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in any series or event at LVMS.
That includes Trucks, Busch and NEXTEL Cup, where
he finished ninth in A.J. Foyt's No. 14 car in
2001. Last year, Hornaday finished ninth in the
Sam's Town 300. Hornaday is listed by the odds
makers at 15-1 to win the event
Weekend Plans - Hornaday spent his leap year off
weekend signing autographs at the Detroit (MI)
Autorama Hot Rod show for sponsor GM Performance
parts. The show, held at the
Cobo
Center,
is the largest event of its kind in the
U.S.
This weekend, Hornaday will take part in the
Speedway Children's Charities auction at Sam's
Town on Thursday night in
Las Vegas,
NV.
He will also be on hand Sunday morning at LVMS for
a Fan Forum with GM Goodwrench driver Kevin
Harvick. After the forum, Hornaday will head over
to
Ft. Worth,
TX,
for a two-day test at Texas Motor Speedway.
The Test in the West - Hornaday and his Richard
Childress Racing team tested at LVMS back in
January. The test went well for Hornaday and the
ACDelco team. They were the first car on the
track on day one and one of the first to leave,
after practicing for half the day on day two.
Tire wear seemed to be the biggest issue of the
test as a green track and the new generation
Goodyear tire made for shorter runs. Hornaday
liked the combination and felt the test was a
success, but also noted that weather could change
everything.
What ya' Haulin'? - The ACDelco transporter
will unload chassis No. 023 at Las Vegas Motor
Speedway. It is the same car that Kevin Harvick
drove to a second place finish at LVMS last year
and also to victory lane in
Michigan
last August.
Ron Hornaday on the Sam's Town 300
You tested at LVMS in January. How did the new
spoiler rule and the new generation Goodyear tire
change how you race the track?
"I think the big difference was the tire wear. We
wore out every set of tires we had in just a day
and a half. The spoiler rule wasn't a big deal.
I think when you get in a pack, the spoiler issue
might come up or when the tires are worn out.
Goodyear gave us exactly what we wanted. The
drivers have the control again, so its not a tire
problem. It is what it is.
"This year's race is going to be tire
conservation. I think we will have to approach it
almost like
Darlington or
Rockingham. Now all that could change once we
start practicing and more rubber gets put down,
but from the test, you have to finesse the car
around the track to save the tires. You never had
to do that in the past."
You have a great streak going of seven straight
top-10s at LVMS. In fact, you have never finished
outside the top-10. What makes you so successful
at this track?
"I just enjoy racing here. The track is nice and
wide so you can race wherever you want. I think
the fact that I have raced here in all three major
NASCAR series gives me an advantage, because the
trucks handle different than the Busch cars. And
the Busch cars are different than the Cup cars.
So you have to adapt to whatever you are driving.
It's the same thing that happens when you car
isn't handling right. You have to adapt. And I
think the number of laps I have here and the
different styles of vehicles I have driven here,
help me now when the car isn't exactly right."
You are a West Coast icon in motorsports with all
of your success in
California.
When you come to
Las Vegas,
does it feel like homecoming?
"It really does. I'm from
California
and we have a ton of fans from there. But it
seems like
Las Vegas
is another of my homes. The fans out there have
been great to me. They are awesome. I get more
requests for appearances there than just about
anywhere else. Plus, it's a short drive from
Southern California,
so a lot of our friends and people we raced with
out there can come over for the races and say hi.
I really enjoy going out there. It is one of my
favorite weekends of the year." |