COLE CUSTER – 2019 NXS Atlanta Race Advance

Date: February 23, 2019
Race Name: Rinnai 250 (Race 2 of 33)
Venue: Atlanta Motor Speedway
Television: 2:00 p.m. EST on FOX Sports 1
Point Standings: 

– Chase Briscoe: 14th; trails points leader by 24 points
– Cole Custer: 15th; trails points leader by 26 points

 

COLE CUSTER NOTES OF INTEREST:

 

Crew Chief: Mike Shiplett        Spotter: Joel Edmonds

Jacob Companies joins Custer in the NASCAR Xfinity Series after a successful outing in the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway. Jacob Companies, Inc. (Jacob), is a multifaceted construction firm with a focus on construction, development, design and technology services. Jacob provides clients with a wide range of services in the Design Build and Construction Management sectors of the construction industry. In conjunction with these services, Jacob self performs structural concrete, architectural and structural precast erection.

The 2018 race at Atlanta didn’t go as planned. What are your expectations leading up to the race this weekend?
“We’ve always been fast at Atlanta, we just haven’t had the finishes that we have wanted. Mike (Shiplett) and the team are going to try some things that we haven’t tried before to see if they will work, so I am excited to see what kind of speed we have when we unload on Friday. The weather looks like it’s going to throw a curveball at us with how much rain is being predicted over the weekend, so we are going to have to learn pretty quickly and think on our feet to get the Jacob Companies Ford Mustang to victory lane.”

CHASE BRISCOE – 2019 NXS Atlanta Race Advance

Date: February 23, 2019
Race Name: Rinnai 250 (Race 2 of 33)
Venue: Atlanta Motor Speedway
Television: 2:00 p.m. EST on FOX Sports 1
Point Standings: 

– Chase Briscoe: 14th; trails points leader by 24 points
– Cole Custer: 15th; trails points leader by 26 points

 

CHASE BRISCOE NOTES OF INTEREST:

 

Crew Chief: Richard Boswell        Spotter:Time Fedewa

  • Briscoe will make his third NASCAR appearance at Atlanta Motor Speedway. He has two previous starts at the Georgia track, one in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and one in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series. 
  • Boswell has recorded one win and two top-five finishes in two starts at Atlanta in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Boswell earned his victory at Atlanta one year ago with Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kevin Harvick.
  • The #ChaseThe98 campaign continues this weekend with Stewart-Haas Racing co-owner Tony Stewart’s friendly companions, Max and Mia, adorning the sides of the No. 98 Nutri Chomps Ford Mustang.
  • Click here for Briscoe’s career stats.
  • Click here for Briscoe’s stats at Atlanta.
  • Click here for photos of Chase.
Nutri Chomps has taken the lead delivering 100 percent rawhide-free dog chews that are the healthiest choice for dogs. Our rawhide alternative dog chews are fully digestible and veterinarian recommended. Nutri Chomps are vitamin and mineral enriched, high in protein and fiber, and low in carbs. Dog-Approved Nutri Chomps can be found at a retailer near you: www.NutriChomps.com.

 

Your crew chief, Richard Boswell, won here last year. How much confidence does that give you heading into this weekend?

“It definitely gives me a little extra confidence heading into Atlanta knowing that my crew chief, my team, and the car won there last year. We are actually taking the exact same car that Kevin Harvick won with last year and pretty much the exact same setup. With that being said, it is supposed to rain all weekend, which is a good and bad thing. If it does rain-out practice, we know we should be good, but the bad thing is that it may not work with my driving style. I feel like my dirt background translates well to Atlanta, so I am hoping for a great weekend.”

DANIEL SUÁREZ – 2019 Atlanta Race Advance

The 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series heads to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the second race of the season with Daniel Suárez piloting the No. 41 ARRIS Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR). Atlanta marks the first time Suárez will pilot the black-and-orange ARRIS paint scheme this season.

While Suárez is new to SHR and the Ford camp, ARRIS is very familiar to the 27-year-old driver and his fans. ARRIS has been a longtime supporter of Suárez and continues its relationship with him this season at SHR. The Hampton, Georgia track is the home venue for Atlanta-based ARRIS.

ARRIS has been involved with NASCAR since 2014 and is responsible for the most comprehensive Wi-Fi deployment in NASCAR history at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway. The company recently announced the first CBRS Private LTE network deployment at the newly renovated ISM Raceway near Phoenix. ARRIS also powers the communication between NASCAR drivers and their teams through its SURFboard SB6183® modem and E600® Converged Edge Router (CER) with integration and support from its global services team.

Suárez is looking for a better ending to this weekend’s event at Atlanta than he had at the season-opening Daytona 500. With just 10 scheduled laps remaining in Sunday’s Great American Race, Suárez was caught up in a multivehicle accident that ended his bid prematurely. The Mexico native has two Cup Series starts at Atlanta with a best finish of 15th and a best starting position of fourth, both during last year’s event. In addition to his Cup Series starts at the mile-and-a-half track, he has two starts in the Xfinity Series with a best starting position of third and a best finish of seventh, both in 2016.

Suárez’s new team, SHR, was successful at Atlanta last year with teammate Kevin Harvick taking the checkered flag in dominant fashion by leading 181 of the 325-lap event. Harvick’s Atlanta win was just the start of an extremely successful season for the two-time championship-winning SHR team which accumulated 15 Cup Series wins.

NASCAR’s new rules package goes into effect for this weekend’s event at Atlanta. NASCAR has made rule changes for 2019 to bolster competition with enhanced aerodynamic and engine configurations. The different packages are tailored to the specific tracks on the Cup Series circuit, with a combination of a smaller tapered spacer to reduce engine horsepower to a target goal of 550 – from 750 – and aero ducts to foster tighter racing on a majority of speedways measuring longer than 1 mile.

“I think it will take a little bit of time for everyone to adapt to the new rules package,” Suárez said. “At the end of the day, though, it’s going to be like any other race. Whoever hits on something first and figures out how to go faster is going to be winning races sooner. I don’t want to waste too much time thinking about if the package is good or bad. What’s important is figuring out how to adapt to it and to go fast and win races.”

While the 2019 rules package is new for the Cup Series, it’s somewhat familiar to Suárez, who raced a similar package in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The Mustang driver went on to win three races and ultimately the Xfinity Series championship in 2016.

 

DANIEL SUÁREZ, Driver of the No. 41 ARRIS Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

How long before the elite teams figure out this package and break away from the pack? When do you think the elite teams get a little bit better than everybody else? 

“I would say two to three months. The good teams will continue to be the good teams and the elite teams will continue to be the elite teams. I’m very lucky in that I feel like Stewart-Haas Racing is one of the best race teams out there. I’m very confident based on what I was able to do in the All-Star Race and what Stewart-Haas Racing was able to accomplish by winning the race that we’re going do great things together this year.”

You’re still looking for your first playoff appearance. If you had your preference, would you like a win early in the season so you know you’re locked in? Or, if you’re running up front, you’ll have the points to get in and it’s all good?

“Honestly, you can tell me, ‘Hey, do you prefer to get a win and be locked in the playoffs, or be competitive and run up front all of the time?’ I would say to be competitive and run up front all of the time. The win will come when you do that. I know that. I don’t want to get a lucky win and be in the playoffs and then not be able to perform well at the end of the season.”

KEVIN HARVICK – 2019 Atlanta Race Advance

When Michael Jordan played in any NBA game, everyone in the arena knew he could dominate at any time. Which is why Jordan is considered one of – if not the – best ever.

Kevin Harvick has only two Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series wins at Atlanta Motor Speedway, site of Sunday’s Folds of Honor 500, but has dominated there since 2008 with 11 top-10 finishes in 14 races. He’s led a series-high 1,152 laps and is coming off an impressive victory last year when he started third and led 181 laps along the way.

Harvick has led 100 laps in every Atlanta Cup Series race since 2014 and has also won four of his last six NASCAR Xfinity Series races at the 1.54-mile oval. He will not race in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race but will be the lead driver analyst for the television broadcast on FS1.

Atlanta has always been a special place for Harvick as he scored his first career Cup Series victory there in 2001. Following Dale Earnhardt’s death on the final lap of that year’s Daytona 500, Harvick was named the driver of the No. 29 Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing and made his series debut the following weekend at Rockingham (N.C.) Speedway, where he finished 14th. On March 11, less than one month since his debut in NASCAR’s top series and in just his third start, Harvick won his first Cup Series race at Atlanta.

While Harvick will look to continue his Atlanta domination this weekend, the rules will be a bit different than in previous years.

NASCAR officials in October announced two baseline rules packages for the 2019 season, making a move to bolster competition with enhanced aerodynamic and engine configurations. The different packages are tailored to the specific tracks on the Cup Series circuit, with a combination of a smaller tapered spacer to reduce engine horsepower to a target goal of 550 – from 750 – and aero ducts to foster tighter racing on a majority of speedways measuring longer than 1 mile. Both features are in place for 17 of the 36 races, the lone exception being last week’s Daytona 500, which ran with traditional restrictor-plate rules. Five races, including Atlanta, will be run with the smaller spacer, but without ducts.

Harvick heads into Atlanta 14th in points after a disappointing 26th-place finish in the Daytona 500. But he did score 10 points by winning the Gander RV Duel No. 1 last Thursday and scored six bonus points in Stages 1 and 2 Sunday’s Daytona 500.

Daytona was three races in nine days to get the season started. But now, the real season begins as there are 35 points-paying events left as Harvick goes for his second championship.

 

KEVIN HARVICK, Driver of the No. 4 Busch Beer Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

The new rules package starts at Atlanta this weekend. What can you do to prepare for this?

“Race. You know, race is really what you have to do to adjust to the package because you don’t really know how it’s going to race until you run a race. And Daytona is irrelevant to what we’re going to do in Atlanta. And, you know, as we go to Atlanta and start compiling that notebook in the very first practice and put the cars on the racetrack, obviously our history in Atlanta is pretty strong. And we know what we’re looking for in the racecar and how it should handle and so there’s the downforce-versus-drag conversation. How much downforce can you take out of the car and make the thing survive? How much handling will come into play? The restarts are going to be crazy. Are you going be able to get close enough to actually bump draft? Can you actually stay hooked together? There are just so many questions to answer that we don’t have any answers to other than theory. And, at this particular point, we just need to race to really start crossing things off the list and have a direction to know what we’re working on past, you know, the theory that we’ve put into everything to put on the track at the beginning of the year.”

The cream always rises to the top but how long do you think it’ll be before elite teams figure out this package and break away from the pack, literally and figuratively?

“It could happen in the very first race. I think as you look at the drastic change that we’ve had in horsepower and downforce and rules and all the different things that are coming into play here, we could very well go to the first two months of the season and one organization might have just an absolute, distinct advantage and win all the races. I mean, it’s literally possible and I think obviously last year we were kind of in that crowd and it’s just too big of a ship to turn around in a week. It’s just impossible from a manufacturing standpoint and cutting bodies off and knowing whether your theory’s right or wrong. It’s only answered when we get to the racetrack and every team’s going to have a little bit of a different approach to what they think is right and wrong. And, you know, I think the window’s wide open to take a period and have an organization absolutely dominate or be behind in the first two months of the season.”

You’re broadcasting on FOX and Sirius again this year. Talk about that.

“Well, I feel like it’s definitely – TV and radio are totally different, and I say that just because, fortunately being able to do both, I think to me they’re a totally different set of fans and how they pay attention to what you’re doing. The radio stuff I feel has given me a really great connection with the grassroots, hardcore fan. TV has been just talking to everybody in more general terms, I guess you could say, on a much more sporadic type of schedule. But it’s been really good practices for me to go through just because of the fact that the perspective is so much different than the competitor perspective and what you want to see and what you want to talk about. You want it to be more exciting and you want to have more stuff happen. And from a competitor standpoint, I just want to go out there and run them into the ground and hope that you beat them by two laps. So that’s not very exciting to watch but, from a competitor standpoint, that’s when you feel like you do your job. From a TV standpoint, it’s hard to keep talking about the guy who’s two laps ahead of everybody else and make a good story out of it, but there are always stories. Sometimes on TV you don’t have to really say anything because the screen tells the story. On the radio, you have to really put it in perspective for the fans, and on Sirius I feel like we’ve probably been one of the best things that I’ve ever done as far as that connection to the fans, because it’s so interactive. And if you’re tuning in to the NASCAR Channel, it’s a specific tune-in. It’s not, ‘I accidentally turned on the NASCAR channel.’ You’re listening for a reason and especially if you’ve tuned in to our show.”

 

ARIC ALMIROLA – 2019 Atlanta Race Advance

Last year was a learning year for Aric Almirola, his first with Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR). He met an entire new team, new drivers and newer, faster setups that put him in position to win races and finish fifth in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship standings.

As soon as the 34-year-old Tampa native had it all figured it out – the game was about to change.

In October of last year, NASCAR announced new rules packages for the 2019 season. The packages are tailored to the specific tracks on the Cup Series circuit, with a combination of a smaller tapered spacer to reduce engine horsepower to a target goal of 550 – from 750 – and aero ducts to foster tighter racing on a majority of speedways longer than 1 mile. Both features are in place for 17 of the 36 races, debuting this weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway’s 1.5-mile oval.

Almirola came into 2018 with the expectation to adapt, and he knocked down 17 top-10 finishes, four top-fives, led 181 laps on the year, and earned his first win with SHR Oct. 14 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway to clinch a playoff spot. He advanced to the semifinal round before finishing a career-best fifth in the points. Almirola’s 181 laps led in 2018 were more than his previous six full-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series seasons combined. This year, the No. 10 Smithfield Ford driver enters the 2019 season with the same mindset.

“I think adapting to change is what makes the drivers at this level so great,” Almirola said. “You don’t make it to the Cup level without being a great racecar driver. It’s very hard. There are thousands of racecar drivers all across the country who race every weekend and want to be Cup drivers. There are only 40 Cup drivers. They have to be able to adapt to a tight racecar, a loose racecar, a different racecar. But I think, from my standpoint with the racecar, it has a steering wheel, a gas pedal, a brake pedal, and a clutch pedal and a shifter that goes through four gears and has reverse. I have to learn how to drive the racecar on any given weekend to get the most out of the car with whatever problem it has.”

With Atlanta being the first track of the 2019 season to run this new package, it will be far from the first time Almirola and his fellow drivers have experienced tight racing action on a 1.5-mile speedway oval. Almirola raced in the 2018 All-Star Open to clinch a spot in the Monster Energy All-Star Race at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway, and a similar rules package was used. The Smithfield driver led 11 laps in the opening stage and raced in and around the top-five for the remainder of that race. While he didn’t win, he got a taste of what is to come this weekend at Atlanta.

Unlike the All-Star Race last year, teams will have the opportunity to take the notes they learned from Atlanta to gain an advantage for Las Vegas the following week.  The question is, how long will it take for elite teams to break away and dominate the field like in years past?

“I think that’s the one thing that people misunderstand about our sport,” Almirola said. “It’s NASCAR’s job to govern the sport and try and make sure that everyone plays under the same fair rules. It’s the team’s job to find every area it can possibly work in to win. That’s what everybody does. If you are playing a board game at home, you want to win. You understand the rules of the game, and then you figure out how to play the game to get an advantage to win the game. If you play Monopoly, there is a risk versus reward and you have to understand the rules – you have to figure out how to gain an advantage in the game to win.”

Almirola’s racecar at Atlanta this weekend will feature the traditional black-and-white Smithfield paint scheme. Founded in 1936, Smithfield is a leading provider of high-quality pork products, with a vast product portfolio including smoked meats, hams, bacon, sausage, ribs, and a wide variety of fresh pork cuts.Smithfield is based approximately five hours northeast of SHR headquarters in Smithfield, Virginia.

 

Aric Almirola: Driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Are you excited to run the Mustang in this first 1.5-mile race of the year? 

“Man, it’s so cool to drive the Mustang in the Monster Energy Cup Series now. You think about muscle car when you think about that racecar. You think about horsepower and you think about a badass racecar – when you think about Ford, you think about the Mustang. The Fusion is what you drive to the grocery store and throw your groceries in the trunk. When you think about pulling up to a red light and racing the car that’s sitting next to you from the light, you think about the Mustang. You know, you don’t think about the hybrid Fusion with 275 horsepower that gets 60 miles to the gallon. You think about the Mustang. To have that on the racetrack and racing it in competition at the Cup level, it’s cool and I think it’s going to resonate with the consumer and all the Ford fans.”

CLINT BOWYER – 2019 Atlanta Race Advance

Nobody really knows what to expect Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway with the debut of the new Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series rules package designed to bunch the field closer on the ultra-fast, 1.5-mile speedways like the Atlanta oval.

Clint Bowyer doesn’t know what to expect, but expects something different.

“Well, everybody’s got their opinion on what we’re going see, but only time will paint that picture,” said the driver of Stewart-Haas Racing’s No. 14 Haas Automation Ford Mustang. “I think it could be drastically different than what we have ever seen. My opinion is, it’s going to be different. I don’t know how much different, I don’t know what kind of different, I just know it’s going to be different than what we know as the norm on a mile-and-a-half. Um, will they be drafting? I think. How much drafting? I don’t know.”

NASCAR officials in October announced two baseline rules packages for the 2019 season, making a move to bolster competition with enhanced aerodynamic and engine configurations. The different packages are tailored to the specific tracks on the Cup Series circuit, with a combination of a smaller tapered spacer to reduce engine horsepower to a target goal of 550 – from 750 – and aero ducts to foster tighter racing on a majority of speedways measuring longer than 1 mile. Both features are in place for 17 of the 36 races, the lone exception being last week’s Daytona 500, which ran with traditional restrictor-plate rules. Five other races will be run with the smaller spacer, but without ducts.

Bowyer said the key to success Sunday in Georgia, as well as the rest of the season, could be adaptability.

“I think it’s extremely important to have some adjustability built into that racecar,” Bowyer said. “We do have that in our Mustangs. But that’s no different than anybody else. Everybody’s putting the work in to try to figure it out.”

Bowyer and his crew chief Mike Bugarewicz-led team tested the new rule package on the 1.5-mile Las Vegas Motor Speedway track last month. So he’ll have some idea of what to expect once practice begins Friday in Atlanta. In addition to the new rule package, drivers will also have to overcome the challenge of the 22-year-old racing surface that often provides some of the best racing of the season. New pavement usually creates much better grip and faster speeds that often result in a one-groove racetrack on which passing is difficult. That typically results in single-file racing, something Bowyer says neither drivers nor fans enjoy for 500 miles. He says the Atlanta track is just the opposite. Its slick surface is difficult to navigate but offers several grooves and plenty of passing opportunities.

“Ever since I have been in the sport, it seems like Atlanta is the most worn-out track but always produced some of the best racing,” Bowyer said. “It’s crazy how worn out the track is, but that is what makes for good racing and it lets us put on such a great show for a long time.”

Bowyer and SHR’s No. 14 team are sure to improve upon their 20th-place finish at last weekend’s Daytona 500. A daring move in the final laps saw Bowyer’s bid for the lead and trophy end in an accident.

“That’s last week and we are on to Atlanta now,” he said. “It’s a very long season but we’re confident. We had a good Speedweeks in Daytona and I think that will continue this weekend in Atlanta and on the West Coast swing in the coming weeks.”

Bowyer goes to battle at Atlanta carrying the black-and-red paint scheme of Haas Automation, Inc. Haas Automation is America’s leading builder of CNC machine tools. Founded by Gene Haas in 1983, Haas Automation manufactures a complete line of vertical and horizontal machining centers, turning centers and rotary tables and indexers. All Haas products are built in the company’s 1.1 million-square-foot manufacturing facility in Oxnard, California, and distributed through a worldwide network of Haas Factory Outlets.

Bowyer hopes he can replicate last year’s success at Atlanta when he scored a third-place finish – his first top-five finish at the track. He’s always run well at Atlanta, leading 52 laps in the March 2008 race before finishing sixth. The most heartbreaking moment at the track came in September 2013, when he led 48 of the first 192 laps before engine failure. In total, Bowyer has led 115 laps at Atlanta but only has last year’s third-place finish and four other sixth-place finishes to show for the effort.

All things considered, Bowyer said history won’t mean much this weekend.

“I think you can throw out all the stats,” he said. “It’s going to be a whole new ballgame at Atlanta this weekend.”

 

CLINT BOWYER, Driver of the No. 14 Haas Automation Ford for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What will an organization have to do to gain the advantage with the new rules package?

“The team, the organization, the manufacturer that can beat the next one and figure it out the fastest is going to prevail. It seems like once you get ahead, you ride that wave all the way through the season. Everybody else is playing catchup because you don’t just figure it out and stop there – you know, we’re weeks, months, in advance. So, if you can beat them to the punch right off the bat, nine times out of 10 you’re able to keep that advantage all the way through the season.”

What is the mindset of drivers and team after leaving Daytona?

“Once we get the Daytona 500 out of the way, it’s Atlanta and it’s down-to-business time. I know it’s weird to say that. Yes, the Daytona 500 is the first race of the year and certainly the biggest race of the year, but it’s so unique from any other racetrack. We get to Atlanta and it’s that mile-and-a-half, fast track, but even it is very unique because it’s so worn out and we don’t have anything like that anywhere we go, anymore. We just have to get through that, have a good balance on your racecar because it’s so slick you can’t afford to be tight, loose or anything else. We’ll just go and hopefully have another good run there.”

CHASE BRISCOE – 2019 Daytona I NXS Race Advance

Event: NASCAR Racing Experience 300
Date: February 16, 2019
Location: Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway
Television: 2:30 p.m. EST on FOX Sports 1

CHASE BRISCOE NOTES OF INTEREST:

 

Crew Chief: Richards Boswell        Spotter:Time Fedewa

  • After running five races for Stewart-Haas Racing with Fred Biagi in 2018, Chase Briscoe returns to the seat of the No. 98 Nutri Chomps Ford Mustang full time and will contend for Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors.
  • The NASCAR Racing Experience 300 will mark Briscoe’s first NASCAR Xfinity Series start at Daytona International Speedway.
  • On January 25th, Briscoe competed in the Michelin Pilot Challenge for Ford Performance as part of the 24 Hours of Daytona weekend. Briscoe and team finished fifth overall.
  • Briscoe will appear alongside Custer at the Ford Performance display in the midway at Daytona International Speedway for an autograph session on Saturday, February 16th at 12:30 p.m.
  • This weekend is the beginning of the #ChaseThe98 social media campaign with Chase’s dog, Ricky, adorning the sides of the No. 98 Nutri Chomps Ford Mustang. As part of this campaign, fans are encouraged to send in photos of their dog, via Twitter and Instagram, using the hashtag #ChaseThe98 for a chance to be featured on the side of the car.
  • Click here for Briscoe’s career stats.

Nutri Chomps has taken the lead delivering 100 percent rawhide-free dog chews that are the healthiest choice for dogs. Our rawhide alternative dog chews are fully digestible and veterinarian recommended. Nutri Chomps are vitamin and mineral enriched, high in protein and fiber, and low in carbs. Dog-Approved Nutri Chomps can be found at a retailer near you: www.NutriChomps.com.

What are you looking forward to the most in 2019?

“Being full time with one team, especially a team that is able to compete at the level that Stewart-Haas Racing with Fred Biagi does on a weekly basis. In 2018, we proved we could win at this level, so we are going to work on adding to the victory total for SHR, Fred Biagi, Nutri Chomps and Ford.”

Click Here to Listen to Chase

COLE CUSTER – 2019 Daytona I NXS Race Advance

Event: NASCAR Racing Experience 300
Date: February 16, 2019
Location: Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway
Television: 2:30 p.m. EST on FOX Sports 1

COLE CUSTER NOTES OF INTEREST:

 

Crew Chief: Mike Shiplett        Spotter: Joel Edmonds

Jacob Companies joins Custer in the NASCAR Xfinity Series after a successful outing in the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway. Jacob Companies, Inc. (Jacob), is a multifaceted construction firm with a focus on construction, development, design and technology services. Jacob provides clients with a wide range of services in the Design Build and Construction Management sectors of the construction industry. In conjunction with these services, Jacob self performs structural concrete, architectural and structural precast erection.

What are your goals for the 2019 season?

“For us, we’ve always competed in the top-five in the past, but now we want to break through and be able to celebrate in Victory Lane more this season. I am excited to have Mike Shiplett on top of the pit box as he had a breakout year in 2018 with six wins in the Xfinity Series, so I feel like we have all the parts to be contending for a championship in 2019.”

Click Here to Listen to Cole

KEVIN HARVICK – 2019 Daytona I Race Advance

Kevin Harvick won eight Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races in 2018, plus the non-points-paying NASCAR All-Star Race.

And he’s hoping that success leads right into 2019.

His eight race wins were a career high after winning five races each in 2006 and 2014.

And for the kickoff to the new season at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway over the next two weekends, his car will have a new look.

As the Official beer of NASCAR, Busch has a long and storied history within the NASCAR family. Not only has Busch been the beverage of choice by countless winners during their celebrations in victory lane, but Busch has been along for the ride for four decades dating back to the 1979 Daytona 500.

Since 2019 marks the 40th anniversary of Busch’s presence at Daytona, the brand is celebrating racing roots and raising a cold one to 40 years of NASCAR support with something never before seen in motorsport – a crisp, cold can of Busch constructed from Harvick’s No. 4 racecar. The Car 2 Can collection from Busch is giving people the unique opportunity to drink the sport they eat, sleep, and breathe.

See the full making-of video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5hSJOtIBUM

On Daytona 500 race day Feb. 17, Busch is inviting nearly 10 million Daytona 500 viewers to play a live trivia contest for a chance to win one of the exclusive cans. The truer the fan, the higher the chance folks have of winning one of the most exhilarating cans ever created. To join the race for a can during Daytona, participants will need to look out for the trivia questions on screen and simply tweet their answers using the designated hashtags #Car2Can and #BuschContest.

How to Participate:

  • Follow @BuschBeer on Twitter
  • Watch Daytona 500 live
  • Answer trivia questions on Twitter using the hashtags #Car2Can and #BuschContest
  • Stay tuned for the winners

Trivia skills not up to par? Consumers can also score a can via Busch’s charity auction ahead of the contest at Daytona. The first can of the collection will be offered to the highest bidder Monday (Feb. 11) at rallyup.com/car2can. All proceeds will go directly to Keep America Beautiful (KAB) and be matched dollar-for-dollar by Busch. KAB’s mission is to improve and beautify community environments across the country every day. As a part of Busch’s ongoing commitment to giving back to and taking care of the great outdoors, Busch partnered with KAB to kick off the collection announcement with a special auction of can #1.

“We wanted to do something for the hardcore fans that had never been done before, and give them a chance to hold the sport they love,” said Daniel Blake, Senior Marketing Director, Anheuser-Busch. “This year marks the 40th anniversary of our first Daytona 500, so we created the 40 collector’s edition cans to give a piece of the sport back to the fans that have been there every step of the way.”

Follow @Buschbeer on Twitter to stay up to speed with how consumers can get their hands on a piece of NASCAR history with Busch Beer’s #Car2Can collection auction Monday (Feb. 11) and via live trivia during the Daytona 500 on Feb. 17.

For more information on Busch Car 2 Can collection, please visit https://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialBuschBeer

Meanwhile, this is Harvick’s 19th year in the NASCAR Cup Series and his sixth with crew chief Rodney Childers. Since joining forces at Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) in 2014, Harvick and Childers have combined to produce 22 points-paying victories, a victory in the non-points-paying 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway, 19 poles, 91 top-five finishes and 127 top-10s while leading 8,655 laps.

They won the 2014 championship, finished runner-up in the 2015 title chase to champion Kyle Busch, finished eighth in 2016 and third in 2017 and 2018. The team has qualified for the Championship 4 at Homestead-Miami Speedway four times in the last five years.

Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Busch Beer Car2Can Ford Mustang for SHR, has two wins at Daytona, including the 2007 Daytona 500. He also has nine top-five finishes, 14 top-10s and has led a total of 244 laps in his 35 career points-paying NASCAR Cup Series starts at Daytona. That said, he has not had a top-15 finish at Daytona in a points-paying race since he finished fourth in the 2016 Daytona 500.

He does have three victories in the non-points Clash exhibition race – in 2009, 2010, 2013 – tying him for second on the all-time list with his team owner Tony Stewart and NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Jarrett. Additionally, the Bakersfield, California native has seven top-five finishes and 10 top-10s in Clash competition.

In addition to his three Clash wins at Daytona, Harvick has four other victories at the famed 2.5-mile racetrack – two NASCAR Cup Series points-paying races in February 2007 and July 2010, the 2013 non-points-paying Gander RV Duel, and the February 2007 NASCAR Xfinity Series race.

The key for Harvick and the rest of the SHR team is the transition to the new Ford Mustang for this season. It is the world’s best-selling sportscar and been in continuous production since its debut in 1964. But it has never been used in the Cup Series.

Harvick is hoping he can start 2019 the right way – with a second career Daytona 500 victory. He would be just the 12th driver to win the race multiple times.

 

KEVIN HARVICK, Driver of the No. 4 Busch Beer Car2CanFord Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Talk about Car2Can for Daytona Speedweeks.

“Busch Beer officials brought the idea to me last year and I thought it was great way to connect with the fans. These cans are made up of pieces of my car from the 2018 season and I’m excited for the cans to be released. Can’t wait for the fans to see them.”

Talk about the Ford Mustang.

“Well, the first thing I think of is muscle car and, in today’s world, I guess you would call it a sportscar. For me, I know how much the Ford Mustang brand means to Ford. I’m still new to the Ford family. I would consider myself new only being here two years, going into the third. Being able to drive the Ford Mustang on the racetrack and know that it’s never been in the Cup Series, and to have seen the car being designed, developed and put on the racetrack, I feel like I’ve been part of the whole process. Not doing anything, but part of the whole process and how much effort has gone into getting the Mustang to the racetrack at the Daytona 500.”

How important would it be to win a second championship in 2019?

“Winning championships is important and, obviously, getting the first one out of the way takes a lot of pressure off of things. I think as you start to add championships, it puts you in a different class of competitors who have done that before and there are a lot less of them. So, to be able to add championships is a goal and what we’re still here racing for on a yearly basis. It’s a lot different than it used to be. There’s not a week-to-week point count. There are stages and cutoff races and cutoff races in playoffs – there are so many more elements in NASCAR than there used to be. There is a lot of short-term thinking. In the end, more championships are definitely better.”

SHR’s last restrictor plate race was pretty impressive. Qualified 1, 2, 3, 4. Ran 1, 2, 3, 4 for much of that race. Can that type of performance be replicated in the Daytona 500?

“Well, we hope so and we specifically hope to finish the race in the 4 car whether it’s a wreck or a circumstance or something along those lines, the restrictor plate stuff hasn’t been great for us. But from a team performance side of things for 98 percent of that race, I thought all the drivers and the plan that was laid out to try to execute during the race started in qualifying by having fast, fast cars and, you know, as we went into the race the four of us did a really good job of, of navigating everything and keeping ourselves in the front of the pack, which is the safest place to be. And it came down to some, some crazy fuel mileage at the end but definitely possible. I mean speedway racing is all about details. It’s all – to me when I owned a race team, that was really a measuring stick of, of how detailed your organization was because or specifically your aero department and the guys putting the cars together in the fab because speedway racing is all about details and, obviously, they shined that day.”

You won the 2007 Daytona 500. How satisfying is it to win that race?

“You always hear people talk about how winning the Daytona 500 is different than winning any other race. Once experiencing that, I would definitely say that it’s true just because everything you do at Speedweeks during the Daytona 500 weekend is just bigger and different than any other race you go to. So, winning our sport’s most prestigious race is pretty cool and something you would definitely like to experience again.”

Does winning one Daytona 500 make you even hungrier for another one?

“After experiencing everything that comes with the Daytona 500, yes. But, you know, you look back in time and see how hard it’s been to win that one particular race because you only get one shot a year. It’s a tough one to win. So I’m very fortunate to have been to victory lane in the Daytona 500, but would love to get back there.”

DANIEL SUÁREZ – 2019 Daytona I Race Advance

The 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series kicks off at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway with the 61st running of the Daytona 500 with Daniel Suárez piloting the No. 41 Haas Automation Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR). This season marks Suárez’s third year behind the wheel of a stock car in NASCAR’s most elite series for the Monterrey, Mexico native.

The 27-year-old Suárez is looking for a “Haas-ome” year, which in just a little more than a month has already been a busy one. On his birthday, Jan. 7, it was announced he would be the driver of the No. 41 Haas Automation/ARRIS Ford Mustang. Shortly after the announcement, Suárez headed out to California for a quick media tour and then on to Auto Club Speedway in Fontana for a two-day Goodyear tire test Jan. 9 and 10. The test signified the first time the Mexico native was behind the wheel of the No. 41 Mustang and his first time working with his new team.

Suárez will pilot the black-and-red Haas Automation Ford Mustang for Daytona Speedweeks. Haas Automation is America’s leading builder of CNC machines and owned by SHR team co-owner Gene Haas. In addition to Haas Automation, the No. 41 Ford Mustang will also feature ARRIS International PLC for a portion of the season. In 2016, Suárez captured the Xfinity Series title with support from ARRIS.

The No. 41 crew remains intact for 2019 after a successful campaign in 2018. Billy Scott, a native of Land O’Lakes, Florida, continues to lead the Haas Automation team as crew chief. Scott and the No. 41 team most recently visited victory lane at the Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway race in August 2018. The veteran crew advanced to the Round 8 in last year’s NASCAR playoffs and captured a series-leading five pole awards.

Before running in the 61st “Great American Race” on Sunday, Feb. 17, Suárez will participate in the Advance Auto Parts Clash this Sunday. He gained entry into the 75-lap exhibition race by winning his first career Cup Series pole award at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway in July 2018. This season marks Suárez’s second time running the event with his most recent start during his 2017 Cup Series rookie campaign. He brought home an eighth-place finish.

Suárez is the newest driver among SHR’s four-car contingent, joining veterans Aric Almirola, Clint Bowyer and Kevin Harvick. The new Ford driver is looking forward to getting to know his teammates better and being an integral part of the two-time championship-winning organization, which is coming off of its most successful season since its inception.

“Stewart-Haas Racing is a very good organization and all they do is race to win trophies,” Suárez said. “Tony (Stewart, co-owner) told me that and you can tell that’s what they do. When the owner of the team tells you that we do everything we can to win races, that just gives you a smile on your face. That’s all you want as a driver, that’s all you care about. I’m very happy at SHR and everyone has made me feel at home in a very short period of time. I’m excited and can’t wait to start the season. We had a test in California and it went well, and it was very productive for me and for my team.”

Among his many goals for 2019, Suárez is looking to improve his record at superspeedways. With three of his four previous superspeedway starts in the Cup Series resulting in accidents, SHR might just turn his luck around. The SHR organization pulled off the amazing ability to stick together throughout almost the entire race during the fall race at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway last year and Almirola went on to claim the victory. As a whole, SHR led 155 laps that day and looks to have the same success at the season-opening Daytona 500.

“The Daytona 500 is the biggest race of the year,” Suárez said. “It’s a big deal to be in it and to have an opportunity to win it. It’s extremely hard to be up front at the end of the race. It’s one of the races that you can easily be in a wreck that is from someone else’s mistake. At a regular racetrack, it doesn’t happen as much. It’s difficult to win and you have to learn how to run those marathons and I feel like I’ve had the opportunity to learn quite a bit the last couple of years and hopefully I can put myself in position to be a contender at the end and to win the Daytona 500.”

With several rules package changes, a new manufacturer, new car model and a new team, the 2019 season begins a year of change for Suárez and his Cup Series career.

 

DANIEL SUÁREZ, Driver of the No. 41 Haas Automation Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What’s it like to work for Tony Stewart?

“The way I look up to Tony is that he is a true racer. A guy that does racing for breakfast, racing for lunch and racing for dinner, and I’ve been like that since I moved to the United States. I don’t have family here. I have friends now, but when I moved here in the beginning, I didn’t have any friends, either. When you’re in that position, all you’re thinking about is how to win races and be better. To be able to learn from him and get advice from him as a driver, that’s extremely helpful. I feel like I’ll learn a lot from him and he’s one of the most talented drivers. The year that I moved here to the U.S. in Charlotte, that was the last year he won the championship in 2011. I’ve been a Tony fan since then. I’m excited to know how much I’m going to be learning from Tony, Kevin, Clint and Aric. There’s a lot of experience between all of them.”

What has your experience been like working with Billy Scott, so far?

“For me, you have to have good chemistry and communication with the group of guys. Billy is a racer. When we went to Auto Club, we all went go-kart racing one night and he was the fastest one out there. He likes to win, he’s competitive and it doesn’t matter if it’s the Cup Series or go-karts. We get along well. I’m very confident that we’re going to build a great team together. He has a good personality, he’s very smart and I feel like we are going to be a good fit.”

How challenging is it switching manufacturers?

“It’s been a process. I will say that I’ve never done a change like this, but now I have the opportunity with Ford Performance and it’s been very good. I’m very happy and lucky to be in the Cup Series with Ford and to be in the Mustang. I don’t think there is one person out there who doesn’t think of the Mustang when you think of muscle cars. I think it’s going to be great to run the Mustang in the Cup Series. I was fortunate to drive the car at Auto Club and it felt good.”

What are you looking forward to at Stewart-Haas Racing? 

“It’s a very competitive team. Racing for wins week in and week out. SHR was able to do that not only with one car but all of their cars, which is very impressive to me. The goal is to continue to grow with this team and continue to learn from these guys. I have learned a lot. They obviously do things a little bit different from what I’m used to and there are a lot of things that they’re trying.”

How did your first test go with the No. 41 team?

“It was a very productive test for us. Billy and the guys have been trying a bunch of stuff with the Ford Mustang. The car looks very sharp and it’s fast. I’m looking forward to making the car go faster and to drive well, too. We had two productive days and brought back as much information as we could to the table for SHR and for my teammates. It was the first test for me with this package. Everyone is intense about how it’s going to go at a track the size of Auto Club. It reminds me a lot of the All-Star Race and the Xfinity package that I raced back in 2016. It worked out well for me in 2016, so hopefully we can work out something similar. There was a lot of throttle time and drafting, just a different kind of racing. I think it will be fun.”