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darlingtonraceway.com 200 - Ron Hornaday Notes
Hornaday heads to Darlington looking to continue strong runs
March 10, 2003 (Darlington, S.C.) The NASCAR Busch Series heads into race
number four of the 2003 season and with three good races under his belt, Ron
Hornaday hopes that his ACDelco team can continue to build momentum towards
a championship season. After notching his first top-10 of the season,
Hornaday is seventh in the NBS points standings. And in the past,
Darlington Raceway's been a track that has been pivotal as far as points are
concerned. With it's tricky egg shape, narrow abrasive surface and
unforgiving walls, Darlington Raceway is indeed "too tough to tame!"
Ron Hornaday, driver of the No. 2 ACDelco Chevrolet, comments on racing at
Darlington Raceway:
You are currently seventh in points. Has the season met your expectations
so far?
"Yes and no. I am very pleased right now with how good these ACDelco cars
have been when we unload them. The guys back at RCR do a great job of
getting the cars ready for whatever track we are going to. At every track
we've been to so far, the car has been good right of the truck. I think
that speaks to the kind of equipment that Richard Childress expects his
drivers to have. And I think that shows how strong a team we have."
"With that said, we really thought we would be better in race trim than we
have been. We have struggled a little bit with finding the balance and the
feel I like. At both Rockingham and Las Vegas, I really had a hard time
feeling the nose of the car. Rick Viers and I went back through the notes
and think we may have come across something that will help me feel the car
better at Darlington. And that kind of attention to details is what has me
so excited about this ACDelco team. I just feel like we can win every time
out. So we are disappointed that we haven't won yet, but I think that shows
just how tough the Busch Series is. It also shows how good this ACDelco
team is. We haven't run close to our potential, yet we still have a car
that has run in the top-five at every race and that is seventh in points."
Darlington Raceway is a classic NASCAR track. They say it is "too tough to
tame." You have only one top-10 finish there. What makes it so tough?
"Everything! Darlington is a tough track, but it actually is a lot of fun
when you are hooked up. My stats don't look very good there, but I have had
some good runs at the track, but had something break on the car. That's how
Darlington is. It can bite you at any time. The track is so narrow. There
isn't a lot of room for side-by-side racing once the tires wear, but yet we
attempt every race and usually it doesn't work. In the No. 14 car, I was
running in the top-20 and a car came under me in turn three and just came
right up in the middle of the corner and put us both in the wall. I guess
he thought he was clear or something. But that is what can happen. I was
happy to ride out the tire run, and then the next moment, I'm in the wall.
So you have to race the track, but you have to hope the guy next to you is
doing the same."
Your teammate Johnny Sauter tested the No. 21 RCR Chevrolet at Darlington
Raceway last week. In fact the No. 21 tested at both Rockingham and Las
Vegas. You haven't tested this year, outside of Daytona. Are you able to
learn anything from your teammates test?
"We have learned a lot from both Johnny (Sauter) and Kevin's (Harvick)
tests. I think that is why we have been prepared so well right off the
truck. We can get a great base setup from what they have learned and Rick
(Viers) and I get feedback from Butch Hylton as well, so I think it helps a
great deal. What we haven't learned for us is balance and feel. That takes
track time and with the rain in Rockingham and Las Vegas, we just haven't
had enough practice time under race conditions."
"Our goal was to try to save as many tests as we could until late in the
season. When you are running for a championship, they can be beneficial.
With only five tests available this year, we felt like we needed to try and
save them as long as we could. We have scheduled our first test for
Richmond in April, so hopefully we will continue to race strong and have
some tests for down the stretch."
DID YOU KNOW?
* Ron Hornaday began his 2002 Busch Series campaign at Darlington
Raceway. Hornaday substituted for Ricky Hendrick in the No. 5 Chevrolet of
Hendrick Motorsports after Hendrick was injured at Las Vegas. In fact, it
was Hornaday's first NBS start of that season. Rick Hendrick had hired
Hornaday to run his Chevrolet Silverado in the NASCAR Truck Series for 2002,
but abandoned those plans after Ricky's accident. Hornaday ran six races
for HMS before the younger Hendrick returned to the No. 5 car.
* Hornaday competed in the fall Busch Series event in the No. 26
Chevrolet for Carroll Racing. He replaced Lyndon Amick at Loudon, N.H. and
finished the season driving for Dave Carroll. During his tenure in the No.
26, Hornaday notched eight top-10, five top-five, and one pole in route to a
17th place finish in points, despite not running a full schedule.
* Hornaday learned his way around Darlington with the help of
seven-time NASCAR Winston Cup Champion Dale Earnhardt. In 2000, Hornaday
stepped up to the Busch Series from the Trucks, taking over the No. 3 car
from Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Since the Truck Series did not race at Darlington
at that time, Earnhardt manned the radio and talked Hornaday around the
track. During the race he offered advise to Hornaday and helped him find
the groove that led to an eighth place finish in his first race at the
track.
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