Author: Official Release

  • Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Darlington 2

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Darlington 2

    Cook Out Southern 500: Darlington Raceway
    Darlington, S.C. – September 1, 2024

    AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 DISCOUNT TIRE FORD MUSTANG

    START: 11TH STAGE ONE: 32ND STAGE TWO: 26TH FINISH: 13TH POINTS: 10TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric and the No. 2 Discount Tire team rallied to a solid 13th-place in Sunday’s Cook Out Southern 500 at the historic Darlington Raceway after battling off the lead lap for much of the event. Cindric started a strong 11th after narrowly missing out on advancing to the final round of qualifying in Saturday’s time trials. The Team Penske driver fought a tight car from the start, making his first visit to pit road on Lap 37 for four tires, fuel and an adjustment. On Lap 71, the No. 2 was docked for an uncontrolled tire penalty, swiping away valuable track position. After finishing 32nd in the opening Stage, Cindric returned to pit road for fresh tires, fuel and additional adjustments to aid the car. The 2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series champion remained focused on the task at hand, returning to the lead lap, but slotted in 26th when Stage 2 concluded in a relatively uneventful second segment. In the third and final portion of the crown jewel event, Cindric was able to take the wave around on Lap 314, gaining a lap back. When the sixth caution of the day slowed the competition with less than 35 laps to go, Cindric was in the free pass position, jolting him back to the lead lap. As the chaos intensified in the regular season finale, Cindric was able to press forward, gaining momentum in the running order. The driver of the No. 2 ultimately recorded a 13th-place finish, demonstrating his never-give-up attitude.

    CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “From our first pit stop to our last one, it was definitely an adventure. I feel like I used that word a lot throughout the regular season. But yeah, having to come down for the uncontrolled tire penalty put us two laps down for pretty much the majority of the race. The first chance we got to do the wave we got it, and then they got to wrecking and we drove up to the lucky dog spot and got the lucky dog, leading us to a decent finish. Track position was important, and I’m happy we were able to get a solid result. It was definitely an entire race of not giving up.“

    RYAN BLANEY No. 12 MENARDS/RICHMOND FORD MUSTANG

    START: 7TH STAGE ONE: 37TH STAGE TWO: 37TH FINISH: 37TH POINTS: 5TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Ryan Blaney’s run in the NASCAR Cup Series regular season finale came to a very early end Sunday night at Darlington as the No. 12 Menards/Richmond Ford Mustang was involved in an incident on lap three of the Southern 500. Blaney was running up by the wall in turns one and two when the No. 19 broke loose underneath the No. 24 and slid up into outside wall, collecting the Menards/Richmond Ford in the process. Despite the 37th-place finish, Blaney enters the Cup Series Playoffs fifth in the standings while defending the 2023 championship title.

    BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “It looked like [Martin Truex Jr.] got loose and I thought he was going to spin to the bottom, so I kind of gassed up, and right as I got to his outside his car kind of hooked up and shot right into me. Unfortunate timing on lap three. It stinks we didn’t get to race at all but we’ll go on to next week.”

    JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

    START: 23RD STAGE ONE: 15TH STAGE TWO: 15TH FINISH: 8TH POINTS: 9TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Joey Logano posted his 11th-career top-10 finish at Darlington Raceway in Sunday night’s Southern 500 with an eight-place result. The No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford worked its way through the field in the opening stage of the regular season finale as Logano battled some early handling issues before coming away with a 15th-place finish in Stage 1. Following a four tire stop and a round of adjustments prior to the restart, Logano began to gain track position and charged into the top-10 early in the run. The 22-crew continued to go to work on the balance during a pair of green flag pit stops in Stage 2 as Logano came away with another 15th-place effort in the second segment. With just over 50 laps to go and teams needing one more pit stop to make it to the end, a trio of cautions saw varying strategies unfold as Logano was brought to pit road – the opposite call of the leaders ahead – in an effort to gain ground on those with older tires. Logano ultimately made his way up to ninth prior to the final restart with 17 laps remaining before taking the checkered flag eighth on the night. Logano enters the Cup Series Playoffs ninth in the standings following the points reset.

    LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “Starting where we were, our goal was to pick them off one or two at a time and methodically move our way through the field. We were doing that. We got ourselves into the top-10 and looking pretty good. We had some issues on pit road – I’m not sure exactly what happened – but we cleaned it back up for the end there and got a top-10 out of it, at least. Not quite what we wanted with the Shell-Pennzoil Mustang but at least we recovered and got something decent out of it. We’ll move on to the playoffs and give it a run for our money and see if we can get down to the championship four.”

    The NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs opens the Round of 16 at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, September 8. Coverage of the Quaker State 400 begins at 3 p.m. ET on USA, PRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

  • Stewart-Haas Racing: Cook Out Southern 500 from Darlington

    Stewart-Haas Racing: Cook Out Southern 500 from Darlington

    STEWART-HAAS RACING
    Cook Out Southern 500
    Date: Sept. 1, 2024
    Event: Cook Out Southern 500 (Round 26 of 36 | regular-season finale)
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series
    Location: Darlington (S.C.) Raceway (1.366-mile oval)
    Format: 367 laps, broken into three stages (115 laps/115 laps/137 laps)

    Race Winner: Chase Briscoe of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
    Stage 1 Winner: Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 2 Winner: Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)

    SHR Finish:

    ● Chase Briscoe (Started 3rd, Finished 1st / Running, completed 367 of 367 laps)
    ● Ryan Preece (Started 30th, Finished 12th / Running, completed 367 of 367 laps)
    ● Josh Berry (Started 15th, Finished 31st / Accident, completed 343 of 367 laps)
    ● Noah Gragson (Started 29th, Finished 32nd / Accident, completed 343 of 367 laps)

    SHR Regular-Season Points:

    ● Chase Briscoe (17th with 571 points)
    ● Josh Berry (23rd with 460 points)
    ● Noah Gragson (24th with 431 points)
    ● Ryan Preece (27th with 393 points)

    SHR Playoffs:

    ● Briscoe qualified for the playoffs by winning the Cook Out Southern 500.
    ● This is Briscoe’s second playoff appearance.

    Victory Notes:

    ● Briscoe’s victory in Cook Out Southern 500 marked the 104th overall win for SHR. It was the organization’s milestone 70th points-paying NASCAR Cup Series victory, its first of the season and its fourth at Darlington. SHR’s total win tally also includes six non-points-paying Cup Series wins, 27 NASCAR Xfinity Series wins and one ARCA Menards Series West win.

    ● Kevin Harvick scored all three of SHR’s prior Darlington wins. The first came in April 2014 with the other two coming in May 2020 and September 2020.

    ● This was SHR’s 34th NASCAR Cup Series victory with Ford. Kurt Busch won the 2017 Daytona 500 to deliver the organization’s first win with the Blue Oval.

    ● This was Ford’s 735th all-time NASCAR Cup Series victory, its sixth of the season and its second straight. Ford driver Harrison Burton won last weekend at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway.

    ● This was Ford’s 34th all-time NASCAR Cup Series victory at Darlington and its second straight. Ford won its first race at the 1.366-mile oval on Sept. 3, 1956 with NASCAR Hall of Famer Curtis Turner. Brad Keselowski won the series’ prior race at Darlington in May when he took the checkered flag in the Goodyear 400.

    ● This was Briscoe’s second career NASCAR Cup Series victory. His first came in March 2022 at Phoenix Raceway. Both wins have come since he joined SHR in 2021.

    Briscoe Notes:

    ● In addition to this being Briscoe’s first victory of the season, it is his third top-five and seventh top-10 of the year. It is his second top-five in eight career Darlington starts.

    ● Prior to his win at Darlington, Briscoe’s best finish of the season had been a runner-up effort earned June 23 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon.

    ● This was Briscoe’s second straight top-15. He finished 14th last weekend at Daytona.

    ● Prior to winning the Cook Out Southern 500, Briscoe’s previous best finish at Darlington was fifth, earned in May at the Goodyear 400.

    ● Briscoe finished third in Stage 1 to earn eight bonus points and second in Stage 2 to earn an additional nine bonus points.

    ● Briscoe led four times for 29 laps – his first laps led at Darlington.

    Preece Notes:

    ● Preece earned his eighth top-15 of the season and his third top-15 in 10 career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Darlington.

    ● Preece’s 12th-place result equaled his previous best finish at Darlington, originally earned in September 2021.

    Berry Notes:

    ● Berry finished ninth in Stage 1 to earn two bonus points and seventh in Stage 2 to earn four more bonus points.

    ● Berry led twice for five laps – his first laps led at Darlington.

    Race Notes:

    ● Briscoe’s margin of victory over second-place Kyle Busch was .361 of a second.

    ● Briscoe was the 14th different winner in the 26 NASCAR Cup Series races run this season.

    ● There were seven caution periods for a total of 39 laps.

    ● Only 17 of the 37 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.

    ● Tyler Reddick won the NASCAR Cup Series regular-season championship by one point over second-place Kyle Larson. But with the points reset for the 16 drivers who qualified for the NASCAR Playoffs, Larson takes over first place in the playoff standings via his series-leading four victories.

    Playoff Standings:

    1. Kyle Larson (2,040 points)
    2. Christopher Bell (2,032 points, -8)
    3. Tyler Reddick (2,028 points, -12)
    4. William Byron (2,022 points, -18)
    5. Ryan Blaney (2,018 points, -22)
    6. Denny Hamlin (2,015 points, -25)
    7. Chase Elliott (2,014 points, -26)
    8. Brad Keselowski (2,008 points, -32)
    9. Joey Logano (2,007 points, -33)
    10. Austin Cindric (2,007 points, -33)
    11. Daniel Suárez (2,006 points, -34)
    12. Alex Bowman (2,005 points, -35)
    13. Chase Briscoe (2,005 points, -35)
    14. Harrison Burton (2,005 points, -35)
    15. Ty Gibbs (2,004 points, -36)
    16. Martin Truex Jr. (2,004 points, -36)

    Sound Bites:

    “Man, everybody knows I’m a diehard Tony Stewart fan and to get this 14 car back in victory lane and, for all 320-something employees, to be able to race for a championship in their final year, it’s unbelievable. God is just so good. This group, the day that we found out that the team wasn’t going to exist anymore, we went over to the shop floor, we all looked at each other and said, ‘We’re in this till the end. We’re not going to give this up.’ We kept saying all week we’ve got one bullet left in the chamber. That bullet hit. It was like déjà vu there at the end with Kyle (Busch), with the Xfinity race here in 2020. Obviously, I didn’t know if I was going to be able to do it. I was sideways, counter steering, like I was in a sprint car. Yeah, this night just literally went perfect. The pit crew did an incredible job. I was crying after the checkered. I just won the Southern 500! This is a crown jewel! What makes this race so special is all these race fans. Every time we come here, it’s sold out. It’s awesome. We love you guys. Last time I won here was during COVID, I didn’t experience it with the fans. Glad that you are here and can’t wait to celebrate. Just can’t thank HighPoint.com, Mahindra Tractors, Rush Truck Centers, Rinnai, Zep, enough, everybody that makes this deal go around. We’ll go to Atlanta and try to steal another one.” – Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 14 HighPoint.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “We just got caught in a tough spot there at the end of the race. We decided to stay out and risk it on fuel and it just didn’t work in our favor today.” – Ryan Preece, driver of the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “Tough way to end such a promising day. We had a great No. 4 Overstock.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse and we were going to net out to have a good points day, and it was just one of those nights that you look back on in frustration because this team deserves better. Our results don’t do us justice and tonight was one of those nights. We have 10 weeks to go chase a win.” – Josh Berry, driver of the No. 4 Overstock.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “I saw a couple of them wreck up front, so I tried to get on the brakes. Then I saw an opening and a little bit of smoke, but I thought they were all sliding down to the bottom and I throttled up. I thought it was open and it wasn’t. Definitely a bummer. We needed to be better all day.” – Noah Gragson, driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Next Up:

    The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Atlanta 400 on Sunday, Sept. 8 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The first race in the 10-race NASCAR Playoffs starts at 3 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT DARLINGTON 2: Post-Race Report

    CHEVROLET NCS AT DARLINGTON 2: Post-Race Report

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DARLINGTON RACEWAY
    COOK OUT SOUTHERN 500
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT
    SEPTEMBER 1, 2024

     Five Chevrolet Drivers Set for 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs

    • In a caution-filled ending to the 2024 Cook Out Southern 500, strategy from atop the No. 8 Morgan & Morgan Chevrolet team’s pit box gave Kyle Busch a fresh set of tires and prime track position to make a run for the win and a playoff berth. Ultimately falling just short of the victory, Busch led Chevrolet to the checkered flag in the regular season finale from the runner-up position. The result marked Busch’s third top-four result – and his second straight runner-up finish – in the series’ past three races.
    • In a three-way battle for the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Regular Season Championship, Chevrolet’s Kyle Larson put on a commanding performance in much of the 500-mile event. Qualifying fourth in his No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1, Larson progressively made his way to the top of the leaderboard near the midway point of Stage One. The 32-year-old Elk Grove, California, went on to perform a commanding sweep of the stages and lead a race-high 263 laps en route to a fourth-place result. Falling just one-point short from claiming the regular season title, Larson will begin his campaign for his second career championship title in NASCAR’s premier series at the top of the playoff standings.

    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd Kyle Busch
    4th Kyle Larson
    5th Ross Chastain
    9th Corey LaJoie

    WITH 26 NASCAR CUP SERIES RACES COMPLETE:
    Wins: 11
    Poles: 7
    Laps Led: 2,220
    Top-five finishes: 47
    Top-10 finishes: 100

    UP NEXT: The first of three races in the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 16 gets underway at Atlanta Motor Speedway with the Quaker State 400 on Sunday, September 8, at 3 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on the USA Network, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.


    CHEVROLET’S NASCAR CUP SERIES PLAYOFFS FAST FACTS:

    · In the NASCAR Cup Series’ 26-race regular season, Chevrolet collected a manufacturer-leading 11 wins, recorded by six drivers from three different Chevrolet organizations.

    · The 2024 season marks the 10-year anniversary of the elimination-style playoff format for NASCAR’s premier series.

    Since the debut of the 16-driver playoff field and elimination rounds to the NASCAR Cup Series in 2014; at least five Chevrolet drivers were represented in the playoffs each season.

    Chevrolet All-Time

    NASCAR Cup Series Championships:

    42 NCS Manufacturer Championships:

    1st Chevy Title: 1958

    Most Recent Title: 2023

    Highest Number of Consecutive Titles: 13 (2003-2015)

    33 NCS Driver Championships:

    1st Chevy title: Buck Baker (1957)

    Most Recent: Kyle Larson (2021)

    Highest Number of Consecutive Titles: 7 (2005-2011)


    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:

    ROSS CHASTAIN, NO. 1 BUSCH RETRO CAMARO ZL1

    Finished : 5th

    Chastain on his race at Darlington Raceway:

    “For the final stage, we shorted the green flag stops the first time; netted some positions and we were fine. And then we did it again and as I was already on pit road, the caution came out. I could have kept rolling and probably stayed on the lead lap, but I wanted to try it just like Phil (Surgen, crew chief) was calling an aggressive race. I went ahead and stopped in the box knowing there was a chance that we would go a lap down. It was worth the risk. I had it off by about a quarter-lap in my head of where the No. 5 (Kyle Larson) would be. He was a lot closer than I thought.

    It’s one of those things that the staying out was a little scary in the moment, but I just kind of went through what I needed to do; get a good launch. I got clear into turn one, which I struggle to do that on equal tires, let alone the old ones. I was clear off of (turn) two still, and I was like – OK, this is going pretty good. And then new tires took over into turn three.”

    How crazy are those restarts with playoff positions on the line?

    “Actually, they were pretty calm. Back in the pack, they’re way worse. It’s brutal back there. We’re all just trying to get leverage and air on and off each other. It’s a lot nicer to be up front.”

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 TOYS FOR TOTS CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 15th

    “We had a fast Toys for Tots Chevrolet tonight at Darlington Raceway and the entire Richard Childress Racing team fought hard all weekend. We fell a lap down in Stage 2, but never gave up, stayed patient and raced our way back onto the lead lap. We could have had a shot there at the end. We were well within the top 10 and battling for position when a multi-car incident happened, and we ended up with damage. We lost track position pitting for repairs but fought back to finish 15th. I’m proud of this entire team.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 4th

    That was a dominant performance for you. What happened at the end of the race?

    “Yeah, I think where it all kind of got crazy was when Ross (Chastain) stayed out. I had to choose the bottom on the front row. He got a good launch. I just got behind the No. 14 (Chase Briscoe) and kind of lost control of the race from then on. And then I just did a bad job on that last restart. Really, I just had the points on my mind there and really wanted to get the driver’s regular season championship there to get those bonus points. I was being extra cautious, which I don’t know if the end result was any different. But I was definitely as aggressive as I could have been with just being safe.

    But hats-off to Chase Briscoe; that’s amazing. He did such a great job all day long, all weekend long. This is a super, super tough race to win. To do it with the pressure that they had on their team was pretty amazing.”

    Looking back on a night where you were dominate, what do you think played a factor in that performance?

    “Our No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevy was great. We came here with a little different package than normal, and I felt like our car was much better. Our pit crew did a really, really good job. I would have to look, but it felt like in the car, it was our best day on pit road by far. I’m proud of them. We were always able to maintain the lead and that’s what you need to do here to have a shot to win. It’s just so tough to pass.

    Just proud of my team and looking forward to the next 10 weeks. Hopefully we can make the Championship Four.”

    Not getting those extra 15 bonus points, what’s the strategy moving forward?

    “Yeah, we got them on the owner’s side, which is nice. But the driver’s side is definitely a bummer. I thought we were going to be able to get it, but I guess Tyler (Reddick) must have passed a couple of cars there at the end, and then I fell back a couple of spots. Just a bummer, but we were still able to rack up a lot of playoff points this year with the wins, as well as the stage wins. We got two more stage wins today, so that’s always good. You just have to take each week, week-by-week. You have to assess how you did the week before, where you are in points and go prepare for the next week.”

    Larson on the start of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

    “I’m excited to get the playoffs going. The first round, there’s some nerve racking tracks, but our team is doing a great job right now. We just need to bring fast Chevrolet’s to the track and take it week-by-week.”

    KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 MORGAN & MORGAN CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 2nd

    “We needed him (Chase Briscoe) to have about three more laps on his tires, maybe. Just be a little bit more used up so I could get there. I got within his wake, and as soon as I got within his wake, I just felt my car come out of the race track and I didn’t have enough to overpower that.

    Really hate it for everybody at RCR; the effort, the work and everything that’s gone into our Chevrolet’s. I’m proud of his Morgan & Morgan Chevrolet today for being what it was. To come out second; we didn’t have much speed there through a majority of the race. We were just mired in traffic and we weren’t able to get up through there. But once we got up there; I felt like those last three or four restarts, we were going to have a shot running in the top-five. But then we had a shot for the win and just couldn’t make it up there.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA GOLD FILTERS CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 11th

    How would you describe this Southern 500?

    “Very poor. We got a gift to finish where we did.. a bunch of gifts. But yeah, obviously excited to have that one over with and look forward to getting the playoffs started. These next 10 races; they’re intense, so myself and this entire NAPA Chevy team needs to hit the reset button in a big way. We were pretty bad today, but we’ll go to Atlanta (Motor Speedway); get things rolling in the right direction and see where we end up.”

    There’s no track like this in the playoffs, so is the reset on all tracks or certain ones?

    “I’m just glad we’re not coming back here next week (laughs). Man, I have to figure something out here. It’s been a struggle. But nonetheless, I’m excited to get these next 10 races started. There are some good tracks in there for us, so I’m excited to get to those and try to make the most of the places that we’ve struggled at. I would love to tackle that this year, so we’re going to work really hard these next 10 weeks; bring everything we’ve got and hopefully it’ll be enough to get to the Championship Four.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 19th

    “We weren’t very good here in the spring either. We tried some different things, but it just didn’t really work out. We’ll keep digging at it. I’m glad we get to reset. Obviously next weekend at Atlanta (Motor Speedway) is going to be a wild, so we’ll see what happens.”

    You’re back in the playoffs. How good does it feel to put this team back where I know you’ve said they deserve?

    “It feels good, for sure. We just need to go run better. We can’t do what we’ve done for the last month. We’ve had some good runs, but we just haven’t ended up with good results. We just can’t have days like this, for sure.”

    Atlanta is going to be wild, as you said. When you look at the first round, is there anything you are looking forward to? Is there a strength for this team?

    “Yeah, I mean I think honestly; the one that I circle in the first round that I’m looking forward to is Watkins Glen. I’ve been so bad there. I’ve worked so hard at road course stuff, in general, and that’s the last one that I feel like as a driver I need to check the box at. Excited to get there and be better than we’ve been in the past, and I think we’re plenty capable of doing that.”

    DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 FREEWAY INSURANCE CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 18th

    Suarez on his race at Darlington Raceway:

    “It was an up-and-down day for the No. 99 Freeway Insurance Chevy team. I thought we made the car better when the sun was out. Once the nighttime came, I thought we were actually a little bit better, and good enough to run top-15. We were already right up there in the top-10 when the cautions started coming out. It’s unfortunate, but it’s part of it. There were people staying out. There were people with new tires. It was just a little bit of a crazy situation.”

    How do you feel going into the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs?

    “I feel good. I feel like our No. 99 team is strong. We’ve had pretty good momentum the last couple of months, so I think we’re ready. We’re ready to get to Atlanta (Motor Speedway).”


    About Chevrolet

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Buescher Misses Playoffs in Heartbreaking Fashion Despite P6 in Darlington

    Buescher Misses Playoffs in Heartbreaking Fashion Despite P6 in Darlington

    Keselowski 14th in Southern 500

    DARLINGTON, S.C. (Sept. 1, 2024) – If controlling his own destiny were the bottom line Sunday night at Darlington, Chris Buescher would’ve been in the right position as the 2024 NASCAR Playoffs picture was decided. However, another new winner went to victory lane, putting the No. 17 team on the outside looking in as the night ended.

    “I don’t know,” Buescher said in disbelief following the 500-mile race. “We felt like we did, for the most part, what we needed to do today. We got back in contention there at the end and got a decent finish out of it. We just didn’t quite get it done again and we’re on the outside looking in.

    “It’s just the system we’re all playing in. We had such a great year, everyone at RFK has worked so hard. We’ve been so fast. We’ve outrun so many of these cars that are gonna get to run for a championship, but that’s the system and we didn’t work it right.”

    Keselowski finished 14th in his return to the track ‘Too Tough to Tame’ where he won this spring, and now enters the playoffs reseeded as the No. 8 driver entering the final 10 races.

    6 Recap
    Keselowski began the afternoon from the 12th spot, and ended the opening stage of 115 laps in 11th, just behind teammate Buescher.

    Stage two ran caution-free for all 115 laps as Keselowski managed a 10th-place result to earn a stage point, setting up a long run to the finish as night fell on South Carolina.

    Despite a lack of cautions early, the last 50+ laps saw four yellow flags fly, reshuffling track position and strategy for the closing laps. Keselowski overcame a pit road issue in one of the breaks, and restarted sixth with 17 to go before going on to finish 14th.

    17 Recap
    Buescher and the No. 17 team did everything needed to insert themselves into the playoff picture. A qualifying effort of 10th began the weekend as Buescher locked in a heated battle with the No. 23 all race. He put the BuildSubmarines.com Ford 10th in the first stage to pick up a stage point.

    Despite a 13th-place finish in stage two, Buescher carried a seven-point buffer to the 23. He hit pit road earlier than the 23 as green-flag stops cycled early in stage three. After a yellow at lap 315, Buescher and the No. 38 were the cause of a caution just eight laps later as Buescher was forced into the outside wall.

    Buescher rallied though, ultimately coming back to restart fifth with 17 laps remaining in what would be the final restart of the night. With the 14’s win, Buescher stood as the first car out of the playoffs.

    Up Next
    Atlanta Motor Speedway hosts the first race of the 2024 Playoffs next weekend, with race coverage Sunday set for 3 p.m. ET on USA, and radio coverage on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90).

    About RFK Racing
    RFK Racing, in its 37th season in 2024, features an ownership lineup pairing one of the sport’s most iconic names, Jack Roush, along with NASCAR Champion, Brad Keselowski, and Fenway Sports Group owner John Henry. Roush initially founded the team in 1988 and it has since become one of the most successful racing operations in the world, propelling him to be the first NASCAR owner to amass three hundred wins and capturing eight championships, including back-to-back NASCAR Cup titles in 2003 and 2004. Keselowski, a former owner in the NASCAR Truck Series, is the 2012 NASCAR Cup Series Champion. In 2007, Roush partnered with Henry, who also owns Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox, English Premier League’s Liverpool F.C., and the NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins, to form Roush Fenway Racing. Off the track, RFK is a leader and proven winner in NASCAR marketing solutions, having produced multiple award-winning social media, digital content and experiential marketing campaigns. Visit rfkracing.com, and follow the team on all social platforms @rfkracing.

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Darlington Post-Race Report – 09.01.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Darlington Post-Race Report – 09.01.24

    REDDICK WINS REGULAR SEASON CHAMPIONSHIP IN DRAMATIC FASHION
    Five Camry Drivers Set to Compete for 2024 Cup Series Championship

    DARLINGTON, S.C. (September 1, 2024) – Tyler Reddick won the NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) Regular Season Championship with a 10th place result on Sunday night at Darlington Raceway. Reddick overcame fighting an illness during the 500-mile race, persevering by one point in the championship standings to earn the regular season driver’s title. Reddick is joined in the Cup Series Playoffs by four other Camry drivers, including Christopher Bell, Denny Hamlin, Ty Gibbs and Martin Truex Jr.

    Bell led all Camrys at Darlington with a third-place result. Gibbs and Bubba Wallace, who started on the pole, were involved in a multi-car incident late in the race, and both were able to continue and cross the finish line in the top 20. Wallace fell just outside the Playoff cutoff, while Truex had an incident early in the race but was able to secure the final spot in the Playoff field.

    Toyota Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Darlington Raceway
    Race 26 of 36 – 367 Laps, 501.322 Miles

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, Chase Briscoe*
    2nd, Kyle Busch*
    3rd, CHRISTOPHER BELL
    4th, Kyle Larson*
    5th, Ross Chastain*
    7th, DENNY HAMLIN
    10th, TYLER REDDICK
    16th, BUBBA WALLACE
    20th, TY GIBBS
    24th, ERIK JONES
    25th, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
    36th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    CHRISTOPHER BELL, No. 20 Rheem Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 3rd

    How was your race tonight?

    “I don’t know. It was definitely a lot to digest. It was pretty self-explanatory there. The first two stages it went green and then the third stage we kind of had differing strategies. Some guys selected to pit early, we were on the long pit side. And then the yellow flags came, and people stayed out, people pitted, and we had differing tire strategies, and it made it really exciting. Chase (Briscoe) was awesome all night long obviously. Through stage one and stage two he was right there in the mix with them. He pounced whenever it mattered the most. I had the best seat in the house for the great shootout between the 14 (Chase Briscoe) and the 8 (Kyle Busch). And, yeah, it wasn’t meant to be for us today. Now, the real job starts.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 7th

    Can you talk through the end of the race and what more you needed tonight?

    “Just need to be a little bit faster in the short run. We chipped away at it all day and put ourselves in a good spot. Just once we had that restart upfront it looked like we were going to kind of settle in there and run second and then with all the cautions at the end we ended up where we ended up. Overall, a decent day.”

    TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Upper Deck Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    Finishing Position: 10th

    How were you able to maintain your focus battling illness during the race?

    “I don’t really know if I did honestly. Just things fell our way there at the end. Yeah, I started the day off feeling really, really good just kind of trying to take my time to get around Bubba (Wallace). Him and the 5 (Kyle Larson) kind of jumped us on the first cycle. I thought we had a long race and plenty of time and just man, by the end of stage one I couldn’t even really focus on what to tell the guys to do on the Upper Deck Toyota Camry. It was frustrating, man. We had that buffer over the 5 and just watched it disappear all day long. I tried everything I can to drive this car as fast as I can, it was just a real struggle honestly. I don’t have anything left.”

    What does it mean for this team to win the regular season championship and score those extra 15 points going into the Playoffs?

    “It’s huge for us. It’s a bummer, man. This has been one of my best tracks and we just had an all off night. I hate that. Like I said, I hated to use that buffer up that we had coming in here, but this is what this team is kind of all about. I feel like this is the worst night we’ve had in months and months speed wise, and I still finished 10th, and it was an all-out struggle for us. Just really proud of everybody on this team standing behind me. I couldn’t give great feedback, and it was just really, really hard to focus and keep it out of the wall there all night. It’s a shame we gave some points up. I felt like this is a race we could win, but it’s really nice in year two for me here at this team and year four of this team to get the regular season championship like we did.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, No. 23 U.S. Air Force Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    Finishing Position: 16th

    What happened during the second half of the race for you?

    “We just were back and forth on our U.S. Air Force Toyota Camry. We were a little too loose, a little too tight. And the caution a couple laps on tires where we stayed out, I don’t know if that was the deciding factor or not. I was so tight there and got back there in traffic in a spot we hadn’t been all day and got caught up someone else’s mess. It’s unfortunate. I hate it for our guys. Hats off to the 14 (Chase Briscoe). I thought I did something yesterday, they one-upped us and showed up when it was game time so that’s pretty bad ass so congrats to them. Man, just wasn’t good enough for 16th this year. I hate that. It stinks saying that, but it wasn’t for a lack of effort for all of us on the 23 car. Best of luck to the 45 (Tyler Reddick) and hopefully a Toyota wins.”

    TY GIBBS, No. 54 Monster Energy Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 20th

    Can you believe you were able to make the Playoffs after being involved in an incident late in the race?

    “Not really. That was really unfortunate. I was really confused at it. Tried to get wrecked in (turns) three and four and then went and got finished off. I don’t know what was going on. That was unfortunate. I wish we could’ve ran better. I really love this track and have so much fun racing here. My car was so good. I wish we could’ve finished better but most importantly we made the Playoffs and that’s what we came here to do. We accomplished that so I’m very happy to be able to make it.”

    Are you relieved that you made it into the Playoffs?

    “Honestly, it’s good to get in. I really just wanted to win this thing. It’s great that we made it in. We tried to get wrecked that whole entire lap and then they pretty much finished us off down there which is unfortunate. I would expect different, but I don’t know what was happening with 30 something to go. It was unfortunate. It’s frustrating because I really love this place.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 36th

    What happened to take you out of the race?

    “Clearly me. Yeah, it was all my fault, all my doing. I got a run on the 24 (William Byron), and went to the inside and thought everything was going fine and the car just took off and I ran into him. Obviously, that was on me. I hate it for my guys, Bass Pro Shops, Toyota, everybody. We had a phenomenal race car, and I know this is like the longest race of the year – just a dumb mistake on my part.”

    Did it surprise you that the car slid as much as it did?

    “I was definitely surprised. I didn’t expect – obviously that I’d drive into one that deep. I thought I was going to be fine side-by-side. It just took off on me and I hit the 24 (William Byron) so that’s obviously on me. I hate it for my team. You hate to make a mistake that early in the race. All my fault. I hate it for my team, I hate it for (Ryan) Blaney. I apologize to his guys. Just caught me by surprise and just a stupid mistake. Inexcusable.”

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 65 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

    Toyota directly employs more than 63,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 47 million cars and trucks at our 12 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 13th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 29 electrified options.

    For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

  • Briscoe Gives Ford Manufacturer-Most Six Playoff Mustangs with Southern 500 Win

    Briscoe Gives Ford Manufacturer-Most Six Playoff Mustangs with Southern 500 Win

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Cook Out Southern 400 | Darlington Raceway
    Sunday, September 1, 2024

    CHASE BRISCOE WINS SOUTHERN 500, CLINCHES FINAL PLAYOFF SPOT

    • Chase Briscoe drove his No. 14 Ford Mustang Dark Horse to victory in the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway on Sunday night.
    • The win clinched the final playoff spot for the No. 14 team in the regular season’s crown jewel finale.
    • Ford now has the most drivers in the 16-driver playoff field of any manufacturer, with six.
    • Tonight’s win is Briscoe’s second career Cup Series victory.
    • This marks Stewart-Haas Racing’s 34th win since joining Ford.
    • Tonight’s win is Ford’s 735th all-time in NASCAR Cup Series competition.

    FORD FINISHING RESULTS (UNOFFICIAL)
    1st – Chase Briscoe
    6th – Chris Buescher
    8th – Joey Logano
    12th – Ryan Preece
    13th – Austin Cindric
    14th – Brad Keselowski
    17th – Todd Gilliland
    21st – Harrison Burton
    27th – Justin Haley
    28th – Michael McDowell
    31st – Josh Berry
    32nd – Noah Gragson
    34th – Kaz Grala
    36th – Timmy Hill
    37th – Ryan Blaney

    CHASE BRISCOE No. 14 HighPoint.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Finished: 1st

    POST-RACE INTERVIEW

    HOW MUCH OF THIS WAS FOR YOU AND HOW MUCH FOR THE EMPLOYEES AT SHR? “Both. Last week was the most embarrassing week I ever ran in my life and I told Richard, I said, ‘I don’t even want to talk about it. I promise you, I will make it up to you next week.’ Man, everybody knows I’m a diehard Tony Stewart fan and to get this 14 car back in Victory Lane and for all 320-something employees, to be able to race for a championship in their final year, it’s unbelievable. God is just so good. It’s like deja vu again with Kyle with the Xfinity race here in 2020. Obviously, I didn’t know if I was gonna be able to do it, but I just can’t thank HighPoint.com enough, Mahindra Tractors, Rush Truck Centers, Renai, everybody that makes this deal go around. We’ll go to Atlanta and try to steal another one.”

    WHAT DOES THIS SAY ABOUT YOU AND THE ENTIRE 14 TEAM THAT YOU NEVER GAVE UP OR QUIT ON EACH OTHER? “This group, the day that we found out that the team wasn’t gonna exist anymore, we went over to the shop floor and we all looked at each other and said, ‘We’re in this until the end. We’re not gonna give up.’ We kept saying all week that we had one bullet left in the chamber and that bullet hit.”

    KYLE BUSCH WAS CHASING YOU DOWN. WAS THAT THE HARDEST YOU’VE DRIVEN IN YOUR ENTIRE LIFE? “Yeah. I was sideways. Countersteering. I felt like I was in a sprint car. Yeah, this night just literally went perfect. The pit crew did an incredible job and I was crying after the checkered because I just won the Southern 500. This is a crown jewel and what makes this race so special is all you race fans. Every time we come here it’s sold out. It’s awesome and we love you guys. The last time I won here was during COVID, so I didn’t get the experience with the fans, so I’m grateful you guys are here and I can’t wait to celebrate.”

    CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Finished: 6th

    HOW WOULD YOU SUMMARIZE YOUR RACE? “I don’t know. We felt like we did, for the most part, what we needed to do today. We got back in contention there at the end and got a decent finish out of it. We just didn’t quite get it done again and we’re on the outside looking in. It’s just the system we’re all playing in. We had such a great year. Everyone at RFK has worked so hard. We’ve been so fast. We’ve outrun so many of these cars that are gonna get to run for a championship, but that’s the system and we didn’t work it right.”

    WHAT IS THE APPROACH TO THE FINAL 10 RACES AND WHAT ARE YOUR GOALS NOW? “It’s not on my mind yet. We had a lot of things figured out. That’s not it now. We’ll get back and digest this one a little bit. It’s such a shame, but another great run for our BuildSubmarines.com Mustang. It’s another great finish here at Darlington, but just not enough with another new winner and, yeah, just crazy. I’m definitely gonna think back on different times throughout the year and we’ll figure out how to do better next time.

    HOW DO YOU SUM UP THE EMOTION? “It’s frustration and disbelief all together.”


    RYAN PREECE, No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Finished: 12th

    “We just got caught in a tough spot there at the end of the race. We decided to stay out and risk it on fuel and it just didn’t work in our favor today.”

    JOSH BERRY, No. 4 Overstock.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Finished: 31st

    “Tough way to end such a promising day. We had a great No. 4 Overstock.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse and we were going to net out to have a good points day, and it just was one of those nights that you look back on in frustration because this team deserves better. Our results don’t do us justice and tonight was one of those nights. We have 10 weeks to go chase a win.”


    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Richmond Water Heathers Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Finished: 37th (Retired early due to accident on lap 2)

    ARE YOU OKAY AND WHAT HAPPENED? “Yeah, I was hurt for a little bit, but I think I will be okay. I am alright. I saw Martin (Truex Jr.) get loose, and I thought he was going to spin to the bottom, so I kind of gassed up to get around him, but it was just terrible timing. He overcorrected, and we were just right there. Gosh, I hate wrecking on lap 2. It is one of those things where you think he is going to spin to the bottom, but his rear is hooked up but he just came up. I hate it for everyone at Menards and Ford. Our car was great and I just didn’t get any laps. Hopefully, next week goes a little bit better.”

  • Cadillac records best result of WEC season

    Cadillac records best result of WEC season

    No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R finishes fourth in 18-car Hypercar field at COTA

    AUSTIN, Texas (Sept. 1, 2024) – After qualifying third Saturday for the Lone Star Le Mans, Alex Lynn took the opportunity for a motivational moment in the Cadillac Racing garage at Circuit of the Americas.

    “I said in the debrief to the team, ‘We’re good at having a good Saturday, well done, we’ve done it again, but let’s focus on banking a result tomorrow,’ ” he said following the 10-minute Hyperpole session. “That’s all we want … to nail a result on the table tomorrow night that we can be happy with, whether that’s P5, P6, a podium or a win. We need to execute tomorrow because so far this season we haven’t done that. We need a result we deserve on home turf.”

    Mission accomplished. Fourth place in the 18-car Hypercar field for the No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R driven by Lynn and Earl Bamber in the steamy six-hour encounter was reward for the entire team’s efforts in the sixth round of the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) season.

    “I think we came home with a solid A result,” a sweat-soaked Lynn said following the last of 183 laps on the 3.426-mile, 20-turn course.

    The result is the best in a challenging and often frustrating second year of Hypercar competition. Fourth place in the opener in Qatar was vacated after FIA stewards ruled on a post-race technical infraction and other promising starts fizzled.

    Media resources: Cadillac Racing race weekend photos | Cadillac Racing WEC statistics

    Third place in the centenary 24 Hours of Le Mans in June 2023 is the high-water mark for the Cadillac Racing program. Lynn and Bamber started that inaugural season with fourth place results at Sebring International Raceway and Portimao in Portugal.

    The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R qualified third – the fourth consecutive race it has recorded a top four starting spot in Hyperpole — and Bamber started the late morning (CDT) race with the ambient temperature pushing 90 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Contact with the No. 35 Alpine in Turn 12 of Lap 1 dropped the No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R to seventh in the 18-car running order, and Race Control handed the Alpine Hypercar a drive-thru penalty for causing the incident.

    The team quickly implemented an alternate pit stop strategy designed to return the No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R to contention. Bamber and Lynn – the lone tandem among Hypercar competitors – traded driving duties on each pit stop, navigated traffic and were unscathed from further contact while the Chip Ganassi Racing-led crew performed flawlessly on each service stop.

    Following the final round of stops with under 54 minutes left, Lynn drew tantalizingly close to the third place-running No. 50 Ferrari AF Corse. But the restart after the third full-course caution of the race with 33 minutes left blunted his progress.

    The No. 83 AF Corse Ferrari 499P became the sixth different Hypercar winner this season.

    The Lone Star Le Mans – the sixth round of the eight-race season — marked the WEC’s return to the racecourse after a three-year absence. The race was a fixture on the calendar from 2013-2017.

    Next up for Cadillac Racing is the Six Hours of Fuji on Sept. 15 at the 2.835-mile, 12-turn Fuji Speedway.

    What they’re saying

    Alex Lynn: “Our goal was a podium at home. That would have been our A-plus result. I think we came home with a solid A result. We finished only behind Ferrari and Toyota and we know they are very strong. To be P4 is a rally good day and we should be proud. It’s something to build upon 100 percent. We learn a lot and it was our first race where we could really work on the detail and dig into when we’re fighting for one-tenth every single lap what do I need in the car, etcetera. Just a solid day.”

    Earl Bamber: “I think it was a really good day. We managed to execute the race well and did the most we could. It would have been great to get P3, but we came home with a solid result. (Lap 1 incident) It wasn’t a huge bearing on the whole race. We were quite lucky. It could have been worse. We managed to survive, get a good, clean first stint and get through the rest. A solid result and I’m proud of everyone.”

  • CHEVROLET INDYCAR AT MILWAUKEE: Team Chevy Race 2 Report

    CHEVROLET INDYCAR AT MILWAUKEE: Team Chevy Race 2 Report

    CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    HY-VEE MILWAUKEE MILES 250S
    MILWUAKEE MILE 25O RACE 2
    MILWAUKEE MILE
    WEST ALLIS, WISCONSIN
    TEAM CHEVY RACE TWO RECAP
    SEPTEMBER 1, 2024

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN DELIVERS SECOND CHEVROLET VICTORY OF MILWAUKEE MILE DOUBEHEADER WEEKEND
    WIN KEEPS CHEVROLET PERFECT ON INDYCAR OVALS THIS SEASON

    • Scott McLaughlin, driving the No. 3 Gallagher Team Penske Chevrolet, captured his third win of the 2024 NTT INDYCAR Series season leading 85 of the 250-lap race
    • It is the seventh win of his career and the third this season-his second on an oval
    • McLaughlin sits third in the point standings, 50 points down to the leader with one race remaining on this season’s schedule
    • Today’s win is the 11th of the season for Chevrolet, the 122nd overall in the 2.2-liter twin turbo V6 era. Additionally, today’s victory is the seventh in eight hybrid technology events.
    • Championship contender Will Power had an eventful race in the No. 12 Verizon Business Team Penske Chevrolet coming back from being two laps down at one point from a spin and pit stop, to ultimately score a 10th place finish keeping him second in points, 33 down to leader Alex Palou with the Nashville Superspeedway season finale set for September 15th
    • Chevrolet drivers scored six of the top-10 finishers in a successful return to the Milwaukee Mile for Team Chevy and the NTT INDYCAR Series

    WEST ALLIS, WISC (SEPTEMBER 1, 2024) –After starting on the outside of the front row, Scott McLaughlin scored his third win of the 2024 NTT INDYCAR Series season and seventh of his career with a final pass for the lead on lap 218 of 250 and never looked back.

    The win moved the driver of the No. 3 Gallagher Team Penske Chevrolet to third in the point standings, 50 points behind leader Alex Palou with one race remaining at Nashville Superspeedway on September 15, 2024.

    Will Power looked to gain significant points in his quest for a third championship after Palou suffered mechanical issues before the race got underway. However, Power had a spin that created an extra pit stop putting him two laps down at one point. He recovered to finish 10th and is 33 points behind the points leader.

    Saturday’s winner of Race One of the Doubleheader, Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, suffered a mechanical issue and retired from the race on the 87th lap.

    Pole winner Josef Newgarden was involved in a two-car accident on lap five and retired from competition being scored in the 27th position.

    Chevrolet powered drivers had six drivers in the top-10 finishing positions in a race that saw six cautions for a total of 57-laps

    The final race of the season is scheduled for Sunday, September 13-15, 2024—Big Machine Music City Grand Prix at Nashville Superspeedway.

    TEAM CHEVY TOP-10 RACE RESULTS:
    Pos. Driver
    1st McLaughlin
    4th Santino Ferrucci, No. 14 AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet
    6th Alexander Rossi, No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet
    7th Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 askROI Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet
    9th Romain Grojean, No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet
    10th Power

    WHAT THEY’RE SAYING (QUOTES)

    ROB BUCKNER, CHEVROLET ENGINEERING PROGRAM MANAGER FOR THE NTT INDYCAR SERIES:

    ” Congratulations to Scott McLaughlin and the Thirsty 3s on a hard-fought win at Milwaukee. There were several unexpected twists to this race, but Scott and his No. 3 Chevrolet crew adapted and kept their eye on the prize with great strategy and excellent pit stops. This win keeps our Chevrolet winning oval-track record in place this season with one to go in two weeks at Nashville. Again, I can’t emphasize enough how proud I am of the Chevrolet engineering group and our Chevy-powered INDYCAR teams for the incredible effort they continue to put forth throughout this season. With all the new challenges including the hybrid technology, everyone has kept pushing and moving forward.

    “We have one to go with Will Power still very much in the hunt for his third title. We will give it everything we can at Nashville.”

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 GALLAGHER TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – FINISHED 3RD:

    HOW WERE YOU ABLE TO DEAL WITH THE UNPREDICTABILITY OF THIS RACE?

    “That was like the most fun race I have had in INDYCAR, it was a blast. So happy for everyone on the Gallagher Chevy because we just stuck with it. It wasn’t quite good at the start, but we trimmed it up and it was awesome. Lot better with traffic today which helped a lot. Credit to Colton (Herta) and all the guys we raced with, we had a blast. The 21 car, the crew, they helped me a lot in some exchanges and helped me with getting in the box. Big thanks to Team Chevy, and that teamwork that we have. But yeah, I am pumped.”

    WHAT DOES THIS SIGNIFY FOR THIS TEAM?

    “Just the tenacity in some ways. We work hard. Our car wasn’t good last night, and I did a terrible job yesterday. We really worked hard on it and I had about four and a half hours of sleep last night because I was so stressed about it, what I did wrong, and what I could do better. We will keep working and that is all we can do, just keep winning races.”

    SANTINO FERRUCCI, NO. 14 SEXTON PROPERTIES AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 4th:

    “The crew’s done a great job all weekend. It’s really, really tough, especially in these quite tight turnarounds. Great job on stops all day. We only had one bobble, I think, all weekend. But considering we did probably 10 or so pit stops under pressure, they did a great job. And Engineering did a great job, all around. Hard to beat.”

    ALMOST ANOTHER PODIUM, WHAT A DRIVE

    “Yeah, just tough. Its such a competitive field. So tight, so hard to win, so hard to get on the podium you know? We were there all day just….that’s what we had. That was it.”

    YOU KEEP PUSHING FOR THAT TOP TEN IN POINTS TOO

    “Running down that 7 car man. Would love to beat him.”

    ALEXANDER ROSSI, NO. 7 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, FINISHED 6th :

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 ASKROI ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 7th:

    “Yesterday’s race was tough. We really struggled with grip, especially at the end of the race, and P14 was about all we had. But today, P7 and I think we can call that a very good day! It was very sketchy out there today, a lot of guys got into trouble. On our last stop, we had to go to 25-lap old tires. It wasn’t ideal, but it was better than the 50-lap old tires we had on the car! That made it tough, I was really hanging on by a thread there at the end. It was a good day though and this is what we need to do to finish out the season on a strong note.”

    ROMAIN GROJEAN, NO. 77 JUNCOS HOLLINGER CHEVROLET, FINISHED 10TH:

    “A very good weekend for the Juncos Hollinger Racing team with Conor’s podium yesterday and the first podium for the team. A tough time for me in the last two races but generally I think we can be very proud about work we put into the weekend. With just one race to go and we are going to try to do even better.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON BUSINESS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 10th:

    “I saw the (Palou) situation and it was like, looking pretty good. As per usual, something else happens! It’s never straightforward. That’s racing.

    “We were trying to win it. I’m not one to look back, but if I would have just got a good restart in the first one, we would have been OK. Yeah we kept it off the wall and that was a good start.”

    CHRISTIAN RASMUSSEN, NO. 20 GUYCARE ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 16th:

    “This was not the day we had hoped for. The No. 20 GuyCare Chevrolet crew put together a really strong car for me and we had a pretty good start to the race. We were running with the lead pack guys and had a solid race going. Then we had the incident with the No. 15 car which was a bit of a weird one. I didn’t push super hard into the corner but he was completely checked up and I was fully on the brakes. I couldn’t really avoid him, which resulted in us having a drive through penalty. We had a bit of damage as well so we were kind of hanging on throughout that stint until we could get the front wing changed. Tough day. We finished ahead of the people that we needed to, but we probably should have finished even farther ahead with more points. It will all come down to Nashville which is also a new track for me, but we’ll see what we can do!”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 78 JUNCOS HOLLINGER CHEVROLET, FINISHED 17th:

    “Well today started OK and then we had an issue with the clutch which cost us a lot of laps which was such a shame because our car was so fast. We know we were really fast which is great and yesterday we were on the podium so we can really be happy about this weekend. So now we head to Nashville with a lot of good momentum.”

    STING RAY ROBB, NO. 41 GOODHEART VET/PRAY.COM AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 18th:

    “A tough weekend overall. When we spun in the middle of the race that caught us out on an early set of tires there, and so we actually had to go long on our last couple sets, which just made us survive. I felt like the track progression just kept getting worse and worse and worse. So we were just surviving, and I got like, maybe a tire width too high, and the car just didn’t turn and went straight into the wall. So quick end to our day. We go into Nashville with hopefully a better race weekend ahead of us.”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, FINISHED 24TH :

    NOLAN SIEGEL, NO. 6 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, FINISHED 25TH:

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 SNAP ON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 27TH:

    PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    Scott McLaughlin

    Press Conference

    THE MODERATOR: Scott McLaughlin joins us, third win of the season. Still mathematically alive for the 2024 NTT INDYCAR SERIES championship. Chevrolet clinches the manufacture championship as well.

    Your thoughts on another win in 2024?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It was awesome. The car was a lot better today than it was yesterday. I was able to do what I wanted in traffic in some ways. Kind of what Pato was able to do yesterday. Just big props to Benny and the crew. The Gallagher Chevy was unreal.

    Yeah, once I got confidence with the car… The first stint was quite tough for me, but once I got confidence and where I wanted to run the car, I felt the track was really cool. Even the way racing Herta there, he’s a little bit older tires than I was, whatnot, and you could sort of enter at the same point. He would go low, I’d go high, you’d sort of end up in the same spot. That’s why you could have really good side-by-side racing, I thought. It’s always fun when you’re leading.

    Yeah, it was a fun race. I thought it was a really fun race. It was a lot funner for me than yesterday. Good Lord. Really proud of everyone. Proud of the turnaround. We were really bad yesterday from my side.

    THE MODERATOR: Questions.

    Q. Another oval win.

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Definitely an INDYCAR driver now (smiling).

    Q. You’re becoming an oval driver. How proud are you of being able to master this unique skill in racing?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Look, I wouldn’t say… For me, I think winning on an oval, not saying road and street courses isn’t satisfying, because I’ll never forget my first race win and whatnot, but it’s incredible winning on an oval. A lot of things have to go right. You have to make the right moves at the right time. That’s probably why I put Indy above a championship in some ways because it’s just incredible how perfect it has to go on an oval.

    Yeah, it’s the backbone of our sport. I thought it was great. The crowd was awesome. Yeah, it was an awesome weekend. Honestly, I thought the racing was a lot better than we all expected, as well. Yeah, that’s props to INDYCAR. That’s props to Firestone. The drivers, as well. There were a couple incidents, but we were mostly pretty good.

    Q. One of the incidents was to your teammate, Will Power. Could have been a really huge day for him. How shocked were you by seeing that? He could have been leaving here if not the points leader only down a couple.

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, I mean, you got to make your own decisions, and I felt like I made it reasonably. I knew his position. When Palou didn’t start the race, it’s like things shifted to Will in terms of trying to get him back. That’s sort of why it made it a little bit easier in the stint.

    Yeah, man, it sucks. Look, he’s still in the chance. Probably could have capitalized a lot. Yeah, I don’t really know what happened, so I can’t comment on it. I know he spun. Yeah, I was surprised for sure.

    Q. Not counting how you did yesterday, which race did you prefer, the evening or the afternoon?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Honestly, I know I won, but I like this race. Yesterday was extremely hard. I don’t know what other drivers thought or said, whatever. I could not see into three and four. The glare from the sun was incredible, especially when the windscreen got dirty and stuff. That was a big issue for me.

    It probably made the race-ability of the track tougher down three, four compared to today because it was so hard to pick the right line. No one wanted to make a wrong move.

    I prefer this start time. I thought we had a pretty good crowd, yeah. Unless they put some lights on, it would be pretty sick. It would be awesome, yeah.

    Q. The other drivers yesterday said the cars were disappearing, then reappearing. You weren’t the only person.

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Okay, interesting.

    Q. Before this weekend, Penske was unbeaten on ovals this year. Yesterday obviously was a bit of a struggle. Everybody said you guys were lights out at the test here. Did the field catch up a little bit to Penske?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think the test maybe threw us for a loop a little bit. The tire was a little bit different. The pace of the cars was a little bit different. When the pace slowed down yesterday in the race, we just weren’t good when it was slow. When it was high speed, the car was quite good, created natural downforce. When it started slowing down, that’s when we really struggled, which we fixed today with a couple things.

    I think we just missed the mark yesterday. I mean, our qualifying was really good. I thought we hit some really good lap times. I led the first 30 laps or whatever it was. I felt pretty good until I caught traffic and I just couldn’t do anything.

    Today was a big change-up for that, as well.

    Q. You said you were beating yourself up yesterday. Was it mistakes behind the wheel?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, it’s my first flat track, I guess. Yeah, I was pretty peeved. Honestly I’m going to sleep like a baby tonight. I only slept like four hours last night. I was up till probably 3 in the morning. I couldn’t sleep. I was rolling over.

    It’s funny. I think it’s a lot to do with a doubleheader. The adrenaline is just going. But I generally just was pissed off with the way it went and my performance, a little bit of the team’s performance, the car performance. It was just trying to think of ways to make it better.

    I mean, that’s passion. I think my engineer was the same. He was four and a half hours. Same. It’s a passion to be better.

    Yeah, I’m going to sleep like a baby tonight. I need to catch up as much as I can because we are going to have a baby, so it won’t be too long.

    Q. When you talk about how much confidence you’re feeling, how much better did you feel in traffic compared to the lap cars yesterday?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Oh, my God, like 10 out of 10. 100% better. It was night and day. I could pick where I wanted. It took me a little bit of time to get comfortable and confident. Ultimately, man, it was just lights out for me today in traffic. I think some of my moves on the restarts was showing my confidence, what I had underneath me. Yesterday, I was hanging on for dear life.

    Q. Was the lap traffic fair?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: They race you hard when you’re leading because they want to stay on the lead lap. You expect it.

    No, I thought it was fair. Honestly, I had a blast racing Colton for the lead. That was awesome. We were banging, side by side. But it was legit. That’s how it should be.

    I knew he was there. I slid up a little bit. He pinched me. We hit. It was like proper. It was so cool. Like being in the Super Car again. You’re just banging doors. This place is nice because you haven’t got much banking. It’s like a big road course. It was fun.

    Q. I think it’s your first win for Gallagher. Your guys had a late night. Speak on that. Secondly, your fueler said the last stop like he wasn’t there, plugged in perfectly. Talk about your stops today. Your spotter is from here in Wisconsin, as well.

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: They were ripping today. Unreal. Really fast in the pit stops. I saw on TV, but the 21 car was super helpful, the box behind us. It was really good sportsmanship, to be honest. Just allowing me to have an open in into my pit box under some pretty important pit stops. They don’t have to do that. They’re a lap down car or trying to stay on the lead lap and they’re trying to help me. That’s props to Team Chevy, too, for that camaraderie.

    On Adam, yeah, it’s awesome for him. He’s been chasing this win in Wisconsin. I don’t think he’s even had one in INDY NXT. It’s super cool to have that for him. I know he’s going to be having a couple Spotted Cows tonight, that’s for sure.

    THE MODERATOR: New sponsor for 2025.

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: And Gallagher, nine hours to change the stickers. Pretty incredible job. The car looked pristine this morning. The effort is just unmatched. Really cool to see. They just want to do it.

    But yeah, this is an important race for Gallagher, an hour or so down the road, however far Chicago is. That’s their home base. Pretty cool.

    Q. Was the racing what you expected this weekend or more?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It’s hard to tell because the tire changed from the test day. The test day was hard, difficult to pass and whatnot, no deg. This weekend was really good.

    I probably would say it was better than we all thought. The track was wide enough, yeah.

    Q. The drivability of the track over the two days, the differences in the rubber, the temperature, did that factor into today’s race or was it another game on?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It was interesting. I thought the bottom lane, it was a little bit harder than it was yesterday. I think the heat, it being a darker sort of tinge of asphalt, it was probably a little bit hotter today to make those moves.

    Yeah, the track was really fun to drive. Slick in places, but once you sort of got your head around it, it was really, really cool. Super fun, man. Super fun.

    Q. Back to a more elevated banked track in two weeks’ time. Differences for you as a driver? What’s the first thing that comes to mind?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I haven’t stepped foot in that joint yet. It’s a whole new place for me. I’ve seen some footage, whatnot. Watched the NASCAR race there and old INDYCAR footage.

    It’s going to be interesting, that race. I’m hoping we come with a similar tire to what we’ve done this weekend and we can have some really good racing.

    I’m sort of expecting a little bit of action, man. People are crazy right now. Like, there’s a lot of people out there that don’t give an ‘F’. I’m excited to see how we go.

    THE MODERATOR: Congratulations, Scott.

    About Chevrolet

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • McLaughlin Wins Wild Milwaukee; Palou Up 33 with One to Go

    McLaughlin Wins Wild Milwaukee; Palou Up 33 with One to Go

    WEST ALLIS, Wis. (Sunday, Sept. 1, 2024) – In a wild race that featured more twists than a pretzel factory, Scott McLaughlin held off six-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Scott Dixon to win the second race of the Hy-Vee Milwaukee Mile 250s doubleheader Sunday.

    New Zealand native McLaughlin earned his series high-tying third victory of the season in the No. 3 Gallagher Team Penske Chevrolet, finishing .4558 of a second ahead of fellow Kiwi Dixon in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. Colton Herta placed third in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda of Andretti Global with Curb-Agajanian.

    SEE: Race Results

    “That was the most fun race I’ve had in INDYCAR,” McLaughlin said. “It was a blast. We just stuck with it. The car wasn’t quite good at the start, and we just tuned her up, and it was awesome. A lot better in traffic today, which helped a lot.

    “Yeah, burn the house down tonight. That was awesome. I’m pumped.”

    Santino Ferrucci finished fourth in the No. 14 Phoenix Investors Chevrolet of A.J. Foyt Enterprises, mirroring his result in the first race Saturday. Marcus Ericsson ended up fifth in the No. 28 Delaware Life Honda of Andretti Global, his best result since placing fifth July 7 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course.

    Defending series champion Alex Palou will carry a 33-point lead over Will Power into the next race, the season-ending Big Machine Music City Grand Prix at Nashville Superspeedway on Sept. 15. Palou finished 19th in the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda, while Power placed 10th in the No. 12 Verizon Business Team Penske Chevrolet in a day of disappointment and lost chances for both.

    McLaughlin, who started sixth, passed Colton Herta on Lap 218 to take the lead for good. That decisive dive under Herta in Turn 1 came after a feisty three-lap joust between the two young stars, as McLaughlin took advantage of fresher Firestone Firehawk tires and traffic in front of Herta to erase Herta’s seven-second lead in just 14 laps.

    It appeared Alexander Rossi might have a chance to challenge McLaughlin after the Kiwi took the lead, as Rossi was gaining ground quickly in his No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet. But Sting Ray Robb crashed his No. 41 Goodheart Vet/Pray.com Chevrolet of A.J. Foyt Enterprises in Turn 2 on Lap 228, triggering the last of six caution periods.

    All five cars on the lead lap at the time had to decide whether to pit for fresh tires or stay out, and the entire quintet dove to pit road on Lap 230. McLaughlin powered away from the field on the restart on Lap 239, and Dixon passed Rossi for second in Turn 1.

    Then Herta and Dixon engaged in a spirited fight for second, racing side by side, inches apart, in Turns 3 and 4. Dixon finally passed Herta for second on Lap 241 and set his sights on McLaughlin, but never got closer than six-tenths of a second. McLaughlin took the checkered by leading his race-high 85th lap.

    “I think had it gone a few more laps, it looked like he was starting to burn off his fronts (tires) a little bit,” Dixon said. “But congrats to McLaughlin. Pretty sweet to have a Kiwi 1-2 there.”

    McLaughlin’s victory was just one of the thrilling ebbs and flows in the race, which featured a series track record 13 lead changes on the historic 1.015-mile Milwaukee Mile oval.

    Perhaps the one lead change that appeared probable early in the race didn’t happen. Palou held on to the championship lead despite one of his most challenging days of the season.

    Palou finished 29 laps down after an electrical problem on the pace laps sent his car to the pits and the garage for repairs. Power placed 10th as the last car on the lead lap, losing a chance to gain more ground and perhaps take the championship lead after spinning in Turn 4 on a restart on Lap 131 while running in the top five.

    “It was not a great day, but it could have been a lot worse,” Palou said. “It could have been a lot better, obviously. On to Nashville.”

    Said Power: “A long shot now. God gave us a chance then, but kind of let it go. That’s the season, man. You just can’t have those mistakes.”

    McLaughlin is the only other driver mathematically eligible for the title at Nashville, 50 points behind Palou. But it should come down to a two-driver duel for the Astor Challenge Cup at Nashville between two-time season champions Palou and Power, as McLaughlin will be eliminated if Palou starts the race.

    Palou, strategist Barry Wanser and the entire Chip Ganassi Racing crew stayed calm and avoided catastrophe when Palou’s car stopped at the exit of pit lane at the start of the pace laps with an apparent electrical problem. The car returned to the track but then had to return to the paddock for more diagnosis and repairs, and Palou returned to the track at speed on Lap 37, 28 laps down.

    “We couldn’t really do anything,” Palou said. “We tried everything to try and not lose many laps.”

    Palou was the most notable of a handful drivers struck by mechanical misfortune in this race. Another was Race 1 winner Pato O’Ward, who finished 24th after completing just 87 laps due to a gearbox problem.

    The race took an eventful tone right from the start. Besides Palou’s car shockingly sitting silent at the exit of pit lane, NTT P1 Award winner Josef Newgarden was eliminated from the race in a three-car incident on Lap 1. The race start was called off because the rear of the field wasn’t in order, and the No. 8 American Legion Chip Ganassi Racing Honda of rookie Linus Lundqvist hit the rear of the No. 11 Ridgeline Lubricants Chip Ganassi Racing Honda of teammate Marcus Armstrong, who then pinballed into Newgarden’s No. 2 Snap-on Team Penske Chevrolet, punting it into the inside wall.

    After that melee, the race settled into a pattern of nonstop action. There were a season-high 763 on-track passes – a season high and the most on record in an INDYCAR SERIES race at the Milwaukee Mile – and 56 passes in the top five, another track record. Ferrucci once again put on a show with 63 on-track passes, the most of any driver in one race this season.

    Hy-Vee Milwaukee Mile 250s Race 2 Results

    WEST ALLIS, Wis. – Results Sunday of the Hy-Vee Milwaukee Mile 250s Race 2 NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.015-mile Milwaukee Mile, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

    1. (2) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 250, Running
    2. (17) Scott Dixon, Honda, 250, Running
    3. (18) Colton Herta, Honda, 250, Running
    4. (12) Santino Ferrucci, Chevrolet, 250, Running
    5. (16) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 250, Running
    6. (6) Alexander Rossi, Chevrolet, 250, Running
    7. (15) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 250, Running
    8. (19) Kyle Kirkwood, Honda, 250, Running
    9. (14) Romain Grosjean, Chevrolet, 250, Running
    10. (4) Will Power, Chevrolet, 250, Running
    11. (8) Felix Rosenqvist, Honda, 249, Running
    12. (25) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 248, Running
    13. (24) Kyffin Simpson, Honda, 248, Running
    14. (13) Jack Harvey, Honda, 247, Running
    15. (22) Katherine Legge, Honda, 246, Running
    16. (23) Christian Rasmussen, Chevrolet, 243, Running
    17. (20) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 230, Retired
    18. (21) Sting Ray Robb, Chevrolet, 221, Contact
    19. (10) Alex Palou, Honda, 221, Running
    20. (5) Linus Lundqvist, Honda, 215, Contact
    21. (27) Pietro Fittipaldi, Honda, 181, Mechanical
    22. (9) David Malukas, Honda, 126, Mechanical
    23. (26) Graham Rahal, Honda, 123, Contact
    24. (7) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 86, Mechanical
    25. (11) Nolan Siegel, Chevrolet, 23, Mechanical
    26. (3) Marcus Armstrong, Honda, 6, Contact
    27. (1) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 5, Contact

    Race Statistics
    Winner’s average speed: 120.334 mph
    Time of race: 2:06:31.3981
    Margin of victory: 0.4558 of a second
    Cautions: 6 for 57 laps
    Lead changes: 13 among 7 drivers

    Lap leaders:
    Newgarden, Josef 1 – 4
    McLaughlin, Scott 5 – 43
    Power, Will 44 – 54
    Ferrucci, Santino 55 – 56
    Legge, Katherine 57 – 58
    Power, Will 59 – 96
    Ferrucci, Santino 97 – 100
    Power, Will 101 – 115
    Rossi, Alexander 116 – 161
    McLaughlin, Scott 162 – 163
    Herta, Colton 164 – 187
    McLaughlin, Scott 188 – 198
    Herta, Colton 199 – 217
    McLaughlin, Scott 218 – 250

    NTT INDYCAR SERIES point standings: Palou 525, Power 492, McLaughlin 475, Herta 462, Dixon 443, O’Ward 419, Kirkwood 384, Newgarden 365, Rossi 350, Ferrucci 339, Lundgaard 301, Rosenqvist 301, Ericsson 292, VeeKay 282, Armstrong 272, Lundqvist 255, Grosjean 246, Rahal 244, Fittipaldi 177, Robb 175, Simpson 174, Rasmussen 147, Siegel 142, Harvey 126, Malukas 125, Agustin Canapino 109, Daly 99, Theo Pourchaire 91, Legge 56, Tom Blomqvist 46, Ed Carpenter 45, Toby Sowery 45, Callum Ilott 39, Luca Ghiotto 27, Helio Castroneves 26, Kyle Larson 21, Takuma Sato 19, Tristan Vautier 12, Juri Vips 11, Colin Braun 10, Ryan Hunter-Reay 6, Hunter McElrea 6, Marco Andretti 5

  • PAUL LEE WINS PEP BOYS FUNNY CAR ALL-STAR CALLOUT AT TOYOTA NHRA U.S. NATIONALS

    PAUL LEE WINS PEP BOYS FUNNY CAR ALL-STAR CALLOUT AT TOYOTA NHRA U.S. NATIONALS

    B. Force, Prock, Anderson & Herrera also all qualify No. 1 at The Big Go

    INDIANAPOLIS (Sept. 1, 2024) – Funny Car’s Paul Lee won a specialty race for the first time in his NHRA career on Sunday at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park, defeating Bob Tasca in the final round of the Pep Boys Funny Car All-Star Callout as part of the 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals.

    In other racing action, Brittany Force (Top Fuel), Austin Prock (Funny Car), Greg Anderson (Pro Stock) and Gaige Herrera (Pro Stock Motorcycle) all qualified No. 1 at the 14th of 20 races during the 2024 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series season.

    Lee, who was seeded eighth in the eight-car field and appeared in a specialty race for the first time, went 4.243-seconds at 328.38 mph in his 11,000-horsepower McLeod Racing/FTI Performance Dodge Charger to slip past Tasca’s 4.255. Both cars drove into smoke near the finish line, but Lee had enough to coast to the victory, which nets the veteran the $80,000 prize. Lee beat Ron Capps and defending world champion Matt Hagan earlier on Sunday to reach the final round of the specialty race.

    He left first on Tasca and held on for the win, which is certainly Lee’s biggest moment in the Funny Car ranks. Lee has made impressive strides this year with Jonnie Lindberg as his crew chief and John Medlen offering guidance as well.

    “I couldn’t be prouder of my whole team. They really worked their butts off today, changed engines between first and second round and did a flawless job,” Lee said. “This is a team sport. I’m here representing my team, but it’s a true team sport and I just remember growing up watching all the specialty shootouts in the past and then growing up and getting to be in one and win it? I’m over the moon.

    “I’m in it, I don’t care who I race. I didn’t really care because you have to beat everybody. Look at the cars you have to race, these are the top cars in the country. I don’t look at this as stress, I look at it as opportunity. This time, it was an opportunity to win $80,000. Tomorrow, I look at it the same way. I have the opportunity to win the U.S. Nationals.”

    Top Fuel’s Brittany Force has enjoyed the weekend she has needed so far, securing the No. 1 qualifier when Saturday’s 3.693 at 333.08 in her 11,000-horsepower Chevrolet Accessories dragster. It’s the 48th top qualifier for the two-time world champ and Force needed every bit of it this weekend, entering the U.S. Nationals 10th in points. She’ll enter raceday with a 58-point advantage over 11th-place Josh Hart and Force will need to stay in the top 10 to earn a spot in the Countdown to the Championship playoffs. That means plenty is on the line for Force on Monday as she opens eliminations against Shawn Langdon.

    “It’s been a whirlwind of a weekend,” Force said. “We’ve done really well and we’re wearing a No. 1 qualifier hat. We ended up No. 1 and haven’t done that since the very beginning of the season. That’s a huge deal, but we are right now so focused on tomorrow and what it takes to stay in this thing. We’re sitting 10th and we can get bumped out. This team, we want to be in a hunt for a championship. We’ve done great so far and done everything that we can..

    “If it wasn’t Langdon, it’d be somebody else and there is no easy team or driver out here. We’ve seen crazier things happen on raceday. We’re going to give it our all, we’re in a really good position, we have to focus on that and just stay in our lane – focus on what our team can do, what our goals are, what we want to accomplish.”

    Points leader and reigning world champion Doug Kalitta did not qualify, going 3.793 during the final qualifying session. His teammate, Langdon, bumped him out on the next pass, going 3.784 to go to 16th. He’ll take on Force in the opening round, while Kalitta won’t qualify for the first time since 2010, an incredible span of 301 races.

    Tony Stewart qualified in the second spot with his 3.707 at 331.04 and T.J. Zizzo is third with a 3.716 at 332.67.

    In Funny Car, Austin Prock easily held on to the No. 1 spot, as Saturday’s stellar pass of 3.855 at 328.38 in his 11,000-horsepower Cornwell Tools Chevrolet Camaro SS handed the points leader a remarkable 10th No. 1 qualifier this season. It’s been nothing short of a spectacular season for Prock in his rookie season in the category and this was another major moment for the young standout who earned his first career U.S. Nationals No. 1 qualifier. Prock will try to turn that into his first U.S. Nationals victory on Monday, where he will open eliminations against Chris King.

    “It’s pretty cool, I didn’t even think about it until today and not very many people get to qualify No. 1 here at the U.S. Nationals. It’s our biggest race of the year, and I’m definitely proud of this team,” Prock said. “They all work really hard and deserve results like this. I was proud to be able to get the car down the track in a nice, neat fashion all five runs, and I’m looking forward to tomorrow.

    “Earlier this week I got a new attitude, and I’ve just been having fun. When you get punched in the face like I did (in Brainerd), that’ll change a man. I got a new attitude and it’s been working so far. I’m having fun and can’t wait for tomorrow. It’s going to be a great show for the fans, and that’s how the U.S. Nationals should be.”

    Tasca took the second spot with a 3.871 at 336.23 and Jack Beckman, racing for John Force, qualified third thanks to a run of 3.877 at 329.10.

    For a third straight day, Greg Anderson stayed atop the Pro Stock field and for the third straight day, the veteran improved on his performance, going 6.575 at 207.88 in his HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Camaro. Weather conditions should allow for Anderson to improve again on Monday during eliminations, where the five-time world champion will have a chance to win The Big Go for the eighth time. He’ll open raceday against Camrie Caruso, looking for his third win of 2024. It’s already been a rewarding weekend for the veteran, making the quickest run in all five qualifying sessions, but success on Monday is the biggest thing and Anderson feels confident his team is on track.

    “The big day is Monday but it’s been near perfection for three days straight and that’s a helluva confidence builder,” Anderson said. “It certainly makes me feel good, the car feels great, engine is running great, crew is right on point making decisions. Hopefully, we can make that go for four more runs tomorrow and make some magic here at Indy. I feel great, a lot of confidence in the group, the team, and that helps as a driver and makes you get up on the wheel as a driver.

    “I need to get it done. That’s not just me, it’s the entire race team. We need to race error free, like we qualified and get the job done, win the race. I’ve got the horse, I need to ride that sucker to the finish line and ride it proud. That’s what I plan on doing tomorrow. I love racing here at Indy. It would be tough to find a more special race than when I won my 100th race here. You never know when you’re going to get another one. The very next one I get, if I can get another one, will be the best one I ever had.”

    Defending world champion Erica Enders remained in second with a 6.592 at 207.11, while Jeg Coughlin Jr. took third with a 6.598 at 207.50.

    After two days of strong performances from Matt Smith Racing, Pro Stock Motorcycle points leader Gaige Herrera had his day on Sunday, picking up the No. 1 qualifier with a standout run of 6.809 at 197.71 on his RevZilla/Mission Foods/Vance & Hines. It was a strong weekend turnaround for the defending world champion, who picks up his fifth No. 1 qualifier of the season with the impressive run. He’ll open eliminations against Wesley Wells, trying to pick up his first victory at the world’s biggest drag race. It’s one of the few events Herrera didn’t win a year ago and he’ll get a chance for redemption on Monday.

    “It’s good to get the No. 1 spot for Vance & Hines. This is big for us,” Herrera said. “I was happy to run 6.80 and I’ve got to credit Mother Nature because the [cool weather] helped us. I just didn’t think it would be good enough to stick. I was surprised that it did. It should be even cooler tomorrow, so I think you’ll see some 6.70s for sure.

    “We tested here a couple of weeks ago and it helped quite a bit. The air was close to what we had this morning, so we got good data. We’re in a good spot for Monday. That goes for me and Richard [Gadson], Kelly [Clontz], and Geno [Scali]. I think we’ll also do well tomorrow.”

    Matt Smith took the second spot with a 6.816 at 196.90 and John Hall qualified third after going 6.830 at 198.76.

    Eliminations for the 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals begin at 10 a.m. ET on Sunday at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park.


    INDIANAPOLIS — Sunday’s Pep Boys NHRA Funny Car All-Star Callout final results from the 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park. I

    Pep Boys NHRA Funny Car All-Star Callout — Paul Lee, Dodge Charger, 4.243, 234.86 def. Bob Tasca III, Ford Mustang, 4.255, 222.69.

    INDIANAPOLIS — Final Pep Boys NHRA Funny Car All-Star Callout round-by-round results from the 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park.

    Pep Boys NHRA Funny Car All-Star Callout:

    ROUND ONE — J.R. Todd, Toyota GR Supra, 3.955, 318.24 def. Chad Green, Ford Mustang, 4.006, 311.70; Matt Hagan, Dodge Charger, 3.931, 327.19 def. Alexis DeJoria, GR Supra, 4.812, 166.66; Paul Lee, Charger, 4.014, 291.57 def. Ron Capps, GR Supra, 5.849, 126.10; Bob Tasca III, Mustang, 3.933, 332.43 def. Cruz Pedregon, Charger, 5.203, 144.12;

    SEMIFINALS — B. Tasca III, 3.974, 326.16 def. J. Todd, 4.632, 180.89; P. Lee, 3.968, 323.35 def. M. Hagan, 3.972, 326.00;

    FINAL — P. Lee, 4.243, 234.86 def. B. Tasca III, 4.255, 222.69.

    INDIANAPOLIS — Monday’s first-round pairings for eliminations for the 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park, the 14th of 20 events in the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series. Pairings based on results in qualifying, which ended Sunday. DNQs listed below pairings.

    Top Fuel — 1. Brittany Force, 3.693 seconds, 333.08 mph vs. 16. Shawn Langdon, 3.784, 320.36; 2. Tony Stewart, 3.707, 331.04 vs. 15. Doug Foley, 3.776, 313.80; 3. T.J. Zizzo, 3.716, 332.67 vs. 14. Ida Zetterstrom, 3.776, 327.51; 4. Antron Brown, 3.723, 331.94 vs. 13. Clay Millican, 3.774, 331.12; 5. Tripp Tatum, 3.729, 328.54 vs. 12. Josh Hart, 3.772, 326.63; 6. Steve Torrence, 3.736, 332.84 vs. 11. Billy Torrence, 3.764, 332.34; 7. Justin Ashley, 3.738, 332.84 vs. 10. Dan Mercier, 3.763, 319.75; 8. Tony Schumacher, 3.739, 326.32 vs. 9. Shawn Reed, 3.755, 325.53.

    Did Not Qualify: 17. Doug Kalitta, 3.793, 329.10; 18. Jasmine Salinas, 3.814, 317.64; 19. Krista Baldwin, 3.863, 285.29; 20. Lex Joon, 3.927, 313.95.

    Funny Car — 1. Austin Prock, Chevy Camaro, 3.855, 328.38 vs. 16. Chris King, Dodge Charger, 4.079, 302.21; 2. Bob Tasca III, Ford Mustang, 3.871, 336.23 vs. 15. Buddy Hull, Charger, 4.046, 303.30; 3. Jack Beckman, Camaro, 3.877, 329.10 vs. 14. Dale Creasy Jr., Charger, 4.008, 321.04; 4. Blake Alexander, Mustang, 3.890, 327.82 vs. 13. Chad Green, Mustang, 4.006, 311.70; 5. Daniel Wilkerson, Mustang, 3.896, 331.28 vs. 12. Bobby Bode, Mustang, 3.986, 292.58; 6. Cruz Pedregon, Charger, 3.901, 325.53 vs. 11. Paul Lee, Charger, 3.931, 315.49; 7. Ron Capps, Toyota GR Supra, 3.901, 313.37 vs. 10. J.R. Todd, GR Supra, 3.918, 323.12; 8. Matt Hagan, Charger, 3.908, 327.66 vs. 9. Alexis DeJoria, GR Supra, 3.911, 323.50.

    Did Not Qualify: 17. Dave Richards, 4.105, 297.94; 18. Justin Schriefer, 6.801, 99.59.

    Pro Stock — 1. Greg Anderson, Chevy Camaro, 6.575, 207.88 vs. 16. Camrie Caruso, Camaro, 6.628, 205.72; 2. Erica Enders, Camaro, 6.592, 207.11 vs. 15. Sienna Wildgust, Camaro, 6.625, 207.27; 3. Jeg Coughlin, Camaro, 6.598, 207.50 vs. 14. Eric Latino, Camaro, 6.624, 205.82; 4. Aaron Stanfield, Camaro, 6.598, 206.70 vs. 13. Matt Hartford, Camaro, 6.623, 205.94; 5. Jerry Tucker, Camaro, 6.600, 207.59 vs. 12. Cory Reed, Camaro, 6.623, 206.54; 6. Troy Coughlin Jr., Camaro, 6.601, 208.07 vs. 11. Fernando Cuadra Jr., Camaro, 6.616, 205.51; 7. David Cuadra, Camaro, 6.602, 207.62 vs. 10. Mason McGaha, Camaro, 6.616, 206.39; 8. Cristian Cuadra, Ford Mustang, 6.603, 207.43 vs. 9. Dallas Glenn, Camaro, 6.609, 206.92.

    Did Not Qualify: 17. Deric Kramer, 6.640, 205.26; 18. Chris McGaha, 6.652, 207.24; 19. Derrick Reese, 6.668, 206.54; 20. Larry Morgan, 6.670, 206.67; 21. Kenny Delco, 6.705, 205.76.

    Pro Stock Motorcycle — 1. Gaige Herrera, Suzuki, 6.809, 197.71 vs. 16. Wesley Wells, Suzuki, 7.326, 181.06; 2. Matt Smith, Buell, 6.816, 196.90 vs. 15. Ron Tornow, Victory, 7.058, 190.46; 3. John Hall, Beull, 6.830, 198.76 vs. 14. Marc Ingwersen, EBR, 7.012, 191.73; 4. Richard Gadson, Suzuki, 6.834, 196.64 vs. 13. Ryan Oehler, EBR, 7.008, 191.59; 5. Jianna Evaristo, Buell, 6.856, 199.29 vs. 12. Geno Scali, Suzuki, 6.998, 193.54; 6. Angie Smith, Buell, 6.859, 197.94 vs. 11. Steve Johnson, Suzuki, 6.954, 192.55; 7. Hector Arana Jr, EBR, 6.864, 196.64 vs. 10. Kelly Clontz, Suzuki, 6.935, 194.60; 8. Chase Van Sant, Suzuki, 6.887, 195.73 vs. 9. Chris Bostick, Suzuki, 6.929, 193.52.