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Cale Gale can get quite an education spotting for Kevin Harvick.

Off to a very quick start, Gale looks to impress in '08

By Dave Rodman, NASCAR.COM
January 26, 2008
08:31 AM EST
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Young Alabamian Cale Gale has got a couple things going for him as he builds a career in NASCAR racing at Kevin Harvick Inc.

He gets along great with his boss, as he shares Harvick's attitude, commitment and dogged work ethic. And oh yeah, he's fast.

One thing that's come through loud and clear for Gale is Harvick's intensity and single-minded focus when it comes to all things racing. And Gale gets great comfort from knowing that's something they apparently share.

"I've come to realize that Kevin Harvick doesn't believe in losing -- at all," Gale said. "He refuses to lose. He's not going to do it -- he's going to do whatever it takes to win -- and I feel the same way about myself.

"And to see him as successful as he's been in the business, it makes me want it that much more, because I can see exactly what you need to do to be a superstar in this business. To see someone like him and to be able to watch him day-in and day-out just makes me dig that much harder."

Gale, 22, spent two days in the spotters' stand last weekend at Daytona, offering guidance from above and soaking in the sights as Harvick tested his No. 33 Chevrolet stock car in the opening days of Nationwide Series Preseason Thunder. (speed charts)

Then, Gale stepped into the No. 77 Chevy that he'll make his 2008 debut in -- during Speedweeks' Camping World 300 -- then share for five more races this season with Ron Hornaday.

"To spot for Kevin and to watch him in the draft and work traffic, definitely helped," Gale said. "I was able to watch Kevin and then talk with him about how I should drive the car during my test.

"And then to have him watch my test session and talk with me about my weak points and tell me ways to improve, that was awesome. I now have a few weeks to think about the things we discussed and prepare to return in February."

Using the lessons he'd learned from spotting, and also absorbing his owner's expertise after Harvick hung out a couple days for Gale's test, Gale was the fastest car in single-car runs on Monday and Tuesday mornings.

Gale ended up second overall on the cumulative overall single-car time sheet for the five-day test, less than a tenth of a second and three spots ahead of his owner.

"The biggest challenge for me, obviously, is going to be the pressure of needing to run good," Gale said. "Because you know that when Kevin gets in a car, he's going to do everything he can behind the wheel and it's going to be up front.

"Last year, the hardest thing for me was to adjust to the new racetracks that I'd never been to, whereas this year I'm going back to most of the tracks that I've already been to, one or two times.

"So the hardest thing is just going to be to compete in the top 10 and try to keep up with Kevin's performance as much as I can, which is definitely going to be hard to do."

This season, the plan is for Gale to contend for the Nationwide rookie of the year award with crew chief Wally Rogers.

How well Gale's settled in with his owners, Harvick and his wife, DeLana, has a lot to do with the comfort he does feel. Gale made his debut for KHI at the end of 2006 and has been there ever since.

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"Obviously, Kevin's my boss, when it comes right down to it," Gale said. "But the last couple of years I think we've developed a pretty good relationship. I think the bond's getting stronger, the more that he gets to know me and the more that I get to know him."

Gale said he was looking forward to sharing the upcoming Nationwide test at Las Vegas with his owner. Other than a test at Charlotte, it's one of the few chances the Nationwide programs will get to test, Gale said.

"I'm in it to win as a driver, but I'm also in it to win as a team player -- outside the car and inside the car."

CALE GALE

"Obviously, any time you can have Kevin around -- in any aspect of racing, whether it's watching me driving or watching the team and seeing the things that are going on -- it's a big help," Gale said. "Kevin and DeLana both are very hands-on with their company, and they have goals set out on what they want to do to make KHI a better company for everybody, and to make it a championship organization in the Truck Series and also in the Nationwide Series.

"They do whatever they can do to make it better each and every day. I believe Kevin's as much into it on the business side of the company as he is on the driving side."

That's why Gale spent some time at the Nationwide test building shock absorbers. It's something he did back when his dad, successful Late Model racer Bubba Gale, did more with less from their Mobile-area shop.

"When I was growing up, I didn't have the best of everything when I was racing," Gale said. "We worked hard for what we had. Growing up, we built our own chassis, motors, transmissions, rear ends, shocks -- everything -- because that's what we had to do to be able to go out there and race each weekend.

"My dad raised me to be a racer on the track and a racer off the track, and anything I can do to help these guys out in the shop, I'm willing to do. If it requires me going in the shock room every day to make our racecars and trucks go faster -- I'm willing to do that.

"I'm in it to win as a driver, but I'm also in it to win as a team player -- outside the car and inside the car."

The younger Gale got his big league break with James Finch's Phoenix Racing, where he was known as a shock specialist with driving aspirations. He got a lot of people's attention when he made his ARCA RE/MAX Series debut for Finch in 2006, then winning at Gateway.

In fact, in six ARCA starts, Gale's worst finish is sixth. That's the potential that prompted the Harvicks to bring him to their organization at the end of 2006, when he made one Busch Series start before making a total of 12 spot starts in both the Busch and Truck series in '07.

Gale, who had a less intense schedule in 2007 all the way around, this year, is responsible for building all the shocks for KHI's two-truck program. He also drives the cars and trucks for pit-stop practice, as needed.

"Sometimes I'll jump in on the set-up plate, helping guys set up the cars," Gale said. "I'm just pretty hands-on -- any time anybody needs anything, I just go and help 'em."

Gale said his 2008 travel schedule will also consistently have him at the track, another change from a year ago.

"I will be attending all of the Nationwide events that I'm not running, watching Kevin and learning everything that I can learn," Gale said. "I'm going to be learning as much as I can from Kevin, inside the car -- what's he's telling the crew chief and what he's feeling and what the crew chief does to make it a little bit better.

"I did the same thing last year with all the other [KHI] drivers, [Tony] Stewart and Tony Raines [and] Ron Fellows. I was at every race that I could be at -- Hornaday's Truck races when they were companion races with the Busch races -- and I learned a lot. I learned as much off the track as I did on the track, last year."

The End

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Nationwide Series Testing

Cumulative Single-Car Speeds
Pos. Driver Make Best Time Best Speed
1. Tim McCreadie Chevrolet 49.991 180.032
2. Cale Gale Chevrolet 50.023 179.917
3. Chase Miller Dodge 50.029 179.896
4. David Green Chevrolet 50.097 179.651
5. Steve Wallace Chevrolet 50.132 179.526
6. Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 50.195 179.301
7. Scott Wimmer Chevrolet 50.203 179.272
8. M. McLaughlin Toyota 50.208 179.254
9. Bryan Clauson Dodge 50.231 179.172
10. Johnny Sauter Chevrolet 50.258 179.076
• Complete Speeds click here

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