Kurt Busch's Two Big Concerns Heading to Michigan
-Shell-Pennzoil Dodge Driver Knows Improving & Dealing With Fuel Mileage Critical This Weekend-
August 17, 2011
NEWS FLASH...Shell-Pennzoil Dodge driver Kurt Busch is scheduled to be a special in-studio guest on tomorrow night's edition of "Inside NASCAR" on SHOWTIME. Veteran sports TV host Chris Myers and auto racing experts Randy Pemberton, Brad Daugherty and Michael Waltrip serve as analysts for the one-hour show. Wednesday night's edition will air at 9:00 p.m. EDT with a second broadcast at 10:30 p.m. EDT.
Shell-Pennzoil Dodge driver Kurt Busch and his Steve
Addington-led Penske Racing team will be racing their "PR-744"
Shell-Pennzoil Dodge Charger this weekend at Michigan. This chassis
debuted in the March 6 Kobalt Tools 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
Busch started 22nd and led the race en route to a ninth-place finish in
that race. In its last outing, the team raced the car from a
10th-place start to a 10th-place finish in the April 9 Samsung 500 at
Texas. "This was a pretty consistent Shell-Pennzoil Dodge Charger in
its first two races," offered crew chief Addington. "Kurt was
comfortable with the car and it responded well with our adjustments. We
have done our standard updating tweaks since the last race with the
car. We're confident that it'll be a piece that Kurt can use to get
the job done."
BROOKLYN, Mich. (August 16, 2011) - Shell-Pennzoil
Dodge driver Kurt Busch enters this weekend's Pure Michigan 400 at
Michigan International Speedway convinced of two factors his Steve
Addington-led "Double-Deuce" team will face. He is hoping that his
team's preparation will help in dealing with one and he has confidence
that his team's strategy and execution will help conquer the other.
"We're heading back into Michigan hoping
that we learned a lot that we can apply from the June race," said
Busch, who won the Coors Light Pole Award in the June battle at MIS,
but had to settle for an 11th-place finish in the race. "We won the
pole and found out just how tough it is when you can't take advantage
of it during the race. Our Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger was just too
inconsistent in that race to contend for a race win. We were a solid
top-10 race car, but just couldn't get it dialed in enough to run with
the leaders when we had to. We ran 198 laps inside the top 10, but
finished 11th after getting nudged out on the last restart.
"It was such a seesaw day for us there at Michigan in
June," added Busch, whose career record at MIS boasts two wins, three
top-five finishes and eight top-10s in 21 races. "It seemed like our
car would be good for the first five laps of a green flag run, and then
once the track would rubber-in, we just couldn't get the grip we
needed. Our first lap was awesome; the last 199 were a challenge. You
have to be rock-solid on these two-mile race tracks and we weren't
nearly close to having what we needed at the end. You need a good race
car, solid pit stops and good changes to keep up with the track and we
just were too inconsistent there in the June race.
"I am confident that Steve Addington (crew chief),
engineers Steve Reis and Jonathan Hassler and the rest of the
"double-deuce" crew have done their homework and will have the chassis
situation in better shape than what we had there in June," said Busch,
who enters this weekend sixth in the Sprint Cup point standings,
trailing leader Kyle Busch by 40 points. "I'm also counting on them
to continue to prove that our guys are some of the best fuel
strategists in the business.
"When it comes to strategy and execution for fuel
mileage races, Steve and the guys have proven that they can get the job
done," said Busch. "I'll be the first to tell you that we have been
in the conservative mode much of the time out there because we had to
always keep a look on the big picture and the points situation.
"The great thing is that we're coming into
Michigan with a 78-point buffer on 11th (points difference between
sixth-place Busch and 11th-place Clint Bowyer) and that gives us so
much wiggle room when it come down to crunch time. We can afford to
take chances that most of the other teams can't. If it comes down to
Steve telling me to conserve fuel after the last pit stop and we look
to be a little bit short in the calculations, you can bet that the
‘double deuce' will be rolling the dice trying to pick up another race
win."
What makes Michigan International Speedway
perhaps the most glaring track on the circuit where fingers are
pointed at fuel mileage when it comes to race wins?
"Michigan is one track where you always
come in there planning on it to have fuel mileage involved in the
equation, said Busch, who would cherish another victory on Sunday
regardless of how it comes. "It's always been a track where there
aren't many cautions and that works to push the fuel mileage aspect to
the top of the list as far as strategy goes. But there's a lot more to
it these days than it being just the nature of that track.
"Really, the fuel mileage importance has
become the nature of our sport, like it or not," said Busch. "With
NASCAR changing the points system around and throwing the ‘wild card'
entry into the Chase by race wins, it's sent the importance of winning
through the roof. Teams are willing to take more chances than ever.
They'll roll the dice and throw caution to the wind.
"We've seen it in so many races this
season - it really has been incredible as to how many races we've had
where fuel mileage has come into play. At Charlotte in the Coca-Cola
600, there were all the cars trying to go the distance stretching their
fuel and running out at the end. At Kansas, it was my Penske Racing
teammate, Brad Keselowski, able to score a huge win for his Miller Lite
Dodge Team by stretching his fuel mileage. Even at Loudon (New
Hampshire Motor Speedway), where (Ryan) Newman won the race, it was
fuel mileage that made the difference. It is just that important to
score the wins these days.
"It's not quite to the point where the
crew chief's pit strategy sees them really run the race backwards with
the pitting strategy like it is on the road courses, but it'd
definitely be a key part of the strategy to know what the final fuel
window is," said Busch. "If you get a caution flag and you're remotely
close to being able to make the distance, you have to consider it
seriously. You can start rolling off the throttle early, cutting off
the engine...whatever it takes to conserve fuel. I'd say that you'll
likely see all those things come into play there at Michigan this
Sunday."
Busch and his Steve Addington-led Penske
Racing team will be racing their "PR-744" Shell-Pennzoil Dodge Charger
this weekend at Michigan. This chassis debuted in the March 6 Kobalt
Tools 400 at Las Vegas. Busch started 22nd and led the race en route
to a ninth-place finish in that race. In its last outing, the team
raced the car from a 10th-place start to a 10th-pl
