Jeff Green No. 66 Best Buy Chevrolet Impala SS Martinsville Speedway Preview

MOST RECENT RACE AT MARTINSVILLE: In the October, 2006, NEXTEL Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway, Jeff Green qualified eighth and finished eighth, marking his second top-10 finish of the 2006 season.

Earlier in the week, the management of Haas CNC Racing promoted Holly to the crew chief position with Green’s No. 66 Best Buy Chevrolet team. Holly had been working as crew chief of Johnny Sauter’s No. 00 Haas CNC Racing NASCAR Busch Series team.

That race marked the first weekend Green and Crew Chief Harold Holly had worked together since they dominated the NASCAR Busch Series as driver and crew chief, respectively, of the No. 10 PPC Racing entry, from 1999-2001.

CHASSIS: Chassis No. 406 – Built by Hendrick Motorsports, this chassis is brand new. On Monday, March 19th, the Best Buy team spent several hours “shaking down” this car at South Georgia Motorsports Park, near Valdosta, Ga. The team brought it to Bristol Motor Speedway as the backup car for last weekend’s NEXTEL Cup Series race.

Q&A WITH DRIVER JEFF GREEN:

Several drivers are complaining about the Car of Tomorrow (COT). Given how things went last weekend at Bristol for your team, are you a fan of the COT? “Yeah. I mean, I’m more confident with where our team is at with (the COT) than I am with the other car right now. I was excited about it. I’ve been used to sliding around, so it really wasn’t much different for me, if that’s what (the other drivers) were doing.

“It’s still a race car. It’s still got four tires, four shocks, four springs, and you still have to tune on it to get it the best you can. With the tire situation the way it is, as hard as (the tires) are, I think the other cars would have slid around as much as (the COT) did. I’m sure it will be much different on a mile-and-a-half track, but on a short track, I couldn’t tell much difference.”

Harold Holly (crew chief of the No. 66) said you had to bring out setup notes from four or five years ago and refer to them to set up the COT. Do you think that works in the favor of a veteran driver like yourself, as opposed to some of the younger drivers who weren’t around five years ago? “I don’t know. In terms of the percentage of races I’ve driven, I’ve driven more of the older type setups like we had last weekend, with limited travel on the front end and stuff like that. It’s only been the last three or four years where we’ve been doing what we do on the other cars, with the coil binding. I don’t know if it helps or not, but I’ll take any advantage I can get, so I hope it does work in my favor.”

Is it too early to grade the COT, or do you think it’s going to help competition in the way NASCAR hopes it will? “I think it’s going to be great (for the sport). Anytime you can make the car safer and make the competition closer because everyone’s the same, it’s going to bring the driver back into the equation even more, and the teams with more resources are hopefully not going to excel as much as they have.

“NASCAR’s got the teams in a much smaller box now than they have in the last three or four years, and they police that car so much, it’s much harder to bend the rules or find that gray area. It’s kind of like buying a kit car, basically. If NASCAR does what they say they’re going to do and keep policing the (COT) like they are, it’s going to give the teams without as much funding and without as many resources the chance to be much more competitive than they have been for the last three or four years.”

Martinsville is a track where you’ve run well. Do you think the short tracks suit your driving style more than the 1.5-mile tracks? “I think we’ve performed better at the short tracks lately just because we’ve hit the setup closer or had better race cars at those places. I enjoy them all. I’ve won at big tracks and short tracks, so it really doesn’t matter to me where we’re going on any given weekend.

“I like Martinsville, but I wouldn’t say it’s one of my favorite race tracks. I like that you’re able to sling your car around a lot more. As a driver, it puts it back in your hands and how you drive can definitely make or break what kind of finish you produce that day. I like that.”

With the concern over the potential fragility of the front end splitter on the COT, do you think there will be less bumping and banging than in the past at Martinsville? “I doubt it. There will still be rooting and gouging. I think you’ll see what you saw at Bristol, which is that there will be a lot of guys who are just off on their setups. There will be some who hit it right on, and there will be a few in between. I think that’s why the field at Bristol got spread out as much as it did, and you didn’t see guys take as many chances, maybe.

“With the other car, there would have probably have been 20 or 25 guys on the lead lap, and I think there were only 12 or 14 (at Bristol). I think a lot of guys missed (the right setup) and couldn’t get a handle on it, and I think you’ll see the same thing at Martinsville.”

How much of a relief is it to be comfortably in the top-35 in points this weekend? “It’s one less thing you have to worry about, so it definitely makes Friday a lot easier, but you still have to worry about how you perform on race day. This early in the year, all it takes is one bad day and you can easily be on the outside looking in. With the way we’ve been on the mile-and-a-half tracks this year, we really need a good run this weekend. If we can put a few top-10 or top-15 finishes together and really give ourselves some breathing room, it’ll be a much better situation, but for now we’re just taking it one race at a time.”

JEFF GREEN’S HISTORY AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY: In 13 Cup Series starts at Martinsville Speedway, Jeff Green’s best starting spot was a sixth-place qualifying effort in the Sept., 1998, event, when Green drove for Felix Sabates. His best finish came in Oct., 2004, when he finished seventh while driving the No. 43 car for Petty Enterprises.

HAAS CNC RACING’S HISTORY AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY: In eight Cup Series starts at Martinsville, the Haas CNC Racing team has qualified in the top-15 five times. The team’s best qualifying effort was a fourth-place run by driver Ward Burton in Oct., 2004. The team’s best finish was the eighth-place finish Jeff Green posted in the October, 2006, event.

BEST BUY FUN FACT:

A number of musical artists born in Virginia have CD’s available at Best Buy retail locations, and from www.BestBuy.com, including:

  • Stewart Copeland – Born in Chesapeake, Va., this drummer is about to embark on a 30th-anniversary reunion tour with his bandmates in The Police. Their tour, which is selling out shows at a record pace, is sponsored by Best Buy.
  • Roy Clark- Guitar virtuoso from Meaherrin, Va. Best known as one of the hosts of the classic Country-flavored variety show, “Hee Haw.”
  • Robert Cray – Electric blues/rock guitarist from Newport News, Va., who is currently the opening act on Eric Clapton’s tour.
  • Clarence Clemons – From Norfolk, Va., this saxophonist has played with Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band for some 30 years.
  • Wayne Newton – “Mr. Las Vegas” was actually born in Norfolk, Va.

BEST BUY LOCATIONS: Using the “Store Locator” feature at www.BestBuy.com shows there are 10 Best Buy locations in Virginia, including stores in Lynchburg, Charlotesville, Richmond, two locations in Glen Allen, Colonial Heights, Roanoke, Fredericksburg, Manassas and Woodbridge.

Jeff Green- Martinsville Speedway Cup Series Statistics

Date

Start

Finish

Team Owner

Laps

Status

9/28/97

33

30

Gary Bechtel

464/500

Running

4/20/98

41

17

Chuck Rider

499/500

Running

9/17/98

6

31

Felix Sabates

479/500

Running

4/14/02

38

22

Richard Childress

499/500

Running

10/20/02

28

32

Richard Childress

498/500

Running

4/13/03

35

26

Richard Childress

498/500

Running

10/19/03

10

24

Petty Enterprises

498/500

Running

4/18/04

33

24

Petty Enterprises

498/500

Running

10/24/04

10

7

Petty Enterprises

500/500

Running

4/10/05

14

22

Petty Enterprises

497/500

Running

10/23/05

11

37

Petty Enterprises

409/500

Engine

4/2/06

34

25

Haas CNC Racing

491/500

Running

10/22/06

8

8

Haas CNC Racing

500/500

Running

Haas CNC Racing- Martinsville Speedway Cup Series Statistics

Date

Start

Finish

Driver

Laps

Status

4/13/03

14

29

Jack Sprague

497/500

Running

10/19/03

34

27

Jason Leffler

498/500

Running

4/18/04

6

22

Ward Burton

499/500

Running

10/24/04

4

28

Ward Burton

497/500

Running

4/10/05

15

36

Mike Bliss

410/500

Overheating

10/23/05

31

41

Mike Bliss

173/500

Crash

4/2/06

34

25

Jeff Green

491/500

Running

10/22/06

8

8

Jeff Green

500/500

Running