Author: Official Release

  • RCR NCS Race Recap: Daytona International Speedway

    RCR NCS Race Recap: Daytona International Speedway

    Promising Race for Austin Dillon and the No. 3 BREZTRI AEROSPHERE® (budesonide, glycopyrrolate, and formoterol fumarate) Chevrolet Team at Daytona Before Late-Race Crash Takes Them Out of Contention

    Finish: 22nd
    Start: 16th
    Points: 29th

    “I’m proud of this Richard Childress Racing team and ECR. We were able to run up front in our BREZTRI AEROSPHERE® (budesonide, glycopyrrolate, and formoterol fumarate) Chevrolet, and avoid the early crashes to put us in a good position towards the end of the race. We were solid with fuel mileage. We ended up with suspension damage in a crash with three laps to go, which took us out of contention for the win. I just had no where to go. It’s part of speedway racing, but we’ll regroup and give it our all for Darlington.” -Austin Dillon

    Kyle Busch and the No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet Team Lead Laps and Narrowly Miss Victory at Daytona International Speedway Enroute to Strong Second-Place Finish

    Finish: 2nd
    Start: 11th
    Points: 16th

    “I’m really proud of everybody on the No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet team. Crew chief Randall Burnett and all the guys at RCR and ECR did a great job and brought a fast car. I was hoping we could get those free No. 8 specials from Cheddar’s on Monday for everybody – it would be great to get some chicken tenders rolling — but wasn’t meant to be. It’s frustrating. We’ve led races here at Daytona going into the last restart and haven’t been able to pull off a victory. I’m not sure what it is that I am doing wrong or what it is that I’m missing. It seems like the energy broke up off Turn 2 and the No. 20 car got crooked and wasn’t on my rear bumper the way we needed to be. The outside lane just went by. I wanted to get up in front of the No. 21 because I knew the momentum was coming there, but I knew the No. 20 was a better friend. It just didn’t work out. We’ll take this second-place finish. We’ve got a good little stretch going these last three weeks, and I hope we can do what we need to do next week at Darlington.” -Kyle Busch

    Austin Hill and the No. 33 Team Put the United Rentals Chevrolet in Position for a Top-10 Finish at Daytona International Speedway

    Finish: 25th
    Start: 23rd
    Points: N/A

    “I’m very proud of the No. 33 United Rentals team for the effort this weekend at Daytona International Speedway. In the closing laps, everyone was pushing extremely hard and no one was going to lift. The closing rate is very quick in the Cup Series car. Right as I saw the leaders get turned to my inside, I checked up to not run over the No. 3, but I got hit from behind. We got turned to the right into the outside wall, then I slapped the right rear and it broke something in the backend of our Camaro. Everyone is pushing so hard, so no one is at fault at that point of the race. It’s just an unfortunate end to our day. We ran inside the top-10 multiple times throughout the race and had ourselves in a position to finish there. The goal was to push the No. 3 or the No. 8 to the checkered. I can’t thank Richard Childress Racing and United Rentals for the opportunity to make Cup starts this year though. I’m having a lot of fun running in the Cup Series so hopefully I get more chances in the future.” -Austin Hill

  • Kaulig Racing – Race Recap | Coke Zero Sugar 400

    Kaulig Racing – Race Recap | Coke Zero Sugar 400

    DANIEL HEMRIC
    No. 31 Cirkul Camaro ZL1

    • Daniel Hemric qualified 28th for the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
    • Hemric made it up to 18th within the first seven laps of the race and maintained a top-20 position for the majority of the opening stage. As the intensity ramped up towards the front of the field, Hemric dropped back with five laps to go, playing it safe and finishing the first stage in 33rd.
    • During the first stage break, Hemric radioed that the front end of the No. 31 Cirkul Chevy felt a little light. Crew chief Trent Owens made the call for Hemric to pit the second time by, in order to save fuel. He started the second stage from 32nd place. Hemric made it as high as third, where he ran for a handful of laps. By lap 59, a massive crash brought out the first caution, and Hemric was unable to avoid it completely. Fortunately, the No. 31 Cirkul Chevy received minimal damage and was able to carry on. After pitting to change tires and check for damage, he restarted 28th on lap 66. The next caution came out on lap 81, and Hemric pitted for tires and fuel, with the plan of pitting for fuel only at the stage break. Playing it safe, Hemric dropped out of the lead pack for the final seven laps of the second stage, finishing 25th.
    • During the second stage break, Hemric pitted for fuel only. After acquiring a pit-road penalty, he started the final stage in 20th place. On lap 109, Hemric radioed from ninth place that his No. 31 Cirkul Chevy was tight on the bottom. The next caution came out on lap 140, as Hemric avoided a spin in front. He pitted for right-side tires and fuel, before restarting 19th with 16 laps remaining. With nine to go, a wreck brought out the caution. Hemric avoided the mayhem and restarted 15th with three to go. As an overtime-inducing caution brought out the yellow, Hemric avoided getting any major damage. He restarted ninth for the first overtime attempt and finished the race in ninth.

    “Speedway racing. It was chaotic. I thought we lined up pretty well there for the green-white-checkered and tried to formulate something going into [turns] three and four. I made a move to separate, and I got shoved. Luckily, I got a big shot coming to the line to even get back forward and get spots back into the top 10. All-in-all, it was a decent day for the No. 31 Cirkul Chevy team. Appreciate Cirkul and all they do for us and all the people we have here supporting us. Looking forward to going to one of the coolest race tracks in the country next weekend.” – Daniel Hemric  

    SHANE van GISBERGEN
    No. 16 Safety Culture Camaro ZL1

    • Shane van Gisbergen qualified 32nd for the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
    • Van Gisbergen maintained position throughout the opening stage, while battling a loose-handling No. 16 SafetyCulture Chevrolet. The first stage concluded without caution, and Van Gisbergen crossed the line in 36th.
    • The No. 16 SafetyCulture Chevy started the second stage 39th, after being issued a speeding penalty on pit road. Halfway through the second stage, Van Gisbergen worked his way through the field into the top 10, running eighth for multiple laps, before a caution came out. The No. 16 team opted to pit for fuel and fresh tires during the yellow flag, restarting the stage 13th. Van Gisbergen quickly broke back into the top 10, three laps into the restart. After running at the front of the field, the No. 16 SafetyCulture team opted to drop towards the back of the pack. On lap 80 of the race, the No. 16 exited the race due to a mechanical problem and finished 35th.

    “Unfortunate circumstances today. Our No. 16 SafetyCulture Chevy was a solid car and had a lot of speed. I hate it for our Kaulig Racing team, but something we can’t control. Ran up front there for a bit and showed our potential, but not the finish we hoped for. Get another shot at it next weekend in Darlington!” – Shane van Gisbergen  

    About Kaulig Racing

    Kaulig Racing™ is a full-time, multi-car NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) team, owned by award winning entrepreneur, Matt Kaulig. Established in 2016, Kaulig Racing™ has earned 23 NXS wins, made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started, and won two regular-season championships. In 2021, the team competed in select NCS events, before expanding to a two-car, full-time NCS team in 2022 and adding a third, part-time entry during the 2023 season. Since its first NCS start in 2021, the team has earned two wins. Kaulig Racing is currently fielding two full-time entries in the NCS and continues to field three full-time NXS entries, with a part-time fourth entry at select events. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT DAYTONA 2: Post-Race Report

    CHEVROLET NCS AT DAYTONA 2: Post-Race Report

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    COKE ZERO SUGAR 400
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT
    AUGUST 24, 2024

    Busch Leads Chevrolet With Runner-Up Finish at Daytona International Speedway

    •  Battling to keep their championship title hopes alive, Kyle Busch and the No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Camaro ZL1 team came just .047 seconds from the victory – ultimately taking the checkered-flag in the runner-up position after a chaotic overtime restart for the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
    • After losing the regular season points lead at Michigan International Speedway last weekend, Kyle Larson and the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team earned crucial points in both stages. Running fourth with less nine laps to go, Larson was caught up in a multi-car wreck that took his chances away from his first career victory at the “World Center of Racing”. Making repairs to ultimately cross the finish line in the 21st position, Larson will head into the series’ regular season finale at Darlington Raceway sitting in the second position in the standings and 17 points behind current points leader Tyler Reddick.
    • Amidst the battle for his second career regular season title, Chase Elliott and the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1 team were collected in a multi-car incident while running mid-pack during Stage Two. Suffering too much suspension damage to continue, the former series champion was forced to retire early from the race – moving the Team Chevy driver to the third position and 18 points from the points lead.

    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd Kyle Busch
    7th Parker Retzlaff
    9th Daniel Hemric

    WITH 25 NASCAR CUP SERIES RACES COMPLETE:
    Wins: 11
    Poles: 7
    Top-Five Finishes: 42
    Top-10 Finishes: 91
    Stage Wins: 13

    UP NEXT: The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series regular season concludes at Darlington Raceway with the Cook Out Southern 500 on Sunday, September 1, at 6 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on the USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.


    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:

    Ross Chastain, No. 1 Worldwide Express Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 12th

    You’re 27 points below the cutline. How do you feel going into Darlington?

    “I look at it like we have another chance to go win the Southern 500. That’s what I’m focused on this week. The points, they give them out at the stages and end of the race. If you run good, they give you a lot of them. I just get excited for a chance to go win the Southern 500.”

    When you get in an incident early like that, drive around and hope for the breaks you need to get back to the front, are you thinking about the points situation?

    “I was just hoping it would stay running, keep the water in it and be able to keep up with the pack. Looking at the car, it was amazing it did. The whole splitter is off of it; dragging the ground. Yeah, it’s pretty incredible that we were even able to finish. I thought the radiator was going to be gone. We’re fortunate to finish, but yeah, as I’m riding around – mainly in Stage Two when I dropped back from the pack and was going to be the free pass, I thought through all of it then. And then the whole final stage, it was all about trying to execute and maximize what we could.”

    Kyle Busch, No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 2nd

    “It’s just frustrating. We’ve led races here at Daytona going into the last restart and haven’t been able to pull off a victory. Not sure what it is; what I’m doing wrong or what it is that I’m missing. It seems like the energy broke up off of turn two and the No. 20 (Christopher Bell) got crooked and wasn’t on my rear bumper the way we needed to be. The outside lane just went by. I wanted to get up in front of the No. 21 (Harrison Burton) because I knew the momentum was coming there. But I knew the No. 20 was a better friend. It just didn’t work out.”

    You did everything right tonight. How do you square this one?

    “Just finished second. It’s all good. We were really, really, really lucky tonight to miss a few of those crashes.

    All good. Just real proud of everybody; Randall (Burnett, crew chief), all the guys at RCR and ECR. They did a great job and brought a fast car. Was hoping we could get those free No. 8 specials on Monday for everybody; get some chicken tenders rolling, but wasn’t meant to be. We’ll take this. We’ve got a good little stretch here going with these last three weeks, and hope we can do what we need to do next week.”

    Can you go on and win the Southern 500 next week?

    “Yeah, I mean, we want to. We ran good there the first time I ran with these guys early last year. But early this year, we struggled mightily. We’ll just have to go with hopefully a really good package that works and get our job done.”

    Daniel Hemric, No. 31 Cirkul Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 9th

    “Speedway racing. It was chaotic. I thought we lined up pretty well there for the green-white-checkered and tried to formulate something going into (turns) three and four. I made a move to separate and I got shoved. Luckily, I got a big shot coming to the line to even get back forward and get spots back into the top-10. All-in-all, it was a decent day for the No. 31 Cirkul Chevy team. Appreciate Cirkul and all they do for us; all the people we have here supporting us. Looking forward to going to one of the coolest race tracks in the country next weekend.”

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Kroger/BIGGIE Muffins/ Capri Sun Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 33rd

    “I was just running the middle there. Kind of saved our car all day. Actually made our way to the front a little quicker than I thought we were going to be able to. That caution kind of killed us. We’d been saving a ton of fuel. In the spot we were in, I felt like we were going to gain some track position on that green flag pit stop. Obviously, we didn’t get that, and were mired back there in 20th, and so we got the third row in the middle there, and it looked like the No. 2 just turned the No. 34 and then we piled in there. Just part of it.”

    “I felt like we got towards the front. We were really setting ourself up for that green flag pit stop. We were saving a ton of fuel. When the caution came out, it kind of screwed our strategy up. Being 20th and coming in and not really gaining anything on your pit stop, so it kind of put us in a bad spot. Kind of had to make our way up through there and put ourselves in the middle. I didn’t really like being in the middle but I had to make some moves. I think we got somewhere close to the top 10, and looked like the No. 2 turned the No. 34 and we just piled in. We were hoping for a green flag pit stop, because that’s what we were really setting up ourselves for. Hopefully jump a lot of cars and jump into the top-10 that way. But, didn’t happen.”

    Parker Retzlaff, No. 62 Funkaway Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 7th

    What does this finish mean to you?

    “Yeah, it was definitely a good run for the No. 62 Funkaway Chevy team. I’m happy with a top-10 finish. I came in here today saying I wanted a top-15. Coming out of turn four there, knowing I was third or maybe fourth to the No. 20 (Christopher Bell), I knew I had a shot. I’m happy we gave this team a shot. We had an amazing car. Thank you to Darren (Shaw, crew chief) and everyone at Beard Motorsports; the Beard family for everything they’ve done and the support of Funkaway. I’m happy about it, but I still want more.”

    Talk about the emotion of this sport.

    “It’s just been my dream to be here in the Cup Series at Daytona. It was my first one and I feel like I gave myself a shot. Coming so close and not getting it just hurts a little bit.”

    What was it like there at the end?

    “It was just really aggressive. Everyone was pushing as hard as they can. It just very aggressive, but that’s how this racing gets and that’s why you see wrecks like you do. You have to be lucky and miss the wrecks, but also have a fast enough car to be there at the end.”

    Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1

    Sidelined by damage sustained in a multi-car incident during Stage Two.

    Finished: 36th

    What happened from your perspective?

    “Yeah, I honestly have no idea. I just think that everybody was kind of playing games. Nobody wanted to lead, and it just kind of puts everyone in a tough spot. We were all just kind of stacked up there. Somebody was switching lanes, it looked like, and got out of shape. It’s a bummer. It was so early in the race. I would just like an opportunity to get a little deeper into it and just see where things shook out. We’ve been pretty lucky these last couple of trips down here to Daytona. It’s just unfortunate, but we’ll try to have a good weekend at Darlington.”

    Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Coca-Cola Zero Sugar Camaro ZL1

    Sidelined by damage sustained in an incident on pit road.

    Finished: 40th

    “I was doing my pit stop just like every single weekend. The No. 11 (Denny Hamlin) was right behind me and the No. 21 (Harrison Burton) was right in front of me, so unfortunately I got boxed in. We know that every single time we do a pit stop, we drop a little bit of fuel and that’s completely normal. Unfortunately, the No. 11 was leaving his pit stall right behind me, and because he was waiting for me to leave, his exhaust fired up the little fuel I dropped. Because I was still parked there, that went up the back of my car where the fuel cell is and it just grabbed it. It was a very unfortunate situation. I don’t know what we could have done differently. Just sad that we’re out of the race this way, but I’m glad I’m fine and the entire team was fine.

    The other crazy thing is that I was able to feel the heat, but because I don’t run a rearview mirror and only run the rearview camera, I couldn’t see it. The rearview camera is connected to the rear bumper, so I could see the smoke, but I couldn’t see the fire. I could feel the heat, but I couldn’t see how big it was.”

    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.

  • Harrison Burton Gives Wood Brothers 100th Cup Win with Daytona Victory

    Harrison Burton Gives Wood Brothers 100th Cup Win with Daytona Victory

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Coke Zero Sugar 400 | Daytona International Speedway
    Saturday, August 24, 2024

    HARRISON BURTON GIVES WOOD BROTHERS 100TH VICTORY AND CLINCHES PLAYOFF BERTH

    • Harrison Burton’s win today gives Wood Brothers Racing its 100th NASCAR Cup Series victory.
    • This also marks Burton’s first career Cup victory.
    • Burton is the 89th different driver to win a Cup race with Ford, and the first new winner since Chase Briscoe won at Phoenix 1 (2022).
    • Today’s win is Ford’s 734th all-time in NASCAR Cup Series competition.

    DRIVERS WHO HAVE WON NCS POINTS RACES WITH THE WOOD BROTHERS

    19 different drivers have won points races for the Wood Brothers. Harrison Burton is the latest in a long line of success for the 21 team, led of course by David Pearson’s 43 career wins with the organization.

    Full List of Wood Brothers Winning Drivers: David Pearson (43); Cale Yarborough (13); Neil Bonnett (9); Marvin Panch (8); A.J. Foyt (5); Glen Wood (4); Dan Gurney (4); Speedy Thompson (2); Kyle Petty (2); Tiny Lund (1); Curtis Turner (1); Donnie Allison (1); Buddy Baker (1); Dale Jarrett (1); Morgan Shepherd (1); Elliott Sadler (1); Trevor Bayne (1); Ryan Blaney (1); Harrison Burton (1).

    VICTORY LANE INTERVIEW:

    HARRISON BURTON, No. 21 DEX Imaging Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I don’t know. I cried for the whole cool down lap. It’s just been the hardest three years of my life. There’s no denying. It’s just been rough and these guys have rallied behind me when it matters the most. Going to every single race with the same mentality of trying to win because we could get number 100. We kept saying that in our meetings that we had a chance to get No. 100 for the Wood Brothers and that’s something that you can’t take lightly. We as a group have that place in history now forever for the 100th win for the Wood Brothers and, to me, that just means the world.”

    YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A JOB. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN TO YOU? “I wish it came sooner so I didn’t get fired (laughing), but it’s amazing. Like I said, I just felt worried that I would leave the Wood Brothers with a lot of regret that I had three years to get their 100th win. To get Ford in Victory Lane, to get them in Victory Lane and not have to leave this situation with regret. To me, that means the world and now we have a chance to be in the playoffs, so we’re not gonna roll over and die. We’ve had a rough year, but this is the shot in the arm we’ve needed and we’re gonna go to Darlington set on kill.”

    HOW SPECIAL IS THIS? “This place is just amazing. I don’t think I’ve finished a race at Daytona in my whole Cup career. I’ve always been up front and never made it to the end. My dad is filming now. He’s like a TV guy still. Gosh, I don’t know. I just can’t put into words how much this means.”

    Ford Performance Unofficial Results:
    1st – Harrison Burton
    4th – Cody Ware
    8th – Brad Keselowski
    10th – Chris Buescher
    14th – Chase Briscoe
    18th – Austin Cindric
    23rd – Todd Gilliland
    26th – Josh Berry
    29th– Ryan Blaney
    30th – Michael McDowell
    31st – Joey Logano
    32nd — Justin Haley
    37th – Noah Gragson
    39th – Ryan Preece

    AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Menards/Tarkett Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “Obviously, we had a really fast Ford Mustang Dark Horse. The Menards/Tarkett Ford was good enough to win tonight. We were in position there to win and I just got turned and that’s how it goes sometimes here. I’m really happy for Harrison and everybody at the Wood Brothers. They’ve been waiting a long time for win No. 100. I love those guys. I love Harrison. He’s a great dude and deserves this spot in the limelight. It’s awesome.”

    WHAT HAPPENED WHEN YOU GOT INTO MCDOWELL. THE RUN WAS TOO BIG? “I don’t know fully who was pushing who with the wreck with McDowell, but I was trying to back out of the gas and not run over the 34. I’m not sure he knew what lane he wanted to be in, but between that and how we got turned from the lead it’s just how it goes. You’ve got guys trying to win the race and that’s the nature of the beast.”

    JOSH BERRY, No. 4 eero Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I just looked like the 2 got pushed into me and, unfortunately, we’re seeing a lot of these blow overs lately, but I mentioned on the TV broadcast – obviously paving that section helped keep me from really barrel rolling. As bad as it looked, they made a big improvement over what Ryan had last year. I just can’t believe we flipped two of our Stewart-Haas cars in a row like that, but it was just a great job by Rodney and this whole 4 team. We were in contention all night and had a hell of a race car and had a shot at it.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Advance Auto Parts Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I saw the logo on his rear bumper get really big really fast and it knocked the radiator out of it. I don’t know what happened in front of him and who got turned or what and what made us check up.”

    WERE THE CARS SKETCHY ANY MORE THAN NORMAL? “It’s the last few laps, I think. Everyone pushing hard.”

    INTENSITY CAME AND WENT. DID IT FEEL ANY DIFFERENT TONIGHT COMPARED TO OTHER SUMMER DAYTONA RACES? “Not really. I don’t really know what caused that wreck in Stage 2. We were all just saving gas. I don’t know how we all wrecked saving gas. Maybe some guys weren’t, but I feel like it’s pretty normal. I was really hoping to make it to the end of this. I haven’t finished a Daytona race in like two years, so I was looking forward to it. I thought Joey and I were in a decent spot to go forward, but it’s just chaotic like normal.”

    THE FORDS WERE STRONG ALL WEEK. WHAT CAN YOU TAKE FROM THAT? “It’s good. I think that’s positive to have. Hopefully, we can carry that to Atlanta. Obviously, we were pretty good there in the spring, but it doesn’t matter when you’re sitting on a flat bed.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It’s speedway racing. It’s a lot of fun until it’s not. We did a good job keeping our car in position all night, up in the top five the whole race. We got a stage win, which is great. McDowell just got turned and came down in front me with nowhere to go. I think he’s OK as well. Some pretty big hits there, and then horrible to see Josh Berry there a second ago upside-down into the wall. We’ve got to figure out how to keep the cars on the ground. We’re not doing enough to fix that.”

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 Long John Silver’s Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I’m fine. I don’t know what it looked like. I closed my eyes. Anytime you get turned in front of the field while leading it, you know somebody is gonna hit you. There’s no way you’re getting out of it. I’m just bummed. We had a really fast Long John Silver Ford Mustang. I’m really proud of everybody at Front Row. We had a ton of speed with both cars this weekend and with a few laps to go we put ourselves in position to win the race and that’s what we wanted to do. Unfortunately, we didn’t get to the end and that’s part of this racing. I haven’t watched it in detail to know exactly what happened, so I don’t want to throw any opinions out there because Lord knows that I’ve made plenty of mistakes at superspeedways and I want to make sure it wasn’t me. But I felt like I got turned getting down into turn one. The wrong angle at the wrong time, but Austin was doing a great job of pushing me. We had a good run and you’re at the end of these races, so I’m not faulting him. We were trying to do what we could.”

    YOU WERE EXPECTING A PUSH. “We’re all pushing hard. Typically, you don’t push going into the corner as far as entry goes. You kind of pick somebody up, push them, and then you kind of release as you get off into it, but he was just a little bit off center and I think that’s what did it more than anything.”

    DID YOU FEEL THE CAR GOING OVER? “It was going over. I had my eyes closed, but whoever hit me it felt like it set me back down because I had that moment where it got real light and it got real quiet and then I got hit and then I was back on the ground. I haven’t seen the replay, but I’m just glad Josh Berry is OK. That one looked definitely worse than mine. It’s the end of a Daytona race and these things happen. Everybody is pushing hard and we had guys up there that had to win, so you know everybody is gonna go for it.”

    TODD GILLILAND, No. 38 Grillo’s Pickles Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “We had a really fast car. I thought we could go about anywhere and we had a lot of speed. It’s disappointing when you feel like you kind of waste one, but it is Daytona. We missed the first wreck, but weren’t so lucky on the last one. That’s racing for you and our car is really fast.”

    JUSTIN HALEY, No. 51 Beef a Roo Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “You know it’s gonna happen, but you just have to keep going. That’s just part of it. It’s unfortunate. We’ll keep digging and go the next one. The last few laps is just speedway racing. It was a good run for us. I appreciate everyone at RWR for their hard work. We had a good car and led some laps and we go to one of our better tracks next week. We got lucky to flip one of the stages there and were able to get up front, so we had a good run.”

    RYAN PREECE, No. 41 TRUEWERK Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I don’t know what happened. We were all kind of riding. We were all saving fuel, so I’m kind of shocked it happened, but I checked up. I got hit from behind and, I don’t know, the car didn’t even look that damaged. It was just we couldn’t change the toe link. We ran out of time and that was it, so kind of a tough deal.”

    IT SEEMED LIKE IF IT WAS GOING TO HAPPEN IT WOULD HAVE BEEN IN THE FIRST STAGE. “There was a wreck right there, but honestly, we were all getting really aggressive. I thought it was gonna happen in the first five or six laps, so I was planning on racing really hard and being aggressive but then it crossed my mind that this stage is not worth not potentially trying to win and change your whole season. They didn’t wreck and then when you wouldn’t have thought they would wreck with fuel saving, we all did. I don’t know. It’s a tough deal.”

    NOAH GRAGSON, No. 10 Rush Truck Centers Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I’m good. I haven’t seen what happened yet, but we kind of struggled at the beginning of the race with the front balance and then we made adjustments out of the first pit stop and felt like we had it decent. We had the bottom lane rolling and were up to maybe the top 10 or the top 15 on the bottom line. I got up to the middle and I was behind the 1. He looked real darty, real squirrely so I was trying to bail out of there and get out. I haven’t seen what happened yet, but I was trying to get out of that line. I don’t know if I got ran over or what the case was, but once I see it I’ll see more. If it was my fault, I want to apologize to the other guys, but I don’t really know yet. It’s just a bummer.”

    IT LOOKED LIKE LAJOIE GOT IN THE BACK OF YOU. “I was trying to get away from the 1 in the middle line. I was pushing him and I pushed him a couple times and he just couldn’t take a push. He was super squirrely and I didn’t feel comfortable pushing him just because he was out of shape by himself. I was trying to get out of that middle line. I haven’t seen what happened yet, but I don’t know if the 7 got into me or what. I can’t comment on it yet, but I’m just disappointed.”

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Daytona Post-Race Report – 08.24.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Daytona Post-Race Report – 08.24.24

    BELL, GIBBS EARN STRONG TOP-FIVE FINISHES IN DAYTONA
    Martin Truex Jr. and Ty Gibbs in solid position to earn Playoff berths with one race remaining in regular season

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (August 24, 2024) – Christopher Bell (third), Ty Gibbs (fifth) and Bubba Wallace (sixth) led Toyota with top-10 finishes at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday evening.

    With one race remaining in the regular season, Christopher Bell, Denny Hamlin and Tyler Reddick are locked in the Playoffs on the strength of their wins this season. Martin Truex Jr. remains the leading driver in the standings without a win, as he holds a 58-point advantage over the cut line. Gibbs, with his back-to-back top-five finishes, is 39 points to the good. Wallace, despite his top-10 run tonight, fell to 21 points out of the Playoffs tonight due to Harrison Burton claiming a berth due to his race win.

    In the battle for the regular season championship, Tyler Reddick increased his advantage as he looks for his first regular season title and the first regular season championship for 23XI Racing. The California-native holds a 17-point advantage over Kyle Larson and an 18-point lead over Chase Elliott.

    Toyota Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Daytona International Speedway
    Race 25 of 36 – 160 Laps, 400 Miles

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, Harrison Burton*
    2nd, Kyle Busch*
    3rd, CHRISTOPHER BELL
    4th, Cody Ware*
    5th, TY GIBBS
    6th, BUBBA WALLACE
    15th, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
    17th, ERIK JONES
    24th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    28th, TYLER REDDICK
    38th, DENNY HAMLIN
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Finishing Position: 3rd

    What could you have done differently on that last restart?

    “I don’t know. I’m bummed about it – you want to push the leader out and have a shot to win it yourself. I just never really felt in control. I was always chasing my Interstate Batteries Camry – so I was never confident behind the 8 (Kyle Busch) and pushing him. Disappointed with that last green-white-checkered, but overall, a great day. It is one of those races where when we look back it, we will be happy – but right now it stings.”

    How do you feel about the race?

    “Just – I don’t know – it’s Daytona. You restart on the second row, and to have a shot at it, is awesome. We were really fortunate to miss those wrecks – but bummed with how it played out. Didn’t feel great on that last green-white-checkered.”

    TY GIBBS, No. 54 REAGAN The Movie Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 5th

    How important was that solid day today?
    “It was really important. I’m glad that we got to finish this race. It just got kind of messy there at the end, which is similar to what happens at all of these races. I just was happy to have a good, clean day – good points day. Thank you to the Ronald Reagan movie. I’m proud to have him on my Camry. What a true American. This is really cool. I’m glad that we could come home with a top-five. Thank you to Monster Energy, Toyota, He Gets Us – everyone who is part of my deal. Congrats to Harrison (Burton) for getting his first win. We will look to have a good day next week.”

    What do you feel like you need to do next week to solidify your Playoff spot?

    “Just have a good run. We finished second there in the Spring. I think we have the speed to go win it, so I think it would be cool to get my first win at the Southern 500. That would be awesome.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, No. 23 Columbia Sportswear Company Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    Finishing Position: 6th

    How do you describe your night and seeing a new winner?

    “Not good enough. Simple as that. Easiest way to put it. We had a fast Columbia Toyota Camry – just not good enough.”

    After the new winner, you are 21 points out the cutoff. What does that mean going into Darlington?

    “You have one car fighting for a regular season championship and another car right around the bubble. It is unacceptable. I’ll take all of that weight on my shoulder – should have won multiple times this year and we haven’t. We don’t deserve to be here, and we are – I’ve got to go win next week. That’s it.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Cares Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 38th

    Can you tell us what happened there?

    “Stage one, everyone was kind of going all out – because we are inside the fuel window where were able to run 100 percent to get to the end of the stage, and then stage two, there was kind of a little bit of fuel saving going on, so there was a little stack up – just seemed like some guys wanted to go, some guys didn’t and it caused a little contact there.”

    Did you see what happened from your windshield?

    “I’m not really sure. Everyone was saving gas, so I didn’t really think anyone was being too aggressive, but the first thing I saw was the 7 (Corey LaJoie) got turned in front of me.”

    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.

  • Fletcher Makes Astonishing Comeback to Take First Mazda MX-5 Cup Win at VIR

    Fletcher Makes Astonishing Comeback to Take First Mazda MX-5 Cup Win at VIR

    DANVILLE, Va. (Aug. 24, 2024) – Showing flashes of pace and continued improvement of his racecraft, Jeremy Fletcher (No. 22 McCumbee McAleer Racing) has been on the cusp of a Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin race win all season. After one corner of Saturday’s race at VIRginia International Raceway, it looked as though he’d have to keep waiting, but a stunning comeback finally put Fletcher on the top step of the podium for the very first time. He was joined by young rookie Westin Workman (No. 13 BSI Racing) and 2021 series champion Gresham Wagner (No. 5 McCumbee McAleer Racing).

    Starting second, Fletcher had the outside lane going into Turn One. He dropped a wheel and that was all it took for physics to pull him off the track and through the grass. He came to a stop just before the tire wall and was able to continue, albeit at the back of the field.

    “It was driver error,” Fletcher said. “I apologize to the team for making them stress out. I knew I had to put my head down and really get back after it. I knew the McCumbee McAleer guys provided me with a great race car.”

    Fortunately for him, a full-course caution was issued only a few moments later when three cars tangled in Turn 10. On the restart, Fletcher was able to pick up six positions in one lap to kick start his comeback. He was into the top 10 by lap six.

    The top 10 cars were glued nose to tail and it took everything Fletcher had to find his way through the pack, especially without another full-course caution for the rest of the 45-minute race.

    In a series where the draft is a huge factor and the winning pass is often made on the final lap, Fletcher made the surprise decision to execute a three-wide pass for the lead in Turn One with more than six minutes left on the clock.

    “Honestly, I haven’t really led much this year so far,” Fletcher explained. “So, I was really excited to get out there. I just wanted to stay consistent, and I was pretty confident I could do it from the front.”

    He was right. Even with heavy pressure from two-time series champion Jared Thomas (No. 96 JTR Motorsports Engineering) for the final four laps, Fletcher stayed out front and finally got his first MX-5 Cup win.

    “You’ve just got to get them on your bumper and make it happen,” Fletcher said. “The Home Restoration Store, Home Decor and More, McCumbee McAleer machine got it done today and I’m so thankful for everyone.”

    Finishing second by 0.070-second, Workman also had a lot of work to do, to make the podium. The rookie started seventh on the grid but made a skillful restart after the full-course caution and was into second by lap six.

    “I think I was just able to get a good run on all the straightaways and was able to make up some time on the cars in front of me throughout that lap,” Workman said. “I was able to get to second. I stayed in second for a while, pushing whoever was leading me. It [the leader] was kind of flip flopping around a lot and I was always the second car in line, either pushing Gresham [Wagner] or Jared [Thomas]. Then, I finally went for the lead, and I was just managing the gap behind me.”

    Managing was hard work when the top eight were still nose-to-tail through the fast and technical circuit.

    “It’s a lot of trusting the drivers around you,” Workman said. “I’ve been racing with these guys all year, so I kind of know their driving styles and where they’re gonna brake and things like that. I was in second for so long, just to get to know the drivers around me. During that time that I was in second, I was able to find that breaking point and break there every single lap to manage the gap in front of me.”

    Starting from pole, Wagner led early, but lost pace in the closing stages of the race and even fell out of the top five with four laps to go.

    “It’s tough to push non-stop just because the temperatures get so high, so it incentivizes passing and getting some clean air every couple laps,” Wagner said. “At some point, I just shuffled back and then tried to work my way back. The car wasn’t 100 percent. I didn’t have the running in the first practice, so the setup was just a tick from where I’d want it. I just tried to set myself up to always move forward the last 10 minutes and take advantage of the racing ahead of me.”

    Exiting the final corner, Wagner was fourth, but prepared for the long drag race to the finish line.

    “Fourth place is a tough spot, because you’re at the whim of what happens in front,” Wagner said. “But thankfully a lane opened up and I pushed Weston through to second and also my teammate to his first win. So, all things considered, I’m pretty happy with it.”

    Thomas was seemingly in the wrong lane at the finish and didn’t have anyone to give him a push, so he crossed the finish line in fourth.

    Jonathan Neudorf (No. 55 BSI Racing) had one of the best races of his MX-5 Cup career and secured a personal best of fifth place.

    The point leader coming into VIR, Aaron Jeansonne (No. 24 JTR Motorsports Engineering) finished seventh, right behind Nate Cicero (No. 83 McCumbee McAleer Racing) who came into the weekend second in points.

    Round 12 of the Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin goes green Sunday at 9:45am ET with live streaming on the RACER and IMSA YouTube Channels.

    About: The Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin is the signature spec series for Mazda Motorsports. The series has been operated by Andersen Promotions since 2017 and is currently sanctioned by IMSA. Mazda-powered grassroots champions can earn Mazda scholarships for this pro-level series. The Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup awards more than $1 million in prizes and scholarships.

    Find out more at http://www.mx-5cup.com.

  • Front row start at Portland for ABEL Motorsports

    Front row start at Portland for ABEL Motorsports

    Jacob Abel will start on the outside pole for Sunday’s race, while Yuven Sundaramoorthy will start on row three, the best starting position of his rookie INDY NXT season

    PORTLAND, Ore. (August 24, 2024) – ABEL Motorsports put its pair of drivers in position to contend for victory on Sunday, working hard through the weekend to put two solid race cars on the grid for the 35-lap INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of Portland.

    At the end of the pair of 15-minute qualifying sessions on the tricky 12-turn, 1.967-mile road course, Jacob Abel had placed the No. 51 ABEL Construction Dallara in second position, with Yuven Sundaramoorthy (No. 22 S Team Motorsports/ABEL Motorsports) earning his best qualifying position of his rookie season, starting in fifth (after a penalty to a car ahead).

    The ABEL crews and drivers worked together through two 45-minute practice sessions to optimize setups, balancing having both a stable platform and fast pair of race cars in Friday afternoon’s practice. Then in Saturday morning’s session, both drivers came out of the box hot, with Abel P1 and Sundaramoorthy P2 in the early going. The team continued to fine tune each car and on the combined session time sheet, Abel held the third quickest time and Sundaramoorthy the 12th fastest.

    Qualifying took the green flag later in the afternoon, after NTT INDYCAR qualifying and two USF Pro Championships races leaving plenty of rubber on the racetrack. The 17-car INDY NXT field was split for qualifying, with Sundaramoorthy in the first session and Abel in the second, with 15 minutes for each group.

    With ambient temperatures in the high 60s and track temps in the high 80s, Sundaramoorthy took the green flag, and immediately put the lessons from the practice sessions to use, putting himself P1 on his fourth lap. At the checkered flag, he held the third quickest in group one, but knowing that P1 would have a six-place grid penalty that would move Sundaramoorthy forward.

    Abel headed out moments later, setting the group’s second quickest time on his third lap. As time wound down, Abel set a quick lap of 1:02.4418 to earn his sixth front row start of the season (allowing for the penalty to the car ahead of him).

    “We had a lot more pace in the car than I brought out,” said Sundaramoorthy. “I just didn’t quite maximize the lap. I think our theoretical lap was pretty good there, but I didn’t get the most out of it. I think we had pace for third or fourth, but I’ll take P5 at the start. The start is just all about surviving. P5 means we have the inside, and that’s a little better, but we have to hope for less chaos than it’s been in the past.”

    “We worked hard to get the cars well prepared for qualifying,” said Abel. “In a series that’s this close, you need everything you can get. We might be a little behind but big props to the crew for working on it all weekend long. We’ll see, we’ll see how the race goes – obviously, it’s always an interesting Turn 1 so we’ll see how it goes for the front row. I’d rather be on the inside of the front row but outside is the next best thing so hopefully we’ll be able to go for it.”

    ABEL Motorsports thanks partners ABEL Construction Company, Advance Ready Mix, Boyd Cat®, S Team Motorsports, Quest Global and OMP for their continued support.

    The INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of Portland takes the green flag Sunday, August 25 at 1:10 p.m. ET. The race will be streamed live in the U.S. on Peacock, while international viewers can watch via INDYCARLIVE, with INDYCAR Radio available at indycar.com and on Sirius XM.

    About ABEL Motorsports: Team principal Bill Abel began racing motocross in 1972, earning numerous championship titles as he continued the family racing tradition. In 2015, ABEL Motorsports was launched, starting in the USF2000 series and building up the junior open wheel ladder. The team captured the inaugural Formula Regional Americas Championship with driver Kyle Kirkwood in 2018.

    ABEL Motorsports currently competes in the INDY NXT by Firestone series, the official development series for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, led by third-generation driver Jacob Abel. The team made its INDYCAR debut in 2023 with driver RC Enerson in the Indianapolis 500. For more information visit the official team website at abelmotorsports.com.

    About Abel Construction Company: ABEL Construction is one of the largest general contractors in Kentucky, holding licenses in thirteen states. The company has offices in Lexington, Kentucky and Indianapolis, Indiana, with the corporate office in Louisville. Their expertise spans many areas, including general contracting, construction management, design-build, Integrated Project Delivery (IPD), and facilities maintenance.

    Abel Construction has helped build some of the region’s most recognizable landmarks. Their projects cover diverse sectors, including automotive, healthcare, post-secondary education, commercial, food/beverage, tech, and industrial/manufacturing. They prioritize client satisfaction, focusing on efficient project delivery regardless of size or cost. The company’s skilled professionals utilize cutting-edge technology and software to ensure successful outcomes. abelconstruct.com/.

    ABEL Motorsports social media

    Facebook: ABEL Motorsports
    Twitter/X: ABEL Motorsports
    Instagram: ABEL Motorsports

  • CHEVROLET INDYCAR AT PORTLAND: SANTINO FERRUCCI PUTS CHEVY AND AJ FOYT RACING ON POLE AT PORTLAND

    CHEVROLET INDYCAR AT PORTLAND: SANTINO FERRUCCI PUTS CHEVY AND AJ FOYT RACING ON POLE AT PORTLAND

    CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    BITNILE.COM GRAND PRIX OF PORTLAND
    PORTLAND INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY
    PORTLAND, OREGON
    TEAM CHEVY ALL CHEVY FRONT ROW
    AUGUST 24, 2024

    SANTINO FERRUCCI SCORES CAREER-FIRST NTT P1 AWARD AT PORTLAND
    WILL POWER QUALIFIES SECOND TO LOCK-IN ALL CHEVROLET FRONT ROW FOR THE BITNILE.COM GRAND PRIX OF PORTLAND

    • Santino Ferrucci put his No. 14 Phoenix Investors AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet on pole for the BiTNILE.COM Grand Prix of Portland with a lap of 58.2046 seconds
    • It is Ferrucci’s career-first NTT P1 Award, and the first pole for AJ Foyt Racing since Detroit, 2014
    • Will Power, INDYCAR’S all-time pole winner, qualified second to lock-in an all-Chevy power front row behind the wheel of his familiar No. 12 Verizon Business Team Penske Chevrolet with a lap of 58.3120 seconds
    • Two Team Chevy drivers-Ferruci and Power-progressed to the Firestone Fast Six to run for the pole
    • Josef Newgarden and Romain Grojean also represented the Bowtie brand in the Fast 12
    • The schedule on Saturday concluded with a final 30-minute practice at 5:15 PM PT
    • The session was completed without incident
    • Ferrucci had a solid session finishing ninth in the final order
    • Sunday’s race will be live of USA and Peacock starting at Noon PT, 3:00 PM ET plus INDYCAR Radio, and SiriusXM Channel 218..

    TEAM CHEVY TOP-10 QUALIFYING RESULT:
    Pos. Driver
    1st Santino Ferrucci (58.2046)
    2nd Will Power (58.3129)
    7th Josef Newgarden (58.41.63)
    8th Romain Grojean (58.4494)

    WHAT THEY ARE SAYING-QUOTES

    SANTINO FERRUCCI, NO. 14 PHOENIX INVESTORS AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, POLE WINNER:

    How special is this moment?

    “I mean, this is definitely one of the greatest days of my career. In qualifying, too, it’s so tight. This series is so incredible talented. To be doing this today is such a feat for us and the team, and shows how hard we’ve been working. I can’t thank everybody enough for believing in me.

    “Man, I think it’s no secret how hard we’ve been working this year, how hard I’ve been working, Larry (Foyt), our entire staff. I mean, my first career pole in an INDYCAR and I’m not known for being the best qualifier and today, we just felt it. We unrolled off the trailer amazing. It’s been a year of hard work and progression. We’ve showed some real speed at certain times and it feels great to put it together, man. I can’t just thank this entire team enough, Sexton Properties, Phoenix Investors, everybody that’s involved, Chevrolet. We brought it.”

    Starting on pole, how do you keep it up front in the race tomorrow?

    “We’ve been so good in race craft, that’s actually the least of my worries. The racing’s so good for us. We’ve been struggling everywhere else on the weekend, so to knock this out of the park, I’m excited.”

    You’ve been strong on ovals in past, but to get this first career pole on a road course, how does that feel to you?

    “Everything. I’ve got some more bargaining power for next year. I mean, I love it. What Larry (Foyt) and I have been building at this team, I’m so proud of him, so proud of what we have accomplished, and I just can’t wait for the future. I think this is a glimpse of what we’ve got. This is the last road course of the year, and, trust me, I want to get on that podium so bad, stand on that top step, and a road course would be a way to make it happen.”

    LARRY FOYT, AJ FOYT RACING TEAM PRESIDENT:

    “It’s just awesome. I mean, the trajectory where we’ve been headed as a team, it’s just been great. We’ve added so many great people to our group. Santino (Ferrucci) is just getting better all of the time. This is just a testament to everything we’re doing. Thanks to affiliation with Penske. Certainly, a huge help. Those guys are awesome, but our guys just really delivered today and Santino drove the wheels off. It’ll be good to call dad. It’ll be a fun call for a change. I hope the Sextons are watching and the Phoenix livery is beautiful this weekend. It’s great, just great.”

    We know what one half of the team is going to look like from the driver perspective with David Malukas. What does this do to help solidify Santino’s position in the team?

    “He’s done a super job this year. Can’t say enough about how he’s helped elevate the team. It’s just really good. I hope he can enjoy this. It’s really great for the morale of the whole group.”

    What have been some key moments along the way with this team whether it’s key personnel, milestones, etc.?

    “You get a good group together, everybody pulling in the same direction, and that’s what it really takes. INDYCAR is so tight. You can be up one weekend and down there next. If you’ve got a group that really likes working together and putting in the extra effort, that’s just what we’ve been doing. From guys like Michael Cannon joining the team to the Penske affiliation, Chevy power, everything just comes to this. It feels great.”

    MICHAEL CANNON, AJ FOYT RACING TECHNICAL DIRECTOR:

    “I’m just so blessed to work with so many really good drivers, really great drivers, a lot more great drivers and these great engineers. This has been a 19-month project getting here and I can’t thank Larry (Foyt) enough for giving me this opportunity to build a racing team, Roger Penske and his group, Ron and all the guys there with all of the help they’ve been giving us, it’s made a world of difference. We’ve turned this team completely around from tail end Charlie to pole. This is magnificent.”

    Many on the team were here when you showed up to help with this resurgence. Celebrating this moment, what does that mean to you?

    “Everything. It means everything. I hope AJ (Foyt) is watching. I hope he’s proud of us. It was what I was hired to do. A lot of us came in here given a blank slate, not necessarily a blank check but a blank slate. To pull this off is remarkable. It’s one of the best days of my 42 years of racing that I can remember. Just truly remarkable, so proud of (this crew), and I’m so glad I could do this for Larry and AJ (Foyt).”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON BUSINESS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED SECOND:

    “I made one mistake in turn 12. I dropped the wheel off which lost me a bit over a tenth, so (Santino Ferrucci)’s lap was very, very good. He did a great job. All stoked to get through the Fast Six. I really wanted pole because it helps so much not getting caught up in that first corner. But, it’s great to be on the front row with somewhat of a teammate. Obviously, with Santino, we share information some, so we can start about the start. Ultimately, just have to keep finishing ahead of (Alex) Palou. He’s right there. Obviously, I can be a bit more aggressive than he can on the start. I have less to lose than he does, so we’ll just focus on trying to win the race.”

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 TIRERACK.COM TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED SEVENTH:

    “We heard your radio discussing the limiter concern that you had on your lap. How big of a difference do you feel that it made?

    “Pretty small, but when you’re talking in the grand scheme of things of couple of hundredths of a second making the difference in the cut, you know… We haven’t seen the data yet, but regardless of that, we probably needed to be a little bit quicker to be safe and not have to even worry about something like that. But that on that particular lap, we had a limiter spike for whatever reason. I’m disappointed. Our car was really good. This team is really good. Luke (Mason) did a really good job on the set up. It’s fun to have TireRack.com on board. They’re new for us this weekend. Obviously, we have a great partnership with Discount Tire, so to bring Tire Rack as well is really great on our INDYCAR program. But I’m disappointed because I really wanted to transfer there, I wanted a shot at the pole. Hopefully, Will (Power) can get that job done. As you can see, our cars are quick. We’ll have to focus on the race with the No. 2 car.”

    Obviously, INDYCAR qualifying is intense but it seems like this weekend, the field is so close. How intense are these sessions as a driver?

    “It’s insane. I don’t know how to describe it any more. We have essentially a new car we’re working with. It’s five races old, we’re 100 pounds lighter. It’s hybridized, so it’s a completely different use case and somehow everyone is within a tenth or two of a second. It’s unbelievable how tight it is. You can’t make one little misstep whether it’s me driving the car or us with the setup. Any little detail just can’t be missed. It’s hard. I don’t think there’s anything more competitive on the planet. It’s been that way with INDYCAR but it seems to ratchet up each year.”

    ROMAIN GROJEAN, NO. 77 JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED EIGHTH:

    “P8 in qualifying, and think we’re going to start P6 with engine penalties in front, so pretty good job. Not an easy weekend with the start, but we’ve done some great work to get better in qualifying. A few ideas for the race. Weather for tomorrow is going to be a lot different, so we just need to try to analyze that the best and get a good race car.”

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 FREIGHTLINER TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 14TH: NOTE – will take a six position grid penalty for unapproved engine change

    “Our car was good now, I just didn’t find the gap where I should have. Pretty disappointed for everyone on the Freightliner Chevy. Our car was quick. You just can’t afford to just be, even if the car is a second in front of you, it’s disturbs it enough to slow it down. I’m bummed with that because we have a car good enough for pole, but I’m just going to have to do it the hard way.”

    What did the reds feel like there? Did they take a lap or two to come in there?

    “It was pretty normal to every other track. It’s not a problem with that. It’s a matter of just getting it in the right gap.”

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 askROI ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 15TH:

    “This is a tough one. We really feel that we have a much better car than 15th, but it’s so hard to get the gaps right during qualifying and then not knowing what other cars around you are going to do. Last year though, I started 13th and had my best finish of the season, so we will try to move our way forward tomorrow and continue our streak of Top 10s!”

    CHRISTIAN RASMUSSEN, NO. 20 GUY CARE ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 17TH:

    “I think everyone knows it’s that tight. You have to be on the absolute limit to even transfer. A tenth of a second, I mean, in practice it was a matter of ten spots, a tenth of a second. It’s crazy tight. Unfortunately, we were just on the wrong side of that, and I think we have a strong car this weekend. We didn’t really show our pace in the practices, but this is more like it. Hopefully, we can move forward a little bit in the race and finish the season off strong.”

    Last race of the season, what does that mean mentally for you?

    “I want to race, that’s what I’m here for, but right now I’m focusing on this weekend and doing the best I can, give us a best spot in the championship – that’s what we’re all thinking about. It’s not going to be anything super crazy this weekend, just kind of a safe, strong weekend.”

    ALEXANDER ROSSI, NO. 7 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 18TH:

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 23RD:

    “I don’t know what went on with the reds. The blacks, the car didn’t feel horrible on the blacks, it just felt like it never switched on the reds. I don’t know if it what how we brought them in or having to back down when some of the guards in front… We were a little bit off sequence. That was obviously a handful. Just no pace in it at all. Couldn’t really get it out of the car. There’s not much more I could’ve done or would’ve been spinning. It’s a bummer because I thought we had a chance for at least a Fast Six and for the pole. We just couldn’t get the car to switch on on the reds.”

    NOLAN SIEGEL, NO. 6 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 24TH:

    “Pretty strong pace-wise in practice, and we were in a good spot to transfer, then I thought we had pretty clean run and the balance in the car was fine. It didn’t feel like anything went wrong, we were just lacking pace. Obviously, none of us transferred so not a stellar day. We’ll have to find a little bit more and keep searching. I think our race pace is a little bit better than qualifying pace, at least, but was hoping to have a stronger qualifying session for the last road course qualifying of the year, for sure.”

    You went 20th to seventh at World Wide Technology Raceway so you know how to slice and dice your way through the field. What kind of different challenges on a road course does that present?

    “It’s very different than to oval racing. I don’t know how much strategizing there will be in this race. I think that it’s generally easier to make passes on road courses or at least it has been. Gateway raced pretty well. I don’t know. We’ll see. I’ve never done an INDYCAR race here at Portland, so I’ll be learning. I’ll see what I can do, and hopefully this track races as well as Gateway did last weekend.”

    STING RAY ROBB, NO. 41 GOODHEART VET/PRAY.COM AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 25TH:

    ”Qualifying was great for the team, seeing Santino in P1 was very exciting . We’re going to his car to try it out in the warmup and see what happens there. Hopefully that will improve it for us and I think that we’ll be in a good spot.”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 78 JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 27TH:

    “It is what it is. It’s just frustrating because I think the team made a great step forward in the car. Just don’t have the experience to take advantage of it, and we can’t afford to make silly mistakes either. I think we’ll be fine, I do believe that. Obviously, the work is really hard for us. But I appreciate everyone trying to get me up to speed with just one session. Honestly, you just have to make something happen. We’ll try and stay out of trouble and try to strategize our way forward and use the speed of the car that we’ve got. It is what it is. I’m personally frustrated because I want to be better for these (Juncos Hollinger Racing) guys. It’s almost impossible to really know what I don’t know.”

    POST QUALIFYING PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:

    Santino Ferrucci

    Larry Foyt

    Will Power

    Press Conference

    THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by Santino Ferrucci for AJ Foyt Racing with his first career NTT P1 award.

    Santino, congratulations. Tell us about this. What are the emotion months like?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Man, it’s pretty awesome. It’s my first career pole in the series. To come on a road course like Portland where it’s so tight, it’s so competitive. It just felt great.

    That lap felt amazing. We rolled off the trailer really good coming here. We knew we had a strong car. So it’s really nice to put everything together for myself and for the team.

    Yeah, super stoked as well. New sponsor on the car this weekend, Phoenix Investors. They were all down there in the pits with us when it happened, so it was a blast.

    THE MODERATOR: You were already P1, but pushing towards the end. The unknown is what you’re fearful of. You weren’t backing down at the end at all, were you?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: No, definitely not. It’s always about who crosses the line last year. I’ve watched enough Fast Sixes to know that. We field for three laps, so I was going to use them all, regardless if we ran out or not.

    THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.

    Q. Larry, could you talk about what this means for the organization.

    LARRY FOYT: Well, it’s huge. I think you can just see how happy everybody is because a couple years ago it was a struggle. We’ve just kept building this team, kept adding better people. It’s led to all this.

    Having some consistency with Santino, man, everyone is just really happy. This whole year, even fighting for a top 10 in the championship was a huge step up. The qualifying pace, don’t say you’re not a good qualifier, can’t say that (smiling).

    We have such a good group working together from the engineering, mechanics, and a hell of a driver. So it feels great.

    Q. How much does the Penske alliance put you in this position today?

    LARRY FOYT: It’s great. They’ve been super to work with. I’ve learned a lot. So can’t thank them enough for everything that they’ve done to help us achieve that, get to where we’re headed. Awesome organization to be with.

    Q. Santino, you said this gives you some bargaining power for next year. Are you going to get a contract out of Larry by the end of the day? What’s your situation?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: When is warm-up? How long do we have (laughter)?

    No, it’s good. I don’t think it’s any secret that I very much found a home here with Larry and AJ Foyt. I want to stay. That’s kind of in the cards here. Obviously there’s a lot that needs to happen, still a pretty big off-season.

    Getting pole today definitely doesn’t hurt (smiling).

    THE MODERATOR: AJ Foyt’s first P1 award since Belle Isle in 2014. This has to feel good, Larry.

    LARRY FOYT: Yeah, I was in my 30s (smiling). It does feel great. We had a good car from when we unloaded. Santino said the car was really good. We thought we had a shot at top six, but we really didn’t think the pole. Just a hell of a lap he put in there.

    Q. You felt this was a place you could target for a strong result. What about this track, permanent road course package, made for this? Did you feel like a pole was possible or did this take you a little by surprise today?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I said Portland would be a good one for us just based off of how we did at Barber and Laguna. We kind of understood why we were so quick there in the race. It was just putting it together here in Portland. Obviously they’re three totally different tracks.

    When we unloaded on Friday, we knew we had a really good car. Then it was fine-tuning it really into today. I kind of figured we’d be able to get into the top 12. The Fast Six I knew was going to be really difficult.

    The new tire runs for us we’re not super sparkly. The second tire runs is where I kind of knew we had something. So in my head, when Larry told me we had advanced into the Fast Six, I knew that if I just stayed calm and hit my marks, we could really be a threat to contend for a pole.

    I didn’t think we would get it, but I thought we would at least be on the front row. I’m beyond thrilled to lead the field to green tomorrow.

    THE MODERATOR: Larry, any chance you’ve heard from the boss yet?

    LARRY FOYT: No. I’m going to go give him a call right now and give Marlene Sexton from Sexton properties a call. None of this would be possible without them. This will be a fun call (smiling).

    Q. When the Fast Six starts, we see everybody pile out onto the track. You stayed in your pit stall for quite a few minutes. Was it just a matter of that’s the way you wanted to do it to build a gap or did it have more to do with the heat cycle on the reds?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: There were a couple of strategy things involved. I think I’ll say a lot has to do with the fuel situation here in Portland. Just we’ve run a lot today. We really only had one run. Just wanted to make it count.

    Yeah, that was kind of the plan.

    Q. We had the announcement about Malukas. Santino, when we know what you’ve accomplished, how this program has grown together, the ability to not get demoralized, down, continue to rally when you’re facing an unknown situation for next year…

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, I think it’s been a very interesting two years. I think me and Larry have worked really well together. That news is honestly a huge steppingstone for the team. There’s a lot behind for that. Obviously for me it’s a bit of an unknown.

    Things like today help. The Indy results that we’ve had during the 500 help. Being 10th in the championship helps. We’ve really brought it together.

    Regardless of news, I never really found it demoralizing if that makes sense just because of how much we’ve been able to accomplish in the last two years. I don’t see it as a negative. I see it as a massive positive for something like that to come along.

    Yeah, no, it’s exciting for the future. I can’t wait to see what unfolds.

    Q. Larry, any thoughts other than that?

    LARRY FOYT: Yeah, this whole season is a big tribute to a lot of what Santino brings to the table. Fighting for us to get top 10 in the championship, first time in two decades that this late in the season we’re fighting for that. That’s a big testament to a lot that he’s done.

    We have a great relationship. I’m sure things will work out the way they should.

    Q. Santino, in the Fast Six, you had last year’s polesitter Graham Rahal, Alex Palou, Will Power. Does that make what you accomplished today, taking pole, any more satisfying?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: To be honest, when we made it into the Fast Six, I was like, Who’s in it?

    They said, Will.

    I was like, Oh, damn.

    It’s so hard to compete against everybody here. Everybody’s so talented. On any given day as a driver, as an athlete, if you get everything right, it’s a chance and an opportunity to excel. We had the car. Today was the day for me in qualifying to nail the lap, to get it right, especially when it counts.

    Honestly the Fast 12 was more pressure than the Fast Six just because it’s so hard. I mean, you’re going against so many more people. Once you’re in the Fast Six, the math in my head was you’re in the Fast Five. Once you’re in the Fast Five, it’s only two more spots to third. If you nail your lap, it’s front row.

    To take the pole, I didn’t really think about it (laughter).

    Q. Were folks communicating to your ear with 30 seconds to go that you were on top or did you not know you had pole or were sitting on the fastest time until the session was over with?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I knew I was first starting the final lap, when I came onto the frontstretch just because we have telem in the car and stuff like that. I knew I was good. With one more lap to go, it’s whoever does the last lap normally gets the pole.

    I just kind of put my head down. I felt like the car was in a perfect position. I just drove as hard as I could. When I got on the back straight out of seven, that’s when I keyed up the radio ’cause they have more telemetry than anybody else. I was asking them if I’m going to make it. Knew we were quick. I knew it was a hell of a lap. I just didn’t know how good.

    At the line, we kind of knew. We were just waiting for Palou. Yeah, once we came down pit road, we had it.

    Q. What is it like when you look down with a lap to go and you’re sitting on top? Was it surprising? How do you keep your emotions in check?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Kind of made me hungry, I’m not going to lie. When you see it there and you know you got more lap time that you can wring out of the car and yourself as a driver, I saw that. I saw I was already negative on the dash. I just wanted to push as hard as I could to see what I could actually do without the threat of what’s the worst that’s going to happen. You’re still going to end up in the Fast Six. At that point there’s no pressure to not push. That’s kind of where I was at mentally.

    Q. Larry, there’s been a lot of attention on the Penske deal. A lot of people you brought into the team over the past few years. Might you want to talk about those people and reaction to all this happening, the importance of some of the hires you made.

    LARRY FOYT: Well, for sure. I mean, we’ve been fortunate to bring in some really great people that have helped all the way from Michael Cannon to a lot of the other engineers, Adam, James. The whole stand. C.J., has been here a long time. A lot of people have stuck with us through the hard times, and as well a lot of new people have come in and been a great addition.

    It’s just a great group that are working hard together. Definitely the Penske alliance has been great. They’re a great company to work with. We go back so far. AJ and Roger go way back. Obviously Tim Cindric. Working with him and Ron has been great. I’ve learned a lot. Certainly has been a benefit to help us get to where we’re headed.

    No, can’t say enough about everyone on the team. That alliance has been very helpful, as well.

    Q. Santino, is this your first pole since British F3 in 2014?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, I think this is my first one in a minute. At least that I can remember (smiling). It will be nice to lead the field to green, to have no one in front of us.

    I’ve been off pole a couple of times. But yeah, it’s definitely fun.

    Q. Will was saying you two could strategize for tomorrow. Does it help to have someone who is sort of a teammate to you alongside you?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: It’s definitely going to make it interesting. At the end of the day we are kind of our own team. We’re fighting our own championship. The championship doesn’t really matter as much to me as getting a win. That’s kind of my goal.

    If we can help out some of our Penske alliance friends, to help Will with the championship in any way with how we do things, then yeah, we’re obviously going to. It’s what teammates do, how things kind of work.

    By no means am I going to start and pull over and let him take the lead into one.

    Q. Can you assess the rise that you and the team have had over the last 12 months?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Man, yeah, it’s been a huge help. There’s so much more that goes into it between just the alliance and working with everybody. Our engineering staff is unreal. We have some really overqualified guys here. They’ve worked together so well.

    It’s one of those things to where it’s kind of created a perfect storm for us to where everybody has just gelled seamlessly. The car, we found good setups throughout the year. We found a lot of speed at a lot of different tracks, a lot of different disciplines. We were good at Laguna, Barber. We were average at Road America.

    Coming into Portland with the last road course, I knew if we put everything together correctly… Everyone working with Chevrolet and some of the other things that we get as being a Chevy team really prepped us well for this event and it shows.

    This is definitely a glimpse into the future for the team, I believe.

    THE MODERATOR: As we wrap up qualifying, we’re joined now by Will Power. His fourth front row start of 2024.

    You were the first one to congratulate Santino. You knew what this kind of moment meant for him, right?

    WILL POWER: Yeah, I’m good friends with Santino. We go-kart together, go to dinner, so on. I was upset that I didn’t get pole, I really wanted it here, I wanted it badly. I was kind of a little bit upset.

    Couldn’t be happier for Santino. He’s driving extremely well. And Foyt, it’s a great partnership for those guys. It’s good stuff, man. Good stuff. A fiercely competitive field. As you’ve seen, you never know who is going to get pole, you never know who will be the top six, you never know who is going to win the race.

    THE MODERATOR: Obviously a Chevy sweep on the front row. Points championship still very much alive. Starting second, a nice boost heading into tomorrow’s race.

    WILL POWER: Yeah, very nice to be on the front row. Of course, you have Palou right there. I can certainly be aggressive with him because he has a lot more to lose than me. Just got to keep finishing ahead of him. I’ll drive like Verstappen. Give him a little bit of pressure (smiling).

    THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up for questions for Will.

    Q. Looking at the championship, do you still see it as a realistic opportunity for you?

    WILL POWER: Yeah, man, still very, very possible. Very possible. It’s almost a little less than a quarter of the races to go, four races. A lot of points, a lot of stuff can happen.

    I would have to say if he finishes ahead of me tomorrow, starts to look very, very tough. We have to have a good day, at least finish ahead of him, see where we come out in points there. Then doubleheader at Milwaukee, a lot on offer. Our goal is to get as close as we can to him by Nashville.

    Q. After all that happened last week, have you cleared that up with the team? Is that sorted going into the rest of the season?

    WILL POWER: Yeah, I mean, whatever. I’m over that stuff real quick. Just one of those things that was unfortunate. We had a very good car and a very good night.

    Yeah, moved on very quickly, focusing on this event to get the best possible result. See what we can do tomorrow.

    Q. How do you see Santino as a prospect, and Foyt as well? They have the potential to start taking points away from you. At the same time they’ve also got the potential to finish ahead some of your rivals as well. How do you see all that playing out?

    WILL POWER: Well, yeah, they could be a great asset to us, taking points from Palou. Obviously, yes, they can take points from us, but that’s just the name of the game. They got a good driver in Santino, obviously a good car with the partnership we have.

    Yeah, like I said before, I couldn’t be happier for Santino to get a pole. He works hard, deserves it.

    Q. Looking at the final stretch of races with the three oval races to come, you have to feel a little bit more confident than Alex considering Alex hasn’t had an oval victory.

    WILL POWER: Yeah, based on our oval form this year, we should be more confident than he is. You never know in this series, though. I think Dixon is very strong at Nashville. Milwaukee, we haven’t been there, so we don’t know.

    Ultimately we have to finish ahead of him every weekend. It’s the only way. Anything can happen in this series. Look at last week. I mean, I led so many laps, had the quickest car, and I finished 18th just because of a restart. Same with Toronto the race before. I was running the top four or five, had an incident, gave myself a drive-through.

    A lot can go down and change quickly. We’ll see how this plays out.

    Q. Looking at the race tomorrow, a lot of the other championship contenders are caught in the awkward midfield area, which is not a place to be at Portland.

    WILL POWER: Yeah, definitely a tough place to be at the start of the race, no question. We’ll see, yeah. Can even be tough where I am honestly. Really you want to be a leader. That’s why I was mad after I didn’t get pole. Man, I need that, get a jump in front of the whole field, take off.

    Yeah, but they have the lead to go early which strings it out more than it used to, so that will help. Yeah, we’ll see what happens.

    Q. Do you feel this weekend can erase what happened last weekend? How confident are you to catch some important championship points tomorrow?

    WILL POWER: Yeah, it certainly can erase last weekend with a race win. That would help tremendously. I know Palou is a very tough customer. He doesn’t make mistakes. He’s very good in the race. We’ve got our work cut out for us to finish ahead of him because it’s almost essential that we do.

    We’ll work on our car in warm-up and try to get the best possible race car that we have, yeah, see where we stand.

    Q. How important is it to start in the first row for tomorrow? How do you feel about that?

    WILL POWER: I think the only guy that feels completely safe is P1. Even starting on the outside of the front row can be a little tough at times because the inside row goes, if you can’t block out third place.

    Yeah, we’ll see. Anything can happen. Can’t really plan on it. Just the key is to get through that first turn in a reasonable position.

    Q. Do you feel you could be P1 after the second session?

    WILL POWER: Yeah, like in the Fast Six, could I have been P1? Is that what you mean?

    Q. Yes.

    WILL POWER: Yeah, I made a mistake. The lap he did was really good. He did a really good lap. It was going to be tough to beat that.

    But I actually lost like a 10th and a half on the 10 and 12 curb when I made a little mistake there. It was doable, but man, he put a bloody good lap together. It’s impressive.

    Q. You said you can talk with Santino about the start, and also you can be more aggressive than Alex can be. What can you and Santino work together on ahead of the start? What kind of plan can you put in place? When you say you can be more aggressive, what does that mean?

    WILL POWER: Well, we can take more risk with strategy. I mean, I race as clean and fairly as possible. Never want to win a championship in a way where you’ve taken someone out. Of course not. But I can race him a little harder because it’s not just me that he’s racing. If we both went out, it would be bad because there’s a lot of people coming as well around my points.

    Yeah, yeah, my goal is I just got to stay ahead of the guy. I have to finish ahead of him, it’s as simple as that. It’s the only way I’m going to have a shot at the championship.

    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 heartbeat, 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

  • Foster Continues Portland Domination with Pole

    Foster Continues Portland Domination with Pole

    PORTLAND, Ore. (Saturday, Aug. 24, 2024) – The beat goes on for Louis Foster – quickly, as usual.

    Foster continued his march toward the INDY NXT by Firestone championship Saturday by winning the pole for the Grand Prix of Portland with a top time of 1 minute, 2.1396 seconds in the No. 26 Copart/Novara Technologies car fielded by Andretti Global. Foster broke the track record he set by winning the pole last year with the quickest trip around the 12-turn, 1.964-mile road course in three sessions this weekend – all led by Foster.

    “Turn 1 is just absolutely bananas here,” Foster said. “My goal this weekend, honestly, was just to get through Turn 1 safely. And the best way to do that is to sit on pole. Happy to have done that.”

    Coverage of the 35-lap race starts at 1:15 p.m. ET Sunday on Peacock and the INDYCAR Radio Network. Championship leader Foster has won six of the last eight races this season in the INDYCAR development series.

    This was the fifth pole of the season for Foster. It’s also the ninth of his two-season career in INDY NXT, tying him for sixth on the all-time list. The last driver to win as many poles in a season as Foster was current Chip Ganassi Racing NTT INDYCAR SERIES driver Linus Lundqvist, who took six top spots en route to the INDY NXT title in 2022.

    Foster, from England, leads the standings by 91 points over Jacob Abel and needs to expand that gap to 108 points after the race Sunday to clinch the title. There are only three races remaining this season.

    Brazilian rookie Caio Collet was runner-up to Foster for the third straight session this weekend, qualifying second at 1:02.2922 in the No. 18 HMD Motorsports car. But Collet will start eighth in the race due to a six starting-spot penalty for blocking and avoidable contact in an incident with Jamie Chadwick in the race last Saturday at World Wide Technology Raceway.

    Abel qualified third at 1:02.4418 in the No. 51 Abel Construction car fielded by Abel Motorsports, followed by James Roe at 1:02.7614 in the No. 29 Topcon machine of Andretti Global.

    Reece Gold qualified fifth at 1:02.6777 in the No. 10 HMD Motorsports. Yuven Sundaramoorthy will join him in the third row after qualifying sixth at 1:02.8024 in the No. 22 S Team Motorsports/Abel Motorsports machine.

    INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of Portland Qualifying Results

    PORTLAND, Ore. – Qualifying Saturday for the INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of Portland INDY NXT by Firestone event on the 1.964-mile Portland International Raceway, with starting position, car number in parentheses, driver, time and speed in parentheses:

    1. (26) Louis Foster, 01:02.1396 (113.783 mph)
    2. (18) Caio Collet, 01:02.2922 (113.504)
    3. (51) Jacob Abel, 01:02.4418 (113.232)
    4. (29) James Roe, 01:02.7614 (112.655)
    5. (10) Reece Gold, 01:02.6777 (112.806)
    6. (22) Yuven Sundaramoorthy, 01:02.8024 (112.582)
    7. (27) Bryce Aron, 01:02.7034 (112.759)
    8. (39) Christian Brooks, 01:02.9221 (112.368)
    9. (2) Salvador de Alba Jr., 01:02.7589 (112.660)
    10. (28) Jamie Chadwick, 01:02.9800 (112.264)
    11. (14) Josh Pierson, 01:02.8103 (112.568)
    12. (23) Jonathan Browne, 01:03.0204 (112.192)
    13. (17) Callum Hedge, 01:02.9215 (112.369)
    14. (7) Christian Bogle, 01:03.1768 (111.915)
    15. (99) Myles Rowe, 01:02.9686 (112.285)
    16. (40) Jack William Miller, 1:04.0255 (110.431)
    17. (76) Ricardo Escotto, 01:03.3829 (111.551)
  • CHEVROLET NCS AT DAYTONA 2: Trackhouse Racing Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVROLET NCS AT DAYTONA 2: Trackhouse Racing Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    AUGUST 24, 2024

     JUSTIN MARKS, FOUNDER AND OWNER OF TRACKHOUSE RACING, AND SHANE VAN GISBERGEN, DRIVER FOR TRACKHOUSE RACING, met with the media at Daytona International Speedway to announce that Trackhouse Racing will field three full-time entries in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2025, with van Gisbergen behind the wheel of the No. 88 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1.

    Press Conference Quotes:

    Justin Marks:

    “A great day for the company, obviously. Being able to announce that we’re expanding to a third full time Cup series entry in 2025. The most exciting thing about it, for me, is that we’re able to announce that Shane Van Gisbergen is going to be the full time in the Cup Series for us next year for Trackhouse as we expand from two cars to three. These moments are always special, especially since 48 months ago this was a Tennessee Limited Liability Company with 500 dollars in the bank and sort of an idea. Me and Ty trying to figure out how to do it. For us to come in as a one car team in 2021 and make the acquisition of Ganassi, expand into two teams, win seven races the next year two and a half years after that, and have some great, great partners come on and sort of continue this amazing journey of building a great company here, this is obviously a huge moment. Really, really thrilled and excited that Shane put the trust in us and made a huge commitment and leaving a very successful career in Australia and New Zealand and move to a new country and start over and put his faith and trust in us, means a lot to us. He put in a tremendous amount of work. Great human being. Very, very talented racecar driver and someone with an incredibly bright future. We’re very excited to have him here. It’s also what’s kind of unique about this is that this is a neat moment for Project 91. Project 91 was a program to bring incredible talent from around the world to the NASCAR Cup Series and see if we could do something special with it. Obviously, with Shane going to Chicago and being the first winner in 60 years on debut in Project 91 and then make the move over, make the commitment to the Xfinity Series this year, and a bunch of Cup races, and then be able to turn that into a full time Cup Series ride in 2025, is just a really cool moment and story of Project 91. So, we’re very excited. We’re thrilled that he’s accepted the offer and made the commitment and looking for big things in 2025.”

    Shane van Gisbergen:

    “Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. It’s been a pretty awesome 18 months, I guess, now. It’s been a huge life change as Justin said. Everything he’s said will happen has happened. I never thought it would happen this quick, and I’m very glad we’ve done the learning this year in Xfinity. Kaulig Racing has been great to work with, and also a lot more races to finish the year now. It’s been a huge learning experience, but just excited to get full time in the Cup Series next year. Working with Trackhouse has been fun this year the way everyone goes racing, the attitude in the place, it just resonates from the top with Justin and Ty, the leadership there. You just feel it through the place. It’s a really cool team to be a part of. Hugely excited about it. Have a lot of work to do and it’s not going to be easy, that’s for sure. But, I’ll keep pushing and hopefully fit in pretty good next year. Can’t wait.”

    Justin, talk about as you look at Trackhouse Entertainment Group and how you get all of the different regions now of the world represented under that banner…

    “That’s definitely an element to the story here that we take a lot of pride in. We’re going to be full time Cup racing with three cars and three drivers that were born in three different countries, which I think is a pretty amazing thing for this sport. It’s pretty amazing for where motorsports is today, and we’re thrilled and honored to be stewards of international diversity. The top level of motorsports. I’ve said this a couple of times now, with our MotoGP lineup next year and our Cup Series lineup next year with Trackhouse has a roster of athletes that represent Mexico, New Zealand, the USA, Spain and Japan which is a pretty incredible thing for a motorsports company. We take a lot of pride in that. We just continue to tell a great story, try to get really great people in the house with diverse backgrounds, great stories to tell, compelling personalities, and at the end of the day just really, really dedicated, hard workers.”

    Shane, for you, coming over here and you’re racing over here with those you haven’t met before. When we were in Chicago, you were trying to read the names on the back of the windows to try and remember who you were trying to race in that corner. Talk about a year later now that you’ve been around these guys, how much you’ve learned, and also some of the respect you see between yourself and some of the other drivers…

    “It goes both ways. Didn’t you have to Google me when Justin brought my name up? It’s a different world, and it’s you’re still car racing but it’s a completely different sport. But like I said, learning so much this year and got two recent examples of people I guess that came through – Marcos Ambrose and Juan Pablo (Montoya) – similar backgrounds and Juan did three or four races in Xfinity and then full time into Cup. Marcos took it the slower route, so we’re kind of in between. I think the way we’ve done this is the right way with all of the processes and even though the Xfinity car is very, very different to a Cup car, I think it was 100% worth it. Learning all of the tracks, all of the places, the terminology, metric vs. imperial, that’s been tough. But, you know, it’s a massive learning era, but I’ve just got to keep building on it and keep improving every week. Had a little set back in Xfinity, I guess, losing our crew chief, but we’ve got to get that momentum built up. I’m still fully focused on getting a result in the Playoffs and keeping that momentum into next year. Pretty exciting times.”

    Justin, one more element to this in expanding the team, you have to dig deep and started thinking what’s going to be the number. How do you take this into the next level and something that has relevance?

    “Before we unveil the number, one of the things for Trackhouse, numbers are important. I mean, numbers are important and they’re a big part of the branding in this sport. Numbers represent history, and they represent legions of fans and historic drivers and historic moments in this sport. We don’t take our number choices lightly, and when we chose the No. 99 car to begin with, there was a responsibility that came with that. That was wins with Carl Edwards, wins with Jeff Burton and a lot of great drivers. Same thing with the No. 1 with Kurt Busch and Jamie McMurray, and when we think about the numbers and our history and the number, it’s important for us to honor that history and to add to the winning legacy of that number. We’ve done with the No.1 and we’ve done with the No. 99 and we intend to do it with the new one.”

    Justin, talk a little bit about the process of this, wanting to do the right thing, talking to the Hendrick group, talking to Jeff Gordon, talking to the Earnhardt’s…

    “I called Carl Edwards in the end of 2020 and said we’re starting this Cup team, and we want to run the No. 99 number, and I want to tell you we’re doing this and obviously get your endorsement of it and get your support for it. We did the same thing with the No. 1, and we’ve done it with the No. 88 in talking to the folks at Hendrick and to Dale (Earnhardt) Jr. who I was just texting an hour and a half ago. It’s important for us to have the endorsement. A great exchange with Dale Jr. saying look, it’s not my number. I added to legacy of it. It’s important to me personally, but he was proud to see it in good hands. And that’s something that’s super, super important to me and this company.”

    What was the trigger that said all of a sudden, we need to do this? Did you have a goal, like last year, if we get to this certain time, we’ll pull the trigger on a third team, or was this just the time was right?

    Marks: “I’ve always thought that three teams is a really strong number of teams to have in this sport. It just gives you 33% more of an opportunity on the racetrack every weekend. Frankly, it’s four-car teams are reserved for really, really big companies in this sport, and it’s tough to make four cars work. I think three was kind of always sort of the number for us from day one if things went our way and we could grow from one car to two, that three was kind of the goal. An opportunity be able to come up to expand to a third car for this year, so we took it.”

    Shane, for you, the pressure is there. When you won in Chicago you said this was your ultimate goal. Next year, you’re going to be a full time Cup driver. Pressure, do you feel pressure? Are you motivated, excited, happy, anxious?

    “All of the above, but that’s why we do it. Those feels are good things because it means you care so much about it, right? All this year, I’ve been nervous getting in the car. Anxious. How it’s going to go. How am I going to be? That’s an awesome feeling and something I haven’t had for a few years, so it’s been really cool. It’s cool to be energized like that. Of course there’s going to be pressure. The Cup Series is pretty cutthroat as we’ve seen. A lot of guys, it’s pretty hard to make it. I just have to keep learning, do the best I can, and I’ll be fine.”

    Justin, can you confirm where you’re getting the charter from?

    “What would you guess?

    I would guess Stewart Haas Racing.

    “Probably not a bad answer.”

    Can you talk about the decision, or was it an easy decision? You had more drivers than you had spots, so you had to announce you were releasing Zane and keeping Shane…

    “I think when we decide the drivers, it’s a big picture, and we cast a wide net, sort of, of qualifications. It’s commercial support, fit in the company, personality, all of that. We don’t have four cars, we have three, so we have to make a decision. We’re excited about the decision we’ve made with SVG.”

    With all of your endeavors and connections in other motorsports arenas, is there a concentration of on where you’ll find the next driver to potentially bring to NASCAR? With a wide net, is there a target?

    Marks: “I don’t think we’re in the driver-looking business for right now for a while. We’re excited with Ross (Chastain), we’re excited with Daniel (Suarez), we’re excited with SVG. Really excited about resigning Raul Fernandez and bringing the (Ai) Ogura into the MotoGP thing. And we’ve got amazing talent who’s going to be racing full time next year in the Xfinity Series in Connor Zilisch. I think we’re in a pretty good spot right now. As the business expands and we’re able to expand to a third team and have these opportunities, it was important to make sure we put an emphasis and put ourselves in the best position to get the best talent in the house. I think we’ve done that, and now we can focus on what we’ve got and try to go win races.”

    Can you give a number, an exact number, on what you paid for the charter?

    “No.”

    In negotiations of the charter agreement, there’s been some debate whether to continue to invest in teams. Why not wait to acquire a third charter until the negotiations are final?

    “I don’t really have any stress that the fact the charter system is going to continue. I don’t really think that’s a risk, and when there is an opportunity to make a move and to expand… We had a lot of great commercial support around this program that we’ll announce later this season. There’s a lot of things falling in line. We had to take advantage of that opportunity when it was here before we lost it. It wasn’t really that difficult of a decision. The charter negotiations will continue. Those conversations will continue to happen. I think the charter system has been good for the sport. I think NASCAR will tell you the same thing. We don’t really have any stress about that system continuing.”

    Justin, the news came out that Zane Smith and Trackhouse were parting ways. Did this come down to a Zane or Shane decision. If it didn’t, describe what you made pick Shane for this seat over some other drivers who I’m sure were in consideration who may have had experience in NASCAR specifically?

    “The way I’ll answer this, this moment is about Shane van Gisbergen. This is a SVG moment. I’m going to keep it an SVG moment. I will tell you the reason we chose to go with Shane for this third car is that he… Yeah, there’s not a lot of experience in the Cup Series, some unknowns, a lot of hard work, but Shane checks a lot of boxes for a really, really compelling story and building great business for this sport. I think it’s the fact he’s incredibly talented. He’s really dedicated. There’s a reason why he was the first one to win on debut since Johnny Rutherford in 1963. That’s a big thing. Obviously, the Chicago Street Race is kind of in his wheelhouse, but the rate of adaptability of everything else, just the competition, the restarts, the pit stops, the way he prepared for that race, this is a superstar. This is somebody we were really excited about committing to knowing that’s a relatively unconventional path to a Cup car. But we wouldn’t be doing it if we didn’t think this guy couldn’t win lots and lots of Cup races and be a Playoff contender. It was honestly a pretty easy decision because he checked a lot of boxes for us and everyone in the company is really excited for it.”

    Shane, what has been the hardest part about your learning curve? Just trying to get up to speed? You come out and, in your debut, win. What has really challenged you along the way?

    “Turning left. It’s just there’s so many variables in this racing. You see even Kyle Larson, who is the best driver, he’s first one week, 20th the next. There are so many variables that make this sport a thing. I’m used to being on one line, the repetition the whole time, hitting my marks, where the race can change so much over the course of the day. When the weather changes, the rubber goes down, or ever the superspeedway racing is completely different. Probably just the amount of variables in this racing. You can prep all you want, but it’s having those instincts in how to react and having the best way to do it. Every race, I’m learning something. I seem to always start the races kind of slow, and by stage three, I’m on the pace kind of thing. Just every week, this time of year, going back to tracks I’ve been to before, hopefully I can show that improvement and keep getting better. As I said, every week, I’m like a sponge trying to learn stuff and get better and better.”

    Do you expect to run any Xfinity races next year?

    van Gisbergen: “Yeah, I hope so. Obviously, there will be speaking with Chris and the Kaulig team and there’s opportunities to do the road courses, but to me, that’s the easy stuff. I want to do more ovals with them and learn in both ways. Hopefully, we’ll race with them next year and win some road courses but hopefully, they’ll let me do some ovals and I can keep getting more experience.”

    Justin, Project 91, you mentioned the importance of it right off the top. Do you anticipate it continuing moving forward with a full three car roster, or do you feel that stretches the team too thin?

    “We’re having those discussions right now. I think that Project 91 is something that 100% in my mind, I’d love to continue. It’s just difficult to do it this year because we had so much on our plate with supporting other drivers in other programs, and just a lot of other business development stuff we’re working on. I would expect Project 91 to be back sooner rather than later. Obviously, it has to fit into the workflow of the company. We’re expanding our focus on running three competitive Cup cars next year. There’s a lot of interest in Project 91 both from drivers, and from commercial partners. I would 100% anticipate that to continue in some capacity.”

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