RUSTY WALLACE LOOKING AT "BIG PICTURE" AT LOUDON
-Miller Lite Dodge Driver Focused On Making Points Cut In Next Eight Races-
LOUDON, N.H. (July 20, 2004) - "Diddly-squat."
No, that's not a new competition just added to the 2004 Olympic
Games set to begin in Athens, Greece, on August 13. And no, that is not the
name of a hot new bluegrass band hailing from Eastaboga, Ala.
Instead, that is what Miller Lite Dodge driver Rusty Wallace
replied when asked what his current points deficit to NASCAR NEXTEL Cup
standings leader Jimmy Johnson meant.
"With the new points system, the difference between us and first
means diddly-squat," said Wallace, as his team was preparing for this
weekend's Siemens 300 on the 1.058-mile New Hampshire International
Speedway. "But, the difference to 10th-place in the standings means
everything in the world to us."
Under this year's new point system, after the first 26 races,
all drivers in the NASCAR Top 10 and any others within 400 points of the
leader will earn a berth in the "Chase for the Championship." All drivers
in the "chase" will have their point totals adjusted. The first-place driver
in the standings will begin the chase with 5,050 points; the second-place
driver will start with 5,045, etc. Incremental five-point drops will
continue through the list of title contenders.
Wallace, winner of the inaugural NASCAR NEXTEL Cup race at NHIS
back in 1993, currently is 17th in the point standings entering this
weekend. He is 208 points behind Penske teammate Ryan Newman, who holds
down the 10th spot.
"We're coming into Loudon (NHIS) looking at the big picture and
focused on getting all we can out of it," said Wallace, whose track record
boasts the one win, six top-fives, 11 top-10s and two poles in the 18 races
held there to date. "We're heading into all of the upcoming races
concentrating on winning, but looking at really making up the lost ground at
the end of the day.
"We probably had a little different perception about that 11th-place finish
we had at Chicago the last time out," said Wallace, who finished 11th in the
July 11 Tropicana 400 at Chicagoland Speedway. "First of all, it was the
best finish we've ever had at that track. Second, it was our best finish in
two months (since finishing 10th at Lowe's Motor Speedway on May 30), so we
know we're headed back in the right direction. But most important is the
fact that we shaved off more than 50 points in our move to get back up there
in the top 10. (Wallace was 260 points out of 10th entering the Chicago
race.)
"We don't expect to make up that much ground every week between now and
Richmond, and with eight races to go until then (through the Sept. 11
Richmond race) we don't have to," offered Wallace. "But when you look at
the races we have coming up, there are definitely some that offer great
potential for us. We've had success at all the tracks coming up, but when
you consider places like Watkins Glen, Bristol and a few others, those are
tracks where there could likely be big swings as far as the points go.
"We just have to go into each week from here on out and get everything we
can out of them. We can't afford to shoot ourselves in the foot again like
we have, that's for sure. It's no good to dwell on the past, but that deal
at Sears Point (Infineon Raceway) keeps on coming back to haunt me. We had
fourth-place wrapped up and ran out of gas (finishing 28th). They said we
lost 82 points right there on that one lap. We'd be about three spots
further up (in the standings) and only 125 (actually 126 points) out of the
top 10, if not for that. But that's behind us now and we can't change what
happened. We just have to learn from it and not make any more mistakes."
Wallace is confident that his Larry Carter-led Miller Lite-sponsored team
can make up additional ground this weekend at New Hampshire.
"They added the soft walls last year and the Bahre Family continues to make
improvements there," said Wallace, who will be racing his "57 car" this
weekend at NHIS. The car debuted in the May race last year at Richmond and
Wallace finished 10th, even after an early race altercation. Wallace raced
it only one other time since - last September at NHIS. "I still don't think
they'll have a great track until they put some banking in the turns. I've
probably been too vocal in the past, so that's all I'll say about that.
Anyhow, we've had a lot of good runs at Loudon and we hope to keep up that
pace there this weekend. In the last race there last fall, we had a great
car. We were supposed to start 11th, but we lost an engine and had to start
from the rear. We had to come from 43rd and got up to finish sixth, so we
had a super car that day. We're bringing back that same car, so we know we
can be as strong as anything out there. As always, with it being so
difficult to pass on that layout, the track position situation will be a
chief factor in who wins the race. We hope we can run strong and make all
the right calls to be there battling for the win at the end."
Qualifying to set the 43-car field is set for Friday at 3:05 p.m. The
Siemens 300, the 19th of the 36 events on the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup tour, will
take the green flag on Sunday at 2:00 p.m. EDT. The 300-lap, 317.4-mile
race will air live on TNT-TV and MRN Radio will provide live radio coverage.
Notes of interest:
--Rusty and his Larry Carter-led Miller Lite team racing their "57 car" this
weekend at New Hampshire - the same car that was used there last September.
We were supposed to start 11th, but we lost an engine and had to start from
the rear. We had to come from 43rd and got up to finish sixth, so we had a
super car that day. We're bringing back that same car, so we know we can be
as strong as anything out there. As always, with it being so difficult to
pass on that layout, the track position situation will be a chief factor in
who wins the race. We hope we can run strong and make all the right calls
to be there battling for the win at the end." (see release for more)
--Eight races to make up 208 point (current deficit to 10th) - but some of
Rusty's greatest tracks coming up. Among them (per the schedule) are: New
Hampshire (1 win), Pocono (4 wins), Watkins Glen (2 wins), Michigan (5
wins), Bristol (9 wins), California (1 win) and Richmond (6 wins). He has
recorded 51 percent (28 of 55) of his career wins on tracks included on that
list.
--Steve Wallace's fifth-place finish at Newport (Tenn.) Speedway last
Saturday night has moved him up to sixth in the UARA-Stars point standings -
and into the lead for the Hobart Sales and Service rookie-of-the-year title.
"We were at the top of the speed chart in practice and thought we had a good
shot at the pole," explained Steve, the 16-year-old son of Rusty and Patti.
"It rained just before we qualified. I went out third and on stickers.
With no rubber on the track, we wound up starting 16th. We ran a strong
race and were up to fourth when the 27 car (Lee Tissott) got us from the
rear at the end and we fell to fifth. We're getting stronger and stronger.
We have us a brand new little Townsend (chassis manufacturer) hot rod ready
for our next race at Anderson in two weeks (on Aug. 6)." (gosh, doesn't he
sound so much like his dad?)
--"Reality leaves a lot to the imagination." -John Lennon