NASCAR Atlanta Sunday Press Conference

Participants:

  • 1st – Ryan Blaney, and Crew Chief Todd Gordon, Penske Ford
  • 2nd – Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevy
  • 3rd – Alex Bowman, Hendrick Motorsports Chevy

THE MODERATOR: We’ll continue with our race-winning driver, Ryan Blaney, that No. 12. We’ll start with questions.

Q: How much did you have to save at the beginning of that final run? Were you a little surprised that Larson fell off as much as he did at the end?

RYAN BLANEY: Yeah, you’re always kind of saving, right? You never know when cautions are going to come out, when they’re not. Yeah, we fired off after the last green flag stop, it was going to be over a 50-lap run. I did need to save a little bit. Even if you do get a caution, if you save a little bit, not lose a lot, you’ll be fine.

I knew our strong area of our car was not the short run. We weren’t that good on the short run. We could just kind of maintain. Not with Larson. He would drive away. But maintain with everybody.

After 15, 20 laps we’d start coming forward. Towards the end of the longer runs, we’d really start coming forward. We made a big step on that in the last stage. Just getting tighter. I was pretty free all day. We were able to get tighter, keep the rear tires under it. Looked like he was getting pretty free. Was just able to drive up, get a good run off of three and four and get by him.

Q: With this surface, they talk a lot about the repaves. The cars were moving around a lot today, the bumps being a struggle. Can you describe how physically demanding this racetrack is and what it takes to maneuver around it?

RYAN BLANEY: Yeah, it’s tough. I know people have been having talks about the repave, but I hope it doesn’t happen any time soon. I think you talk to anybody, they really like this place the way it is.

Yeah, it’s rough. I mean, the bumps getting out of one and two is rough, three and four you have the wavy set of bumps there. Makes it hard to hold the line. Yeah, it’s just a big challenge.

I talked to Todd a lot today about our car hitting the racetrack pretty hard. As the race went on, it got a little bit better. So, yeah, it’s just the challenges of Atlanta. Sometimes you can do your best to try to get over them, get over those bumps. A lot of the time you just have to drive through them and work on your car around those bumps.

THE MODERATOR: We are now also joined by our winning crew chief Todd Gordon. Walk us through that win from your perspective today.

Kyle Larson, driver of the #5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, leads Ryan Blaney, driver of the #12 BodyArmor Ford, during the NASCAR Cup Series Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

TODD GORDON: Yeah, it’s pretty awesome. Felt like we’ve had long run cars here in the past. I felt like last year we were that way. Definitely paid off with that last stage being — the last run almost being a fuel run. Excited about everybody got a chance to work together here. Thought pit crew did a good job, and Ryan drove a heck of a race all day long, especially that last run. Just grinding himself forward to put some pressure on the 5.

After a tough first couple races, starting with a pretty big points hole, I think last couple weeks we’ve been digging our way out of it. It’s a place I really like and wanted to win at. I felt like in the past I’ve had opportunity, been close.

But you love to win at these places that are old, wore-out racetracks, because everybody has to step up and do their part. The guys put together a good race car for him and Ryan did a good job today.

Q: Todd, you probably heard what Ryan said about don’t repave.

TODD GORDON: No, don’t repave. Don’t repave. Don’t, don’t, don’t repave (laughter).

RYAN BLANEY: Same answer as me (smiling).

TODD GORDON: I’ve said it for the last five years and I’ll say it for the next 10.

Q: If you’re going to introduce the NextGen car, is it okay to run on the old surface for a couple years with NextGen and then repave or would you prefer to have everything new at once?

TODD GORDON: This place, you got a lot of these old, wore-out racetracks. You have this place, California, Homestead come to mind for me. Darlington has come back into it.

When you look at it, like today, you saw cars running the wall, you saw cars splitting that last seam up top, you saw cars running around the bottom.

The older these surfaces get, the less grip they got in them, we can put a softer tire on it, you get cars that can run all over the place.

When we repave, get all the grip back in the asphalt, there’s a balance there. The tires have to be harder to keep us in a box that we’ve got to be in. You lose that ability to race all of the racetrack.

I would keep this surface as long as we can until it starts coming up. When you get to that, it becomes a safety issue, then you have to address it. But until you get to that point, I’d love to race a NextGen car here on this surface. I’m glad we get to race it again later this year. Great to have two events here at Atlanta.

Q: Ryan, was there a point in the last run, I’m sure you never lost confidence, where you were, like, Larson is beatable today and I have enough to beat him?

RYAN BLANEY: Honestly, I didn’t really think that until I’d say the start of the last stage. He had a huge lead there in that second stage, then he didn’t really get that far out in front of me in the start of the third stage. Then we were running him down pretty good until we pitted there.

He got a little bit ways away from me on pit road after we came out. He stretched his lead out a tiny bit. I was like, All right, it’s going to be a 50-plus-lap run, I’m going to try to save my stuff a little bit. Hopefully we’ll even out and he’ll start coming back to me. He started coming back to me really hard at the end of that first run.

Yeah, at the start and halfway through the final stage, I had confidence we made really good changes to our car. Hoping there would be a long run towards the end because that was the only shot I had to beat him. I wasn’t going to beat him in a 10-lap shootout because his car was good. Hopefully it worked out for a long run. Had a great long run car, like Todd said. It was awesome.

Q: Over the last few years you have had a lot of races, led a lot of laps, been dominant, been in position to win, seen something happen where it’s gone away. This was kind of the opposite of that today. Does it feel good to get a win like this after these experiences?

TODD GORDON: Who wants to answer first?

RYAN BLANEY: Go ahead. I just got done talking.

TODD GORDON: Yeah, it does. I think there’s a — this is just the growth of a relationship. Confidence building amongst each. Yeah, it’s great to be in a position where you’re chasing them down, the hunter, not the huntee. I’ve watched Ryan grow in the last 14 months. He’s had tons of speed. He continues to do things.

We’re understanding what we need to do as a race team to give him better stuff at the end of the race. There’s been places we’ve gone the other way. That’s all part of the learning curve.

Trying to put that together, yeah, I was thoroughly impressed with the drive there after stage two. Like what Ryan talked about, he knew late in that run before the pit cycle, the final run, he was running Kyle down pretty hard. Love the fact that he could put the pressure on him and still run up there at the top.

I think this is something that we as a team can continue to build off of. I think there’s a lot more opportunities to do this. We’ve had a couple situations where it’s gone away from us, but I would say that we all are figuring out what these pieces are that we can put together to make sure we’re successful at the end.

Today was a culmination of those. We’ll build off that.

RYAN BLANEY: Yeah, what Todd said. It is a little bit opposite from last year. We led tons of laps and it just didn’t work out.

Today, you keep yourself in the hunt at all these races, you keep yourself running up front, you’re going to stack up wins. Today was a great example. We weren’t the best car the first half of the day, we kept working on it. Everyone did a great job, pit crew included, of keeping us in the game, keeping us top three all day. We got our car where it needed to be. We were able to capitalize on it.

It’s just about staying in the game. We did that really well today so I’m proud of everybody.

Q: Ryan, you’ve won a race now for five straight seasons. You have not won two races in a season. Going into this year, was that a goal, expectation, we have to take the next step and become a multi-race winner?

RYAN BLANEY: Oh, yeah, for sure. Yeah, it’s nice to win a race every year, but you don’t want to just win one race.

Honestly it’s nice to get a win early in the season now. Six races in, something like that, six different winners. It’s nice to get a win early in the season. That’s something that has kind of eluded us. We got the win at Talladega last year, but it was mid-season.

Getting one early is great. We had the potential to do it last year. Like Todd said, we’re just learning each other. Just really proud of the effort. I look forward to the rest of the season here.

Q: Todd, from a crew chief perspective, how did you look at a 56-lap run to the finish on the tires and the way that they were working today?

TODD GORDON: I was foaming at the mouth, excited about it. As you looked at it, later in the runs we were running guys back down. The race kind of played out with the caution at 25, you got a little bit longer run to split stage one in half. Stage two was another eight or nine laps you had to run.

As we kept seeing that go, we saw the speed of our car on the long run, what Ryan was able to do with it. I was actually contemplating short pitting that last cycle as soon as we got in our fuel window just to force everybody into a long run there. I shrunk up, a little chicken there.

Definitely was excited to see the cycle start when I did. Was just trying to work through a couple things we wanted to do the final adjustment. We were talking through some things back and forth. I wasn’t willing to pit until we got to that point.

Glad to see the cycle start a little early and jump on it. I felt like that was going to put us in a good window for the last 20 laps of the race, like it did today. We had good long run cars at different places. Last year we did at this place. We knew what we wanted to do to make it a little better. We did that. Excited to see a 56-lap run.

Q: Ryan, with the win in hand early in the season now heading to unfamiliar territory with the dirt race, what is your approach going into that weekend?

RYAN BLANEY: Go get another win (smiling).

I mean, no one knows what to expect, right? I mean, everyone, they’re going into it very optimistic. From seeing videos of the late models that have been racing there here this week, yeah, the track has gotten pretty rough. Granted, we aren’t going to be going nearly that fast that those guys are going. We’ll be seconds and seconds slower than them. We’ll see.

I’m excited. My dad actually ran the dirt race at Bristol in the early 2000s when they did it. They did it for like three years. He did it one year. He said it was just incredible in a Sprint car.

I’m just excited to see how it all plays out. It’s nice to be able to practice, have heat races, then race. That part is going to be nice. So, yeah, just looking forward to it. It’s going to be something new. Drivers like new things.

Q: Ryan, how much patience did it take for you to tell the team I’m just going to let Kyle go, he’s just too fast, then save your equipment there for the end?

RYAN BLANEY: Yeah, I did say that. No, we got the lead on pit stop. The guys did a great job getting me out there ahead of him. They were holding off for a little bit, but he was just so good on the short run there.

Yeah, if I was going to stick with him… I wasn’t going to be able to stick with him, I was going to burn my stuff all the way up. I just got to save my tires, save my right rear and we’ll see what happens.

At that point when I said that, no one was able to touch him all day. He would straightaway you, and even more than that. Just got to ride here, see on a longer run, if he starts coming back to us.

Yeah, just kind of the position you were in or I was in just knowing if I try to hang with him, which I wouldn’t be able to hang with him, burn my stuff up, when he started coming back to us, obviously paid dividends just being patient. Just trying to be smart about this, not have a heavy right foot. It’s cool to win here today at a place that you have to finesse it a little bit, kind of think ahead. That was good.

It goes back to just knowing we had a good long run car. Like Todd said, you know what you got, try to play to your strengths. That’s really where that comment came from.

Q: Todd, what kind of relief is it to have a driver that has the maturity? A lot of guys, they want to be the rabbit, get out there. A lot of times you have to pull in the reins. The fact he shows that wherewithal, I was impressed by that.

TODD GORDON: He’s done a great job. He’s got great balance because if you get him in the right position, he can run a lot of speed. There’s places that we’ve been able to do that and had success with it.

It’s good to keep composure. I think he did a great job of managing the situation. Like he said, understand the strengths of your race, play to it. It’s really cool to watch the maturity and just see the fruits of the labor in the end.

I kind of saw us whittle at the 5 car’s lead. It just kept getting bigger and bigger going back. Did a really good job. Really proud of him. Proud of the growth that I think we’ve had as a race team.

Q: Todd, before this track was reconfigured, it was really conducive to Ford because of the long sweeping turns and the short strays. This is Ford’s fifth win in a row here at Atlanta. Do you still see the track as an advantage for Fords? If so, why? I noticed that Ryan was running the top groove when he was running down Larson after having been on the lower groove.

TODD GORDON: Yeah, I don’t know that I’d say that. I mean, really if we have cautions that break this up differently, we talk about how dominant the Hendrick group was. I felt like we raced the 48 and the 5 most of the day. The 9 got in the back and got some damage, so I don’t know where he was going to lay out.

It’s been a great racetrack for us. I think as a whole for our organization, Team Penske, I feel like the rougher, wore-out racetracks are a place we work pretty hard at, are good.

I can’t speak for why Ford or why not somebody else. I think if you looked at it, overall speed, I wouldn’t say that it was dominated by Ford today. I thought actually the Hendrick group was probably the strongest organization. We hit on what we needed to out of our notebook from prior races.

Can’t really put it on the Ford piece. But it’s great that we’ve got five wins in a row for the blue oval.

Q: Ryan, it was actually this race 20 years ago that was probably your dad’s best chance ever to win a Cup Series race. Knowing that and having watched his career, the sight of him trying to win a Cup race for so long, does it make you appreciate the fact you’ve won five?

RYAN BLANEY: I’m really happy you brought that up. I was going to bring it up before I left anyway. I wanted to talk about it.

Dad was here today in the stands. He texted me today. He said, This is the 20-year anniversary. He was whipping butt in that Amoco car. The damn wheel fell off his car, ruined his day. He lost the race. He was dominating.

I said, We’ll win one for the 20th anniversary. I don’t know how solar cycles line up, every 20 years, I don’t know. Happy we were able to avenge that loss on him.

Dad, he’s taught me everything that I know. Like I said, he was here today. He comes to as many races as he can. Just sits in the stands nowadays. Obviously can’t come in the infield.

He’s always someone I always trusted. Fortunate to have a dad that’s done it all, seen it all. I still go to him for advice about anything. Whether it’s a stern talking to or it’s careful advice, I’ve always enjoyed talking to him, hearing what he’s got to say. Just him being around means a lot. I grew up watching dad race. Now I’m racing full-time in NASCAR. He’s watching me. That’s pretty cool.

Dad never got the best of opportunities at the Cup level. He drove for some great race teams, Bill Davis, one year at RCR. He was never with a powerhouse group I’d say like Penske or Hendrick or Gibbs. I hated that for him, that he never got that shot.

He was almost a little bit too old when he got into the sport because he was running Sprint cars for so long. He never got a great shot with an amazing team like I’ve been really fortunate to do.

It’s nice to have him here. I can’t wait to call him and tell him, I told you so, we got one back for you, so…

Q: Ryan, the Cup Series comes back here in July for the summer race. Did you learn anything today that could help you for that race or is it completely different because of track conditions? How much will you beg Todd to let you bring back this car?

RYAN BLANEY: Yeah, you know, I definitely think it will change. It was pretty cool out today. The sun was out most of the race, I think. Might have been overcast, half and half. It was pretty chilly today. The start of the race was a little warm. As the sun was going down, it was starting to get cool. I think it changed the track.

When we come back here in the summertime, it’s going to be hotter and slicker. You can almost compare it when we came back to Atlanta last year after we got back racing. I think it was around the same time.

Yes, speed is going to slow down, it’s going to be slicker. But there’s definitely notes you can take from today and apply them to the next Atlanta race, how you build your cars. Your basic setup might be a little bit different, but I think you’re obviously going to learn a lot, put stuff in your notebook, try to apply it for the next one even though it will be a lot hotter.

Q: Ryan, what do you make of the six different winners in the first six races? Does that speak for any kind of new or different competitive balance in the sport?

RYAN BLANEY: Happy I’m one of them (laughter). I’ll tell you what, we got the 5, I was like, Whew, we’re stacking them up, racking them up pretty quick. We need to win one here.

Yeah, man, it just shows how many people can win in this series, in this sport. You have different winners from different organizations. I think that just shows how competitive it is. I feel like everyone is doing a great job of figuring out ways to work with their crew chiefs and drivers and teams. It just goes in the off-season of prep work, how you’re going to unload, show up to race.

Yeah, we’ve probably never seen this. I don’t know when there were six different winners in the first six races. Yeah, it just shows that a lot of great teams are out there and you have to be on top of your game. It just shows how many people can win.

There’s 15 other teams that can win at the Cup level. Yeah, it just shows how competitive it is.

Q: Ryan, is there any trend or anything from the first six weeks that is surprising when it comes to who is and isn’t performing right now?

RYAN BLANEY: Obviously I think the Hendrick cars are really good. They got a couple wins. The 5 car was crazy fast today. I’d say he dominated the whole race pretty much, most of the race, until the last 15 laps or whatever it was, 20 laps when we were starting to catch him. They were good.

I think other cars ran good today. The 9 had trouble. I’d say the biggest surprise for me is that Stewart-Haas has been struggling a little bit, which I think has shocked everybody. Great team, they’ll figure it out and get back to where they need to be.

The racing is kind of just a big cycle. Teams are up top, then other teams find something, it just kind of keeps rotating.

Obviously we showed our speed today at the Penske group. I think the other couple cars got damaged, from what I was told. The 21 ran pretty good. I saw him up there a good bit of the day. I think we’re really close. We made a big step from I’d even say Vegas, the last mile-and-a-half, even Homestead to now. I was really proud of the leap.

But you got to keep working and you have to do the best you can at finding new things because every other team is doing that.

Q: Todd, I’ve heard from a few crew chiefs that inspection is a little different this year. That’s maybe accounting for some things with teams. Has that affected you at all? What are you seeing with the differences?

TODD GORDON: Yeah, I mean, Jay Fabian does a great job as series director. He looked at it where we were as a sport last year. I think there were some thoughts that the optical scanner was going to police everything. We have smart people that keep working at things. There were places that we were able as a sport to work around the optical scanner, kind of get it where we could make more downforce. As a sport, we got there.

Jay and the whole NASCAR group, they tried to reel some of that creativity back in, made some templates that would address areas that they felt like we were losing control of. He made it very clear in the off-season this was going to happen and we all knew it.

I do think it’s created a little more parity across. It’s taken some downforce away, which I think puts on good racing because we’re sliding around at places like Atlanta.

We’re trying to understand how we work our balance back around the aero balance that we’ve got now. Obviously at Homestead, Ryan talked a little bit about it, but we missed it at Homestead because we didn’t account for the shift as well as we needed to. But we learned from it and brought that here to another wore-out racetrack and had success with it.

I think what NASCAR is doing from an inspection standpoint is fair for everybody. It’s leveled the playing field a little bit more. That’s kind of how this whole sport works. We as teams continue to try to find places that we can work that are advantages for us. NASCAR looks at it kind of in a global scale and says, Where are we not policing, then come back to that.

I think it’s a level field and one that we have to learn a little bit from what our notebooks were last year. We’ll continue to work forward in the areas that we can.

Q: Todd, what has your preparation been like for the Bristol dirt race? When did you start working on this race? What are you expecting?

TODD GORDON: So my preparation is ask Ryan what he and his dad thing because I’ve never raced on dirt to speak of at all (laughter).

We’re trying to understand what all needs to happen. Watching all the video you can. Just trying to understand through all the shop testing what we can do, what we can’t do, trying to understand what it’s going to take to run on dirt.

It’s great because Dave, Ryan’s dad, spent a fair amount of time just talking with me, with my engineers and myself. You’re trying to understand what it will be like. Fortunately Dave ran one of the truck races at Eldora in Brad’s truck team. He understands a little bit of what taking a stockcar type chassis, our type of a race car, to a dirt track.

It’s not going to be running like these late models where the left rear jacks underneath itself and it’s got four inches of skew in the housing, everything that’s going on.

Trying to pick off the people around us. Jeremy Bullins is the crew chief on the 2 car. He has a dirt late model on the side. Done that for a couple years. Just gathering information where we can and trying to watch the events. Joey ran the modified at Bristol last weekend in a sequence of stuff there. Just trying to learn from everybody we can around us.

It will be interesting when we get there, definitely. Unchartered territory.

THE MODERATOR: Gentlemen, congratulations on the win. Go celebrate. Good luck next week at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Kyle Larson

THE MODERATOR: We are now joined by today’s runner-up, Kyle Larson. We’ll go straight into question for Kyle.

Q: Looking back, would you try to push it more on the last run early or do you feel like you had to save something there for the end because of the long run?

KYLE LARSON: I mean, no, I was pushing the whole time, every lap really from when I left pit road. I was trying to get out to a big gap. But I never really did. I think I extended it a little bit, but not nearly enough.

Before the other green flag stops I could exit pit road, I feel like I’d gain a few seconds over the course of like 20 laps. I was hoping it was going to be like that. I thought me having to race him and pass him was what used my tires up the little run before, but after the green flag stop, he was just really good. I couldn’t get out to that gap that I could earlier in the race. Ultimately just had to run my tires too hard to try to get that gap, and I didn’t have anything there at the end.

Q: Do you think if you had gotten by Logano at all or quicker you would have been able to hold off Ryan, or was he coming so fast that didn’t matter?

KYLE LARSON: I mean, it’s hard to say. I definitely would have had a better shot had I gotten by Logano when I got to him. But, yeah, I mean, it just was hard. My tires were pretty much gone at that point. I was sliding around. I just didn’t get through traffic good at the end.

Q: Kyle, with 56 laps in the final run on the tires, would you have hoped for a late race caution or did you think you would be able to navigate that distance and keep the lead?

KYLE LARSON: Well, initially, yeah, I mean, I wanted to go green because I’d been so good on the long runs. But then when I realized that he was better than me, and he was catching me there at the end, yeah, I was definitely hoping for a caution just to get some new tires on it and hopefully come out the leader, control the restart and try and win that way. I knew I was in trouble. But it didn’t play out that way.

Q: In regards to the track surface, it’s asked all the time if this place needs to be repaved. Is it past the point of race-ability? Does that need to happen sooner or later?

KYLE LARSON: I enjoy surfaces that are wore out. You can move around. I hope this place doesn’t ever get repaved. I feel like each year we talk about it more and more. We’ll see what they do.

I enjoy it how it is. I mean, if it’s not repaved, it’s a totally different style of race. It’s kind of whatever you’re into. For me, as a driver, I’m into this style.

Q: With today’s performance, we look at Texas and Atlanta the second time around, what is your expectation for the rest of the season for these types of racetracks?

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, our Hendrick Chevys have been really good on the mile-and-a-half’s. Really every track so far this season. I’m excited to go to the racetrack every weekend.

Given my win at Vegas, being good today on another mile-and-a-half, I think I look forward to the mile-and-a-half’s the most. But, yeah, it’s fun to have cars that are this good. It gives us confidence as a team each weekend.

Q: What is the ceiling for this team? You mentioned the win at Vegas, today you were dominant. What are you capable of? Does this give you hope for the rest of the season that you can do something special?

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I mean, I would have loved to win today to really pick up some momentum. But, yeah, I mean, we’ve had the fastest car most weekends. If we can continue to evolve and continue to get better, yeah, I mean, we can do great things.

Our pit crew has been really good. Our car has been really fast. I feel like for the most part I’ve been doing a good job. With all that Cliff and all the guys making good decisions on the box, yeah, we can definitely go out there and keep contending. If we can contend as much as we are, yeah, I mean, we can win a lot of races.

Q: Is this the first time in your career where you’re going to every track and you feel like you can dominate and win every single race?

KYLE LARSON: 2017 we were really strong. Probably not this strong. But, yeah, I mean, 2017 also I was a little bit like surprised that we were that good early in the season because normally we weren’t. But once I realized we were a top-two car, the 78 at that time, yeah, I felt like I could win every time.

I didn’t really, from what I remember, dominate races like I did today. Yeah, I was confident like I am now.

Q: A non-race question for you. NASCAR put out a tweet before the race honoring the victims of the Atlanta Spa shootings earlier this week. Just curious your thoughts on how NASCAR has done bringing light to real world issues and trying that in with the sport?

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I feel like NASCAR’s done a great job. You look at everything they did last year after my deal, everything that they did here in Atlanta was great, Talladega, really throughout the whole season, they continued it through now.

Yeah, the real life stuff hits hard with everybody. I feel like NASCAR as a sport has done a great job to get ahead of it and honor those people.

Q: How were you personally able to process this week?

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I mean, I really didn’t pay too much attention to it. But obviously, me being Asian-American, I started noticing it more and more. It definitely hits closer to me probably. But, yeah, hopefully things will get better in our world. It’s just a terrible, terrible time for Asians. I hope it gets better.

Q: All the work you’ve done away from the track in the past year, how has that affected your mind when something like the Spa shootings do happen, and your reaction to them?

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I mean, I did do a lot of stuff last year. It’s definitely opened my eyes to how people are treated differently. That’s something I never really paid attention to before. It stinks that somebody can be treated differently because of their race or the color of their skin. That’s really what I learned a lot about last year.

So, yeah, it definitely means more to me now than maybe it would have in the past after everything that I went through.

Q: It’s not necessarily anyone’s responsibility. When you do have a platform, do you feel the need to be more forward on any issue?

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I mean, I think so. I think us as athletes, for sure, we have powerful voices. We can try and lead a change. It’s definitely important. Like we mentioned earlier, NASCAR has done a great job on these topics, as well.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you, Kyle, for taking the time. Good luck next weekend on the dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Alex Bowman

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by today’s third-place finisher Alex Bowman. Why don’t you walk us through your run today.

ALEX BOWMAN: I felt like we had a pretty solid day. We kind of struggled on long runs a little bit, but had really good pit stops all day. Our Camaro was pretty fast. Decent restarts. Nothing went wrong for once. Seems like every race all year something has gone wrong, right? I was just glad we were able to put an entire day together and not have anything go wrong.

Greg called a great race. We were just a little off. I was on the splitter a little bit over the bumps. Would kind of snap the back of the car out of the racetrack after that.

Solid day. Really proud of the 48 team. On to the dirt race next weekend.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll start with questions.

Q: You guys have shown for the most part as much speed as your teammate so far this season, but have not been able to obviously capitalize on the results. Though you didn’t have a chance to capture the win today, did it feel good to be in that position?

ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, absolutely. We’ve struggled in some areas this year that have been pretty frustrating. I feel like we really struggled in dirty air, maneuverability in traffic, restarts and stuff. Worked really hard at bringing something to the racetrack that I could be aggressive with, could drive hard.

Felt good to have that, to be able to pass cars. My pit crew did a great job keeping us up front, as well. Yeah, I mean, it definitely feels good to be closer to the front. We want to be a couple spots better.

After the last couple weeks, this definitely feels pretty good.

Q: The performance of Hendrick Motorsports, how does it feel for you right now to be part of the organization?

ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, I mean, every day walking into HMS for me is a dream come true. Still enjoying every minute of it. I feel like this is the strongest start to the season the company overall has had. I feel like as a race team we were a little better the beginning of last year than we are the beginning of this year. I feel like us specifically could have won Vegas. We did win Fontana. Came back after the break pretty strong.

I feel like we’re a little behind. But the 5 and 24 specifically are super fast each and every week. It always is good to be able to learn from them. Yeah, everything is going really well. A lot of really smart people working really hard back at the shop. It’s paying off.

Q: You got strung out a little bit today. Does the surface have anything to do with it? When they talk about repave, does it matter if they repave between July and the start of the 2022 season with the NextGen car? Does it matter to you or to drivers at all if you’re going to change something, why not change everything all at once?

ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, I don’t know. I feel like the surface, you’re going slower so it’s a little more forgiving just because of the raciness of the racetrack. You have some huge corrections and still catch the race car. That’s probably why it gets as strung out as it does.

There’s really no mechanical grip once the tires are worn out. That’s another reason I feel it gets strung out. Aero grip is super important. It’s hard to follow somebody closely.

As far as repaving it, I haven’t driven the new car yet so it’s really hard for me to say. I hope they never repave this place. I think the slick racetracks are so much fun. We’ve repaved some places and not had the races that we used to at those racetracks.

I love the fact that you can run from the bottom all the way to the outside wall here. You can move around. It’s got so much character. I understand the need to repave it, right? From a race car driver’s perspective, I hope they never do. I love these places with character.

Q: About learning from the 5 and the 24, what have those lessons been? How close are all four cars to each other or are you just completely different? What’s applying that you’re learning from the other two?

ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, I feel like all four cars are really similar each and every week. The team does a really, really good job of working together and bringing the best product to the racetrack that they can.

I feel like every crew chief has their own interpretation, every engineer has their own interpretation of the data and the tools we have at HMS. There are differences in all four cars. Doesn’t matter if you think you’re showing up the same as a teammate, different teams just kind of do things just a little bit differently, right? Little things add up at these events.

They’re definitely close. It’s an open notebook. That’s the best part. When we struggle a little bit, our teammates are out front, we can go to them, lean on them, which is great.

I don’t know exactly what the things are or aren’t, but I’m glad that we have some really fast teammates to lean on.

Q: Is there a particular area where your team is really trying to focus right now that you feel is the biggest hindrance you’ve been fighting?

ALEX BOWMAN: Building fast racecars, faster racecars (smiling). I don’t know. I feel kind of like I said earlier, I’ve struggled on restarts a lot this year. Instead of being on offense, I felt like I’m trying not to crash for a couple laps. I feel like today was a step in the right direction in that. I guess next week is probably going to be a whole different deal, but from then on see how it applies.

Q: Back to the conversation about leaning on your teammates. You referenced how strong of a start it has been, maybe the best Hendrick has had. Do you feel a lot of that is because of how closely you guys are working together? Was there a conversation before the start of the season that you need to be tighter knit as a group?

ALEX BOWMAN: I think we ended last year really strong as well, with the 9 winning the championship. I think we scored the second most points during the Playoffs, or at least until the very last race. We all ended the year pretty strong. I feel like that’s carried over.

I feel like any time you kind of move people around, have some new faces, whether it’s Kyle, new driver on the 5, Rudy, a new crew chief on the 24, typically that, like, sparks positive things pretty quickly. I feel like they both have been great additions.

But I really think it just stems from ending last year so positive, continuing the positive momentum.

Q: Greg Ives has been the constant for you. What has he brought to the team? How has he helped make you a better driver?

ALEX BOWMAN: Riddles. He likes to talk in riddles (smiling).

I feel like Greg and I are both a little awkward at times. But I think recently Greg has stepped up and kind of identified some areas that he can help me in the race car, whether it’s on the radio, keep giving me more information, helping me understand things, or telling me things I can do differently, what he sees on the driver data and stuff like that.

I feel like today Greg talked more on the radio than he has any race I ever have been a part of. I think it was really positive. I think we’ve been working together for, like, four years now, but we still are learning. I feel like we learned some things that he can help me. It’s definitely showing.

Q: You guys are off to a terrific start as a whole. Your expectations ahead with the unpredictable race at the Bristol dirt race.

ALEX BOWMAN: I’m excited. I may not be a dirt guy, per se, but I probably have more dirt starts than most, I guess, going into Bristol. I ran a couple different midget series for a couple years. While I ran pavement more than dirt, I did run some dirt stuff. I’m going to race my Sprint car this year as well. I definitely enjoy the dirt thing.

I’m ready to go. I ran the ARCA race on dirt. I feel like that was somewhat similar. I don’t know what to expect. You saw the track get pretty rough over the last couple nights. But those late models make a lot of grip, do some crazy stuff with the rear suspension that I think probably tends to dig the racetrack up a little bit. Our cars are heavy. I don’t think — I don’t know. We’ll see if they do the same thing or not.

I’m just excited. I love new and different things. I think going somewhere completely different than what we’ve done in the Cup Series for forever is pretty awesome. Who knows if it’s going to be amazing, not great, what the racetrack is going to do or what’s going to happen. I think the fact that it’s new, different and exciting, is really cool to be a part of.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks for taking the time to join us. Good luck at Bristol.

ALEX BOWMAN: Thanks, guys. Have a good one.

 

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