California Love? California,
Here Comes the DLP® Team. Please Treat Us Well!
CORNELIUS, N.C., (Feb. 20, 2007) – An open letter to
California Speedway:
Dear California Speedway,
We hope this letter finds you well.
Tony Raines, the No. 96 DLP® HDTV Chevrolet and Hall of
Fame Racing are all looking forward to seeing you this weekend
for the Auto Club 500 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series event.
That said, none of us have really had any success at your
race track since you opened in 1997. In fact, your hospitality
has been downright rude.
Raines has never finished better than 28th in three Nextel
Cup starts at California, but he did enjoy his time with you
in 1999, when he started second and finished eighth in the
NASCAR Busch Series event conducted there.
Last year during both Nextel Cup race weekends, you were especially
unkind to our team as Terry Labonte started 43rd and then finished
34th, three laps down in the 2006 spring race. We came back
in the fall hoping you would be nicer, but Raines started 42nd
and finished 27th, also three laps down. We hope there is not
a pattern developing here.
Last June, we did have a good race going at your sister track – Michigan
International Speedway – which like you is a two-mile,
D-shaped oval. Unfortunately, while we were running in the
top-15, a cut tire caused us to lose two laps, putting us out
of contention for a win. Oh, and it rained too, ending the
race after just 129 of the 200 laps. We hope you didn’t
have a hand in our tough weekend in Michigan as well.
Nonetheless, we’re still looking forward to seeing you
again. We think we’ve learned some things in the off-season,
and we had a pretty good test at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
We think some of the things we learned there in January will
help us at your track. We believe we can qualify better and
probably race better as well.
Even though you haven’t been kind to us, we’re
still coming to visit because we’re good people. And,
we don’t give up. So we’re excited to get out there
and show you what we can do.
Look forward to seeing you. We hope the weather is nice. It
was cold and windy in Daytona.
Sincerely,
The DLP HDTV Racing Team
TONY RAINES (Driver, No. 96 DLP HDTV Chevrolet):
Overall thoughts heading into California:
“We hope we’ve made some gains. California wasn’t
good to us last year at either race. Terry (Labonte) drove
the first one, and I drove the second one. We’re going
to have to work hard with the hour-and-a-half of practice that
we have when we get there. I think we’ll be better. I’m
confident of that. With not being able to test there, we’re
going to have to get our preparation done before we get out
there.”
How hard is it to spend 11 days in Daytona (Fla.) and then
go across the country to California the next weekend?
“Getting out there really isn’t the bad part.
The bad part is, you get out to California and Friday, Saturday
and Sunday go by really, really fast. Sunday night you’re
headed home and you’re kind of like, ‘Wow, what
just happened?’ The length of Daytona, taking 10-12 days,
is really long, then you’re home in Charlotte (N.C.)
for two or three and then California kind of comes and goes.
Pretty soon it seems like a month has gone by.”
How important is it for the DLP team to have a solid start
in the first five races?
“It’s equally important to everybody. It’s
just important to set a trend. We want to show up ready. We
want to qualify well and race well. If we do those things,
we’ll be solidly in the top-35 and not have to worry
about anything. The competition is tougher than ever. Everybody
is trying to do the same thing. We just need to work harder
and smarter than everybody.”
Rules infractions and penalties were a hot topic in Daytona.
What are your thoughts on all the penalties?
“Last year, late in the year, they threatened to start
escalating the penalties. They warned everybody that if (the
cheating) continued, that’s what they would do. So, I’m
not surprised by the escalations of penalties and fines."
Can you describe a lap around California?
“The frontstretch has a slight curve to it and turn
one is one of the faster turns that you enter. You’re
going a little more than 200 mph. Coming down the banking it
flattens out in the center a little bit, which makes the car
not want to turn, and then it flattens out again as you exit
the turn. The backstretch is pretty straight. Then turns three
and four have a tight entry, but then it’s got a long
center and a long exit, so it’s kind of fun to drive
that end. The car is on the edge the whole way through there.
You have to carry it sometimes. It might be a little tight
or a little loose at anytime. It’s certainly an exciting
turn to drive. It’s not quite as fast as (turns) one
and two, but it’s fast enough.”
A lot of people say Michigan and California are identical
tracks. Are they really that similar?
“You know, it’s funny, they’re similar,
but they are really two different race tracks setup-wise. I
think what works there will definitely slide over to Michigan,
but it’s hard to tell exactly what will work.”
BRANDON THOMAS (Crew Chief, No. 96 DLP HDTV Chevrolet):
The DLP team struggled at 1.5-mile and 2-mile tracks in
2006. You recently tested at the 1.5-mile Las Vegas Motor
Speedway. With that in mind, what are your thoughts heading
into California?
“We felt like we learned a lot during our qualifying
runs at Las Vegas. We felt like we learned a couple of key
things in race trim at Las Vegas. We’re optimistic going
into California. We feel like we’ve got a good direction
on our downforce program right now.”
You used to live in Southern California. Where did you
work and how long did you live out there?
“I lived in Huntington Beach, Calif., which I miss terribly.
I lived there from late 1997 through the middle of 1999. I
worked with Dan Gurney’s All-American Racers in the CART
Series. I wasn’t home that much, but I really did like
it out there. I left there because stock cars were a better
future for me.”
What do you miss about living out there?
“I miss the beach, the pier, good fish tacos and Main
Street Huntington Beach. I miss the ladies of southern California,
who are rather attractive.”
From a crew chief standpoint, how hard is it to spend 11
days in Daytona and then turn right around and go to California?
Was it easier to go to Rockingham, N.C., for the second race
of the season?
“Oh yeah. Before you kind of eased into the season.
Daytona has always been a long trip, but having Rockingham
right after that – it was kind of a ‘home’ race.
The problem with being in Daytona so long is that the work
doesn’t really stop. My engineering group did seven-post
testing on the California and Vegas car last Friday. We did
some pull down testing on the Car of Tomorrow last week as
well. We’re doing our first test with the Car of Tomorrow
at Rockingham on June 20, and then sending the truck out to
California that night. It’s definitely harder getting
to a West Coast race. The more West Coast races we’ve
added, the more strain it’s put on getting things done
early, and the more important it’s made the group back
home at the shop.”
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