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Raybestos Rookie Johnny Sauter FIFTH in Heluva Good! 200

Monday September 28, 2009

 

Where the Raybestos Rookies finished at New Hampshire:

Sauter 5th

Buescher 17th

Fitzpatrick 18th

Malsam 20th

Jones 28th

 

CHRIS JONES, No. 41 MIKE BERG TRUCKING/H&H METAL SOURCE DODGE:  “It felt like we broke an axle.  We had a pretty good run going.  Made some changes after qualifying and I think we went the wrong direction with some shock changes and had a bad qualifying run and spun out.  We were way too free but I think everybody is fighting that.  We just went in the wrong direction.  We passed some trucks there at the beginning of the race and was hoping to have a good run but it just didn’t work out.”  AT LEAST YOU GOT SOME EXPERIENCE HERE THIS WEEKEND.  “Yeah, absolutely.  Every time you go somewhere new you learn something.  You can apply it somewhere else.  The more tracks you see the better driver it makes you.”
 
JOHNNY SAUTER IN THE No. 13 FUN SAND/RODNEY ATKINS/CURB RECORDS CHEVROLET WAS THE TOP RAYBESTOS ROOKIE IN TODAY’S RACE.

 

NOTES:

 

  • Sauter posted a fifth-place finish, his fourth consecutive top-five and eight top-10 finish of the season.  He claimed Raybestos Rookie of the Race honors for the fourth consecutive race and for the ninth time this season.

 

  • DID YOU KNOW?  A Raybestos® Rookie has scored top-10 finishes in 16 of the 19 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races this season.

 

  • Sauter becomes the first Raybestos Rookie to score a top-five at New Hampshire since David Reutimann placed fifth in 2004.  Other Raybestos® Rookies who have scored top-fives at New Hampshire:

1997:   Boris Said, fourth

1997:   Kenny Irwin, fifth

1998:   Andy Houston, FIRST

1998:   Greg Biffle, second

1998:   Ron Barfield, fourth

2000:   Kurt Busch, FIRST

2001:   Travis Kvapil, second

2001:   Ricky Hendrick, fourth

2002:   Brendan Gaughan, fifth

2003:   Carl Edwards, second

 

  • UNOFFICIALLY Sauter climbed three spots in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship standings.  He is seventh in the standings, 28 points behind sixth-place Todd Bodine and 11 ahead of eighth-place Rick Crawford.

 

SAUTER:  “It’s a good day for us.  I’m proud of all the guys on the Fun Sand Curb Records Chevy.  That’s the way it goes sometimes.”  THIS TRUCK WAS VERY FAST LATE IN THE RACE.  “Yeah it was.  That’s cool.  Sometimes the fastest truck doesn’t win.  We had a lot of mishaps on pit road today.  We ran out of fuel.  We had a fast truck and sometimes that’s all you can ask for.”  YOU PASSED STACY COMPTON ON THE LAST LAP FOR FIFTH-PLACE.  THAT LOOKED LIKE FUN.  “It is, especially when I thought I was laps down.  That’s cool.  When they told me I was on the lead lap I was shocked as anybody.  I was shocked that we were still on the lead lap and then I knew I could get a bunch of those guys because we were definitely the fastest truck on the racetrack.  It wasn’t meant to be.  We’ll take it and move on.”  THIS IS ANOTHER TOP-FIVE AND THIS TEAM IS GETTING BETTER AND BETTER.  “Yeah we are.  It’s just that as a driver you always want more and when you feel like you’ve got more and you just can’t get it, that’s what is frustrating. It’s not that the guys aren’t trying.  Everybody is doing their part, we’ve just got to do a little bit of work to be able to get up there and be able to contend for wins week in and week out.  Rome wasn’t built in a day.”

 

SAUTER PRESS CONFERENCE

 

“It was good.  We brought the same truck that we ran last week and had a shot to win the race.  We unloaded and we were a little bit off.  We tried some different geometry this week and ended up pretty much going back to what we had last week.  I knew after the second practice session here we had a shot to win the race.  We made a few adjustments that were really big for us.  Just had a lot of obstacles today.  Super-proud of all my guys, we just struggled in the pits today a little bit.  We were able to overcome all of that a couple times and then we ran out of fuel there late getting ready to take the lead.  It’s a long hard day when you’ve got to keep battling.  By the grace of God we stayed on the lead lap.  I was 12th I think there on that last restart and ended up with a fifth-place finish.  Definitely felt like we had the truck to beat, just didn’t get it done today.”  DID YOU HAVE ANY IDEA THAT YOU WERE THAT CLOSE ON FUEL THERE?  “It’s funny because you know the race goes by and you’re constantly focused on hitting your marks and I swear that they told me I could run five, 10 more laps.  So I’m thinking okay, okay but I knew when Harvick pitted that we were close.  We were actu ally going to pit the next time by because the leader forces your hand.  As soon as I came off Turn 4 and he pitted it stared to miss and stumble and by then I was out of fuel and coasted all the way around.  I don’t know how we stayed on the lead lap.  It’s a miracle.”         

 

TAYLER MALSAM, No. 81 ONE EIGHTY TOYOTA:  “We just fought a bad truck all day.  We thought we had a good truck coming in here and it was just tight all day.  Same thing we had last weekend.  Definitely putting this one up on the shelf.  Doug [Wolcott, crew chief] and the crew did a good job working on it.  No cautions killed us 'cause we couldn’t really work on it like we wanted to.  It was a long fought race.  We came out with no scratches and still have a truck left for a backup.”  WAS THE TRUCK TIGHT OR LOOSE?  “Just tight all day, couldn’t even get it to turn.  It was terrible tight in traffic, terrible tight by itself and just no fun.”   

 

JAMES BUESCHER, No. 10 INTERNATIONAL MAXXFORCE DIESEL FORD:  “Pretty much struggled all weekend.  Struggled in practice, qualified decent and the start of the race wasn’t all terrible.  Started out tight and tried to work on it and the truck was real inconsistent, never the same thing two laps in a row so it was real hard to figure out what it was going to do when you go bailing off in the corner.  Got into it with a couple of different people, people not quite clear trying to take our nose off and then came into pit on the last pit stop and put the left rear tire on the right rear tire and made it even harder to hang on to for the last seven laps so we just kind of milked it to the finish line and finished the race one lap down.”       

  

Raybestos® brand brake and chassis parts are produced by affiliated companies in Affinia’s Global Brake and Chassis Group, the leading manufacturer of braking systems and chassis parts in the transportation industry.  The brake line includes everything from brake drums to rotors, pads, shoes and hydraulic parts, while the chassis line features tie rods, ball points, idler arms and sway bar links.  Raybestos brand braking and chassis systems are also the only systems used by NASCAR’s Joe Gibbs Racing in competition.  For more information about Raybestos brakes, visit Raybestos.com.  For more information on Raybestos Chassis visit RaybestosChassis.com

 

Affinia Group Inc. is a global leader in the on and off-highway replacement products and service industry.  In North America the Affinia family of brands includes WIX® Filters, Raybestos®, AIMCO® and BrakePro® brake products, and McQuay-Norris® and Raybestos™ Chassis parts.  South American and European brands include Nakata®, Filtron®, Urba® and Quinton Hazell®.  For more information, visit affiniagroup.com.


* Affinia Group Inc.’s affiliated companies include Brake Parts Inc. WIX Filtration Corp LLC, Affinia Products  Corp LLC and other high quality manufacturers of the Affinia family of brands.

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This report was provided by an outside PR source and posted by Beth Lunkenheimer.

 

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