Author: SM Staff

  • Michigan apparently a not-so-friendly reminder to NASCAR teams that the regular season is about to end

    Michigan apparently a not-so-friendly reminder to NASCAR teams that the regular season is about to end

    Did anyone else find it fascinating concerning what all can happen in the space of a month?

    Here are a few examples:

    A. I personally went from “productive citizen” to “hooray, I’m stuck in my home because I get to wear an oxygen line leash!” thanks to Covid.

    B. The Allies went from storming the beaches at Normandy on June 6 to controlling a significant portion of France four weeks later.

    C. And finally, Harry Gant won all four September races in 1991. He didn’t equate this to a championship, but hey, I thought it would be neat to bring up Mr. September.

    What’s happened so far in August?

    1. Well, in case we have all forgotten, we had something of a snoozer of an event at Watkins Glen, where, on top of us being quietly reminded that the outgoing NASCAR machinery really doesn’t have much of any place on a flat-ish road course (hooray for the incoming Next-Gen cars!). Practically every driver on the track burst a rotator cuff in their attempts at being “gentlemen drivers” in how furiously and happily they waved Kyle Larson to the front.

    2. Do I dare bring up the Indy road course debacle from last week/Scene 24? On top of being reminded…again…concerning how poorly the old, paltry downforce Model T NASCAR machinery does on flat road courses or even flat tracks for that matter. We also had the completely unfamiliar specter to process that with a handful of laps to go. There was a mildly alarming realization that the Turn 6 curbing was now actively wrecking the drivers.

    Concerning the “amateur hour” that unfolded afterward, it definitely appeared that something had gone horribly awry with the Turn 6 curbing, but shouting at our TV’s only works 50% of the time in making people onscreen listen to what we’re telling them to do or not to do. In this case, it was readily apparent that something had gone “Exxon Valdez”-level of wrong with that curbing. This reminds me of another D-Day invasion story, where a Tiger tank got past an Allied artillery station because whoever was manning it was busily relieving himself, and the Tiger knocked out several American tanks.

    At any rate, we all saw the show that unfolded afterward, including the truly genius decision to leave the perpendicular secondary curbing/Robby Gordon Super Stadium Truck Series jump ramp in place for the remaining few laps. After the lethal primary curbing had been unceremoniously removed, a wee bit of vehicular carnage presented itself as entertainment.

    Side notes for Indy:

    • Chase Briscoe gets punted off of turn one by Denny Hamlin (who was previously punted into Briscoe by someone else), and Hamlin is then somewhat shocked to discover that Briscoe just might retaliate only against the person who was punting the No. 14? Uh, okay.
    • Concerning the No. 14 “non-retaliation,” and “Briscoe has never done anything like this ever before!” No, he’s probably done it, it’s just that he’s never been this blatant and caught. Kudos to his explanation concerning what happened afterward, almost as if someone else (space aliens?) took control of his car and forced him to run into the back of Hamlin.
    • Yes, Indy happened almost two weeks ago, but I thought it would be better if I took an extra week to write about that. As my inner misanthrope was dominating any conversation I had immediately after that event, especially taking into account that the race probably should have ended after the first big curbing wreck that took out many competitors. But then again, it was nice to see Allmendinger in victory lane, so my thoughts are mixed.

    3. Michigan, however, that was the turnaround. Oh, hey, NASCAR teams finally remembered that the end of this season was two weekends away, and then proceeded to try to make up for 20-something weekends of coasting through the 2021 regular season all in one race. As everyone was racing for the lead, to the point where it looked like even the pace car was beating and banging to try to stay ahead of everyone else.

    Okay, I might be exaggerating slightly.

    Michigan notes: Um, can someone remind me as to why Austin Dillon has a full-time ride in NASCAR? And why is he parked in a car that has the legendary No. 3 on the side?

    Asking for a friend.

    4. The regular-season finale is Saturday night, in the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona. This is NASCAR’s original crash fest track and what a way to close out the regular season, practically the rest of the entire field (you know, pretty every team out there not already locked into the NASCAR Championship). This event has a distinct flavor…hint…feeling of October 2011, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, another season-ending event with a huge potential payoff for the winner, a track that was hosting cars that were probably too fast for the venue. A monster crash occurred with that year’s Indy 500 winner taken from us far too early in one of Indycar’s most horrible incidents.

    Not that I’m suggesting that there are too many elements of potential panic being pushed into one five-pound bag, but judging by the race full of Hail Marys being thrown last weekend at Michigan, this weekend doesn’t suggest, in the slightest, that this won’t be toned down for this night time Daytona bookend to the 2021 regular season, which promises to be one for the highlight reels for all the wrong reasons.

  • Is anyone actually interested in winning a race? Asking for a friend.

    Is anyone actually interested in winning a race? Asking for a friend.

    With the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series regular-season wrapping up three weekends from now, there isn’t much excitement concerning who’s going to win, who wants to win, and who might desperately need the win.

    After all, we all know that Daytona is only good for one thing, which is quickly eradicating almost an entire season’s worth of pesky excess old-stock sheet metal inventory,

    If anything, it’s almost as if the regular-season championship trophy will be Kyle Larson’s to do whatever he wants with it, even if it’s to blow up for a trending TikTok destruction video, which will be infinitely more interesting than whatever passes for Cup Series entertainment these days.

    As the 2021 Cup Season grinds along, it is beginning to resemble a great many other things throughout history that nobody was really interested in. It’s almost as if the title series sponsor is ATARI’s legendarily bad “ET the Extra-Terrestrial” 2600 video game cartridge, and nobody really cares who wins or loses this year. But unlike all those unsold copies of that game that conveniently disappeared (and were dug up recently), there really isn’t a landfill large enough to bury what remains of the rest of this season.

    We need something, anything, where we can speed up the process where we finally put the Model-T-in-comparison, current-generation car out to pasture, and begin NASCAR’s Jiminy-Christmas-we’re-finally-getting-18-inch-wheels-with-single-lug-nuts modern era with the 2022 NG masterpiece (which remains to be seen).

    I’ve spent practically the entire 2021 season attempting to put my finger on just what’s wrong this year. It seems that NASCAR is being brought to us by malaise, apathy, doldrums, or any other apathetic nouns. It’s almost as if an other-dimensional Sesame Street is now a title sponsor of the series, and those are the low-effort words of the day.

    Is there nobody other than Kyle Larson who really wants to win a race here of late? Why is everyone else in the field practically rupturing their left rotator cuff in how hard they wave Larson past them during an event? I suspect that there are other reasons why Larson is already being loudly thought of as the regular-season champion, but I don’t get paid enough to think that high up in the racing world political food chain. In the end, racing is merely really loud entertainment bread and circuses for fans around the world. isn’t it?

    Oddly enough, I think that there is a trio of factors that are producing low-effort “bucket list” results this season, with bucket list meaning “we snagged a win which guarantees us a spot in the Championship so now we’re gonna coast until Daytona.” It’s what practically every other driver in the top 16 has done this year. Eight of the top 16 drivers only nailed one win so far in 2021, and those single-win drivers now look like perpetual backmarkers in every race, the now somehow-dystopian Dick Trickles and Derrick Copes of the 21st Century.

    On a side note, I will give kudos to Penske Racing (and more specifically the No. 2 and No. 22) for attempting to make things interesting at Watkins Glen this past weekend, however by taking themselves out in quite possibly the most pointless accident throughout all of the motor racing on Sunday. That’s also taking into account the IMSA race at Road America and the Indycar Music City Grand Prix, both of which saw their own fair share of ridiculous accidents.

    Getting back to the wheezing, rusty squeezebox of 2021, we have Kevin Harvick. He was the dominant winner of last year’s regular season with somewhere around seven wins at this exact point in 2020, finishing the Chase with two additional wins, and of course, we can’t forget that incredible implosion when it really counted.

    Fast Forward to this point in 2021. Has anyone seen Harvick lately? Is he still racing? Some of his fans might be curious as to whether or not he’s still among the breathing. Due to COVID regulations these days, we can’t get close enough to him to place a mirror under his nose in an attempt to verify.

    Hasn’t Harvick had at least one win for the last bazillion seasons? I do see a No. 4 car out there occasionally when Larson is easily driving around it.

    Oh, and hey, isn’t there one of them there foreign teams out there a drivin’ in NASCAR? I think it starts with a ‘T’? Talbot-Lago? Thomas Flyer? Tucker? Trabant?

    Oh yeah, silly me! Toyota!

    Speaking of Toyota, Denny Hamlin also hasn’t won all season, and if anything, he’s attempting to emulate the zero-win 1977 British Sidecar Motorcycle Champion George O’Dell on his way to possibly upending Kyle Larson for the regular-season championship. This is also an interesting development for Hamlin, given that he finished up 2020 with seven wins. But he might also need to have a mirror placed under his nose this year, as he can’t seem to be bothered to push for a win this year.

    So, given that the top two drivers from 2020 appear to be stuck in ‘coast’ mode throughout all of 2021 so far, and eight out of the top 16 drivers are one-and-done backmarkers, what exactly does this all mean?

    The first of the trio of factors concerning why 2021 is something of a bust so far is this. I am almost entirely convinced that nobody other than deep-pockets Hendrick Racing wants to spend any money racing the old Model T current-generation car. It really is a Model T in comparison to the Next Generation/2022 car, and whatever you don’t have to spend on the old crapbox can go towards the NG.

    Hey, it is actually better just to coast along this year because all of us have a major reset to pay for in 2022, nothing from the old car applies to the new one, meaning parts inventory, specialized tools, nothing remains behind. Don’t build anything new unless you absolutely have to and this is evidenced by accidents no longer having any heart or backbone here of late. Hey, don’t beat on each other because if we break something expensive, that takes away from the new car development.

    Of course, I don’t have any evidence that this is going on, but something similar did happen in the corporate world in the mid-1990s. The Chevrolet Corvette was supposed to be replaced by the 5th generation car for the 1993 model year. But due to an incredible comedy of errors, the new replacement never materialized when it was supposed to for the 1993 model year and ended up being delayed until the 1997 model year. With Chevrolet, realizing that they done gone and screwed the Corvette pooch, GM ended up having to do three things at the same time.

    – Skip all the throwing away of old 4th-generation Corvette tooling (1984-1992) or replace tooling that had already been disposed of. This part is mind-boggling.

    –  Perform updates to the old 4th-generation Corvette platform as time went along (1993-1996 model year), because Chevrolet didn’t think that it was fair to screw over the Corvette faithful by shoving old junk onto their customers (the 1996 Grand Sport is an incredible Corvette by the way). Mind-blowing.

    – Also invest in the all-new 5th-generation Corvette at the same time, including new technologies that had never been tried (hydro-formed frame rails, anyone?) The Corvette went from having something like 16 pieces welded together for a frame to two hydro-formed frame rails. Given that the C5 Corvette ended up delivering mind-blowing performance all while having a minimum of (typical) GM engineering headaches speaks volumes to the Corvette Faithful in the halls of General Motors.

    NASCAR could probably learn something from Corvette here concerning what to do with both an outgoing car and the incoming unit.

    Keep in mind that also during this time, the Corvette Faithful inside General Motors managed to create a masterpiece during the middle of one of GM’s most turbulent times imaginable.

    They were facing bankruptcy due to bone-headed investments into their mid-sized sedan platform, and the Corvette was on the chopping block. Not sure why this is important, but I think it’s more to demonstrate that NASCAR is operating with similarly deep pockets (in regards to what was spent on the C5 Corvette, $255-ish million, the OEM’s are spending somewhere around $140 million each, aren’t they?) and we’re getting an entire field of backmarkers out on the track while NASCAR teams sort out whatever they are trying to do with the existing season and the outgoing cars.

    I think that’s what annoys me the most about this racing. Looking back at the Corvette one more time, Chevrolet demonstrated that they had a serious responsibility to Corvette owners to provide the best product they could (within reason), and buyers were rewarded with a superior product for 1997, the C5 really is an incredible car.

    In comparison, concerning their final product here of late, what has an entire field of push-Kyle-Larson-to-the-front backmarkers done for us lately, other than remind us of the startling competition that can be found in practically every other race series out there?

    The second factor is this. If teams are merely coasting along to a hide-the-remains-of-2021-in-a-landfill finish, how exactly are the fans being rewarded for doing their darndest to get back to tracks during Covid-is-still-lurking-like-a-stalking-butler-in-the-background during 2021? All they’re seeing is stately Gentleman’s Racing, with the only things missing being World War 1 leather aviator helmets, glass driving goggles, and mechanics riding in cars again.

    To summarize, I think that NASCAR fans are being slightly short-changed, but who knows? NASCAR just might get away with it, because everyone kinda wants the old car to go away already. It’s like the expired milk in the fridge that can’t be replaced until Thanksgiving, but it’s all we’ve got to work with if we want our Kraft mac and cheese, so we’ll put up with it for now.

    And third in the trio of factors concerning why nobody is really interested in the 2021 season. I’m not entirely sure that the teams have their hearts into the next-generation car. From what I am seeing with the NG cars, NASCAR’s top rung is going to be nearly a complete reset when the 2022 season begins next year. Everything concerning the old car is going to be thrown away or sold, nothing carries over from the old car and nobody is talking about this. Geez, one might think that this would be sorta important as the 2021 regular season winds down, but once again, nuthin’ but crickets.

    And if you’re doing really well with the old car such as a pair of certain top-performing-in-2020 drivers, freaking out about getting all-new cars to work is an actual thing, especially if you’re not Hendrick Racing or Penske or Gibbs (although I think that Penske might be the early spoiler in 2022).

    To that end, I’m not seeing much of any excitement about the new cars, either. I’m having trouble remembering the last time they were mentioned during a race broadcast, and there are even a few possible rumblings out there concerning whether or not the NG cars are crash testing all that well.

    In addition to all that, to be a bit honest with you, has anyone actually seen the new cars recently? They’re kinda ugly-looking (the Mustang is the best out of the three, but that’s not saying much). It’s as if the stork has just dropped off Bugs Bunny with his new gorilla family, and the gorilla dad hasn’t decided if he wants to keep the Next Generation car or crush it with a tree, And, we’re supposed to be excited about this car?

  • Gilliland wins the inaugural Camping World Truck Series race at the COTA

    Gilliland wins the inaugural Camping World Truck Series race at the COTA

    Todd Gilliland took the lead from Tyler Ankrum with six laps to go and won Saturday’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) Toyota Tundra 225. This was the NCWTS inaugural race at the 3.41-mile, 20-turn Austin, Texas, road course, called The Circuit of The Americas (COTA).

    This was Gilliland’s first win of the season, second of his NCWTS career, and his first with Front Row Motorsports.

    “I definitely did a lot of stuff wrong but that’s what I love about road course racing, there’s 20 turns here, 20 opportunities to pass but also make mistakes,’’ Gilliland said.

    Kaz Grala finished second, Ankrum third, Grant Enfinger fourth and Sheldon Creed rounded out the top-five finishers.

    Gilliland won stage one but the jackman went over the wall too soon and he had to start from the tail of the field for stage two. Ben Rhodes won stage two, his first stage win of the season.

    The NCWTS heads to Charlotte Motor Speedway next Friday for the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at 8:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    Circuit of The Americas
    Austin, Texas
    Saturday, May 22, 2021

    (5) Todd Gilliland, Ford, 41.
    (2) Kaz Grala, Chevrolet, 41.
    (1) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, 41.
    (23) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, 41.
    (3) Sheldon Creed, Chevrolet, 41.
    (21) Sam Mayer, Chevrolet, 41.
    (17) Carson Hocevar #, Chevrolet, 41.
    (15) Zane Smith, Chevrolet, 41.
    (9) Austin Hill, Toyota, 41.
    (11) Ben Rhodes, Toyota, 41.
    (26) Paul Menard, Toyota, 41.
    (6) John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, 41.
    (13) Parker Kligerman, Chevrolet, 41.
    (28) Hailie Deegan #, Ford, 41.
    (4) Matt Crafton, Toyota, 41.
    (29) Austin Wayne Self, Chevrolet, 41.
    (16) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, 41.
    (8) Parker Chase, Toyota, 41.
    (24) Camden Murphy, Chevrolet, 41.
    (12) Ryan Truex, Chevrolet, 41.
    (19) Derek Kraus, Toyota, 41.
    (27) Johnny Sauter, Toyota, 41.
    (32) Lawless Alan, Toyota, 41.
    (22) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 41.
    (30) Tate Fogleman, Chevrolet, 41.
    (14) Bayley Currey, Chevrolet, 41.
    (31) Chase Purdy #, Chevrolet, 41.
    (33) Jack Wood, Chevrolet, 41.
    (25) Michele Abbate, Toyota, 41.
    (34) Cory Roper, Ford, 41.
    (36) Tanner Gray, Ford, 40.
    (18) Timothy Peters, Chevrolet, 40.
    (20) Chandler Smith #, Toyota, 39.
    (35) Roger Reuse, Chevrolet, 38.
    (10) Christian Eckes, Toyota, Suspension, 36.
    (7) Cameron Lawrence, Chevrolet, 34.

    Average Speed of Race Winner: 70.79 mph.
    Time of Race: 1 Hrs, 58 Mins, 30 Secs. Margin of Victory: 7.941 Seconds.
    Caution Flags: 2 for 2 laps.
    Lead Changes: 8 among 6 drivers.Lap Leaders: K. Grala 1-11;T. Gilliland 12-13;S. Creed 14-23;B. Rhodes 24-26;M. Crafton 27;S. Creed 28-31;T. Ankrum 32-35;T. Gilliland 36-41.
    Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Sheldon Creed 2 times for 14 laps; Kaz Grala 1 time for 11 laps; Todd Gilliland
    2 times for 8 laps; Tyler Ankrum 1 time for 4 laps; Ben Rhodes 1 time for 3 laps; Matt Crafton 1 time for 1 lap.
    Stage #1 Top Ten: 38,02,26,88,99,32,52,4,2,56
    Stage #2 Top Ten: 99,88,19,2,26,02,45,32,38,11

  • Kyle Busch comes out on top at Kansas after wild overtime attempts

    Kyle Busch comes out on top at Kansas after wild overtime attempts

    Kyle Busch took the checkered flag at Kansas Speedway after multiple attempts in NASCAR Overtime. It would be Busch’s 61st win in the Camping World Truck Series and also marks the fifth win for Kyle Busch Motorsports in 2021.

    “It’s pretty awesome, we had some great accomplishments as a team.” Busch stated. “It’s just a true team effort and a testament to everybody at Kyle Busch Motorsports. It’s fun to have the opportunities with running for my own trucks and going out there and be able to put on good shows, good finishes, good races, and work with some good talented people.”

    Stages 30/30/74 would make up the 134 lap event, with John Hunter Nemechek on the pole.

    Stage 1: Laps 1-30

    Nemechek and teammate Busch would take the green flag. A good portion of the Top 10 would go three-wide, with Todd Gilliland one of the drivers to fall backward at the start.

    Sheldon Creed would launch himself up to second while Ben Rhodes, Matt Crafton, and Austin Hill challenge Busch for third. A few laps later Busch would have a run off of Turn 2, and use it to breeze past Rhodes for third.

    Creed took away the lead from Nemechek as he would pass the No. 4 down the inside into Turn 1. Nemechek would try and fight back for the lead but would get loose off Turn 2, losing out to Busch as he would drop to third.

    Busch’s No. 51 would come to life as he made a pass on the bottom of Creed’s No. 2, placing him back to the front. Nemechek would quickly dispose of Creed, making it a Kyle Busch Motorsports 1-2.

    The No. 51 would take the first stage, with Nemechek behind Busch. Creed, Rhodes, Crafton, Austin Hill, Stewart Friesen, Todd Gilliland, Derek Kraus and Ross Chastain would be the Top 10.

    Stage 2: Laps 38-60

    Busch led on the restart but it was Creed that would muscle his way to the front shortly afterward.

    A few laps later Busch would run down the No. 2 and reclaim the race lead.

    On Lap 43 Chase Purdy would have a big moment, sliding his truck. The No. 23 would keep it straight, however, and the race stayed green.

    Busch would take the Stage 2 win, sweeping both stages. Nemechek again would be in second, while Creed, Austin Hill and Zane Smith would round out the Top 5. Friesen, Kraus, Rhodes, Gilliland, and Hailie Deegan would rack up the Top 10.

    Nemechek would beat Busch off pit road during the stage break to lead on the restart.

    Final Stage: Laps 67-140

    As the field bunched up to start the final stage, Nemechek would lead the field down, with Creed battling the No. 4. Teammate Busch would make a three-wide pass on the inside of both Nemechek and Creed, and would take the lead immediately.

    A caution would fly as Carson Hocevar nearly spun out battling with Christian Eckes. He would save it but the yellow flag would fly.

    The leaders would stay out on the track, but Johnny Sauter would come down pit road to make some big swings to his No. 13.

    A majority of the front runners would swarm Busch on the next restart, as he would get in a four-wide situation with the other drivers. Creed would come out on top with teammate Smith right behind him.

    On Lap 97, Nemechek would run down Creed and take the lead away. Smith would bring his truck down pit road as green flag pit stops began.

    Tyler Ankrum would have troubles as he would go around, but no caution would fly, dropping the No. 26 down in the running order.

    Busch’s truck would come to life as he closed in on the front two of Creed and Nemechek with a three-wise pass for the first position. Shortly afterward, the leaders, one-by-one, would come down pit road.

    With 17 to go Creed hit the Turn 1 wall due to his right front tire going down. A lap later Sauter would pit from the lead, bringing Busch back up to the front.

    The yellow flag would fly with seven laps to go, bunching the field up. Jennifer Jo Cobb’s truck stalled on the track, bringing out the yellow. This would lead to NASCAR Overtime. Rhodes brought his car down pit road for fresh tires, as well as Deegan.

    Busch and Chastain led the field to green. Rhodes made it three-wide with Busch and Chastain, who would come out on top with a pass to the bottom. However, there would be trouble behind them as Friesen went for a spin off of Turn 2, and collecting Kraus and knocking the two out of contention.

    Chastain and Smith would lead for another attempt at overtime. Smith would try to block Busch but would force the No. 51 up against the outside wall as the field flocked to three to four-wide racing. Many drivers would experience several tire rubs on their trucks, but everyone would keep it clean as the leaders fought it out.

    Hill and Chastain would duke it out for the lead, and Busch would make it three-wide for the lead as they got to the final lap. Busch’s No. 51 would breeze by Chastain and Hill, running away from the two drivers to claim the victory at Kansas.

    There were 36 lead changes among seven different drivers.

    The Camping World Truck Series heads to Darlington Raceway for the LiftKits4Less.com 200 on Friday, May 7 at 7:30 PM ET. Coverage will be on FOX Sports 1 and MRN Radio for 147 laps of action.

    Results:

    1. Kyle Busch, Stage 1 and 2 winner, 59 laps led
    2. Ross Chastain, six laps led
    3. Austin Hill
    4. Christian Eckes, three laps led
    5. John Hunter Nemechek, 16 laps led
    6. Todd Gilliland
    7. Zane Smith
    8. Raphael Lessard
    9. Johnny Sauter, 13 laps led
    10. Ben Rhodes, two laps led
    11. Chandler Smith
    12. Bayley Currey
    13. Hailie Deegan
    14. Stewart Friesen
    15. Tyler Ankrum
    16. Austin Wayne Self
    17. Grant Enfinger
    18. Tanner Gray
    19. Chase Briscoe
    20. Ryan Truex – one lap down
    21. Timothy Peters – one lap down
    22. Timmy Hill – one lap down
    23. Carson Hocevar – one lap down
    24. Matt Crafton – one lap down
    25. Chase Purdy – two laps down
    26. Danny Bohn – two laps down
    27. Bret Holmes – two laps down
    28. Derek Kraus – two laps down
    29. Spencer Davis – three laps down
    30. Jordan Anderson – three laps down
    31. Dawson Cram – three laps down
    32. Sheldon Creed – four laps down, 41 laps led
    33. Kris Wright – five laps down
    34. CJ McLaughlin – seven laps down
    35. Spencer Boyd – seven laps down
    36. Tate Fogleman – ten laps down
    37. Jennifer Jo Cabb – OUT, Electrical
    38. Jessi Iwuji – OUT, Too slow
    39. Norm Benning – OUT, Too slow
    40. Ryan Reed – OUT, Steering
  • Colton Herta dominates the streets of St. Petersburg

    Colton Herta dominates the streets of St. Petersburg

    Colton Herta dominated a majority of the race, as he cruised on to take his first win of the season at St. Petersburg. It is Herta’s fourth win in the Indycar Series, his first at St. Petersburg.

    “We knew we needed to win,” Herta said.

    “We needed a good points swing for us. It’ll put us up in the championship and that’s gonna make our lives that much easier in Texas and that much easier going forward for the rest of the season.”

    Herta started the race on the pole, with Jack Harvey on his outside. The field would roar off to the green flag, and there would be some four-wide action near the mid-pack as Alexander Rossi would make an aggressive dive into the first corner. Herta would maintain the lead while Rossi moved up to eighth.

    Sebastien Bourdais would have damage on the front nose after contact with the Penske cars of Simon Pagenaud and Josef Newgarden.

    Scott Dixon would make an overtake on Pato O’Ward on the fifth lap, putting the defending champion up to the ninth position.

    Conor Daly would pit early, as he would bring his No. 20 down pit road on Lap 11 in order to go for a three-stop strategy while many other teams looked at a two-stop strategy.

    Jimmie Johnson would go off the track on Lap 16. He would struggle in getting the car to reverse while everyone else would come down pit road. Will Power, Romain Grosjean, and several others would come in, hoping for a caution to come out. Eventually, there would be a full course yellow as a result of Johnson’s stalled No. 48.

    Herta would lead on the restart. Graham Rahal would make a dive on the outside of Rinus Veekay, putting the No. 15 to sixth.

    On Lap 23, Takuma Sato would make a move to the inside of James Hinchcliffe into Turn 1. The two would make contact and as a result it would give Hinchcliffe’s No. 29 a flat tire.

    Will Power and Grosjean would make contact battling it out, as they also would collide, putting Grosjean’s No. 51 into the wall. A few corners later he would find the wall again but would keep ongoing.

    Sato would continue to get on the attack as he would make a dive on the inside of Hunter-Reay, putting him up to 11th.

    Dixon would make a swing to the inside on Veekay, moving the No. 9 to eighth on Lap 28. Sato would make it three-wide on Veekay and O’Ward as the No. 21 would continue to plunge down the order. Sato would move up to ninth.

    More drivers would head down pit road on Lap 30, as Veekay and Ryan Hunter-Reay would pit for tires and fuel.

    A lap later, Newgarden would makes his move to second as he would pass Harvey off the first corner.

    Green flag pit stops would continue to commence as Harvey, Bourdais, Dixon, and O’Ward would bring their cars down pit road on Lap 35. A majority of the field would come in lap after lap. Rossi and Rahal would duke it out, but Rossi would have a right front go down after the two would make contact, sending the two of them off course on Lap 38. Herta would cycle as the leader at the end of pit stops. Rossi would end up two laps down as a result of the contact, while Rahal would drop down to 19th.

    The field would remain spread out for the next portion of laps, but as the field reached Lap 66, the final round of pit stops would begin. O’Ward would be the first to come in. Afterward, more would come down.

    Leader Herta would have a close shave, as when he finished his stop, Newgarden was coming into his stall. The two nearly touched, but managed to stay off one another.

    Dalton Kellett’s car would be stopped outside of Turn 1 on Lap 71. There would be no yellow regarding the No. 4’s stopped car.

    Johnson’s troubles would continue as he would spin on Lap 74. As a result it would bring out another full course yellow.

    Herta would lead the field once again to the restart, and everyone else would flock right behind the No. 26. However, another yellow would fly laps later as Ed Jones would try and make a move down the inside of Hinchcliffe, sending the No. 18 spinning around. O’Ward would also receive damage from the incident.

    With 18 laps to go Herta would continue to hold his ground. Power would send it down the bottom underneath teammate Scott McLaughlin to take tenth away.

    However, there would be no opposition for Herta, as he would take the win.

    In terms of the standings, Alex Palou holds a two-point gap over Power and Dixon. Herta sits fourth in points, five points back. Simon Pagenaud rounds out fifth in the points, 13 points back. Harvey, Bourdais, Beekay, Ericsson, and Newgarden round out the rest of the top 10 in the points.

    Next week marks a doubleheader at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday and Sunday, May 1st (at 7:00 PM ET) and 2nd (at 5:00 PM ET) respectively. Coverage will be on NBSCN, Peacock, and SiriusXM Radio.

    Results Sunday of the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.8-mile streets of St. Petersburg circuit, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

    1. (1) Colton Herta, Honda, 100, Running
    2. (3) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    3. (4) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    4. (2) Jack Harvey, Honda, 100, Running
    5. (8) Scott Dixon, Honda, 100, Running
    6. (15) Takuma Sato, Honda, 100, Running
    7. (16) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 100, Running
    8. (20) Will Power, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    9. (7) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    10. (5) Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    11. (14) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    12. (17) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    13. (18) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 100, Running
    14. (13) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, 100, Running
    15. (9) Graham Rahal, Honda, 100, Running
    16. (19) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    17. (10) Alex Palou, Honda, 99, Running
    18. (12) James Hinchcliffe, Honda, 99, Running
    19. (6) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 99, Running
    20. (21) Ed Jones, Honda, 99, Running
    21. (11) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 98, Running
    22. (23) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 95, Running
    23. (24) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 67, Off Course
    24. (22) Max Chilton, Chevrolet, 18, Mechanical

    Race Statistics
    Winner’s average speed: 96.552 mph
    Time of Race: 1:51:51.4115
    Margin of victory: 2.4933 seconds
    Cautions: 3 for 9 laps
    Lead changes: 3 among 3 drivers

    Lap Leaders:
    Herta 1-34
    Pagenaud 35
    Palou 36-37
    Herta 38-100

    NTT INDYCAR SERIES point standings: Palou 67, Power 65, Dixon 65, Herta 62, Pagenaud 54, Harvey 51, Bourdais 51, VeeKay 51, Ericsson 50, Newgarden 47.

  • Jeb Burton snatches first NASCAR Xfinity Series win at Talladega

    Jeb Burton snatches first NASCAR Xfinity Series win at Talladega

    Jeb Burton rose to the top as he claimed victory at Talladega while rain flooded the 2.66-mile track. It would be his first win in his Xfinity Series career.

    “We ran up front all day, definitely wasn’t a fluke,” Burton stated.

    “The guys did a great job with our No. 10 LS Tractor car. We led a lot of laps and it was a blast to drive.”

    Jeb Burton had led 21 laps in the event to get his first series win. It marks the second win for Kaulig Racing this season.

    Stage 1: Laps 1-25

    Austin Cindric and Daniel Hemric led the field down for the green flag. Hemric would get a shove from Noah Gragson to launch out ahead, but Cindric would fight back toward the inside as Hemric would lead the opening lap.

    Though the primary goal was to contend for the win, it also was a race for others drivers racing in the Dash 4 Cash. Josh Berry, Brandon Jones, Hemric, and Gragson were the contenders all trying to gather that bonus.

    As the laps progressed throughout the first stage, a majority of the field would migrate to the outside line of the track.

    With nine laps to go in the stage, Gragson would try and pounce for the lead. With help from the other Chevys, they would be side by side with Hemric for several laps.

    Cindric would make an aggressive move to the bottom underneath Hemric on the frontstretch, swiftly passing the No. 18 with six laps to go in the stage. Cindric’s No. 22 would put multiple blocks on Hemric and Gragson as he would try and maintain the lead.

    As four laps remained in the stage, Harrison Burton would start to surge upwards toward the pack, as his No. 20 would surge through the middle line past teammate Hemric. The Offerpad Toyota would file back behind Cindric as Gragson led.

    Haley took the lead away from Gragson on the last lap of the stage, while teammate AJ Allmendinger would have a scary moment off of Turn 2 as he saved his Chevy. Haley’s No. 11 would take the stage win over Jeb Burton. Gragson, Cindric, Harrison Burton, Allmendinger, Hemric, Jones, Brandon Brown, and Justin Allgaier would round out the top 10 to take stage points.

    During the stage break, Burton won the race off pit road, with a two-tire stop. Many would follow suit, while some would take four tires. One of the main people that took four was Gragson.

    Stage 2: Laps 29-50

    Jeb Burton would lead coming to the restart with teammate Haley on his outside. The Kaulig cars would move toward the top while Myatt Snider would try and make it three-wide. However, Snider’s No. 2 would lose several spots as he would be left out to dry.

    Cindric would take over the race lead over Jeb Burton. The Joe Gibbs Racing drivers would follow right behind the No. 22.

    Jeb Burton would ignite the inside line as he would challenge for the lead with nine laps to go in the second stage. Ty Dillon would make it a three-wide battle for the lead as both lines would try and swarm Cindric.

    Haley made a move to the outside of Cindric, and with help from teammate Jeb Burton, it would put the No. 11 dead even with Cindric as they would be side by side for the lead. Jeb Burton would be stuck on the middle line, as teammate Allmendinger would pass by on the high side.

    The trio of Kaulig cars would try and make a move on Cindric, but the defending champion would place several successful blocks. It would give way for the JR Motorsports cars of Gragson and Allgaier to pounce.

    Gragson had a run on the high side off of Turn 2 and transfer it throughout the backstretch. He and Cindric would go at it, with Gragson claiming the Stage 2 win. Teammate Allgaier would be in the second spot, with Cindric, Jones, and Dillon rounding out the Top 5. Snider, Hemric, Brett Moffitt, Michael Annett and Brown rounded out the Top 10.

    On the stage break, Gragson won the race off of pit road, with a two-tire stop. Many would also go with the two-tire strategy as they prepped themselves for the final stage.

    Final Stage: Laps 56-113

    Gragson and Snider would lead the field for the final stage. Snider would have momentum on the outside and would clear Gragson and hold off Jones for the lead.

    On Lap 58, Cindric would make a pass to the inside of Snider in Turn 3, and the No. 22 would rocket to the front. As Cindric went to the top, the main pack would follow in suit.

    With 45 laps to go, pit stops would begin. Berry, Cindric, and many others would bring their cars down pit road for a fuel-only stop. A lap later the rest of the leaders would come down pit road. Jeffery Earnhardt would spin coming in, but no caution would fly.

    There was trouble on the race track as Berry would bring out the third caution. The No. 8 would lose a right rear tire in the middle of Turn 3, sending the No. 8 for a spin.

    Harrison Burton, as a result of pit stops, would cycle as the race leader over Cindric as he led the field to the restart with 35 laps to go. Cindric would try and side draft the No. 20, but with the help of Jeb Burton it would put Harrison Burton ahead of the No. 22.

    Jeb Burton’s No. 10 would challenge Harrison Burton with 32 to go, and would easily take over the top spot with assistance from teammate Allmendinger. Snider would shuffle up to third, but with a hound of hungry cars behind the TaxSlayer Chevy.

    A really close call would occur when Jeb Burton would place a late block on Snider. The two of them would hold onto it, but would cost Snider a load of momentum.

    The yellow flew as Annett got hit by Joe Graf off Turn 2, sending the No. 1 into the path of the Joe Gibbs Racing cars of Jones and Dillon. Dillon’s No. 54 would slide up into the path of Jones, sending the Toyotas into the outside wall. There would be a secondary wreck behind them as Caesar Bacarella and Joey Gase would spin around.

    Jeb Burton would lead with 24 to go, but weather delayed the restart, and eventually, the red flag would be waved as rain pelted the track. From there NASCAR would announce Jeb Burton as the race winner. Gragson would win the Dash 4 Cash, giving them a monetary bonus for the No. 9.

    There were 23 lead changes among 12 different drivers and four cautions throughout the event.

    The Xfinity Series heads to Darlington on Saturday, May 8 at 1 PM ET with coverage from FOX Sports 1 and MRN.

    Results:

    1. Jeb Burton – Led 21 laps
    2. Austin Cindric – Led 24 laps
    3. AJ Allmendinger
    4. Riley Herbst
    5. Ryan Sieg – Led one lap
    6. Noah Gragson – Stage 2 Winner, led eight laps
    7. Brandon Brown – Led one lap
    8. Justin Haley – Stage 1 Winner, led two laps
    9. Myatt Snider – Led three laps
    10. Harrison Burton – Led six laps
    11. Tommy Joe Martins
    12. Daniel Hemric – Led 18 laps
    13. Timmy Hill
    14. Jeremy Clements
    15. Colin Garrett
    16. David Starr
    17. Brett Moffitt
    18. Jade Buford
    19. Colby Howard – Led three laps
    20. Landon Cassill
    21. Alex Labbe
    22. Jeffrey Earnhardt
    23. Kyle Weatherman
    24. Natalie Decker
    25. Matt Mills
    26. Jesse Little
    27. Josh Williams
    28. Mason Massey
    29. Justin Allgaier
    30. Ryan Vargas – Led three laps
    31. Josh Berry
    32. Michael Annett – two laps down
    33. Joe Graf Jr. – two laps down
    34. Gray Gaulding – three laps down
    35. Ty Dillon – three laps down
    36. Joey Gase – five laps down
    37. Brandon Jones – six laps down, OUT, Accident
    38. Caesar Bacarella – six laps down, OUT, Damage Vehicle Policy
    39. Jason White – 39 laps down, led one lap, OUT, Suspension
    40. Bayley Currey – 56 laps down, OUT, Overheating

  • How To Create An Elegant And Luxurious Garage

    How To Create An Elegant And Luxurious Garage

    If you have several luxurious cars, that means that you are fortunate enough to live in an upscale home. You are also expected to be wealthy, given that you own a variety of expensive cars. These cars are not to be taken for granted, which is why you need to leave a room for your garage. Your garage should be spacious enough for your cars and also safely hidden to avoid getting stolen. 

    If you already have a garage, you might as well put effort into making the room elegant and luxurious looking by adding some unique decorations. 

    Read on to learn more tips on how you can create an impressive and luxurious garage. 

    1.Water features

    Nothing is more attractive than a water fountain designed to give a sense of luxury to any area in your house. Having a modern-looking water feature in your garage would be perfect if you want to transform your garage’s look. Modern water features come in a variety of styles and designs that would perfectly fit into any garage. 

    You can also match the water fountains with the color or designs of your cars to bring out their beauty. Don’t worry about the space of your garage because modern water features have different shapes and sizes. If there’s limited space, you can choose smaller water features that still integrate elegance and luxury. 

    2.Car lifts

    Having a car lift in your garage is a practical thing to do, especially when you think your garage is not spacious enough. Car lifts are more cost-efficient and space-saving too. If you install a car lift in your garage, you won’t be needing a garage expansion to park two cars in one parking slot.

    But that’s not the only thing that car lifts can offer, and they can also make your garage look stunning and beautiful by allowing your cars to be showcased and displayed. Just imagine opening your garage, and your guests see the whole part of your luxury car. That would definitely leave them speechless. 

    3.Lighting

    If you want to create an elegant and attractive-looking garage, you should choose the proper lighting to complement your cars and the entire room. There are a variety of unique ideas on how to design the lighting of your garage. 

    Some have strip lines of light that show coolness, some have brighter lights to complement the car, and some installed LED lights to make the area look more attractive. You can look for unique ideas online and follow their tips. 

    But take note of the things that you should consider before installing any kind of light in your garage. There are many factors to consider, such as the walls, minor decorations, the color of your luxury cars, and more. 

    This area of your house is often disregarded because homeowners only think of it as a place for your car to be stored safely. Little did they know that having an attractive and expensive-looking garage is a game-changer if you want to amaze people with interior designs.

  • What are some of the most popular betting markets in NASCAR?

    What are some of the most popular betting markets in NASCAR?

    Since being founded in 1948 at Daytona, NASCAR has grown to be one of the most exciting sports around. It regularly draws huge crowds to tracks such as Phoenix and large TV audiences for the top races. News such as top driver Michael Annett’s 300th Xfinity start recently is also a reason why it gets so much attention. 

    As a major sport with plenty of fans worldwide, NASCAR is also popular to bet on. This not only allows followers to get more involved with the sport but also means that they can potentially make some money from it. In the modern age, this usually involves fans logging onto online sportsbooks to place NASCAR bets. This is not dissimilar to casino players choosing to play games for money at the best online casino sites now. It does, however, pay to know what you are doing before gambling online. 

    For online casino players, this means hunting out top bonus codes for online casinos and the safest internet operators to game at. This becomes easy when you use a comparison site for online casinos – many players will use BonusSeeker.com as it is a trusted source of bonus codes and casino reviews for players. What can you do to prepare for sports betting on NASCAR races?

    The best thing to begin with is working out the most popular markets to gamble on – but what does this include? 

    Win market 

    While all sports will have their unique betting markets, the win market is one that you find everywhere. It is also usually one of the most popular. This is because it is accessible and simple to understand, and can come with decent odds. NASCAR is no different, and the win market here is always a well-backed one at race meets. To place this bet, you just need to look at who is competing in the race and pick who you think will win. 

    Matching up drivers

    When you start to look into betting on NASCAR, you soon find that there are some bets that are more popular than others. Driver match-ups certainly fall into this category. How do they work? This sees bookmakers pit two opposing drivers against each other in a head-to-head for the upcoming race. You would then bet on who will finish in a better final position than the other. If you get it right, then you win! This bet can be profitable, especially if you back an underdog driver who finishes higher up than a big name. 

    Proposition bets

    Also known as ‘prop bets’, this is another popular betting market for NASCAR racing. As with the win market, this bet is easy to understand and simple to place. It sees you deciding that something will or won’t happen in the race. This can be split further into skilled prop bets (which require some knowledge to predict correctly) and unskilled ones (which require no prior knowledge or research). Common prop bets include betting on the number of cautions in race, who will set the fastest lap, and who will be leading after a certain number of laps. This sort of bet offers a quirky way to gamble on NASCAR and also has an interesting, entertaining variety of bets to make.

    Who will make the podium? 

    As we have already mentioned, picking out the winner in NASCAR is not always easy. For this reason, the podium finish market is popular. This allows you to bet that a certain driver will finish on the podium when the race ends. If the driver does, then your bet wins – even if they did not win the race. This can be a good type of insurance bet and help build up long-term profits over time. If there is a driver in the race who you feel sure will do well, backing them for a podium finish gives you that extra bit of protection should they not quite grab the win. 

    NASCAR racing has lots of markets to bet on 

    The continued popularity of NASCAR can be put down to certain key factors. The dramatic racing action is definitely one, as is the range of teams and personalities in the sport. The history of NASCAR also helps a lot. There is also no doubt that the variety of betting markets helps. This not only brings added interest to the sport for fans but also gives them a way to get even closer to the action. If you’ve ever wondered just which markets were the most popular in NASCAR betting, then the above should help. 

  • Chris Buescher – Daytona Clash Advance

    Chris Buescher – Daytona Clash Advance

    Team:                   No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang
    Crew Chief:         Luke Lambert

    Twitter:                @17RoushTeam, @RoushFenway and @Chris_Buescher

    Busch Clash – Tuesday, Feb. 9 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

    ADVANCE NOTES

    Buescher in the Clash

    ·         Buescher makes his second start in the annual Clash event on Tuesday, and first since 2017. The 2021 field is limited to 2020 pole winners, past Clash winners who competed full-time in 2020, Daytona 500 Champions who competed full-time in 2020, former Daytona 500 pole winners who competed full time in 2020 and 2020 NCS Playoff drivers, race winners and stage winners.

    ·         Newman is coming off a fifth-place run in the exhibition race a season ago after starting on the pole following a random draw. He has four top-five results in the Clash all-time, including second in 2005, third in 2011 and fourth in 2003.

    ·         The 2021 edition of the Clash moves to the Daytona Road Course, where the NASCAR Cup Series competed at for the first time last summer. Newman ran 19th in that event.

    ·         Tuesday’s race serves as a primer for the newly-established second race of the NCS regular season, when the series heads right back to Daytona for a points event on the road course.

    ·         The random draw to determine Tuesday’s starting lineup will take place Monday night at 7 p.m. ET.

    Luke Lambert in the Clash

    ·         Lambert makes his sixth start in the Clash on Tuesday atop the box, after four prior appearances with Newman and one with Jeff Burton.

    ·         Lambert has two finishes of eighth – one with Burton in 2011 and again in 2014 with Newman.

    QUOTE WORTHY
    Buescher on racing in the Clash:
    “Just getting back to the track in general is very exciting, and we’re ready to kick this thing off after a busy offseason. Hitting the road course at Daytona will be quite different for this format, but I’m a fan of road course racing and feel good about where we are, especially coming off the top five there last summer. We’re looking forward to it, and hopefully it gives us a solid plan for week two.”

    On the Car
    Fastenal returns to the fold at Roush Fenway for its 11th season in 2021. They spent three years on the No. 99 before jumping to the No. 17 Cup Series entry, and were the primary partner on the No. 60 Xfinity team that captured the owner’s championship in 2011.

    About Fastenal
    Fastenal [Nasdaq: FAST] is North America’s largest fastener distributor and a ‘one-stop’ source for hundreds of thousands of OEM, MRO and Construction products. With more than 2,600 stores worldwide, the company supports B2B customers with tailored local inventory and dedicated personnel, who visit regularly, quickly respond to emergency needs, and provide efficient inventory management solutions. Fastenal’s service-oriented business network includes the world’s largest industrial vending program, 14 regional distribution centers, 8 custom manufacturing facilities, thousands of delivery vehicles, and industry-leading sourcing, quality and engineering resources.

  • Speculation, questions arising from Hendrick’s pick of Larson’s spotter for ’21 season

    Speculation, questions arising from Hendrick’s pick of Larson’s spotter for ’21 season

    Heading into the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season, a lot of the eyes in the NASCAR community are on Hendrick Motorsports and the driver of the No. 5, Kyle Larson. Larson, the former driver of the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevy, lost his ride a few races into the 2020 Cup season following his utterance of a racial slur during an online racing event.

    For all intents and purposes, the mistake seemed less malicious and more insensitive than anything. Regardless, the punishment was adequate in the big picture of things – he lost his ride, sponsorships, and was suspended from NASCAR until he completed sensitivity training. Larson went above and beyond that, taking the initiative to participate in several outreach programs in an effort to educate himself and to better understand the racial plight and disparity in America, and on the announcement of his return to NASCAR competition he made it clear that he wasn’t going to stop with that.

    In the meantime, he managed to win a horde of dirt racing trophies while away from NASCAR; it’s safe to say that along with being paired with NASCAR’s 2020 Cup championship organization it is looking like Larson may be in the hunt for a title for the first time in his career. All of that will depend on his actions off and on the track. Sure, the on-track matters look to be a cinch – Larson is a wheelman in the truest sense. But off-track? 2020 was a shaky year in regards to social unrest, so Larson’s actions will do the talking on whether or not he’s serious about change for the better. There will be a lot of scrutiny in that area.

    With that said, Chris Monez was recently tabbed to be Larson’s spotter for the 2021 season. Already, NASCAR Twitter has exposed some questionable aspects regarding Monez and whether or not he’s the type of influence needed around Larson. A cursory search of Monez’s Twitter exposed several questionable tweets and likes that indicate a socio-political fringe mindset away from the track, including his subscription to a cult-like thought group known on the internet as QAnon. This included tweets with the group’s slogan among other things.

    In a nutshell, QAnon is an extremely dangerous fringe conspiracy idea that has zero basis in fact and has been labeled as a terrorist threat by the FBI, and in short, believes that Donald Trump is working in a clandestine fashion with several law enforcement officials behind the scenes in order to take down a Satanic-worshipping cabal of celebrity and Democratic pedophiles in a mass event called “The Storm,” where they will then be subject to public executions.

    Yes, that is what they actually believe.

    In the meanwhile, this is paired with several likes of anti-COVID mask tweets as well as a like of Trump’s tweet from August when he asked if/when Bubba Wallace would apologize for the noose found at Talladega in the summer. With all of this being said, it’s clear where Monez’s interests lie. It’s one thing to subscribe to a political ideology. That’s one of the many great things about being an American, where we can have that sort of freedom. But in 2020, socio-political ideologies began to merge with baseless fringe conspiracies, and many others seemed to jump off the mental deep end. If Monez’s Twitter likes amount to anything it seems like he’s one of those who made the plunge as well.

    That said, does it make sense to pair him with Larson, a driver who is working hard to prove that he’s changed? Is Monez the kind of influence he needs? For what it’s worth, any kind of social media “likes” a user has is a form of enabling/endorsing. And despite a substantial amount of NASCAR Twitter claiming that it was “wrong” for these old likes to be looked through, there’s an old adage from the early days of social media where anything is fair game when it’s in the public eye. It just so happens that Twitter is a public forum, and pairing Monez’s name with Larson makes him a very public figure.

    In other words, Monez’s “likes” and “tweets” are definitely fair game when it comes to being scrutinized. An argument can be made that if he didn’t want the NASCAR world to see it, then he wouldn’t have tweeted what he tweeted or liked what he liked. Being Larson’s spotter is no small thing. He’ll play a very integral role on race day considering the spotter is one of the top important roles on the team.

    So is it worth having someone with that mindset as an influence around Larson? What’s the price of victory worth in NASCAR? At the end of the day the team is privately owned so there’s no point in the social media outcry of “Fire him!” or what have you. But once again, Monez’s subscribing of dangerous conspiracy theories (with zero basis in fact) could compromise Larson’s drive for change. So is it worth it? Does it even matter?

    There was once a point where people could actually keep nonsense like that away from the race track, along with talk of religion or politics. But in 2020, a lot of people began making that stuff their identity in an attempt to make those opinions and ideologies valid. Suffice to say, from a logical point of view, opinion isn’t fact and should never be considered valid. Yet these days, there aren’t a lot of logical people out and about.

    Sadly, among those crazies, one is now a spotter for a driver on the eve of what could be the most important season of his career. And for all the work that driver has put in to come back, this adds extra scrutiny on an otherwise heavily scrutinized season. So when all is said and done, HMS and Larson must consider if it is worth it keeping this guy around.