Your very first outing in the No. 41 SHR Ford was an impressive one a year ago this weekend. You led 42 laps in last year’s Clash at the Coliseum main event before a fuel pump going bad dropped you to a seventh-place finish. How uplifting was that to kick off your inaugural season with the team? “It certainly helped when I went into a style of racing which I grew up doing, and it’s a style I feel like some of these guys hadn’t done in quite a long time. When you grow up racing quarter miles and you really figure out what you need in a racecar on how to pass, how to make speed when your car isn’t necessarily doing what it does or does not want to do, there are just a lot of tools that I have in my toolbox to be able to go out there and either get the most out of the racecar or drive from 16th to the lead. Track position’s always nice at a place like that, but for me, if I start 18th, I don’t think the race is over for me, I think I can still get to the lead and win that race.” The year before, in the inaugural Clash, driving a Rick Ware Racing Ford, you raced your way into the main event in one of the Last Chance Qualifiers after working closely with the team and even wrenching on the car yourself. Talk about that. “It’s funny, I can remember the entire setup of that car that day because it’s pretty similar to what I’d run in my Modified, which is probably why we kept locking up the left-front. But it was just Tommy (Baldwin), myself and Rick Ware Racing going out there and kind of doing the things that we know how to do. Tommy grew up at Riverhead Raceway (in Calverton, New York) and I grew up racing there, and when you have that foundation to work from and understanding what it takes to get around a paperclip, a quarter mile, you know what tools to go for. It was a lot of fun. When we made that race, I know Rick was pretty pumped, and I was so focused on getting the car changed over to get in the race. I’m sure there were a lot of people that day who probably counted us out. If we didn’t lose brakes in the feature, I feel like we probably could’ve ended up in the top-10.” What kinds of things have you and the team been focusing on as you’ve prepared for the 2024 season? “It would be nice to go and win the Clash. I feel like last year’s was one where Martin (Truex Jr.) was really fast, but it would’ve been really difficult for him to get by us for the lead without having to wreck me. Between the Clash, Daytona, Atlanta, Vegas, it’s a really interesting dynamic. You’re going from a quarter-mile to a 2.5-mile superspeedway, and then Atlanta, and then you’re going to Vegas. You’re really going to have an understanding of where you are on the short-track side, and then with two weeks of superspeedway-style racing, you’re going to see where your cars are at superspeedway-wise. And then we get to answer a lot of unanswered questions about this new-style body. There’s a lot of potential, a lot of things we’re looking forward to with this new Dark Horse Ford Mustang, so we’re going to have a pretty intense three to four weeks ahead of us and that’s going to help guide our season to see what we are really excited about and at the same time work to make our cars better. Hopefully our cars are just super fast.” You grew up running short tracks. The Coliseum is the shortest of short track. Was there any track that you ran on back in the day that you feel has similarities to the track at the Coliseum? “I want to say they modeled that track after Bowman Gray (Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina), somewhat, so there are a lot of similarities. From the grip standpoint, it’s always fresh pavement, so you’re going to have plenty of grip. Bowman Gray is really difficult to pass at just because it’s outside a football field. I feel like L.A. reminds me so much of Riverhead (Raceway in Calverton, New York) when it comes to setting a pass up in how they’ve laid out the places where you can change the shape of the turn to give yourself an advantage over the guy in front of you instead of just driving through him. I think that style of racing takes so much craft to be able to make your way forward rather than just harpooning somebody and moving them out of the way. I enjoy that side of it.” When it comes to the Clash, and short-track racing in general, what’s acceptable and what isn’t when it comes to on-track contact? “I’ve always been under the influence of, ‘I’ll race you the way you race me.’ So if you’re going to race me with respect, I’ll do the same to try and get by you. If you’re going to stick a bumper to me, I’m probably going to put my brass knuckles on and take care of it. That’s just how I think all of us racers are, you see how you treat one another, and if the gloves come off, the gloves come off.” The Busch Light Clash takes place in the nation’s No. 2 media market and tees up our version of the Super Bowl – the Daytona 500. Talk about being a part of that moment for NASCAR in getting the train rolling, and getting us to our biggest event. “A lot of sports have their biggest moment at the end of the season where we kind of have two – we have our Phoenix finale, but we have the Daytona 500 to kick off all that hype. For me, it’s always great going to the 500, being a part of something so big. The energy that comes with that event is untouched, in my opinion. But at the same time, it’s a big deal for me because the last time we were at Daytona, I wasn’t able to drive out of there. I was driven out of there in an ambulance. So it’s going to be nice to get in there and go out, race that race and do our best to put ourselves in position to win it, but at the same time be able to drive myself out of that track.” |