Piquet Jr. Tests RHR Toyota At New Smyrna Speedway
01-19-2010 7:23 pm
What were your impressions of testing the Tundra at New Smyrna Speedway?
"This track is a bit more difficult than the other track (Motor Mile Speedway)
I've driven last year. I'm getting used to it. I didn't do many laps. It still
takes me a few outings to get used to it every time. I think slowly it's going
to get more imbedded into me and I'm going to get more used to it. I still don't
feel comfortable in the truck. There are different things that I need to think
about. It's still a bit of a learning process for me for the next few weeks. I'm
going to learn a lot, but I feel I'm still very much in the beginning (phases)."
Is it a bit of a 'culture shock' to be testing at New Smyrna compared to some
of the places you've gone in your career?
"My whole life -- my whole career -- I've been going to different tracks where
there were different temperatures or different people or a different language or
different continents. For me, I treat it all of course as work. My work is a
passion, but when I'm at a track, for me it's all the same. I'm with my
mechanics, with my engineers, with my race car next to me. For me, I can be in
China or in America or in Australia or Brazil, and for me it's still the same.
Obviously, it's different when you leave the track and you're in a hotel or you
need to eat in a restaurant. Different countries or different places have
different styles of life. When I come into the race track my mind is just turned
into race mode and it's the track, the car, the engineers and it's basically
very similar everywhere around the world -- it's motorsports. I think at the
moment my head is just focusing on the driving, on getting used to the car, the
track and stuff like that. I know it's a much different environment of what I
came from, but it's just automatic because I've been doing this my whole life --
going from one place to another. And, if I start thinking about all of the stuff
around that is happening, I think it disrupts my concentration."
What was the deciding factor for you to give NASCAR a try?
"I had to balance a lot of things. I had to balance my happiness. I had to
balance my opportunities. I had to balance a lot of things and I think the best
thing that I came up with -- that I thought would be better for me -- was the
NASCAR route. I think the biggest factor point is that I'm having a lot of
people behind me helping me, wanting me to be here. A lot of people that I trust
and I'm liking. So, all of that has been very good for me. I think that's what
has played a big factor into the decision."
Do you have a contract in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) yet?
"Hopefully I will be able to do races with Red Horse Racing. I still don't have
the whole plan decided. It's the first year. It's a lot of learning for me. I'm
going to be doing races here, races there -- as many races as I can just to get
used to these kinds of cars and the tracks. If it starts going well, then I'll
maybe do even more races or maybe do higher levels, like maybe even Nationwide.
It is all going to depend on how quick I learn everything and how well I get
involved with the team."
Are you excited to get into a new form of racing?
"This is an oval. Not only is the car being built different with a carburetor
and it's much heavier, but it's an oval. The whole process of everything is much
different. I think I'll really feel the excitement in the first race. To me,
it's still testing and everybody is still very friendly and everything. I think
when we reach a race weekend that's going to be when the real excitement is
going to come and I'm going to really feel what the real thing is."
Do you feel like you have to get over any challenges by coming to America and
NASCAR?
"I think one factor of coming to America was my language. I think I have it
quite easy. I can get myself around quite easy with my English. I think for
Brazilians to come to NASCAR, for example, the first thing is that his English
needs to be very well. If a guy doesn't speak English they wonder why he's
there. I speak better English probably than Portuguese. It's going to help me
get along here with some of the drivers, the series, with journalists and it
will make everything much easier. I've studied in American schools my whole life
and then lived in England for six years, so I think it's more of my duty to
speak good English."