ARIC ALMIROLA – 2018 Homestead Race Advance

Aric Almirola and the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) head to Homestead-Miami Speedway to cap off what has been the Tampa, Florida native’s most successful of 11 seasons in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

While he fell short in the point standings and just three positions short on the track Sunday of transferring to the Championship 4 and the chance to battle for the 2018 Cup Series title during Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400, Almirola joins SHR teammate Kurt Busch in the battle to finish as high as fifth in the final standings.

Almirola is seventh in points entering Homestead, trailing sixth-place Busch by two points and leading eighth-place Brad Keselowski by seven. Last week at ISM Raceway near Phoenix, Almirola qualified 18th and finished fourth after running as high as second place late in the race.

Almirola’s history at Homestead includes one top-five finish and two top-10s in eight starts on the 1.5-mile oval south of Miami. But this is the first year Almirola has driven a Ford for SHR, which had all four of its drivers advance to the Round of 8 in the Cup Series playoffs after combining for 12 wins, 41 top-fives and 80 top 10s in 2018. SHR’s Kevin Harvick is one of the four drivers battling for the title Sunday as part of the Championship 4.

The 34-year-old Almirola has had some success on 1.5-mile ovals this season. In his last 10 starts at tracks similar in length, he’s accrued six top-10 finishes with four of those earned in his most recent starts. He’s led 70 laps and earned an average start of 10.6 and an average finish of 13.4 at intermediate tracks this season.

The 2018 season has been one of resurgence for the Smithfield driver whose highlight was a return to victory lane in October at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. He nearly won the season-opening Daytona 500, as well as races at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, Dover (Del.) International Speedway and, most recently, Phoenix last weekend. But Almirola took the checkered flag at Talladega just ahead of teammate Bowyer for his second career Cup Series win and the first with the Smithfield paint scheme.

Under the leadership of first-year crew chief Johnny Klausmeier, Almirola set season bests this year in laps led with 181 – more than during his previous 10 Cup seasons combined – top-fives with four, and top-10s with 16. And no matter where he finishes in points after Homestead, he’ll notch another season best in the final standings.

In addition to it being the conclusion of the 2018 racing season, the Smithfield Smoke Machine Ford Mustang giveaway culminates this weekend. The grand prize winner will be flown to Miami and will ride in the one-of-a-kind 2018 Ford Mustang RTR Spec 3 with Almirola for a few laps around Homestead-Miami Speedway. Tony Stewart, who designed the high-performance Mustang in conjunction with Vaughn Gitten Jr., will present the keys to the winner on Sunday during Ford Championship Weekend.

The timing of his Talladega win couldn’t have been any better because he sported a special bacon-themed Smithfield Ford Fusion that afternoon. The unique paint scheme coincided with Smithfield’s Bacon for Life promotion. Yes, it’s possible to win bacon for life. The sweepstakes runs until Dec. 31, and fans can enter by finding specially marked packages of Smithfield bacon in stores, then visiting Smithfield.com/BaconForLife and entering the unique code provided in the package. More than 1,000 runners-up will be awarded select bacon merchandise.

Almirola is piloting the traditional Smithfield paint scheme for the final race of the 2018 season but, with the holiday season is just around the corner, Smithfield continues to promote its perfectly cooked, spiral sliced ham as an ideal addition to most every kind of holiday feast to make family and friends feel special. Not only does it make holiday cooking a breeze, it provides equally flavorful leftover dishes. Fans can visit Smithfield.com/HolidayHub for information on how to make every holiday soiree a breeze, as well as foolproof tips and simple recipes that are sure to wow holiday guests with flavor-filled dishes for all the celebrations the season brings.

Almirola hopes for a good run this weekend en route to his best career points finish in order to build momentum for the 2019 Cup Series season that begins with the Daytona 500 on Feb. 17 in the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang.

 

ARIC ALMIROLA, Driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

For who or what are you racing for?

“I feel like I’m racing for my team, and for our sponsors, and for the people who believe in me. I’m obviously racing for myself, too. But, more importantly, it takes so many people to put me in this position and give me the opportunity that I have. The only way I know how to pay them back is to win, or to go win a championship to thank them for believing in me. You can say thank you and do all of the right things off of the racetrack but, on the track, they want you to perform.”

How do you and your team stay motivated?

“Everybody on this No. 10 team is self-motivated. There really is nothing I can say to change that. I’m not really a leader with words – I’m not really good with words, I’m not a motivational speaker, I’m not a cheerleader. I try to lead by example. I put in a lot of hours of studying and working out and doing all of the things I can do to be as prepared as possible. I think all of the guys on my team appreciate that and see that, and they’re the same way. They all work endless hours to make sure our racecars are fast and perfect. That’s the only way I know how to lead, and that’s to lead by example.”

 

JOHNNY KLAUSMEIER, Crew Chief of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What are your thoughts overall on the No. 10 team’s season?

“While we came up short on advancing to the final four, the overall performance of this Smithfield team throughout our first season together is something I am proud of. We continued to improve as the year progressed and had some of our best results when it mattered the most in the playoff races. Aric did an outstanding job learning our system at SHR and pushing our team throughout the year. You could see everyone’s confidence grow throughout the season, and that in itself has me looking forward to 2019.”

Any noticeable differences on your moving from an engineer to crew chief this season? 

“I have enjoyed the crew chief role in my first full-time year. The biggest differences are getting to work alongside and rally the talented people we have on our team. As a race engineer, you are so immersed into the technical workings of the car’s performance, you sometimes lose sight of the larger picture. As a crew chief, you get to motivate and rely on the specialists in each area of the team to get the best result possible. Working with Aric has been a great experience and I hope to continue to grow our relationship into a championship-caliber team.”

COLE CUSTER – 2018 NXS Homestead Race Advance

Event:               Ford EcoBoost 300 (Round 33 of 33)
Date:                Nov. 17, 2018
Location:          Homestead-Miami Speedway
Layout:             1.5-mile oval

 

Cole Custer Notes of Interest

 

  • While this will be Cole Custer’s first NASCAR Xfinity Series championship eligibility at the Homestead Miami-Speedway season finale, the 20-year-old California native is no stranger to victory lane at the 1.5-mile oval. Last November, Custer won the Homestead race by a hefty margin – 15.405 seconds – after winning Stages 1 and 2 and leading 182 of 200 laps. He also earned a perfect driver rating of 150. 
  • Custer’s victory two weekends ago at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth clinched his Championship 4 spot in this weekend’s Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead. It was his first victory this season.
  • Custer leads the Xfinity Series playoff standing, and he’s earned the most points (422) at 1.5-mile tracks in 2018. 
  • Custer leads the Xfinity Series playoff standings and is tied with Elliott Sadler for points earned at 1.5-mile tracks this season with 334. Custer’s average start of 5.2 at 1.5-mile tracks leads all Xfinity Series regulars. He also led the series in points earned at 1.5-mile tracks last season with 422.
  • In addition to Custer’s championship eligibility, fellow Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kevin Harvick will race for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship at Homestead Sunday. Since NASCAR’s inception, no team has ever won both Xfinity Series and Cup Series titles in the same season.
  • Custer, 20, is the youngest competitor in the Championship 4.
  • This season, Custer has one win, 13 top-five finishes, 15 top-10s, five pole awards and has led 294 laps in 32 career Xfinity Series starts. 
  • In nine Xfinity Series races at 1.5-mile tracks this season, Custer has earned one win, two poles, seven top-10s, six top-five finishes and has led 66 laps.
  • Custer has two wins, 21 top-five finishes, 46 top-10s, five pole awards and has led 596 laps in 70 career Xfinity Series starts.
  • Custer’s five pole awards this season tie Christopher Bell for most in the series and his average starting position of 6.1 is the best among Xfinity Series regulars.
  • Saturday’s Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead caps 2018 NASCAR Xfinity Series playoffs, which began with 12 eligible drivers and was divided into three rounds with the first two rounds consisting of three races apiece, followed by Sunday’s single-race round. Four drivers were eliminated after each of the first two rounds to ultimately establish four finalists at Homestead. Drivers automatically qualified for the next round with a win in the current round with the remaining spots determined by the point standings. At Homestead, the top-finishing driver among the four finalists – Custer, Christopher Bell, Tyler Reddick and Daniel Hemric – wins the championship.

 

Cole Custer, Driver Q&A

 

To what can you attribute your success at Homestead in 2017?

“We just hit on something really good. Our Xfinity Series team thrives at 1.5-mile tracks and we capped off our debut season with a solid win in Homestead. We also did everything right. From the pit crew to me not making any mistakes, we were perfect. We have to do our homework this week, though, and fully focus on everything we can get there. We obviously have a really good baseline to go off of.” 

How much pressure do you feel to bring home an Xfinity Series championship?

“I don’t know if you would say there is a lot of pressure going into the weekend, but we all know you don’t know how many opportunities you’ll get to win a championship, so we’re going to make sure we make the most of it and leave it all out on the track.”

Last year, bad luck at Kansas and Texas took you out of contention for a championship. You went on to win the race in Homestead but were not crowned champion. Would this be the icing on the cake to finally prove you deserve to hold the Championship title? 

“For our second year in the Xfinity Series, it would be huge to go out and win a championship. All our people have worked extremely hard to get us to where we are today, so now we need to take advantage of it. We have competed at a championship level all year and it’s time to back that up by actually doing it.”

What is a lap around Homestead like and why has it seemed to fit your driving style so well?  

“Homestead is a place with very little grip and there are countless different lines you can run. I think I’ve been able to drive some really good cars there in the past and I found the lines that I like to run to fit my driving style. It’s unique and a fun track to get around.”

 

Jeff Meendering, Crew Chief Q&A

 

What car are you bringing to Homestead and what car did the Haas Automation team bring there in 2017? 

“We are bringing Chassis No. 1114 – the same car we ran at Chicago and Vegas (this year). Last season, we ran Chassis No. 1059, which we retired after that race and added to the Cole Custer car collection.”

Do you expect to run as well as you did last year, or are there variables that will come into play? 

“We had high expectations last year after having a very productive test leading up to the race. There are a few different variables this year, one being a different tire, another being the new composite body. I feel like we have a really good idea on how to adjust for those items and have a lot of confidence going to Homestead.”

CLINT BOWYER – 2018 Homestead Race Advance

Clint Bowyer wishes he was part of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Championship 4 this weekend in the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. He also realizes his No. 14 Ford team has made significant progress since he started at Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) in 2017.

“We’ve had a great year getting to where we were part of this playoff situation and being in contention to be able to run for a championship,” Bowyer said moments after Sunday’s race at ISM Raceway near Phoenix. “There’s a lot of pride with (crew chief) Mike (Bugarewicz) and all the guys on the 14 car. It’s been a lot of fun to go to battle each and every week all across the country with these guys. Stewart-Haas Racing – I can’t say enough about the job the men and women have done at Stewart-Haas, getting all four cars in the playoffs and then, obviously, winning and being in victory lane, and everything Ford, Roush-Yates Racing and everybody involved has done for us. I’m proud of our season,”

To appreciate where the No. 14 team is now, it’s essential to know where it’s been.

Bowyer replaced three-time champion Tony Stewart in the No. 14 at SHR in 2017. The year saw the Emporia, Kansas native post three second-place finishes on his way to a year-end tally of six top-fives and 13 top-10s. His average finish of 15.5 was 11th best among full-time drivers competing in 2017, and it left him just shy of a spot in the NASCAR playoffs.

Bowyer was most disappointed the team never made it to victory lane despite a few near misses, but that changed in 2018.

The Bugarewicz-led team dominated the March 26 race at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, leading 215 of 400 laps. Video of Bowyer’s young family running down the front stretch to join him in victory lane celebrating the end of a 190-race winless streak top the season’s highlight reel. Moments later, Bowyer went into the grandstands to celebrate with the Martinsville fans who stayed until the Monday raced that was postponed by rain Sunday.

And his 2018 victory lane celebrations weren’t over.

On June 10, a Bugarewicz pit strategy to take two tires, then some incredible wheel-to-wheel driving by Bowyer with SHR teammate Kevin Harvick led the No. 14 to prevail by a few feel before rain brought the race to an end. Those laps on only two fresh tires, trying to hold off the hard-charging Harvick with rain clouds closing in, might have been the best of Bowyer’s career. His 10 career victories tied him at 59th on the all-time win list with Sterling Marlin and Donnie Allison.

Bowyer’s NASCAR playoffs turned out to be quite a rocky but successful run. An accident in the playoff opener at Las Vegas Motor Speedway left him with a 23rd-place finish and doubt as to whether he would advance to the next round. But a 10th-place finish at Richmond (Va.) Raceway, combined with a third-place finish on the “roval” at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway, allowed him to squeak into the Round of 12.

Hopes for a good start to the Round of 12 vanished with an extra pit stop, combined with a mechanical issue that led to an accident at Dover (Del.) International Speedway and a 35th-place finish. Again, Bowyer rebounded at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway with a second-place finish. A 13th-place finish at Kansas Speedway near Kansas City paved the way to the Round of 8.

Bowyer’s plans for a good start to the Round of 8 races and a repeat victory at Martinsville fell by the wayside with an ill-handling car and a late-race spin that netted a 21st-place finish. The second Round of 8 race was worse when first-lap contact with Denny Hamlin at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth forced him to the pits for a green-flag pit stop and a 26th-place finish. Knowing the No. 14 had to win at Phoenix, Bowyer raced from 16th to seventh before a cut tire led to an accident that ended his championship hopes.

Sunday won’t be merely an “exhibition race” for Bowyer. He’s 12th in points and would like to climb into the top-10 with a good run at Homestead and reward Rush Truck Centers and Haas Automation, the two partners whose decals have adorned the No. 14 most often in 2108 and again this weekend in the season finale.

And, as Bowyer points out, “A win Sunday will make for a fun off season.”

 

CLINT BOWYER, Driver of the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Haas Automation Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Describe your 2018 playoff run? 

“Obviously, the playoffs haven’t really gone as smoothly as we wanted them to, haven’t gone as smoothly as our season has pretty much gone. At the end of the day, we’ve been a fifth- or sixth-place car all year long. We’ve been a fifth- or sixth-place team against the best of the best. We had some mishaps in the playoffs and things like that. Sometimes when you go for it, things go your way and sometimes they don’t, and a drastic measure one way or the other kind of changes the picture, points-wise, quite a bit. When you’re in the final eight, you go for broke and put all the cards on the table. A mishap at Texas really set us behind as far as the grand picture of the points were concerned, but it’s not really the situation you’re in, anyway. We were in a do-or-die situation and we went for it and came up short,” 

Describe your 2018 season? 

“At the end of the day, I’m proud of our year and proud of the work that we’ve put into this year. It’s been a great year for Ford. It’s been a great year for Stewart-Haas Racing. It’s been a great year for the 14 car getting back in victory lane for all of us. It was a long time coming for (crew chief) Mike (Bugarewicz) and all the guys on the 14 team. To get back to their winning ways and, certainly for me as a driver who hadn’t been in victory lane in a while, it was gratifying to get in victory lane a couple of times this year and knock on the door a few other times.”

What will Homestead be like for drivers not in the Championship 4?

“For those of us not in the Championship 4, Homestead is like the last day of school, but it’s still very important. Whenever you race, you want to win, whether it’s the season-ending Cup race or racing your brothers on dirt bikes in the backyard. Homestead is no different. There’s going to be a lot on the line with those guys racing for a championship, but the rest of us are going to race for a trophy, as well.” 

Would a win this weekend be overshadowed by the championship?

“It’s tough to win these races, so anyone who takes the checkered flag Sunday is going to be more than happy. But, think of the momentum it builds. You spend the entire offseason knowing you are the most current winner. You’ll still be happy when you get to Daytona in February.”

KEVIN HARVICK – 2018 Homestead Race Advance

Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway will be one for the ages – a true clash of the titans.

Kevin Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Jimmy John’s Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR), is part of what might be the toughest Championship 4 field since the start of the elimination-style playoff format in 2014. That year’s NASCAR Cup Series champion is joined by 2015 champion Kyle Busch, 2016 runner-up Joey Logano and 2017 champion Martin Truex Jr., in a one-race shootout where the highest finisher among the four is crowned the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion.

Harvick and Busch both have four appearances in the Championship 4 at Homestead since 2014, while Truex and Logano are both making their third appearances. In total, the 2018 edition of the Championship 4 have accounted for 22 wins, 13 poles, 80 top-five finishes, 100 top-10s and 5,230 laps led through this year’s 35 points-paying races.

What should make it more interesting is the Championship 4 drivers’ combined resume on 1.5-mile racetracks in 2018. In the 10 Cup Series events on 1.5-mile layouts, the Championship 4 occupy the top four positions in points scored. They’ve combined for eight wins, five Busch Poles, 24 top-fives, 34 top 10s and have led a combined 1,978 laps led on 1.5-mile ovals.

Amazingly enough, Championship 4 drivers finished 1-2 in four of the 10 races on 1.5-mile tracks in 2018. At Las Vegas Motor Speedway in March, Harvick and Busch finished first and second; at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Busch got the better of Harvick; at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City in May, Harvick finished first while Truex was the runner-up; and Busch got the better of Truex in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway the last weekend in May.

Harvick ranks first with four wins and 867 laps led in those 10 races on 1.5-mile tracks in 2018. He’s also second with seven top-five finishes and a 7.1 average starting position.

The No. 4 Jimmy John’s team has set the standard for high performance since its inception in 2014. The 2018 season proved no different as it is tied with Busch and the No. 18 team for a series-best eight points-paying wins. It also leads the Cup Series with a 115.2 driver rating, 22 top-fives, 28 top-10s, 18 stage wins, 51 playoff points, 1,932 laps led, 2,869.12 miles led, 1,258 fastest laps and an 8.236 average running position. The team ranks second with an average starting position of 8.7, average finishing position of 9.0, has 8,398 laps in the top-15 and is tied for second with four Busch Pole Awards.

Harvick is also attempting to claim Ford’s first NASCAR Cup Series championship since SHR teammate Kurt Busch hoisted the Cup in 2004 while a member of Roush Fenway Racing. The Bakersfield, California native is also trying to become just the 16th driver in NASCAR history to win two or more Cup Series championships in a career and attempting to become the first driver since SHR co-owner Tony Stewart to win a NASCAR Cup Series title with two different manufacturers.

Harvick is attempting to make history and become the first NASCAR driver to win multiple Cup Series and Xfinity Series titles. In addition to his 2014 Cup Series title, Harvick won the Xfinity Series championship in 2001 and 2006.

What makes Harvick’s history in the playoffs even more impressive is his eight wins in NASCAR Cup Series playoff races since 2014, tying him with Kyle Busch for the most since the inception of the format. No team and driver have performed better in must-win situations since 2014, and this Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 is the ultimate must-win situation with the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series title on the line.

The Championship 4 at Homestead is set to become a battle for the ages, which is good since Harvick has age and experience on his side.

 

KEVIN HARVICK, Driver of the No. 4 Jimmy John’s Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Describe the emotion, hype and adrenaline before the championship race in Miami? Is there anything outside of NASCAR that you can compare that to?

“That’s a tough comparison because I’ve never been in that position in any other sport. The thing I can tell you about Homestead is, for me, from a mental standpoint, there’s nothing about it that’s the same. You have mandatory press conferences, mandatory appearances, every sponsor, friend and everything else that comes along with that. There is just way more to manage before the race. From a mental standpoint, you have to be prepared to do things differently than you’ve done all year because that’s the type of situation you’re in. Throw all that aside and then go into the race knowing you’re probably going to need to win the race to win the championship, because that’s what’s happened the last few years. We’ve seen the champion go out and win the race. You have to be in an ‘I have to win’ mindset and prepare for everything outside of the normal.”

What kind of driver does it take to win a NASCAR championship?

“I don’t know that it is the driver. I think it’s the team because you can’t drive a slow car fast. You have to have everything put together on one particular day. Homestead is a track that is fairly unique to a lot of the other mile-and-a-half racetracks we go to. There is really nothing about that weekend at Homestead that is the same just because of the fact everything is different. The track is different. The amount of people is different. The weekend is a championship-winning scenario. You know that you need to go out and win.”

What is it like knowing at the end of a race that the championship is right there for the taking?

“The year I won, we went through so many ups and downs and I really think 2014 was a good training ground for us from a mental standpoint, because we went through so many highs and lows and ‘must-win’ situations. We were 12th with 10 or 12 laps to go in that race, wound up pitting and being on the offensive.  It was definitely a scenario where your heart rate and intensity were up and you know you’re going to have to go out and get it to make it happen and be on the offense to go forward and get back to the front. There are a lot of things that get me excited, but I don’t think there is anything that gets me more excited than being behind and winning a race late.”

KURT BUSCH – 2018 Homestead Race Advance

Kurt Busch endured heartbreak Sunday at ISM Raceway near Phoenix when he was eliminated from the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoffs after being involved in a multi-car accident late in the race, which caused him to finish 32nd.

As a result, Busch, driver of the No. 41 Haas Automation/Monster Energy Ford Fusion, won’t have a shot at the Cup Series championship in this week’s season-ending Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

But he can still win the race and end what has been a magical season.

In Olympic hockey, there is a bronze medal game. The “consolation game” is played between two teams that lost their semifinal games against the teams going for the gold medal. Until 1981, the NCAA men’s basketball tournament featured the “third-place game” – who can forget Ray Meyer and the DePaul Blue Demons edging the University of Pennsylvania Quakers coached by Bob Weinhauer in 1979 in a 96-93 thriller?

Busch has two poles, one win, four top-five finishes and six top-10s at Homestead. Additionally, the 40-year-old driver has led 97 laps, has an average starting position of 13.5, an average finish of 18.4, and has completed 89.2 percent (4,054 of 4,545) of the laps he’s contested there.

He’s also had a remarkable 2018 season. In August at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway, he scored his 30th career win and his sixth at “Thunder Valley.” Busch has won five poles this season, his most since he scored six in 2006. He became just the 21st driver to lead 9,000 career laps and is now just 223 laps behind Buddy Baker for 19th on the all-time list.

Busch has 21 top-10 finishes this season and if he scores another one this week at Homestead, it will be a career high for him. He had 21 in 2004, 2009, 2015 and 2016.

And a top-10 finish might put Busch fifth in points, which would be his highest finish in the standings since 2009.

After 35 points-paying races and two exhibitions, it’s finally time for the finale. And, as always, Busch hopes to be in victory lane.

 

KURT BUSCH, Driver of the No. 41 Haas Automation/Monster Energy Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Talk about racing at Homestead-Miami Speedway.  

“Homestead is a fast, mile-and-a-half racetrack. It’s a sister racetrack to Texas, to me. It’s an older track, the worn-out asphalt is similar to Texas and, if you ran well at Texas, you’ll run well at Miami. There’s a lot that carries over from one to the other. Since 2004, there’s been a nostalgic feeling when I get to Homestead. Winning the championship in the first year of the ‘Chase’ format was a magical time for me.” 

What’s it like for you, as a driver, to have seen Homestead change so much over the years?

“Homestead is a lot of fun to race on, both the old configuration and the current configuration with the multiple grooves of banking. With the old configuration, it was all about the bottom of the racetrack, how you could exit the corner and make the straightaways longer. It was all about the softest springs you could run because you wanted the car as low as possible. Now, with the way the cars are set up, you have to have stiffer springs to manage the banking. You have to shoot for the middle. You run the middle groove in practice. That way, you can get to the bottom and not have your car so far off on setup, and then you can go to the high groove when the tires wear out to keep your momentum up high. But then, you have those crazy restarts and that is what this racetrack is perfectly designed for – that mad dash at the beginning with fresh tires. It’s the ultimate place because it puts it more in the driver’s hands.” 

Talk a little bit about the race at Homestead from a fan’s perspective.

“NASCAR has always been about family. A family can come and find all types of different activities around the event. Perfect weather, usually. The race ends right around nightfall, so you can get back home before it gets too late on that Sunday night and get the kids back to school on Monday.”

ARIC ALMIROLA – 2018 Phoenix II Race Advance

Aric Almirola and the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) make the long trek out to ISM Raceway near Phoenix for the 35th Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race this season. Almirola heads into the event after finishing eighth last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth.

The entire four-car SHR contingent remains in the hunt for the winner-take-all Championship 4 season finale Nov. 18 at Homestead-Miami Speedway with only this weekend’s event at Phoenix left to try and qualify. The two-time championship-winning SHR organization, which makes up 50 percent of the remaining playoff field, is the first since Joe Gibbs Racing in 2016 to have all of its entries reach victory lane. Almirola currently ranks seventh in the playoff standings with 4,068 points, 35 behind the final cutoff spot for the Championship 4. The 34-year-old is in a virtual must-win situation if he is to be one of the four championship-eligible drivers at Homestead.

The Smithfield driver heads into the weekend coming off his 15th top-10 of the season behind the wheel of the No. 10 Ford Fusion. Almirola scored one of those top-10s in March on the mile oval at Phoenix, his second straight top-10 there. The Tampa native ran as high as second in this year’s spring event before finishing seventh.

Almirola has 15 career starts at Phoenix with an average starting position of 19.5, an average finishing position of 16.3, and he’s completed 99.9 percent of all laps possible at the desert track.

Almirola is back to piloting the traditional Smithfield paint scheme this weekend but, with the holiday season is just around the corner, Smithfield continues to promote its perfectly cooked, spiral sliced ham as an ideal addition to most every kind of holiday feast to make family and friends feel special. Not only does it make holiday cooking a breeze, it provides equally flavorful leftover dishes. Fans can visit Smithfield.com/HolidayHub for information on how to make every holiday soiree a breeze, as well as foolproof tips and simple recipes that are sure to wow holiday guests with flavor-filled dishes for all the celebrations the season brings.

Over Almirola’s last 10 starts at a track less than or equal to a mile in length, he’s scored one top-five finish and four top-10s. Additionally, he’s led 67 laps and completed 98.3 percent of all laps possible while earning an average starting position of 14.1 and an average finishing position of 12.4.

On Oct. 14, the Tampa native piloted a special bacon-themed Smithfield Ford Fusion to victory lane at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. The unique paint scheme coincided with Smithfield’s Bacon for Life promotion. Yes, it’s possible to win bacon for life. The sweepstakes runs until Dec. 31, and fans can enter by finding specially marked packages of Smithfield bacon in stores, then visiting Smithfield.com/BaconForLife and entering the unique code provided in the package. More than 1,000 runners-up will be awarded select bacon merchandise.

Phoenix is the 32nd points-paying event during which the Smithfield livery has adorned Almirola’s No. 10 Ford Fusion. Smithfield, a brand of Smithfield Foods, which is based approximately five hours northeast of SHR headquarters in Smithfield, Virginia, is in its seventh season with Almirola and its first with SHR. 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.

Through 34 races this season, Almirola has one win with an average start of 15.6 and an average finish of 13.1 with three top-five finishes and 15 top-10s. He’s also led 181 laps this season, already a career best with two races remaining.

 

ARIC ALMIROLA, Driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What is going to make ISM Raceway difficult this time? 

“I think Phoenix is going to have some new challenges with the reconfiguration of the track and the start-finish line moving. I think it will make restarts awfully entertaining for the fans, and crazy and chaotic for us. There are going to be a lot of different strategies and things, and pit road is going to be different, too. There are some unknowns, and with these unknowns come different strategies and chaos.”

With the starting line being moved at Phoenix, how will that change things?

“I think it will just make the restarts really hectic and interesting. We are not allowed to pass until we get to the start-finish line. So I think when you look at Phoenix with the start-finish line being before the dogleg, I would imagine that we will cross the start-finish line and be nine-wide going through the dog leg and then try to figure out how to get back to two-wide by the time we get to the new turn one. That is a really flat, tricky corner. Running much more than two-wide is pretty difficult through there. I am sure it will fan out and get really exciting. I think when it gets down late in the race, the restarts will be really, really intense and chaotic with guys trying to make moves in desperation and trying to make that final round of four. You can run two-wide through the old (turns) three and four, the new one and two I guess it will be. You can run two-wide pretty comfortably through there. I think there is potential for us to be four-, five-, six-wide going through that dogleg. We have seen that when it was just the back straightaway, so now going through the gears will be pretty crazy.”

Pit stops have become more important. How much attention to detail is being paid to them?

“Pit stops are important, but everything is important. Especially this part of the season when you’re trying to go for a championship. No stone can be left unturned. The car has to be fast, the driver has to do his part, the pit crew has to be perfect, everything has to come together and you have to be perfect to win these races and to win a championship. That’s what everybody strives for all year long, but really, when we get to this part of the season it’s a must.”

Have you had a chance to talk with Joey (Logano) about Texas?

“Joey and I talked. We talked on the phone (Monday). I think we both know where each of us stands and I feel good about it. I know a lot of people are confused at why I was upset when you look at the replay but the reality is that, as racecar drivers, we both know the situation that we were in, and he knows kind of where my head was at and what I was thinking. I know where his head was at and what he was thinking, and we’ll move on. We’ll go from there.”

Did you and Joey kind of agree to disagree, or are you good?

“We’re good. I think when you look back at it, Texas is just a challenging racetrack to run two-wide at. The tire is extremely hard that Goodyear brings there because of the repave. The track is extremely wide, but the groove is very narrow, and so it’s really hard to run side by side. When you do run side by side, if you’re wheel to wheel and the cars are perfectly even with each other, the car on the inside is extremely vulnerable and it’s really hard to drive your car. You saw it in the Xfinity race, you see it in all the restarts in the Cup race – that car on the inside just gets incredibly loose. So I expected and I thought one thing and that didn’t end up being the case. I was hoping he’d cut me a break, to be quite honest, and that didn’t happen to be the case. I feel like if we go to Homestead and, for whatever reason I wasn’t in the championship, that he would expect the same out of me. He would expect me to cut him a break if we restarted with 30 laps to go and he was third and I was fourth, I feel like he would expect me to cut him a break and let him go race for a championship, and that’s kind of what I was hoping for. Whether that was wrong or right of me is beside the point. I was mad and upset, and it didn’t work out for me. I went from running third to running eighth, and I didn’t think I was the best car. I didn’t think I was just going to go up there and drive around the 4 (Kevin Harvick) or the 12 (Ryan Blaney). But what I did think is, if I could just get through (turns) three and four and be third, that if something happened with the 4 and the 12, I’d be in position to capitalize on that. When I got loose under Joey, I lost that opportunity, so I was mad. These are high-pressure times and the intensity level is incredibly high and emotions run high in situations like this. I got cameras and microphones stuck in my face immediately upon getting out of the car and being upset, and everybody heard it.”

Do you let the criticism from Texas bother you?

“If I worried about what other people thought, I wouldn’t be here where I’m at today. People are always going to criticize, especially on social media. It gives people whose opinions mean absolutely nothing a platform to say whatever it is that they want. I really could care less what anybody thinks about what I said or what I did or anything about Texas or otherwise. The people’s opinions that matter the most to me are Tony Stewart, Gene Haas, all the guys on my 10 team and everybody at Stewart-Haas Racing, the people at Smithfield, Ford Motor Company – the people who directly impact my life and my career. All that outside stuff is just noise.”

COLE CUSTER – 2018 NXS Phoenix II Race Advance

Event:               Whelen Trusted to Perform 200 (Round 32 of 33)
Date:                Nov. 10, 2018
Location:          ISM Raceway near Phoenix
Layout:             Mile oval

 

Cole Custer Notes of Interest

 

  • Cole Custer won the O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, clinching his spot in the Championship 4 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 17. He is currently ranked first in the NASCAR Xfinity Series playoff standings.
  • This marks Custer’s first Xfinity Series championship eligibility at Homestead. Custer won the 2017 season finale at Homestead by 15.405 seconds after winning Stages 1 and 2 and leading 182 of 200 laps. He also earned a perfect driver rating of 150.
  • Saturday’s Whelen Trusted to Perform 200 at ISM Raceway near Phoenix is the third and final race of the second round of the 2018 NASCAR Xfinity Series playoffs. The playoffs began with 12 eligible drivers and are divided into three rounds with the first two rounds consisting of three races apiece, followed by a final, single-race round at the Homestead season finale. Four drivers are eliminated after each of the first two rounds to ultimately establish four finalists at Homestead. Drivers automatically qualify for the next round with a win in the current round with the remaining spots determined by the point standings. At Homestead, the top-finishing driver among the four finalists wins the championship. 
  • The Whelen Trusted to Perform 200 is the last of five mile-oval races during the 33-event season. In 67 Xfinity Series starts, 42 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts and 29 NASCAR K&N Pro Series starts since 2015, Custer has five wins, eight poles, 17 top-five finishes, 33 top-10s and 1,077 laps led at tracks that are a mile in length or shorter. 
  • This will be Custer’s fourth Xfinity Series start and his ninth overall at Phoenix. Custer has three Truck Series starts and three K&N Pro Series starts at Phoenix. Custer’s best Truck Series finish is third in 2014 and, that same year, he won the K&N Pro Series race. Custer also has a K&N Series pole at Phoenix, earned in 2013 when he first competed at the track.
  • Custer has three top-five finishes, seven top-10s, two poles, one win and has led 111 laps in eight career Xfinity, Truck and K&N starts at Phoenix.
  • Custer has two wins, 13 top-five finishes, 24 top-10s, five top-five finishes and has led 596 laps in 69 career Xfinity Series starts.
  • Custer’s five pole awards in this season tie Christopher Bell for most poles in the series and his average starting position of 6.2 is the best among Xfinity Series drivers.
  • Earlier this year at Phoenix, Custer started third and ran in and around the top-five before earning his second Xfinity Serie top-10 at Phoenix.

 

Cole Custer, Driver Q&A

 

What mindset do you head to Phoenix with after clinching your spot in the Championship 4?

“We’re still going to head into Phoenix firing on all eight cylinders to get a trophy. There are two races left and we want to end the season winning three in a row and a championship. That’s exactly what we plan to do.”

Do you think you have a good shot at winning the championship at Homestead?

“We obviously have a great setup from last year at Homestead, but that doesn’t promise anything so we still need to do our homework. We can’t go into that weekend thinking we’re just going to race as well as we did last year. We have to go to Homestead like we did in Texas and give it all we have to bring home the championship.” 

How did it feel to win at Texas?

“I couldn’t believe it. The No. 1 car is the best pusher in the series and I hated that I didn’t have him behind me. We did all we could. I drove it in deeper than I have all weekend and it worked out. I was pumped for Autodesk. It was their first time on the car. Gene Haas, I wouldn’t be here without him and Haas Automation. I am pumped. We are going to Homestead and I think we have a great shot of winning.”

You have a win at Phoenix. What is it about that track that fits your driving style?

 “I’ve been lucky enough to drive some fast cars there, but I think I’ve taken to flat tracks fairly well and it’s a feel I just like. We had a quick Haas Automation Ford Mustang there last season so, with the notes we have now, we should be even quicker.”

 

Jeff Meendering, Crew Chief Q&A

 

Now that you aren’t racing for points, how does the strategy change at Phoenix? 

“Really, the only thing that changes for me is not having to worry about stage points. We can make pit calls based on getting the best finish rather than gathering the most points. Everything else is business as usual – try to sit on the pole and win the race.”

KURT BUSCH – 2018 Phoenix II Race Advance

Kurt Busch is fifth in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoff standings and, if certain things happen, he can advance to the winner-take-all Championship 4 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano are locked in via their wins at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth and Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. Busch is 28 points behind his brother Kyle Busch, who’s third in the standings, and 25 behind defending-champ Martin Truex Jr., who currently holds down the fourth and final cutoff position. So if Kurt Busch has a great day and his little brother and Truex both struggle Sunday at ISM Raceway near Phoenix, he could advance to the Championship 4.

A mathematics professor at Brown University could figure out all the different point scenarios Busch would need to advance. But the 2004 Cup Series champion seems to prefer a much simpler method – one with a guarantee.

Win at Phoenix in Sunday’s Can-Am 500k and he’s automatically in the Championship 4. Or simply, “Win and In.”

Getting the opportunity to race at the mile oval in the desert west of Phoenix – the same track where he once cheered for many of his racing heroes – was a dream come true for Busch. Racing at the track was like a home game for Busch, who also attended college for several semesters at the University of Arizona, just down the road in Tucson, before making it in NASCAR’s big leagues.

While he was coming up through the ranks, Busch made a number of race starts at Phoenix, competing in the likes of NASCAR’s Southwest Series tour. Then, in 2000, Busch took to the track for the first time as a competitor in NASCAR’s top touring series, competing in both the Camping World Truck Series race in March, in which he finished fourth, and then in the Cup Series race in November later that same season, when he finished 29th.

Since his first NASCAR Cup Series start at Phoenix, it has been a track where Busch has performed consistently. Busch has one win, seven top-five finishes and 18 top-10s there. Additionally, the 40-year-old driver has led 751 laps, has an average starting position of 12.5, an average finish of 13.6, and has completed 99.6 percent – 9,634 of 9,675 – of the laps he’s contested there.

This weekend’s event is also the first at what can be considered the new ISM Raceway. The start-finish line was moved to what used to be turn two and the original grandstands were torn down and the garages were replaced.

So if Busch can score the victory at the “new” ISM Raceway, he will punch his ticket to the Championship 4.

 

KURT BUSCH, Driver of the No. 41 Haas Automation/Monster Energy Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

Thoughts on Phoenix? 

“Our Haas Automation/Monster Energy Ford team has fought hard all year to be in this position. We will give it our all in Phoenix. Consistently consistent is good, but we need to win to be great. Billy Scott (crew chief) and all of us are ready. We’re going to give it our best shot.”

It’s the first race at the “new” version of ISM Raceway. Any thoughts on that?  

“It’s pretty wild how much Phoenix has changed over the years. The dogleg used to be open and the wall was kind of open. They closed that off. Then they put a tunnel in turn four and the grandstand addition in turn two. Now they’ve upgraded the place and made it more fan friendly. It’ll be exciting to see it.”

What do you feel you need to work on at Phoenix for this week? 

“It seems like, each time we go back to Phoenix, the asphalt is getting a little bit older. It’s starting to get a little bit slicker, yet it still seems like you can stay out forever on tires. You are out there a long time on tires and the air pressures build up. We are going to work this time around on keeping the air pressure down and trying to make our long-run speed better.”

CLINT BOWYER – 2018 Phoenix II Race Advance

Clint Bowyer’s strategy is about as clear-cut as it gets this weekend at ISM Raceway near Phoenix when he competes in the next-to-last Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race of the 2018 season.

If the No. 14 ITsavvy Ford driver wins Sunday, he advances to the Championship 4 round next weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway to compete in the four-way, winner-take-all title race. Anything less this weekend at Phoenix sends Bowyer to Homestead battling for a finish of fifth to eighth in the final point standings.

It’s going to take a spectacular effort for the Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) driver to advance Sunday, but Phoenix is a pretty good place for Bowyer and his SHR organization.

“It’s a pretty simple strategy this weekend for us: win and we’re in,” said Bowyer, who owns two top-five finishes and seven top-10s in 26 races at Phoenix. “We’re obviously going to do our best. Phoenix has been good to us in the past. Now, we just need her to be great to us.”

The mile-oval in the desert is SHR’s best track, with six victories and 17 top-five finishes in 58 starts. Kevin Harvick owns five of SHR’s six victories, including a win in this season’s April race. Bowyer had a good run of his own that day, ending with a sixth-place finish.

It will be a different-looking Phoenix facility when the Cup Series begins practice Friday. As part of its $178 million project, the track’s start-finish line has been moved from the middle of what was the frontstretch to what was turn two – now turn four. The change was made because the track added 45,000 grandstand seats to that area of the track as part of its huge renovation project. Restarts and the race finish will be in front of the majority of fans attending the event.

“I’m telling you I think moving the start-finish line is going to be a bigger deal than anyone thinks,” Bowyer said. “I’ve raced at a lot of racetracks all over the country and I have never seen a start-finish line right out of the corner. It’s very, very unique and it’s going to be interesting to see how it all plays out.”

Bowyer said the change could make an impact during the race.

“I think where you will see that really play out is on restarts and finishes,” he said. “How it comes down to that last-lap pass for a position to maybe put yourself in the playoffs or something – you kind of just have to make it out of that corner. You just have to kind of have forward momentum to make it across the line. That, in my opinion, can bring on some wild, wild things, I think, over the next few years there.”

For the fans, these changes bring new and improved access to the garage. The renovations also include new restaurants, plus a state-of-the-art facility inside the gates that includes two separate entertainment venues.

“I can’t wait to get to Phoenix – it’s a fun racetrack, fun atmosphere and fun fan base,” Bowyer said. “Everything about Phoenix is awesome. By the way, she’s a new Phoenix. The start-finish line has moved. So are the garages, plus everything else that is being done. I’ve seen some pictures, but I can’t wait to get out there and see what it looks like.”

For the second time in 2018, Bowyer’s No. 14 Ford Fusion will carry the paint scheme of ITsavvy (pronounced I-T-savvy). The Addison, Illinois-based company is one of the fastest-growing resources for integrated IT products and technology solutions in the United States. ITsavvy has catapulted rapidly from a Midwest startup to a national leader in IT products and solutions.

Founded in 2004 by Mike Theriault and Chris Kurpeikis, ITsavvy has been consistently recognized as one of the fastest-growing businesses of its type. ITsavvy is a single-source, end-to-end IT partner. The company combines a comprehensive, value-added reseller business of more than a million computer, hardware and software products with an industry-leading advanced solutions group. ITsavvy has access to $8 billion in daily inventory in 46 distribution centers around the country with the ability to ship in-stock items the same day they are ordered.

Bowyer arrives at Phoenix eighth in the playoff standings, 73 points behind the fourth and final transfer position to the Championship 4 after finishing 26th Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth. Bowyer qualified second, but opening-lap contact with Denny Hamlin forced Bowyer to pit road for repairs, dropping him two laps behind the leaders that he could never regain.

Points no longer matter to Bowyer. Only a victory guarantees his place in the title battle.

“We’re going to try like hell,” he said.

 

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

 

Does it mean anything to have all four SHR Fords in the Round of 8?

“Yeah, it means something to all of us and everyone involved at Stewart-Haas Racing. That army of people who are back at the shop working tirelessly day in and day out. Those people – it is unbelievable the people who are in the Stewart-Haas camp. I am not saying other teams are not racers, but I have been with about all of them now and I have never seen a group of just sheer racers. What I mean by that is, when you have down time, you see them with their kids racing Late Models or a dirt car somewhere, or they are racing on their weekends. Some of our shop guys – it’s amazing how many true die-hard, hardcore racers there are at SHR. For me, I think that speaks volumes about our performance. When we do get behind, if we do, they close the gap in a short amount of time. Their attention to detail and willingness to work all across the board, everybody involved pushes one another to be better. I think we have closed the gap drastically from last year to this year. It was my first year last year when we really only had one car running good each week. We could have a good run and would back it up with a couple of bad ones. We were spraying it all over the place. This year, we are there with all four cars every week.”

Is there pressure in the playoffs? 

“The pressure this time of year is intense. In any weekend, there is always pressure but, inside these playoffs, it increases. It’s the drivers, the teams you are competing against. At this time of year you are going against the best of the best. But, we all feed off that. You have to be able to eat that up and enjoy that and somehow make peace with it because it’s there. There’s no getting around the pressure side of that. You have to be able to perform at your best within that pressure.”

What does it take to be a NASCAR champion?

“To be a NASCAR champion, you have to have the total package and that’s the team and driver and everyone in the organization, as well as the folks you work with at Ford Performance and Roush-Yates Engines. You’ve got to be the total package if you want to beat these guys in the Cup Series. We have all the pieces of the puzzle. Now we just have to put them together.”

ARIC ALMIROLA – 2018 Texas II Race Advance

Aric Almirola and the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) head to Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth for the 34th Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race this season. The event also marks the second race in the Round of 8 in the 2018 Cup Series playoffs. Almirola is coming off of an 11th-place finish Sunday at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway.

The entire four-car SHR contingent remains in the hunt for the winner-take-all Championship 4 season finale Nov. 18 at Homestead-Miami Speedway with only this weekend’s event at Texas and next weekend’s race at ISM Raceway near Phoenix left to try and qualify. The two-time championship-winning SHR organization, which makes up 50 percent of the remaining playoff field, is the first since Joe Gibbs Racing in 2016 to have all of its entries reach victory lane. Almirola currently ranks eighth in the playoff standings with 4,033 points, 25 behind the final cutoff spot for the Championship 4. A win this weekend or next would automatically lock him into the Championship 4.

The 34-year-old Almirola’s trip to Texas earlier this season resulted in an accident just past the halfway point in the race. Before this year’s spring race, Almirola had completed all of his previous starts at Texas. Almirola has one Cup Series top-10 there with an average starting position of 19.9 and an average finishing position of 20.6 in 15 starts.

Almirola and his No. 10 Ford Fusion team are hoping a special paint scheme featuring Smithfield’s Spiral Sliced Ham product will bring good luck this weekend. With the holiday season just around the corner, Smithfield is promoting its perfectly cooked, spiral sliced ham as an ideal addition to most every kind of holiday feast to make family and friends feel special, and by making holiday cooking a breeze, as well as providing equally flavorful leftover dishes. Fans can visit Smithfield.com/HolidayHub, for information on how to make every holiday soiree a breeze, as well as foolproof tips and simple recipes that are sure to wow holiday guests with flavor-filled dishes for all the celebrations the season brings.

Almirola and his team are also hoping their recent success at tracks like the 1.5-mile Texas oval – the bread and butter of the Cup Series schedule – will continue to yield positive results this weekend. In his last 10 starts at 1.5 mile tracks, Almirola has five top-10 finishes and has led 70 laps with an average starting position of 12.2 and an average finish of 14.4.

On Oct. 14, the Tampa native piloted a special bacon-themed Smithfield Ford Fusion to victory lane at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. The unique paint scheme coincided with Smithfield’s Bacon for Life promotion. Yes, it’s possible to win bacon for life. The sweepstakes runs until Dec. 31, and fans can enter by finding specially marked packages of Smithfield bacon in stores, then visiting Smithfield.com/BaconForLife and entering the unique code provided in the package. More than 1,000 runners-up will be awarded select bacon merchandise.

Texas is the 31st points-paying event during which the Smithfield livery has adorned Almirola’s No. 10 Ford Fusion. Smithfield, a brand of Smithfield Foods, which is based approximately five hours northeast of SHR headquarters in Smithfield, Virginia, is in its seventh season with Almirola and its first with SHR. 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.

Through 33 races this season, Almirola has amassed one win with an average start of 16.0 and an average finish of 13.3 with three top-five finishes and 14 top-10s. He’s also led 181 laps this season, already a career best with four races remaining.

 

ARIC ALMIROLA, Driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Fusion for Stewart-Haas Racing:

 

What is the most difficult thing to get right or figure out at Texas Motor Speedway?

“I think the most difficult thing at Texas now that it’s repaved and they changed the banking in turns one and two is just the speed that you carry through the banked corner of turns three and four, and then you have to get slowed down for the flat turns one and two. That has made it very challenging. Then, the exit of turn two is very flat, so you’re carrying some speed there and the car just doesn’t have a lot of grip because there isn’t any banking.”

Do you think we’ll see some different strategies employed by the playoff teams in these final rounds, even if they’re at the end of a stage?

“I think there will be varying strategies, but it really is all dependent on when cautions come out and different things of that nature. But I think you will see guys who are maybe off on their setup and not performing the way they need to. They will maybe try and stretch their fuel run and hope for a caution, different strategies like that. I think desperation will start to set in and you’ll try and figure out any way you can to try and make it to Homestead.”

SHR has four teams in this Round of 8. What is an advantage, and what is a disadvantage with that scenario?

“I think the advantage of having all four cars in the Round of 8 is that everybody is still fully vested. There isn’t a team that’s checked out and just like, ‘Alright, let’s just get through the end of the year and get to the offseason.’ Everybody’s adrenaline it high and they’re still putting long hours in at the shop and shooting for excellence every week. I feel like that elevates everybody else around you and, when you have that in the four walls around you at Stewart-Haas Racing, it keeps the attention to detail very, very high on all fronts. I don’t think there is a disadvantage. I think it’s purely upside to having all four cars still in the playoffs, especially for the organization. As an organization, when you set out to build your team with the staff, the drivers and all of those things, you do it with every intention of having the four best. Currently, we have four of the eight cars in and now we have to figure out how to get as many as possible in the Championship 4 at Homestead.”