Jeff Burton, No. 31 AT&T
Chevrolet Impala SS
California Preview
NOTES:
· This Week’s AT&T
Chevrolet at Auto Club
Speedway of Southern
California … Jeff Burton
will race chassis No. 255
from the Richard Childress
Racing NASCAR Cup Series
stable. Built new for 2008,
this is the same AT&T
Chevrolet Burton drove to a
21st-place finish at Pocono
Raceway in August. Burton
was well on his way to a
top-five finish but, on the
day’s last pit stop, a
penalty was called for an
uncontrolled tire which
resulted in a pass-through
penalty for the AT&T Racing
team. The South Boston, Va.,
native also piloted this
Chevy Impala SS two weeks
ago at Michigan
International Speedway where
he started 28th and finished
11th.
· 500 for JB … Jeff
Burton will add his name to
an exclusive list on Sunday
when he takes the green flag
at Sunday’s Pepsi 500 at
Auto Club Speedway for his
500th career start in
NASCAR’s premier series. He
will become the 29th driver
to reach the 500-start mark.
He is also 30th all-time
with 20 victories, including
his first at Texas Motor
Speedway’s inaugural event
in 1997, back-to-back wins
at Darlington Raceway in
1999, two Coca-Cola 600 wins
at Lowe’s Motor Speedway in
1999 and 2001, and under the
lights at Daytona
International Speedway in
2000. Over 16 years of Cup
Series competition, Burton
has compiled 114 top-five
and 205 top-10 finishes.
· The California Report …
In 16 Cup Series starts at
Auto Club Speedway, Burton
has earned five top-five and
six top-10 finishes.
Additionally, the 2008 Chase
contender is the sport’s
second-best Quality Passer,
with passing car 370 cars
while running in the top 15
since 2005, just 13 shy of
leader Jeff Gordon. He is
also the sport’s
seventh-best Green Flag
Passer, passing a total of
537 cars under green-flag
conditions over the past
seven races at two-mile
Fontana oval. The RCR driver
has a 12th-place Average
Running Position and sits
11th in the Driver Rating
category with 92.8.
· Double Down West Coast
Style … In addition to his
driving duties with the No.
31 AT&T Chevrolet, Burton, a
27-time race winner in the
NASCAR Nationwide Series,
will drive RCR’s No. 29
Holiday Inn Chevrolet in the
Aug. 30 Camping World 300.
The race will air live on
ESPN2 beginning at 9:30 p.m.
Eastern Daylight Time and
can also be heard on the
Motor Racing Network and
Sirius Satellite Radio.
· California Driver …
Jeff Burton isn’t the only
member of the AT&T Racing
team with driving experience
in California. Crew chief
Scott Miller was behind the
wheel on six occasions at
the now-defunct Riverside
International Raceway from
1981-1984, with a top finish
of 14th at the nine-turn
road course in Southern
California. Miller raced in
the NASCAR Winston West
Series from 1983-1986
accumulating two poles, one
win and six top-five
finishes.
· Racin’ for a Chase Spot
… The AT&T driver currently
sits fifth in the
championship point standings
with two races remaining in
NASCAR’s “Race to the
Chase.” Burton can clinch a
spot in this season’s Chase
for the Cup if he posts a
finish of 15th or better.
Additionally, the 2008 Food
City 500 winner will contend
for the 2008 championship if
he finishes 16th or 17th and
leads a lap or finishes 20th
and leads the most laps.
· RCR at California … In
44 overall starts at Auto
Club Speedway, RCR cars have
earned one pole (Mike
Skinner – April 2000) four
top five and 12 top-10
finishes. Clint Bowyer’s
third-place run in September
2006 is RCR’s best effort at
the moderately-banked
D-shaped race track.
· One Trophy Missing from
the Case … RCR has earned a
Cup Series victory at 18 of
the 22 tracks on the 2008
schedule. The only tracks on
the current schedule where
RCR hasn’t earned wins are
Auto Club Speedway,
Homestead-Miami Speedway,
Las Vegas Motor Speedway and
Kansas Speedway. All told,
RCR has Cup Series wins at
21 tracks, including three
tracks no longer on the
schedule (North Wilkesboro,
Riverside and Rockingham).
· Here’s to You, Jeff …
To commemorate his 500th
NASCAR Cup Series start,
Burton will be honored at a
roast on Sat., Aug. 30 at
Auto Club Speedway. ESPN
broadcaster Allen Bestwick
will serve as the
roastmaster, with team owner
Richard Childress, fellow
RCR drivers Kevin Harvick
and Bowyer, ESPN broadcaster
and recently retired Cup
Series driver Dale Jarrett
and AT&T’s director of
national sponsorships Tim
McGhee as roasters. The
roast will begin at 11:15am
in the driver’s meeting
room, located in the infield
between the Cup and
Nationwide garages, and all
media are invited to attend.
· Catch the Action …
Flag-to-flag coverage of the
Pepsi 500 at Auto Club
Speedway will take the green
flag Sun., Aug. 31 beginning
at 7 p.m. EDT on ESPN. The
race will also be broadcast
on MRN and Sirius Satellite
Radio. Qualifying for the
25th points-paying race on
the Cup Series calendar will
be televised live on SPEED
Fri., Aug. 29 beginning at
6:30 p.m. EDT and will also
broadcast live on MRN and
Sirius Satellite Radio.
JEFF BURTON QUOTES:
What are your thoughts as
you embark on your 500th
start?
“It’s pretty hard to
believe I’m coming up on my
500th start. Professionally,
there’s nothing else I’d
rather be doing. Competing
in NASCAR’s top level series
has been a lifelong dream
and I’m fortunate that I
have been doing what I love
for as long as I have but I
still believe my best years
are ahead of me. I’ve
learned a lot over the years
and this environment has
made me a better person
because of it. Racing is
something I dreamed of as a
kid and I’m fortunate that I
am doing it.”
California’s fall race
starts during the day and
runs into the night. What
type of changes will you
see?
“California is a fairly
slick race track. It’s not a
track with a tremendous
amount of grip. What will
end up happening is you’ll
slide around a little bit
during the day and when it
gets darker and the track
cools down, there will be
more grip. That will make
your car a little bit
tighter or it will make it
drive a little better,
depending on your situation.
If you’re good during the
day, it might hurt it and
get too tight at night. But,
if your setup isn’t so good
during the day, it might
transfer up and be really
good at night.”
How does your points
position affect the way you
drive in these last two
races before the Chase?
"Well, we are obviously
in a position of need. We
need to get ourselves in the
Chase. That is goal number
one. To do that, we need to
have good finishes, we need
to run well, we need to
compete at a high level and
we need to get the best
finish that we can. We
certainly don't want to put
ourselves in a situation
that we didn't have to be in
because I did something
silly or we had a mechanical
problem. But at the same
time, you have to compete at
a high level. The
competition is too tough.
So, we are going to go out
and try to win the race. If
we can't win the race, then
we are going to try to
finish second. If we can't
finish second, then we are
going to try to finish
third. That is what we try
to do every week.”