickyard Friday
Advance (Biffle and Kenseth)
Greg Biffle, driver of
the No. 16 Dish Network Ford
Fusion, is seventh in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup point
standings coming into this
weekend’s Allstate 400 at
the Brickyard. He held his
weekly press conference
before Friday’s practice
session.
GREG BIFFLE – No. 16 Dish
Network Ford Fusion – DO YOU
CHANGE YOUR STRATEGY AT THE
END FOR A BIG RACE LIKE THIS
KNOWING THAT A MISTAKE COULD
COST YOU A PLACE IN THE
CHASE DOWN THE ROAD? “I
don’t think so. I think
getting in the chase,
obviously, is our number one
priority at the same time
winning races is, so it’s
kind of a delicate balance.
Still, we need to come and
approach this race as we
want to win here, yet, it’s
a double-edged sword. You
can try to be conservative
to get in the chase, but the
thing is today you’ve got to
race your butt of to finish
tenth or eighth or top five,
so you just run as hard as
you can all the time.” WHERE
DOES THIS RACE RATE IN YOUR
BOOK? “The Brickyard rates
at the top for races that a
team, an organization and a
driver wants to win.
Certainly there’s a lot on
the line here. We want to
win here. I want to win the
Daytona 500 and a Brickyard
just as bad as I want to win
championships, so this is an
important place. We want to
run well here. We’ve run
well here and feel like
we’re gonna run well this
weekend.” WHAT DO YOU NEED
IN YOUR CAR TO MAKE SURE
IT’S GOOD HERE? “Good
balance is what you need.
You need a car that has
speed, which that’s always
important in a race car,
but, more importantly, good
balance – a car that’s not
too tight going through the
corner and not too loose, so
you can carry your speed
through. So if you have a
car that’s got good balance,
normally you’re gonna have a
lot of speed because the
grip levels balance front to
back and that’s gonna
produce the easiest to drive
and the fastest lap.” WHAT
WILL THIS PLACE BE LIKE WITH
THE NEW CAR? “This race
track is difficult. For our
cars, it’s barely two lanes
wide in the corners. We
don’t notice the thing being
four inches wider, but it’s
still a difficult place to
race side-by-side. With the
way this car has reacted on
the mile and a halfs, being
real aero-tight. This is
gonna be a place to try and
get your car to handle
behind somebody. That’ll be
the most challenging thing
of this weekend is getting
your car to handle behind
another car.” JACK TALKED
ABOUT THE FUTURE OF THE
ORGANIZATION EARLIER TODAY
AND LEFT OFF JAMIE MCMURRAY.
WHETHER IT WAS UNINTENTIONAL
OR INTENTIONAL, IS THERE A
SHIFT GOING ON IN THE
ORGANIZATION RIGHT NOW WHERE
THERE’S MORE FOCUS ON JUST
FOUR DRIVERS? “I don’t think
so, no. Jack’s like that.
I’m surprised he remembered
four of us. He introduces us
at the Christmas party and
forgets Matt (laughing). I
think it’s just Jack. I
don’t think there was an
intention of singling out
anybody, but, obviously at
the same time we need to go
to four cars, so I wouldn’t
say that had any intention.”
HOW MUCH PRESSURE HAS JAMIE
BEEN UNDER? “I can’t answer
that. I don’t know that
Jamie has felt anymore
pressure than all of us.
I’ve got a lot of pressure
to not make mistakes and get
good finishes. I think we
all do. We all feel the same
pressure. We all have good
contracts with a great
sponsor, so when it comes
time to figure out what
we’re gonna do to go to four
teams, I’m sure there’s
gonna be an incentive
package or program for
somebody to move over to the
Yates organization. That’s
the obvious answer for us,
which they have all the same
technology and engines and
things, similar to what Haas
is gonna have with
Hendrick’s and Tony Stewart
driving that car. It’s just
an extension of Hendrick’s.
Yates is their own
organization, but share in
technology and engines and
those kinds of things, so
it’s not gonna be a lot
different for whoever that
driver ends up being.”
GREG BIFFLE CONTINUED –
THERE HAVE BEEN A LOT OF
FUEL MILEAGE RACES. CAN YOU
COMPARE HOW YOU SAVE FUEL IN
A RACE CAR COMPARED TO A
REGULAR CAR? “I guess yes
and no. It’s very difficult
to save fuel in a race car.
The one way to do it is to
let up on the gas a little
bit earlier for the corner
and maybe wait a little bit
longer to get on the brakes
and then get on the brakes a
little sharper – and off. So
you kind of try not to lose
too much time, but yet sort
of accomplish the same
thing. I guess driving on
the street would be the same
thing – maybe let up on the
gas and let it coast a
little bit further. And if
you’re planning on taking
the next exit off the
highway, instead of staying
on the gas clear to the off
ramp and then using more
brake, I guess that would
kind of be the same theory
as saving fuel or whatever
you could do, but it’s very
minimal. We can’t save much,
but when it’s on that edge
of whether it’s gonna suck
air off of turn four and
make it all the way to the
checkered flag, you just
don’t know. Saving a little
bit sometimes will make that
difference and a lot of
times it’s bigger than that.
A lot of times, if you’re
gonna run out in the
backstretch or in turn one,
you’re probably not gonna
save enough gas to make it
to the end. You’re probably
not gonna save that much,
but if it’s closer than that
and you save, you can
probably make it to the end.
We save all the time or when
we can, but very seldom does
it come down to what we
actually did to make it.
Sometimes we can theorize
that it did, but a lot of
times they’ll check it after
the race and we had a gallon
and a quarter left. So did
we make a difference in
saving? We’ll never know.
But sometimes you get down
to the end and you run out
on the cool down lap and
it’s like, ‘Wow.’” ARE YOU
SATISFIED WITH YOUR SEASON?
“I have to tell you that
I’ve been frustrated with
myself. I can go back a
dozen races and there are
some things about it, but I
got caught speeding at
Pocono running in the top
five. I ran off the race
track at Infineon leading
and those two finishes – and
you always look back and
wish you had done something
a little bit different, but
Daytona we finished 43rd. I
was racing with Juan Montoya
for 25th place 25 laps or 30
laps into the 400-mile race
and, looking back on that, I
probably should have chose
something a little different
so I could have finished
that race, but, at the same
time, we’ve had issues in
the pits. We had an engine
at Darlington and we caught
the air hose on the splitter
at Michigan running in the
top five, so it’s been a
comedy of little things, and
some of it is the team
working the bugs out and
some of it is me working the
cobwebs out or whatever you
want to say. But I’m happy
with where we’re at. We’re
seventh in points, but I
feel like we could be a lot
better than that. I think
anybody could say that. Any
team could say they could be
better, but I’m happy with
the way the car has
performed. The cars have
been fast, we’ve just made
some mistakes – myself and
everybody has made small
mistakes. None have been
major, so it’s not what we
want, but we’re seventh and
we’re gonna keep chipping
away at it.” HOW DO YOU FEEL
ABOUT THIS TRACK? “I feel
good about this weekend.
(Greg) Erwin and the guys in
engineering have been
working really hard back at
the race shop on simulation
models and looking at our
data from this race track,
trying to learn things,
trying to set scenarios up –
different setups, different
springs and all kinds of
things – and they think
they’ve got a pretty good
starting spot for us.” WHY
IS IT THE NOBODY SEEMS TO
LUCK INTO A WIN HERE? “The
reality is if you don’t run
well, if you’re not running
strong, you’re not gonna
fluke into getting up front
here. It’s always four
tires. The track is so big –
it’s two-and-a-half miles –
you’ve got to have tires.
Track position, like
everywhere, is gonna be
important, but the important
thing is you’ve got to have
a good handling car. It’s
kind of like Daytona and
Talladega, if you don’t have
good speed, you don’t have a
good, slick, fast car, you
can’t really make up for it
here. You’ve got four square
corners, long straightaways,
if you don’t have good power
and torque to get off the
corner, if your car doesn’t
go around the corner really
good and balanced, you’re
gonna lose that straightaway
speed and you’re just not
gonna be there. So this race
track you can’t hide
anything. If you have a
little bit of an issue, it’s
gonna show up everywhere.”
GREG BIFFLE CONTINUED --
HAS NASCAR RACING HERE LOST
ANY OF ITS LUSTER OVER THE
LAST 15 YEARS? “I think it’s
still pretty important in
the NASCAR community, but
certainly coming here for
the first time would be kind
of an icon event. I would
say it’s just as important
and special now for the
NASCAR community. Everybody
knows, ‘Oh, we’re going to
Indy next week,’ so it still
carries a lot of weight with
us and the race fans, but,
certainly some of the
heritage and not coming here
for the very first time,
it’s maybe lost a little bit
of that, but you’re gonna
have that anywhere you go
for the very first time.”
WHAT’S IT LIKE TO RUN ON
THIS TRACK? “This track is
fun to run on. It’s very
challenging. The
straightaway speed is all
determined on corner exit
speed and getting your car
to handle, getting your car
balanced. Balance is the key
at this race track, but it’s
a fun place.” WHAT KIND OF
ANXIETY DOES THE NEW CAR
PRESENT HERE? “It creates a
lot because we’ve never been
in this car. One thing is
this car is more consistent
than our old car, so coming
here with a new car isn’t
probably as scary as it
would be with the old car
showing up somewhere for the
first time.” WHAT’S THE
DIFFERENCE? “Certainly the
downforce is a lot
different. The way the car
handles is completely
different. It drivers
completely different around
other cars because it is
bigger and kind of square.
It acts a little different
around other cars, so
there’s quite a few
characteristics different
about this car.” WHAT WOULD
IT MEAN TO WIN THIS RACE?
“It would be a relief. We
haven’t won this year in
2008, but to win the
Brickyard would be pretty
special. I think we’ve got a
solid opportunity, just like
everybody else. I think
there are a solid 15 guys or
better that stand a really
good chance of winning here
and, obviously, there are
probably 25 or 30 cars that
can, and I feel like we’re
in that top tier of teams
that can pull off a win
here.” WHAT ARE THE KEYS FOR
YOU ON SUNDAY? “Track
position and balance – get
the car balanced really well
and get track position and
keep it. That’s the thing
about this car. You need to
get track position and keep
it and that will be the key
to winning here.” YOUR BIG
BREAK WAS WHEN BENNY PARSONS
SAW YOU AND MENTIONED YOUR
NAME TO JACK. HOW MANY GUYS
OUT THERE AT LOCAL SHORT
TRACKS COULD HAVE MADE IT AT
THIS LEVEL BUT WERE NEVER
DISCOVERED? “Hundreds. I
think hundreds because
there’s a guy racing in Utah
somewhere at a local short
track that’s just a plain
wheel man. He’s as good as
all of us – Joey Logano –
whoever you want to compare
him to and has a tremendous
amount of talent, but what’s
he gonna do? And that
probably holds true for
Montana and more in the
mainstream places – maybe
the Midwest or Hickory or
wherever that the guy is
good, but that’s all he can
afford to do and can’t make
the next step. So it is very
difficult in our sport to
get the opportunity and it’s
so funny because I hear
people talk about how they
want to go to driving
schools and they want to get
into NASCAR. That doesn’t
happen here. The school is
your local short track down
the street on Friday or
Saturday night. That’s the
school. Go get a car and
learn how to put it together
yourself and then try to
figure out how to go out
there and race. And then
hope you’ve got the right
camber and air-pressure and
this and that and then hope
you can drive it. That’s the
school. That’s it.”
Matt Kenseth, driver of
the No. 17 DeWalt Ford
Fusion, has posted eight
top-10 finishes in the last
nine races to climb from
22nd in the NASCAR Sprint
Cup point standings to
eighth going into this
weekend’s race. Kenseth held
his Q&A session before
Friday’s practice sessions
at the speedway.
MATT KENSETH – No. 17
DeWalt Ford Fusion – WHAT DO
YOU THINK OF THIS PLACE?
“It’s a pretty cool deal
coming to Indy, just to be
able to race on the track to
start with. It’s probably
our second-biggest race of
the year. It’s one of the
biggest races of the season
and it means a lot to come
here and race and everybody
wants to win.”
MATT KENSETH CONTINUED --
DO YOU PUT MORE ON THE LINE
FOR THIS RACE THAN MAYBE
ANOTHER? “No, not really. If
you’re in position to win at
the end of the race, you’re
always trying as hard as you
can to win. I don’t think
you can try any harder than
your hardest, so that’s when
you’re probably gonna end up
getting yourself in trouble,
so you just go and race as
hard as you can like any
other race and, hopefully,
you’re in position at the
end to have a shot at it.”
WHAT IS THE KEY FOR YOU?
“It’s a really tough track
to pass at, so you’ve got to
have track position. I think
that’s the biggest thing is
trying to get your car
positioned so you’re in the
front or real close to the
front at the end.” JACK
FAILED TO MENTION JAMIE THIS
MORNING WHEN TALKING ABOUT
THE TEAM’S FUTURE. IS THERE
A SHIFT GOING ON IN THE
ORGANIZATION WITH FOUR
DRIVERS? “I don’t really
have any idea to be honest
with you. Obviously, there’s
some affiliation with Yates
Racing so we’ve never talked
about it internally. I’ve
never been in any
conversations internally
about the future and what he
plans on doing for teams.
Obviously some day they’ve
got to get it whittled down
to four, I just assumed one
of the teams would end up
probably over at Yates, but
I don’t really know.” HOW
DOES JAMIE NAVIGATE THE REST
OF HIS SEASON? CAN YOU PUT
YOURSELF IN HIS SHOES? “I
kind of am in his shoes,
honestly. Jamie and I, I
think, have the shortest
time left on our contracts
at Roush and I think they
both expire at the same
time, so I think that we’re
kind of in the same boat.
Greg and Carl just re-signed
long-term and I’m not sure
about David’s situation, so
really I kind of am in the
same situation. You’re only
as good as your last race. I
don’t think you’re ever
really secure in your job.
You have to perform all the
time. It’s a performance
business and I think we all
realize that.” WHAT WERE
YOUR THOUGHTS ABOUT RANDY
MOSS GETTING IN THIS SPORT?
“I don’t know. You’ve seen a
lot of sports figures come
in and out of this sport. I
was kind of surprised to see
him come in, but I don’t
know much about it. I don’t
know if it’s just a naming
thing. I don’t know how much
he is involved or not
involved, so I don’t know. I
can’t say I’ve really been
surprised. I’ve seen a lot
of professional athletes
come in and try it out for a
while and see how they like
it or how much money they
lose or how it works.” IS IT
GOOD FOR THE SERIES? “I
think anytime you get any
big name person from the
business world or the sports
world coming into this sport
it has to be good for the
sport. It has to get more
attention, if there are
Patriots fans or Randy Moss
fans out there and they say
he’s interested in NASCAR
and he’s an owner in NASCAR,
they’re probably gonna pay
more attention to the
sport.” IS QUALIFYING KEY
TOMORROW? “I hope not
because we just drew 46th.
Qualifying here is always,
in general, kind of silly
because the weather, in
general, it’s just such a
big advantage to go out
early than last. It’s at
least half-a-second
difference from first to
last and you never want to
be that guy that draws in
the back, but you never
know. I heard there’s a
chance of weather tomorrow,
so we’ll have to see what
happens with all that. It’s
still 400 miles. Even though
it’s a difficult place to
pass at, it’s still 400
miles so if you have a good
car you should be able to
get to the front.” WHAT DO
YOU FEEL ABOUT THE NEW CAR
HERE? “I still feel good
about it, although to this
track – not to cry about
stuff – but I feel we have a
fair disadvantage. None of
the Fords came and did the
tire test. We had one
Hendrick car, one Toyota and
I think one Dodge do it, so
everybody kind of has data
except for us, so we don’t
really have any speeds or
loads on the car to look at
from the tire test. This
will be our first time on
the track, so I think if we
can get the car close and
sort it out right away, I
think we’ll be OK. I think
most of the tracks we ran
good with old cars and when
we came with these cars we
still ran OK and ran decent
at tracks like Michigan and
California and Vegas – stuff
like that. So I feel good
about it and as long as we
get all of our practice,
we’ll be OK.”
MATT KENSETH CONTINUED --
MARK MARTIN’S DEMEANOR HAS
CHANGED TO MORE OF AN
OPTIMIST THE LAST FEW YEARS.
HAS A SWITCH GONE ON? “When
I met Mark the whole time I
was there he always
contended for championships
and wins, but when I met
Mark he was kind of a
pessimist. He wasn’t always
down, he was always in a
good mood, but he was like,
‘Aw, man, I can’t believe
I’ve got to do that. I hate
doing that. The schedule is
too long. I can’t wait to
get a break. This is
terrible. Man, we ran
terrible,’ and he finished
third. Stuff like that. Then
about four years ago he just
flipped a switch and it was
the total opposite –
everything was great,
everything was fun, he
couldn’t wait to get to the
track, everything was great.
I don’t know what
transformed him, but he had
a transformation somewhere
between the day I met him
and about three or four
years ago.” SO IN FIVE YEARS
THAT SWITCH WILL GO ON FOR
YOU? (Laughing) “I don’t
know about that. I don’t
think I’m really that much
of a pessimist, but I’m kind
of a realist. I kind of like
to do things first and talk
about them later and not
talk about them first and
then try to do them. I feel
like it always sets me up to
fail, so I would rather go
do it first. I don’t know.
I’ve been in a pretty good
mood lately, so I don’t know
that I need a big mood
change, but he definitely
went through one for sure.
He’s pretty happy about
everything, which is good to
see. He’s been
super-enthused. He loved
doing the part-time deal. At
first I never thought he’d
quit doing the full-time
deal and then once he
started the part-time deal
he was so happy that I never
thought he’d go back and do
the full-time deal. I know
he’s looking forward to next
year and I’m curious to see
what he feels like at this
time next year after doing
the whole thing and having
to go to Martinsville and
Talladega and maybe the
places he doesn’t like going
to.” WHAT MAKES ROBBIE
REISER SO GOOD AT WHAT HE
DOES? “Robbie has always
been a great organizer and a
great leader – great at
figuring out how to make
things work with people. As
general manager of the shop,
instead of being in charge
of 30 people on the 17, now
he’s in charge of 400
people. He’s just always
been really good at that
stuff, so I think that all
the guys come walking in and
see how much more organized
everything is and how much
things flow a lot smoother
than maybe what they used to
is probably what they mean.”
DID THE SWITCH HAVE ANYTHING
TO DO WITH YOUR SLOW START?
“I don’t think so. Daytona,
I thought we had a car that
was capable of probably
actually winning and we got
ran over. The 6 car wrecked
us and got taken out and
then we finished in the top
five at California and were
running second with two to
go at Vegas and the 24 wiped
us out when he had his
problem, so we got wrecked
two out of the first three
races when we were running
in the top five in all three
of them. I don’t know that
we really would have that
slow of a start. We just had
a lot of problems here and
there, but Chip has been
there since we started the
deal with Robbie and Chip
has been a huge part of
making the cars run the
whole time for the last nine
years, so that’s really kind
of been a non-issue.” WHERE
DID YOUR TURNAROUND START?
“I guess probably
Darlington. At Darlington we
ran pretty good. I still
think we had some problems,
I can’t remember what it was
but we went to the back and
then were able to work our
way back through there and
get a good finish. That was
kind of the start of us
running better and not
shooting ourselves in the
foot and doing that type of
thing.” DO YOU THINK IT’S
JUST A FLUKE THAT ROUSH
HASN’T WON HERE? “I don’t
know if it’s a fluke. I
guess we have been coming
here a long time. I’ve seen
Mark run really, really good
here a lot of times and be
really close. I’ve seen Jeff
Burton be really close a
bunch of times. In the near
past, I can’t remember. I
know we’ve had really good
cars at times and have never
quite been able to pull it
off or get it figured out,
so I don’t know. Hopefully
it’s just a matter of time.”
WOULD IT BE A BIG DEAL FOR
JACK TO WIN HERE? “I would
assume so. I know it would
be to me and I’m sure the
other drivers. It’s one of
the biggest races of the
year. The Daytona 500 and
the Brickyard, if you can
win one of those races,
obviously that does a lot
for your season and does a
lot for the team.”