Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Michael McDowell and the No. 34 Love’s RV Stop Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Michael McDowell and the No. 34 Love’s RV Stop Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Kansas Speedway Competition Notes

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (April 30, 2024) – Michael McDowell and the No. 34 Love’s RV Stop Ford Mustang Dark Horse team travel west to the Kansas Speedway.

    McDowell will be making his 26th Cup Series start at the 1.5-mile oval, with the iconic Love’s RV Stop paint scheme back on the car.

    The Cup Series will have practice and qualifying on Saturday, May 4th at 5:00 p.m. ET. The 400-mile event will take place Sunday, May 5th at 3:00 p.m. ET and will be televised live on FS1. Fans can also listen in on the action live from Sirius XM and the Motor Racing Network.

    No. 34 Love’s RV Stop Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

    DRIVER MICHAEL MCDOWELL:

    “We’ve been pretty good at Kansas where we’ve been close to a top-10 finish the past few races. These are challenging tracks, but we’ll work hard to be ready. Every race is important going forward and we just need to bring our best car and execute with no mistakes.”

    CREW CHIEF TRAVIS PETERSON:

    “We’ve had a lot of things go wrong lately, but the cars have had speed. If we can continue to show up with fast cars each week, sooner or later all the issues and execution errors will go away and we will get back to finishing where we are capable of. Last race at Kansas we qualified really well, and we need to repeat that again to keep good track position. We just need to put together a complete race and score a good result to get the momentum back on track.”

    ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

    Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. The team is the 2021 Daytona 500 and 2022 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series team from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR – 2024 Kansas 1 Advance

    Ford Performance NASCAR – 2024 Kansas 1 Advance

    KANSAS 1

    Saturday, May 4 — NASCAR Craftsman Series, 8 p.m. ET (FS1)
    Sunday, May 5 — NASCAR Cup Series, 3 p.m. ET (FS1)

    The month of May kicks off with the first of two trips this year to Kansas Speedway, where the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns to action on Saturday night. That will be followed on Sunday afternoon by the NASCAR Cup Series. Ford has 15 combined wins at the 1.5-mile facility.

    LOGANO GOING FOR FOURTH

    KANSAS VICTORY

    Joey Logano will be looking for his fourth career win at Kansas Speedway this weekend, which would be a personal best. Logano currently has three career wins at five series tracks, including Kansas, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Michigan International Speedway, Phoenix Raceway and Talladega Superspeedway. He won for the first time at Kansas in 2014, and then did it again one year later in a well-documented battle with Matt Kenseth that resulted in contact as the two entered turn one with five laps to go. That controversial finish marked Logano’s second straight playoff win and led to a sweep of the round as he took the checkered flag the following week at Talladega. His last Kansas win came in 2020 when he led the final 45 laps to beat Kevin Harvick across the finish line and clinch a spot in the Championship 4.

    ONE OF BRAD’S BEST

    Brad Keselowski comes into this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race looking for his first win of the season, but Kansas Speedway could provide the proper medicine for a trip to Victory Lane. That’s because Kansas ranks as his fifth-best venue when it comes to average finish on tracks that currently make up the 2023 circuit. In 28 career starts at Kansas Speedway, Keselowski has a pair of wins, seven top-5 and 14 top-10 efforts for an average finishing position of 12.3 (same as Michigan). Only Loudon (9.8), Pocono (10.9), Las Vegas (11.6) and Richmond (12.0) are better.

    JOEY LOGANO: “I believe Kansas has become the best racetrack for the Next Gen car. You look at how wide the racetrack is and the racing that is there, the groove has moved around as it has weathered over the years since it’s been repaved. It’s been a really good race track for these cars, so I look forward to going there for sure. It’s definitely one of those tracks where it takes everything. Downforce is king. Horsepower is a big deal. You’re on the gas a lot. You’ve got to have a car that’s versatile enough to run the bottom on restarts and also be versatile enough on the long run to where you can move up or down to make passes, so the car that can do a lot of different things pretty good is usually the one that is the strongest.”

    CHASE BRISCOE: “I feel really good about Kansas and just where our mile-and-a-half program has been. Texas was really good for us and at Vegas we were pretty good, too, so I feel like if we can take some of those things and apply it to Kansas, we’ll be in a pretty good spot. Honestly, I just need to survive these next two weeks and see where we stand from a points standpoint.”

    NOAH GRAGSON: “I feel like Kansas is pretty good. Those tracks where they’re a mile-and–a-half and you have progressive banking you have options. You can go to the bottom. You can go to the middle. You can go to the top. It seems like we do well up against the outside wall, but it gives you options to move around, so I think those kind of mile-and-a-halves are really good for the Next Gen car. I noticed at Vegas and Texas that we had good speed in our Mustangs, so that’s been a lot of fun. That’s more of our bread-and-butter this year, so I’m super excited for the next handful of weeks.”

    CHRIS BUESCHER: “Kansas is one of those that even after the repave on the Xfinity side, I was there very shortly after that, was really good at that point and then as its aged and moved around and gotten a lot of character I still love it. I still think it’s a really good racetrack. It’s got a lot of different options. You can run top to bottom. It’s got character and I think that’s always a big hitter for me is when we go places that they’re not too smooth or they’re not too clean-cut, I like that. I think that just creates options. I think about the old Atlanta. That was my absolute favorite mile-and-a-half, and you look at Kansas now that Atlanta has been repaved and it’s starting to slowly take that spot.”

    JOSH BERRY: “I think Kansas just races really well with the Next Gen. I think just having the different lane options – top, middle, bottom, against the fence, the restarts are crazy – I think it just puts on a really good race there and Kansas is unique. It’s kind of to the point where it’s starting to age and wear the tires a little bit, so there’s that side of things. You’ve got to be conscious of how you’re pushing the tires and sliding the tires, which is more fun as a driver just to know you have to pay a little bit more attention to that, so I just think all of those things together it just puts on a good show.”

    ON THE MARK

    Ford went to Victory Lane for the first time at Kansas Speedway on Oct. 9, 2005 when Mark Martin took the checkered flag in what was a Roush Fenway Racing runaway with teammates Greg Biffle and Carl Edwards finishing second and third, respectively. Martin led a race-high 139 laps, including 81 of the final 83 circuits, to win by one-half second. It marked the second time in as many months that RFR swept the top three spots, a feat it did two more times during that season. In addition, the victory ended up being Martin’s last with Ford. His 35 series wins with the manufacturer ranks third all-time behind leader Ned Jarrett (43) and second-place Bill Elliott (40).

    CALLED DUE TO DARKNESS

    A couple of rain delays and impending darkness couldn’t keep Greg Biffle from winning a shortened Lifelock 400 on Sept. 30, 2007. The race was delayed for more than three hours and NASCAR decided to shorten the distance from 267 laps to 210 laps when it became evident there wouldn’t be enough daylight to finish. Biffle passed Kevin Harvick on lap 274, but when Juan Pablo Montoya blew a tire to bring out the caution with four laps to go it appeared he would have to survive a green-white-checker finish in order to win. NASCAR, however, decided to end the race under caution due to darkness. The win was Biffle’s first of the season and snapped a 32-race winless drought.

    CRAFTON A TOP 10 FIXTURE

    Matt Crafton enters this weekend’s race at Kansas Speedway eighth in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series standings, but being in the top 10 isn’t anything new to the veteran Ford driver. Crafton is currently on a streak that has seen him in the top 10 for 52 consecutive weeks and 73 of the last 74 dating back to the 2021 season-opener at Daytona International Speedway. In 27 career starts at Kansas Speedway, Crafton has a career-best three wins, including one with Ford in 2020, and 14 top-10 finishes.

    FORD NASCAR CUP SERIES WINNERS

    AT KANSAS

    2005 – Mark Martin

    2007 – Greg Biffle

    2010 – Greg Biffle

    2012 – Matt Kenseth (2)

    2014 – Joey Logano (2)

    2015 – Joey Logano (2)

    2018 – Kevin Harvick (1)

    2019 – Brad Keselowski (1)

    2020 – Joey Logano (2)

    FORD NASCAR CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES WINNERS AT KANSAS

    2003 – Jon Wood

    2004 – Carl Edwards

    2006 – Terry Cook

    2007 – Erik Darnell

    2020 – Matt Crafton (2)

    2022 – Zane Smith (1)

  • Corey LaJoie, Spire Motorsports Partner with Razzle Dazzle Grapes for Darlington Throwback Weekend

    Corey LaJoie, Spire Motorsports Partner with Razzle Dazzle Grapes for Darlington Throwback Weekend

    Third-Generation Racer to Showcase First NASCAR Regional Touring Series Victory

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (April 30, 2024) – Spire Motorsports and Corey LaJoie have partnered with DLJ Produce, via its Razzle Dazzle brand of grapes, to commemorate LaJoie’s first ARCA Menard’s Series East victory with a special look for the NASCAR Cup Series Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway.

    LaJoie’s No. 7 Razzle Dazzle Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 will showcase a similar paint scheme to the one he raced to his first career NASCAR Regional Touring Series win, coming on June 2, 2012 in the NASCAR Hall of Fame 150 at historic Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, N.C.

    The Concord, N.C., native went on to win four more ARCA Menard’s Series East (formerly K&N Pro Series East) races in 2012 driving his family-owned No. 07 machine.

    “It’s always fun when we can bring a new partner to the track and introduce them to the sport,” said LaJoie. “I really appreciate the team at Razzle Dazzle for being willing to participate in Darlington’s initiative and help us throw it back to my first NASCAR win at Bowman Gray. Our Razzle Dazzle Chevy Camaro looks awesome and we’re going to work our tails off to have a great day on the race track.”

    DLJ Produce, through its Razzle Dazzle brand, has become synonymous with quality and trust in the Fresh Produce industry. With decades of experience, DLJ Produce has consistently delivered the finest produce, nurturing strong partnerships with local and international growers, and upholding uncompromising standards of excellence.

    Razzle Dazzle table grapes are meticulously grown and harvested to ensure a premium taste experience. Each grape is carefully selected for its natural sweetness, offering a burst of flavor in every bite. From classic favorites to unique varieties, Razzle Dazzle brings a spectrum of taste and color to consumers’ plates, elevating every moment with its brilliance.

    “Partnering with Spire Motorsports under our Razzle Dazzle brand is a thrilling extension of our commitment to excellence and community engagement,” said Bill Coombs, President/CEO DLJ Produce. “Just as we strive to deliver the finest produce to our customers, we’re excited to see Corey Lajoie bring the brilliance of Razzle Dazzle to the exhilarating world of the NASCAR Cup Series, enriching experiences for fans nationwide.”

    LaJoie has 12 previous NCS starts at the “Track Too Tough To Tame” dating to 2017 and has logged one top 15 and six top-25 finishes, completing just shy of 92 percent of the laps contested over that span.

    The 32-year-old father of two recorded a team- and venue-best 15th-place finish in the 2021 Southern 500. In the series most recent visit to Darlington Raceway, LaJoie started and finished 22nd.

    The Goodyear 400 from Darlington Raceway will be televised live on FS1 Sunday, May 12, beginning at 3 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (EDT). The 13th of 36 races on the 2024 NCS schedule will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    About DLJ Produce …
    As a responsible corporate citizen, DLJ Produce is deeply committed to giving back to the communities it serves. Through sustainable farming practices, reducing environmental impact, and actively supporting local initiatives, DLJ Produce enriches lives and fosters a stronger connection between consumers and their source of nourishment. DLJ Produce is at the forefront of innovation, constantly seeking new ways to improve quality and streamline operations. By embracing sustainable farming methods and investing in cutting-edge technology, DLJ Produce ensures that every product delivered is a testament to its commitment to sustainability and environmental stewardship.

    DLJ Produce prioritizes its customers at every stage of its operations. From sourcing the finest produce to ensuring timely delivery and providing exceptional service, DLJ Produce is dedicated to meeting the needs and exceeding the expectations of its customers. With a commitment to quality, freshness, and satisfaction, DLJ Produce builds lasting relationships with its customers, empowering them to enjoy the best nature has to offer with confidence and trust.

    About Spire Motorsports …
    Spire Motorsports is a NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race team co-owned by long-time NASCAR industry executives Jeff Dickerson and Thaddeus “T.J.” Puchyr. In 2024, Spire Motorsports will campaign the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1s in the NASCAR Cup Series with drivers Corey LaJoie, Zane Smith and Carson Hocevar, respectively. The team will also field the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Silverados full time in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. An all-star driver lineup will rotate throughout the 2024 season in the No. 7 Chevy. Rajah Caruth will drive the No. 71 entry and Chase Purdy rounds out the team’s fleet of Chevrolets in the No. 77.

    Spire Motorsports earned its inaugural NASCAR Cup Series victory in its first full season of competition when Justin Haley took the checkered flag in the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway on July 7, 2019. Less than three years later, William Byron drove Spire Motorsports’ No. 7 Chevrolet Silverado to its inaugural NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series win on April 7, 2022, at Martinsville Speedway. The team’s most recent win came on April 12, 2024, when Kyle Busch took the took the checkered flag in the SpeedyCash.com 250 at Texas Motor Speedway.

  • Auto-Owners Insurance Racing: Martin Truex Jr. Kansas Advance

    Auto-Owners Insurance Racing: Martin Truex Jr. Kansas Advance

    Martin Truex Jr.
    Kansas Advance
    No. 19 Auto-Owners Insurance Toyota Camry XSE for Joe Gibbs Racing

    Event Overview

    ● Event: AdventHeatlth 400 (Race 12 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, May 5
    ● Location: Kansas Speedway in Kansas City
    ● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
    ● Format: 267 laps, 400 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 85 laps / Final Stage: 102 laps
    ● TV/Radio: FS1 / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● Where We Stand: The New Jersey native heads to Kansas Speedway in Kansas City second in the driver standings with 395 points, 15 behind leader Kyle Larson. Three of the four Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) entries are currently inside the top-10 in the standings heading to the 12th points race of the season, with Denny Hamlin fourth and Ty Gibbs eighth.

    ● Up Front: All four JGR Toyota Camry XSE drivers are among the leaders in total laps led this season. Larson’s 570 laps tops the list for the Cup Series, followed by Hamlin (535), Truex (437) and Gibbs (201) in second, third and fourth, respectively. Bell is 10th on the list with 120 laps led.

    ● Truex has two wins, 10 top-five finishes, 17 top-10s and has led a total of 906 laps in 31 career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Kansas. Truex’s average Kansas finish is 12.9.

    ● Strong in the Heartland: Truex’s two Kansas wins came by way of a season sweep of the spring and fall races there in 2017. The feat kicked off a 13-race stretch on the 1.5-mile oval during which he earned six top-fives and finished inside the top-10 all but once.

    ● While he doesn’t like to play favorites, Truex certainly excels at tracks with worn-out surfaces, where driver skill is key to managing the tires and the racecar over the course of a long race. At four such tracks, Kansas, Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, and Homestead-Miami Speedway, Truex has notched six wins, 23 top-five finishes and 45 top-10s, and has led 2,209 laps. After Kansas this weekend, the Cup Series will race at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway next week.

    ● Looking for 35: Truex’s win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon last July was his most recent Cup Series win, the 34th of his career, tying him with 2004 Cup Series champion Kurt Busch for 25th on the all-time Cup Series win list.

    ● Ahead at this Stage: Truex has accumulated 63 stage wins since the beginning of the stage era in 2017. He is the only driver with 10 or more stage sweeps, with his latest sweep coming at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn last August. Truex scored his second stage win of the season at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway last weekend, leading the field across the line at the end of Stage 1.

    Martin Truex Jr., Driver of the No. 19 Auto-Owners Insurance Toyota Camry XSE

    You have had success at Kansas Speedway over the years, but your most recent visit turned out to be a challenge. Can you talk a little bit about what it takes to have a solid day there?

    “Yeah, for sure. I felt really good about our car there last year, but it didn’t last very long with the tire issue. Kansas (Speedway) is a really fun racetrack. It’s a place where you can move around.The tires wear out and it gets slippery. It’s just a fun place to race and we’re looking forward to it with our Auto-Owners Insurance Camry. At the same time, I think it’s a real measuring stick of your cars and where you’re at. It takes everything to get around there. You have to have horsepower and downforce, a good setup with a lot of tire grip and things like that. It’s a big challenge and usually the guys that have the fastest cars are up front there, so hopefully we’ll be one of those guys because it seems like our Camrys have been really strong this year.”

    You head to Kansas this weekend looking for the first win of the season. What will it take to break through and get that first win of 2024?

    “Building on what we’ve done so far this year, I feel like Kansas is one of those places that has always suited my style. It’s a place you can move around, it gets really slick and there’s a lot of tire falloff. I really enjoy that. As good as our cars have been lately, I feel good about our chances that we’ll go there and have race-winning speed. And then it’s all about execution, which we are working on right now. If we can have a straightforward strategy race and good pit stops, I think we are going to be in the mix at Kansas, for sure.”

    What is racing at Kansas like, and what other track is most similar?

    “I would say Kansas is a lot like Homestead but with a tri-oval. Similar corners and a little bit of progressive banking. The wall has really come into play the last couple of years there since the asphalt has worn out. So, running high is very important there, and also momentum is very important at Kansas. You have a big, wide, front straightaway that gives you the option to make big bold moves on the restarts where it can get pretty wild there. Kansas is definitely high on my list of places I like to race, and we are hoping for a great weekend there with our Auto-Owners Insurance Camry.”

    There’s a lot of variety in the schedule now – you go from short tracks, to concrete, to road courses, and this week to a 1.5-mile oval. How do you take on the challenge of the variety of tracks you go to in the Cup Series?

    “I feel like the schedule nowadays is all over the place with all the variety we have, it’s just that every week is so different and you have to do your homework and study and think back to last year and past races just to remind ourselves. We have really short practices now, so you don’t get a lot of time to get dialed in and get comfortable, and not getting in that rhythm and just getting the car dialed in. We don’t have a lot of time and we need to show up and be ready to go. For the most part, I’ve been doing to these tracks for quite a while, now, and you lean on that past experience a lot.”

    No. 19 Auto-Owners Insurance Team Roster

    Primary Team Members

    Driver: Martin Truex Jr.

    Hometown: Mayetta, New Jersey

    Crew Chief: James Small

    Hometown: Melbourne, Australia

    Car Chief: Chris Jones

    Hometown: Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia

    Race Engineer: Jaik Halpainy

    Hometown: Blockville, New York

    Engineer: Jeff Curtis

    Hometown: Fairfax Station, Virginia

    Spotter: Drew Herring

    Hometown: Benson, North Carolina

    Road Crew Members

    Underneath Mechanic: Ryan Martin

    Hometown: Mechanicsburg, Virgina

    Mechanic: Todd Carmichael

    Hometown: Redding, California

    Interior/Tire Specialist: Tommy DiBlasi

    Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

    Engine Tuner: Beau Morton

    Hometown: Lake Havasu City, Arizona

    Transporter Driver: Kyle Bazzell

    Hometown: Fairbury, Illinois

    Transporter Driver: Eddie DeGroot

    Hometown: Baldwinsville, New York

    Over-The-Wall Crew Members

    Gas Man: Matt Tyrrell

    Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

    Jackman: Caleb Dirks

    Hometown: Riverside, California

    Tire Carrier: CJ Bailey

    Hometown: Outer Banks, North Carolina

    Front Tire Changer: Lee Cunningham

    Hometown: Leaf River, Illinois

    Rear Tire Changer: Mike Laheta

    Hometown: Gibraltar, Michigan

  • RFK Advance | Kansas I

    RFK Advance | Kansas I

    Kansas I Event Info:
    Date: Sunday, May 5
    Time: 3 p.m. ET
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Location: Kansas City, Kansas
    Format: 267 Laps, 400.5 miles, Stages: 80-85-102
    TV: FS1
    Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90)

    Weekend Schedule:
    Saturday: 5:05 p.m. ET, Practice (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
    Saturday: 5:50 p.m. ET, Qualifying (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
    Sunday: 3 p.m. ET, Race (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

    Pace Laps:

    • Kansas hosts its first of two race dates in 2024 as the NASCAR Cup Series embarks on its 12th points race of the season. Kansas marks just the third 1.5-mile race of the season.
    • RFK is coming off a P2 finish in the last 1.5-mile track (Texas – Brad Keselowski), and the No. 6 earned a ninth-place finish in the last trip to Kansas. Chris Buescher has three-straight qualifying efforts of 14th or better at Kansas.
    • Jack Roush has four wins in the Cup Series at Kansas and nine overall, the most recent in 2012.

    6 Team Info:
    Crew Chief: Matt McCall
    Partner: Consumer Cellular

    17 Team Info:
    Crew Chief: Scott Graves
    Partner: Castrol Edge

    Keselowski at Kansas
    Starts: 28
    Wins: 2 (2011, 2019)
    Top-10s: 14
    Poles: 2 (2015, 2021)

    • Keselowski makes his 29th start at Kansas this weekend, a track where he carries a 12.3 average finish. He’s coming off a ninth-place run last fall, his 14th top-10 at the 1.5-mile track. He finished 19th in the 2023 spring race.
    • Keselowski has an average starting position of 11.3 with 17 starts inside the top-10. He most recently qualified 20th last spring and 12th in the fall, and has two career poles (2015, 2021) in Kansas.
    • He also made a combined 10 starts in the Xfinity and Truck Series with one win and five combined top-10s.

    Buescher at Kansas
    Starts: 16
    Wins: —
    Top-10s: 3
    Poles: —

    • Buescher makes his 17th start at Kansas this weekend. He has three top-10s at the 1.5-mile track with a best finish of sixth (2017).
    • He’s coming off a 27th-place finish in the 2023 fall race where he lost a tire with less than 10 laps remaining. He finished 17th in the spring, but qualified top-15 in both races.
    • Dating back to the 2022 fall event, Buescher has qualified 14th or better in all three races, including a career-best 10th in that 2022 fall race. His average starting position stands at 19.6.
    • Buescher made three Xfinity starts at Kansas from 2013-15 with a best finish of sixth (2015).

    RFK Historically at Kansas
    Cup Wins: 4 (Mark Martin, 2005; Greg Biffle, 2007, 2010; Matt Kenseth, 2012)

    • Follow the Yellow Brick Road: Overall, RFK has started 183 races across the three national series, earning nine wins, 41 top-five finishes, 77 top-10 finishes and has an overall average finish of 15th.
    • Winning at Kansas: RFK swept both the NASCAR Xfinity Series and NCS races at Kansas in the fall of 2012 with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Matt Kenseth. Stenhouse became the sixth driver to win at the track for the organization via his Xfinity victory. NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin earned RFK’s first NCS win at Kansas in 2005 and former driver Greg Biffle bested the 1.5-mile track in 2007 and 2010. RFK’s first overall win at Kansas came in 2002 via Jeff Burton in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Three drivers (Jon Wood in 2003, Carl Edwards in 2004 and Erik Darnell in 2007) have won in the NCWTS at Kansas for RFK.
    • Tale of the Tape: RFK has started 114 NCS races at Kansas, recording four victories, 20 top-five finishes, 37 top-10 finishes, an average finish of 16.7 and has led 993 laps. Kenseth earned the most recent victory at Kansas in the fall of 2012.

    RFK Kansas Wins

    2002 Burton NXS
    2003 Wood Truck
    2004 Edwards Truck
    2005 Martin Cup
    2007 Biffle Cup
    2007 Darnell Truck
    2010 Biffle Cup
    2012-2 Kenseth Cup
    2012 Stenhouse NXS

    Last Time Out & Where They Stand
    Dover: Buescher led the RFK charge with a 17th-place result in Dover last weekend. Keselowski spun early on and later suffered a blown tire to finish 30th.

    Points Standings (17: 14th, 6: 16th): Buescher advanced two positions to P14, while Keselowski sits 16th. Just 17 points separate 11th-17th.

  • Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Racing: Chase Briscoe Kansas Advance

    Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Racing: Chase Briscoe Kansas Advance

    CHASE BRISCOE
    Kansas Advance
    No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Event Overview

    ● Event: AdventHealth 400 (Round 12 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, May 5
    ● Location: Kansas Speedway in Kansas City
    ● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 267 laps/400.5 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 85 laps / Final Stage: 102 laps
    ● TV/Radio: FS1 / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● The AdventHealth 400 Sunday at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City will be Chase Briscoe’s seventh career NASCAR Cup Series start at the 1.5-mile oval. While Briscoe is still looking for his first top-10 finish at Kansas, he has been quietly consistent, with four finishes among the top-20 and only one result outside the top-25. Briscoe’s best Cup Series finish at Kansas is 13th, earned in September 2022.

    ● Briscoe’s Kansas record in the NASCAR Xfinity Series was a study in improvement – specifically, rapid improvement. After finishing 30th in his first Xfinity Series race at Kansas in October 2018, Briscoe returned to the track the following October and finished an impressive third after leading twice for 33 laps. He finished 14th in July 2020 but then roared back three months later to utterly dominate. In his final Xfinity Series start at Kansas in October 2020, Briscoe led four times for a race-high 159 laps – all but 41 of the race’s 200 laps. He finished 1.199 seconds ahead of runner-up Daniel Hemric to take the last of his 11 career Xfinity Series victories.

    ● Briscoe has made two NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts at Kansas. He finished fifth in his first Truck Series race at the track in May 2017 and, in his return to Kansas four years later, he finished 19th (May 2021).

    ● Briscoe’s epic run to the 2016 ARCA Menards Series title ended with a mic drop at Kansas. Having already sewn up the series title before the last race of the year at Kansas, Briscoe went into the series finale and made that race a microcosm of his season. He won the pole, led twice for a race-high 67 laps (all but 33 of the race’s 100 laps) and then won the race with a 1.464-second advantage over runner-up Austin Cindric. It was Briscoe’s sixth win of the season and he padded his championship tally to an eye-popping 5,290 points, which was 535 points more than his nearest pursuer, Tom Hessert III. In that title-winning season, Briscoe’s average start across 20 races was 4.1 and his average finish was 5.2 with a total of 949 laps led.

    ● The 2024 season marks the 15th year of partnership between Rush Truck Centers and Stewart-Haas Racing, and it’s a partnership that goes well beyond a design on a racecar. All Stewart-Haas racecars are transported via tractor-trailers from Rush Truck Centers, the premier service solutions provider to the commercial vehicle industry. And those tractor-trailers are supported by the RushCare Customer Support team of parts and service experts, who also provide concierge-level service for scheduling maintenance, technical support, mobile service dispatch and roadside assistance, along with help locating the nearest Rush Truck Centers dealer, and more. Rush Truck Centers is the largest network of commercial vehicle dealerships in North America with 150 locations in the United States and Ontario, Canada, and takes pride in its integrated approach to customer needs – from vehicle sales to aftermarket parts, service and body shop operations, plus financing, insurance, leasing and rental, as well as alternate fuel systems and other vehicle technologies.

    ● Rush Truck Centers is providing the chance to own a piece of iconic Peterbilt history – the last and only 2025 Peterbilt Model 389X ever produced. Proceeds will be donated to the Wounded Warrior Project to help provide free, life-changing programs and services for America’s heroes and their families. Enter to win at WinTheLast389.com. A donation is not required to enter.

    Cummins joins Rush Truck Centers for this weekend’s race at Kansas. Cummins Inc., is a global power technology leader that designs, manufactures, distributes and services a broad portfolio of power solutions. These solutions include advanced diesel, natural gas, hybrid, electric, fuel cell and other technologies. Cummins powers the future through innovations that make people’s lives better. From buses that transport kids to and from school, to the trucks that carry essentials, to construction, mining equipment, trains and ships, and critical backup power for places like data centers and hospitals, Cummins is doing it with the cleanest solutions available. Learn more at cummins.com.

    Chase Briscoe, Driver of the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    While Texas Motor Speedway isn’t an exact copy of Kansas, it’s still an intermediate-style oval. Does your sixth-place run three weeks ago at Texas provide some insight as to how you’ll perform at Kansas?

    “I’d like to think it would. Texas is a very unique mile-and-a-half in that you’re way slower in one end than you are in the other. Kansas is also a very unique mile-and-a-half just because it’s very high-speed. I would say it probably has the fastest corner speed of any mile-and-a-half we go to. So if your stuff was OK in (turns) three and four at Texas, I’d say it maybe correlates a little bit to Kansas. Kansas is just so fast and smooth. There are no bumps, no anything, so it’s kind of a weird racetrack. We don’t really go anywhere that’s like Kansas. Our mile-and-a-half stuff’s been pretty good this year. I don’t know if we’re going to have race-winning speed going there, but I do think we’re going to at least be in the hunt.”

    Has the new Ford Mustang Dark Horse been an improvement compared to the previous generation Mustang, and will its updated aerodynamics be of help at Kansas?

    “The Ford Mustang Dark Horse is 100 percent better, at least for us. I can’t speak for every Ford driver, but for us on the 14, it is 100 percent better. We have more performance and the aero balance is just way more together. The front and back of the car work together a lot more. In traffic, it’s way better. Everything about it has been way better for us. It is weird how it seems some of the Ford teams don’t feel the same, but for us, last year we were so far off that anything was going to feel like an improvement. I feel like Kansas is a place where we can go and run well.”

    The Kansas layout looks simple, but is that simplicity a bit deceptive when it comes to turning consistently fast laps?

    “Kansas is fairly simple. Out of all the mile-and-a-halves that we go to, I would say in some ways it’s probably the least technical, but in other ways it’s one of the more technical tracks, just because it seems like for whatever reason, especially the last couple of years, Kansas has become a track where everybody runs on the fence. So it’s really, really hard to pass there. Your car does have to be really balanced there just to be able to pass anybody and not get tight behind guys. Any time you run the fence, there’s a technical aspect to it, but at the same time, it’s so high-speed, it’s not like we’re in there doing a lot of stuff with the pedals, but there’s a lot of commitment that comes with that as far as understanding the downforce and where you put your car compared to others. And the other thing that’s really hard about Kansas is just the wind. It seems like that racetrack, more than anywhere we go, your car drives totally different on one end than the other just because of the direction of the wind and how windy it is when we’re there.”

    Kansas is another track where you had success in the Xfinity Series. In fact, you ended your career in the series there with a win. What made Kansas work for you in an Xfinity Series car?

    “We just had really good stuff, truthfully. I think anybody could’ve driven that thing to win when we won there in the playoffs. I don’t know how many laps we led, but it felt like we led every single one of them. Our stuff was just extremely good, and that’s what it takes at Kansas. It’s one of those places where you’re only going to go as fast as your car allows. It’s a place where the driver, out of all the mile-and-a-halves, probably makes the least amount of difference just because it is so fast. (Kevin) Harvick said all the time, ‘You can’t make a slow car go fast,’ and that’s the truth when you go to Kansas. If your car’s not nearly perfect, it’s going to be a long day for you. So, hopefully, we can take what we’ve learned this year and apply it to Kansas. I feel like at Texas our car was 85 percent, 90 percent close to being perfect, so I feel like we’re right on that window of finding what perfect is, as close as you can be to that. You’re never 100 percent, but you can get to 98, 99 percent, and if we can do that, then we can go to Kansas and run well.”

    How much different is a NASCAR Cup Series car at Kansas compared to what you were used to when you were there in an Xfinity Series car?

    “The NextGen car is kind of different everywhere. The biggest thing when you got to the Cup Series is that in Xfinity, there are probably only two or three guys whose cars are really, really good and the rest were way off. And if you got to Kansas and you were off, you were way off. But you get to the Cup Series, there are now 25 guys whose cars drive pretty dang good. It just makes it way tougher. I don’t know what my stats have been like at Kansas but they definitely haven’t been good, so hopefully we turn that around when we go back there.”

    Your introduction to Kansas was pretty amazing. In the ARCA race in 2016, you won the pole, led 67 of 100 laps, won the race, and that was during a dominating ARCA season. How big of a deal was that win and that kind of domination when you’re really trying to stake your claim to being a professional racecar driver?

    “It was huge. ARCA finished their season at Kansas when I was racing there, and we were able to wrap up the championship before even going to Kansas that year. When you already have won the championship, you want to go out winning the race, right? We went in there, sat on the pole and won the race. It was cool. I knew when I ran that race it was probably going to be the last ARCA race I would ever run, so you want to go out on top. But also, I didn’t have anything for sure going into 2017. I was obviously talking to a couple of Truck teams, and when I won that race, that was finally when Ford came and said, ‘Hey, we want you to drive next year for us.’ So it was a big deal to win there and I think about it every time I go back, even though it was eight or so years ago now. That’s kind of where it all started, in a sense. After that weekend was when I finally signed my Ford contract, so it’s always cool to go back.”

    You, crew chief Richard Boswell and the entire No. 14 team have been steadily chipping away at the points and rising up the leaderboard. What are some of the things that you and the team have been doing to find that improvement?

    “It’s a lot of little things. I’d say the biggest thing is we’ve just tried to be way more consistent with what we bring to the racetrack. In the past, not that we would do a total 180 every week, but I felt like we never really built on anything. We were always like, ‘This looks way better, let’s go do this.’ The next week, it was ‘This looks way better, let’s go do this.’ We just didn’t have a lot of consistency in what our cars were doing. Over the offseason, Boswell and I kind of talked – in the Xfinity Series, that’s kind of the same approach we had that first year, where I’d run a (Kevin) Harvick setup one week and a Cole (Custer) setup another week. And going into 2020, we were just, ‘Let’s just build a setup and let you figure out how it drives and kind of chip away at it little by little.’ That’s kind of the approach we went into this year with, let’s just go back to last season and look at the few racetracks we ran well at, what were the similarities, and let’s just build on that and try to get the same type of driving racecar every week. That’s been big for us. I feel like unloading the car off the truck for practice, I know what the car should do every week. In qualifying, we’ve been good because we can kind of fine tune it and we can learn from it week in and week out. I feel like I’ve done more studying this year than ever before, and a lot of that just goes to having teammates who want to kind of do it with me. Noah (Gragson) and I sit down every Tuesday for an hour and a half. It’s me, Noah, Drew (Blickensderfer, No. 10 crew chief) and Boswell, and we just go through video and talk through things, and I’ve just been way more prepared every week when I go to the racetrack. It’s a lot of little things, but I’d just say trying to be more consistent is the biggest thing.”

    No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Team Roster

    Primary Team Members

    Driver: Chase Briscoe

    Hometown: Mitchell, Indiana

    Crew Chief: Richard Boswell

    Hometown: Friendship, Maryland

    Car Chief: J.D. Frey

    Hometown: Ferndale, California

    Engineer: Mike Cook

    Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

    Spotter: Joey Campbell

    Hometown: Berlin, Connecticut

    Over-The-Wall Members

    Front Tire Changer: Shayne Pipala

    Hometown: Frankfort Square, Illinois

    Rear Tire Changer: Dakota Ratcliff

    Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee

    Tire Carrier: Jon Bernal

    Hometown: Holland, Michigan

    Jack Man: Dylan Moser

    Hometown: Monroe, North Carolina

    Fuel Man: Corey Coppola

    Hometown: Bluefield, West Virginia

    Road Crew Members

    Underneath Mechanic: Stephen Gonzalez

    Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

    Interior Mechanic: Trevor Adams

    Hometown: Plymouth, Wisconsin

    Tire Specialist: Keith Eads

    Hometown: Arlington, Virginia

    Shock Specialist: Brian Holshouser

    Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

    Engine Tuner: Jon Phillips

    Hometown: Jefferson City, Missouri

    Transporter Co-Driver: Todd Cable

    Hometown: Shelby, North Carolina

    Transporter Co-Driver: Dale Lackey

    Hometown: Taylorsville, North Carolina

  • Black’s Tire Celebrates 95th Anniversary with Kaulig Racing at Darlington Raceway

    Black’s Tire Celebrates 95th Anniversary with Kaulig Racing at Darlington Raceway

    Daniel Hemric to Drive No. 31 Black’s Tire Camaro ZL1 for Goodyear 400

    LEXINGTON, N.C. (April 29, 2024) – Black’s Tire (BTS) will celebrate its 95th anniversary with the help of Kaulig Racing at Darlington Raceway.

    BTS, a longtime partner in NASCAR’s top series, will be the primary partner onboard Daniel Hemric’s No. 31 Camaro ZL1 for the Goodyear 400.

    As one of Goodyear’s leading tire partners in the Darlington area, BTS is excited to showcase its throwback colors and logo in the Goodyear 400 for the second year-in-a-row with Kaulig Racing, previously acting as the primary partner of the team’s No. 16 Camaro ZL1 with AJ Allmendinger in the 2023 Goodyear 400.

    “We’re excited to team up with our friends at Kaulig Racing for the second time at Darlington!” said Ricky Benton, president at Black’s Tire. “With this year being our 95th anniversary, we thought what better way to celebrate than to use our ‘throwback’ colors for NASCAR’s annual throwback weekend?“

    With many of its 70 locations in The Lady in Black’s backyard, BTS will once again give back to its customers and team members by offering them a chance to bring their moms to the track for an afternoon of action-packed racing as part of its Mother’s Day promotion. Coining the phrase “Let’s Go Together”, BTS ensures all who walk through its doors feel like family.

    “Not only are we excited to team up with Black’s Tire for its 95th anniversary, but we have the chance to help thank moms of BTS employees and customers on Mother’s Day,” said Chris Rice, president of Kaulig Racing. We’re proud to partner with an organization that values family as much as we do at Kaulig Racing. We can’t wait to take on ‘Too Tough To Tame’ together.”

    The Goodyear 400 will kick off on Sunday, May 12 at 3 PM ET with coverage on FS1.

    About Kaulig Racing:

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

  • Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Racing: Noah Gragson Kansas Advance

    Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Racing: Noah Gragson Kansas Advance

    NOAH GRAGSON
    Kansas Advance
    No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Event Overview

    ● Event: AdventHealth 400 (Round 12 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, May 5
    ● Location: Kansas Speedway in Kansas City
    ● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 267 laps/400.5 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 85 laps / Final Stage: 102 laps
    ● TV/Radio: FS1 / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● Two months ago, in just the third race of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series campaign at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Noah Gragson finished an impressive sixth. It was his third career top-10 and it came in his 42nd career Cup Series start, but only his third points-paying start with Stewart-Haas Racing. Since then, the driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse has scored four finishes of 12th or better, including a career-best third-place drive two weeks at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway and another sixth-place run last Sunday at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway. Las Vegas’ 1.5-mile oval is similarly structured to the 1.5-mile oval Gragson will visit this weekend – Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, host to Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 – and he’s eyeing the intermediate-style track for a Las Vegas-esque performance.

    ● After the second race of the season at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Gragson was mired a dismal 42nd in the championship standings. In the nine races that have followed, Gragson has clawed his way to 21st in points, a gain of 21 positions.

    ● Last Sunday at Dover, Gragson made his milestone 50th career NASCAR Cup Series start. Three of those starts have come at Kansas, making the D-shaped oval in America’s Heartland one of the rare venues where Gragson has run multiple Cup Series races. In his first two Kansas races in 2022, Gragson earned a pair of 18th-place finishes. In his return to Kansas last May for the AdventHealth 400, Gragson finished 29th.

    ● Gragson has five NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Kansas and, collectively, they are emblematic of his growth as a racecar driver. The Las Vegas native finished 13th in his first Xfinity Series start at Kansas in October 2019 and then scored a 15th-place finish in his return to the track in July 2020. Two strong runs at Kansas followed in October 2020 and October 2021 when Gragson led a total of 22 laps, but crashes left him with finishes of 36th and 35th, respectively. But in Gragson’s fifth and final Xfinity Series start at Kansas, he put a whole race together and punctuated it with an exclamation point. In September 2022, Gragson qualified fifth and then led three times for 20 laps, including the final 18, to take the victory. It was the 10th of his 13 career Xfinity Series wins.

    ● Before that NASCAR Xfinity Series triumph at Kansas, Gragson had already put his name on the track’s list of winners. In May 2018, in his second and final NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series start at Kansas, Gragson dominated. He won the pole with a lap of 30.564 seconds at 176.678 mph and proceeded to lead five times for a race-high 128 laps, pacing the field for all but 39 of race’s 167 laps.

    ● Gragson’s Kansas debut came in the ARCA Menards Series. On Oct. 14, 2016, an 18-year-old Gragson started eighth and finished fifth in the Kansas 150.

    Noah Gragson, Driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    You finished sixth earlier this year at Las Vegas – a 1.5-mile oval that has similar characteristics to Kansas. While that race was back in March, can what you learned in Las Vegas translate to Kansas?

    “I think the mile-and-a-halves are the bread and butter for our program. Specifically, it seems like we’ve had good speed at the two we’ve been at, we’ve had good pace. So with that being said, it definitely is one that interests me, going back to a mile-and-a-half. I’m looking forward to Kansas, Darlington, Charlotte and the rest of the mile-and-a-halves this year just because I feel like that’s probably where I excel at, now, as a driver. I used to love the short tracks and felt like I was really good and only got wins on short tracks. Now, I feel like I’m terrible at the short tracks and better at the intermediate-style tracks.”

    How much of a factor is the wind at Kansas?

    “I haven’t really noticed the wind too much at any racetrack. I know it gets pretty bad at Vegas and some other tracks, but I don’t really feel it too much in the car. A lot of guys are pretty sensitive to it but, I don’t know why, I haven’t been able to notice it in huge amounts.”

    Kansas is a track where you have a decent amount of NASCAR Cup Series experience with three starts at the 1.5-mile oval. You’ve got two 18th-place finishes and one run of 29th. What has that place been like for you in a Cup car?

    “I’ve always run pretty strong at Kansas. I don’t know if it’s necessarily my favorite track, but it’s definitely been a good track and I’ve figured it out, gotten an Xfinity win there, a Truck win, and have run well during the Cup races. Haven’t finished great, but ran great.”

    You have five starts in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Kansas. Those first four starts were a bit of a struggle, but that fifth start was impressive. You qualified fifth and led three times for 20 laps, including the final 18, to take the win. How’d you do it, and how satisfying was it to take the checkered flag?

    “It was either hit or miss there. We always ran well there but never finished well. But once I finally figured out how to put a whole race together, we ended up getting a win. The same thing happened in Trucks, too. The first year I went there, had decent speed but just didn’t capitalize on the entirety of the day. That’s kind of how the Cup races have been, too. Nonetheless, it’s a fun track and, to be able to put it all together, it’s good.”

    That Xfinity Series win at Kansas was not your first win there. You won a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Kansas in 2018, and pretty handily, too. You won the pole and led five times for a race-high 128 laps, and the race only went 167 laps. It was only your second-ever start at the track and you beat your boss at the time, Kyle Busch. How’d you do it?

    “It was probably bigger just to win the race, in general. It was definitely a little sweeter because Kyle was in it, but we had a lot of speed that year and, once again, didn’t capitalize on the races where we had that speed and had shots to win. I got the pole, we won the first stage, the second stage, and ultimately won the race, so it was kind of a perfect day, a perfect weekend. That was a pretty cool moment.”

    You ran an ARCA race at Kansas in 2016 and finished fifth. At that time, it was one of the bigger tracks you had raced on. What were you experiencing as an 18-year-old competing at Kansas?

    “It was crazy. I never dealt with aero too much and having to move myself around, so learning on the fly and trying to figure that out and how to position your car just so you could have the best aero positioning was big, and that place was fast, learning how to drive around that place. I wish I could go back to that day knowing what I know now, I probably would’ve won that race. But with that being said, I was doing all I could to try and figure it out on the fly, and as I’ve gained experience, I’ve definitely learned a lot since that day.”

    No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Team Roster

    Primary Team Members

    Driver: Noah Gragson

    Hometown: Las Vegas

    Crew Chief: Drew Blickensderfer

    Hometown: Decatur, Illinois

    Car Chief: Jerry Cook

    Hometown: Toledo, Ohio

    Engineer: James Kimbrough

    Hometown: Pensacola, Florida

    Spotter: Andy Houston

    Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

    Over-The-Wall Members

    Front Tire Changer: Ryan Mulder

    Hometown: Sioux Center, Iowa

    Rear Tire Changer: Trevor White

    Hometown: Arlington, Texas

    Tire Carrier: Tyler Bullard

    Hometown: King, North Carolina

    Jack Man: Sean Cotten

    Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

    Fuel Man: James “Ace” Keener

    Hometown: Fortuna, California

    Road Crew Members

    Mechanic: Chris Trickett

    Hometown: Grafton, West Virginia

    Mechanic: Beau Whitley

    Hometown: Carmel, Indiana

    Tire Specialist: Jacob Cooksey

    Hometown: Westbrookville, New York

    Engine Tuner: Matt Moeller

    Hometown: Monroe, New York

    Transporter Co-Driver: Steve Casper

    Hometown: Salisbury, North Carolina

    Transporter Co-Driver: Matt Murphy

    Hometown: Augusta, Georgia

  • Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Dover

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Dover

    Würth 400 – Dover Motor Speedway
    Dover, DE – April 28, 2024

    NASCAR TRACKS – DOVER MOTOR SPEEDWAY – NASCAR 101

    AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 MENARDS/QUAKER STATE FORD MUSTANG

    START: 11TH STAGE ONE: 19TH STAGE TWO: 20TH FINISH: 15TH POINTS: 19TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric, driver of the No. 2 Menards/Quaker State Ford Mustang, rallied back to net a 15th-place finish in Sunday’s Würth 400 at Dover Motor Speedway. Cindric, an admirer of the high-speed, one-mile concrete oval, fired off from the 11th position after barely missing out on advancing to the final round in Saturday’s time trials. Just under 35 laps into the race, Cindric informed the team that the car was free on entry and tight on exit and shortly after made his first trip to pit road under caution on lap 39 for four tires, fuel and adjustments. When the flags flew signifying the conclusion of Stage 1 following the opening 120 laps, Cindric crossed the line 19th and returned to pit road for additional adjustments to help provide stability and overall grip. The 25-year-old driver restarted 17th and reported that the car was getting loose 30 laps into the run. After completing a green-flag stop on lap 182, Cindric cycled to the 20th position and remained there as Stage 2 ended. The 2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series champion restarted 19th and avoided a multi-car incident with 72 laps to go. When the field returned green, the No. 2 was scored 15th and powered through to the finish 15th, marking his best finish since Atlanta.

    CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “I’m proud to have a result that is representative of the hard work our team has put in. I feel like we’ve struggled to finish these deals out the last month or so, the speed that we’ve shown, so I’m proud of that. Fifteenth is solid, but we still have more progress to make. The guys called a great race. We made good adjustments and it feels nice to execute one. We just need to keep moving forward.”

    RYAN BLANEY No. 12 WÜRTH FORD MUSTANG

    START: 2ND STAGE ONE: 4TH STAGE TWO: 8TH FINISH: 7TH POINTS: 7TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Ryan Blaney wheeled the No. 12 Würth Ford Mustang to his fifth top-10 finish of the season Sunday at Dover, coming away with a seventh-place result. After starting on the front row for the 400-mile event, Blaney settled into second before making the pass for the lead on lap 34 before the first caution of the day came out five laps later. The 12 team ripped off a fast, four-tire stop under yellow to win the race off pit road, allowing Blaney to restart from the inside of row one with 73 laps remaining in Stage 1. Blaney paced the field for a majority of the ensuing run before the Würth Ford began to build tight as he fell to fourth in the running order with 20 laps left in the segment. The caution flag flew with three to go in the stage as Blaney was credited with a fourth-place finish in Stage 1. Following a four tire stop and a round of adjustments during the stage break, Blaney settled into fourth for the initial run of Stage 2 before the green flag pit cycle began. The tight-handling condition persisted after the trip to pit road, but Blaney battled to an eighth-place finish in Stage 2. The opening run of the final stage saw Blaney settle into sixth on the leaderboard as the tight condition at the start began to work its way to the free side before the leaders hit pit road with 80 laps to go for scheduled green flag stops. Shortly after Blaney made his way off pit road, the caution flag flew for a single-car incident that trapped him a lap down but the free pass brought him back on the lead lap and scored ninth in the order. Blaney continued to battle inside the top-10 over the course of the final run before ultimately taking the checkered flag seventh. Blaney’s 47 laps led marked a career-high at Dover in his 14th-career Cup Series start at the one-mile oval.

    BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “I still thought we had, like, fourth to seventh-place potential all day, so I’m proud of the effort by everybody on this team for sticking with it. I really wanted to win one for Würth. It’s a big race for those guys and they’re a great partner for us, but we just missed out. Hopefully, we can get a redemption shot next year if they do this again, but I appreciate the effort. It was a long day. To run 400 laps around this place is tough and working on it all day, the 12 boys stuck with it so I appreciate their effort and we’ll go to Kansas next week.”

    JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

    START: 13TH STAGE ONE: 20TH STAGE TWO: 18TH FINISH: 16TH POINTS: 13TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Joey Logano drove the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang to a 16th-place finish in Sunday afternoon’s Würth 400 at Dover. Logano battled a tight-handling condition after starting the 400-mile event from 13th, resulting in a 20th-place finish in the opening stage. Following a four-tire stop and a round of adjustments at the stage break, Logano settled into 20th during the first green flag run of Stage 2 before he was called to pit road on lap 184 around the halfway point of the segment. The Shell-Pennzoil Ford fired off tight for the final run of the stage as Logano battled to an 18th-place finish in Stage 2. After restarting the final stage from 18th, Logano continued to battle in traffic around the one-mile concrete oval before the green flag pit cycle began around 80 laps to go. Following a four-tire stop under green, Logano was making his way off pit road when the caution flag flew for a single-car incident on the backstretch, trapping the No. 22 team a lap down. After taking the wave-around to rejoin the lead lap, Logano avoided a multi-car incident coming off the exit of turn two on the ensuing restart as he was able to get checked up in time and allowing the 22 team to make another round of adjustments under caution. The ensuing restart proved to be the final one of the afternoon as Logano took the checkered flag 16th.

    LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “We dealt with some handling issues early on and continued working on it throughout the day but we couldn’t regain the track position that we lost during that first run. Proud of the effort from this Shell-Pennzoil team for keeping at it all day long and we’ll see what we have for Kansas.”

    The NASCAR Cup Series heads to the Sunflower State next weekend for the AdventHealth 400 on Sunday, May 5 at Kansas Speedway. Coverage begins at 3:00 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

  • Buescher 17th, Keselowski 30th in Hard-Fought Day at The Monster Mile

    Buescher 17th, Keselowski 30th in Hard-Fought Day at The Monster Mile

    Early Spin and Tire Issues Dampen Day for No. 6 Team

    DOVER, D.E. (April 28, 2024) – Dover Motor Speedway served as the 11th points paying race for the NASCAR Cup Series this season, with both RFK Racing drivers looking to build off a strong start to the season

    6 Recap
    Coming off two straight runner-up finishes (Texas, Talladega), Brad Keselowski and the No. 6 team looked to ride their momentum into a victory at Dover Motor Speedway.

    Starting from the 24th position, the BuildSubmarines.com Ford was quick from the start. Keselowski passed 11 cars during the first stage, putting him in the 13th position with just a handful of laps left in stage one. Unfortunately, the No. 6 car would go for a spin while trying to make the pass for 12th with just four laps to go in the stage, putting Keselowski back to 33rd to start stage two, one lap down.

    The No. 6 team spent the beginning of stage two fighting to get into the free pass position, hopeful that a caution would come out to get back on the lead lap. The BuildSubmarines.com Ford looked to be making good lap time just before Keselowski made contact with the outside wall after cutting down a right front tire with under 30 laps to go in the stage. The No. 6 team went to work on the suspension of Keselowski’s ride, but his Ford could not be repaired to reach the same strong lap times it had earlier.

    Now multiple laps down with a damaged race car, Keselowski would carry the BuildSubmarines.com Ford home to a 30th place finish in Dover.

    17 Recap
    Buescher had a more uneventful afternoon in the Fastenal Ford, beginning his day from the 18th position.

    The Texas native showed speed in the first stage, making his way up to the 14th position when the green-checkered flag flew. Buescher made note that the car was a little tight, so crew chief Scott Graves went to work to make adjustments.

    Stage two served uneventful for Buescher, as he would once again finish 14th in the Fastenal Ford.

    After struggling during the start of stage three, the No. 17 team made their final pit stop inside of the final 75 laps, chasing down a top-10 finish. After a multi-car incident on lap 329, the race would restart with just over 60 laps remaining. Buescher was able to drive his way to the 17th position to cap off his day at the Monster Mile.

    Up Next
    Kansas Speedway hosts race No. 12 for the Cup Series next weekend. Race coverage Sunday is set for 3 p.m. ET on FS1, with radio coverage on MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90).

    About RFK Racing
    RFK Racing, in its 37th season in 2024, features an ownership lineup pairing one of the sport’s most iconic names, Jack Roush, along with NASCAR Champion, Brad Keselowski, and Fenway Sports Group owner John Henry. Roush initially founded the team in 1988 and it has since become one of the most successful racing operations in the world, propelling him to be the first NASCAR owner to amass three hundred wins and capturing eight championships, including back-to-back NASCAR Cup titles in 2003 and 2004. Keselowski, a former owner in the NASCAR Truck Series, is the 2012 NASCAR Cup Series Champion. In 2007, Roush partnered with Henry, who also owns Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox, English Premier League’s Liverpool F.C., and the NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins, to form Roush Fenway Racing. Off the track, RFK is a leader and proven winner in NASCAR marketing solutions, having produced multiple award-winning social media, digital content and experiential marketing campaigns. Visit rfkracing.com, and follow the team on all social platforms @rfkracing.