 |
Top Story |
|
|
Daytona 500
Post-Race Press Conference Transcript
February
18, 2007
An interview with:
MARK MARTIN
JEFF BURTON
DAVID RAGAN
KEVIN HARVICK
RICHARD CHILDRESS
TODD BERRIER
KERRY THARP: We are pleased to be joined in the media center
by our third place finisher today in the Daytona 500, and
that's Jeff Burton, driver of the No. 31 Cingular Wireless
Chevrolet.
Jeff, talk about the run out there that you had today and what
you saw there at the end.
JEFF BURTON: Well, I was ecstatic with how our car drove all
day. We didn't have the fastest car in the race for sure.
That's the thing we lacked was speed. But what we didn't lack
was being able to drive the car wherever I wanted it to be. We
ran really well. To be honest, we ran well. I still don't know
the whole story, but we had a jack man, came in running third,
I think, and our jack man injured his ankle. I'm not sure what
happened, I just saw him limping around the car after the pit
stop. But he toughed it up. Went ahead and did the pit stop.
Went around the front of the car literally hopping on one foot
carrying the jack, got the left side up.
We lost all our track position with that, but he got it done
and he kept us from going a lap down. Really proud of him for
doing that. And then it was kind of fighting our way back up.
I think I passed somebody for third with maybe five or six to
go, and I drove into turn three, and I just was completely
sideways and backed up the racetrack in front of everybody,
and we were four wide, people banging on my doors, and
recovered from that and then missed another wreck.
So the last 40 laps were just crazy. I mean, I cannot tell you
guys how wild and aggressive those last 40 laps were. I mean,
it was insane, as all the carnage proves. So glad to get
through it. We had a good start to the year. I'm real proud of
Kevin and his guys and equally disappointed for Mark and his
guys.
Q. It seems like it's two races: the first half of the race
everyone is just kind of riding around, and the second half.
Is that how it turns out?
JEFF BURTON: Well, what happens is as the track temps cool
down, the track gets a little more grip. As the laps wind
down, the risk versus reward ratio starts to change and people
do things that they otherwise wouldn't do. It's really wild.
The first part of the race, people are racing hard, but the
last part of the race, they race we race harder than we
should, if that makes any sense.
So we're at a point where we're racing and everything is cool,
but then we try to take it the next step. There's just not
enough grip to take it that next step and therefore you get
people running into each other and all the carnage that we
had. I hate late race cautions on restrictor plate races. I
hate them. When that last caution came out, I was really glad
because that got us caught back up, but I was really
disappointed because I knew we were 40 to go at Daytona for
the Daytona 500, it's going to get ugly.
Q. I hate to put a little downer on this, but in your mind
should the caution have been thrown before it was, because
Mark is saying that he thought he would have won the race if
the caution would have come out?
JEFF BURTON: I haven't seen a replay of it. I mean, I can't
comment because I just have not seen a replay. The only thing
I did see was it looked like Harvick got way in front of him,
then Mark got a little bit in front of him, then Harvick got a
little bit in front of him. I don't know if the caution when
the caution would have come out, where everybody was at that
point. Honestly, I just saw that one brief thing because I saw
it live. But I haven't seen a replay.
I think throwing a caution at that point, turn four, last lap,
doesn't do you any good anyway. Nobody is going to do anything
different than what they otherwise would. Before I really
comment, I'd like to see a tape of it.
Q. Was the cold temperatures and the wind a factor at all in
the beginning?
JEFF BURTON: Yeah, I thought the wind was a factor. I hope it
was. We believe that we worked on our race car because of the
wind and we did a lot of setup stuff based on the wind.
Yeah, I think that the biggest thing that happens at the end
of the race is just, like I said, that risk versus reward
ratio changes, and people start trying to get more than
perhaps they should. It just gets wild.
It's hard to even describe. The cars don't drive good enough
to be three wide consistently. You can for a little while, but
early in the race when you're three wide, people lift a little
bit, get a little more room. Late in the race, nobody gives
any room, and it just gets bizarre.
Q. Kevin is your teammate and Mark is your long time friend.
If you're sitting there and assuming yourself you can't win,
what are you rooting for?
JEFF BURTON: As good as I feel for RCR and Kevin, I feel that
bad for Mark. I'm going to tell you that Mark Martin is a
champion. I don't care if he ever wins a championship. He's a
champion. I don't care if he ever wins the Daytona 500, he's a
champion. But it would be nice for Mark Martin to be able to
see the hardware on the trophy case -- for him. But to the
competitors, he has so much respect and not only as a
competitor but as a person. He is a world class individual and
driver and mainly person.
You do a whole lot more living than you do driving, and when
Mark Martin steps away from the race car, he'll have friends
and he'll go on and live a really good life. So disappointing
for him, but at the same time, I'm so ecstatic for RCR. To get
another Daytona 500 means a great deal. It's huge. But it's
exceptionally disappointing for Mark and all the things that
he was close to doing.
KERRY THARP: We are joined by a couple other competitors
today. Our runner up in today's race, driver of the No. 01
U.S. Army Chevrolet, and that's Mark Martin; and also our top
finishing rookie, that's driver of the No. 6 AAA Ford, that's
David Ragan.
Mark, a great run for you out there today. Talk about it. Give
us your viewpoint.
MARK MARTIN: Well, first of all, you know, I've got several
things I want to say before I talk about the race. First of
all, I want to thank the race fans for supporting me so much
because if it wasn't for them, I might not have got my dream
ride with Ginn. And I also want to thank, you know, that team
that worked so hard to give me this deal.
It gives me such great pride to represent the U.S. Army and to
work with people who want to win so bad as this group and who
gave me a chance to do it the way I wanted. I also want to say
that I didn't ask for a win in the Daytona 500; I asked for a
chance. Those guys gave me exactly what I asked for, and I let
it slip away, slip through my fingers, and I'm fine with that.
I did my best.
When I looked up there at the end, I was minus any pushers. I
didn't have any help to get it done, and that's the way it
goes. It was really looking good. I told this team through
Speed Weeks when we qualified 35th, that we still we came down
here for Sunday. We came down here to win this race. Ryan
Pemberton and all these guys, they got it done. They got it
done on Pit Road, they gave me the car, huge horsepower with
Hendrick Chevy horsepower, and they gave me the tools to get
out there, and we came up a little bit short.
JEFF BURTON: Before I leave, I do want to say one thing that
Mark Martin told me this winter. This would be his best chance
of winning the Daytona 500 ever, and he was right. He knew
what the hell he was doing. I know a lot of people scratched
their head, Why is he doing, why is he going over there?
He's not a dumbass. He's a pretty smart guy (laughter).
MARK MARTIN: Thank you. I appreciate that, Jeff.
KERRY THARP: We're joined by our top finishing rookie, and
that's David Ragan. David, your first Daytona 500.
Talk us through it a little bit.
DAVID RAGAN: Well, we've had an up and down week here, and
certainly to come out with a top 5 finish was remarkable for
everyone at AAA and Roush Fenway Racing. We just took it easy
the first 250 miles, a little too easy at times because I
could hear Jimmy Fennig getting mad in the pits, and he told
us to get with it with about 40 to go, and it just worked out
perfect.
When I was on the top line, the top line was moving. When I
was on the bottom line, the bottom line was moving. So nothing
that I did. My crew and everyone put me in great position to
go out and just try to hang on, and with help. Mike Wallace
stuck through the race with me through thick and thin. I've
got to give a little credit to him. We had a great top 5
finish for the AAA Ford Fusion. We're just ready to go to
California.
KERRY THARP: Questions for David Ragan.
Q. You seemed to be well back of the field for most of the
day, and you just skyrocketed up there at the end. Did you
really honestly see yourself having a top 5 finish today?
DAVID RAGAN: I was running 15th with the green-
white-checkered. I would have paid money to have it over right
then.
MARK MARTIN: You and me both (laughter).
DAVID RAGAN: You know, I would be happy with that. That was
our game plan. We almost lost a draft through that one round
of green flag pit stops. We lost a couple of cars. And like I
said, I could hear Jimmy in the pit box starting to get mad.
It just worked out. We got a caution the time we needed, our
car was handling great the last part of the race. When I was
on the top line, it was moving. We had a restart there with
about 20 to go. Things worked out great. I had a few guys
stick with me through thick and thin. Nothing that I did on
purpose, but it certainly helps to have a lot of luck here.
Q. What did it look like out there with all the wrecks in the
last 50 laps and how did that keep on changing the race?
DAVID RAGAN: I saw a few of them start to happen. I had a good
look when the 48 got loose. I guess he got loose in the middle
of three wide. Started chasing it up and down the track and
things started to get tight. And it worked out perfect where
the cars behind me checked up, no one ran into me. I got
checked up in plenty of time where I didn't cave the nose in
on the Ford Fusion. It just worked out great. On the last lap
I saw Kyle Busch run off the apron coming off of four, and I
just kind of stood my ground and stayed straight and kept my
own on the start/finish line, and that's where I was trying to
get to.
Q. Can you talk a little bit, and Mark knows about this, with
Jimmy Fennig, can you talk about how good he is with mentoring
you as a rookie?
DAVID RAGAN: I would put him up against any crew chief in the
garage. He's got perfect my father has always preached it's
good to have some I don't want to call him old but good to
have some veteran leadership on the team. And Jimmy, he's got
that veteran leadership, he's not afraid to get on the guys,
that he keeps us walking the chalk line. And if you check when
the garage opens at 6:00 a.m., the AAA team is there at 5:30.
We're always there early.
We're here to race and nothing else. He stays on me very hard
to try to do the best job I can, and at the same time he
doesn't slack off any either. He's a great combination from
the veteran leadership skills that the guys had back in the
'80s and '90s and certainly to now. He's smart. He knows what
wind tunnel numbers we're looking for. He understands the race
car. The only thing I keep preaching to him is, Jimmy, don't
take anything for granted that I might know; tell me
everything.
There's a few things that I might know and a few things that I
don't, and I tell him, Don't be afraid to talk. If you've ever
been around Jimmy Fennig much, he's pretty much a
straightforward guy, doesn't like to talk a lot. I tell him,
Tell me everything you know, Jimmy, and that will help us all.
Q. Talk about the redemption, if you would, of wrecking your
primary car in the qualifier and how the piece you ran today
worked in comparison, please.
DAVID RAGAN: Certainly that was a big disappointment to us and
something that could have been prevented by myself. We had a
bad luck of getting a flat right rear tire, which that happens
a lot of times, and it's up to myself as a race car driver to
be smart and get slowed down quick enough. Well, I obviously
thought I could slow down 30 miles an hour and still hang onto
it, and I needed to slow down 70 miles an hour. I didn't get
it slowed down quick enough, and eventually just couldn't hang
on anymore. We got our backup car, same one we tested here in
January.
Again, all the hard work and effort that the guys back in
Concord at the race shop at Roush Yates Engines put into this
Daytona program means so much that they're working on next
year's Daytona 500 over the next month or two. It's really
tough when you wreck your primary car, but we had a great AAA
Ford Fusion for our backup. We're very fortunate we had two
practice sessions between the 150s and today's race and we got
it driving extremely well, and with a few adjustments for
today, it drove well but it just wasn't that great of a
pusher.
I always needed some help. I didn't have the pure speed that
it might have needed to pull out and make a pass with no help.
It was tough right there, but that might have been a good
thing for me because that really taught me how to stay in line
and not push the issue.
Q. The follow up, concerning where it looked like your
teammates were going to finish, how proud are you to be the
standard bearer for Roush Racing in its debut?
DAVID RAGAN: To get down to the truth, I probably don't
deserve it. Certainly Greg Biffle, Matt Kenseth, they are the
smart race car drivers on our team. They were running up front
the whole day. I saw the score board. I usually try not to
look at that stuff. Jimmy tells me to stay focused. And we had
the red flag and I looked up and I saw the 01 was up there and
the other Roush teammates, and that was cool. I was definitely
pulling for you, Mark. I wanted our teammates to win, but you
could have been the next best thing to win. And I really mean
that. It was a long day for us, and we came out on the top
side of things, but certainly week in and week out, Greg
Biffle and Matt Kenseth are going to show you why they're the
champions.
Q. For Mark, on the last lap when you saw the car spinning
behind you and saw the smoke, what were your thoughts? Did you
think you had won the race? And secondly, obviously NASCAR
allowed you to race back to the caution. Should they allow you
guys to do that on the final lap?
MARK MARTIN: You're asking tough questions there. NASCAR was
doing their best to get an exciting finish for the Daytona
500. I have no idea what happened behind me. I was ahead when
they were wrecking my spotter said they were wrecking. I did
notice that there was some smoke and stuff. But my focus was
basically on beating the 29 to the line. And I knew that we
were in good shape being on the inside line when I had Kyle
behind me because he had been so strong. I didn't even
realize, until I saw a replay afterwards, that I lost Kyle.
Gosh, I was kind of that outside line usually gets us up
forward just there in the short chute behind the start/finish
line. And it was my hope all the way down to the line that I
was going to get a push. But I see there was nobody left back
there. No, I didn't think it was over. It isn't over till it's
over, and I never saw a yellow flag and I kept racing with
everything that I had.
Q. For Mark, I've got to keep belaboring the point, but when
y'all came to the line and you crossed it, I think the first
words on the radio from you was, They waited, they waited, I
can't believe they waited. Did you really have no expectations
based on the information you got either from your mirror or
crew chief or spotter or anybody else? Did you have no
expectation that you would look up at the line and see a
yellow there?
MARK MARTIN: You know, I've been racing for over 30 years, and
I know one thing for sure, I'm real dumb, so I do stupid
stuff. So I sure as heck aren't going to quit racing. I never
thought twice about the prospect of the race going yellow. I
could hope because we were ahead at one time. Coming off the
corner, I think we were still ahead. And even at that, I
thought, Hey, this is a no brainer.
I've got the inside line. I've got Kyle back here, he's fast
as all get out. We're going to zoom bac. But we never picked
that speed up, and all I was looking at was the start/finish
line. Obviously that's what you do. And that's how it works
out. I took a Pepcid Complete before the race, and that took
care of my heartburn. And I had a Coca Cola afterwards, and
everything's good (laughter).
Q. When Kyle was behind you, it looked like he might have just
been kind of waiting for the right time, but you really felt
like you had him beat. What was it that gave you that
confidence in Kyle Busch? You felt confident with him behind
you, although you made it seem like he was waiting to set you
up. Why were you able to be confident you would finish up?
MARK MARTIN: Because when we were side by side that meant Kyle
couldn't pass me. He wasn't going to pass me on the inside and
he wasn't going to pass me on the outside because there was an
outside line, so he would have been caught in a box where he
had to push me to get the most positions he could.
Look, y'all saw more of it than I did. I don't know. I knew
Kyle was behind me. I knew he wasn't going to get under me
because I was on the yellow line. And I thought that Kyle's
car was really fast, and I thought he was trapped on the
inside line and he was going to be pushing me come off of
four. But, you know, I wasn't doing a whole lot of thinking
about anything but trying to beat the 29 to the line. You
know, that's what happened.
I'll say again: I didn't ask for that trophy; I asked for a
chance at it. And I'm very proud of what this team did for me
this weekend.
KERRY THARP: We are pleased to be joined by the winner of the
2007 Daytona 500, and that is Kevin Harvick, driver of the #29
Shell/Pennzoil Chevrolet. Kevin, congratulations.
What's
it feel like to win the Daytona 500?
KEVIN HARVICK: I'm cold right now. They got me with the water
there. I smell like I have a heavy alcohol problem. But it's
just hard to put into words. I mean, we got ourselves in a
little bit of trouble there with a hole in the nose and got
really hot and had to drop out of the draft there with about
20 to go. Luckily we got a caution and were able to come back
in and fix the front of the car.
Just Daytona 500, it's hard to believe. I knew I was going to
be the bad guy there at the end with Mark leading. But we just
held the pedal down and hoped for the best.
Q. This is for all three of you. All three of you have varying
levels of experience in this sport. Is this the wildest finish
or the wildest final 40 laps all three of you have ever been
involved in?
KEVIN HARVICK: I know for me I told them on the radio, I says,
I don't know what's happening out here but I'm putting myself
as close as I can to the wall so I'll hit something as least
hard as possible. There at the end, people were dragging the
walls. I know I hit the wall two or three times there at the
end of the race. I think I hit the back end of the 17,
straightened him back out there, in the next to last caution.
It was the wildest thing I've been a part of in a long time.
DAVID RAGAN: I was just trying to stay on the line and stay
out of the way and try to finish this thing. Certainly it was
wild. The first part was pretty easy and a little too calm, I
guess, and we all just had a chance to work on our cars and
everybody had good handling cars there at the end and was
giving it all they had.
MARK MARTIN: I was ahead of it all (laughter). It was pretty
decent up there where I was sitting.
KEVIN HARVICK: It was very entertaining behind you.
MARK MARTIN: I'm sure it was. I'm usually back there bouncing
off of everything, so I was enjoying myself.
Q. Kevin, you talked yesterday about what the win meant for
RCR, with the success you've had here in the past. What does
today's win mean as far as what this team has done in the
past?
KEVIN HARVICK: I think obviously RCR has a very deep history
here with everything they've done, and with Dale winning the
500 in '98. They've won a lot of races here, and we've been
close to winning a lot of races here. And it always seems like
something happening. We had things happen today, and I think
it just shows the maturity of our team and all of us coming
through and putting everything back together and coming back
up through the field.
Q.
Kevin, you brought I don't know if the right word is
'redemption' to Richard, winning back at I think it was
Rockingham in 2001. What did he say to you today right after
this win?
KEVIN HARVICK: He just kept looking at me saying, Man, this is
the Daytona 500, can you believe it? It's the Daytona 500.
Knowing the history of Richard and RCR and everything that
he's done in NASCAR racing, it's hard to put into words the
history of RCR and how much they've meant to this sport. And
to be part of that history is something that is just hard to
put into perspective. And until we get further down the road,
it's hard to put it all into words right now.
Q. This is for Kevin and sort of for Mark, too. You have such
a respect for the history of this sport and the guys who
really built it, so is any part of it just a little
disappointing that Mark didn't get that win? And then for Mark
would you have been disappointed had Kevin not raced you as
hard as he did to maybe give you that win?
KEVIN HARVICK: Well, I think, like I told you earlier, I knew
when I got out of the car I wasn't going to be the good guy.
But that's just the way it works. Somebody has to win and
somebody has to lose. And unfortunately today fortunately
today was our day to win.
MARK MARTIN: In this sport, no one ever races less. But had
that been the case hypothetically, it would have broke me in
half. That's what I love about this sport, because it's hard.
It's what's driven me for over 30 years, and that's what I
love about it, and that's why I'm here, was here today,
because I had the choice of whether or not I wanted to race
the Daytona 500. I wanted a chance I wanted a shot at it, and
these guys gave me a shot.
Q. Mark, do you go home tonight feeling like, Oh, I came this
close and feeling bad, or do you go home and say, I had the
best Daytona 500 I ever had in my life and I feel great ?
MARK MARTIN: I've got a feeling it'll be a little of both. We
were very close, and it wasn't a fluke. It was a two month
long drag. We've been down here a week and a half. We haven't
shown anybody any real pizzazz, and we methodically worked our
way into the position. We didn't back into it or anything
else. I'm very proud of the effort.
I probably will feel some sadness somewhere along the line.
Right now I was focused on my job. My heart wasn't broke. I've
done this stuff a long time, and I've had a lot worse happen
than what happened there in the last 200 yards of this race
happen to me, and you guys know it a lot worse. If I'm lucky,
Bobby Ginn might put me in a car in the 500 again next year.
And I want to say one other thing, too. This was an awesome
effort today and this week and this month, but we still have
work to do. It's not all golden. The challenge that they've
given that I have and that we all have at Ginn Racing is out
there for us, and we have we do have many more challenges.
It's not all going to be as golden as today, and I know that.
I'm going to continue to roll my sleeves up and work at it.
Q. Mark, you said you were looking for a pusher there at the
end. Does it make it any worse that your old Roush teammate
kind of pushed Kevin to victory, Matt Kenseth?
MARK MARTIN: No, no. I haven't even seen the finish. It is
what it is. We were inches or feet or whatever we were short.
It was so close, but it was second.
I couldn't expect Jeff Burton to have come behind me. I
thought Kyle Busch was behind me. I didn't know until just
recently. I felt confident. Kyle Busch's car was really fast
and I thought he was going to be trapped on the inside, he was
going to have nowhere to go and have no option but to push me.
His car was fast. And we both had Hendrick power, and I still
thought we were going to be all right. But then I didn't
realize that he was in the wreck. I wasn't looking back very
much. I had my eye on Kevin.
Q. Can you talk about what was going through your mind during
that 11 minute red flag period where you're just sitting there
lying in wait?
MARK MARTIN: You know, I didn't I stayed focused and I ran
over the restarts and scenarios and thought about what I
needed to do and how I need to do it. I'll be real honest with
you. I'm very proud of the effort I made on the final restart.
I was very proud at the middle of the backstretch coming for
the checkered flag to have Kyle where he was and contained, I
felt, which was the most immediate threat because his car
seemed so fast. At that point I felt like I had done I had
done everything that I could do. And when I get done here
tonight, I probably will feel like I did everything that I
could do.
I don't know of any particular scenario that I could have
changed that would have changed the outcome. I expected a push
from behind as I exited the corner. I still felt like I was in
the catbird seat in that respect and never looked back. I
didn't realize that we were in that position.
Q. Mark, yesterday you said that it would be huge to win the
Daytona 500, but you wouldn't waste your time dreaming about
it. And then out on Pit Road just a little bit ago you said
you had a dream. Did you have that last night or were you
daydreaming out there today?
MARK MARTIN: I think I was referring to when I signed the deal
with Ginn. I didn't do it I didn't sign the deal with Ginn
with consideration of their restrictor plate cars. Immediately
after I signed it, I reminded everyone that they had really
fast restrictor plate cars. And I have not been particularly
in position to win these races in the 6 car, especially in the
last several years. And so that's basically what I was
referring to, that I knew that I might have the best chance
ever the day after we signed the deal, and it came true. That
was true, I did have the best shot ever.
Q. This entire week has been all about this cheating. Does a
finish like today's help heal things a little bit?
KEVIN HARVICK: Well, there has been a lot of things go on this
week. You know, I think some of them were probably a little
bit further than the rest of us ever thought it would go. But
I think anytime there's a good race on the racetrack, it helps
mend things. But I think it's still going to take a little bit
to get over some of the issues that happened.
Q. You sound as if you're perfectly okay with the racing back
to the green, almost you would have rather it been decided
that way. Is that what you're saying? You could raise a little
more hell and turn this into a big controversy it seems like.
Do you not want to win it this way?
MARK MARTIN: No, that's not it. Nobody wants to hear a grown
man cry, all right? That's what it is. And I'm not going to
cry about it. This is what it is, and that's it. That's the
end.
Their decision, they made the decision, and that's what we're
going to live with.
KERRY THARP: Thank you, Mark. Congratulations on a great race
out there tonight. We're also going to call up our
championship team owner Richard Childress and crew chief Todd
Berrier.
Todd, talk about the race from your vantage point in the pit
box and maybe some of the strategy you guys utilized there
towards the end.
TODD
BERRIER: The race was pretty unbelievable, the finish was.
Everything else was pretty typical from our side of things.
Seems like every race we have overheating problems, we have
stuff to fight back from, we always end up at the back and end
up at the front and end up at the back. Seems like we always
have wrecks. It was just historic, seemed like everything was
just the same as it was. He got them runs there coming back
from all that, which was it was four wide, three wide all the
time. It was just hard to believe that we actually made it all
the way back to the front, and then for the finish to be like
it was, it was pretty awesome.
KERRY THARP: Richard, what's does it feel like to win another
Daytona 500?
RICHARD CHILDRESS: It's great. It really hasn't sunk in yet.
I'll wake up in the middle of the night and scream. It was
unbelievable to see the moves that Kevin made. I've seen a lot
of these Daytona 500s, and this had to be the wildest Daytona
500 I've ever watched. I told Kevin, we were talking at one
time, I said I kept my eyes shut there a little bit, it was so
wild. Just proud of everybody at RCR and Kevin Harvick and
Shell/Pennzoil, everybody that's involved, Todd Berrier and
his group, our restrictor plate engine guys did a great job,
as well.
Q. What is your feeling right now? Six years ago today, to
this date, Dale passed away. What are you feeling about that
today with this win?
RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, it's just it's a great win. You
know, it gives me thoughts back to our win here in '98. And
it's just -- we're cherishing the moment of winning this
Daytona 500. And I know Dale is proud of everything that we've
done, and Kevin jumping in there and doing what he done for
us. It's just been an unbelievable ride.
Q. Is there an irony because it's the same date do you think?
RICHARD CHILDRESS: I don't know, you know, really. It could
be, you know. It's just unbelievable to be sitting here
tonight.
Q. Kevin, as I watched the replay or watched it live and then
the replay, I was a little bit surprised with all the momentum
you had coming out of turn two. As you came halfway down the
backstretch you could tell that line was really flying. Were
you surprised nobody else jumped out in front of you to try to
stop your momentum to try to use that to push you guys
through?
KEVIN HARVICK: Well, the 5 started to come up there, but we
were just going so much faster than they were, that I had the
17 and the 31, and we just had such a run back there, that I
was coming like a freight train I guess you could say, and we
were up against the wall. At that point it was take all you
can take and there wasn't any give. I think that they just
realized how fast we were going. I apologize for quivering
because I'm cold.
Q. What did you think about what Mark said about not seeing a
grown man cry? What did you think about that reaction, and
then you shook his hand?
KEVIN HARVICK: Well, I've got to know Mark over the last few
years, and there's not a more competitive person in the
garage. You know, he used to get a bad rap for sometimes
speaking his mind and coming out and saying things. And Mark
is one of the best people you'll ever meet. But he is one of
the best race car drivers that's ever sat in the seat of any
of these NASCAR races. To get to race against Mark Martin is
an honor, and just for the fact that he will drive that car as
hard as it'll go every lap and won't ever give up. You know,
it's a lot of fun to race against those guys.
Q. How soon or at what point did you know that all that
crashing was going on behind you, and when you did know it,
did you expect there to be a yellow flag?
KEVIN HARVICK: I saw the yellow come out right after we
crossed the start/finish line I believe. I don't really know
when it came out. I was concentrating on Mark got back in
front of me for just a split second there. I had him not
cleared but I was in front of him coming off of turn four and
he side drafted. And usually when you get the side draft back
right where you can get back by. So that was what I was
concentrating on the most.
Q. Were you aware of how close Kyle Busch came to running into
the side of you going into turn three, and did you guys see
that?
KEVIN HARVICK: I knew I was going so much faster than the
momentum would carry him down the track. I saw him coming up,
and at that point I was committed to it. It was just going to
be one of those deals where either he doesn't come all the way
up or we probably all crash. We had taken so many chances at
that point that it was the last lap of the Daytona 500, and
you've got to go.
Q. You talked about what the new colors and the new sponsor, a
chance to establish your own identity a little bit more,
finally emerge from the shadows. How big a step is this win in
doing that?
KEVIN HARVICK: We've been extremely focused on our race cars
and let them do the talking for us. We've laid low this week
and over the winter and just really trying to do things kind
of on our own agenda, and we felt like we really stuck to our
agenda and our plan and did things as we wanted to. Shell and
Pennzoil have been great to work with. And coming into the
sport, first race, and winning the Daytona 500 is pretty big.
No matter what the colors, GM Goodwrench and Dale Earnhardt
and Richard, are all the people that got RCR to the point that
it is today. Things change and sponsors change, and we had to
move forward. But winning is what makes the shadow less, and
being successful on the racetrack and making things happen.
That's what makes it less.
Q. This is for Todd and Richard. Kevin said earlier that when
he was in the back of the pack and he had the problem with the
nose, it was the new maturity of the team that really kept you
guys in there. Can you talk a little bit about the involvement
of the team and coming close to the championship last year and
not winning help to make that team more mature?
TODD BERRIER: I feel for sure that just having the year we had
last year makes you realize that you can do a lot of things
you knew you could do, but you just proved that you can do
them. So it gives everybody more initiative, more drive and
more confidence to go out and do it. And then I think having
that happen, it's happened several times, I think there was 20
some laps to go in the race, and it's not unusual to have cars
come from 30th back up to the front in 20, 30 laps in these
kind of races.
It's just our team has been together a long time and work
really hard together, and it's just pretty nice to have all
that hard work paying off.
Q. Richard, you took a team that had been questionable and
turned it around, changed the employees and put two cars in
the Chase, and now you've won the Daytona 500. Can you tell
how that feels? What a statement about not quitting.
RICHARD CHILDRESS: It feels great, but it isn't about that I
done this or that. It's the team work of everybody at RCR. We
made a lot of changes that was for the better. You know, I'm
just proud of where we're at today, and we're looking at
tomorrow and looking at next week. I think this team, like
Todd said, has matured. They've been together he and Kevin
have been together now for quite a few years, and that's what
it takes to win championships, is having a team to mature
together. These guys know what they're thinking before they
even do something. I'm proud of what they've accomplished in
winning the Daytona 500.
Q. Could you just comment a bit on how it seemed the entire
complexion of this race changed and seemingly the players
changed when you had the accident when everything got strung
out and the 20 and the 2 got together?
KEVIN HARVICK: A bunch of demons came out when it got dark, I
know that much. All hell broke loose after that. The
complexion of the race changed when it got dark because
everybody's car started handling so much better. It got
anywhere near the end of the race, and I think it was 50 laps
to go, and everybody was three wide, two wide, beatin' and
bangin', and it was just kind of survival of the fittest at
that point. We were fortunate to be a part of the race in the
beginning of the race and be a part of the race when it
counted at the end, too. That's the most important thing.
Q. Richard, you've been here before. What does it mean to a
team to win the Daytona 500 as far as the year goes? And for
Kevin, where does this rank in comparison to your Brickyard
400 victory?
RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, it's a momentum builder. It's
kind of payday for everybody that worked so hard all winter. I
know how much Todd and his group has put in it and everybody
at RCR. And to come here and win the Daytona 500 just gives
you a boost and a jump start going into the rest of the year.
You know, it's a confidence builder.
Q. You've got a new sponsor here, and you kick off kind of a
new era of you starting off on your own with this sponsor.
Richard, can you talk about what it means to have Pennzoil,
what it means for them to get their first outing a win? And
Kevin, no longer being the guy in black and starting a new era
as a winner?
KEVIN HARVICK: I think, like I said earlier, none of us ever
want to get rid of anything that ever has happened at RCR. You
don't ever want to see things change. But things do change and
things have to go forward. And we're just excited to have
everybody from Pennzoil and Shell to be a part of our program.
And they've been huge supporters of everything that we've
done. Their activation has been just incredible to be a part
of. To see them get involved and be a part of that and know
how enthused they are.
But like I said, winning is what it's all about. And that's
the best way to create your own identity, is to be successful.
And we've been fortunate to have some success over the last
couple years. We've won the Brickyard 400. But I don't think
there's anything that can match a Daytona 500 in stock car
racing. This is what it is, and this is as big as it gets. I'm
just glad that we're able to accomplish that.
Q. This is for Kevin and Richard. This was obviously a wild
and spectacular race, one that will be remembered for a long
time, and you guys have come out on top. Do you think this
will also help wipe out the memory of some of the problems
that went on this week, scandals or whatever you want to call
it?
KEVIN HARVICK: Well, I mean, you know, I'm glad we weren't a
part of any of it. It's hard to start off Speed Weeks with
everything going the wrong direction with points and people
having to take a vacation. It's hard to continue forward like
that. So we're excited that everything has gone really good
for us. And hopefully I don't know. I mean, there's a couple
things that were pretty big, but I'm just glad we weren't a
part of it.
Q. In Victory Lane you said something about you thought you
broke your wrist. Can you explain that a little bit?
KEVIN HARVICK: I got so excited at the end of the race, and I
knew we had won the race, and I guess I just didn't realize
how excited I was. I punched the dang mirror out of the car.
It just kind of hurt my hand a little bit. Just overexcited, I
guess, knocked the mirror out.
Q. You talked about the demons coming out in the dark that
changed the complexion of this race. What about when Tony
Stewart and Kurt Busch went out? How did that change the
complexion? It seemed like they were pretty strong cars.
KEVIN HARVICK: You could see that one coming from about lap
10. The 2 was running down on the apron a couple times, and
the two weren't completely thrilled with each other. They were
racing pretty hard. And when they got tangled up, the 20 had a
really good car. But the end of the race was so much different
than the first part of the race because it was just two and
three wide and everybody all over the place. But it was a very
enthusiastic race after it got dark.
Q. You were courted rather heavily last spring to go over to
the Toyota, and I know that you gave it a lot of thought
before you decided to stay with Richard Childress. Just talk
about how well you feel about your decision to stay with
Richard now that you've won the Daytona 500?
KEVIN HARVICK: Well, it wasn't all my decision. I mean, it was
our decision as a group. We wanted to make sure that we were
all on the same page and pulling in the same direction. We
wanted to win races. I mean, that's what we wanted to do.
That's what I wanted to do, that's what Richard wanted to do,
that's what Todd wanted to do. You know, we just you have to
follow your heart and let it guide you sometimes and let
things happen how they're supposed to happen. I've got a lot
of friends and a lot of loyal people that were behind me at
RCR and felt like that's what I needed to do, and that's what
we did.
Q. The hole in your radiator, there was so much going on, I
just want to make sure I know, what incident or which one of
the incidents caused you to get that at the end and at what
point in the race did that happen?
KEVIN HARVICK: That's a good question. I know it was probably
three cautions from the end. All of a sudden the water
temperature just went crazy and we just put a little bit of
tape on, and I think it probably got that hole knocked in
there and probably just wasn't cooling right.
TODD BERRIER: Just had a hole knocked through the nose, and it
was kind of disturbing what was happening in there with the
duct work. Once we got it patched up, it was fine. There was
no hole in the radiator, just the nose itself.
KEVIN HARVICK: Just kind of screwed up the way the intake of
the air was coming into the radiator.
Q. Richard, can you talk about the healing process and what
all this means tonight?
RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, winning tonight is great for
today's deal, but I don't think anything will ever replace a
friend, Dale Earnhardt, a great American race driver. Winning
the race with him was great. I think the healing started for
me when Kevin won in Atlanta, the third race. I think when
Junior won here in July the 4th, that was some healing. And
today, to win this race, just everything is healing. But we
still all miss him today as much as we did the day we lost
him.
Q. With the unusually cold weather, the winds, what type of
setup changes, anything different you guys did with the car
for the race, any changes during the race?
TODD BERRIER: Yeah, we made a lot of changes during the race.
And I think a part was a track change. I think us and the 5
got together and knocked the right front fender in about the
same time it was starting to get dark. We got a lot tighter,
so we had to make a lot of changes to the car up to that
point. We kind of knew we wanted to pull the fender out but
knew we were going to be back in 35th, 39th position or
something. As it turned out we ended up back there anyway with
the water temp. We would have been back there twice if it
weren't for that.
The practice yesterday was very similar to what the day
started out being, and then we were having to chase the track
for the night conditions. We weren't really sure what that was
going to be, so we kind of kept up with it as we went.
Q. I mean, this is the second straight day you're in here.
Yesterday was your first win as a driver here. Can you just
take us through what your emotions were this weekend?
KEVIN HARVICK: It's been a really calm week for us. Like I
said earlier, we've kind of tried to do our own deal and just
really concentrate on getting our cars to handle. It's pretty
incredible, to be honest with you, to finally break that wall
down and then win two days in a row, and then win the biggest
race of the whole season. It's a lot of fun. It's a lot of
hard work that our guys have put in over the winter and over
the past years to get to this point. I've probably screwed
more of them up than I have done good. You know, it's been a
lot of fun to be a part of this weekend. To win the Saturday
and Sunday race just makes it that much sweeter.
Q. And then just for Richard real quick, yesterday when you
came in here you said you wanted to scream and jump on the
table, so how are you feeling right now?
RICHARD CHILDRESS: The same deal. I may do it anyway
(laughing). This is such a great race and so much goes into
it. You know, it's such an international event, everyone all
over the world watches it. To be a part of it and to win it, I
think it's great. Whoo.
KERRY THARP: Congratulations. Thank you very, very much.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harvick Information |
|
|
|
Fan
Central |
|
|
|
Interactive |
|
|
|
|
Photo Gallery |
 |
|