Latest News From Kurt Busch & Miller Lite Dodge Team -- Darlington By Diecast DudePosted on Thu May 08, 2008 at 11:30:44 PM EST
(Courtesy Tom Roberts PR)
But first, these notes of interest:
--Call it Miller Lite Dodge driver Kurt Busch's racing version of the "Theory of
Relativity"... As incredible and perhaps unbelievable as it might sound, Kurt says
that Saturday night's Dodge Challenger 500 at Darlington Raceway could produce a
finish even closer than that of the March 16, 2003 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400.
In that race, Kurt and Ricky Craven staged the closest finish in the history of
electronic scoring and timing along the NASCAR Sprint Cup circuit, with Craven
taking the exciting victory by a mere 0.002 seconds over Busch.
--Review the exciting finish of the 3/16/03 race, the closest in NASCAR history
here:
(Link to the video of the finish of the 2003 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400--
3:01:00 of unbelievable action:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xV7hAz-75UA )
--Much more on this subject in this week's Darlington race advance that follows
and is attached...
--The "Grand Opening" of the new Kurt Busch Superdome at the Victory Junction
Gang Camp is set for Tuesday, May 20 at 2:00 p.m. The project was announced in
May 2006, with Kurt announcing the donation of the initial $1 million in support
of the project. The facility will provide opportunities for indoor sports in a
climate-controlled environment. "It'll be like seeing a dream come true to
finally get the doors open and see all the kids enjoying themselves," said Kurt.
"It's been a labor of love for all of the people involved and I'm so proud and
grateful to have the opportunity to make a contribution in this manner to the
Petty camp." Officials are still ironing out all the final details. Several
entertainment and sports figures are expected to attend including members of the
Carolina Panthers and Ryan Newman, 2008 Daytona 500 Champion, Kurt's teammate at
Penske Racing.
--Kurt's career record at Darlington Raceway has produced one top-five finish
and four top-10s in 11 races. He started 18th and finished 12th in last year's
May 13 Dodge Avenger 500.
--Kurt claimed his first career NASCAR NEXTEL Cup pole position in qualifying
for the Mountain Dew Southern 500 on Sept. 2, 2001. He toured the 1.366-mile
egg-shaped oval in 29.263 seconds for an average speed of 168.048 mph. It came
in qualifying for his 32nd career Cup race. "It came as such a surprise," said
Kurt, who joined the late Davey Allison as only the second rookie driver to win
a Darlington pole. "I wasn't even thinking about the pole that day. I was just
focused on running a good lap. It was certainly a thrill to win my first pole on
such an historical track as Darlington and for such a prestigious race as the
old Southern 500."
--Kurt and the Miller Lite crew will be racing their PSC-550 Dodge Charger in
the Dodge Challenger 500 this weekend at Darlington. The car was the first of
the "second generation" COT cars out of the Penske Racing shops and will be
racing for its first time this weekend. "We started numbering the COT models
with a 500-series number last year," explained team shop foreman Gary Brooks.
"When we went back and revamped the new car, we designated that by upping the
chassis numbers to 550 and beyond. The No. 2 Team will be racing the first of
the new cars to roll off the line at Darlington this weekend. Rest assured that
a lot of time and effort went into the preparation of this new Dodge Charger."
--Kurt and crew are testing their PSC-554 and PSC-557 Dodge Chargers at Lowe's
Motor Speedway this week. "The game plan is to race the 554 car in the All Star
race and save the 557 for the Coca-Cola 600," reported team engineer Brian
Wilson. The 554 chassis was raced at Atlanta on March 9 where Kurt started 29th
and finished 11th. The 557 chassis was raced at Texas on April 6 where Kurt
started 23rd and finished 23rd.
--Kurt on racing at Darlington: "I've always loved racing at Darlington. From
way back in my short-track days, I can remember the place being so full of
history. I always thought that it would be so cool to race there. When I got my
first opportunity to race at Darlington back in the spring race of 2001, I found
out that everything I'd heard about the place was absolutely true. It is such a
challenging track and so demanding from a mental standpoint. You used to have to
get your car setup right to deal with the unbelievably abrasive surface. Even
with the brand new pavement, it will still always be the ultimate challenge.
That's just part of the equation, because then you have to apply a mental focus
to each and every lap. You really do race the racetrack lap after lap in hopes
of being there up front to race the other competitors in the final few laps."
--Kurt returns to the radio airwaves next Monday night. He will again play
co-host for the Performance Racing Network's (PRN) nationally acclaimed "Fast
Talk." The weekly one-hour show airs on Monday night's at 7:00 p.m. EDT and is
carried on more than 200 stations plus XM Satellite Radio Channel 144. "It's
always a lot of fun to get back there in the studio with Doug (Rice, veteran
moderator of the show) and it's a big thrill to be part of the broadcast that
the late Benny Parsons, everybody's hero, started 16 years ago," Kurt said. The
show can also be downloaded next Tuesday morning on the network's site at:
http://www.goprn.com/shows/fast_talk/
--Las Vegas odds just in...Bud Team favored by 3.5 positions over Miller Lite
Dodge...Heading into the eleventh race of the season this Saturday night, Kurt
Busch and his #2 Miller Lite team will be looking to turn this year around at
the venue of arguably the most exciting finish in NASCAR history. Five years
ago, Busch wheeled his machine around the famed Darlington Raceway beating and
banging with Ricky Craven all the way to the checkers, in what is the closest
recorded finish since NASCAR went to electronic scoring fifteen years ago. "The
Lady in Black" is just the track for this Miller Lite team to get back to
finishing the way they have been accustomed to for so long. Following last
week's improbable finish, the "Battle of the Beers" roars on, with the #9
Budweiser team holding a commanding lead of 222 points in the standings over the
Miller Lite Dodge. With only the handful of five races under his belt, Kasey
Kahne holds a 12.4 average finish at Darlington, compared to Busch's 18.1 over
his eleven career starts. Let's take our weekly trip to Las Vegas to see what
the Palms Casino Resort sports book representative, Fred Crespi, has to say
about this week's Beer battle.
"Honestly, I am really shocked at the horrible luck this Miller Lite team is
having this year, and just as surprised at the success of the Bud team. They
have been steady all year long, and sitting 12th in points after the season they
had last year is a testament to teamwork. Both the #2 Miller Lite Dodge and the
#9 Budweiser Dodge have the drivers that are perfectly suited to finish well at
such a demanding race track like Darlington, so this week's number was not an
easy one to get to. However, until the Miller Lite team can shake their bad
luck, I have to make the Bud team more of a favorite than I normally would or
have. This week, the #9 team is a 3.5 position favorite over the #2 at The
Palms, based upon current form and career success at this track. And am I the
only one that wishes this race was still over Labor Day weekend? Regardless, I
know we are going to see yet another amazing Darlington finish this Saturday."
--Kurt scheduled to be a featured guest next Tuesday for the Chicagoland Fan
Appreciation event at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Ill. The special event for
the track's season ticketholders is set from 3:00 p.m. till 6:30 p.m. CDT. For
additional information, please visit the track's site at
http://www.chicagolandspeedway.com
--Kurt's visit to his souvenir trailer at Darlington this Saturday will mark the
256th time in the last 259 races that he has been out on race days to meet the
fans and sign autographs. His continuing tradition began during his first full
year on the Cup circuit back in 2001. Kurt is tentatively scheduled to be at his
souvenir trailer from 4:00 p.m. till 4:30 p.m. at Darlington on Saturday. Please
verify that time by visiting the trailer in advance and picking up the free
tickets for the autograph line.
--"The difference between the old ballplayer and the new ballplayer is the
jersey. The old ballplayer cared about the name on the front. The new ballplayer
cares about the name on the back." -Steve Garvey
KURT BUSCH'S RACING "THEORY OF RELATIVIVTY" AT DARLINGTON:
-Miller Lite Dodge Driver Says Saturday's Darlington Finish Could Be Even Closer
Than 2003's Record-
DARLINGTON, S.C. (May 6, 2008) - As incredible and perhaps unbelievable as it
might sound, Miller Lite Dodge driver Kurt Busch says that Saturday night's
Dodge Challenger 500 at Darlington Raceway could produce a finish even closer
than that of the March 16, 2003 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400.
In that race, Busch and Ricky Craven staged the closest finish in the history of
electronic scoring and timing along the NASCAR Sprint Cup circuit, with Craven
taking the exciting victory by a mere 0.002 seconds over Busch.
You could call it Busch's abstract racing version of the "Theory of Relativity."
"As odd as that may sound, yes it could very well happen there on Saturday
night," said Busch, hoping to regroup at Darlington Raceway this weekend after
enduring two consecutive disastrous races at Talladega and Richmond. "It's like
taking two completely different sets of ingredients or circumstances and coming
up with the same results. That has certainly been the nature of our sport,
especially over the last few years.
"When Ricky and I staged that nail-biter at Darlington back in 2003, we were
racing the smaller cars on old asphalt with softer tires," said Busch. "This
time around, the elements are totally different. We have the bigger and boxier
cars. We'll have the brand new fresh asphalt. And yeah, we'll have the rock-hard
Goodyear Tires there this weekend.
"When you stop and think about it, it's very much possible that we could have
another close finish like we did in 2003. I certainly don't think that we'll be
running side-by-side and that close all night long; it would be absolutely
absurd to think that could happen. But if we were to get a late-race caution, it
really could set up another race that close to the finish.
"The new track will have a ton of grip, but the rock-hard tires will probably
see us slipping and sliding all over the place," Busch explained. "If the cars
are all bunched up for the finish of Saturday night's race, you'll likely see
some of the brave and daring young souls out there pushing it to the limit and
doing whatever it takes to win. The key to it all, however, would probably be a
late caution with less than 10 laps remaining. We'd start single-file with the
leaders up front and all the lapped cars completely out of the way and running
behind them.
"Darlington is such a tight and narrow track all the way around and when you
look back at the video from the shootout that Ricky and I had, you'd have to
label it a miracle that we didn't crash each other out that day. As big and
bulky as these new cars are, you could still wedge two guys running side-by-side
on that narrow little strip of asphalt. It would be another mind-blowing finish,
that's for sure. We'd definitely welcome the opportunity to be involved in
another classic finish like that."
Busch took time out on Monday night to detail the historical finish in his
battle with Craven in the racing classic, even divulging information he hasn't
revealed until now.
"The fact was that my power steering went out late in that race and by the time
it got down to those last couple of laps, I had no power steering at all," said
Busch. "The TV and radio guys were reporting that I'd just abused my stuff so
badly that I'd used everything up; I had just had burned the tires slap off the
thing.
"It made for such a great story that I never bothered to mention that if I'd
still had my power steering and didn't have to manhandle the car like I was, I
probably could have held Ricky off. Regardless, it was a historical race and I
was so proud and excited to have been part of it. Ricky has always been such a
first class guy and I have had the utmost respect for him then and through
today.
"Over the years, I've been privileged to have had the opportunity to do TV and
radio shows with Ricky and we inevitably get around to discussing the 2003
Darlington spring race," said Busch. "In my mind, that race displayed the
ultimate example of two drivers battling their hearts and guts out till the very
end, yet having and maintaining so much respect for each other. Ricky and I were
both in the same state of mind in that we both wanted to win, but neither of us
was going to wreck the other guy. I think it was the supreme example of two guys
racing as hard as they could to win a race. If that same situation played out
again a hundred times, 99 of them would probably end with a big crash before
they got to the finish line.
"I can remember it just like it was yesterday," said Busch of the amazing final
few yards of his battle with Craven. "I went into turn three trying to give
Ricky the impression that I was gonna go high, yet I cut the wheel down low. I
was trying to make sure I made it as wide as I could getting in, so he couldn't
commit to a line. When you commit to a line quicker, obviously, you can generate
speed through the corner. So I went into (Turn) three low and there was no way I
could hold it down like I needed to.
"The car pushed up a little bit and I knew he'd go low, so I didn't want to come
back across his nose because I would have spun out and finished as the last car
on the lead lap. So I had to just carry the momentum towards the high side and
get as much throttle-on time as I could. He started rubbing the left-rear, the
door, the A-post, and as soon as he got up to my front tire, it jerked the wheel
out of my hand and yanked my car completely into his. That killed my momentum
and then we stayed locked from there on. I grabbed as much of the wheel as I
could and finally tugged it back to the right to get off of him by the time we
got to the start-finish line, but my momentum had been killed after that. It was
just a hard-fought battle and one that they'll probably be talking about
forever."
This weekend's Darlington action gets under way on Thursday with practice
scheduled from 7:00 p.m. till 8:00 p.m. Friday's schedule features practice
sessions at 12:00 noon and 2:00 p.m. Friday's 5:15 p.m. single round of
qualifying will establish Saturday's 43-car starting field. Saturday's Dodge
Challenger 500 (367 laps, 501.3 miles) has a 7:20 p.m. EDT starting time and
features live coverage by FOX-TV and MRN Radio.
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