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Miguel Paludo to drive BRANDT do Brasil No. 32 Chevrolet in NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at Chicagoland Speedway

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (August 23, 2013) – BRANDT, the professional agriculture company, is going to Brazil. And going big.

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Today, BRANDT announced the formation of Brandt Brasil Serviços Profissionais em Agricultura Ltda. Known as BRANDT do Brasil and headquartered in Sao Paulo, the entity will be a wholly owned subsidiary of Brandt Consolidated, Inc. and the focal point for BRANDT’s growth strategies in Brazil. To mark the announcement, BRANDT has teamed up with Turner Scott Motorsports and Brazilian driver Miguel Paludo for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Chicagoland Speedway on September 13, 2013.

In its 60th Anniversary year, BRANDT has established BRANDT do Brasil to build its business in the high-profile agriculture country.

"Over the last half-century, Brazil has become a global leader in agriculture production," said Rick Brandt, President and CEO of BRANDT. "Brazil, along with a handful of other countries, is a key growth area as we continue to focus on international expansion. Teaming up with Miguel is a perfect way to introduce BRANDT do Brasil as we tap into local passions for motorsports and connect with the agricultural community."

BRANDT is the primary sponsor of the No. 31 Turner Scott Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro with Justin Allgaier in the NASCAR Nationwide Series and has also made an appearance in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series with Ryan Newman in 2011.

"Brazil plays an important role in global and U.S. agriculture," said Brandt. "Brazil is the third largest agricultural exporter in the world behind the U.S. and E.U. and serves as a growing market for U.S. agriculture exports. We can bring our proprietary products and knowledge into Brazil to help increase production. Our nutritional products are the perfect fit for the diverse ag markets of Brazil."

"I could not be more excited about the opportunity to run BRANDT do Brasil on the No. 32 truck in Chicagoland," said Paludo. "I have seen the passion and energy that BRANDT has put into its motorsports program with Turner Scott Motorsports and Justin Allgaier, and I know that I am very privileged to become a part of that. I’m very proud to be representing BRANDT do Brasil. A lot of people think of Brazil as beaches and big cities, but agriculture plays a huge role in many parts of the country, including in the south where I grew up. Chicagoland is BRANDT’s home track and they always have a huge number of guests supporting our team at the racetrack. I don’t think there would be anything more special than to go to victory lane in front of BRANDT while representing my home country."

BRANDT has an ongoing agreement with Multitecnica to distribute its products in Brazil. Currently, BRANDT Manni-Plex® and BRANDT Smart Trio® are registered in Brazil and are enjoying increased sales.

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Get event times, TV information and more for this weekend’s NASCAR action

All times ET

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21

ON TRACK
— 10-10:50 a.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS1 (Get results)
— Noon-1:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FS1 (Get results)
— 4:35 p.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FS2 (Get results)
— 8 p.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series UNOH 200 (200 laps, 106.6 miles), FS1, 7:30 ET (Get results)

FRIDAY, AUGUST 23

ON TRACK
— 9-11:50 a.m.-noon ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice, FS1 (Get results)
— Noon-2 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FS1 (Get results)
— 2:45-3:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FS1 (Get results)
— 3:40 p.m. ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FS1 (Get results)
— 5:40 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 7:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series Food City 250, ESPN on air at 7 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES
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— 10:40 a.m. ET — Mark Martin and Greg Zipadelli
— 11 a.m. ET — Jimmie Johnson
— 11:15 a.m. ET — Joey Logano
— 4:30 p.m. ET — Martin Truex Jr.
— 6:40 p.m. ET (approximately) — Post-NSCS qualifying
— 9:15 p.m. ET (approximately) — Post-NNS race

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 24

ON TRACK
— 7:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Irwin Tools Night Race (500 laps, 266.5 miles), ABC on air 7 (Get results)
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Sprint Cup: Season schedule | Standings | Entry list | Lineup | Pit stall assignments | Results
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Camping World Truck: Season schedule | Standings | Entry list | Lineup | Pit stall assignments | Results

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No. 2 tire changer Fambrough: ‘I wouldn’t be where I am without this place’

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Colin Fambrough spends much time showing off the large championship ring he earned last year as part of Brad Keselowski’s pit crew.

Had it not been for the NASCAR Technical Institute, he probably wouldn’t have it.

“I wouldn’t be where I am without this place,” said the 2005 NTI graduate. “It offered really good options for me. I was able to tell my parents, ‘Look — if the NASCAR thing doesn’t work out, I’ve got all this training to go into a manufacturer program, and I can go to work for Ford or BMW or something like that.’ So it gave me a viable career path if racing didn’t work out. Fortunately for me, racing did work out.”

Fambrough is hardly alone there. The No. 2 team’s rear tire changer is one of several graduates celebrating the 10 years of the NASCAR Technical Institute, which has placed more than 5,000 of its former students in the automotive and motorsports industries since opening its doors a decade ago in a partnership between NASCAR and Universal Technical Institute.

UPS

“It’s one of our best-kept secrets, almost, that people go up and down Interstate 77 and they see NTI on the side of the building,” said NASCAR President Mike Helton. “But until you get inside and really see what UTI has made out of NASCAR Technical Institute, and now the heritage that it’s built — it’s one of our best-kept secrets in some regard. The race shops, the race teams, the automotive peripheral businesses that complement NASCAR’s motorsports efforts, certainly have recognized NTI as a place to go for resources when it comes to employees and everything.”

NTI opened in 2002 as a joint effort between NASCAR and Arizona-based UTI, which operates 11 different technical campuses across the U.S. The 146,000-square-foot campus sits in the heart of racing country, in the same business park as race shops like JR Motorsports and Red Horse Racing. In August of 2003, it produced its first graduating class, and a week later had its first graduate find a job in the NASCAR industry, with the engine shop at Robert Yates Racing.

The anniversary brought together graduates, instructors, executives of UTI and NASCAR, and even drivers like Joey Logano and Sam Hornish Jr. to help celebrate the facility’s first 10 years. “We owe a debt of gratitude to NASCAR,” said John White, UTI’s chairman of the board, “for partnering with us in creating a first-class educational facility that provides a broad-based automotive background.”

Notable NTI alumni include Katy Renard, a 2005 graduate who now works as NASCAR’s chassis pre-certification manager; Daniel Smith, a 2004 graduate who is now the rear tire changer on Tony Stewart’s No. 14 car; and Fambrough, a native of Tyler, Texas, who became hooked on NASCAR after attending the summer 400-miler at Daytona International Speedway in 1999, and decided to attend NTI after seeing a commercial for the school on television.

At the NTI celebration, Fambrough was able to brandish a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship ring he won last year as part of Keselowski’s over-the-wall crew at Penske Racing. Would he have one without the other?

“No. Absolutely not. No way,” he said. “I absolutely would not have this opportunity. I know there are some people who have connections who can get in other ways. I came up here and didn’t know anybody. I hadn’t even met my roommate at the time — I met him on Craigslist or something …. I met him when I got up here, and then I knew the representative from the school I had spoken with. That was it.”

For Fambrough and many others, NTI has provided an entry point. Just as important, Helton said, is the base of skilled labor the institute provides the NASCAR and automotive industries. Long gone are the days when race teams scoured the likes of service stations and automobile dealerships looking for mechanics with the potential to work on race cars.

“Teams go looking for talent, and they didn’t know where to start at sometimes,” Helton said. “You’d go to an automotive service center or a dealership and look for mechanics, but then you had to teach them the difference between a street car and a race car. UTI put the race car element into the automotive technology business, and made a pipeline for both sides to benefit from.”

Fambrough broke in thanks to an instructor in his Fab 2 class who was a tire changer on Carl Edwards’ car at the time. That connection got Fambrough a tryout at Roush, which just happened to be on a day when a very young Logano was learning pit-stop practice in preparation for a Hooters ProCup campaign. Roush didn’t want to risk its Cup crew on the new kid, so the team tapped Fambrough and other over-the-wall prospects.

One thing led to another — Fambrough volunteered to work with Logano at a test, and then volunteered to work at the shop. “About four months later they realized they weren’t getting rid of me, so they started paying me,” he said with a laugh. When Logano went to Joe Gibbs Racing to drive on the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Fambrough went along. He worked on Jimmie Johnson’s crew in 2011 before signing with Penske and Keselowski’s team in 2012.

While at NTI, Fambrough earned a broad-based automotive education that he intended to use in case working on a pit crew didn’t pan out. In that eventuality, his plan was to get into a BMW program and work for the manufacturer as a technician. While at NTI, he learned everything from engine construction to how to fabricate brake ducts and noses for race cars.

“You learn everything,” he said. “When you first start, you learn the basics of an engine and how it works and the parts and pieces. You move in to suspension. And then you move on to the oiling system. And then you move up to setups and aerodynamic and engine building, and everything. That’s just on the manufacturer side. A lot of that stuff still applies to the NASCAR side. Race cars are very different, but you can still transfer some of that knowledge over.”

NTI was designed to combine an automotive technology program with a NASCAR-specific motorsports program. Helton hears stories like Fambrough’s, and knows that 10 years later the facility is still doing its job.

Veteran driver needs win, strong showing to boost Chase hopes

Related: Chase clinching scenarios | Sprint Cup Series standings

For the moment, Kurt Busch is safe. For the moment he is ninth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points standings, and if the regular season were to end today he’d gain an automatic berth into the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Unfortunately for Busch and several others who teeter on the edge of an ever-thinning Chase bubble, the postseason doesn’t begin today, but instead there are still three races left before it commences.

The first of the last three tests before the field is reset, Bristol Motor Speedway, is perhaps the most unpredictable. The drivers will not only be fighting for position on track during the Saturday’s IRWIN Tools Night Race (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC), many of them will be fighting for their lives… their playoff lives.

With only 21 points separating eighth-place driver Brad Keselowski and 13th-place driver Joey Logano the Chase bubble is a very precarious place to be right now. Jeff Gordon, who has yet to win in 2013, is nine points behind Logano, with Indy-race winner Ryan Newman another marker further back.

A poor showing this weekend at Bristol for Busch could spell doom for his chances to make the Chase, as he’d probably drop out of the top 10. Without a win this season, falling out of the top 10 would even knock him out of contention for a Wild Card spot, reserved for the two drivers between 11th and 20th in points with the most wins.

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"There’s still just three weeks to go where we can get in a little fender bender. Just some small little itty bitty thing can happen the next three weeks and that will put us on the outside," Busch said. "So, we’re just gonna keep plugging away."

Busch has three options: 1. Win one of the next three races and remain in the top 10 after the 26th race at Richmond International Raceway; 2. Come up empty in the next three races but still hang on to a top-10 spot; 3. Go winless over the next three races and fall out of the top 10 and out of the Chase.

Obviously, Busch and everyone at Furniture Row Racing would prefer the first option.    

"It’s a tremendous feeling to be in the Chase mix, but we have to remain focused in these next three races," Busch said. "A lot of things can happen and we just have to worry about what we do and not what others do."

Busch has visited Victory Lane at each of the three tracks remaining before the Chase field is set — Bristol, Atlanta and Richmond. Between the three of them, his best chance at winning is at Bristol.

In 25 races at Bristol, the driver of the No. 78 Chevrolet has captured the checkered flag five times (versus three times at Atlanta and once at Richmond), most recently in March 2006. He did, however, post his first of 24 NASCAR Sprint cup wins in the March 2002 race, followed by a season sweep the next year and a victory in the March 2004 race.

He finished fourth in the Bristol race earlier this season, and only has one other top-10 finish at a short track in 2013 (ninth at Richmond in April).

His average finishing position of 13.4 at Bristol is also better than Atlanta (17.2) and Richmond (17.9). He has won more races and led more laps (841) at Bristol than any other track on the circuit. His career-high 14 top-10 finishes at the track is tied with Pocono.

The close racing and high banks at the .533-mile track nestled in the mountains of northeast Tennessee, however, provide a level of uncertainty and risk that puts drivers on the edge of their seat in anticipation of the unpredictable.

"The biggest thing is just staying out of trouble. Bristol, trouble can happen at any corner," said Busch last weekend at Michigan. "There’s gonna be 500 laps that we have to perform there next week where we have to protect our car and still finish well."

 

 

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