Author: Official Release

  • Ty Majeski Closes Out Truck Series Regular Season With Second Straight Wi

    Ty Majeski Closes Out Truck Series Regular Season With Second Straight Wi

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
    CleanHarbors 250 | Richmond Raceway
    Saturday, August 10, 2024

    TY MAJESKI CLOSES OUT REGULAR SEASON WITH SECOND STRAIGHT TRUCK SERIES VICTORY

    • Ty Majeski backed up his win at Indianapolis Raceway Park with another victory tonight in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series regular season finale at Richmond Raceway.
    • The win is Majeski’s second of the year and fifth of his career.
    • Majeski and defending series champion Ben Rhodes will represent Ford in the NCTS playoffs.

    Ford Performance Results:
    1st – Ty Majeski
    5th – Layne Riggs
    7th – Ben Rhodes
    13th – Jake Garcia
    15th – Matt Crafton
    18th – Lawless Alan
    28th – Mason Maggio
    31st – Conner Jones
    34th – Keith McGee

    TY MAJESKI, No. 98 Soda Sense/Curb Records Ford F-150 – VICTORY LANE INTERVIEW:

    WHEN YOU HAD YOUR ISSUE DID YOU THINK IT WAS OVER AT THAT POINT? “No, we had a good truck. Knowing how good this thing was last year we wanted to prove we could do it again after everything that happened towards the end of the year last year, so we did that. We recovered from it. It was a little bit tougher to recover this year, but what a fast Soda Sense Ford F-150. I’m so proud of these ThorSport guys sticking behind me. We’ve got to clean up these little mistakes though because that could be the difference between transferring to Phoenix and not. We’ve got to clean those things up, but as long as we keep getting to Victory Lane the sky is the limit for us. We’re on it right now.”

    THAT’S TWO IN A ROW. WHAT HAS BEEN CLICKING FOR THIS SUDDEN SEASON-ENDING SURGE? “We always seem to do that. These are my first two wins outside of the playoffs and they’re right on the cusp of the playoffs, so this team just seems to click right around playoff time. Between that and a lot of these racetracks are just our bread and butter. Joe and I, I feel like we’re pretty good at these last two racetracks and we’re going to another familiar one in Milwaukee and the way that this playoff schedule lays out is pretty good for our team. I’m excited to get going.”

    WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM LAST YEAR’S PLAYOFF RUN THAT WILL HELP FOR THIS YEAR? “We had a pretty big barrier last year. We didn’t have the chief up on the box, so that was a big deal. We’ve got him back full force and we’re ready to go make another run at this thing.”

    BEN RHODES, No. 99 Nashville Stampede Ford F-150 – WHAT IS THE FEELING RIGHT NOW? “Relieved. Honestly, I was pretty relaxed going into this race. I knew it was kind of our championship to lose. I see it that way. Other people may not, but at least the playoffs race to lose. I’m happy with the overall performance for the night. It was a step in the right direction for this Nashville Stampede Ford F-150 team, but we still have to improve. We still have to get better. Now that it’s reset, we kind of get to take it one race at a time. The first round is all about top 10s. The second round is all about top fives and then after that it’s anybody’s championship. It’s not our first rodeo, but at the same time this has been a roller coaster year and we have to smooth out some of the valleys and try to create a few more peaks.”

    WHAT DOES IT SAY ABOUT THIS TEAM THAT THROUGH ALL THE UPS AND DOWNS YOU STILL MADE THE PLAYOFFS? “It bodes well for our team. Our story over the years has been that we always find a way even when things are going right or things aren’t going well. Whether we’re the underdog or the odd man out, we always find a way and typically that’s just not letting any pressure situations get to us and let other people do their thing and it seems to work out, so I’m hoping that can work again for us this year as well.”

  • Toyota Racing – NCTS Richmond Post-Race Report – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – NCTS Richmond Post-Race Report – 08.10.24

    TAYLOR GRAY CLOSES REGULAR SEASON WITH STRONG THIRD-PLACE FINISH
    Corey Heim, Taylor Gray place two Tundras in the Playoff field in Richmond

    RICHMOND, Va. (August 10, 2024) – Taylor Gray had a strong run to the end of the regular season, leading Toyota with a third-place finish at Richmond Raceway on Saturday evening. Gray, who clinched his spot in the Playoffs for the first time at the close of the first stage, claimed his fifth top-five finish of the season.

    Taylor Gray will be joined in the Playoffs by his TRICON Garage teammate Corey Heim, who will be the number one overall seed on the strength of his series-leading five victories this season.

    Tanner Gray, who entered Richmond five points above the cutline, finished 12th and missed the 10-driver Playoff field by 12 points.

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series
    Richmond Raceway
    Race 16 of 23 – 250 Laps, 187.5 Miles

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

    1st, Ty Majeski*
    2nd, Christian Eckes*
    3rd, TAYLOR GRAY
    4th, Grant Enfinger*
    5th, Layne Riggs*
    12th, TANNER GRAY
    16th, COREY HEIM
    19th, TIMMY HILL
    22nd, WILLIAM SAWALICH
    25th, STEWART FRIESEN
    27th, JUSTIN CARROLL
    32nd, DEAN THOMPSON

    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    TAYLOR GRAY, No. 17 JBL Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

    Finishing Position: 3rd

    Can you talk about the run you had tonight?

    “I can’t thank all of my TRICON guys enough and Jeff Hensley (crew chief) on top of the box bringing me a really fast JBL Toyota Tundra TRD Pro. Just, honestly, I think I kind of ruined our chances of winning the race on that one restart where I fell back to 10th or so and it kind of just snow-balled from there. We got into the wall on the backstretch and got a little bit of a fender on the right front and it just caused us to get super tight there. The caution saved us, came down, got tires and Jeff made a good adjustment and we were able to drive back to third so can’t hang my head too much. It was a good points day for us and we’re running for a championship.”

    Does it give you confidence going into the Playoffs knowing you’ve been successful on the short tracks?

    “Yes, it does especially when Jeff (Hensley, crew chief) whipped everybody’s butt last year in Milwaukee and hopefully we do the same. Yeah, it defintiely does. We’ve struggled the last couple weeks so to go out and run third and content for a win is definitely a confident booster going into the last seven. Hopefully, just claw our way to the front.”

    TANNER GRAY, No. 15 Operation 300 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

    Finishing Position: 12th

    What are your thoughts right now?
    “We just weren’t good enough. All day, we just didn’t have the speed – didn’t have the balance. I didn’t do a good enough job. Really frustrated. I don’t know. You come into a race where you’re on the cut like this – you have to better, and we weren’t tonight. Congrats to Daniel (Dye). They were better, and they were better down the stretch when it mattered. We just made too many mistakes overall throughout the season – too sloppy, so we have to clean it up. I have got to clean up things on my end, and we just need to be better.”

    COREY HEIM, No. 11 Safelite Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

    Finishing Position: 16th

    What more did you need to get the win tonight?

    “Just tires I guess. Easy way to say it. Honestly, we kind of struggled tonight overall. Was riding around in fifth and sixth all race. I was right there with him, I wanted to try something and put on some tires. I really think we had a good chance to win tonight. The 98 (Ty Majeski) was coming there at the end. I was on board with that strategy call. Just part of it. It didn’t fall our way tonight. I’m certainly just thankful for TRICON Garage, Safelite, Toyota Racing. I wish we could’ve had it go green there, but it is what it is.”

    What did you learn last year that you can take into the Playoffs this year?

    “Just perserverance I think is the main thing. I think we’re kind of in a dip right now just on overall speed with these last few short tracks. We haven’t had the speed we’ve wanted. Just got to regroup and understand what went wrong these last couple weeks and I’ve got to personally understand how I can do a better job during the week on the simulator to get these guys to give me a better truck. Overall, just have to reset and keep moving forward.”

    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.

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Richmond Quotes – Denny Hamlin & Chris Gabehart – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Richmond Quotes – Denny Hamlin & Chris Gabehart – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – Denny Hamlin and Chris Gabehart
    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    RICHMOND, Va. (August 10, 2024) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin and crew chief Chris Gabehart were made available to the media on Saturday after winning the pole for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway.

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

    CHRIS GABEHART, crew chief, No. 11 FedEx Rewards Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    What are your thoughts on the option tire and how it went in practice?

    HAMLIN: “Couple tenths faster, couple tenths slower over 40 some laps or so. Personally, I would love the option tire – the soft tire – just to be the tire. We stopped around lap 40 or so on that run, and I feel like it was just about to take off lap time wise. That’s kind of what we used to have back in the day. It is possible. We’ve built a tire that has some good fall off to it. There was some front-end grip as well, so if we are experimenting this to see if we can run those tires in a race as the only tire, I think that is certainly a viable option.”

    GABEHART: “It is not every day that he (Denny Hamlin) is more aggressive than me, but that is more aggressive. For me, I need to see it in the race more because in terms of how it is going to perform with the option, because the track changes so much from practice here in Richmond – especially in the first five or ten minutes. There was considerably more wear with the option, and it does appear that it is going to fire off faster and maybe go slower, and it already seemed like it was going to go slower after 40 laps – which is not quite a get home lap here at Richmond – definitely a lot of potential.”

    You get two sets of these for the race. How are you managing the strategy?
    GABEHART: “Well, it is like every race, you tell me when the cautions are going to come out, and I’ll tell you the strategy you should use. Unfortunately, my caution Ouija Board is broken right now. I hope we fixed it over the two-week break. Certainly, I think you are going to leave them laying for the end of the race for the most part – now I won’t say – there may be some cars that need some points that might try to put a set on to steal a stage win or something like that, some of those cut off cars potentially, but I think to win the race, you will have to leave them for the end of the race.”

    Denny, do you feel any differently about your chances of winning after you got the pole with the option tire in play?

    HAMLIN: “I think if you would have asked Chris (Gabehart) that question – he doesn’t want any novelties thrown in – but I understand why we are doing it. I think it is a good idea, but anything that something bizarre can happen and you lose on it is a possibility, but it is the same for everyone. Everyone has the same rules with the tire allotment, so it is just do you get unlucky with cautions or not – that is the only thing that can really throw a wrench in where we would be.”

    Were you surprised that your lap was good enough for the pole?

    HAMLIN: “He told me I needed to back up – to win the pole – I needed to back up my lap. We did, and it did. We know historically it always does fall off, but I felt like I did as good as I could on the lap. There was no kind of regrets with it, with what I could do different. I feel like we made some really good adjustments between the two rounds, and I was able to execute the lap I was trying to execute. Was I surprised it held up? Yes. I definitely was. When I ran it, that was the most that I could get out of the car. There wasn’t anything left, but as cars go – and those guys ran much faster than us and had less laps on the tires – when they didn’t beat us, it certainly gave us a little bit of hope going into that last round.”

    What does your continued success mean at Richmond Raceway, being your home track?

    HAMLIN: “I probably put a little more pressure on myself to preform at this race track, just simply because I know what it takes to win here and what I need out of the car. I don’t always express that correctly. I always put that pressure on myself to preform here. I feel like I have good techniques that help equal the success in the past, but we have gone through so many car changes, tire changes – things like that, but the basics still ring true in the end. I love winning here. To have five is certainly exciting, I feel like each one has been a little different, a different car – COTs, Gen 7’s and all the different things, but it feels good to come here and still be able to perform years after I was competitive here in my rookie year.”

    If tire management comes into play tomorrow, do you think it will favor the veterans?

    HAMLIN: “It will be a little different than Bristol, because I don’t think it is going to hit a cliff where one lap as Kevin Harvick says the switch turns off, the car turns off – I don’t think it will be that moment, but I think it will be a three-to-four lap moment where the switch goes off. Sure, the guys that are good at managing tires and things like that will all have a little bit longer switch than others, but I just think if it happens during green, we are just going to come in and pit – I think – it just depends on how the cautions work out. It is going to depend on how long you are going to ask from those tires at the end of the race if you are saving them, and that is your only last remaining set, and you have 60 laps to go. That’s going to be a tall task, but I like my chances against anyone in that scenario.”

    Do you think the weather will make changes to the tire plan tomorrow?

    GABEHART: “I think the cooler weather played a factor at North Wilkesboro. At practice we saw one thing and certainly had a feeling going into the race that in those conditions we might see this and then we lived the race where it was a night race and cooled off and certainly felt differently about it afterwards. I don’t think this track is capable of that level of transformation from one condition to the next, but I do think until the lights turn on here at Richmond you won’t know what you have.”

    For tomorrow, do you have an idea of when you put both sets of option tires on?

    GABEHART: “I have a rough game plan. I have a rough idea of how most will tend to use them if they know when the cautions come out. And, again, depending on what their agenda is I do think you’ll see some cut off teams that may need to get a little desperate at the end of some of these stages to try to go grab some of those points, and I think that would be a wise move for some of them if they got the opportunity. But again, to win the race, I think you have to have them laying around as an option in stage 3.”

    Do you feel like right now is the right time to introduce the option tire?

    HAMLIN: “Well, we’ve done so many different tire tests and there’s only been a handful of cars out there so nothing replicates real world like the real world. And, so I think that they did it at North Wilkesboro just as a blind – they did do it during the tire test a little bit and they were wearing out extremely high. Then they put all the cars on the track and it’s just not as bad. Certainly, I think if they would’ve tried this tire at a tire test that they probably would’ve got 20 laps out of it, and it would’ve been roasted because there’s not enough tire rubber filling in the pores of the track to keep the wear down. I think almost have to have these real-life moments of trial and error to try it. And, certainly, this shows me personally that we can get a lot more aggressive with our compounds on these short track tires. I would’ve never thought they would’ve lasted 40 laps, truthfully. I think tomorrow there’s a chance they can go longer. I’m not sure. It could go the other way too if there’s more load. Who knows how this turns out, but I think it’s safer to do it now than probably in the Playoffs.”

    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.

  • Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Qualifying Report – Richmond

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Qualifying Report – Richmond

    Cook Out 400: Richmond Raceway
    Richmond, VA – August 10, 2024

    After a two-week break, NASCAR Cup Series teams and drivers are back in action at Richmond Raceway, where a new competition element will debut. For the first time in a points-paying race, teams can choose between two Goodyear tire options: the “Prime” tire, with a harder compound offering less grip but more durability, and the “Option” tire, which has a softer compound for better short-term grip and speed but reduced longevity. The “Prime” tire will be marked with yellow sidewall lettering, while the “Option” tire will feature red lettering. This adjustment is expected to introduce a new level of strategy to the race as just four races remain in the regular season before the Cup Series Playoffs begin at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

    Joey Logano, driver, No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang

    9th

    Ryan Blaney, driver, No. 12 BODYARMOR SportWater Ford Mustang

    11th

    Austin Cindric, driver, No. 2 Menards/Libman Ford Mustang

    18th

    HEAR FROM LOGANO: “I feel like we got a decent read on it but eager to find out the balance change and overall lap times that you’re looking for to try to create a strategy for tomorrow, then the adjustments you need to make sure your car is balanced to take advantage of the softer tire. It’s definitely different – [the option tire] fires off faster and it falls off harder. That’s kind of what I was looking for. It’s going to change the strategy a lot. It’s definitely going to be different from the racing we’ve seen.”

    RICHMOND BY THE NUMBERS: Team Penske owns nine Cup Series victories at Richmond Raceway over 144 starts, with the most recent win being scored in 2020 by former Team Penske driver Brad Keselowski. Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Ford Mustang, has amassed two wins at the Virginia short track in 30 career starts and has recorded an impressive 14 top-five and 19 top-10 finishes, netting him an average finish of 9.7. Driver of the No. 2, Austin Cindric, has a best finish of 12th in six premier series starts at the Richmond venue. Teammate Ryan Blaney, pilot of the No. 12 Ford Mustang, has scored three top-10 results with a best finish of seventh.

    TUNE IN ON SUNDAY: Coverage of Sunday’s 300-mile race at Richmond begins at 6:00 p.m. ET on USA, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • Josh Berry Qualifies Third to Lead Ford in Richmond

    Josh Berry Qualifies Third to Lead Ford in Richmond

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Cook Out 400 Qualifying | Richmond Raceway
    Saturday, August 10, 2024

    Ford Performance Results:
    3rd – Josh Berry
    7th – Chris Buescher
    9th – Joey Logano
    11th – Ryan Blaney
    16th – Noah Gragson
    18th – Austin Cindric
    23rd – Todd Gilliland
    25th – Chase Briscoe
    26th – Ryan Preece
    28th – Michael McDowell
    29th – Brad Keselowski
    31st – Harrison Burton
    34th – Riley Herbst
    36th – Justin Haley
    37th – Parker Retzlaff

    JOSH BERRY, No. 4 P&G Supports Our Military Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “That was really good. Obviously, we had a really good lap in the first round. I felt like I had a good lap in the second round, but just needed a little bit more there. I’m pretty happy with how that went and we’ll see what tomorrow brings us.”

    HOW MUCH CAN YOU APPLY FROM YOUR PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE ON TRACKS LIKE RICHMOND? “This place, I came here in an Xfinity car in probably 2015 and there was Cup drivers in the field and that was one of my best races in a one-off. It just felt natural to me, based off what I’ve done before, just how the track races. It’s come to me a little easier than some of the others.”

    DO YOU FEEL THERE’S ANY ADDED PRESSURE TO GET IT DONE TOMORROW NIGHT? “I don’t know that there’s added pressure, but we realize this is a great opportunity for us. We ran great here in the spring. We didn’t execute like we needed to on pit road and kind of took ourselves out of the race, but I think we have a car that can compete with these guys. We have the starting spot. I think it’s just gonna come down to executing tomorrow and doing the right things, making the right calls. There’s obviously a lot going on with the tires. Rodney is prepared for that and tomorrow can be the day.”

    DO YOU THINK THIS IS THE RIGHT TIME TO INTRODUCE THE OPTION TIRE? “I think it’s a great move. They’ve got to move the needle and I think it’s a success. The tire wear we had today, it will only be better tomorrow with little cooler temperatures and more rubber on the track. Like I said, I think we could have a fleet completely of those tires and there wouldn’t be any issues.”

    CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It’s a really good start. I feel like that’s been a weak spot of ours here even though we’ve been really good. That puts us in a good spot to get a good pit selection and be set up for a good race. We’ve got a lot to go through from practice to figure out from the reds and yellows and see what we feel like that’s gonna do for the race and what our options are. I think it’s gonna be a whole lot harder for the crew chiefs and all the smart people tonight, but it was definitely a good day and start to our weekend. I’m proud of that and ready to get this Fastenal Ford Mustang out on the track tomorrow.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I felt like we were OK in race trim. We just really haven’t figured out the second round of qualifying We were good the first round, but it seems like the second round I don’t have much left in the tank for whatever reason, so we have a little bit of work to do there, but it’s not a bad starting spot.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 BodyArmor Sport Water Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ABOUT THE OPTION TIRE THIS WEEKEND? “I think the biggest thing for us is just seeing how they practice, what the take off speed is like with them, what the fall off speed is like with them, and I think that can kind of determine where you put them on. I’ve got a feeling that everyone is planning right now to save them for the end if it’s like way faster, but I think you can get pretty strategic on where you put them on. Maybe you have a bad pit stop or you’ve got to go to the back, so maybe you throw reds on and see if you can get back through the field if they’re a lot faster. We’ve kicked around a lot of different scenarios.”

    IF YOU TRY TO SAVE ONE FOR THE END AND YOU GET A LONG GREEN FLAG RUN. IS THERE CONCERN YOU COULD LEAVE WITH ONE SET IN YOUR POCKET? “That’s the risk you always take with tires. I mean, how many times have folks tried to stay out and they end with a sticker set in their pits hoping for a caution and they don’t get it and it ruins their day. That’s just the risk you take. Like I said, it’s gonna be interesting to see if you’ve got one set left and there are 100 laps to the end. Are you gonna throw on your final set? I don’t know. It just depends how much they fall off the cliff, if they do fall off the cliff a lot more than the primes. We’ll get a pretty good idea of that today in practice, just like that delta and then that’s why the crew chiefs get paid big bucks tomorrow on whether you throw them on.”

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Richmond Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Richmond Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – Denny Hamlin
    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    RICHMOND, Va. (August 10, 2024) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin was made available to the media on Saturday prior to practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway.

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

    Are you doing anything different for the Playoff prep this season?

    “I haven’t – not yet, not unless something new comes up – new information or something like that. Our process is pretty refined at this moment in kind of how I prepare for each race, and each round – not a whole lot has changed. I kind of keeping going that if I do the best I can each week, my team – they will do the best job they can, we compete against ourselves most weeks.”

    Would you like to see Richmond Raceway in the Playoffs?
    “Of course, I’m biased, so I would love to see Richmond in Playoffs, not only for the hometown reasons, but the on-track success certainly plays a role also. Yes, I would love too, but it really amounts to how they want to put to the pieces of the puzzle of the Playoffs and the season together. SMI and ISC will kind of see as fit.”

    Are you familiar with the system that you can start using in Michigan?

    “I would think we would unless there is some big competitive disadvantage to it, but I don’t know a whole lot about it other than it is available, and I’ve seen the apparatus that it is.”

    Do you consider the Bristol Night Race as one of the crown jewels?

    “It is certainly one of the biggest races, for whatever reason – I think it has just gravitated that way with how more people seem to gravitate towards that race from a spectator standpoint, from an audience standpoint. I think that naturally you can call it one, but I think it is up for debate. Certainly, if you added one, there would be no other track or race that would take the prestige of that one.”

    What has been the key to your success at Bristol?

    “It doesn’t change because I know if you win there, you are moving on. It is still a cutoff race? (Yes.) Well, at that point the first round – you kind of know where you are at. Usually, we are in a comfortable position, which allows me to race a little more freely, but ultimately, I just want to win there. We call races on the goal of trying to win and not trying to be concerned with it.”

    What has stood out to you about Tyler Reddick since joining 23XI?

    “I think that his ability to adapt. I knew he was good at it. He was certainly good at it, at several different race tracks but his ability to adapt during a race. No one has a perfect handle on the car, but driving the best of what you’ve got is what I think he is really, really good at. He’s gifted at getting speed out of a car, but even when it is not exactly right. That to me is what the upper echelon of drivers are able to do, and that is why he is in that group.”

    What stands out about Riley Herbst or what stood out to you in Indy?

    “Well, I was more speaking to the race itself and Riley’s (Herbst) moves. The combination of the two was super impressive. I was on the edge of my seat watching that race, and seeing how it was all playing out the last five laps or so. I thought that he made some great moves, great decisions and controlled his car great. I thought it was very, very impressive.”

    Do you get sentimental when you come to Richmond or is it just another race?

    “No, it is not another race. I certainly come here with high expectations of myself, and I expect a lot out of myself when I come here. There is always a little bit more pressure that I put on myself when I hit the track here. It is not another race because of the hometown connection, and my family and friends that come and visit. This is one of the few times that I come back to Richmond, so it is a chance for us to get together. It is always special for that reason, and I get to go on and put them on a show on Sunday. That is always fun. It is a special track. It has crazy, over the years, it still drives the exact same, I feel like, as my rookie season 20 years ago. It is very unique. It is very technical, and it takes a lot of discipline to be good here. I watched some of the great short track racers in the Mid-Atlantic run the short tracks of Langley and Southside and that is what I believe helped me run good at this type of track.”

    What are your emotions about it looking like Richmond will only have one race weekend next season?

    “I kind of understand NASCAR’s decision because they ultimately – if the fans turned out here and we sold out every race, then there would be two races. They are going to do things that the fans want to participate in. It is crazy because it is always one of our top five markets that watch us on TV, but don’t actually come to the race track itself. It is interesting. There is plenty of racing fans around here but getting them to the race track has been challenging in the past, but I know they have spent significant money at the race track with the fan experience. I think that has all been a really positive thing, but sometimes these are the cycles that you have to go through. Hopefully, it is a learning lesson for the track, and everyone involved that can get this track back revigorated as one of the top short tracks that we have on our schedule. It is a shame if it goes to one week, but the audience here has made it warranted.”

    How did you get Juan Pablo Montoya to race with you at Watkins Glen?

    “A lot of it came from Steve Lauletta (23XI), our president. He reached out to Juan (Pablo Montoya) first of all. Well, it started with a conversation with Mobil 1, and their connections to F1, and they had, had a connection with Juan in his past. A lot of this is geared around Mobil 1’s 50th anniversary. It is certainly special to them, and we want to showcase certain drivers. They talked about up-and-coming ones, along with champions of motorsport. We did that with (Kamui) Kobayshi and obviously, Corey (Heim), on the young side and Juan is the champion, so we have kind of hit on all of the boxes that we wanted to with that. We wanted someone that is going to be competitive as well, and Juan certainly believes that Watkins Glen is a track that he has had significant time at, in the Cup Series, and believes that he can be competitive. I thought it was a great collaboration between Mobil 1 and 23XI.”

    Can you give us your thoughts about Roy Hendrick?

    “It was sobering for him to pass away. He was certainly an instrumental part of me growing my love for the sport. He was part of kind of a three-man battle at Southside Speedway each and every Friday night – Wayne Patterson, Eddie Johnson, Roy Hendrick. Those were the guys that constantly battled every Friday. With that famous flying 11 that he had, his dad had, it was a staple in our sport. I know when we did a throwback to him, I believe back in 2017 at Darlington, I was able to win the race. He was able to be there in victory lane. It was just awesome to see how full circle it all went. I was such a fan of his growing up, and now he is wearing the number 11 of the car I was driving that day. Hopefully, we are able to do some kind of tribute to him at Darlington as well, this year. Thoughts go out to his family. Certainly, he is one of the great short track racers that we lost.”

    Do motorsports have a place in the Olympics?

    “You would think so, the only difference in all of the other sports the equipment is the same. I don’t know how you would do it in a motorsports type of fashion, short of everyone having an opportunity in the same things. If you change one degree of weather and it could change the advantage one has over the other. It would be very difficult. It would be very costly for the Olympic commission to try to put something together for motorsports, but I saw some sports that I didn’t know this time around, so I would love to see motorsports as part of it, but I don’t know how feasible it is, just knowing that we all drive different equipment.”

    What has David Wilson meant to you as a driver and as an owner?

    “Quite a bit. He was the one that believed in me from the very get go when I started 23XI. I will never forget the grocery store parking lot that I was sitting in when I called him and asked him if he would help support this race team that we started. Early on in my career, we made the switch over to Toyota and TRD at Joe Gibbs Racing. He was an instrumental part of that being their flagship team and the team that could carry the brand on for decades and it has. I definitely agree with everything that he said. He made the investment in racing. They changed the game. You will not find another manufacturer, that I believe – there just isn’t, that spends as much money as Toyota Motor North America in not only the racing that you see on Sunday, but the grassroots racing. Top to bottom, Toyota is heavily invested in motorsports in the United States and it because of people like David Wilson that helped push that program to where it is at. A lot of drivers, crew members all owe a huge debt of gratitude to David and what he has done.”

    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.

  • Toyota Racing – David Wilson & Tyler Gibbs Quotes – – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – David Wilson & Tyler Gibbs Quotes – – 08.10.24

    Toyota Racing – David Wilson and Tyler Gibbs
    NASCAR Quotes

    RICHMOND, Va. (August 10, 2024) – TRD U.S.A President David Wilson and TRD U.S.A General Manager Tyler Gibbs were made available to the media on Saturday after Wilson’s upcoming retirement announcement this week.

    DAVID WILSON, president, TRD U.S.A.

    TYLER GIBBS, general manager, TRD U.S.A

    Can you talk about your decision and what your tenure at TRD has meant to you?
    WILSON: “First, I’ll say that I know how Martin Truex Jr. felt a few weeks ago. I’m generally pretty comfortable, after all of these years, sitting up here and talking to this group of people, but I’ll admit, I’m not today. I’m a bundle of nerves and here we are. I’m looking out at the crowd and I’m trying not to go around the room, because I know that I will just get emotional. To see so many people here that I care about, so many friends – means the world to me. The past couple of days have been completely overwhelming. The kindness and the generosity that I’ve seen come my way has truly been special and remarkable. It has been wildly uncomfortable because we come from a place – I come from a place – where we celebrate the team, and not the individual. At my very best day, I’m simply a reflection of this team – TRD and Toyota. The accomplishments – they are not my accomplishments; they are our accomplishments. For that, I’m so grateful and I’m so proud, but it is time to hand the keys over. I’m so proud of this guy (Tyler Gibbs) sitting next to me, and there is so many parallels coming up through the company for years. I enjoyed kind of toiling in the background. I enjoyed being that guy behind the scenes, and then somehow 10, 11 years I was thrust into this spotlight – if you will – and it really does seem like just the other day. Tyler Gibbs – no relation – will be great for our company, will continue to be great for our company. He’s incredibly well deserving of this. As a friend, I’m so happy for you, man.”

    What does it mean to you to be following in David’s footsteps?

    GIBBS: We were in Washington D.C. on Wednesday. One of the things we were talking about after the meeting that we had – we were both a bit uncomfortable with the release and the amount of congratulations that we received, and the number of people that responded. I’m going to apologize to Dave (Wilson) that I’m going to add to that. People particularly in this room and when they hear about TRD or think about TRD, they picture Dave. Dave is synonymous with Toyota in this garage and in this sport. Those are some really big shoes to fill. I’m humbled to be in this position. I’m excited about it. I think back when I got to TRD – TRD was a grown-up organization. When Dave started at TRD, TRD was 10 years old – we were a speed shop. You could buy some performance parts that we could put on your car, and we would even install them if you needed us too. We were getting into off road racing, and we were getting into sports cars. We were pretty new at this whole thing, and when you look at TRD and where we are now, the things that we can do, and the things we get to do and the things we’ve done over the last 35 years, Dave’s fingerprints are all over all of those things. Some of the accomplishments were mentioned, but there are so many off-track that people don’t see and don’t know that have built our organization into what it is. To be able to step-up into this opportunity, I shared with a number of people this week, it is a privilege to lead a team like we have at TRD. The team he has built over the last 35 years – he’s given us incredible opportunities day after day. It is just a humbling experience. We as a team are going to continue that tradition of success that Dave has built.”

    What got you to this point?

    WILSON: “It starts by really being in a position where you comfortably know that you can step back, and the team will move forward. I’ve known for years that Tyler (Gibbs) is the guy. He’s so much smarter than I am. He’s got a work ethic of an absolute animal, so it just started just having a level of trust and comfort that you are going to keep moving forward. The other side of it is – it is simply the clock. I turn 63 this year. There are some family circumstances that play their way into this. My wife and I adopted our two grandsons, so at 63, I’m changing diapers. I’ve got a one-year-old and a four-year-old at home and those boys need me, and I need them. There are some parallels with some of the people in this room with friends in the industry that I’ve made through that. Again, I’m at peace. My heart is full. While we are here, we are all wired to be competitive and we are still here because of what we do on track, many of my close friends have heard me, more recently, talk about what fuels my soul and what I will be most grateful for, and you are not going to find it in a box score, you are going to find it in the hearts of these people, and the trust and the relationship and the love that I’ve developed for so many people in this garage. Tyler and I talked about the intention and sometimes you lose sight of how many people you have touched over the years, and not only industry folks, and NASCAR, and teams – but competitors. My friends from Ford and Chevrolet to reach out – and I would like to think that Toyota’s entry in the sport has left a mark and that our sport is stronger for it, not me, but Toyota and the relationship, and the professional relationships we have with our competitors. It might seem strange, but I’m as proud of anything, because we share the same goals, and we can work together to help make our sport better and that is how it should be.”

    What do you think your lasting legacy is?

    WILSON: “It is pretty simple. I would like to believe that TRD is better than what it was when I got here. I would like to believe that our sport and Toyota’s position in our sport has left NASCAR in a better place. Coming back to when we entered 20 years ago, we didn’t have a relationship with the sanctioning body and we didn’t have a relationship with our competitors the way we do now, and so much has changed. I’m proud of the way the competitive model that Toyota brought to the sport. We’ve changed the way the sport goes racing. I love that. I love that. There is a lot that I’m really happy about and proud of.”

    What do you think David’s lasting legacy is?

    GIBBS: “You will know a few of them, just in terms of the team members you get to work with at the track, but on Tuesday, Dave (Wilson) shared his news with our (TRD) team members and the response from our team members was incredible. They recognize the opportunities that Dave has provided for them, so for me, it is TRD. It is our team. It is the people. Dave’s impact on TRD will go far, far beyond when he decides to walk out the door in December. For me, it’s that. His legacy is our people. It is our team. It is the culture that we have. It’s Dave’s humility. It’s his competitive nature, when he stands in front of our team members every week and talks about the different things that happened over a course of the weekend and what is going on in our business. It’s a family, and there is a huge element to that. Some of that can come off as cliché, and I don’t think our team members would take it at all that way. Our team members, if they were listening to this, would identify very, very personally with that.”

    David, what would be your advice to Tyler?

    WILSON: “There is not much advice I can give to Tyler (Gibbs). He’s so ready for this job. I think he has come to appreciate, as well, what I have come to appreciate – we are given this tremendous privilege and opportunity to lead and never forget that you are just the point person, the iceberg that sticks out of the water. There are a tremendous group of people behind you. Tyler knows that. The other side of it is more personal. This vocation that we have chosen, and I can look at every one here, they know what I’m talking about – the vocation that we’ve chosen is tough. It is a grind. You have to take care of yourself, mentally more than physically. I think Tyler is very balanced in that regard, and he is going to be just fine.”

    Have you ever thought about changing your last name?
    GIBBS (laughter): So, here’s my line, I’m not related to Uncle Joe (Gibbs). That’s what I’m going to tell people to just get people more confused. I’ve been at TRD for 28 years. I get texts for Ty (Gibbs) on occasion, so we swap back and forth, but outside of that, we are good.”

    Was their one message this week that really stuck out to you?

    WILSON: “So, there were several. Most of them are personal, but I’ll share one. I don’t think Joe (Gibbs) will mind. I got a text message from Joe Gibbs. It was one of the first ones, and he said I miss you already – Joe. It about made me cry. Joe and I have this ongoing kind of joke that we are going to write a book, and we talk about the chapters in this book, and we get through something, and we are like yep. That is another chapter and Joe and I talk about it. This industry, the competitive nature is something, and the folks that can get through that, that can endure the battles and come out of the end, they become closer for it. I love Joe. I spent some of my formable years in Virginia. I came into this sport, and I was thinking there is no way that I’m working with Coach Joe Gibbs, and that was just one that stuck me right in the heart.”

    What was the biggest change that you saw?
    WILSON: “Coming at it from the OEM level, I mentioned before – the ways we compete, the way we come to the race track. I want to say that we have moved the needle, but the participation that we have as a stakeholder in the sport – Toyota, Ford, Chevrolet – the relationships that we have with each other and the work we do collaboratively to advance our sport. 20 plus years ago, I don’t think that existed. We are competing for space. We are competing for many other forms entertainment and sports, and if we are not continually working on advancing our sport and bringing new fans to the race track, then we are going to fail. We are going to fall behind. I personalize it to the OEM’s because that is who we are, but it is not just us. It is the teams and that collaboration. The drivers, and how they work together for the betterment of the sport, just on the whole, it seems a lot more collaborative than what it was 20 years ago.”

    What does leadership mean to you in respect toward younger drivers that you’ve seen grow throughout the years?

    WILSON: “Leadership is certainly a bit of an intangible. The position doesn’t come with an entitlement of respect, that is something there or not, that is something that is earned. Again, in terms of my own sense of accomplishment, probably more important than anything else is I want to believe that I treated people whether they were friends, whether they were competitors, with kindness, with respect, with compassion. So, I think that’s a big part of being a leader. In terms of the TRD team, you can get into a little more of a granular level, but I certainly learned early on in my career – I came to work as a young engineer, I didn’t know what I was doing. I really didn’t. I’m so proud of that mechanical engineering degree I have from Virginia Tech and the relationship I have with that university. They’ve been so kind to me. But I was not a bright shining star in the list of their alumni. And I came to appreciate just the – when I left, I went straight into the service and I learned as a platoon leader that unless I have the support of my platoon sergeants and my squad leaders, I was doomed to fail. And I took those lessons everywhere I’ve been, and I surrounded myself with capable people and people that were instrumental in shaping a culture and a commitment of excellence. That’s a little bit of my view on leadership.”

    Will you still be involved in racing in any capacity?

    WILSON: “I love what we do, I love racing, I love all forms of racing, and I’ll continue to be a fan. I’ll come back to the track on occasion, probably far less than you would expect. Because the reason more often than not that I’ll come back is for the people. It’s not for a “race.” I’ve been to enough races and enough race tracks, but it’s the people that I’ll come back to visit with and to see. In the immediate future, just to be clear, I have 128 days in office left. I don’t do lame duck well and the irony is of those 128 days I’m on the road for 70.”

    Have you stopped long enough to give a thought about what it’s going to be like to start 2025 and not have to worry about the Rolex 24 and Daytona 500?

    WILSON: “Tyler (Gibbs) and I talk about this a lot and I’m sure for many of you in this room, you go through the same emotional hurdle. You have to cross a hurdle. When you get up on New Years Day or the day after, you have to be prepared to strap it back on and get after it. Usually, we’re on the road by the third or fourth day of January heading somewhere. What I’ve come to find more and more difficult is getting myself mentally prepared for that. And now, again leaving my two grandsons – my four-year-old, we’re tight. He’s my buddy and he gets upset when I leave and that’s hard. It gets harder. Thank goodness for technology. But, come the first of next year, it’s going to be surreal. I don’t know. I don’t know how I’ll handle it. My wife is a little terrified. Had a test run with COVID. There was a little silver lining there and I found out that not getting on an airplane for like two months or whatever it was, I didn’t miss any of that. And I loved being home with my family. I really did. It doesn’t mean that there won’t be moments like I need to get on an airplane and get out of here, but I’ll figure it out. I’m comfortable.”

    Have you been able to figure out what caused the recent engine issues and have you solved the issue?

    GIBBS: “Yes, we’ve dug into each one of those individually. They are different issues. We know what caused them so from that perspective we are comfortable – as comfortable as you can be with some of the components involved with solving those problems.”

    WILSON: “Let me just touch on that because many of you who were here 10, 11, 12 years ago, you probably got to know me through the crap storm that we were in the middle of. That’s when I was put out in front of the media for the first time. I’ll never forget we were at Phoenix and Kyle Busch’s engine failed in warm up on Sunday morning. Bob Carter is watching from his couch and freaking out. So, that’s how I came to get to know you all and one of my biggest takeaways and Tyler (Gibbs) has seen it as well is never run from your problems and get out in front of it and just be honest. I had to share some real tough things with you all and I’m so grateful for the respect and the trust that all of you on this side of the industry has shown me over the years. We’ll get that stuff sorted and thank you.”

    David, are there any others that have had a profound impact on your career?

    “Well, everyone in this room on some level has had an impact because the common denominator for the most part is I’ve been given a level of trust in time. There’s not too many jobs where you have that, but just to focus more at home and the parent company, Toyota Motor North America, who enable us to do this and who decided that we should race in this sport. They have – our top management have given my team the latitude and the freedom to build what we’ve done in this sport and that’s such a luxury. And it comes because they have a trust, because you have a track record and that’s been amazing. But the people that I’ve worked with over the years, Bob Carter, that retired not too long ago. Ed Laukes, my last boss who retired a couple of years ago. Both played a significant role in me and my team having the success that we have. But, again, looking more at this team here and looking at the things that bring me so much pride, but it’s helping be a part of bringing new organizations into our sport. What we did with Furniture Row Racing back in the day – just off the charts. Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan putting their trust in Toyota to make a big bet in the sport. It’s breathtaking. Having Jimmie Johnson cold call you and say, ‘Hey, I want to come out to California and have dinner with you.’ To be working with him, it’s hard to put in words but certainly all of those people have played a tremendous amount of influence, and I care so much for each of them.”

    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.

  • The Rock and Monster Jam – As Big As It Gets!

    The Rock and Monster Jam – As Big As It Gets!

    Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s ‘Monster Jam’ Disney Project Revealed

    Palmetto, Fla. (August 10, 2024) — On Friday night, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson announced at D23, The Ultimate Disney Fan Event, a new live-action feature film set in the Monster Jam® Universe. “We got an opportunity here that we could create something that is immersive and cool and fun, and also a live-action experience for our families all around the world, from the POV of these incredible, iconic monster trucks and their very eccentric and crazy drivers,” Johnson said during Disney‘s Friday night panel in Anaheim. “Ladies and gentlemen, ‘Monster Jam’ is gonna be a heck of a ride.”

    Feld Entertainment, the parent company of Monster Jam, the leading motorsport company for families, is excited to team up on the first live-action Monster Jam film with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Seven Bucks, and Walt Disney Studios. “Together, The Rock and Monster Jam are truly As Big As It Gets!™ We’re thrilled to collaborate with Dwayne Johnson and Walt Disney Studios to take moviegoers into the world of Monster Jam on a high-octane, live-action adventure that will bring the larger-than-life Monster Jam trucks and personalities from the stadium to the screen,” said Juliette Feld Grossman, CEO of Feld Entertainment.

    About Monster Jam

    Unexpected, unscripted and unforgettable, Monster Jam® features world-class athletes competing for championships on perfectly engineered dirt tracks that push these ever-evolving, state-of-the-art trucks to the limit. Beyond the 350 global live events each year, the Monster Jam brand extends off the track into the home through products, content and merchandise that keeps the fun alive year-round. For more information, visit MonsterJam.com.

    About Feld Motor Sports

    Feld Motor Sports Inc., a subsidiary of Feld Entertainment Inc., is the worldwide leader in producing and presenting specialized arena and stadium-based motorsports entertainment. Properties include Monster Jam®, Monster Energy AMA Supercross, and the SuperMotocross World Championship. Visit monsterjam.com, SupercrossLIVE.com, and feldentertainment.com for more information.

  • GMG Racing Runs Kyle Washington and Patrick Mulcahy in Porsche Sprint Challenge Dual-Series Weekend at Road America

    GMG Racing Runs Kyle Washington and Patrick Mulcahy in Porsche Sprint Challenge Dual-Series Weekend at Road America

    • Washington Set for Triple-Threat Race Weekend with a Pair of Masters-Class GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup Entries in Porsche Sprint Challenge West, Porsche Sprint Challenge North America and the Porsche Endurance Challenge
    • Mulcahy Looks to Build On Season-Best Top-Five Overall and Pro-Am Race Finishes in Road America Debut in the No. 254 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup

    ELKHART LAKE, Wisconsin (August 10, 2024) – GMG Racing’s three-straight weeks of competition at Road America takes on a triple-threat twist of its own this weekend with team driver Kyle Washington campaigning a pair of GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup entries in each of the three USAC Porsche Challenge series races taking place on the four-mile road course this Saturday and Sunday. Washington’s across-the-board Porsche Challenge campaign is joined by first-year team driver Patrick Mulcahy who continues his inaugural season of Porsche Sprint Challenge USA West by Yokohama competition with his Road America debut in the No. 254 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup.

    The second of three national events on this year’s calendar, the Road America weekend includes doubleheaders for the Sprint Challenge West series and its counterpart Porsche Sprint Challenge North America by Yokohama championship, which races primarily on the East Coast. The packed Road America schedule also features the second round of the first-year Porsche Endurance Challenge North America, which runs a one-hour race to conclude the weekend Sunday afternoon.

    Washington primarily runs a No. 232 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup in Sprint Challenge West, but GMG’s three-week stand at Road America has provided the chance to add a foray into the North America championship as well. The similar Type 992 Porsche Washington drove to a top-five finish in last weekend’s IMSA Carrera Cup races at Road America has been prepared by the team for Washington to race as the No. 234 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 Cup in the North America series races. Washington competes in each series in the Masters Class.

    “Kyle wants to race as much as possible and even thrives on a full-slate of races on any given weekend,” said GMG Racing President and Founder James Sofronas. “After last weekend’s Carrera Cup event, we evaluated the option of changing Kyle’s car over to Sprint Challenge specifications just this weekend and jumped at the chance. Including the entry in the all Pro-Am 992 field in Porsche Endurance Challenge, Kyle will be running in a total of five races this weekend. Patrick Mulcahy competes alongside Kyle in the Pro-Am class in the Sprint Challenge West series doubleheader, and Kyle’s extra track time will provide additional data and feedback that will benefit both drivers and their respective teams. We look forward to helping both Kyle and Patrick achieve all they can this weekend at Road America.”

    Mulcahy secured a season-best fourth in Pro-Am and a top-five finish overall in the second race of the season-opening weekend at Spring Mountain Motorsports Ranch last March. Improving one position or more for Pro-Am podium results this weekend is the goal for Mulcahy.

    Meanwhile, Washington concludes his powerhouse weekend sharing the No. 232 with professional coach and co-driver Tom Sargent in the debut race for the drivers and GMG in the new Porsche Endurance series. The first-year duo scored its first victory together last month at VIRginia International Raceway with a fast and flawless run in the debut of a new No. 32 GMG Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R in Fanatec GT World Challenge competition at VIRginia International Raceway (VIR).

    Following three days of unofficial testing and opening practice that concluded Friday, the Road America schedule kicks into high gear on Saturday.

    Qualifying for both the North America and West series takes place Saturday morning in preparation for the opening sprints in both championships that afternoon. The West competitors race first at 2:55 p.m. CDT with the North America race wrapping up the day with a 4:50 p.m. CDT green flag. Sunday’s second and final rounds for both championships go off at 11:30 a.m. CDT for the West and 1:10 p.m. CDT for the North America finale. All Sprint Challenge races are 35 minutes + 1 lap in length.

    The weekend concludes Sunday at 4:35 p.m. CDT with the one-hour Porsche Endurance Challenge race.

    Visit www.porschesprint.com for results from every session and live timing and livestreaming of all of the races from Road America.

    About GMG Racing: Founded in 2001, GMG Racing quickly established itself as North America’s premier performance tuning facility. What began as a small 1,200 sq. ft. shop, maintaining two race cars, has grown into a 30,000 sq. ft. state-of-the-art performance tuning, racing and service facility located in Santa Ana, California in Orange County and with a trackside motorsports facility at 28,000 sq. ft. currently being built at The Thermal Club. The staff, attention to detail, and passion are what make GMG the choice of professionals and enthusiasts worldwide. GMG, in its early years, was located directly across the street from Porsche Motorsport North America (PMNA). This close proximity allowed GMG to build a strong relationship with the legendary racing brand which has helped us support our customers to the highest level possible. From club racing to Sebring, Daytona and Spa, GMG can take you as far as you want to go. More information can be found at www.gmgracing.com.

  • Suárez, Freeway Insurance Extend with Trackhouse Racing

    Suárez, Freeway Insurance Extend with Trackhouse Racing

    Combination Will Enter Fifth Season Together in 2025

    Concord, N.C. – Trackhouse Racing announced today that driver Daniel Suárez and Freeway Insurance will return to the No. 99 Chevrolet racing team for the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season, marking their fifth season together.

    Suárez scored his second career Cup Series win on Feb. 25 at Atlanta Motor Speedway while flying the Freeway Insurance colors, earning the 32-year-old Monterrey, Mexico driver a playoff berth and the opportunity to race for a championship this Fall.

    Freeway will be the primary sponsor of the No. 99 Chevrolet for one-third of the 2025 season, including the Daytona 500 and the NASCAR All-Star race.

    “Everyone at Trackhouse Racing is pleased to continue the relationship with Daniel and Freeway Insurance,” said Justin Marks whose team is in its fourth year of competition in the Cup Series. “Daniel has been vital to this team and its culture since the first day. Freeway joined that same year and we have all continued to grow together and will continue into 2025.”

    Suárez, who won the 2016 Xfinity Series title, said he is pleased to continue his association with Trackhouse Racing and Freeway Insurance.

    “Trackhouse is home to me and I have enjoyed every minute I have been here,” said Suárez who became the first Mexican driver to win a Cup race when he dominated the race at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway in June 2022. “We plan to keep working, growing and winning more races. We can only do that with the support of my Amigos and Amigas at Freeway Insurance. They have backed me for the last several years and we have grown close with their customers and employees.”

    Freeway Insurance joined Trackhouse and Suárez in 2021 to ensure everyone knows low-cost car insurance is available to people who need it, regardless of their driving record.

    During its relationship, the combination led to a national television and digital advertising campaign featuring Suárez in English and Spanish and customer outreach across the nation. Freeway Insurance recognition among NASCAR viewers and the public dramatically increased as millions of television viewers and social media fans watched Suárez on the racetrack and in commercials.

    Building on that success, Freeway Insurance served as the primary sponsor for Suárez in the 66th running of the Daytona 500 in February.

    “We value our partnership with Trackhouse and Daniel Suárez who has become a powerful ambassador of our Freeway brand and an influential voice in our own diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. Daniel’s story inspires us and deeply connects to the daily lives and goals of our Hispanic customers,” said Cesar Soriano, Chief Executive Officer of Freeway Insurance, the largest auto insurance and personal lines distribution company in the United States.

    “Thousands of race fans have met Daniel at Freeway Insurance stores across the country, and we want him to meet and share his story with even more in 2025. He has been part of our national advertising initiatives and has introduced new customers to Freeway. We want to continue with that effort and scale our presence in NASCAR so when you see the No. 99 racing by you immediately think of Freeway Insurance.”

    Suárez drove the now familiar blue, green and white Freeway Insurance paint scheme to victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Feb. 25 in what is the closest three-wide finish in NASCAR history with Suárez, Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch separated by .007 seconds.

    Suárez has helped build Trackhouse Racing that began competing as a single-car team in 2021 with its cars housed at Richard Childress Racing in Welcome, North Carolina. In June of 2021, Trackhouse announced the acquisition of Chip Ganassi Racing’s NASCAR assets, a move that secured two full-time NASCAR Cup Series entries and cleared the path for expansion.

    Trackhouse moved into its race shop in Concord, North Carolina and fielded the No. 99 for Suárez and the No. 1 Chevrolet with driver Ross Chastain in 2022. The duo, along with Shane van Gisbergen, have combined for seven victories in Cup Series racing.

    In 2016, he became the first NASCAR Drive for Diversity graduate to win a national series title when he won the Xfinity Series championship by claiming victories at Michigan, Dover and Homestead-Miami Speedway. He was the 2015 NASCAR Xfinity Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year – the first Mexican driver to win the award.

    Suárez came to America 13 years ago to pursue a NASCAR dream despite not speaking English. He is now a dual citizen of Mexico and the United States taking the oath of citizenship in Charlotte on June 18 and serves as a television host and in-race commentator, in English, with Fox Sports.

    He and longtime girlfriend Julia Piquet married on July 30 in Brazil.