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Mark Martin, driver of the No. 6 Pfizer Taurus, is
coming off a season-high fourth-place finish in last
weekend's Talladega 500. As the NASCAR Winston Cup
Series prepares for Sunday's NAPA Auto Parts 500 at
California Speedway, a race he won in 1998, Mark and
crew chief Jimmy Fennig spoke about a variety of
topics as part of this week's NASCAR Winston Cup
teleconference.
Following is a transcript of that interview.
NASCAR:
Mark Martin, Driver --6-- Pfizer Taurus --
YOU'VE HAD SOME PRETTY GOOD RESULTS AT CALIFORNIA?
Mark:
"We have and we were really running good in the race
we broke our engine, but I've been fortunate out there
to have real strong race cars and we're hoping to have
one this week."
NASCAR:
WHAT'S THE KEY TO GETTING AROUND THAT TRACK?
Mark:
"I think it's the same as everywhere else, it's
getting through the corners fast and having a car
that is secure -- that turns well and is real secure.
The straightaways are long and you've got to go
down those too, but where you really win and lose
is going through those turns."
NASCAR:
HOW MANY DRIVERS ACTUALLY PICK UP A WRENCH AND WORK
ON THEIR OWN CARS?
Mark:
"I'd have to say they'd be terrified of it. They might
mess something up. These race drivers these days work
really hard and they have a tremendous focus, but that
focus doesn't happen to be on turning bolts and
screws. If you don't do it everyday, it's very
awkward. I worked on my own cars forever and today
I'm just not handy on a car because I'm not able to
use those skills and keep 'em right up to date. If
you get started on something, then you always get
distracted which could lead to not finishing something
properly. It's really not for the part-time guy anymore."
NASCAR:
CAN YOU TALK A LITTLE ABOUT HOW THE ROUSH TEAM HAS
DEVELOPED THIS YEAR AND ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT OF KURT
BUSCH?
Mark:
"The development is that we went to Daytona and, as a
group, didn't run up to our standards. Since then we
hadn't raced another race of that nature, which is a
restrictor plate race. There's been quite a bit of
work done in that area and we went back and made
significant improvement with our stuff there. This is
a very competitive sport and you can't always have the
best stuff because somebody is always out there working
and working in the right area figuring out a way to get
a leg up on the competition. We're fortunate to do that
ourselves from time to time. Kurt Busch is just a truly
incredible talent. He's a fine young man with enormous
talent and reasonably good judgement for the amount of
experience that he has, which will only get better as
he compiles that experience."
NASCAR:
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT GOING TO CALIFORNIA AND THE TRAVEL
INVOLVED?
Mark:
"I don't think we think about it that much. It's
pretty tough on the team, the crews, the truck
drivers, coach driver and souvenir vendors -- things
like that -- it makes it real difficult. That trip
going out is not as bad -- going from Talladega on
out there -- as it is to turn around and be in
Richmond ready to roll on Thursday. It's part of what
we do and it continues to be more difficult all the
time, but we manage."
NASCAR:
WOULD IT BE EASIER TO GO FROM TEXAS TO CALIFORNIA
INSTEAD OF BOUNCING BACK AND FORTH?
Mark:
"I don't think so. I don't think it makes any sense
to do it that way either. No one can stay out there.
We all have to come home. The drivers have to come
home and take care of their business. The teams have
to come home and take care of their business --
unload cars and re-load cars and work at the shop.
It's not as simple as going to California and staying
out there for three weeks or out west and staying out
there for three weeks and racing. First of all, no
one wants to be gone from home for that length of
time. Even though you're only in your own bed a
couple of nights and see your kids or something,
at least you do. I don't think that would really help
us that much."
NASCAR:
IS THERE ANY DIFFERENCE IN 500 MILES AT TALLADEGA AND
500 MILES AT CALIFORNIA?
Mark:
"Absolutely. It is a lot more stressful to do the
Talladega race. Physically, it's probably equally
demanding, but mentally there's a real premium to
racing in a pack -- a restrictor plate drafting pack
like we did for 500 miles."
NASCAR:
HOW IMPORTANT IS THE DRAFT AT CALIFORNIA? DOES IT PLAY
A ROLE IN CONSERVING FUEL AND MAINTAINING YOUR POSITION?
Mark:
"Let me tell you something about fuel mileage. I
think that the real fuel mileage is made by the engine
builder and the carburetor tuner. You can say that
drivers save fuel and you can say you're following
and saving fuel, and you might save a half-a-lap of
gas or something like that, but the five laps are
saved by engine builders and carburetor tuners. It's
just not projected that way. Anybody who does real
good brags that their driver is saving gas and they're
smarter than everybody else, but in the end it comes
down to your engine configuration and gearing and
tuning of the carburetor and those kind of things.
The draft is not super-important in California."
NASCAR:
HOW DID THE NASCAR FOR DUMMIES BOOK PROJECT COME ABOUT?
Mark:
"They contacted my office with an interest in doing
the book, so my business manager sort of put it
together. One thing led to another and now the book
is out. We hooked up with a writer that we were
comfortable with, that was in motorsports, and were
able to do something. It's not for an expert. It's
for an amateur or a novice and has a lot of
explanations about things people have questions
about."
NASCAR:
HAVE PEOPLE FIGURED OUT HOW TALLADEGA NEEDS TO BE WITH
THE FACT THERE WAS NO ACCIDENT OR WAS IT JUST A ONE
RACE SITUATION?
Mark:
"Talladega had the potential to be just disastrous and
just because we got through that race without incident
doesn't mean that it wasn't the most dangerous race of
the year for us to drive in. There is more room there
than there is at Daytona, so with the same rules at
Daytona it's even more difficult to run a 43-car draft
pack like we did. As you see, we ran 500 miles without
a caution flag and still had a 38-car draft at the end
of the race and that is extremely difficult and
hazardous. It's good for ticket sales and it's good for
TV ratings, but they're awfully tough conditions to
race under. It's just incredible that we were able to
get through the thing without triggering one of those
major disasters."
NASCAR:
IS THE SITUATION SOLVED OR WAS THIS A ONE-TIME THING?
Mark:
"I think if they would have had a caution that we
would have had a lot more wrecks. Cautions breed
accidents as well. I think when you don't have any
cautions you usually don't have any cautions. Once
they start, you just keep having 'em. I meant what
I said. I said all those drivers deserve a gold medal
for what they did there."
NASCAR:
CAN YOU COMMENT ON SHAWNA ROBINSON TRYING TO QUALIFY
FOR THE RACE THIS WEEKEND?
Mark:
"It's extremely difficult for women to make it in
motorsports and there's no physical reason why the
Winston Cup champion couldn't be a female. There's
absolutely no reason, but it is a difficult thing to
break into. It's difficult to grow up as a
five-year-old driving stuff and work your way up
through the short track and all the way up through
NASCAR to be a champion. Typically along the way
there are distractions -- more distractions of your
ultimate goal being a female than being a male a lot
of times. Things change and lives change and
priorities change sometimes more. I'm involved in
quarter-midget racing with my son and I see a lot of
girls driving these cars and driving 'em well. I
see girls beating the best guys on the race track in
quarter-midgets. It's possible. Those are the
champions of the future and if those girls don't get
distracted along the way with some of the things in
life -- and if they can keep their eye in the target
and that's really what they want to do -- there's no
reason why they can't make it. Shawna is a great race
car driver and I'm sure she'll have a good race."
NASCAR:
NASCAR TINKERED WITH SOME THINGS
AT TALLADEGA WITH THE GREENHOUSE AND STEEPER
WINDSHIELDS. IS THAT THE KIND OF APPROACH THAT MIGHT
SOLVE SOME OF THE PROBLEMS OUT THERE OR NOT?
Mark:
"It might be able to help it. I applaud them for what
they're trying to do on one hand. Being a dumb little
racer as myself, I see that as a band-aid on the real
problem which is it's a 230 mile and hour race track
that we're trying to race at 185. It's gonna be very
difficult to do. It would almost be safer for the
drivers if we were racing 220 miles an hour because
there certainly wouldn't be a 38-car draft at the end
of 500 miles without a yellow flag. The problem is that
separating the cars to some degree is not good for
ticket sales and it's not good for TV ratings,
which are very important in this sport. From a
competitors standpoint, it would have been a lot
better if it would have been three or four packs of
six, but that certainly wouldn't be as good for the
ratings. It depends what side of the fence you're on
as to what is your most important priority. Hopefully,
you can solve it all, but it's gonna be extremely
difficult to solve with the configuration of the race
track in present form. You don't have all that problem
at a two-mile race track like California. We'll come
out there and race and no one will say a word, but
Daytona and Talladega are big ol' race tracks. These
cars are capable of a lot more than they were in the
sixties and seventies, so it's a tough situation. I'm
not gonna defend NASCAR's point, nor will I stab 'em
in the back either. I'm just saying it's an incredibly
difficult situation that even the competitors don't
have an answer for -- other than reconfiguring the
race track."
NASCAR:
IF YOU COULD BUILD A TRACK, WHAT WOULD YOU MODEL IT
AFTER?
Mark:
"I would throw in a Dover, minus the concrete. There's
nothing wrong with these mile-and-a-half speedways
their building today, but I wouldn't build anything
larger than a mile-and-a-half, if I was building one
because some day two-mile race tracks are gonna be a
problem like the two-and-a-halves. These cars keep
getting faster and faster and some day Atlanta might
face that problem. California could face that problem,
although with the banking that's there it's gonna be
quite a long time before you every have to race that
kind of problem there. The race cars are just capable
of doing a lot more than they were 25 years ago and
you have to keep that in mind when you're building
these race tracks. You don't want to get into a
situation where you have to start restricting them.
When you restrict them, it's like putting the cruise
control on at 65 going down the interstate. Everything
is fine. You can run three lanes wide, four lanes wide,
but then when you run up on road construction and the
lanes keep going straight because you have to turn
because of the barriers, you get nervous all of a
sudden because you hope everybody does the right
thing. If one person does the wrong thing, you
all wreck. So, that's where we're at right now with
these big ol' race tracks like Daytona and
Talladega."
NASCAR:
HOW IS IT NOT RACING BUSCH THIS SEASON AND WHAT CAN YOU DO
NOW THAT YOU DIDN'T BEFORE?
Mark:
"A little bit of piece of mind. I'm able to give a
little bit more time and focus to the Winston Cup deal
and I'm able to give a little bit more time this year
and focus to my son's racing. But, for the most part,
it's just cut a lot of mania out of my life and given
me a chance to have a little piece of mind. I have
enjoyed not being in the Busch races so much that I
can guarantee I'll never go back to a schedule like
I was trying to do prior. I won't say I would never
run Busch races again because I will if the situation
is right, but I won't do it and run 38 Winston Cup
races and 14 Busch races. That's ridiculous."
NASCAR:
IT WAS HARDER LAST YEAR DOING THAT THAN 10 YEARS AGO?
Mark:
"Last year was the hardest because the media demand,
the press demand -- the sponsor demand was not that
much greater than it has been in the past, but to a
small degree -- and then the fan demand is just
astronomical. Trying to get from one car to the other
in practice and drive and not have time to do
interviews, not have time to sign autographs, not
have time to speak to the TV cameras that want you,
is actually very stressful. That stress finally wears
you down. When you're a young man it takes a while
for it to wear you down, but I've been doing it a
long time and the demand is greater. The other thing
you have to remember is I've been doing it so long
that eventually something had to give. I'm really
enjoying not racing the Busch races."
NASCAR:
DO YOU THINK DOWN-SCALING THE ENGINES WOULD BE GOOD?
WHAT WOULD YOU DO?
Mark:
"I don't think that's the answer for Daytona and
Talladega at all. I completely and totally disagree
with that. I don't know that anything you do to make
these cars have 450 horsepower, I think, is all gonna
run relatively the same on the race track no matter
how you achieve it. So I don't know that downsizing
the motors would really solve any kind of problem for
us. I'm not saying it wouldn't because I'm not very
smart, but in my mind I would have a big question mark
on that. I think something needs to be done about
engines unrestricted to control costs. It's out of
control now with the engine costs and the things we're
doing with these engines. It's just crazy, but I don't
know that a small cubic engine is necessarily the
answer either. There might be other ways to skin that
cat, but I don't think anybody is ready to talk about
that just yet."
NASCAR:
JIMMY FENNIG, Crew Chief --6-- Pfizer Taurus -- WHAT'S
THE KEY TO GETTING AROUND THE TRACK AT CALIFORNIA?
Jimmy:
"California is a nice place, a nice smooth race
track. It seems like you have to be a little bit on
the free side there to get around fast enough, but
it's a nice, smooth race track. You can do a lot of
racing out there."
NASCAR:
DO YOU FIND THAT MOST DRIVERS DON'T WORK ON THEIR
CARS THESE DAYS?
Jimmy:
"Yeah, I haven't seen any of the drivers really
turning a wrench. They work for race teams that have
professional mechanics that do that. Years ago you
would always see the drivers doing it, but nowadays
the teams have enough people where the driver doesn't
even have to worry about it."
NASCAR:
WHAT CAN YOU DO TO SAVE FUEL AT CALIFORNIA AND HOW
CAN ENGINES BECOME MORE COST-EFFICIENT?
Jimmy:
"The gas mileage, that's usually Jack's department.
Jack works real hard on tuning his carburetors. He'll
get them as lean as possible to burn the least amount
of gas that he can. That's in the jetting of the
carburetor, where he'll got down on jet sizes and
really tweak his carburetor for fuel mileage. In the
future I wish NASCAR would, as far as the open motors
go, get rid of qualifying motors. It takes so much
time and money to build qualifying motors and you're
actually looking at two different types of motors --
qualifying motors versus race motors. You have two
different expenses there. I just wish they would have
one motor where you practiced, qualified and
raced."
NASCAR:
HAVE TIRES ALLOWED YOU TO SIT DOWN BEFORE A RACE AND
FIGURE OUT STRATEGY OR DOES IT DEPEND HOW THE RACE
DEVELOPS?
Jimmy:
"Sometimes it depends on how the race develops,
but Goodyear has a good tire this year. We don't
have any problems with the tire Goodyear has, but
I think the key factor is the competition is so
tough that track position is more important than
actually putting on four new tires."
NASCAR:
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE TRAVEL SCHEDULE?
Jimmy:
"The big thing is getting the hauler back from
California. It'll probably get back here Tuesday
and the crews will get back probably Monday morning
on the airplane. They'll have Monday off to rest and
maybe Tuesday we'll be working, but it usually takes
about a day-and-a-half because we're on the red-eye
flight coming back where we're up all day and all
night. It takes a while for your body to get rested
up for Richmond, so probably Wednesday we'll be back
at full force when the truck gets back."
NASCAR:
WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE THE TRAVEL MORE GEOGRAPHICALLY
BALANCED?
Jimmy:
"No matter what, we've still got to come home to the
base. We've still got to come back to our shop and
re-load the vehicles because Richmond takes an
entirely different car than we run at California and
Talladega is different than California. You still
have to come back to your base and re-stock your
truck, so there's really no way out of it."
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