WALLACE HOPING TO CONTINUE 2004 SHORT-TRACK STRENGTH IN SATURDAY'S CHEVY
AMERICAN REVOLUTION 400 AT RICHMOND
-Miller Lite Dodge Driver Has A Win & Runner-Up Finish; "The Predator" Back
In Action-
RICHMOND, Va. (May 11, 2004) - Miller Lite Dodge driver Rusty Wallace is off
to his best start on the short tracks along the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup tour in
seven years and he looks to continue his bullring prowess in Saturday's
Chevy American Revolution 400 at Richmond International Raceway.
His record after the first two short-track races of the 2004 season boasts a
win and a runner-up finish. The last time Wallace showed that level of
strength was during the 1997 season, when he won in March at Richmond and
finished second at Bristol that April. Prior to 1997, you have to go all
the way back to Wallace's 10-win 1993 season to match that competitive
level.
"We have got our act together on the short tracks, that's for sure," said
Wallace, whose win in the April 18 race at Martinsville, Va., was his 25th
on race tracks less than a mile in length and 55th overall. "With what we'
ve faced during the last few weeks - with the crashes in both races taking
their toll - I can't think of a better track for us to be going to right
now.
"The new surface is as smooth as silk and fast as lightning," Wallace said
of his first-hand knowledge of the track's recent repaving job. "We had the
Martinsville-winning car testing there last week (May 5) and were super
impressed with the job they did on the track and all the other improvements
they've made. It's really a nice job that they did. All the transitions in
the turns and the banking remained the same so it'll be the usual great
racing everyone expects to see at Richmond. I don't anticipate any changes
at all there. We'll be absolutely flying around the bottom of the place and
I think the second groove will come right back in as soon as we get some
laps on the new surface.
"The last two races have been really tough on us, but we have a solid team
around us now and we can weather the storm and get right back up there in
the points," said Wallace, whose involvement in crashes at Talladega and
California have dropped him from eighth in the point standings to 14th
entering this weekend's Richmond action. "We know that we have a car
capable of getting the job done because this car (PRS-70) won at
Martinsville and we named it "The Predator" after that big win. Taking a
proven winner back to the track is certainly a confidence and morale
booster."
When asked about the notable increase in aggressive driving this season,
Wallace is quick to make his point.
"If you mess with this dog, he's gonna bite you back," Wallace said with a
chuckle. "But if you look back at us getting knocked around in the early
going in both the Bristol and Martinsville races - it shows that you can't
focus on retaliation and get overly aggressive. On the short tracks, you
have to save your stuff and have what you need at the end. At the end of
the day, there were a bunch of guys who had beaten and banged all race
long - abused their stuff - and I didn't see any of them up there with us
fighting for the win. With a second at Bristol and the win at Martinsville,
I'd say we have a pretty good handle on knowing what it takes to get the job
done on the short tracks this year. We're looking to keep turning up the
wick at Richmond."
Wallace enters Richmond as the track's career statistical leader. The
record book shows that in 40 races, he has six wins and three poles, along
with 21 top-five finishes, 28 top-10 finishes and $1,642,644 in career money
won. His most recent Richmond win came in the spring race of 1997, while
his most recent pole came in the spring race of 2000.
He has led 3,023 laps at Richmond International Raceway, more than any other
active driver. Wallace has a 7.612 average finish in 31 races at Richmond
on the current .750-mile layout, the best of all drivers. He has an 8.95
average finish in 40 races overall at Richmond, also the best among all
active drivers.
Wallace started 17th and finished 10th in last May's Richmond race. He
started 17th again there last fall, but pulled out a fifth-place finish.
"We bounced back from an early run-in there in the spring race and the car
there last fall was getting stronger and stronger at the end," Wallace
recalled of last year's races at RIR. "We think we could have won it if we
'd had about 50 more laps of racing. We just hope to qualify better there
this year and not have to make up so much ground in getting up to the
front."
Friday's 3:10 p.m. single round of qualifying will set the field for
Saturday's race. The final "Happy Hour" practice session is scheduled for
Friday from 6:00 p.m. until 7:15 p.m. Saturday's $4,897,954 Chevy American
Revolution 400 begins at 7:30 p.m. EDT and the 400-lap, 300-mile battle
features live coverage by FX-TV and MRN Radio beginning 30 minutes earlier.
Notes of interest:
--Rusty is a featured guest in today's (Tuesday, 5/11) NASCAR NEXTEL Cup
Media Teleconference at 1:30 p.m. EDT. Here is the scoop:
WHEN: Tuesday, May 11, 1:30 PM ET.
WHAT:
In preparation for the 20th anniversary of the NASCAR all-star race on
Saturday night, May 22, NASCAR and Lowe's Motor Speedway will host a press
conference / teleconference to announce the top three "Most Memorable
Moments" in NASCAR NEXTEL All-Star Challenge history. The voting was done by
an expert panel of NASCAR industry professionals, including promoters,
drivers and media.
WHO:
H.A. "Humpy" Wheeler, president and general manager of Lowe's Motor
Speedway, along with Rusty Wallace, Robert Yates, Larry McReynolds and
Richard Childress among others.
--Rusty Wallace posted a DNF in his first race on the current .750-mile
configuration at Richmond, completing just 18 laps. From that inaugural race
thru the spring race in 2000, he had completed all but five of the 9,200
laps raced in those 23 races at the Virginia track. He posted his second DNF
on the current configuration in September 2000, completing 313 of 400 laps
after suffering engine failure. He has completed all but five of the 2,393
laps raced at Richmond since that second DNF.
--Rusty on car name for his Martinsville-winning car, to be raced again this
weekend at Richmond -- "The Predator" -- "We've been trying to get Bell to
name one of their new models (helicopters) that for some time now," Rusty
explained. "The predator is the ultimate hunter and it strikes like nothing
else. This was a brand new car that won right out of the box. The car
never touched a racetrack until we got to Martinsville. That's quite
impressive."
--"Don't get bogged down. If you carry a grudge, how much does it
eigh?" -Rob Myers