Author: Official Release

  • Reddick, Smith Pace Practices as NASCAR Returns to IMS Oval

    Reddick, Smith Pace Practices as NASCAR Returns to IMS Oval

    INDIANAPOLIS (Friday, July 19, 2024) – Tyler Reddick led practice Friday for the Brickyard 400 presented by PPG, as the NASCAR Cup Series is back on the fabled oval at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the first time since 2020.

    Reddick paced the 50-minute session with a top lap of 182.582 mph in the No. 45 The Beast Unleashed Toyota fielded by 23XI Racing, co-owned by basketball legend Michael Jordan and NASCAR Cup Series star Denny Hamlin. Reddick won the Cup Series race on the IMS road course in 2022 and could become the first driver to win Cup Series events on the 2.5-mile oval and 2.439-mile road course at the Racing Capital of the World.

    The NASCAR Cup Series raced on the IMS oval from 1994-2020 in the Brickyard 400 before three consecutive years on the 14-turn road course.

    “I didn’t know what the sensation of speed was going to feel like (on the oval), but it just feels like the center corner speeds we carry in this car, you feel tense in the car,” Reddick said. “There’s such a fine line to hit here. A foot up or down could be the difference between a really good lap or having to check up and not hit the fence.

    “The room for error here is very, very fine, even in a stock car.”

    This is the first time the Next Gen car is competing on the IMS oval, as the new car was introduced to the Cup Series in 2022.

    “It’s interesting how the draft works,” Reddick said. “There is some sort of tow out that you get out there, but also the dirty air that comes with it is a challenge. It was just a big learning session, I guess.”

    Reigning Cup Series champion Ryan Blaney was second at 181.928 in the No. 12 Menards/Atlas Ford fielded by Team Penske. Hamlin was third at 181.561 in the No. 11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota of 23XI Racing.

    Christopher Bell ended up fourth at 181.371 in the No. 20 Rheem Toyota of Joe Gibbs Racing. Alex Bowman rounded out the top five at 180.930 in the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet fielded by Hendrick Motorsports, which has won a record 10 Brickyard 400s.

    2021 Cup Series champion Kyle Larson was sixth at 180.774 in the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet. This is Larson’s second time competing this year on the IMS oval, as he also was named Rookie of the Year in the 108th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge in May after qualifying fifth and finishing 18th in a Hendrick Motorsports-Arrow McLaren entry.

    Cup Series drivers will qualify at 1:05 p.m. ET Saturday, followed by the 160-lap Brickyard 400 presented by PPG at 2:30 p.m. ET Sunday.

    In NASCAR Xfinity Series action earlier in the sunny afternoon, Chandler Smith led the sole practice for the Pennzoil 250 presented by Advance Auto Parts race. Smith drove the No. 81 QuickTie Toyota of Joe Gibbs Racing to a top lap of 166.756.

    “It’s incredible,” Smith said. “This is where it all started for me, as far as where the interest came about. I’m from Georgia, so the first time I saw the (IMS) racetrack was when I was quarter-midget racing. They set up a little quarter-midget track in the infield. I always dreamed of racing here on the oval in a competitive car in one of the top three series in NASCAR, and here we are.”

    Parker Kligerman was second at 166.571 in the No. 48 Spiked Lite Tropical Coolers Chevrolet fielded by Big Machine Racing, followed by Indianapolis 500 veteran and Indianapolis native Conor Daly at 164.995 in the No. 26 Polkadot Toyota of Sam Hunt Racing.

    Brandon Jones was fourth at 164.781 in the No. 9 Menards/Pennington Chevrolet of JR Motorsports, with Riley Herbst rounding out the top five in the 38-car field at 164.736 in the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford fielded by Stewart-Haas Racing.

    Up next for the Xfinity Series is qualifying at 12:05 p.m. ET Saturday, followed by the 100-lap Pennzoil 250 presented by Advance Auto Parts race at 3:30 p.m. ET.

    Visit IMS.com to buy tickets or for more information on Brickyard Weekend.

  • Toyota NCS Indianapolis Quotes – Post-Practice Quotes – 07.19.24

    Toyota NCS Indianapolis Quotes – Post-Practice Quotes – 07.19.24

    Toyota Racing – Indianapolis Post-Practice Quotes

    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    INDIANAPOLIS (July 19, 2024) – Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Christopher Bell, Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin, along with 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick, were made available to the media on Friday after practice for this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

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

    Was there dirty air out there today?

    “Very dirty, very dingy. Very dirty, very air. It’ll be extremely difficult to pass (on Sunday).”

    Where would a Brickyard 400 win rank on your accolades?

    “I mean, I think probably, next to the Southern 500s, I would say. Obviously, it doesn’t have the prestige of the (Daytona) 500s, but I would say, the Southern 500 and the Brickyard 400 to me is kind of equal in its prestige. So, you know, we’ve got three of those Southern 500s, so it put its right there with that Coke 600 and Southern 500s.”

    How frustrating was it to not have a chance to come back and win here after that incident in 2020?

    “You know, I always thought we were going to come back here (oval) one day. Just never resigned to the fact that the road course here was going to be a permanent thing. But, I just didn’t know how long my career would go at that point, right? I was 40 (years-old) and so, I mean, I don’t have that many chances left. It’s less than what’s on my hand, I think. So, you just have to take advantage of every opportunity. Twenty-twenty was an enormous opportunity. Twenty-eighteen was a very underrated opportunity. Brad (Keselowski) caught a big yellow that was just untimely for us. Overall, I feel like I’ve always been in contention here, just never gotten it done.”

    How much emphasis has your team put on to win this race?

    “A lot. Certainly, from my standpoint, you know there’s only so many more opportunities I’ll have here at the oval. So, it’s a big emphasis because it’s a gaping hole on the résumé and would complete all the majors. But Chris (Gabehart, crew chief) wants it pretty bad, too. He’s a little hurt over 2020 and how that ended. I think, without a doubt, going into this weekend, he had spent a little extra time on this car making sure all the details were looked after and he brought me the fastest car he could.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 19 Auto-Owners Insurance Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Impressions from practice today?

    “Yeah, it was interesting. Feel like the track is the same as it’s always been. Just trying to figure out how to get the Next Gen car around for the first time. Yeah, it was an interesting practice. We didn’t really have what we hoped for, but got a good direction for tomorrow and hopefully, we can make the changes we need and get going better.”

    What’s your outlook on the racing for Sunday?

    “I don’t know. This car’s not generally been good when there’s one preferred groove and that’s what we have here. Guess we’ll wait and see, see how the restarts will go and things. But it’s going to be huge challenge making passes. You’re going to have to be significantly faster than the guy in front of you to do that. So, yeah, we’ll see.”

    What does it mean to have another opportunity at winning on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval?

    “Yeah, it’s huge. The history here and what this track means for motorsports in general across the world. It’s very cool to get to come here. I wish we were a little bit faster today as qualifying and track position is going to be everything, so tomorrow is very, very important. But having a chance to win here is huge and special. Someone’s going to have a big day on Sunday.”

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

    You’re nearing 600 laps led on the season. Do milestones like that mean something to you?

    “Yeah, it is, and it’s definitely something that we’ve been focusing on this year. Being in position to lead laps. Hopefully we can keep building that number.”

    How does it feel to be back on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval?

    “Very refreshing. No matter how it turns out, I think it’s very important that we race on the oval.”

    Why do you think that?

    “It’s Indianapolis. You don’t (pause), whenever you think of Indianapolis, you don’t think of a road course. So, it’s the Brickyard 400 and it’s a marquee event and no matter how the race turns out, it’s the right thing.”

    How was your car out there today?

    “I was happy with it. It’s going to be hard to pass. The race is probably going to look similar to all the races we’ve had here in the past. But yeah, it’s you know what you’re going to get whenever you come here and it hasn’t changed.”

    TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 The Beast Unleashed Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    You seem to have a really fast car this weekend.

    “That’s good! I mean, it seemed pretty solid. When
    you come to a place like this, that’s always something you hope for. I’ve been fortunate, we’ve run the road course here, and we’ve been really, really strong. Obviously, it seemed like Denny (Hamlin) had a really good test and we were able to get some good data from him. Yeah, tracks like this, it’s always a question mark to some degree, you know? How close is your sim preparation going to be? But it seemed like everyone did a pretty good job. Yeah, pretty happy with how the car drives. Certainly, it’s interesting how the draft works. I do feel like there is some sort of tow you can get out there, but also, the dirty air that comes with it is a challenge. So, it was just a big learning session.”

    So, there will be tow and dirty air out there?

    “What it seemed like. I mean, if, you know, the car you’re running behind would miss the bottom a little, it was somewhat manageable from like 15 (car lengths) back. You can get a tow down the straightaway it seemed like. But yeah, if they hit the bottom, it was tough to manage. I don’t how that’s going to work as we were all pretty spread out. You know, we can all run some sort of a good pace. I think, I would expect a lot of mistakes in the race on Sunday once we’re all packed up on restarts.”

    Was there any tire fall off you could tell from the session?

    “It was really hard to figure that part out. A lot of times, you kind of get running a pace, you get a feel for the car. Someone would pull onto the track in front of you and you’d run down the car in front of you and just what dirty air is like in these cars at these fast tracks. It’s kind of hard to tell what’s dirty air. Did you just get your stuff hot running behind somebody? And what’s natural tire fall off.”

    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 45 million
    cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th 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
    26 electrified options.

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

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Practice Report and Quotes

    CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Practice Report and Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    TEAM CHEVY PRACTICE REPORT
    JULY 19, 2024

     Bowman Leads Chevrolet in NASCAR Cup Series Practice at Indianapolis

    · For the first time since the 2020 season, drivers and teams of the NASCAR Cup Series turned laps on Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s oval configuration this afternoon for a 50-minute practice session in advance of Sunday’s Brickyard 400. The return of the series’ crown jewel event will mark the first for the Next Gen cars.

    · Hendrick Motorsports’ Alex Bowman led Chevrolet on the speed chart at the conclusion of the NASCAR Cup Series practice session – posting a fastest-lap of 49.743 seconds, at 180.930 mph, in his No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1 to land fifth-fastest overall.

    · Four Team Chevy drivers posted lap times in the top-10 of the final speed chart, with Bowman leading his Hendrick Motorsports teammates Kyle Larson in fifth and William Byron in ninth, with Spire Motorsports’ Carson Hocevar rounding out the top-10.

    Chevrolet in the NASCAR Cup Series at Indianapolis Motor Speedway:

    o In 27 NCS races on the IMS oval, Chevrolet has earned 17 victories – a record more than double the next leading manufacturer, Ford, with six victories.

    o Of those victories includes a streak of 12-straight, recorded between Aug. 2003 to July 2014.

    o Career Chevrolet driver, Jeff Gordon, leads the series with five Brickyard 400 victories, including the inaugural event in Aug. 1994.

    Team Chevy Top-20 NASCAR Cup Series Practice Results:

    1. Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    2. Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1
    3. William Byron, No. 24 Valvoline Camaro ZL1
    4. Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Zeigler Auto Group Camaro ZL1

    Drivers in the top-10 positions of the NASCAR Cup Series points standings, including Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron and Alex Bowman, met with the media following the series’ 50-minute practice session.

    Team Chevy Driver Quotes:

    William Byron, No. 24 Valvoline Camaro ZL1

    9th fastest in practice

    Given your win here at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the Xfinity Series and just Chevy’s dominance when it comes to Indianapolis, how do you feel about returning to the oval on Sunday?

    “I love it. I enjoy Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It has those good memories for me, so anytime you come back here, it’s special. Obviously this place is as special as it is, but that memory in 2017 and what that did for my career, that was a really big moment for me. I enjoy coming back here.”

    You’ll find out where you’ll lineup after tomorrow’s qualifying session, but given the time in the practice session that you had, how do you feel about your car for Sunday?

    “I feel pretty good. I feel like we could stand to work on a couple little things here and there. I think we were ninth overall on speed, so not bad. We never really did a perfect lap on sticker tires. I just felt like I was always kind of missing the corner here and there. I think we can be better than that. Qualifying will be really important because track position is always big here, so I just feel like we have to work on a little tightness in our car and just try to get a little bit faster.”

    Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

    5th fastest in practice

    What are your goals for the remainder of the regular season?

    “Just to continue to improve our program and try to get better at the places that we lack. We weren’t amazing today, so there’s work to be done for Sunday. Really just to continue to try to make our team better and try to be ready for the playoffs.”

    What did you notice about how the Next Gen car goes around the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval versus the Gen-6 car?

    “I mean, similar but different. I think a lot of throttle time, for sure. Passing is going to be super difficult. I was talking to Tyler (Reddick) on the way over here. He’s the fastest thing here by a mile and ran me down like I was tied to a post, and I couldn’t do a damn thing. It’s going to be difficult, for sure. It’s going to be a track position race. This place is unique, right? It’s narrow. It’s really sensitive with this car. If you get a little bit too high, you’re on ice. It’s definitely tricky.”

    So the hope that passing might be a little bit easier because the wake wouldn’t be as bad, that’s not really panning out?

    “I don’t know. It’s hard because we haven’t raced here back-to-back. It’s been four years or whatever, so it’s hard to say if it’s better or worse than the last car. But it’s still extremely difficult, for sure. Anything is though, right? The INDYCAR guys get aero-tight and stuff. The INDYCAR, I feel like, gets such a big run down the straightaway compared to the Cup car. Obviously it doesn’t seem like we’re building those big runs, so it makes it tough.”

    Kyle Larson was saying this week that he expects restarts to be as aggressive as they’ve ever been, or more aggressive than the last time you guys were here..

    “Yeah, for sure. I mean, it’s different, right? It’s so narrow, so there’s not as many options as – like into (turn) one at Pocono (Raceway), you’re five or six-wide. Hopefully we don’t get there here, right? But guys are going to be aggressive because you’re never going to get those spots back. You’re never really going to get a shot to be side-by-side with somebody I feel like, unless they mess up pretty bad. Yeah, I mean if you hit your marks and hit the line, it’s going to be really difficult for anybody to do anything with the other lines.”


    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.

  • Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Brad Keselowski)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Brad Keselowski)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Brickyard 400 Media Availability | Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Friday, July 19, 2024

    Brad Keselowski, dvier of the No. 6 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, met with media members at Indianapolis Motor Speedway ahead of the first Cup Series practice session on the track Friday afternoon.

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    YOU’RE ONE OF TWO GUYS RACING SUNDAY WHO REMEMBER WHAT IT WAS LIKE TO WIN HERE ON THE OVAL. SO MAYBE THE BIG PICTURE PERSPECTIVE ON WHAT IT MEANS FOR NASCAR TO BE BACK ON THE OVAL WITH THE CUP SERIES, AND THEN FOR YOU, WHAT DOES IT FEEL LIKE? WHAT’S IT LIKE TO WIN AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY ON THE OVAL?

    “It’s a return of a crown jewel race, which is great. I don’t think anyone really considered the road course a crown jewel race, so it kind of returns back to that status. I think that’s huge for our sport and it means a lot to me as a driver and I’m assuming it does for the other drivers as well. So, a welcome return. It’s not going to be an easy race. I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of drama on pit road and with respect to how the cars will draft and how they’ll run nose to tail around the track and all those pieces, and we’re still going to go back to some of those headaches, but I think we kind of learned that that’s not necessarily a bad thing. That’s part of what made Indy, Indy, right? And so it’ll be interesting to see how that plays out with tires and all those things along the line, but I think it’s very meaningful to me to see it back on the, I guess you call this oval a quad-oval — is it a quad-oval? I don’t know what it’s called. Rectangle? Rectangle. So it’s good to see it back. For me, winning this race and having your name on that crown jewel list, it’s a really special feeling. It’s kind of a dream come true. It really sank in the best, I think, two years ago when we took the picture with all the drivers that have won here and you just think about how there’s no slouches on that list, right? It’s a lot of champions and the track just has a history for that of the people that win here with very few exceptions are our champions and it feels good to be on that list.”

    THIS IS THE 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF THE FIRST ELIMINATION ROUNDS PLAYOFFS FOR NASCAR N 2014. YOU WERE A HUGE PART, EVEN THOUGH YOU DIDN’T MAKE THE CHAMPIONSHIP ROUND, YOU WERE A HUGE PART OF THE STORYLINES THROUGHOUT THOSE PLAYOFFS. LOOKING BACK ON THAT, WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER NOW ABOUT WHAT IT WAS LIKE TO GO THROUGH 2014 PLAYOFFS AND WHAT HAS IT MEANT FOR NASCAR?

    “I think the playoffs were an interesting change to our sport. There are people that like them and there are people that don’t like them. There’s parts I like personally and parts I don’t like personally and the first year was really kind of that 2014 season was everybody kind of getting to understand the system in real time. You read about it and you read the rules and all that, but you didn’t really fully understand how it would change the behaviors until you actually saw it. I think there were definitely some behavioral changes in the garage and in the sport that are due to the playoffs. We all needed a rep through it to see what that would be. It changed our sport. There’s no way of saying it didn’t. But the real effect of the playoffs to me was the next two or three seasons when people started to get comfortable with it. And then you started to see the playoffs actually have an effect on the rest of the season that wasn’t the playoffs, right? Because people had a better understanding for what that meant. So it’s definitely been a change for our sport.”

    WITH THE TWO-WEEK BREAK COMING UP HERE, HOW ARE YOU GOING TO MANAGE THAT AT RFK? DO YOU STILL HAVE PEOPLE COMING IN THE SHOP OR ARE YOU GOING TO SEND EVERYBODY HOME?

    “Our strategy so far, has been to tell people, please go home, please take a vacation, but not force it. We kind of learned the hard way that forcing people to take vacations is sometimes not always good for them. Sometimes they get more mad at you than if you just told them we have to work. So everybody will kind of figure out their own thing with kind of a heavy nod of, please go take some time off and come back well rested. We’re very fortunate at RFK that this time we have both cars in the playoffs, one locked in and one not locked in but in the playoffs. We need to make the best run we can make through that stretch. It’s very much a people sport and we need those people to be energized and focused when that time comes and this is their best chance to catch their breath.”

    WHO’S GOING TO RULE ON SUNDAY, A CREW CHIEF OR THE DRIVER ABOUT CHANGES BECAUSE YOU’RE OBVIOUSLY GOING TO BE MAKING A LOT OF CHANGES IN THE RACE.

    “With the NextGen car, I think first time for us on the track with it here, 50 minutes is not a lot. It’s interesting, you know, my time in the sport, it used to be if we changed a tire or if we changed a wicker, we had an extra four hours of practice and a test day or whatever it might be. Now it’s like, well, let’s just change the whole car and, yeah, we’ll give you 50 minutes.So it’s interesting how that’s changed over the years, the mentality has changed. Now it’s more about the engineers than it is about me. They’ll run all the simulations and they’ll come up with one little doodad that they’ll change by a couple thousandths of an inch and it will make all the difference in the world and I’ll just shake my head like I understand what they mean. That’s kind of what it is. You have to trust those guys at this level because what they have access to is far superior than what I have access to. It used to be I had access to the track time. That was my access. But they have access because we don’t have track time. They have access to really powerful simulation and digital tools as a whole that at some point you just kind of have to nod to as a driver and say, I’m not worthy, and let them kind of have their moment.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT, AFTER MISSING THE PLAYOFFS LAST YEAR, BEING BACK IN?

    “Well, you know, 2022 was not a lot of fun. 2023 we absolutely made the most of it. Being back in 24, it just kind of feels like a redemption ride to be a part of turning around the organization and to some degree my own career. When I did the deal at RFK, you hated to resign to losing a year or two of your career, but the reality is that you knew that was what it was going to be. Now we’re in the third season. We’re having a slightly better year than we had last year in 2023 with having a win, where last year we didn’t have a win. I feel like we’re more competitive in some ways. More importantly, I feel like we’re a lot more prepared for the playoffs than we were last year. And I think we’ll have a better playoff run than we did last year. I can’t remember, we finished seventh and eighth in the points with our two cars last year. I think we realistically have a shot at getting both cars in that round of eight and one of the cars in the championship round. And from there, who knows what’s going to happen? So I’m excited about that progress. And I’m just eager to see it through.”

    HOW IMPORTANT IS THIS TO YOUR SUCCESS IN THE PLAYOFFS TO HAVE BOTH CARS IN THE FINAL TEN RACES?

    “Well it certainly helps. Having both cars in the playoffs is a really big deal for us on a number of levels. Whether it’s the partnership side and being able to keep that side going, which is obviously really important for us to be able to pay the bills. The recruiting side, you know, we’re always, it’s always going to be turnover in our sport. We don’t, we don’t like it, but it’s a reality. People come and they go and, you know, you want to, anytime somebody leaves, you want to be able to replace them with someone that’s, you know, of equal or greater talent. And when you’re a car that’s got a pedigree of playoffs, whether it be consecutive playoff runs or just even success in the playoffs, that’s so huge for us with recruiting talent. I look at it probably even more impactful for us is at the OEM level. At the OEM level, generally, the next season’s testing schedule is based off of your performance in the season prior. And the more success you have, the higher impact, higher quality kind of test you get. So it can really kind of parlay to that degree. I think understanding that and maximizing that is really important to us.”

    WHEN YOU SEE WHAT KYLE BUSCH IS GOING THROUGH AND WHAT YOU’VE EXPERIENCED IN YOUR CAREER, WHAT DO YOU SEE AND CAN YOU RELATE IN ANY WAY AND WHAT IS IT LIKE TO GO THROUGH SOMETHING LIKE THAT WHERE A LOT OF IT IS PROBABLY OUT OF YOUR CONTROL?

    “Yeah it’s obviously not a fun thing to experience yourself, so you do look out and recognize that it’s probably not a lot of fun for him, too. The series and sports in general are always full of ebbs and flows. For the most part of his career, Kyle has done a fantastic job, at least in the Cup series, of avoiding those down years. The law of averages eventually hits you to some degree and he’s going through that now. I was actually surprised last year with how well they ran. I thought their year last year would look more like this year and their year last year would be like this year. It would be this year where they won multiple races. So I don’t know, I don’t have my finger on the pulse of what’s going on with his team or with that organization, but I know that’s not a fun experience. It’s a true test of character of how you come through that.”

  • Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Chase Briscoe)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Chase Briscoe)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Brickyard 400 Media Availability | Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Friday, July 19, 2024

    Chase Briscoe, the Indiana native and driver of the No. 14 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, spoke with media members Friday afternoon ahead of on-track action at his iconic hometown track.

    CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT WHAT IT IS LIKE RACING HERE FOR YOU, BEING AN INDIANA NATIVE?

    “I am excited to be back home again in Indiana. It’s been nice every year to be able to come up here a couple days early and spend time with my grandparents, family and friends that I don’t get to see a whole lot, so it’s been a fun week, Excited to be back on the oval. Every racecar driver dreams of getting to race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway when you grow up in Indiana, it’s just that much more special. I’ve always said I don’t care what we’re racing on, I just want to race at IMS, whether it’s the road course or the oval, the dirt track over there in the parking lot. But I would be lying if I said there wasn’t more significance in history and just meaning running the oval. So yeah, truthfully, when I came into the Cup Series, we were already running on the road course and I didn’t know if I would ever get a chance to run a Brickyard 400. So to be able to do that this year is something that’s really, really special. It means a lot to me. To be able to do it even in the 14 car and driving for my hero Tony. At least getting to do that one time with the team shut down, this means a lot. So, excited to experience my first Brickyard 400 and a race that I came to a lot as a kid and obviously watched when I wasn’t here. So yeah, special weekend for sure.”

    HOW DIFFERENT DO YOU FEEL LIKE IT MIGHT BE CELEBRATING A WIN HERE AT THE OVAL? KNOWING YOU WERE REALLY CLOSE TO WINNING THE ROAD COURSE A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO.

    “For me, just getting to race here was special no matter what the configuration was. Even when I won here in 2020, it was on the road course and to me, I still kissed the same bricks, I still climbed the same fence. I was still inside Indianapolis Motor Speedway and I was a winner here. But I mean, it certainly means a little bit more, when it’s on the oval. When you think about the history of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the history is on the oval. It’s not on the road course, but still winning here in general is very, very special. So for me, if I was able to win on the oval, it would mean a little bit more, but it’s going to mean more than any other racetrack I could win at, regardless. That’s something that’s been a tough pill to swallow. When I won here, it was during COVID. I got to do all those things, but I was by myself. I mean my family was literally 10 minutes down the road at my cousin’s house watching the race, celebrating as a family there, and they weren’t here to celebrate that. So I just want to win at Indianapolis with my friends and with my family all here, and if I could do it on the oval, especially at the Brickyard 400, which to me is a hundred percent a crown jewel, would be pretty special.”

    YOU’VE NEVER RACED HERE ON THE OVAL, EVEN XFINITY, RIGHT?

    “I raced here twice. 2018 and 19.”

    YOU’RE ONE OF 10 CUP FULL-TIMERS, WHO HAVE NEVER RACED THE OVAL IN CUP. SO YOU’VE GOT SOME EXPERIENCE AND KNOW THE REFERENCE POINTS FROM THOSE RACES IN XFINITY, BUT HOW MUCH OF A DISADVANTAGE IS THAT TO THE VETERANS AND HOW MUCH IS MAYBE THOUGH THE NEXTGEN A LITTLE BIT OF AN EQUALIZER BECAUSE NOBODY’S RACED THAT ON THE OVAL HERE?

    “I think just having laps on the oval is critical for sure from an experience standpoint, just little things here that kind of stand out. I do think there’s some merit to having laps here just with how unique it is and things like that But I do think that it is going to be a pretty big equalizer just for the NextGen car. It’s going to drive very different I would imagine. I never drove the old cup car here but the NextGen car just everywhere we go drives totally different than anything else we normally would do in old cars. So I do think that it is going to be a pretty equal playing field, but there’s still something to be said about having a lot of laps here. You think of guys like Denny and Truex and those guys that have a ton of experience in the Cup Series, they have a lot of laps here. Fortunately for me, I was able to come here a year ago and do the Goodyear test, so that was nice, just to be able to kind of have a full day just to run laps at IMS on the oval and find little things on the racetrack. I definitely think it’s an equalizer with the NextGen car, but there’s still something to having a lot of laps here for sure.”

    WHERE WOULD YOU TYPICALLY SIT WHEN YOU CAME AS A FAN FOR A BRICKYARD 400? AND WHAT ARE SOME OF YOUR STANDOUT MEMORIES WHEN YOU WERE WATCHING THE RACE?

    “We had a sponsor actually in the sprint car. My dad was a crew chief for Damien Gardner in the USAC Sprint Car Series, and their sponsor was Pace Lighting. The guy’s name was Pat Kehoe, and he had a suite in Turn 2. So I remember we would always get to go over there, and it was just a wild experience between Indy 500 and Brickyard 400 going over there and being that close to the racetrack there in Turn 2. But then I remember sitting up here on top one time. I used to sneak into the garage area and I remember walking on pit road. I definitely wasn’t supposed to be out there. I didn’t have a hot pass or anything but I somehow snuck my way out there and was shaking hands with people trying to get just an opportunity down here. So a lot of memories of this place and even my first ever race uniform. I literally got it the brick building when you drive out of Turn 1 and 2, there’s a brick building straight across. That’s where I got my first ever race uniform. So this place has just a lot of meaning to, to obviously me, just how close it is to home. I definitely have a lot of memories. I remember watching Tony win his, his two Brickyards here. I wasn’t here for those. I was watching on TV, but just remember vividly watching those races and just how much it meant to Tony.”

    THE BRISTOL TEST, DID THE TIRES REACT THE SAME AS THEY DID IN THE SPRING, OR WAS THERE ANY CHANGE?

    “Yeah, it was weird. Like, the first race there, everybody said it was the temperature. And when we tested the other day, it was 90 degrees, and we still corded tires after 40 laps. But at the same time, there’s only six cars there so it never really put any rubber down truthfully, which was kind of weird. That’s the one thing I can’t quite understand I guess is just how we’d raced three or four, I guess two other races with the NextGen car and we never had that problem of putting rubber down or anything and now we just can’t seem to do it. I don’t know, we definitely had tire wear but I think if we had 40-something cars out there it would have been a little bit different too, but definitely was kind of the same characteristics that we had at the race.”

    CAN YOU GIVE ME A SENSE OF WHAT YOU THINK RESTARTS WILL BE LIKE AND ALSO THE CHALLENGE SINCE IT’S BEEN FOUR YEARS SINCE YOU GUYS HAVE BARRELED INTO TURN ONE AND THE CHALLENGE ESPECIALLY IF YOU’RE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PACK TRYING TO FIND YOUR SPOTS, THE SIGHT LINES AND EVERYTHING ELSE, BECAUSE YOU’VE GOT SO MUCH TRAFFIC AROUND YOU IN SUCH A TIGHT SPACE. WHAT IS THAT GOING TO BE LIKE AND HOW CHALLENGING IS IT THE DEEPER IN THE FIELD BECAUSE OF THE LOSS OF SIGHT LINES?

    “Yeah, this car is going to be totally different than anything any of us have experienced here from that standpoint. The old car, if you were on the inside, you’d be really loose with guys right on your door and it was just hard to run side by side anywhere, so we struggled to run side by side in the corner where when you come to a racetrack like this, it was extremely hard, just on a restart, you’d have to get single file as soon as you can. With the Next Gen car, that’s the one thing it does really well. We can run side by side for five, six laps sometimes, literally door to door with each other and the car side drafts so extremely and I definitely think that restarts are going to be unlike anything we’ve experienced at IMS, especially in the Cup era. Even just the racing here I think is going to be totally different because of that. We can run side by side now, the runs that we’re going to get down the straightaway and even just how this car reacts side by side. You know that the outside guy is going to be able to pull ahead but then as soon as you get on the guy’s left rear it makes him super tight and it’s just going to be back and forth, back and forth. We’ve seen that at other racetracks where we just can’t break away from each other and I do think it’s going to be like that here to a certain extent. Being deep in the pack is obviously going to be hard, just not having experience of where those lift points are those first couple times. And visibility is definitely a struggle. But we don’t have that huge tall spoiler on or something like that, so it’ll be a little bit easier to see, but that dirty air in the middle of the pack is definitely going to be a struggle for sure.”

    IS THERE ANYTHING IN PRACTICE THAT YOU’RE GOING TO WANT TO DO BESIDES JUST TRY TO GET A FAST LAP IN TERMS OF TRYING TO SEE HOW YOU RACE AROUND CARS, OR IS THAT THE SIDE-BY-SIDE AND WHAT YOU CAN DO THERE JUST GOING TO BE BASED OFF OF HISTORY AND WHAT YOU LEARN ONCE YOU GET INTO THE RACE?

    “I think everybody’s different. For me I definitely want to get my car driving good and have as much speed in it as we can because this is a place where you just have to have that raw speed. I want to try in this hour practice or whatever it is, to get behind other cars because we’re not gonna really be in 100% clean air at any point in race unless you’re the leader So you need to figure out what your car is gonna do in traffic thinat transition and that’ll be something I think you’re seeing honestly a large majority of the field do just because if your car will drive good you know behind somebody it’s probably gonna drive pretty good by itself so you’re definitely gonna put yourself in in different spots and just trying to figure out what you have to do to set yourself up to pass people, how you build a run, how you do things like that. I definitely think that you’ll see a lot of guys putting themselves in traffic today.”

    TO BE ABLE TO DRIVE THE 14 AROUND HERE WITH TONY BEING YOUR HERO, COME SUNDAY IS IT GOING TO REALLY START TO SET IN THAT THIS IS THE END OF THE RIDE FOR YOU AT STEWART-HAAS RACING

    “It’s gonna be emotional for me. Full transparency, I cry every year just on the ride around deal. With it being on the oval and doing it in the 14, all that, it’s going to be definitely probably be emotional for me. It’s something that I honestly hadn’t even thought about until a couple weeks ago. We were actually doing an interview with IMS for the program. He had asked me, what do you think about this being your only time getting around the 14 at the Brickyard? I didn’t even think about it until that point. It’s definitely gonna be emotional, but for seven or ten year old Chase, if you would have told him that he was gonna get around one Brickyard 400 in the 14 car for Tony Stewart, I don’t think I would ever believe you. I’m glad you know how it all played out with SHR closing down this year. It would have been a bummer if we would ran the road course this year and then next year would have moved to oval and I would have never got that opportunity. The only thing that would make this weekend cooler is if Tony was allowed to be here. It’s obviously an NHRA weekend so he won’t be able to be here but we’ll for sure try to get the 14 back in victory lane like it’s been here. Well, I guess the 14 with Tony hasn’t been in victory lane before but it would be pretty cool to get Stewart-Haas back in victory lane here for sure.”

    WITH FIVE RACES TO GO, YOU’RE KIND OF FLOATING IN BUBBLE LAND. WHAT ARE YOU AND THE 14 TEAM LOOKING AT TO TRY TO GET THAT WIN WITH, YOU KNOW, FOUR SPOTS LEFT IN THE PLAYOFFS?

    “We’ve got to be better, right? We’ve had a couple opportunities at New Hampshire and Nashville to win and came up a little bit short. We’re in that weird spot where we could maybe potentially point our way in, but realistically, we probably have to win, which, at a place like this I think is nice to know that you’re in that must-win situation because you can just get super aggressive with strategy where if we were 20 points out of the cut line or something we would probably have to play it a little more conservative. Where we’re at right now, we can be really aggressive with strategy. That’s what Boswell and all the guys will try to do. We definitely feel like we’re in a must-win territory with how we kind of ran and the stage points and things like that. It’s probably going to be hard to point our way in.”

    HOW MANY FRIENDS AND FAMILY DID YOU HAVE TO GET TICKETS FOR TO BE HERE THIS WEEKEND?

    “Quite a bit. Saturday, tomorrow, we got 500 tickets. Back in December, with the Gene Haas Foundation, actually, we donated a bike for every kid from my hometown, from kindergarten to fifth grade. A lot of the high schoolers at my school helped build those bikes. So every kid that helped build the bikes got two tickets to come to tomorrow’s race. So we’re gonna have 500 tickets that we pass out for tomorrow, just for the whole town of Mitchell. They have a spot over in the corner, so I’m gonna try to sneak over there and surprise them after qualifying. Then for the race, there’s a lot. I think I sent in like 40-something pit passes. So I’m pretty much out for the entire season now. I’ve got a ton of people coming. Every time we come here, I have a ton of people just from Lawrence County even that come that never go to another race the rest of the year. They’re not even necessarily NASCAR fans, but they come up here to support me. So it’s always just a really special weekend. Being a Hoosier driver at IMS, it’s always special. Just the whole place kind of rallies around you. So I feel like every time I come here, I can find this other gear, just because I know how many people are here watching me. And hopefully it’ll be the same this weekend.”

    YOUR TEAMMATE JOSH BERRY HAS CAITLIN CLARK ON HIS CAR. HOW COOL IS THAT TO SEE SUCH AN ICONIC FIGURE FOR ALL OF SPORTS, BUT ALSO FOR RIGHT HERE IN INDIANA, BE REPRESENTED AND ON A NASCAR CAR THIS WEEKEND?

    “Yeah, it’s cool. Caitlin obviously has done a ton for the sport of basketball, right? But then especially, you know, Indiana Fever games are sold out every single night now. So yeah, I’m jealous. I don’t think she’s coming. I was trying to make sure that I could meet her. I think a couple of the Colts guys are coming, which is going to be really cool. I’m obviously a big Colts fan, so I think a couple of them I’ll get to meet and hang out with. It’s a cool weekend to have some type of Indiana sports in the race, and having Caitlin on the hood of that car is really cool. So hopefully they can give her a good run. Hopefully, he runs second and I win and it’s a good weekend.”

    CAN YOU WALK US THROUGH THIS YEAR WITH THE CHANGES THERE AT STEWART-HAAS RACING. THE APPREHENSION THAT KIND OF WAS GOING ON, AND THEN THE FACT THAT YOU DID FIND A RIDE FOR 2025, AND HOW BIG A RELIEF THAT IS.

    “It’s definitely been a tough year. Truthfully, as crazy as it sounds, I really thought I would retire in the 14 car. I thought that was just gonna be something that I was gonna be in for my entire career. We knew that there were rumors going around about the team potentially shutting down or changing what it looked like. I think we all knew that there was gonna be a change. We just weren’t sure what it was. I didn’t know if the 14 was gonna stay and maybe one of the other cars and I would still have a place at SHR or what it was gonna look like. Then when Tony came and told us that all four of them are going away, it was a little bit of a surprise. I think we all knew that there was going to be change, we just didn’t think it was going to be all four. So then everything started changing in my world really, really quickly. I literally found out on Tuesday that I wasn’t going to have a ride the following year. Then literally a week later being signed with Joe Gibbs was definitely a crazy whirlwind. It’s kind of ironic going like the reverse Tony Stewart path, going from JGR to SHR instead I went from SHR to JGR. So yeah, it’s definitely been a crazy season in my life even. Not even on the racetrack, but off the racetrack, having twins coming in October and having a 2-and-a-half-year-old at home already. Then finding out you’re not going to have a job, you’re going to have three kids soon. It’s been a lot going on in my life. I’m glad that it all obviously worked out and I’m having an incredible opportunity next year. But right now the main focus is obviously trying to get the 14 car back in victory lane and going out on top like it deserves.

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Chase Elliott Media Availability Quotes

    CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Chase Elliott Media Availability Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    TEAM CHEVY MEDIA AVAILABILITY QUOTES
    JULY 19, 2024

     Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series’ practice session at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    Media Availability Quotes:

    How do you see the regular season title playing out with four drivers still in the hunt?

    “Yeah, I mean obviously it’s really tight between Kyle (Larson) and I, and Denny (Hamlin) and Tyler (Reddick). And William (Byron) isn’t really far out either. There’s still a lot of racing left, is kind of how I look at it. A lot can happen in that period of time. It’s going to force all of us to be really good. You’re going to have to be really solid. You’re probably going to have to win a race or two between now and the end of it to have a legitimate chance without other guys having problems, which I don’t really see four or five guys having a ton of issues between now and then.. not all of them at least.”

    Have you and Alan (Gustafson) discussed a strategy? There are 15 bonus points on the line.

    “Oh yeah, we’re trying to win it. We’re trying to run as good as we can to accumulate as many points as possible to win the 15 points. I mean, that’s all that matters. The regular season championship is really meaningless.. it’s just the points. They could really just call it ’15 points’ and it would be the exact same as what it is now.”

    You mentioned a couple of years ago, when you did win the regular season championship, it did carry you through a couple of the rounds. So how important is it to win it and get those points?

    “Yeah, I mean it carried us the whole way, honestly. There was no shot we were ever making the final four without the amount of points that we accumulated. We fortunately had a really good first-half of the year. That was the same year, right? In 2022?

    Yeah, we just had a really good first-half of the year. And then we ran really bad those last eight-and-a-half weeks. Without those points, we would have been long out of it, in my view. Mathematically, I’m not exactly sure where we would have been, obviously. Judging off the way we ran, we needed to be a lot better and that certainly helped to have some points to lean on because it would have been really, really tough without that. So they can mean a lot. You hope that you’re running good enough that you don’t need them, is the goal that everyone has. But you know, to have eight-straight weeks that nothing goes wrong, is probably not realistic.”

    Knowing that this track has so much history with your family and your dad having won here. What’s it like to have NASCAR back on the oval and for you to have this second chance to maybe win it?

    “Yeah, for sure. When we left the oval, I didn’t really think a ton of it. But I do feel like coming back, it does mean more being on the oval, for me personally. This race has always been important because it was one of the few races that I was old enough to be around that dad had one, so I think because of that, it’s always been just a little more special than the rest. And certainly, one of the few wins that I was around for. But more than that, one of the few – it was the only marquee, major if you will, win that I was around for. So it’s always been really special. I always knew how much that race meant to him. And you know because of that, I’ve always had a lot of admiration for the event. It’s always been something in my mind that I would love to match and be able to share that moment with the shoe on the other foot. I feel like that would be really, really cool. Personally, that’s been a goal of mine ever since I started racing in the NASCAR deal. When we left, I didn’t really think as much about it. But certainly coming back, I’m like, yeah – if I were to ever win this race, this is definitely how I’d want to do it, if I had a choice, for sure. Being here was great regardless, whether we raced on the road course or the oval. But I’m excited that we’re back on the oval. The race probably isn’t going to be great, from a passing standpoint. But that’s OK.. I don’t know that it ever has been super stellar in the past 10 years or so. But I think being here is a big deal. It just puts a challenge into a different bucket. You’re going to have to be really on top of things from the beginning of the weekend; have a good qualifying effort and a really good strategy. Find ways to get out front and try to control the event.”

    Your dad’s 2002 victory, you didn’t kiss the bricks that day? What was the reason for not kissing the bricks?

    “I don’t know.. I was six (years old). (Laughs) You tell me.. I have no idea why I was uninterested. But yeah, I was uninterested. I don’t really know why, I just didn’t want to do it. I don’t know if I thought it was weird or what, but I was anti-kissing the bricks that day. I just did not want to do it. If I could ask myself why six-year-old me didn’t want to do that, I’d ask and give you a better answer. I really don’t know, but I didn’t. I’d certainly be alright with it now, for sure. I’d be plenty OK with it today, so maybe we can make it happen.”

    A very rare speeding penalty for you last week. I’m curious if you dissected it at all, especially with the questions of whether there were any mess up with the zone?

    “I still don’t know, to be honest with you. I haven’t gotten a straight answer. You’re not going to get a straight answer from the NASCAR front, which is fine. But yeah, it was a bummer. I mean whether the zone was too short or the zone wasn’t short enough, we had made ‘X’ amount of pit stops throughout the day that I wasn’t speeding. And everybody else, aside from the handful of guys that got caught, didn’t speed either. So I just kind of chalk it up to mistake on my part, really at the end of the day. There’s nothing I can do about it, so what does it matter now, really? Just try not to make that mistake again. But it was certainly – from how we would typically set our pit road, that had us in a different box than what we would typically be each weekend. I just didn’t do a great job of keeping that in mind throughout the race, and ultimately it flashed red in the zone on their screen. I didn’t feel like I did anything different.. I’m not talking about my bubbles. I didn’t feel like I did anything different on my end than I had done all day. But just the timing of it and everything else, certainly sped in their book. They make the rules, right? So off we went.”

    This two-week break coming up. Every season is always a grind. For your crew guys, people in the shop, how important is it for the industry to be able to get away at this point in the year?

    “Yeah, I think it’s extremely important. You know, so often I think we forget about that and just how much of a grind it is for everybody. For you guys, this is a long time on the road. I’m sure everybody is looking forward to a couple weeks of not having to travel on Thursday or Friday, and getting home late Sunday night and being tired all day Monday. It can certainly wear on you. People have families. They have homes and things to tend to, and certainly I think we all recognize the responsibility when we sign up to come do this. I’m not disregarding that in any way, but I think for everybody to have a good mental and physical reset is certainly healthy. And I think it keeps people in a really good headspace when you come back. I think the happier that everybody is inside the garage, the healthier the sport is as a whole. So I think that ultimately, it’s a good. I also believe that less is more, from a scheduling perspective. I think the more that we spend time away from the race track, the hungrier our fans are to have us come back. I think you see that with football and some other sports that have a little bit longer break. When it comes back, you’re fired up for it more. So I think some of those things can be exemplified here a little better, but extremely important to have a break for everybody involved. Just kind of hit that reset button and get ready for the second-half.”

    A lot of discussion about NASCAR adding an international race next year.. Mexico or Canada. What are your thoughts on that.. racing international?

    “I’m totally good with it. I think it would be a lot of fun, just to do something a little different. I do think – going back to Jeff’s question about the schedule – when you start racing internationally, you’re going to have potential travel logistics that we wouldn’t typically have. So I think just keeping those things in mind.. like are we going to have another weekend backed right up to that, right? Are we going to have to get everybody’s passports to get across the border and then turn around and get ready to go somewhere else in five or six days? I think those types of things need to be thought through. But I’m all for it.. I have no issues doing anything like that. I think anytime you can tap into a new market, or a market that hasn’t seen a NASCAR race very much.. I’m not exactly sure where they’re talking about going, but I think it has potential to be good. And also, too, maybe it’ll open up some opportunities to go to places that NASCAR has never been, which I think would really be even better.”



    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.

  • RCR Race Preview: Indianapolis Motor Speedway

    RCR Race Preview: Indianapolis Motor Speedway

    Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Cup Series at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Richard Childress Racing has earned three wins at Indianapolis Motor Speedway: Dale Earnhardt (1995), Kevin Harvick (2003), and Paul Menard (2011). The team has two pole positions at the storied facility with Harvick (2003) and Jeff Burton (2006). The Welcome, N.C., organization has racked up 12 top-five and 29 top-10 finishes in 73 starts.

    RCR in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Ty Dillon scored his first NASCAR Xfinity Series victory in 2014 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Dillon, a rookie, finished just .833 seconds ahead of Kyle Busch. The victory came in Dillon’s 31st career start in the series and in his second at Indy. RCR has nine top-five and 19 top-10 finishes. Entering Saturday’s race, at least one RCR driver has led a lap in all eight NXS races at Indianapolis.

    Did You Know? Richard Childress is the only NASCAR Cup Series car owner to win races on both the oval and road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. RCR driver Tyler Reddick won on the road course design at Indianapolis in 2022.

    Catch Saturday’s Action at the Brickyard… The NASCAR 250 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway will be televised live on Saturday, July 20 beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET on USA. The event will be broadcast live on the IMS Radio Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    Follow Sunday’s Action in Indianapolis… The Brickyard 400 will be televised live on Sunday, July 21 beginning at 2:30 p.m. ET on NBC. The race will be broadcast live on the IMS Radio Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 SENIX Tools Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Austin Dillon has competed at the Brickyard 400 eight previous times in the NASCAR Cup Series, earning a best finish of ninth in 2016. Dillon finished 18th at the most recent Brickyard 400 on the oval configuration in 2020. He also has five NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at IMS (four on the oval configuration, and one on the road course configuration), with a best finish of fifth in 2012. Dillon grew up attending races at the historic Indianapolis Motor Speedway track with his grandfather, car owner Richard Childress.

    At SENIX, we break barriers and shatter expectations by redefining and manufacturing outdoor power equipment and power tools with edgy innovation and relentless passion… Whether you’re an arborist, a landscaper, or a fearless DIY enthusiast, SENIX tools have been crafted with you in mind. SENIX understands the grit, determination, and artistry that go into your craft, and that’s why they’ve designed products that seamlessly extend your skills. With cutting-edge technology, performance, and eco-friendly design options, SENIX empowers you to conquer any task at hand.

    SENIX, the Official Power Tools of RCR continues to grow and bring new products to market at a rapid pace. Based in Huntersville, North Carolina the SENIX team has increased its staff by more than 20% since the start of 2024 and launched 20+ new products to their line of battery-operated tools!

    The standout of their latest products lies in the X6 60Volt Max Outdoor Power Tools, with particular emphasis on their award-winning 810CFM handheld leaf blower, recognized for its best-in-class performance and honored with the Retailer’s Choice Award! Notably, this is the same blower trusted in all four of the RCR pit stalls! Every item in the SENIX X6 60Volt Max Outdoor Power Tools has best in class features! Be on the watch for more exciting innovations coming from SENIX Tools in the back half of 2024!

    Meet Dillon… Dillon is scheduled to appear at the Team Chevrolet Stage for a Q&A session in the Fan Midway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. ET. He’s also scheduled to stop by the RCR Merchandise hauler in the fan midway on Sunday at 10:50 a.m. ET. Stop by to meet the driver of the No. 3 Chevrolet and get new merchandise to wear on race day.

    AUSTIN DILLON QUOTE:

    What are your expectations going back to Indianapolis Motor Speedway?

    “I’ve always enjoyed the oval at Indianapolis. The prestige behind it, the history. To me when you win the oval, that’s one of the crown jewel races of our sport. It’s a giant racetrack that you know has so much history and you get to cross the bricks. The celebration that comes along with it. It’s a long race, it’s a lot of fun. My fondest memory of The Brickyard is probably when I was in Victory Lane with Kevin Harvick when he won the Brickyard 400 in 2003 and with Paul Menard in 2011. My brother won his Xfinity race there in 2014. I love those moments.”

    Kyle Busch and the No. 8 Cheddar’s Patriotic Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Kyle Busch will make his 17th NASCAR Cup Series start this weekend on the oval at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Busch owns two Cup Series victories at the historic 2.5-mile oval, in consecutive races (2015 and 2016). He scored one of the most dominating victories of his illustrious career in 2016, leading 149 of 170 laps, which is a Brickyard 400 record. His average running position was a sizzling 1.22 and Busch was one of just three drivers to lead a lap in the 400-mile event. His first victory at Indianapolis came in 2015 when he passed Joey Logano with two laps to go. The driver of the Cheddar’s Patriotic Chevrolet has 12 top-10 finishes in 16 previous starts – the most among active drivers – and has claimed a top-10 finish in 75 percent of his starts on the historic oval. The Las Vegas, Nev., native has racked up five top-five finishes at Indy. Busch also leads all active Cup drivers in poles (2) and laps led (324) at the 2.5-mile oval. The Xfinity Series record for Busch at Indy is also impressive. He has four wins in seven starts, with all four victories coming from the pole position (2013, 2015, 2016 and 2019). In 2016, Busch led 62 of 63 laps on the way to scoring the victory.

    A Milestone at The Brickyard… Busch will be making his 700th NASCAR Cup Series start at The Brickyard 400, the most starts among active drivers in series. Busch made his Cup Series debut at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in March 2004.

    Did You Know? Busch swept pole positions and race victories in both the NASCAR Xfinity and Cup Series races on the oval at Indy in 2016. He became the first driver in NASCAR history to accomplish the feat. He scored dominant victories in both races, leading a combined 211 of 233 laps (527.50 miles, or 90.55 percent of the possible laps).

    Points Update… Busch enters this weekend 18th in the NASCAR Cup Series Driver Standings, 102 points below the Playoffs cutline.

    Patriotic Colors at Indy… The No. 8 Cheddar’s Chevrolet will sport a special patriotic paint scheme this weekend at Indianapolis. The red, white, and blue design honors Cheddar’s employees who served in our nation’s military.

    About Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen… Cheddar’s serves American classics and homestyle comfort food in a feel-at-home atmosphere. Guests get a lot, for not a lot with homemade entrees like hand-breaded Chicken Tenders, homemade Chicken Pot Pie and slow-smoked Baby Back Ribs so big, they almost fall off the plate. To kick off a memorable meal, every Guest is welcomed with a warm Honey Butter Croissant on the house. Cheddar’s operates more than 180 restaurants in 27 states and employs more than 15,000 friendly and passionate team members. Cheddar’s is open for lunch and dinner, now featuring new weekday lunch specials, starting at just $8.59. For more information or to locate the nearest restaurant, visit Cheddars.com. Fans can like or follow Cheddar’s on Facebook, X , and Instagram.

    KYLE BUSCH QUOTES:

    What are your thoughts about returning to the oval at Indianapolis Motor Speedway?

    “I would like to think that we’ll be good out of the gate going back to Indy but who knows. It’s definitely a tough racetrack. It is so challenging to get right. I’ve had some really good runs and some that were not so good, but the latest stretch, at the end of the oval time frame that we had in NASCAR, I was right there. I had a shot to win all of them, so I feel really good about going back. I just want to make sure that our Cheddar’s Patriotic Camaro is as fast as it can be when we get there.”

    In 2016, you won poles and races for both NXS and Cup races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the first time in NASCAR history a driver has accomplished the feat. You also dominated the weekend, leading 211 of a possible 233 laps. How much pride do you take in that accomplishment?

    “The 2016 weekend was huge at the Brickyard for me. Being able to win the pole and the race for both the Xfinity and Cup Series races just showed our strength as a team, but also my strength as a driver in figuring out what it takes to be good at Indy. That was certainly a highlight for me on the track during that period of time.”

    Could you tell a big difference in the way the Next Gen car handled at Indianapolis Motor Speedway?

    “There was a difference in the way the NextGen car handled at Indy. The Next Gen car likes to be driven off the right-front tire and you can’t slip the right-rear. But at Indy, as you go through a tire run, you typically continue to get tighter so you need to be on the free side at the start of a run. When you do that with the Next Gen car, it can make it very easy to crash.”

    Ty Dillon and the No. 33 Titan Risk Solutions Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Ty Dillon has made four NASCAR Cup Series starts on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval. In those four events, the 32-year-old has never finished worse than 21st and captured two top-15 results. In addition, Dillon has competed in six NASCAR Xfinity Series races on the historic speedway, earning the 2014 victory, two top-five and five top-10 results all while driving for Richard Childress Racing.

    Welcome, Titan Risk Solutions… Earlier this week, RCR announced a multi-year, multi-car partnership with Titan Risk Solutions. With career trucking professionals as the founders, Titan provides the very best in insurance and insurance related services. Titan, based out of Overland Park, Kansas, has representatives located across the U.S. to assist those in the trucking industry. With the ability to provide insurance quotes or customer support in a matter of minutes, Titan has positioned themselves as market leaders for motor carriers across the country.

    Meet Dillon… On Sunday, July 21 at 12:00 p.m. local time, Dillon is scheduled to participate in a fan question and answer session at the Team Chevy Display in the Midway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Stop by to ask a question or get an autograph from the North Carolina native.

    About Titan Risk Solutions… Titan Risk Solutions is your one-stop shop for everything related to the trucking industry. Founded by dedicated insurance professionals that understand the frustrations of today’s marketplace, Titan was built to eliminate many of the stresses America’s truck drivers face every day. Whether you are needing help with insurance, safety compliance, factoring, or driver training, Titan is here to help! With representatives located all across the U.S. and a 24/7 service hotline, there is always a live person to assist you. For more information or to contact Titan, visit titantruckins.com.

    TY DILLON QUOTE:

    What are your thoughts and emotions with returning to Richard Childress Racing and competing at the historic Indianapolis Motor Speedway?

    “It has been a long time coming to be back behind the wheel of a RCR Chevrolet in the Cup Series. And to be able to do it at Indianapolis Motor Speedway is a dream come true. Kissing the bricks at the historic track is a special moment that we’ve been fortunate enough to experience together. Every time we go to Indy, the memories come back. I’m incredibly grateful to be able to race again for the company that has meant so much to my life both on and off the track. It’s an honor to represent all of the men and women who work at RCR. Our goal is to have a solid weekend and give Titan Risk Solutions a great first outing.”

    Jesse Love and the No. 2 National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund Chevrolet Camaro SS at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Jesse Love will make his inaugural start at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this Saturday. The Menlo Park, California native has never competed at the famed speedway, so Friday’s practice will mark his first laps on the Indiana surface.

    Honoring Fallen Officers… For Saturday’s Xfinity Series race, Whelen Engineering and RCR have teamed up with the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF) for the third consecutive season to honor fallen law enforcement officers. The No. 2 Chevrolet will sport a new design, featuring the NLEOMF logo predominantly on the hood and sides. The decklid will carry the names of 282 officers killed in the line-of-duty, all of whom were recently added to the walls of the national law enforcement officers memorial earlier this year. At the memorial monument in Washington, D.C., there are currently 24,067 names of fallen officers engraved, representing all 50 states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories, federal law enforcement, and campus and military police agencies.

    Move Over… The NLEOMF special design also highlights the Move Over Law, which requires motorists to slow down and change lanes when approaching an emergency vehicle that is parked on a roadway to give safe clearance to law enforcement officers.

    Meet Love… On Saturday, July 20 at 10:15 a.m. local time, Love and his RCR teammate Austin Hill will answer fan questions at the Team Chevy Display in the Midway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Immediately following at 10:35 a.m. local time, the 19-year-old driver is scheduled to sign autographs at the RCR Merchandise Hauler in the Midway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Stop by to meet Love before he takes the green flag at the historic venue.

    About the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund… Established in 1984, the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund is a nonprofit organization dedicated to honoring the fallen, telling the story of American law enforcement, and making it safer for those who serve. The first pillar of this mission, the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C., honors the names of all 24,067 officers who have died in the line of duty to date throughout U.S. history. Additionally, the NLEOMF maintains and publishes comprehensive details on the circumstances surrounding official line-of-duty deaths. The Officer Safety and Wellness pillar uses that data, coupled with best-practice program models, to produce programming directed at solutions to improve survivability and enhance wellness. NLOEMF’s third pillar, the National Law Enforcement Museum (LawEnforcementMuseum.com) is committed to preserving the history of American law enforcement and sharing the experiences of service and sacrifice for generations to come.

    About Whelen Engineering… Whelen Engineering is a family-owned company with a pioneering spirit and a passion to protect the lives of those who protect and serve others. The company mission is to provide industry-defining safety solutions around the world, while creating a community of problem-solvers who are inspired to push boundaries and continue our legacy of delivering ground-breaking innovation. As a global leader in the emergency warning industry, Whelen has been trusted to perform since 1952, when George Whelen III invented the first rotating aviation beacon. Whelen now encompasses two state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities in Connecticut and New Hampshire with over 750,000 square feet of engineering and manufacturing space and the largest design staff in the industry. Every part of every Whelen product is proudly designed and manufactured in America. We embrace quality as our foundation, we celebrate innovative engineering in every product we produce.

    JESSE LOVE QUOTE:

    With making your first start at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, what are your thoughts and expectations for the race?

    “Indianapolis Motor Speedway is one of the best tracks in the world. As an open wheel guy who looked up to Jeff Gordon growing up, it has been a place that I’ve looked forward to racing at. In the GM simulator, it seemed that you could hold the car wide open. We will see if you can do that in real life. I expect there to be a lot of drafting, which bodes well for our RCR Chevrolets. Austin (Hill) and I should both be up front. I expect our Whelen-National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund Camaro to be fast. There is a lot of emotion behind the design and racing for something bigger than yourself is an honor. Definitely looking forward to making those families proud.”

    Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet Camaro SS at Indianapolis Motor Speedway… Austin Hill has made one career NASCAR Xfinity Series start on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval, earning a ninth-place result in 2019. Driving for Hattori Racing Enterprises, the Winston, Georgia native started from the 17th position, completed every lap, and captured a top-10 finish.

    Meet Hill… On Saturday, July 20 at 10:15 a.m. local time, Hill and his RCR teammate Jesse Love will make an appearance to answer fan questions at the Team Chevy Display in the Midway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Immediately following at 10:35 a.m. local time, the eight-time Xfinity Series winner is scheduled to sign autographs at the RCR Merchandise Hauler in the Midway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Come meet Hill and purchase new Bennett Transportation & Logistics gear before the green flag waves.

    About Bennett Family of Companies… McDonough-Ga. based Bennett Family of Companies is a woman-owned, Women’s Enterprise Business Council (WBENC) certified, diversified transportation and logistics company. Through its 14 affiliated operating companies, the Bennett Family of Companies delivers integrated transportation and supply chain management solutions worldwide. Bennett has 4,625 drivers/owner-operators, over 1,000 employees and 600 agents located across the United States. For more information, visit www.bennettig.com.

    AUSTIN HILL QUOTE:

    What are the expectations returning to the oval at Indianapolis Motor Speedway?

    “I’ve only made one start on the oval configuration at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but I’m excited to go back and race on the oval again. Unfortunately, I’m not sure how much from that race in 2019 will translate given the package that we are running this weekend. In 2019, the race was a drafting race and handling didn’t matter. I personally think this time around, handling could be an issue. Since the Xfinity Series has never competed on the oval with this particular package, there isn’t a ton to go off of. We’ve spent time in the GM simulator to prep for this weekend, but there isn’t film to watch other than 2019 just in case it turns out differently than we are expecting. Given this package is the same as we ran at Atlanta Motor Speedway earlier this season, I think track position is going to be key. Qualifying will be a top priority.”

  • NHRA ANNOUNCES 2024 SWEEPSTAKES FEATURING SIX MAJOR PARTNERSHIPS

    NHRA ANNOUNCES 2024 SWEEPSTAKES FEATURING SIX MAJOR PARTNERSHIPS

    INDIANAPOLIS (July 19, 2024) – NHRA officials announced today the 2024 NHRA Sweepstakes, which features a variety of prizes from NHRA partners.

    Camping World, K&N Performance, A-iPower, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Summit Racing Equipment and RevZilla are all part of this year’s NHRA Sweepstakes, which is offering more than $25,000 worth of prizes winnings to lucky NHRA fans.

    One grand prize winner will be awarded a 2024 Keystone Coleman 17B travel trailer from Camping World.

    Six first-prize winners will each be awarded a K&N Performance Cold Air Intake System.

    One second-prize winner will be awarded an A-iPower GXS7100iRD Dual Fuel/Remote Start Inverter Generator

    One third-prize winner will be awarded a certificate that is good for one set of four passenger or light truck tires from Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company.

    One fourth-prize winner will be awarded a $1,000 SummitRacing.com gift card. The gift card is only valid at summitracing.com and is subject to the terms and conditions of Summit Racing.

    One fifth-prize winner will be awarded a $1,000 RevZilla.com gift card. The gift card is only valid at RevZilla.com and is subject to terms and conditions.

    To enter, fans may visit the NHRA Sweepstakes landing page to complete the online entry form. Please visit NHRA Sweepstakes Official Rules for terms and conditions. The sweepstakes will begin at 9 a.m. ET on July 19, 2024, and end at 11:59 p.m. ET on December 6, 2024. No purchase necessary. Terms and conditions apply.


    About NHRA

    NHRA is the primary sanctioning body for the sport of drag racing in the United States. NHRA presents 20 national events featuring the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series and NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series, as well as the Congruity NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series presented by LearnEV+, NHRA Flexjet Factory Stock Showdown™, NHRA Holley EFI Factory X and Johnson’s Horsepowered Garage NHRA Mountain Motor Pro Stock at select national events. NHRA provides competition opportunities for drivers of all levels in the NHRA Summit Racing Series and NHRA Street Legal™. NHRA also offers the NHRA Jr. Street® program for teens and the Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League® for youth ages 5 to 17. With 110 Member Tracks, NHRA allows racers to compete at a variety of locations nationally and internationally. NHRA’s Youth and Education Services® (YES) Program reaches over 30,000 students annually to ignite their interest in automotive and racing related careers. NHRA’s streaming service, NHRA.tv®, allows fans to view all NHRA national events as well as exclusive features of the sport. In addition, NHRA owns and operates three racing facilities: Gainesville Raceway in Florida; Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park; and In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip in Southern California. For more information, log on to www.NHRA.com, or visit the official NHRA pages on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

  • Greg Van Alst Ready to Embrace Busy Indianapolis Weekend

    Greg Van Alst Ready to Embrace Busy Indianapolis Weekend

    CLERMONT, Ind: Greg Van Alst will be busy this weekend.

    The Anderson, Ind. native will not only continue to chase an ARCA Menards Series championship in Friday night’s Circle City 200 at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park, but the avid racer will also make a return to the NASCAR Xfinity Series and compete on Saturday afternoon’s Pennzoil 250 at the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    It may seem that Van Alst will be running around the grounds of the famed Indianapolis short track in complete chaos, but rest assured, Van Alst has spent the past couple of weeks making sure his busy weekend will launch without a hitch.

    “It’s going to be busy, but I am ready,” Van Alst said with a chuckle. “This is a big weekend for me, our team, and our partners. I am running both the ARCA and Xfinity races this weekend, and we will also have a second car at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park.

    “It’s a lot for sure, but I’m fortunate enough to have some good people around me that have helped make sure this weekend goes smoothly. The goal is simple: to have strong efforts in both races and make sure our second car sees the checkered flag so we can place that program in a good place for more ARCA races later this season.”

    Van Alst is returning to Lucas Oil Raceway set for his third ARCA Menards Series start at the 0.686-mile short track. After finishing 10th in his ARCA Menards Series debut in 2022, the veteran ARCA driver returned a year later and picked up back-to-back top-10 finishes with a seventh-place finish last August ahead of his NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series debut the same night with Young’s Motorsports.

    With an emphasis on his ARCA short track program this year, Van Alst hopes his family-owned team can continue progressing at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park.

    “I’m optimistic about Friday night,” added Van Alst. “It’s vital for us to have a good run and to keep us within grasp of the ARCA Menards Series championship. We’re at the halfway point of the 2024 season, and while our year has been productive – we still have work to do.

    “We have a good idea where we need to fire off on Friday afternoon; we just need to ensure we keep going forward and not rolling backward. Nonetheless, I’m just excited to get the weekend underway.”

    Once the season’s 10th ARCA Menards Series race is complete, Van Alst will turn his full attention to his third career NASCAR Xfinity Series race, but first for SS-GreenLight Racing at the historic Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    “It’s been my dream to race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway,” explained Van Alst. “As an Indiana native and a race car driver, I do not think there is anything more glorious than being able to race at such an iconic venue. I’m grateful to Chris (Barkdull) and CB Fabricating for stepping up to the plate and helping make more dreams come true.

    “I’ll start the day at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and get things right at the big track with practice and such. Then, I’ll rush over to IRP and get in the ARCA car. I will try to get some laps in practice before qualifying and then focus on 200 laps of racing.

    “Of course, we want a good night on Friday, but there’s equal excitement about Saturday, too. I want a strong and steady weekend while showcasing to everyone in the NASCAR Xfinity Series that I can get the job done.”

    Zaki Ali (Injury & Criminal Trial Attorney; 1-888-649-1-ALI) has returned to the winning ARCA Menards Series operation as the primary partner of the team’s No. 35 Ford for the highly contested 200-lap race on Friday night.

    In addition to Zaki Ali, CB Fabricating and Top Choice Fence will serve as associate partners for Van Alst’s 48th career ARCA start.

    With nine races complete, Van Alst remains second in the ARCA Menards Series championship standings, 40 points behind championship leader Andrés Pérez de Lara, with 10 races remaining this year.

    Since 2002, Van Alst has 47 ARCA Menards Series starts to his credit, one win, five top-five and 23 top-10 finishes.

    Isaac Johnson returns in a second car for Greg Van Alst Motorsports at Lucas Oil.

    Johnson will drive the No. 34 Endress | Hauser Ford for his third career ARCA start. Johnson will also return to the organization next weekend at Salem (Ind.) Speedway and Kansas Speedway in September.

    “Going back to a track I’ve run before [IRP] will be a great stepping stone into the other two races,” said Johnson. “Ideally, getting top-10s in all three races is my main goal. Anything beyond that would be a bonus and create a ton of momentum for 2025.”

    For more on Greg Van Alst and Greg Van Alst Motorsports, please visit GregVanAlst.com, like them on Facebook (Van Alst Motorsports) and follow him on X | Twitter (@GregVanAlst35).

    The Circle City 200 (200 laps | 137 miles) is the 10th of 20 races on the 2024 ARCA Menards Series schedule. Practice begins Friday, July 19, from 1:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m. General Tire pole qualifying in a timed session immediately follows beginning at 2:30 p.m. The race is set to take the green flag later in the day shortly after 5:30 p.m. ET. The event will be televised live on FOX Sports 1 (FS1) with the Motor Racing Network (MRN) and SiriusXM Satellite Radio (XM channel 391 | online channel 981) handling the radio waves. ARCARacing.com will also stream live timing and scoring throughout the entire weekend festivities. All times are local (ET).

  • Star-Studded Lineup for TeamSLR at Lime Rock

    Star-Studded Lineup for TeamSLR at Lime Rock

    Ken Schrader, Greg Biffle and Scott Speed Join Barry Boes, Connor Mosack and 13-Year-Old Newcomer Tristan McKee for SpeedTour All-Star Race

    ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (July 18, 2024) – This week’s Major League Baseball midsummer classic might be in the rearview mirror, but the all-star spirit lives on this weekend when TeamSLR takes a stout, three-car contingent to Lime Rock Park in Lakeville, Connecticut, for Saturday’s non-points SpeedTour All-Star Race featuring the driving trio of Ken Schrader, Greg Biffle and Scott Speed.

    They’ll be part of a 20-car, 40-driver field of Cube 3 TA2 Series entries in which all-star drivers will be paired with road-racing regulars for a 60-minute race with a $50,000 winner-take-all prize on the line.

    The TeamSLR lineup features Schrader paired with former fulltime TeamSLR driver Connor Mosack in the No. 28 Cube 3 Architecture/Franklin Road Apparel/SLR-M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro, Biffle with current TeamSLR fulltimer Barry Boes in the No. 27 Accio Data/SLR-M1 Racecars Ford Mustang, and Speed with one of his young Team Chevrolet development drivers, 13-year-old Tristan McKee, in the No. 17 Cube 3 Architecture/Franklin Road Apparel/SLR-M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro.

    While the 69-year-old Schrader will be behind the wheel of a TA2 car for the first time, he returns to the 1.48-mile, seven-turn Lime Rock circuit where he dominated the inaugural ARCA Menards Series East (formerly known as NASCAR Busch Series North) race held there in 1993, qualifying on the front row and winning by a two-second margin over Kenny Wallace, leading a race-high 37 of 50 laps along the way. Since running his last of 984 races across NASCAR’s top three series (Cup, Xfinity and Truck) in 2017, Schrader continues to compete on a weekly basis, running primarily modified and occasional stock car events for his own race team. Saturday’s All-Star Race will be his 39th event of the year.

    Mosack returns to TeamSLR after TA2 championship-contending seasons in 2021 and 2022, during which he posted a pair of victories, 18 top-fives and 23 top-10s. The 25-year-old from Charlotte, North Carolina, moved up to a mixed bag of NASCAR Xfinity Series, Craftsman Truck Series, ARCA Menards Series and CARS Tour races the past two seasons and is a two-time ARCA winner.

    Biffle, the 55-year-old from Vancouver, Washington, who scored championships in NASCAR’s Truck Series in 2000 and Xfinity Series in 2002, will also be competing in a TA2 car for the first time and will be getting his first live look at the Lime Rock circuit. He’ll be sharing the cockpit with Boes, who eight races into his first season with TeamSLR sits atop the TA2 Pro-Am Challenge class standings.

    Speed, the 41-year-old Californian who over the years has left his mark in a variety of racing disciplines, including Formula One, NASCAR, Global Rallycross and Formula E, had the chance to lap the Lime Rock circuit in TeamSLR M1 Racecars equipment during a test day earlier this year alongside McKee. Lime Rock holds a special place in Speed’s heart as it was the last American track he raced at as a 19-year-old Skip Barber School scholarship winner before heading to Paris to compete in and win the Red Bull Runoff, launching a longstanding relationship that ultimately took him to Formula One, the NASCAR Cup Series, and throughout his various off-road endeavors. Speed relishes the chance to work with McKee in their respective TA2 race debuts. The young driver from Williamsburg, Virginia, joined Mosack and the rest of the Chevrolet driver development stable at the outset of 2024 and has shown his racing brilliance. He’s been a regular in the Pro Late Model division of the popular CARS Tour, where a year ago he became the series’ youngest winner at the age of 12. McKee also won the series’ most recent event July 3 at Caraway Speedway in Sophia, North Carolina.

    The SpeedTour All-Star weekend kicks off Friday with a 40-minute TA2 practice session set for 11:10 a.m. EDT, followed by qualifying at 3:50 p.m. Saturday’s All-Star main event is set for 1 p.m. with live television coverage by series partner MAVTV, augmented by live-streaming video on the Trans Am channel on YouTube.

    Scott Lagasse Jr., Owner, TeamSLR/M1 Racecars:

    Some very well-known drivers and longtime friends of yours will get their first chance to drive your M1 Racecars equipment in this weekend’s non-points All-Star event at Lime Rock. What does this event mean to the team and to the Trans Am Series?

    “First, I want to thank our year-long sponsors for making this three-car effort possible – Cube 3 Architecture, Franklin Road Apparel, Accio Data – they really stepped up to make it happen. This is going to be a lot of fun. When Tony (Parella, SVRA and Trans Am owner) told me about it, I thought it was a great idea and we immediately jumped on board to be a part of it. We’re fortunate that the group of people in our organization wanted to do it and are as excited about it as I am. It’s a nice change of pace, timing-wise, seeing that we’re in the middle of an eight-week hiatus on our schedule. It’ll be a great chance to catch up with some old friends and see what we can do together on the racetrack.”

    Talk about your lineup of All-Stars mixed with your full-season driver Barry Boes, your former full-season driver Connor Mosack, and young Tristan McKee.

    “(Greg) Biffle and I were teammates at one point, he’s an amazing talent to have. Add Scott Speed, Tristan, Connor, (Ken) Schrader and Barry, we have quite a squad and it’s going to be a lot of fun. Schrader for me is special. He was one of the guys I looked up to as a kid. He was one of the first NASCAR guys I met when Dad made the transition from the road-course stuff over to the NASCAR side. Schrader is the guy who took him under his wing, and I have lots of memories of the annual Schrader Christmas party (laughs). Dad’s always thought the world of Schrader and always thought of him as a real racer, someone who’ll race anything, anytime, anywhere. Having Scott Speed race with us will make it fun to close that loop in terms of the driver development we’ve done with him and the young guys like Tristan and Connor. It’ll be a really good learning experience for me in terms of how we can make our development program even stronger. You lean on a Scott Speed and he’s actually in one of our cars for a race, it’s going to add value to our program and our mutual understanding of what we’re trying to accomplish with all these young drivers in our racecars.”

    Barry Boes, Driver, No. 27 Accio Data/SLR-M1 Racecars Ford Mustang:

    You’ll be rubbing elbows with some of the biggest names in motorsports for this weekend’s one-of-a-kind event at Lime Rock. Your thoughts on the event?

    “I think it’s going to be a cool event, I’m very excited about doing it. I’m not necessarily the guy who’s got the whole fangirl thing about meeting some of the best guys in the business, but it is very cool. I’m going to get to drive with one of the guys and see what he does and look at his data and chat with him, so I’m excited to be able to do that. This race format’s a little bit different and it’s always fun when we mix things up. I’m going to have to do better than I did the last time at Lime Rock because there are some driver pairings and teams out there that are going to make things very challenging.”

    Your co-driver Greg Biffle will be behind the wheel of a TA2 car for the first time, and the two of you will have to share just 40 minutes of practice time before he is tasked with qualifying your car. Any particular concerns there?

    “The Lagasses have known him for a really long time and they say he’s fantastic, so there aren’t any particular concerns there except learning this particular track. He’s won championships in NASCAR and has raced and done well on road courses in those bigger, heavier racecars. He’s a pro and shouldn’t have much if any trouble figuring it out. It’ll be interesting to hear what he’ll have to say about driving these TA2 cars.”

    Greg Biffle, Driver, No. 27 Accio Data/SLR-M1 Racecars Ford Mustang:

    The last time you’ve competed in a racecar was two years ago in the SRX summer all-star series. Your thoughts about this weekend’s event at Lime Rock?

    “I’ve never driven a Trans Am car and I’ve never been to Lime Rock, but I’m ready to go and have some fun. Any time you have a chance to get behind the wheel and compete, and especially competing against all of the guys in this race – there’s a pretty stellar list of people and I’m just happy to be included in that and get a chance to go race against Ron Fellows and Boris Said and Ron Hornaday, a big, big list of guys. Those are the guys I grew up around and know. I’m looking forward to getting behind the wheel and brushing the dust off. I’ve known Scott (Lagasse Jr.) for a long time and this was a natural pairing based on our history and I’m really looking forward to it. The biggest thing is I hope I don’t get hooked, or else I’ll find myself out there buying myself a TA2 car and a transporter and so on (laughs).”

    Are you concerned with having just limited practice time to learn the M1 Racecars TA2 car and the Lime Rock track for the first time?

    “I pick things up pretty fast at new tracks and new places. At least when I raced in the Trucks and Xfinity, I did pretty well and won at places I went to for the first time. I was on the pole at Watkins Glen and won. I always enjoyed and loved road racing, but the situation didn’t present itself a whole lot. So this weekend I’ll be discovering new things and new corners. The best thing to do is get behind a Paul Menard or a Boris Said, someone like that who’s been there before because it’s easier to chase the rabbit, and I can feel confident that I can pick up the track pretty quickly that way versus trying to discover it yourself.”

    Scott Speed, Driver, No. 17 Cube 3 Architecture/Franklin Road/SLR-M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro:

    After working with TeamSLR in helping to develop your young Chevrolet development drivers over the years, you finally get a chance to hop into one of the team’s M1 Racecars and have a little fun, co-driving with one of your young prodigies. Your thoughts on the weekend?

    “This is a really special, cool event that Tony (Parella) is clearly really passionate about and, for me, that’s what hooked me on it. Obviously, number one, I want to get Tristan seat time in a race situation and, being able to have this unique opportunity where I can race, as well, he can see what that looks like and it’s going to be a great resource and experience for him. Outside of that, Tony’s passion for this deal and how excited he is about it was really endearing. I’m really thankful that they’re understanding of Tristan’s situation, being only 13 years old, but having really an enormous experience level and a really high ability level for his age, to give him a waiver to compete with these guys. I did a couple of laps testing at Lime Rock a couple of months ago with Tristan and it was super fun. The car is nice. It has enough horsepower to where you can use the throttle a little bit. It’s going to be a cool race there at Lime Rock.”

    How would you describe your relationship with TeamSLR and the results they are able to generate for your young drivers?

    “The Lagasses have been great to work with. They do a great job of getting these kids good instruction, getting them good cars to race every weekend. Scott’s a racer. He’ll call me and wear me out talking setups and strategies and making sure these kids get the best opportunity. Their equipment is in a good place. And for us, Trans Am is a great opportunity for our guys to get experience behind a heavier car with horsepower. These cars really provide an environment for these kids to learn road racing, to learn braking, to be able to manage horsepower, so it really ticks a lot of boxes for us as far as really valuable experience for these kids to get.”

    Tristan McKee, Driver, No. 17 Cube 3 Architecture/Franklin Road/SLR-M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro:

    After spending the first half of this year learning all about driving a TA2 car in testing, you will get your first racing experience this weekend co-driving with one of your Team Chevrolet mentors. Your thoughts?

    “I’m excited. We’ve put a lot of effort into this. We’ve been preparing a lot and doing a lot to make sure we’re completely prepared for what’s going to happen. I’m excited to have Scott Speed racing with us as the pro driver. I feel like this will be a pretty good combo. We work with each other a lot, I like him a lot, he’s a great driver, so I’m excited for this opportunity and I’m looking forward to this weekend.”

    You’ve driven a variety of racecars in a number of different series, including the CARS Tour the past two seasons. How does the TA2 car compare with other cars you’ve driven, and how has your experience been testing with TeamSLR?

    “I’ve never actually driven a super (late model), I’ve driven a pro late model, but everybody says the TA2 car is a lot like a super, which has about 600 horsepower, and the tires can spin pretty easily, so they’re a lot of fun to drive. They’re definitely one of my favorite cars to drive. It’s been great so far this year. We’ve had a lot of good times and the team has been super helpful to me just teaching me different stuff about these cars, changing my driving style or telling me to try different things for how the car’s driving. And teaching me how to drive a car that maybe isn’t handling great or, if it is handling well, what I need to be doing, just different stuff that I need to change, they help with that a lot.”

    Ken Schrader, Driver, No. 28 Cube 3 Architecture/Franklin Road/SLR-M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro:

    You’ll be stepping into a TA2 car for the first time this weekend, but you have experienced success at Lime Rock Park, albeit back in the day. What are your expectations for the weekend?

    “I was excited to be asked to participate. It’ll be my first time in a Trans Am car, but I’ve been racing a lot – this will be our 39th race this year, so I was racing this weekend, it was just a matter of where. I think the concept is neat. I’m excited about it. We’ll see what happens. I met Scott Sr. in maybe 1995, the first year of the Truck Series. He drove for Mr. (Rick) Hendrick, and I remember when Scotty was just a little kid. I’ve been around them forever. He’s driven for me before. I’m excited getting to do the opportunity with them. As for the car, to me the TA2 car is a short-track pavement car, basically. I’ll be going in cold turkey this weekend, but we do know how to win at Lime Rock. The one and only time we’ve been there was for the old Busch North series in 1993. We qualified on the front row and won the race.”

    You’re primarily a circle-track driver. How would you describe your driving when it comes to road racing?

    “When I started Cup racing, I despised road racing, and if you don’t like something or some place, you don’t do well. So I decided I was going to like it and we started doing more of it. We took an ARCA car to Topeka and we won, we took the Busch North car to Lime Rock and won, we won at Riverside in a Southwest Tour car, we won at Sonoma in our own Southwest Tour car. I just started putting them on our schedule and became a fan. The Lime Rock track, out of the ones I’ve run, is like a bullring road course. But it’s in such a beautiful part of the country, like a lot of the road courses are. Any time I think about Lime Rock, I remember Rodger Ward winning a road race up there in a midget back in 1959. He took a midget to Lime Rock to race against the sportscars and kicked their tails. That was an amazing deal.”

    Connor Mosack, Driver, No. 28 Cube 3 Architecture/Franklin Road/SLR-M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro:

    You get to take a break from the points-paying Cube 3 Architecture TA2 Series season by taking part in this weekend’s SpeedTour All-Star race. How are you going to approach the weekend?

    “I’d say I go into the weekend the same way you would approach a normal race, you still prepare as best you can. And the vibe once you get there might be a little bit different, but still from my end I’ll approach it the same way. I think it’ll be more of a fun race and a chance to hang out with some really cool people and just go out and have a good time. Hopefully we have a good race and take home that cash prize.”

    What do you think about the All-Stars who will be part of the three-car TeamSLR entry this weekend?

    “I work with Scott Speed pretty regularly from week-to-week with the Josh Wise Team Chevrolet program, so that’ll be cool to actually be in a TA2 car side-by-side with him. Greg Biffle has obviously been a big name in the Cup Series and it’ll be good to get to know him, as well. Ken Schrader raced in NASCAR a little before my time, but from everything I hear, he’s a great guy and fun to be around. I’m looking forward to it.”

    About TeamSLR:

    TeamSLR (Scott Lagasse Racing) competes fulltime in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli’s newly renamed Cube 3 Architecture TA2 Series in a multifaceted effort that includes dedicated entries in the TA2 division, customer programs, driver coaching and car construction. Its history dates back to 1985 and covers a wide spectrum of motorsports, including NASCAR, IMSA, SCCA, ARCA and ASA. TeamSLR is a family-owned organization run by Scott Lagasse Sr., and Scott Lagasse Jr., The father-and-son duo have combined to win more than 120 races and seven championships across a variety of series and styles of racecars, from paved ovals to road courses to dirt tracks. For more information, please visit us online at www.TeamSLR.com, on Facebook, on Twitter, on Instagram and on LinkedIn.