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ROUSH FENWAY RACING - PHOENIX ADVANCE

Thursday November 12, 2009

 

Phoenix Driver/Sponsor Line up…

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
David Ragan – No. 6 UPS Ford
Greg Biffle – No. 16 3M Ford
Matt Kenseth – No. 17 USG Ford
Jamie McMurray – No. 26 Irwin Ford
Carl Edwards – No. 99 Aflac Ford

NASCAR Nationwide Series
David Ragan – No. 6 Discount Tire Ford
Matt Kenseth – No. 16 CitiFinancial Ford
Carl Edwards – No. 60 Valvoline Ford

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Colin Braun – No. 6 Con-way Freight F-150



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Roush Fenway Phoenix Fast Facts…

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
●2009 Phoenix Lineup – David Ragan/No. 6 UPS Ford; Greg Biffle/No.
16 3M Ford; Matt Kenseth/No. 17 USG Ford; Jamie McMurray/No. 26 Irwin;
Carl Edwards/No. 99 Aflac Ford.

●In 97 starts, Roush Fenway Racing has five wins, one pole, 29
top-five and 46 top-10 finishes.  The team has finished inside the top
10/47.4 percent of the time.

●Roush Fenway drivers have completed 95.9 percent of their laps run
at Phoenix and have an average starting position of 17.8 and an average
finishing position of 14.7.

●Mark Martin won the first of five races for Roush Fenway at Phoenix
in 1993.  He led 212 laps and crossed the line .17 seconds ahead of
Ernie Irvan in front of 87,000 spectators.

●Roush Fenway’s five wins break down as follows: Mark Martin –
’93, Jeff Burton – ’00, ’01, Matt Kenseth – ’02, and Kurt
Busch – spring of ’05.

●Matt Kenseth is one of 12 active Sprint Cup driver to have won at
the 1-mile oval.

●Carl Edwards claimed Roush Fenway’s only Sprint Cup pole at the
1.0 – mile oval in the fall of 2007 clocking in at 27.114 seconds.

●Four of Roush Fenway’s Cup drivers have won at PIR but Matt
Kenseth is the only driver who has won a Cup race.  Kenseth along with
Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle and Jamie McMurray have all won Nationwide
races at the track. (Note: Biffle won in a Brewco car in 2005 and
McMurray won in 2004 while at Ganassi).

●Although he has not claimed a Cup victory in Phoenix, Greg Biffle
has led the most laps in a Cup car out of Roush Fenway’s current
drivers.  Biffle has led 349 laps at the 1.0-mile oval while Kenseth has
led 154.


NASCAR NATIONWIDE SERIES
●2009 Phoenix line up – David Ragan/No. 6 Discount Tire Ford; Matt
Kenseth/No. 16 CitiFinancial Ford; Carl Edwards/No. 60 Valvoline Ford.

●In the spring race at Phoenix, Greg Biffle captured Roush Fenway’s
100th Nationwide win.  The team has gone on to win seven more times
during the 2009 Nationwide season since that momentous win.

●Roush Fenway’s Nationwide teams have made 41 starts at Phoenix.
Those 41 starts have resulted in six wins, four poles, 18 top-five and
27 top-10 finishes.

●In 15 races at PIR, Roush Fenway has captured six wins.  More than
any other team.

●Jeff Burton captured Roush Fenway’s first Nationwide win in the
desert in 2000 and Greg Biffle followed that up with a win in 2001.
Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth both raced to a win from the pole in 2005
and 2006 respectively (only two of three drivers to do so in the series,
Kyle Busch being the third) and Edwards and Biffle have captured the
last two wins at the track (fall ’08 and spring ’09).

●In addition to Edwards and Kenseth’s poles in ’05 and ’06,
Greg Biffle won Roush Fenway’s first Nationwide pole at PIR in 2002.
Carl Edwards is the team’s most recent pole winner with his quick lap
time of 27.129 seconds in the spring of this year.


NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES
●2009 Phoenix line up – Colin Braun/No. 6 Con-way Freight F-150

●Roush Fenway trucks have made 35 starts at Phoenix logging two wins,
13 top-five and 21 top-10 finishes.

●Joe Ruttman won Roush Fenway’s first Truck Series race at PIR in
1997.  Greg Biffle won the team’s second Truck race at the track in
2001.

●Roush Fenway trucks finish inside the top 10/60 percent of the time
and inside the top five/37.1 percent of the time.

●In his last 16 Truck starts, Colin Braun has accrued one win, three
poles, eight top-five and 11 top-10 finishes and has rebounded up to
fifth in the overall point standings.



Roush Fenway Racing Phoenix Story Ideas…


1.Ford’s Dominate Homestead-Miami – As the 2009 season comes to a
close at Homestead-Miami, Roush Fenway Racing drivers are anxiously
awaiting their return to Ford Championship weekend.  The team’s
success at the 1.5-mile oval is un-paralleled with highlights such as
six Sprint Cup wins in only 10 races at the track.  On that note, a
Roush Fenway Sprint Cup driver has won the Homestead race every year
since 2004 (Greg Biffle – ’04, ’05, ’06; Matt Kenseth – ’07;
and Carl Edwards – ’08) and last year, Edwards became the first
driver to win both the Sprint Cup and Nationwide race in the same year
there (adding to the team’s three previous Nationwide wins).  Biffle
is the only driver to win three Cup races in a row and overall the
team’s Sprint Cup stats add up to six wins, three poles, 18
top-five and 21 top-10 finishes.  It’s a storied history for the team
under the palm trees of sunny Florida.  One that they hope to continue
as the season comes to a close.  For more information please contact
Sheri Herrmann at (704)720 – 4632.



In Their Words…

Roush Fenway Racing’s general manager, Robbie Reiser, took time to
answer questions on 2009, 2010 and Roush Fenway’s 2010 Nationwide
rookie candidates.

Roush Fenway general manager ROBBIE REISER:

Q: Talk about the 2009 season overall for Roush Fenway and what you are
doing to prepare for 2010.
A:  “I guess you always look at the positives and the positives are
we won the Daytona 500 for the very first time.  We’ve worked really
hard this year trying to get our cars competitive and get cars into the
“Chase” and we were lucky enough to get two of them in (Greg Biffle
and Carl Edwards) so I guess those are the positives.

“Looking to next season for what we’ve got to do, with four teams
here at Roush Fenway, we’ve got to work hard to get all four of them
in the “Chase”.  That’s the goal to win races and run for a
championship and the more cars we have in the “Chase” the better
opportunity we have.  Obviously the things we’re going to work on from
the performance end is probably to readjust some of the areas in
engineering and try to get that more efficient number one.  And more
productive number two, so we can get answers to our questions at a
faster rate and get them implemented in the cars.  That will be one
thing we’ll look at.

“We’ll also look at working hard on our over-the-wall bunch and
trying to make that better than what it is.  Probably 2009 is the best
it’s ever been across the board with all our teams.  This year we
implemented a couple different systems with our new work out and our new
practice area but they weren’t fully going until the spring.  We can
now go through the off-season having all that in place which should
produce better teams for next season I would hope.

“On the manufacturing side obviously everybody looks to build
lighter, faster, quicker cars and we’ll spend a fair amount of time in
the wind tunnels and a fair amount of time trying to make the cars
better throughout the engineering group and the guys that work on the
cars everyday.  The same chase we have every year is what we’ll be
doing again this winter.  Putting a lot of emphasis on our engineering
structure and how we simulate our cars for what we take to the race
track.”

Q: What are the implications from going to five to four cars for next
year?
A: “On the Roush Fenway side it will help the mechanic side of things
and the teams working together because they’ll have more experienced
people working on less cars so that should help.  Us as a company, that
we build cars for other people, our volume won’t be much less and
engineering becomes a service department so the volume with stuff that
goes through the engineering department will end up being more.”

Q: The new engine was tested at Talladega a couple weeks ago.  How is
everyone feeling about the results?
A: “I think everybody was really excited with how that engine ran at
Talladega and that we were able to run all the laps and finish the race
and the 17 and 6 ran up front with it all the way until the end.  Now
they have the opportunity to take it back, take it apart, take a look at
it and see how everything performed.  Knowing that we didn’t have any
failures, I think everybody has a lot more confidence in looking at
using it for next year at Daytona and beyond.  I think it was a step in
the right direction.”

Q: Roush Fenway just tested the new Nationwide Mustang at Talladega.
What are your thoughts on the new Mustang?
A: “I think the Mustang looks really cool.  Ford should be commended
for the car that they put out there.  That car is a lot sleeker and
looks a lot racier than the car that we use in the Cup Series so I think
everybody’s excited about seeing that part of it.  Performance wise,
we’ve tested it twice now at Richmond and Talladega.  The car seems to
perform real well.  We didn’t have as much speed at Talladega as what
we anticipated but we also took our first shot at that style car to go
out and run a speedway so now that we have been able to collect some
data, we can come back and build a better piece to go back with.”

Q: Roush Fenway will have two rookies in the Nationwide Series next
year.  What’s your take on Colin Braun?
A: “We started out the year a little slow in the Truck Series.
Colin’s been able to get himself straightened out to the point of he
got his first win and a few poles and he’s been real competitive and
worked his way up through the points system.  I think if he didn’t
have the slow start he would be in there contending for a championship
because the way they are running right now is that caliber.  I think
Colin has come a long way this season.  His patience is getting better.
I think he’s starting to understand the races better, how long they
are and where he’s got to have himself in position to finish and not
have himself in spots where he gets in a bad spot to where he gets
wrecked.  I think he’s starting to think his way through these races
and that’s making him a better driver every time he goes and runs.”

Q: And Ricky Stenhouse, Jr.?
A: “Ricky’s a young guy.  He’s going to go through the phase of
trying to understand how long the races are and when he should race and
when he shouldn’t race.  In a lot of cases if you get a driver who
doesn’t have any speed you aren’t able to fix that.  Ricky doesn’t
seem to have that problem.  Ricky’s got plenty of speed and a lot of
ambition and a lot of aggressive driving and in the next year, going in
and running for points and doing all the things he’s got to do, he
needs to harness some of that so that as the year goes by he has the
opportunity to get his first win.”

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

 

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