Bill Davis Feeling Good as Teams Perform
Multiple team owner Bill Davis had a
unique achievement last weekend, but as usual with
NASCAR's traveling circus, Davis barely had a chance to
enjoy it and he's back in the whirlpool again.
Bill Davis Racing has three Truck Series teams racing
Friday night at Texas Motor Speedway, and Dave Blaney's
No. 22 Toyota competing in Sunday's Sprint Cup Series'
Pocono 500 at Pocono Raceway.
Last weekend on a
track, Dover International Speedway, whose prospects for
success are so dubious it's been dubbed the "Monster
Mile," and with good reason; BDR's same four teams that
competed last weekend all scored top-10 finishes, which
was a first for BDR.
Red Bull Racing
development driver Scott Speed, who's on loan to Davis,
won the AAA Insurance 200 Truck Series race, with
teammates Mike Skinner seventh and Johnny Benson, 10th;
and Blaney continued his march into a comfort zone
inside the Sprint Cup's top 35 when he finished ninth in
the Best Buy 400.
"It was cool to have
everything in the top 10 -- a pretty special weekend for
Bill Davis Racing," Davis said. "It's a lot easier to
come in [to the shop on Monday] when you've run well --
and a lot more fun, I can guarantee you. We've had
a good deal of success with our Truck Series program
over the past couple of years, but we've probably not
had three teams that were capable of winning every time
out like we do now.
"Our Cup program has
really started to come into its own in the past couple
of weeks as well. Tommy [Baldwin, competition
director/crew chief] and all the guys on that team have
worked hard to turn things around from a bit of a rough
start to the season. "We seem to have found the
consistency that we had been lacking and I think good
things are going to happen for that team from here on
out."
In Cup, BDR is a
single-Toyota operation after sponsorship for a
hoped-for second team for Canadian open-wheel champion
Jacques Villeneuve didn't materialize. Davis said he's
still in communication with Villeneuve and his cohort,
Barry Green; and while "we like Jacques a lot and we
would still like to run him in whatever series the
opportunity presents itself, there's nothing to talk
about right now."
On a wider scale,
Davis is in a perfect position to see what Joe Gibbs
Racing's entry into the Toyota family has brought to the
table for the rest of the brood.
"I said it from the
first, that Gibbs coming on board with championship
teams and drivers would do nothing but strengthen the
entire program and be good for everybody right on
through," Davis said. "And certainly that's been the
case. They're a great organization and they've been good
for Toyota and the whole program."
And even with how well
JGR's teams, as well as the other Camrys have run, Davis
thinks claims that NASCAR is closing its eyes to any
inequality in Toyota's power output is ridiculous -- and
he has the proper historical perspective to state that
opinion, courtesy his former Busch Series driver, Mark
Martin. "It's a combination [of things], and I'll
tell you what I always relate it to," Davis said. "Mark
Martin and I used to win Busch races with that Ford V6,
and we were literally 30 or 40 horsepower behind; but
Mark was the greatest driver in the Busch Series at the
time and he did a great job with his chassis.
"Steve Hmiel and Robin
Pemberton came over [from Roush Racing's Cup team] and
helped us with our pit stops and strategy, and we could
win races. So it's the whole combination. "I believe you
could give some of those [Cup] teams back there, 25 or
30 horsepower and they wouldn't outrun Kyle Busch. So I
completely believe that NASCAR is not going to let any
manufacturer have a huge advantage."
For Davis, who's been
a perennial championship contender in the Truck Series,
but who's struggled to find bright spots on the Sprint
Cup side, equivalent to when Ward Burton won the 2002
Daytona 500; the Dover weekend was a welcome breath of
fresh air. "It's been a tough couple years on the
Cup side, and we sure have had better cars than results
-- but that's all past us," Davis said. "The trucks have
run well -- we had a fabulous year with them last year
-- but it is hard. We know we're capable of better
It's been a season of
distinct ups and downs for Davis, who in addition to
operating at NASCAR's highest levels for the last 20
years, has also maintained his Bill Davis Trucking
company in Arkansas and more recently, a growing cattle
operation.
Each end of the 2008
season has a distinct "bang" for BDR -- with Davis'
development driver Michael Annett starting the ARCA
RE/MAX Series season with a victory at Daytona to back
up his Talladega score last fall; and Speed making it to
Dover's Victory Lane.
Countering the ups, as
noted, have been the downs. Davis firmly believes that
Benson would be leading the Truck Series' standings if
he hadn't been "robbed on the restart at Charlotte,
which was a bad call" when Benson was penalized for
jumping a restart, and "certainly Kyle Busch wrecked
[Benson] on the last lap at Martinsville on our way to
second."
Davis always tells the
truth, and even though he and Benson were on the
receiving end of one of Busch's dopier moves this
season, a "dive bomber attack" in Turn 3 at Martinsville
on the last lap; Davis is securely on the list of Busch
admirers. "He's just a phenomenal talent," Davis said.
"I mean, granted, he's sitting in great equipment with
great bodies, great engines and great chassis -- and
Steve Addington is obviously a great crew chief. But
man, he is just. . . "And it extends across all three
series. He's in a great truck, and we'll take a little
credit for our Triad company [Triad Racing Development,
which builds all the Toyota race truck chassis and
engines], but Billy Ballew has got a great team under
him.
"Same scenario in the
Nationwide deal -- but he is just a phenomenal talent.
Does he race a little hard and make a little mistake
every once in a while? Yeah, but who hasn't?
"Did the deal at Martinsville p--- me off? Sure, it
p---ed me off because we're trying to win a
championship, but all that said, he's a great talent and
very deserving of his success."
After failing to post
finishes equal to how well Blaney had run at Daytona and
Martinsville, and after qualifying on the outside of the
front row last fall at Talladega for the Cup race, this
spring Blaney was a Talladega DNQ. But such challenges
only spur good teams, and Davis' organization has proven
its mettle before.
While acknowledging
the strength of his truck program -- Benson and Skinner
were second and third last season to champion Ron
Hornaday; Benson was second to Todd Bodine in 2006 and
Skinner was fifth in the championship in 2005 -- Davis
staunchly believes his Cup program, with the veteran
Blaney and Daytona 500-winning crew chief Baldwin; is
seriously on its way up.
Even though they only
practiced 31st best on Friday afternoon at Pocono, the
stats bear that out. Since their absolute low point to
the season, failing to qualify at Talladega and seeming
hopelessly out of the owners' top 35; Baldwin has guided
Blaney to a ninth-best point total among all teams in
the four races since, with two ninth places and two
other finishes of 17th and 18th.
The good thing is
Blaney's car is 30th in the owner standings, and little
more than 100 points away from 25th. The bad thing is;
he's only 98 points ahead of 36th. Davis, as usual,
chooses to accentuate the positive.
"We've put some points
on the board," Davis said of the rebound, prefacing his
comments with a long sigh. "We went down to Talladega
overconfident, because we sat on the outside pole last
year and ran third, and [this year] we got spanked. You
can't do that nowadays, especially if you're out of the
top 35 -- you've got to be on top of your deal every
week. "I think we learned a lot from that and we
got re-energized, and more focused. But [the top 35
rule] is a hard thing. I've got mixed emotions about it.
I've always said it's a great thing if you're in [the
top 35], and it's really hard if you're not."
Earlier this spring,
Davis shook up the management structure of his team.
While the key pieces were in place, with the exception
of newly-hired vice president Marty Gaunt, who'd
overseen Red Bull's entrance to NASCAR racing; the new
organization, which moved Mark Chambers from Truck
Series program manager to overall general manager, and
Mike Brown from general manager to chief financial
officer; has paid big dividends since then.
"We had some people
whose talent was probably being wasted in the wrong
places, and now we've got them where they need to be,"
Davis said. "Marty's come in and done a good job of
communicating with our people, sponsors and all. Mark
Chambers was managing the truck program and doing a
great job, but he was willing to step up and take on all
of it, and I think it's really worked out well."
With the way things
went at Dover, Davis' laugh when asked if his only
regret on the weekend was that there wasn't an ARCA
speedway race for Annett, 21, to contend in; was truly
rueful. In nine career ARCA starts, Annett has two wins,
five top-five finishes, eight top-10s, one pole and one
mechanical failure. That earned him a Truck Series debut
at Milwaukee later this month.
In fact, with Speed
running the full ARCA RE/MAX Series schedule and thus
being at Pocono for its Saturday ARCA race, for which
practice and qualifying were Friday; Annett stepped into
Speed's truck in Texas and qualified 16th in his first
attempt. "Michael Annett is the real deal," Davis said
of the young man who's led laps in all but one of his
ARCA races, the Iowa mechanical failure. "He is a super
kid and comes from a great family and he's real focused
on what he's doing and what we've got going."
While Speed, who has
victories in ARCA and the Truck Series, where he won in
only his sixth career start; has a future elsewhere,
Annett, who Davis said spends about every day working at
the BDR shops in High Point, N.C., is one of the more
solid developmental drivers currently in the pipeline.
And that's been
recognized at BDR, where a schedule that started with
select ARCA races has segued to at least half of the
remaining truck races in BDR's No. 22; with an eye to
even bigger things in 2009. "We're real excited about
[Annett's] future at Bill Davis Racing, that's for
sure," Davis said. "He's been at all the Cup tests and
if he's not testing one of the Cup cars, he spots for
Blaney. He's as active and hands-on as he could be.
"Next year, we'd like to run Michael in a full
Nationwide schedule. That's certainly what makes the
most sense for him."
Count Davis among the
staunch supporters of NASCAR's new car, whether it's in
Sprint Cup or transitioning it into the Nationwide
Series, which has been met with dragging heels by some
owners. "There's something to be said with supporting
the [new car] in the Nationwide Series, as the best
training for Michael's [eventual] move to Sprint Cup,"
Davis said. "NASCAR's going to make its decision [on the
Nationwide new car] based on a lot of factors, they
believe in the [new car] and that's really the end of
the story.
"It's all about
safety, and the car definitely is safer; so I think
people should just accept it and go on. Ultimately, it
will probably save us money, as car owners -- and I
don't know if you'd had the opportunity to see some of
the prototype Nationwide cars -- but they really look
good."