Vickers: ‘We’re Starting To Get Our Mojo Back’


(By Greg Engle)

Posted: Thursday,October 29th, 2009

(Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service)
 
Brian Vickers, driver of the No. 83 Red Bull Toyota, took a break from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and paid a visit Wednesday to the Blackwater training center near Norfolk, Va.
 
In the seventh installment of his Chase diary, Vickers talks about the weapons and evasive driving training he received at Blackwater, a tactical training and security company; his strong 11th-place run last Sunday at .526-mile Martinsville (which left him 12th in the standings, 530 points behind leader Jimmie Johnson); and his approach to Sunday’s Amp Energy 500 at 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway, where he hopes to avoid the seemingly inevitable multicar accident by racing at the front of the field. Vickers claimed the first of his two Sprint Cup victories at Talladega in 2006.

Brian Vickers
Brian Vickers

Blackwater has a U.S. training center here where they actually train a lot of military, they train law enforcement and they just opened it up to private citizens. You have to have a background check, security checks, things like that to make sure they don’t train the wrong guys.
 
A friend (of mine) knows the owner, and we all went up there—a group of us—and they gave us some handgun and rifle training, safety training … made us better and safer with them. They gave us some highway evasive maneuver training, which was pretty cool, pretty fun. We were in these cars just learning how to be more safe on the road—if kids jump out in front of your vehicles, if you get run off the road, avoiding accidents, all kinds of good stuff …
 
I threw a couple of thoughts in here and there. What I do and what they do are two different things, but from a driving standpoint, it was a lot of fun. The whole group learned a lot about car management and how to avoid situations back on the road.
 
We got back on track (at Martinsville). On Sunday, we had a good car, we were quick in the race, and we ran up front most of the day, and it was good. I think we’re starting to get our mojo back. We didn’t get the finish I felt like we deserved—we had a top-five car and we finished 11th—but there at the end we pitted, and a lot of guys stayed out, and we didn’t have time to get back up to the front with all the cautions. But we still ran good, and I was proud of that.
 
Tires were (important), and I think that’s great. That makes for great racing. It really dices things up. The past several years, the guys who stayed out seemed to be able to hold position, and track position was more important than tires, but this year, tires were more important, and I think it made a great race.
 
Going from Martinsville to Talladega, from a half-mile to a 2 ½-mile, I think is kind of cool. I like the variety. I like the changeup, going from one extreme to the other, and, obviously, I love Talladega. It’s one of the tracks I’ve always enjoyed.
 
Talladega’s always tough because of the lack of control of the (racing) environment, but that’s really true everywhere. I think the difference between Talladega and most other racetracks is that (when) people make mistakes at Talladega it’s just bigger, because everybody’s in a pack. We’ve wrecked just as much, if not more, at other racetracks, but at Talladega, we’re so bunched up and going so fast that it’s just a bigger crash. That’s what makes it more out of control, because it’s easier to get caught up in someone else’s mistake.
 
I think leading’s the best way (to stay out of trouble). There’s really not much you can do. You can drive back behind the field, like half the racetrack, and you’ll avoid some problems, but you’ll also go a lap down, and you’re not going to win the race. The best way I’ve found is just be in the lead. That’s easier said than done—it’s almost impossible to lead at Talladega the whole race, but there’s not a lot you can do. Being in the back of the pack—if you’re going to stay up with the pack and not lose the draft—if you’re staying close enough to keep the draft, you’re just putting yourself more at risk, because now you’re behind the wreck instead of in front of it.
 
— As told to Reid Spencer


Bookmark and Share Share on Facebook - Email this page:
Rate this article:


NASCAR Superstore Specials:

FREE SHIPPING on orders $50 or more at the NASCAR Superstore - Ends 09.30.10.


$15 off $75 or more at the NASCAR Superstore until August 31st!


NEW! Check out our NASCAR Die-Cast and Collectibles!




Latest Posts:

  • Kyle Busch one win from Nationwide record
  • Today In NASCAR History
  • Todays Birthdays
  • Chase-Clinching Scenarios heading to Atlanta
  • NASCAR announces Vegas Champions week schedule


  • Check out the NEW T-Shirt Shop
    Click HERE!



    NEW! Dale Earnhardt Jr. Autographed Memorabilia!

    CupScene.com Race Shop NASCAR T-shirts
    Grab this Widget for your site!
    CupScene.com on Facebook

    Find Us On:

    Facebook

    MySpace

    About Me:


    Enter your email address to subscribe to our headlines:


    Delivered by FeedBurner

      Add to My AOL
    AddThis Feed Button

    Subscribe to the CupScene.com Headlines!

    Friends and Favorites:

    Carl Edwards
    Sporting News: Unrestricted
    Kenny Edwards
    Back 40 Records
    Toni McCray
    Jayski
    NASCAR Examiner
    Sporting News
    Track Talk

    Send site feedback Here

    Listed on ProductionHUB.com in Web Site Designers / Developers in Florida

    Meta

    NASCAR Daily News at Blogged
    NASCAR Blog Directory

    Tag Cloud:

    This website is part "portal". We sometimes provide links to other sites containing the full stories. As such all views and opinions expressed are those of the author of the original story and are not always the views of A&J Racing Enterprises.

    Links and story ideas, which will be posted at our discretion, can be sent HERE

    Contact the webmaster HERE

    Read our privacy policy HERE

    Copyright 2010 A&J Racing Enterprises Inc. all rights reserved

     InLive!  

    National Best

    Click Here to Visit!

    RDW Topsites
    We Support:

    You are visitor number: Since January 1st 2007.

    CupScene.com

    Copyright © 2010 CupScene.com
    Theme by Rajaie AlKorani