I just hear Montreal is nice, especially during the summer months. It’s supposed to be a clean city. The races I’ve watched up there, it always looked like a good time.
I can pump myself and beat my chest all I want going into a racetrack, but when you haven’t had success there, that means you don’t know what feel you are looking for.
I like to make sure I eat as soon as the drivers meeting is over. Then I like to take at least a 15-minute nap or so before the race starts, just to kind of get refreshed. That’s something I try to do every time.
I nearly slept through my entire senior year. I’m fairly convinced they just gave me a diploma just to get me out of school.
Something about my personality fans just have not latched onto and probably never will.
I think that it’s a benefit to have distractions because you don’t overconsume yourself with what-ifs and you end up second-guessing yourself.
I’ve never been one of the top five or six most popular guys ever. I think the most popular I’ve ever been was probably my first two years in the Cup Series, and that’s probably because they just – ‘It’s the new guy and he’s successful and sure, we like him.’
I think there’s always debris around the track, without a doubt you can call anything debris.
I think my reputation among peers is probably different than my reputation among fans. My peers know me pretty well and so it’s fairly accurate. I think I’m respected among my peers.
You think about someone’s well-being or someone’s health as obviously being way more important, than any sporting event you could win.
It’s interesting to see how guys who have been successful at the top level of their sport carry themselves.
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