Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Getting to know Aaron Studwell

    Getting to know Aaron Studwell

    Aaron Studwell is a name NASCAR fans may or may not know. For those who are unfamiliar with him, he runs RACEWeather.net and collaborates with Brian Neudorff forecasting the weather for NASCAR races on their Patreon page.

    Studwell and Neudorff may be two of the most underappreciated people in the NASCAR community that don’t work in the sport but are very helpful to race teams and fans when weather threatens an upcoming race. Both are constantly updating the weather conditions that are near the tracks.

    For Studwell, however, it didn’t start out quite that way. Growing up he was focused on the weather.

    “I originally became interested in the weather in the third grade,” he said. “I grew up sailing on the Chesapeake Bay, so that was often impacted by the weather. I ended up getting my undergraduate degree from Michigan in Aerospace Engineering because I didn’t know about the careers in meteorology beyond TV and the Weather Service. I ended up in meteorology when I decided to get my Masters and wanted to move on from engineering.”

    Studwell explains the type of meteorology he does that is different from the meteorology people know about.

    “Marine meteorology is more focused on winds & waves, along with storms,” he explained to Speedway Media. “This is for both crew safety and for operational limits. So while the National Weather Service will do offshore forecasting for the U.S., it is for a broad region, where we will provide site-specific forecasts. Also, there are regions around the world, where that kind of forecast may not be available.”

    He has been a meteorologist since 1995, but Studwell’s first experience with NASCAR was in 2002.

    “The first time I really got in to NASCAR was in 2002 with the Daytona 500 when Ward Burton won,” he said. “I was a Dodge guy and always been a Dodge guy. Ward’s out there racing the Caterpillar Dodge. I have stuff of his sitting on top of my bookshelf, signed hat and memorabilia from him.”

    “I just remember sitting there watching the (Daytona) 500 and it was a beautiful Sunday, watching it as is and I just got drawn in. And then of all things, I go out and buy NASCAR Thunder 2002 (Video Game) and that was okay, but NASCAR Thunder 2003 got me hooked on NASCAR to watch it more, playing it more, and learning from the sport that way.”

    After that, Studwell began to forecast the weather for NASCAR races to let the fans know what they might expect on a race weekend. He details what led him to where he is today.

    “I was in the chat rooms or message boards for NASCAR 2003,” Studwell said. “Hurricane Isabel in 2003 was heading towards Dover for Dover race weekend in September. So people were asking me, ‘hey what’s your forecast.’ So I went out to go get the domain and someone already had raceweather.com. I got raceweather.net which is why I kind of kept it. They were willing to sell me raceweather.com for $3,000 and I was like, no that’s fine, thanks. Not that big of an effort to spend money on.”

    “So I took it from answering questions on the web board to okay, here’s the website,” he continued. “And then I just kind of kept this website going through the end of the year.

    2004 was a special year for Studwell as he was able to get his website featured on Jayski.com.

    “In 2004, I reached out to Jayski and he had a bunch of weather links on his webpage,” he explained. “I was like hey, could you put my weather link on there? And he did, so that was good. That’s how it kind of grew through Jayski and then updating the webpage, kind of driving web traffic that way.”

    “There wasn’t Facebook or Twitter then like it is a bigger platform now. Hurricane Isabel is the reason why I started raceweather.net and it all kind of tied together in that time frame.”

    Studwell also recalls the first race he attended and an exicting opportunity that came after.

    “In the 2003-2005 time frame, the first race I attended was the Las Vegas race in the spring, I think 2004,” he said. “I actually had the opportunity that I knew a guy, Adam Risher, who was then the Crew Chief for Kertus Davis on the No. 0 car (Busch Series) for Johnny Davis Motorsports, now named JD Motorsports. I believe Adam (Risher) is at (Richard) Childress now.”

    “This was before it was harder to have volunteers, but it was a small team and so I went to volunteer for them, just to have a chance to be on pit road, move stuff around, help a team to put things together,” he continued. “I learned about being there and see if it was what I wanted to do because I had interviews with Ford engineering for the Truck teams that were going to look at using the Toyota model, where you had this team of engineers look across all the Truck teams.”

    From there, Studwell met people who worked in the racing world and gave him interviews.

    “I met with “Cowyboy” Kevin Starland for an interview and I met Dave Charpentier when he was at PPI (Motorsports), and he (Charpentier) is now the Chief Engineer at JTG Daughtery Racing,” he explained to Speedway Media.

    “I also met Greg Erwin for an interview at Roush (Fenway Racing) at the time. I met a bunch of great people in the industry. I had somebody at Roush tell me, hey look your interview was great but it didn’t go much further than that. So the timing just never really worked out because having that Aerospace Engineering Degree, I can work as an Aerodynamist or a Race Engineer, because I had worked at General Motors. But having your own meteorologist on the (Pit) Box and accessable, was a nice perk as well.”

    Studwell also shared his thoughts about how the rain affects NASCAR races when the crew are looking at a different radar model than he is.

    “I think a great example is from Cole Custer on Friday (night),” he added. “The rain is 10 miles out, but you also have something that I posted several times that dry air is over the region and that rain will just continue to weaken/dissipate before it gets to the track. So there’s a lot more than radar reading or radar observing, saying hey nothing is going to change but if you look at the patterns from that, and then knew where to look elsewhere, knew what to think about. Why is the rain dissipating? Is it dissiapating? Will it continue to dissipate and so it’s a lot more than just throwing a radar up, and saying it’s 10 miles moving at 30 mph that it’s going to be here in 20 minutes.”

    He also offered his thoughts whether or not a team could afford a meteorologist.

    “I think it’s feasible,” he said. “Is it cost effective? I don’t know. That’s for them to decide. I think it’s an added value you have one those days when you have those concerns. I think the bigger issue is from a safety consideration.”

    “I’ve had the opprotunity to be at tracks and work the Brickyard 400 in 2017,” Studwell continued. “That’s when we had rain on both days and I had media access. It’s funny because I was talking to Bob Pockrass a couple of weeks ago and I didn’t have this realization until later why they put me where they put me in the media center. I was exactly in the middle from front and back, and in the middle from left to right. I was dead center in the media center because now everyone would have perfect access to me.”

    “So that was my first race to work from as a media weather standpoint. It was funny, I walked in Saturday and Bob Pockrass already had the radar up, and was like, oh hey Aaron there’s rain here. I was like, got it Bob thanks. But to have a chance to work with people like Claire B Lang, Lee Spencer, and Chris Knight.”

    “It was a great opportunity. I met Steve O’ Donnell, Doug Rice, and for them to put a face to a name and say okay, I see what he does, what he is doing, someone in there that they can trust as a resource, I think it’s great. It would also be great if NASCAR could use it as a resource of looking at things from fan safety, planning, earlier starts to races. I know they have their own resource, but to have their own dedicated resource would be great too in all the series.”

    Studwell also added that it is frustrating when there is information going out that may confuse people when fans watch the races.

    “Oh, it’s frustrating when there is conflicting information going out,” he emphasized. “It’s frustrating because they (NASCAR) have a agenda where everything is tolerant driven and I get it. They have a agenda they’re following and want to meet. They want to keep racing and don’t want to go to a red flag for rain. So they’re going to say, certain things.”

    “I’m going to go back to the Vegas race this year,” he added. “They (NASCAR) saw those dark clouds on the background and fourtantely those showers are staying north of I-15. But you see in the background there is rain. I was like okay, I better hit this one.”

    About six years ago, was the first time Studwell came across Neudorff online and it wasn’t all rainbows when they first interacted with each other.

    “I’m going to use a DW (Darrell Waltrip) term here, copertition,” Aaron told Speedway Media. “We would be out there almost competiting against one another to who could have the forecast up first, an advisory out first and we were kind of just stepping on one another’s toes. Then we got to a point and said, you know what? This isn’t how we should be doing it. We have never met in person, but we talk once or twice a week depending on the weather, and what’s going on in our world.”

    “We started coordinating about five or six years ago,” he continued. “We started a Patreon page last year. We take turns doing the weekly updates, he (Neudorff) updates it during the week, I’ll update it during the week sometimes, a little less frequently, as I am focused on raceweather.net.”

    “There was a race last year where we were trying to figure out who is going to put an update out. If we don’t, then we are both putting out updates and end up being contradictory. He has a larger social media presence than I do. When I first got into this (forecasting NASCAR races) and used NASCAR weatherman (on social media), I was concerned with legal reasons using NASCAR in my username, website, that there would be implications like, oh he’s just trying to make money off the company’s name and you put yourself in a weird position. But yeah, we’ll both sit down and coordinate with each other for an upcoming race weekend.”

    When Studwell is not doing the NASCAR weather forecast with Neudorff or for his own site, he is busy working on his Ph.D at Houston University.

    “My proposed dissertation title is, “Spatiotemporal Variations of Saturn’s Zonal Winds based on Cassini Long-term (2004-2017) Multi-Instrument Observations,” Studwell said. “So, it’s looking at the long-term wind patterns within Saturn during the totality of Cassini’s mission. Right now, my dissertation research will not apply to my work. It’s more for my own achievements/goals. I did have to take more classes too, so those will make me a better meteorologist and reinforced a lot of knowledge from my Masters work. I also don’t know what the future may bring, so stay along for the ride.”

    Like forecasting weather for NASCAR races, there are hard parts to his job and a lot of the time, it’s trying to have a regular life.

    “The hardest part of my job is trying to maintain a work/life balance because we have odd schedules and during some weather events, extra hours are expected,” he told Speedway Media. “But that’s also factoring in my PhD research and writing.”

    On top of having to try to have balance in his life, there are times when he does get a little negativity from time-to-time on social media such as being called out for getting a forecast wrong, but it’s been mostly positive.

    “Oh yes,” Studwell said. “There has been (negativity) and I really don’t want to go into those details. For the most part, I have talked with the people who posted it and we have come to better understandings. People should remember that I am a NASCAR fan, as well, that I want to see racing that is uninterrupted by weather. But when that can’t happen, I am going to produce the best forecast I can, as a free service to fans, media, teams, etc, for safety and for planning reasons.”

    “Now, I’d rather focus on the positives that I have received – both as tweets and through DMs. There have been kudos from Cup drivers, media, and tracks for both the quality of work and for our level of communication. And while I don’t do this for the recognition, they are nice to get for the validation of my work.”

    When Studwell first started out, he did not think he would be as big as he is today within the media.

    “To answer the question, no, it wasn’t at all what I was thinking,” he told Speedway Media. “When my son and I were at the Texas NASCAR weekend a few weeks ago, we went to the Tweetup there. I knew the media people and people knew who I was. So, as my son phrased it, I’m “Twitter famous.”

    There has been in times in Studwell’s career where he has thought about a different career path other than meteorology.

    “Oh yeah,” he said. “I’ve been all over the place, especially having the Aerospace undergrad. I graduated kind of soon after the Challenger accident, so it took me a few months to find a professional job after graduating from Michigan. So I’ve substitute taught during the day and as a doorman at a night club. My first professional job was Mission Control at NASA – Goddard Space Flight Center, then I worked on the Star Wars program. I moved back to Michigan and got a job designing and testing antilock brakes at the GM Proving Grounds.”

    He also explains why Clint Bowyer would be someone who he wants to be friends with and his thoughts on who the 2019 Cup Series Champion will be at the end of the season.

    “Clint Bowyer!,” Studwell excitedly answered. “First and final answer – hands down. He just seems (and this from the outside looking in) to be a quality, down to earth guy but also is a helluva driver. Plus he just seems like he’d be fun to hang out with but would likely drink me under the table.”

    As for predicting the 2019 Cup Series champion, he said, “Denny Hamlin will be champion at the end of the 2019 season.”

    Finally, Studwell gave advice for future meteorology students who may want to pursue this career.

    “First and foremost, learn how to program,” he stressed. “While we will still need human forecasters, there is a need for people who can program and also understand/appreciate the weather, so it’s a good combo.”

    You can follow Studwell on Twitter, visit his website RACEWeather.net and catch him on the Lapped Traffic Podcast every Tuesday night.  

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Richmond

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Richmond

    Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

    1. Kyle Busch: Busch led 101 laps at Richmond and posted an eighth-place finish, his ninth top 10 of the season.

    “It’s good to see Martin Truex Jr. get the win,” Busch said. “That’s three of four Joe Gibbs Racing drivers with at least one win this season. Now, if Erik Jones could get a win, it would further extend JGR dominance. All our rival teams know they need to keep up with the Joneses, but let’s face it, the Jones needs to keep up with the Busch’s, Hamlin’s, and Truex’s.”

    2. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin failed pre-race inspection twice and was relegated to the rear of the field at the start. Despite that, he finished fifth, his sixth top five of the season.

    “I was one of eight drivers whose cars failed inspection,” Hamlin said. “For NASCAR viewers who decry the lack of passing, it doesn’t get any better in qualifying either.”

    3. Joey Logano: Logano stalked Martin Truex Jr. over the closing laps at Richmond, but didn’t have enough for the pass and settled for second.

    “It didn’t help that my Penske teammate Brad Keselowski held me up earlier,” Logano said. “It was a case of ‘(Get out of) my way or the highway.’”

    4. Martin Truex Jr.: Truex held off Clint Bowyer and Joey Logano down the stretch to win at Richmond, capturing his first short track win.

    “That’s six wins for Joe Gibbs Racing already this year,” Truex said. “And six for Toyotas. The race was called the ‘Toyota Owners 400,’ and Joe Gibbs can verify that it’s good to own Toyotas.”

    5. Kevin Harvick: Harvick finished fourth in the Toyota Owners 400, joining Stewart-Haas Racing teammate and third place finisher Clint Bowyer in the top five.

    “SHR has yet to visit Victory Lane,” Harvick said. “And we’re spoiling for a win. Which is surprising, because I’ve always heard that ‘to the victor go the spoils.’ As to the reasons we haven’t been able to win, well, I’m lost.”

    6. Brad Keselowski: Keselowski finished seventh at Richmond and is now fifth in the Monster Energy Cup points standings, 87 out of first.

    “We have a week off for the Easter holiday,” Keselowski said. “And it’s the best time of year for drivers to thank the man upstairs. For me, that would be my spotter, Coleman Pressley.”

    7. Kurt Busch: Busch finished 11th in the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond.

    “On Twitter, NASCAR described the Richmond race as a ‘classic,’” Busch said. “It was most certainly not. Sure, the race will ‘go down in history.’ And when I say ‘down,’ I mean way down on the list of memorable races.”

    8. Chase Elliott: Elliott started at the rear of the field after failing pre-race inspection, but battled back to post a solid 15th at Richmond.

    “My teammate Jimmie Johnson raced in the Boston Marathon on Monday,” Elliott said. “Jimmie may never win that elusive eighth Cup championship, but he accomplished a feat that I’m sure no other driver has—he lost to a Kenyan.”

    9. Clint Bowyer: Bowyer chased race leader Martin Truex Jr. over the final 40 laps at Richmond, but wasn’t able to make the pass. Bowyer settled for third, his fourth consecutive top-10 finish.

    “I was hoping to force Martin into an unintentional mistake at Richmond,” Bowyer said, “or better yet, an intentional mistake, like a spin. After all, he doesowe me.”

    10. Ryan Blaney: Blaney struggled with handling issues at Richmond and settled for a 25th-place finish.

    “I didn’t even feel like I was driving the car,” Blaney said. “I felt like it was driving me. And it drove me places I care not to go, like ‘crazy,’ ‘insane,’ and ‘up a wall.’”

  • Team Penske Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Richmond

    Team Penske Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Richmond

    Track:                Richmond Raceway
    Race:                 Toyota Owners 400
    Date:                 April 13, 2019
    ____________________________________
    No. 2 Alliance Truck Parts Ford Mustang – Brad Keselowski
    Start: 8th
    Stage 1: 6th
    Stage 2: 4th
    Finish: 7th
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 400/400
    Laps Led: 40
    Driver Point Standings (behind first): 5th (-87)
    Notes:
    Brad Keselowski bounced back from two straight disappointing races with a seventh-place finish in the Toyota Owners 400 Saturday night at Richmond Raceway. Keselowski grabbed his fifth top-10 this season and his 10th in 20 starts at Richmond. The driver of the Alliance Truck Parts Ford remains fifth in the MENCS driver standings, 87 points behind the leader.
    Keselowski started eighth in the 400-lap race and battled a loose-handling Mustang throughout Stage 1. The team steadily improved the balance during the opening segment with Keselowski scoring a sixth-place finish when the stage concluded on lap 100. He pitted during the stage caution for four tires and adjustments and restarted sixth on lap 111.
    Keselowski ran in fourth position throughout much of Stage 2. He pitted during the third caution on lap 131 for four tires and a track bar adjustment to help tighten up his loose condition. He restarted eighth on lap 135 but climbed back to fourth-place just two laps later. He remained in fourth over the next 63 laps until Stage 2 concluded on lap 200. Keselowski told crew chief Paul Wolfe that he needed a more forward drive off the corners and pitted for four tires on lap 205. The Alliance Truck Parts pit crew held serve during the round of stops and Keselowski restarted fourth on lap 211.
    The restart was beneficial to Keselowski. He picked off third position on lap 212 and held the position until the fifth caution set up a round of stops on lap 246. The No. 2 crew once again did a solid job, giving Keselowski four tires, a wedge adjustment and returning him to the track in third position for the restart on lap 252.
    Once again Keselowski used a good restart to his advantage. He grabbed second position shortly after the race went green and took the lead from Martin Truex Jr. on lap 266. But as the laps ticked away, the No. 2 Ford Mustang grew tighter and tighter. On lap 294, Truex grabbed the lead from Keselowski and on lap 312 Clint Bowyer slipped by, dropped him to third. As a cycle of green flag stops began, Keselowski moved back into the lead on lap 319 before he pitted on lap 322, handing the lead back to Truex.
    Neither the final pit sequence nor the long green flag run to end the race worked to the advantage of Keselowski and the Alliance Truck Parts team. He returned to the track ninth when the cycled was completed. He was able to work his way back to up to sixth by lap 336 but couldn’t get closer to the front. The No. 2 Mustang was lighting fast on the short run but unfortunately, the race ended with a 148 lap green flag run. On lap 392, Austin Dillon passed Keselowski for sixth, but he held off Kyle Busch in the closing laps to claim a seventh-place finish.
    Quote: “We had a lot of short run speed in our Alliance Truck Parts Ford but unfortunately it came down to long runs at the end. Overall, it wasn’t a bad day. We needed the race to come to us with short runs at the end and it didn’t. I like short tracks and I think they’re a lot of fun. It is hard to pass, but that’s racing and that is how it’s going to be.”
    ________________________________________________
    No. 12 MoneyLion Ford Mustang – Ryan Blaney
    Start: 22nd
    Stage 1: 22nd
    Stage 2: 24th
    Finish: 25th
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 398/400
    Laps Led: 0
    Driver Point Standings (behind first): 9th (-123)
    Notes:
    ·        Richmond Raceway proved to be a headache for Ryan Blaney and the No. 12 MoneyLion Ford Mustang team. An ill-handling No. 12 Mustang plus a pit road penalty late in the race led to a 25th-place finish for Blaney on a frustrating Saturday night.
    ·        Blaney started 22nd in the 400-lap race at the .75 mile Virginia short track. He reported the balance on his Ford Mustang was loose on entry, tight center and loose off the corners. The first round of pit service came during a competition caution on lap 42. Crew chief Jeremy Bullins made the call for four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment. Following the restart in lap 46, Blaney soon reported to his team the changes actually made his car drive worse. Despite the challenges, Blaney remained on the lead lap and was credited with a 22nd-place when Stage 1 concluded on lap 100.
    ·        In Stage 2, Bullins and Blaney opted to reverse course on the previous adjustments. The driver of the MoneyLion Ford reported the changes didn’t allow him to be as aggressive on throttle as his other competitors. A stop under caution on lap 131 pit stop allowed the MoneyLion team to change four tires plus make wedge and air pressure adjustments but those changes didn’t make a huge difference. To make matters worse, Blaney made contact with the wall in the closing laps of Stage 2, leaving the young driver 24th in the rundown when the segment concluded on lap 200. But as the first car one lap down, Blaney received the free pass back onto the lead lap during the stage caution.
    ·        Blaney continued to wrestle an ill-handling race car during the final segment of the race. A pit stop during the fifth and final caution on lap 246 saw the crew put a rubber in the left rear spring. His final stop came under green on lap 311, but he was penalized for a commitment line violation. Blaney was officially credited with a 25th-place finish in the final rundown and now sits ninth in the Cup Series standings.
    Quote: “Richmond continues to be a challenge. We just seem to be fighting something every time we race here. I’m looking forward to getting to Talladega in two weeks. Maybe we can figuring this place out in the fall.”
    ___________________________________________
    No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang – Joey Logano
    Start:  3rd
    Stage 1: 2nd
    Stage 2: 1st – (Fourth Stage Win of 2019)
    Finish: 2nd
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 400/400
    Laps Led: 52
    Point Standings (behind first): 2nd (-20)
    Notes:
    ·        Joey Logano started third in Saturday’s Toyota Owners 400 in the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang. Early in the first run, Logano reported the Shell-Pennzoil Mustang was tight in the corners and free on exit. During the competition caution at lap 40, crew chief Todd Gordon made an air pressure adjustment to give Logano the exit and entry security he needed to move forward.
    ·        After the stop, Logano settled into the second position, logging laps as towards the completion of Stage 1. On lap 77, Logano reported he had more entry security than the previous run, and proved it by consistently running the fastest laps on the track while chasing race leader Kyle Busch. But as the opening segment of the race drew to a close, Logano reported he was too tight in traffic, which ultimately forced the driver of the Shell-Pennzoil Ford to settle for second-place when Stage 1 concluded on lap 100.
    ·        Logano continued to battle a tight Ford Mustang during the opening laps of the second stage. The third caution on lap 129 set up a round of pit stops under yellow. The No. 22 team made a four-tire stop and an air pressure adjustment in an effort to enable Logano to turn better in the center of the corners.
    ·        Logano passed Martin Truex Jr. for the lead on lap 195 and held on over the next five laps to claim his fourth stage win of the 2019 season. On the stage ending pit stop, the team elected to make a small air pressure adjustment when they pitted during the stage caution on lap 205.  Excellent pit work kept Logano in the lead continued to lead throughout the opening laps of the third stage until the fifth and final caution slowed the pace on lap 244. All the leaders pitted on lap 246 with Logano restarting second when the race went green on lap 252.
    ·        Unfortunately, the tight handling condition persisted for Logano. The end result was the driver of the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford dropping back to the fourth position – the first time he ran lower than third. A green flag pit stop on lap 318 allowed the team to change four tires and make adjustments in an effort to improve the handling characteristics of the No. 22 Mustang.
    ·        The final 82 laps were run under green, which worked to Logano’s advantage. His long-run speed rallied him from outside the top-five into a nail-biting battle with Truex for the victory. Logano caught Truex on the final lap of the race but simply didn’t have enough time to mount a serious challenge to his rival.
    ·        Logano’s stellar night moved him into the second position in the MENCS driver standings, 20 points behind the leader.
    Quote: “We had a Ford Mustang that was capable of winning for the third week straight and we didn’t win and that’s frustrating. We need to clean up some mistakes on our end. We lost the lead there on a pit stop and we’ve got to get faster there. We lost control of the race at that point and fell back to third but had a decent green-flag cycle where we reeled in the 19 (Truex) and the 14 (Clint Bowyer). I was watching them race and thought that if I was just patient and saved my tires, I might have a chance. I saw them coming off the corner sideways every time. I was just a couple laps late getting there. I was able to get to Truex but it just wasn’t enough. I just ran out of time. I needed a few more laps.”
  • Stenhouse Jr. Drives Fifth Third Ford to a 16th-Place Finish at Richmond

    Stenhouse Jr. Drives Fifth Third Ford to a 16th-Place Finish at Richmond

    RICHMOND, Va. (April 13, 2019) –With the race going green for a majority of Saturday night’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) race at Richmond Raceway, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. overcame handling issues to earn a 16th-place finish in his Fifth Third Bank Ford.

    “We tried all kinds of adjustments but unfortunately they didn’t help my Fifth Third Ford,” Stenhouse said. “Our teammate had a strong run so we will look at his notes and see what we can improve on. We have an off weekend coming up so we can regroup and get ready for Talladega.”

    With the new five-minute qualifying sessions, Stenhouse was forced to settle with a 16th place qualifying position on Friday evening. Due to the impound rules and five cars failing pre-race inspection, the Olive Branch, Mississippi, native rolled off in the 11th position for the 400-lap race.

    Stenhouse quickly maneuvered his Ford inside the top-10 but fell back to 11th due to a tight handling condition right before the competition yellow was displayed on lap 40 for rain overnight. After a lengthy pit-stop due to multiple changes, the Roush Fenway Racing driver restarted in the 14th position. As the remainder of stage one went green, Stenhouse took the first green checkered in 16th due to an ill-handling machine.

    When the caution flag waved on lap 127, crew chief Brian Pattie chose to pit to make a lengthy pit-stop for multiple adjustments dropping Stenhouse to restart 22nd for the remainder of stage two. With track position and clean air being so important, the two-time Xfinity champion struggled getting through traffic taking the second green checkered flag in the 22nd position.

    With less than a 100 laps remaining, the No. 17 team had a speedy pit-stop gaining Stenhouse three positions on pit-road. With the remainder of the race staying green, Stenhouse was able to maintain his position taking the checkered flag in the 16th position.

    Stenhouse and the No. 17 team have a weekend off before returning to action at Talladega Superspeedway on April 28th. Race coverage starts at 2:00 pm EST on FOX.

  • Newman Finishes Ninth at Richmond

    Newman Finishes Ninth at Richmond

    RICHMOND, Va. (April 13, 2019) — For the second-straight week, Ryan Newman and the No. 6 team put together a solid result, finishing ninth under the lights Saturday night at Richmond Raceway in the Roush Performance Ford Mustang.

    “Our Roush Performance Ford Mustang was good,” Newman said. “We needed some track position to start and I think we could have done something with it. We had good lap times at points but just battled track position. We got blocked in on the first pit stop and set us back even farther than when we started. I am proud of the guys. They did a good job in the pits and we had a good car.”

    Newman began the weekend qualifying 31st in Friday’s qualifying session, but rolled off the grid 24th after a host of cars failed pre-race technical inspection with the impound rules in effect. With a competition caution at lap 40, the opening two stages ran 100 laps each with the final stage going 200 laps.

    The 2003 Richmond race winner ran 21st at the competition yellow, reporting he was tight in the center of the turns and loose off. After getting blocked in leaving pit road in his first stop under the yellow, Newman restarted 26th at lap 46. He went on to end the stage in 23rd, still reporting he needed to be more free in the center.

    After service on his No. 6 machine under the stage break, he would roll off 19th, gaining four spots in the pits, one of many stops on the night the pit crew earned him an advantage with track position.

    The yellow flag waved again at lap 127 when he ran 18th, and this time the crew put him plus two off pit road, lining back up 16th for the restart with 65 to go in the stage. He went on to conclude stage two in 17th, but again gained track position off pit road after another solid stop, which put him 13th to begin the final stage.

    The next yellow waved at lap 242, when Newman reported the car was the best it’d been all night. He would pit under the break for four tires and fuel, and lined back up 11th at lap 252. From there the race went green, meaning one final stop for the field.

    That stop for Newman came at lap 316 when he brought his No. 6 Ford Mustang down pit road for four tires and fuel. Once stops had cycled the 2008 Daytona 500 Champion was sixth, before he went on to maintain the top-10 position over the final 70 laps to record his second-straight ninth-place result.

    Following the first off weekend of the season next weekend for Easter, Newman and the No. 6 team return to action at Talladega Superspeedway in two weeks. Race coverage for Sunday’s Geico 500 begins at 2 p.m. ET on FOX. Coverage can also be heard on MRN and SiriusXM Channel 90.

  • RCR Post Race Report – Richmond 400

    RCR Post Race Report – Richmond 400

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 AAA Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 Team Show Speed at Richmond Raceway En Route to 6th-Place Finish

    Finish: 6th
    Start: 6th
    Points: 14th

    “We had a meeting on Monday and talked about what we needed to do here at Richmond Raceway as a team and then we came here and we did it, so I am really proud of everyone on this Richard Childress Racing team. We had a really fast AAA Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 tonight, especially during the last run. I think we actually had a little something for at least the top three spots. We had a little bit of a mess-up on our last pit stop and lost some track position, but we passed some good cars there at the end, including Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski. I’m really proud of the AAA team. I just wish we could have been a little further forward to see what we had. I saved a lot of my stuff for the end and was ready for that last run. But, we didn’t have enough. I’m definitely excited about the direction our team is going. It’s always good to go into the off weekend with a solid, top-10 finish.” -Austin Dillon

    Daniel Hemric and Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet Team Use Richmond Raceway Top-20 Finish as Momentum Builder

    Finish: 19th
    Start: 17th
    Points: 28th

    “Coming out of Richmond with a top-20 finish? We’ll take it. This No. 8 team is focused on putting one foot in front of the other. It’s great to have a group of guys that haven’t given up on me. We didn’t finish exactly where we wanted, but we definitely out-kicked our coverage from the positions we’ve put ourselves in over the last few weeks. We’ll take it and hopefully it’s a building moment for everyone on this No. 8 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet team. I still love racing at Richmond and I feel like I know what I need  when we come here in the Fall to contend and run where our teammate Austin Dillon was tonight. Those guys had good speed all weekend, so hopefully we can trend a little bit in that direction and build on it.” -Daniel Hemric
  • Toyota MENCS Richmond Raceway Recap 4.13.19

    Toyota MENCS Richmond Raceway Recap 4.13.19

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Richmond Raceway
    Race 9 of 36 – 300 miles, 400 laps
    April 13, 2019

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    2nd, Joey Logano*
    3rd, Clint Bowyer*
    4th, Kevin Harvick*
    5th, DENNY HAMLIN
    8th, KYLE BUSCH
    14th, ERIK JONES
    24th, MATT DIBENEDETTO
    33rd, JOEY GASE
    *non-Toyota driver

    Camry driver Martin Truex Jr. was victorious in Saturday night’s
    Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway, winning his first Monster
    Energy NASCAR Cup Series event in 2019.

    Toyota drivers have won three-consecutive MENCS events including
    victories at Texas Motor Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway and Richmond
    Raceway.

    Truex led a race-high 186 laps (of 400) on the way to his 20th
    career-series win and 18th victory in a Toyota Camry.

    Denny Hamlin (fifth), who tonight made his 400th MENCS start in a
    Toyota, and Kyle Busch (eighth) also finished in the top 10 at
    Richmond.

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Finishing Position: 1st

    How important was the win tonight?

    “I’m really excited to win here at Richmond. I’ve always really
    enjoyed this track. I’ve always loved coming here. The short track win
    – everybody kept asking me when it was going to happen. Tonight we
    didn’t have the best car, but we’ve lost here with the best car a
    bunch of times. We just fought, we battled. Thanks to Auto Owners – a
    lot of Auto Owners people here. Toyota Owners 400 – to win here in a
    Toyota was huge. I’ve got my buddy up there. I just won him 10 grand.
    We’re just really excited. Everybody at JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) is
    doing a great job and with Toyota. Just a blessing to drive these race
    cars and have an awesome team. We’ve been chipping away at it and
    hopefully we can get better from here on out.”

    How concerned were you about Joey Logano catching you at the end?

    “I was struggling the last 40 laps. I had no front turn. I was just
    real, real tight in that last run. You just had to hold them off.
    Being out front was important tonight. Thanks to the pit crew, they
    kept us out there. They had a tough year and a tough week last week.
    We beat up on them pretty good all week after Bristol and they had the
    best stop of the year tonight. Just really proud of everyone. Really,
    really happy to get our first win with (Joe) Gibbs and definitely our
    first short track win is pretty awesome too.”

    Explain to everyone how disciplined you have to be with drivers
    closing in on you in the closing laps.

    “It’s really tough, Jeff (Gordon). I don’t know how you explain it
    other than it’s like driving in the snow and trying to hit a line of
    six to eight inches in the center of the corner. It’s just – it’s lack
    of grip. The car wasn’t doing anything I wanted to do that last run.
    We got really, really tight. Being out front was really the key and
    trying to do all I could to not screw up and hold those guys off. It
    was definitely really, really difficult.”

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

    Finishing Position: 5th

    Talk about your race tonight.

    “We really closed on the leaders there at the end. We were fast,
    really fast the last 20 laps. We just didn’t have enough time. We
    battled from the back and really couldn’t gain a whole lot on
    restarts, but just really grinded our way two or three positions each
    run and found our way up in the top five there at the end. I could at
    least see the leaders. Certainly a great day for our FedEx Camry. We
    wanted to win but we just didn’t have the winning car. We would have
    liked to have tuned it during happy hour, we just didn’t have enough
    time.”

    Is there anything you could have done differently during tonight’s race?

    “Not really. I think we maximized what we had out of our car. We just
    didn’t quite have the car to battle with those guys until late in the
    day and by then they had just built too big of a lead.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Post Race Quotes)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Post Race Quotes)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, April 13, 2019
    EVENT: Toyota Owners 400 Post Race

    FORD FINISHING RESULTS
    2nd – Joey Logano
    3rd – Clint Bowyer
    4th – Kevin Harvick
    7th – Brad Keselowski
    9th – Ryan Newman
    10th – Paul Menard
    16th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    18th – Daniel Suarez
    23rd – Aric Almirola
    25th – Ryan Blaney
    28th – David Ragan
    29th – Matt Tifft
    31st – Jeb Burton
    36th – Michael McDowell

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang (Finished 2nd)

    “We had a car that was capable of winning for the third week straight and we didn’t win. That part is frustrating. We need to clean up some mistakes on our end. We lost the lead there on a pit stop. We gotta get faster there. That is when we lost control of the race at that point and fell back to third and had a decent green-flag cycle that got us up and then we reeled in the 19 and the 14 from pretty far back. I was watching them race and thought that if I was just patient and saved my tires, I saw them coming off the corner sideways every time. They were a little faster than me but I knew they were going to kill their stuff and they did. I got there, I was just a couple laps late getting there. I was able to get to the 19 but it just wasn’t enough. It is kind of a double edge sword. You go to the bottom and you can’t get the drive to clear ‘em and getting to the outside is pretty tough. Just couldn’t get there. Ran out of time. Needed a few more laps.”

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Haas Automation Ford Mustang (Finished 3rd)

    “We still struggle. We struggle on Fridays. We don’t unload good. We are definitely getting beat speed wise. Long run wise we slowly but surely run them down. It is frustrating. You get out there and I ran him down. I was faster on a long run than him but by the time you get to him your stuff is pretty wore out and with this aero package you are so aero dependant behind those cars that you get terrible tight. When I got behind him I knew that wasn’t the place to be so I changed that. I lost. It sucks. Then the 22 got to my outside. I knew better than to let him out there but I felt like when I was running high that I was probably losing ground to him. In hopes of still trying to win the race I needed to stay on the bottom and hope that he slipped up in traffic or something. Next thing you know I lost my nose down there and the 22 got to the outside. If I didn’t give up that spot the 4 was gonna get me too. You had to give up one to save one.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Mobil 1 Ford Mustang (Finished 4th)

    “I like nights like this when we can take a car that is a 7th to 9th place car and adjust on it and make it so it is capable of contending at the end. We ran those guys down but we just ran out of time. I am proud of everyone on our Mobil 1 Ford for hanging in there and fighting and we had another good night on pit road. It was a solid night.”

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes

    Page 2

    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)

    Saturday, April 13, 2019

    EVENT: Toyota Owners 400 Post Race

    PAUL MENARD, No. 21 Menards/Maytag Ford Mustang (Finished 10th)

    “It was kind of an uneventful night really, for Richmond. We started ninth and just kind of stayed in the back half of the top-10 all night long. The guys really stepped up their game on pit road and we gained some spots or we maintained and that is what you need when you start running up front. It was a really solid day for us.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Alliance Truck Parts Ford Mustang (Finished 7th)

    “We had a lot of short run speed and unfortunately it came down to long runs at the end. Overall, it wasn’t a bad day. It was good. We needed the race to come to us with short runs at the end and it didn’t. I like short tracks, I think they are a lot of fun. It is hard to pass, but that is racing, that is how it is going to be. I can’t see the whole picture, I am only in the car. I know we cycled back, but I couldn’t tell you why.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Roush Performance Ford Mustang (Finished 9th)

    “Our Roush Performance Ford Mustang was good. We needed some track position to start and I think we could have done something with it. We had good lap times at points but just battled track positioning. We got blocked in on the first pit stop and set us back even farther than when we started. I am proud of the guys. They did a good job in the pits and we had a good car.”

  • CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: Race Notes & Quotes

    CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: Race Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    RICHMOND RACEWAY
    TOYOTA OWNERS 400
    TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    APRIL 13, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL FINISHING RESULTS:
    POS.   DRIVER
    3rd     AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 AAA CAMARO ZL1
    11th    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 CLOBAL POKER CAMARO ZL1
    12th    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1
    13th    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1
    15th    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL FINISHING RESULTS:
    POS.  DRIVER
    1st      Martin Truex Jr. (Toyota)
    2nd       Joey Logano (Ford)
    3rd       Clint Bowyer (Ford)
    4th       Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    5th      Denny Hamlin (Toyota)

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season takes a week off and resumes at Talladega Superpeedway with the GEICO 500 on Sunday, April 28 at 2 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 AAA COATINGS CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 6th
    “We had a really fast car. I think we actually had a little something for at least the top three spots. We had a little bit of a mess-up on our last pit stop and lost some track position. But we passed some good cars there at the end with Kyle (Busch) and (Brad) Keselowski. We had a really fast car. I’m really proud of these guys, the AAA team. I just wish we could have been a little further forward to see what I had. I saved a lot of my stuff for the end and was ready for that last run. But, we didn’t have enough.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 MCDONALD’S CAMARO ZL1 – Sidelined when flat left rear tire caused him to hit the wall on Lap 125. Finished 37th
    “It’s been a pretty crappy start to the year. We’ve had decent speed. We didn’t have great speed tonight, but on the weeks that we have speed, we still run into issues. I hate the start to the season I’ve had. On that restart, I got stuck in the middle. I probably squeezed whoever was underneath me and caused some tire damage and we had to pit to fix that. But they didn’t do a good job of pulling the fenders out and then I got a flat and was back in the wall. But, hopefully this break is a good time and we can re-group. I hate it for McDonald’s and Chevrolet and everybody on our team”.

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with 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.

  • Truex finally gets his short track win at Richmond

    Truex finally gets his short track win at Richmond

    After a three way battle in the closing laps, Martin Truex Jr. was able to out run Joey Logano and Clint Bowyer to the checkered flag in the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway.

    “You just had to hold ’em off,” Truex told FOX on the front stretch regarding the battle between Logano, Bowyer and himself. “Tonight we didn’t have the best car, but we’ve lost some here with the best car. We’ve kept chipping away at it and hopefully we get better from here on out.”

    Truex claimed the lead from Brad Keselowski with just under 80 laps to go, and led to the finish with a race-high of 186 laps. Truex also improved his stage positions throughout the night, third in Stage 1 and second in Stage 2. Kyle Busch led 101 laps, but a speeding penalty paired with the caution for Kyle Larson’s crash knocked Busch off cycle. He wasn’t able to get back to the front, but continues his top 10 streak for the 2019 season among the opening nine races.

    Logano won Stage 2 after passing Truex with a handful of laps remaining, but was not able to repeat at the end of the race.

    “I figured something out there toward the end with about 10 laps to go to make up some speed,” Logano said. “Fun race, but, gosh, two weeks in a row I felt like we had a car that could win the race, and we haven’t won.”

    At this point last year, Clint Bowyer already had a short track victory at Martinsville. He was looking to break the Team Penske/Joe Gibbs Racing duo by putting a Stewart-Haas Racing car in victory lane. He came up a couple of spots short, but not without a few side by side battles with Truex with around 20 laps to go.

    “It’s frustrating,” said Bowyer. “I was faster on a long run than him, but by the time you get to (Truex), your stuff is pretty wore out. And with this aero package, you are so aero dependent behind those cars that you get terrible tight.”

    Pole sitter Kevin Harvick and Denny Hamlin finished in the top five. Austin Dillon was the first and only Chevrolet driver in the top 10, finishing in sixth. Brad Keselowski, Stage 1 winner Kyle Busch, Ryan Newman and Paul Menard rounded out the top 10.

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series takes Easter weekend off. They will race again at Talladega Superspeedway in the Geico 500 on April 28.