Alan Gustafson: "In my career, I've been better on flat tracks...." |
A new car with updates.
“Sort of 24.1,” Gustafson joked. “The chassis that won in Phoenix was destroyed in a wreck at Richmond, so hopefully this new one is better.”
Both the one-mile Phoenix track and the 1.058-mile New Hampshire track are relatively flat, and the similarities has the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger team aiming for similar results.
“If I was to clip one section of a race track and compare it to Loudon, I would say turns 3 and 4 at Phoenix are the closest comparison to what we’ll race on this weekend,” said Gustafson. “And turns 3 and 4 was where our car was best at Phoenix.
“In my career, I’ve been better on flat tracks — and I don’t know why that is. This is a race I’m really looking forward to and on a track that I have a lot of confidence in.
“And Jeff Gordon is good at Loudon. Well, he’s good everywhere.”
In 32 starts at NHMS, Gordon has three wins and three poles, while his 14 top-fives, 18 top-10′s and 1,207 laps led are tops among NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers at “The Magic Mile”.
“I had the chance to run New Hampshire in the Nationwide Series before the Cup Series was racing here,” said Gordon. “I ran well then and had some success, and that transitioned over to the Cup Series.
“It’s a very flat, narrow groove, tight-corner race track. It’s one that seems to suit my style of driving and, as a team, it’s one where we seem to communicate well and get what we need out of the car to make it go fast.
“At Kentucky last weekend, Gordon and company posted their fifth top-10 finish inthe last six events to move from 16th to seventh in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Seriespoint standings during that span. But work remains.
“We’ve had some good finishes,” said Gustafson. “We need a good run where we lead some laps and have a good finish.
“Sort of like Phoenix?
- Performance PR Plus, Press Release
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