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Christopher Bell

Apr 02, 202421 min
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Episode description

NASCAR driver Christopher Bell calls in to the show after a round of impromptu Topic Family Feud

Transcript

You're listening to the downbeat on ninety seven one. The freak Nascar man Christopher Bell calling in momentarily new report out, guys, the report out here top night. Answers are on the board. Germiest places in the office, bathroom, bathroom bump bump, bump, ump, bump, bump, ump, bump, up bump. Yes, but number six, Danny, I will go with coffee maker. Yes. Is that kitchen. That's count's kitchen. Mike board here, new report out just this morning, nine jermist places,

nine Germy spots in your office. Number six gone, Mike door handle, Oh yes, number one answer, all right, elevator button number, keyboard mouse. I think it's all okay. Computer's a computer. I don't know. Pass. That's two strikes. Chair chair. I still want to go back to break room. I'm thinking either that or let's go with water fountain, water cooler. Oh, yeah, that's water cooler. Yes, correct, Number five sink. Technically that would have been Danny wins because you missed

yours sink. He just wanted you to know that you lost, just now that you're a loser. That's what he was doing. Sink with the all of your bathroom I think is what they're going with here. But there's a there's a breakroom sink too, which was weird to Secretary. Their hands in the breakroom sink, Secretary not one of the germiest spots. Jesus Secretary's chair, No stepskin waves, microphone number three, desk, desk, desk number four, microwave, microwave, okay, coffee maker microwave. No, they're

too different, these things that Kevin doesn't have in his kitchen. I have a microwave, and I don't need a coffee maker. When I make cold bruise that it will oppress. That makes pretty good. What else is on the bathroom elevator? Buttons, vending machines, and your phone? Your phone? I love impromptu family feud. Doesn't like it anymore. It seems like he's really down on it. I like it. But keyboard yes number two, Yeah, it's not up here. It's not that he doesn't like it.

It's just that winning kind of cultivates a culture of positivity, and when you're on a losing streak like Mikey's been on for god what seems like decades in life and games. I saw here's a report just dropped nine boom. It's perfect fodder. Before our guest, who is calling on the hotline, JJ is talking to him, the problem with your games, I feel like is I'm too smart and that's holding me back. That's an indictment of you. That's holding me back in your games. You thinking that it's true.

Look at JJ's talking NASCAR with Christopher Bell. You know, Mike that the Auto Trader Echo Park Automotive four hundred is not this weekend but next weekend for NASCAR's Triple Header weekend. Yes, I did, Yes, I do. And that's gonna have to wait until the Cookout four hundred and Martinsville is done this weekend and racing in both of those things. And I'm predicting too.

Victory is our next guest. He is from Norman, Oklahoma. He's driving the number twenty Toyota for Joe Gibbs racing right there in the NASCAR Cup Series. We have Christopher Bell joining us live on ninety seven to won the freak. Hi, Christopher Bell, hey man, I like that prediction. I really like that prediction. Two in a row, Dude, we got Phoenix. We could have got the last couple too, But I feel like we're about to rattle off some checkered coming up, and I know you feel the

same way because you're riding a damn rocket. We had second at Coda, six at Richmond, and life's got to be pretty good. Man. This is looking like a championship season. That's what I'm thinking, Chris. You it's been going good man. The Coda Cota was so close, and then Richmond was tough to swallow as well, because we were right there, you know, in position, and I sped on Pitt Road. But to come back and finish sixth was you know, it was like a bittersweet moment.

Right after speeding. I thought for sure that my day was gonna be a lot worse than six. So we usually just kind of screw around and have fun on the show, but I do have some NASCAR stuff, and you brought it up. Speeding on Pitt Road always is a mystery to me the fan. I've seen it in multiple disciplines. I don't remember. I was at the Indy five hundred a few years ago and somebody cost themselves the whole race just by speeding on Pitt Road. It's such a penal thing. How

hard is it for you? I mean, I know there's a line or a barrier where you know you need to be down to a certain speed. Are you just slamming on the brakes if you're one mile an hour over? Do they ding you? Like, describe how that happens? Yeah, I

mean, so it's it's time over distance. So they have scoring lines in the pit road and they know that it takes whatever it is x amount of seconds to go from you know, one line to the next, so there is a little bit of leeway where if you're going a little bit too fast at the you know, the first part of the timing loop, you can slow down and give it back. But essentially, you know, we don't have spitometers inside the car. All we have is just our RPM reading.

So your your team will give you an an rpm reading that you have to stay underneath. And you know, it's it sounds really easy to just not speed, but the problem is is that everyone is pushing it to the max, and if you don't push it, it's a you know, a huge deficit and you're going to give up a lot of positions on pit roads. So you know, it's it's it's a if you're over by you know, point oh, one of a mile an hour, you're you're gonna get penalized.

So it's all about getting as close as you can without going over man. And I kind of almost a dumb question because I know the answer. But right when you get word in your ear that they got us speeding on pit Row, are you just oh your heart sinking? Yeah, it's it's bad. And you know, under yellow flag conditions, if you get caught

speeding, you gotta you know, you drop to the back. And then under green flag conditions, if you get caught speeding, you got to come down pit Road and make that dreaded path through penalty where you're going forty five five miles an hour all the way down the front stretch and the entire field is passing you going like one hundred and twenty, one hundred and thirty, so it feels like you're crawling. Driver of the number twenty Yahoo Tyota Camry

for Joe Gibbs Racing. It's Christopher Bell joining us on the downbeat. We're gonna be the triple header. We're two weeks away here, get your tickets at Texas Motorspeedway dot com. Now Christopher us three me, Mike and Danny were former night owls who now you know, do morning radio. So we got to get up early. And I read an interview that you did about how your habits changed from your dirt racing days to the NASCAR lifestyle. Yeah, I was, I was right there with you, man. It sounds

like a similar story. I grew up dirt track racing, and all dirt track racing is at nighttime. So the normal schedule would be to you know, your race at seven, eight, and they'll run into you know, ten eleven o'clock at night, and then you would have to go and and you know, find food afterwards, maybe wash the car. So you're up until the late hours or the early hours of the morning, and you'd sleep in and the until lunchtime and you go again. And then it took me

a while to adjust to the normal people's schedule, that's for sure. What time do you wake up? Now? I have a hard time sleeping in past nine, so I would say seven to eight is my normal normal room. Oh my god, sleep until eight sounds so good, Christopher, that sounds Christopher. You're a Norman, Oklahoma kid, right, I am? Okay? So how long? Maybe? How long? There you go? So how long were you there before you you you moved away, So I

actually moved out of Oklahoma whenever I was seventeen. Okay, so yeah, but you gave us a nice boomer obviously a big OU supporter. Did you growing up or even like going back to games and stuff, have you developed any kind of adult relationship with some of the old guard there, like coach Switzer or anybody like that. I I have not. You know, I'm a I'm a big fan and I watch all the football games on TV and stuff like that, but I actually do not know any of the coaches.

Obviously, Bob Suits he was the legendary coach on where I was there, so he's he's my guy. One quote him. Here's one question that I've always wondered, and I know it's different from team sports like the NBA. You see these guys seem to be whether they're on opposing teams or or or not, they all kind of know each other. They played for other teams, they have friendships. I was wondering, and it may be like this

in golf too, I don't know. But in your sport, how how difficult is it to have relationships like friendships with other guys that you're racing against. Is that something that you maintain or cultivate or is it pretty much you're worried about your own scene and when you're not racing, it's family time, hanging out in North Carolina with the wife or whatever. Do you have like good buddies that are that are also racing as well or is that kind of

something that's that's not really a status quo in an individual sport. Yeah, I mean it's actually a very interesting topic, and I think the question or the answer is different for you know, different drivers in the series. And I've heard guys say that their competitors are their enemies and they're never going to

be friends with their competitors. And then you know, you have other guys who have best friends in the industry that they compete against on a weekly basis, So you know, I think everybody has a little bit different mentality on it. For me, I probably am indifferent, Like if if I, you know, meet someone that I race against and we have a lot in common, then you know we might be friends. Like myself and probably my closest guys in the in the sport right now are Daniel Hemrick and John Hunter

Nimachek. Who are two guys that you know I've raced against at times and then we're in different series at times, and now you know we're racing against each other again, and so yeah, I mean, I think the answer is a little bit different for every person. Christopher Bell, I do have to ask you about an incident that happened down in Austin, just a couple hours south to hear with a guy who maybe isn't your friend at least this

week it's Kyle Busch. You guys had a kind of a situation and I understand you did speak and bury the hatchet, but I want to ask, I guess, is that hatchet ever truly buried? And do you how often do you guys are concerned with on track retaliation for an incident that happened maybe weeks ago or months ago, And how often does it happen? I mean, it happens a lot. And we saw we saw at the end of Richmond, you know, there was a lot of beating and banging and people

upset with each other. So you know, I would say it's a weekly thing, and some tracks lead to more contact than other tracks. Austin is you know, a place where there's a lot of break zones, and you know, you're going from one hundred to one hundred and fifty miles an hour all the way down to twenty or thirty, and you're trying to outbreak people and make a hard corner. So it leads to contact in those areas.

And you know, Kyle Bush and I have a you know, a long standing relationship because I drove for him whenever I first got into the sport in twenty fifteen, and so he was my boss for a period of time and then he turned into my teammate for a period of time, and you know, we have a really good respect for each other, and you know from obviously my standpoint is a little bit different than his because I was on the winning side of it. But you know, I hope that I hope it's

that the hatchets buried and we're moving on. But you know, we talked about it, and I'm sure that, yeah, I don't know, I don't know where he stands on it, do you? I mean, do you then, just by nature have to keep an eye on your mirrors and if you see Bush right on your bumper, I mean, is it a cross your mind, like, all right, I got to raise a little differently because this retaliation might be around any of the next corners. I mean, not not really like I think some people. Yes, but my style

and my thought process is just trying to race everybody with respect. And you know, I made a mistake and got into him and you know, spun him out and I was on the winning side of it. He was on the losing side of it. But it wasn't intentional, Like I didn't go in there trying to wreck him. So if he's behind me and he's faster than me, I you know, I would have let him go five weeks

ago and and I'll let him go next week. So you know, from my standpoint, I'm not going to race him any differently than I would and just try and you know, treat him with respect, race them with respect. And you know, maybe if the roles are reversed and I'm faster than him, he might not cut me a break if he normally would. But

you know, time will tell. Yeah, I imagine that, you know, your sport, it's a cross section of society when it comes to you know, personality types, and I would imagine that the ability to manage one's emotions when out there on the track, when it comes to a situation where, look, there's a guy that has wronged you on the track before, for you to not use that initial instinct to kind of get back at him,

because you've always got to keep in mind. It's like, it's not just about maybe you and the dude you've got a feud with, You've got you know, twenty five other guys behind you that their livelihoods depend on this as well. So, I mean, keeping your emotions in check has got to be like one of the top priorities when you're out there, you know, an inch from each other going two hundred miles an hour. Yeah,

I mean, it's it's a big deal. And there's just so much don't I don't know if pressure is the right word, but there's so many people that are invested in what we do, right, So you know, each car has millions of dollars in sponsorship and countless hours of resources trying to build this car, and and you know a little bit of it, like I'm a symbol for all the people that have, you know, put effort into this car, building this car, all their families that are you know,

having to sacrifice time with their loved ones preparing these things, and then all the sponsorship dollars they go into this, and you know there's a there's a lot on the line for every single competitor in every single car. So yeah, it's it's a big deal. This is Christopher Bell, who you can see here in DFW in a couple of weeks at the Auto Trader Echo Park Automotive four hundred tickets at Texas Motorspeedway dot com. Now, Christopher, you're

twenty nine. We're a bit older than you. Have you ever seen the movie Days of Thunder. I don't know that I've ever watched it fully through, but I've definitely seen parts of it. Yeah, and you've heard of it. So if you could name, I'm gonna put you on the spot here one celebrity spotter. Okay, so you're trusting them, they're watching everyone around you, big name celebrity. Who would it be a celebrity to spot

for me? Oh man, I have no earthly idea. It would have to be a singer, right, I don't know, Maybe like a Morgan Freeman, someone with a very calming voice. Yeah, I don't know. I'm thinking more like a country music artist. Maybe, like I don't know Toby Keith, he's a fellow. Wow, yeah, yeah, Harry Underwood maybe. So it's great that in the movie Days It's under Robert Duval is the crew chief and he's outstanding that movie. That that would be my crew

chief or spot Her if I could choose. You should watch that. I know you don't have time these days as you're busy, you know, especially talking with us for ten minutes. We appreciate, appreciate having you. Man. I have a non racing question, Christopher Bell it's kind of racing. But my brother is a big Christopher Bell Man. He's a card collector and he has like fifty Chris for Bell, like rookie cards and all this stuff.

So he loves the hell out of you. But I always wonder the day you have to, like sign all the little plastic things, you know, Like, is do you budget like a day when you have to I know you guys sign god as many autographs as anyone on earth, But how do you spend that day when you have to sign for like a card? Companies? Spend all day with a sharpie in your hand. Yeah, I normally try and break it up and do, like, you know, bits and pieces of it, so we'll get I mean, I don't know.

There's sometimes there's twenty cards, sometimes there's a thousand cards. And whenever you get those big chunks, typically they'll give us, you know, like a I don't know, a week time frame or whatever, and I'll do X amount per day and try and not make sure that they look good. But uh yeah, we do sign a lot of autographs. All right, Well, we're all pulling for you, certainly my brother for those cards value. All right, dude, cook Out four hundred and Martinsville is this weekend.

I know you've won there. You've had a lot of success there, so we called it. That's gonna be W one or W number two on the season. And then Sunday the fourteenth is the Autotradero Echo Park Automotive four hundred at Texas Motor Speedway. Christopher bell Man, cool dude. We can't thank you enough for jumping on with us. Wish are the best of luck and we will see you right here in DFW in just a couple of weeks.

Sounds good. We'll see you guys at Texas Motor Speedway. Yes, sir, there he goes Christopher Bell all in ass and tickets available at Texasmotorspeedway dot com. Cool guy, right, very I enjoyed having him on the radio with us. Yeah, that's a that's a hot beef with this with the Kyle Busch situation. He he did downplay it, and I could tell you he was kind of done talking about it after question two. We've just received a text from Jeff skin Wade. What the hell does he want? All

of this for the Devaul reference? Yeah, all of this and you could tell this fool so Telegraph he was gonna do the ice cream line. I'll try to blow Christopher Bell away. I've never seen it. I don't know who you're talking about. I don't watch TV. A movie car driver. You've never seen a thunder and it's hard to get out of that once you set it up on a tea like that, you know, eating ish cream

all he wanted to do eating crew, you know. Doing research, I found an old interview with someone asked him who would be his motor home driver and his crew chief, and they gave him the option of Lebron James or Taylor Swift, and he said Taylor would be the motor home driver. So I was like, okay, well, who's the spotter? Like that was

something I thought that was a fair question. I thought he would just rifle off Tom Hanks or whatever big name he thought of, and he he struggled, and then yeah, he saved your awkwardness about Days of Thunder by saying he'd take Toby Keith to be his spotder. So you're right, he knocks you off the front page of the Awkward Times. Oh no, I feel bad for what I did do. Listen, just screwed this up. But tomorrow you'll get a chance to make it all right when we have Chase Elliott

on the on the show my guy. That happening for sure. Yes, yeah, back to him. I picked him in the Daytona. Yes, we're looting up on NASCAR this week. Great, uh Chase Elliott eight. And of course you can hear all the NASCAR races on our sister station. Hear me ask the same questions I asked today. I thought you had a great question with the emotions. He didn't get into it that much, but you're right, the emotions that you have to manage in the car when you're

mad, you're happy or angry. I thought that was actually really interesting because we all feel that on the stupid roads that we drive on, but we're not any type of pressure like those guys in the car right in front of you didn't wreck you last week and you have to go. But it's a good answer to say, there's so much that goes into this, millions of dollars and hundreds of people and the you know that are all watching, so you can't just be a salty ass and and and knock him out. But

I thought that was actually a really good question. I thought, Danny, you got a B plus for that. Thank you. I feel like I did very well. I'm going to take an A minus. And Kevin Turner also participated. It's I got the In terms of memorable moments, it's eight fifty seven here on the downbeat on ninety seven, won the freak. What's coming up next? If you're a Danny Bayless fan, I would say buckle up for the next twenty five to thirty minutes, because not only are you

getting a zero res live spot, it's the return of the monthly segment Billboard. Bayless

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