“You still hear me on the radio. I’m frustrated and I’m not going to change," Allmendinger said. "That’s what makes me me but you also have to learn what’s too negative that just hurts you and what keeps pushing you every day, and I think I’ve found that limit now where it’s like I’m not going to allow myself to go down a bad direction and keep burying myself.
"At the end of the day, you still want to win, and you’re still frustrated if you don’t win. It’s just like life. You get older, you get more mature and figure out what works and what doesn’t. You make sure that’s how you allow yourself to be." With Allmendinger's age and maturity, many would expect him to take on the role of "enforcer" when it comes to the aggressiveness of the young drivers in the Xfinity Series. Tony Stewart and Matt Crafton are probably the first names that come to mind when one thinks of those that will give the aggressiveness back to young drivers that make mistakes but Allmendinger says that's just not what he wants to be.“I don’t try to put my wisdom into it," Allmendinger said. "I think it’s trying to understand each other. Ty [Gibbs] and I have had a couple incidents and we talk about it after and we get into each other’s side. It’s racing. You’re not ever going to agree. I’ve always been open with people to come talk about whatever they want to talk about but it’s not right of me to go enforce what I believe on them or what I thought happened.”
Despite being the regular-season champion and earning an extra 15 playoff points, Allmendinger still enters the postseason fourth in the standings and just 27 points above the Round of 8 cutoff line. The Xfinity Series Playoffs begin Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). [pickup_prop id="27718"]