‘We’re Not Going to Take it Anymore’;
Fear Not the 1.5-Mile Oval
CORNELIUS, N.C., (March 14, 2007) – Anyone who followed
the DLP HDTV team during the 2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series
season knows that if there was one problem that stood out,
it was the team’s performance on the 1.5- and 2-mile
ovals.
Save for Tony Raines leading three times for 28 laps en route
to a seventh-place finish last fall at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor
Speedway, the team finished no better than 25th at seven of
the 11 intermediate tracks where Raines competed.
Perhaps progress is being made, however. In fact, statistics
show that it is.
Since the Dickies 500 last November at Texas Motor Speedway,
Raines has driven the No. 96 DLP HDTV Chevrolet Monte Carlo
SS to top-20 finishes at three of the last four intermediate
tracks. At the end of the 2006 season, he finished 19th and
20th, respectively, at Texas Motor Speedway and Homestead-Miami
(Fla.) Speedway and last week finished 19th at Las Vegas Motor
Speedway. The only blemish on the top-20 streak came three
weeks ago, when he finished a respectable 23rd at the 2-mile
California Speedway in Fontana.
The numbers aren’t exactly earth-shattering, but at
the end of the day, the DLP HDTV team is improving on a weakness,
which is obviously a heck of a lot better than continuing to
struggle.
This week, Raines, crew chief Brandon Thomas and all of Hall
of Fame Racing can continue their slow and steady climb up
the 1.5-mile mountain with the Kobalt Tools 500 at the 1.5-mile
Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga.
Like several other intermediate tracks last season, AMS was
cruel, if not outright mean to the DLP HDTV team. In the spring,
with Terry Labonte driving, Hall of Fame Racing struggled during
qualifying and started 43rd, but rebounded to finish 22nd in
the race. Raines and the team struggled in the fall, however,
starting 27th and finishing 34th.
With improved confidence in their intermediate package, Raines
and Thomas head to Atlanta looking to continue their steady
climb to success.
To quote the legendary rock band Twisted Sister, the DLP HDTV
team has said to AMS and all the other intermediate tracks: “We’re
not going to take it anymore.”
TONY RAINES (Driver, No. 96 DLP HDTV Chevrolet):
Dating back to last season, the DLP HDTV team has had three
consecutive top-20 finishes on 1.5-mile tracks. Do you feel
the team is making small but important gains on the 1.5-mile
program?
“I feel like it’s improved a little, but I’d
like to see it improve more, and I know (crew chief) Brandon
(Thomas) feels that way. I think at the beginning of the race
and at the end of the race at Vegas, we ran a lot better than
we did in the middle. The middle portion of the race really
hurt us. That’s racing, though. If you get loose for
a little while, that can knock you back 10 spots pretty quick.
We just have to keep working. Everyone is working really hard.
Brandon and I have only worked about 10 races together, so
I think every race we run together is a plus. We need a big
shot at Atlanta and I’m confident we can go out and execute
it.”
All the 1.5-mile tracks look the same, but have different
characteristics. What makes Atlanta different from the other
1.5-tracks?
“The surface, mostly. It’s so coarse, so rough,
that new tires are good for two or three laps and then, immediately,
the times start to fall off. It’s kind of a unique place
because, in qualifying, you run the very bottom and then in
the race you run about as high as you can get anywhere. You
run up against the wall at least in one corner. It’s
a tricky track, with the surface being so worn out and the
tires falling off, a good-handling race car is going to rise
to the top there more than some other places.”
You are pulling double duty this weekend running in the
NASCAR Busch Series race as well as the Nextel Cup event.
Is that challenging?
“It’s not too bad there because the garages are
fairly close. It’s good to be on the racetrack and get
a feel for how things are going. I’m hoping it’s
a good thing because the guys that run on both days seem to
run better on one of the two days, or both. Plus, it’s
just fun to race. I always watch the race on Saturday, so it’s
probably going to be more fun being in it.”
After last week, with all the talk of tires and the new
surface at Vegas, is it good to go back to more “normal” circumstances
at Atlanta?
“Well, Atlanta can get pretty slick, too. The tire and
track at Vegas was by far the most extreme conditions we’ve
ever had. It’s good to get away from that. It’s
good to get back to a normal situation, even though Atlanta
can be pretty frustrating, sometimes.”
The NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Final Four is
set to take place in Atlanta in a couple of weeks. Who are
your picks to be in the Final Four?
“You know, I haven’t really sat down and looked
at it yet. I figure Ohio State and Wisconsin have got to be
two of them. They’re both up there ranked pretty high.
Florida is looking pretty good, too. I don’t know. I
need take a look at it.”
BRANDON THOMAS (Crew Chief, No. 96 DLP HDTV Chevrolet):
Overall thoughts heading into Atlanta?
“They made a lot of changes to the tire for Atlanta
this time. These are changes we think might be beneficial to
us. All lot of what we attributed our troubles to at Atlanta
was a tire that wasn’t really suited to our setup. We
were obviously changing a lot of things around. The setup we
ran last fall at Atlanta was a lot different than what we had
run only a couple weeks prior at Charlotte. Then we modified
it yet again at Texas and Homestead. Obviously, we were in
a big research mode late last year, trying to find something,
and we feel that we found a lot of those things, now. So, we’re
excited, we’re taking a new car and we’re ready
to get back to Atlanta and kind of redeem ourselves.”
All the 1.5-mile tracks look the same but have different
characteristics. What makes Atlanta different from the other
1.5-mile tracks?
“Each track, down to the nuts and bolts, is different.
What ends up being the same, because the banking is similar,
a lot of the loads on the car are similar. So, yeah, some of
the setups are very close to each other. A lot of the things
we did, a lot of the things we worked on for Las Vegas, will
work at Atlanta. The difference comes in the surface and the
change of the surface with weather and temperature. That’s
very different at all the 1.5-miles tracks.”
Are you happy with the progress that is being made on the
1.5-mile tracks, even though the gains are small?
“I think there is definitely progress. I’d like
to see more progress. You always want to see progress. Until
I feel like we are a threat to be a top-10 team week in and
week out at a 1.5-mile oval, I’m not going to be satisfied.
Obviously, I’m much happier to go and be disappointed
with a 19th at Vegas rather than what we did at the second
Atlanta last year when we finished 34th. It’s not satisfying
enough to be 19th. For the amount of work we put in the program,
we want to be better than that.
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