Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – NCS Las Vegas 1 Post-Race Quotes

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – NCS Las Vegas 1 Post-Race Quotes

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Pennzoil 400 | Sunday, March 3, 2024

    Ford Performance Finishing Results:
    3rd – Ryan Blaney
    6th – Noah Gragson
    9th – Joey Logano
    13th – Brad Keselowski
    20th – Josh Berry
    21st – Chase Briscoe
    23rd – Ryan Preece
    24th – Todd Gilliland
    25th – Michael McDowell
    27th – Justin Haley
    29th – Austin Cindric
    30th – Harrison Burton
    31st – Kaz Grala
    37th – Chris Buescher

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It was a long day. We started 15th and just kind of slowly worked our way up. The top two guys were pretty quick. It was hard to catch them. We never really had the speed of those guys, but I’m proud of the effort. We got better all day, which was good. I didn’t think we were great early and we continued to get better, so that’s all you can ask for. It was a good day for the Menards/Pennzoil Ford Mustang. We definitely have a decent idea of where to go from here going forward.”

    DID YOU OPTIMIZE YOUR DAY TODAY? “Yeah, we worked really hard all day and got better through the race I thought. That was positive and we probably ended the best we were, so that’s always good. It’s something good to look forward to and hopefully just continue to work on. I’m proud of the Menards/Pennzoil Ford Mustang team. The 12 guys did a good job all weekend.”

    HOW WAS YOUR CAR? “I thought we got better all day, which is good. Obviously, I wish we had more, but we got better all day from where we started and where we qualified. I thought we ended kind of our best probably. We were able to get in front of the 19 and the 11, who was pretty good, the 54. We didn’t have anything for the 5 or 45 all day, but I’m proud of the effort. Hopefully, this is a good learning experience. Going forward, hopefully we’re in a good spot.”

    LARSON BEING FAST ISN’T A SURPRISE. IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE WE CAN TAKE FROM TODAY? “I don’t know. The Chevys are still fast. The Toyotas are still fast. The Fords, we had a good showing today too but we just have a little bit of work to do.

    NOAH GRAGSON, No. 10 Fanttik Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “These guys are good. It feels good to do it in front of the hometown crowd. I was battling Ty and Ross there at the end for a top five. I really wanted a top five, but coming from 30th to sixth I’m just really proud of everyone’s effort.”

    WHAT DOES THIS SAY ABOUT YOUR 1.5-MILE PROGRAM? “This is the first true testament. I don’t know. Blaney was up there and maybe a couple other guys in the Ford camp, but this Mustang Dark Horse is bitchin’. It’s fast and it’s been really good. You can see the speed that it’s had in qualifying, not for me because I drove like a sissy out there, but with the other guys they have three poles so far this year, so we’re going good.”

    HOW DOES THIS COMPARE TO OTHER CUP CARS YOU’VE DRIVEN HERE? “This compared to last year just has a lot more speed. You can go where you want. We’ve got a good pit crew and just a good team.”

    HOW MUCH CAN YOU TAKE FROM SOMETHING LIKE TODAY? DO YOU HAVE SPEED TO WORK WITH? “Yeah, we definitely need to be better and I need to clean some stuff up. Really, other than that last restart, I don’t think I had any net gains on restarts, so I need to keep working on that. I’m still trying to figure it all out, but overall it’s a good stepping stone to where we’re at right now. We’re gonna take this and get back into the positives in points and just keep on working, keep on learning and becoming better than we were yesterday and just keep that attitude. I think we’ve got the tightest group in the garage. They’re awesome to work with and I love every one of them.”

    JOSH BERRY, No. 4 Mobil 1 Take 5 Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I think we saw a lot of potential. Each run as a company it seemed like one of our cars was stronger than the other, but we learned a lot. Our car definitely seemed like it had speed. We just have to keep working on fine-tuning it and I need to work on starting a little bit closer to the front. All of those things start to compound and we can have a little better day, but, overall, I thought we were solid.”

    CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Mahindra Tractors Ford Mustang Dark Horse – HOW WAS THE CAR RUNNING BEFORE CONTACT WITH THE 12 AND HOW WAS IT AFTER? “Before I thought our car was pretty good. We weren’t good enough to win, but we were definitely a fifth to 10th place car fairly easily. We were able to pass a lot of cars. That second run of the race we went backwards, but after that I was able to just continue to go forward. I was really happy with how my car was driving and just after the contact as soon as it happened I went into the next corner and we were a half-second slower that lap and just continued to stay a half-second slower the rest of the race. I’m not really sure what happened as far as why we all of a sudden lost a half-second, but it’s a tough one to swallow when you have that good of a car. We definitely had a top 10 car and finished 21st or whatever, so that part is kind of frustrating, but we’ll go to Phoenix, where we’ve had speed in the past and just hope to get a better run.”

    JUSTIN HALEY, No. 51 Ohanafy Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “We were pretty good, but we just lacked execution again. I felt like our car was a little on the tight side, but when we were in clean air it was fine. It’s just new team blues. We’re just trying to get everyone to work together on the same page. I’m proud of the speed we had. I felt like we ran with some competitive cars, so we’ll keep working at it.”

    KAZ GRALA, No. 15 N29 Capital Partners Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “We weren’t too bad today. We just couldn’t quite get a handle on the car. Balance-wise we were tight for the first half of the race and then somehow we got it free and couldn’t get back, so I was just kind of hanging on there at the end. We had decent track position and then a car came up in front of me and took the air away and we just bobbled and smacked the wall out of four. I don’t know if that hurt something or we really just fell off at the end tire-wise. I don’t really know. We just didn’t have anything to fight with at the end.”

    CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT HAPPENED? “We lost the nut and lost half the wheel. I think the tire stayed up under the fender. I’m not exactly sure just yet, but it looks like the nut came off and something in the suspension actually cut the wheel in half. It’s definitely not what we wanted with our Fastenal Ford Mustang out here today. We had a strong day yesterday. I was really proud of that effort. We got a good bunch here and we’re gonna be contenders. We’re gonna win some races, but it’s not gonna happen today.”

    IT WAS A HARD HIT. YOU OK? “Yeah. All good.”

    DID YOU HAVE ANY WARNING? “No. Nothing that says that was coming. That’s kind of been the case with this car. I’ve probably had three of these now through the last couple of years and haven’t had a warning on any of them. It’s nothing like the old five lug stuff where you’d get a vibration or a shimmy or have some kind of clue. It just happens all of a sudden. It’s very unfortunate there, very tough. We have a great group of people on our team right now and we’re gonna bounce back from this and get going in the right direction. That hurts just so early. We were able to move forward out of there. We took two tires and was doing OK and holding our own against four tires around us and just ended up out way earlier than we wanted. I guess we talked a little bit yesterday and probably truthfully for the first time in my career I’m excited about Phoenix after what we had last time there. I won’t have to lie about that, but certainly a bad day today. It’s very disappointing. That sucks.”

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT LAS VEGAS 1: Kyle Larson Drives Chevrolet to Third Consecutive NASCAR Cup Series Win of 2024 Season

    CHEVROLET NCS AT LAS VEGAS 1: Kyle Larson Drives Chevrolet to Third Consecutive NASCAR Cup Series Win of 2024 Season

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    LAS VEGAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    PENNZOIL 400 PRESENTED BY JIFFY LUBE
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT
    MARCH 3, 2024

     Kyle Larson Drives Chevrolet to Third Consecutive NASCAR Cup Series Victory of the 2024 Season

     · In dominating fashion, Kyle Larson and the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team earned their first victory of the season in the Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – extending Chevrolet’s streak as the only manufacturer to win a points-paying race in the NASCAR Cup Series this season.

    · In the Next Gen car’s third season of competition in the NASCAR Cup Series, this marks the second time Chevrolet has swept the first three races of the season – also accomplishing the feat in 2023 when the Camaro ZL1 won four-straight races.

    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st – Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1
    4th – Ross Chastain, No. 1 Kubota Camaro ZL1
    10th – William Byron, No. 24 Z HP Camaro ZL1

    · Larson swept the stage wins and led a race-high 181 laps en route to his third career NASCAR Cup Series win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – his 24th victory in 334 career starts in NASCAR’s premier series.

    · The victory is Hendrick Motorsports’ series-leading 10th NASCAR Cup Series triumph at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – with five of those victories coming in the series’ past seven races at the track.

    · Larson drove Chevrolet to its 13th all-time NASCAR Cup Series victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – four of which have come in the five races that the Next Gen car has competed at the 1.5-mile Nevada oval.

    · Larson delivered Chevrolet its 854th all-time victory in NASCAR Cup Series competition, extending the manufacturer’s record as the winningest manufacturer in series’ history.

    · With Larson’s NASCAR Cup Series win and Rajah Caruth’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway this weekend, Chevrolet continues the streak of earning at least one win in the NASCAR national ranks each weekend since the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course events in October 2023.

    · The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Phoenix Raceway with the Shriners Children’s 500 on Sunday, March 10, at 3:30 P.M. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.


    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:

    Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 1st

    “I knew Tyler (Reddick) was going to be the guy to beat. From the first stage, he was really fast there. I was hoping those guys were going to get racing a little bit longer behind me because I felt it was going to time out to where he was running really hard and getting the tow to catch me at the end. Thankfully, I was able to air lock him a couple of laps and get him tight. I thought (Reddick) and Bubba (Wallace) were going to get working together again to build a run, so I was happy that didn’t happen.

    All in all, such a great, great job by this No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevy team. Just their execution, restarts, pit road.. all of that was great. Cool to get a win here in Las Vegas again, back-to-back, and swept all the stages. Can’t ask for much more than that.”

    Ross Chastain, No. 1 Kubota Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 4th

    What can you take from this mile-and-a-half and apply to others?

    “This speed. I mean the handling of the car is incredible for our Kubota Chevy. It’s everything that I wanted, dream about, and wake up and train for is to drive cars like this. That’s what makes it hurt so much worse. When we finish fourth and we were legitimately an eighth-place car, it’s something we’re high-fiving. You all have seen me in my career, I’d jump up and down for a fourth place finish. If someone is just glancing at my interviews, they’re going to say, “Well, Ross is changing,” but I’m not. When I have a car capable of fighting for the win, and I take ourselves out, that’s what I can get down about right now, but excited about because I know how good the car was and how much speed it has.”

    From the start of the race, speeds dropped five miles per hour in Turn 1. What was it like and how hard was it to hold on?

    “Yeah, there were times where if I wasn’t tucked up within five car lengths of somebody, I’d have significantly less RPM and speed down the front. I couldn’t catch them because I was inhibited by the wind, and they had the draft. Think of the DRS trains in Formula 1. Once those DRS trains get going, the guys that are out of it, they lose so much of it. We’re not losing as much. But there were times where I was 16th place, but I’m three seconds behind 15th and there are no cars, and they get bottled up, and I get with them, and I’m picking up 200 RPMs on the front stretch just being in their draft. So, it was pretty wild because as much as I loved that draft on the straightaway, you’d get into the corner and I didn’t want to be behind them. It’s a lot of fun racing. I passed a lot of cars today. That part I was smiling, but knowing I had a car enough to compete today, it just hurts.”

    Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Freeway Insurance Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 11th

    “It wasn’t easy. I wasn’t really happy with the balance of the No. 99 Freeway Insurance Chevy. The front of the car never turned the entire race. The back of the car was going away on the long run. Sometimes we were making the car a little bit better in the long run, but the front just never turned all race long. Just have to see everything to figure out how we can be a little better next time.”

    Austin Dillon, No. 3 BetMGM Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 16th

    “P-16 finish for the No. 3 BetMGM Chevy. We got stage points in Stage 2. The BetMGM Chevy was pretty good in the middle of the race. Didn’t make a big enough adjustment there at the end and got really tight.

    Unfortunate. We had a pretty solid day around the top-10 all day. We weren’t able to come home with one, but it was a big improvement from where we’ve been. We were one adjustment away from being in the top-10, for sure.”

    Daniel Hemric, No. 31 South Point Hotel and Casino Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 19th

    “We fired off decent in the race, but within a few laps, the No. 31 South Point Chevy just started getting tight. A speeding penalty set us back a bit, but fortunately we were able to get the lap back. We ran the best we had all day during those last couple of runs, and we were able to grab another top-20 finish.”

    About Chevrolet

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Rick Ware Racing: Pennzoil 400 from Las Vegas

    Rick Ware Racing: Pennzoil 400 from Las Vegas

    RICK WARE RACING
    Pennzoil 400

    Date: March 3, 2024
    Event: Pennzoil 400 (Round 3 of 36)
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series
    Location: Las Vegas Motor Speedway (1.5-mile oval)
    Format: 267 laps, broken into three stages (80 laps/85 laps/102 laps)
    Race Winner: Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 1 Winner: Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 2 Winner: Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)

    RWR Finish:

    ● Justin Haley (Started 35th, Finished 27th/ Running, completed 267 of 267 laps)
    ● Kaz Grala (Started 32nd, Finished 31st/ Running, completed 267 of 267 laps)

    RWR Points:

    ● Justin Haley (29th with 39 points)
    ● Kaz Grala (33rd with 30 points)

    Race Notes:

    ● Kyle Larson won the Pennzoil 400 to score his 24th career NASCAR Cup Series victory and his third at Las Vegas. His margin of victory over second-place Tyler Reddick was .441 of a second.
    ● There were six caution periods for a total of 35 laps.
    ● Thirty-one of the 37 drivers in the Pennzoil 400 finished on the lead lap.
    ● Kyle Larson leaves Atlanta as the championship leader with a eight-point advantage over second-place Ryan Blaney.

    Sound Bites:

    “We were pretty good. I felt like our Ohanafy Ford Mustang Dark Horse was a little bit on the tight side, but when we were in clean air it was good. This is still a work in progress. We’re trying to things organized so we’re all working together and getting the best out of each race. I’m proud of the speed we had. We ran with some good cars, so we’ll keep working at it and see what we’ve got when we get to Phoenix.” – Justin Haley, driver of the No. 51 Ohanafy Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “We weren’t too bad today. We just couldn’t quite get a handle on the balance of our N29 Capital Parners Ford Mustang Dark Horse. We were tight for the first half of the race, and then we somehow got it free and couldn’t really get back to somewhere in the middle. We had decent track position until someone came up in front of me and took the airway, then we just bobbled and smacked the wall out of turn four. I don’t know if that hurt something or if we just fell off at the end with older tires. I was just kind of hanging on there at the end. We’ll see what we can do to get better. The field so tight and I feel like we’re just a little bit away from being really good. Easier said than done, but I think if we can find a little something then we’ll be in good shape.” – Kaz Grala, driver of the No. 15 N29 Capital Partners Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Next Up:

    The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Shriners Children’s 500k on Sunday, March 10 at Phoenix Raceway. The race begins at 3:30 p.m. ET with live coverage provided by FOX and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Las Vegas Post-Race Report – 03.03.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Las Vegas Post-Race Report – 03.03.24

    REDDICK RUNNER-UP LEADS TOYOTA IN VEGAS
    Ty Gibbs with a strong top-five finish

    LAS VEGAS (March 3, 2024) – Tyler Reddick led Toyota with a runner-up finish in the NASCAR Cup Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday afternoon. Reddick finished second in both of the first two stages and closed late on race winner Kyle Larson, before coming up just short of the victory.

    Ty Gibbs added his first top-five and second top-10 in first three races this season as the reigning Rookie of the Year battled through transmission issues throughout the second half of the race to earn a Vegas-best fifth-place finish. Gibbs’ teammates Martin Truex Jr. (seventh) and Denny Hamlin (eighth) joined him inside the top-10, while Erik Jones earned points in the second stage and delivered a solid top-15 finish in LEGACY MOTOR CLUB’s first mile-in-a-half start in Toyota Camry XSEs.

    Toyota Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Las Vegas Motor Speedway
    Race 3 of 36 – 400.5 miles, 267 laps

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

    1st, Kyle Larson*
    2nd, TYLER REDDICK
    3rd, Ryan Blaney*
    4th, Ross Chastain*
    5th, TY GIBBS
    7th, MARTIN TRUEX, JR.
    8th, DENNY HAMLIN
    14th, ERIK JONES
    22nd, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
    33rd, CHRISTOPHER BELL
    35th, BUBBA WALLACE
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Finishing Position: 2nd

    How frustrating is it to come so close to a win today?

    “Yeah, it’s just the Next Gen racing game, right? Get the lead and got to hold onto it. Yeah, Kyle (Larson) did a really good job there taking away pretty much every option I had there to close the gap. He seemed pretty good in the middle and I was obviously really good on the bottom, and he just never let me have it, right? I kept trying to run higher and higher and you know, he’s kind of running in the middle of the race track, which is pretty efficient to block both lanes. Every time I sort of got close, I mean, we’re running just wide open enough in turn one and two, you can kind of defend pretty well. It’s frustrating. I feel like we were never up front really all day long, until it got to the stage ends. We had a really good Nasty Beast Toyota Camry. Just stupid mistakes on pit road. Same shit, different year, right? Kind of frustrating. We’ll continue to work on it, but a good rebound for our team today.”

    Sometimes second can be good, and sometimes it’s a bad day. On the radio, it sounds like it was the latter. Is that correct?

    “Second sucks that is for sure, but we had a really fast Nasty Beast Toyota Camry. I mean, we should have been battling up there in the front more than we were today. Just put us behind, unfortunately, and had to battle through that all day. As the field got better, it got harder to get back to the front as quick. You have to run up front all day long, and when asked about what we need to do to get better, that’s the very thing, and we didn’t do it today.”

    What did you need to get Kyle Larson there in the end?

    “We were pretty evenly matched, so I don’t know if there was anything that I really could’ve done to get around him. He would have had to make a big mistake or had some traffic kind of knock his wind around. It’s a solid effort for our team, that’s how we need to run, but I don’t like running second.”

    TY GIBBS, No. 54 He Gets Us Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 5th

    What was your race like today, overcoming early adversity with a strong race car?

    “Yeah, I kind of stuck us in a hole there and we broke the transmission, which is kind of unfortunate that has to happen, that’s just part of it and we fought back. I put my team in a hole there. No excuses. And we just kind of fought back and my team gave me a really great He Gets Us Camry XSE this weekend and we drove back to the front. So, just need a little bit more to get to the lead so we can go get a win, but really happy with my team.”

    There was lot of unknowns coming into this race with a new car, are you happy with the speed?

    “Yeah, really happy. Really excited about what our car is capable of. I feel really happy about what we have.”

    ERIK JONES, No. 43 Dollar Tree Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB

    Finishing Position: 14th

    How was your race?

    “Pretty up-and-down day. Up-and-down weekend really, fired off the race not where we needed to be, and had to make some really big changes the first three, four stops of the day to get the Dollar Tree Camry better. To salvage a top-15 is good, but we want more, so we will keep working on it.”

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 65 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

    Toyota directly employs more than 63,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 45 million cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 26 electrified options.

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

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT LAS VEGAS 1: Kyle Busch Media Availability Quotes

    CHEVROLET NCS AT LAS VEGAS 1: Kyle Busch Media Availability Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    LAS VEGAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    PENNZOIL 400 PRESENTED BY JIFFY LUBE
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MARCH 2, 2024

     KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 BETMGM CAMARO ZL1, met with the media following the NASCAR Cup Series’ practice and qualifying session at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    Media Availability Quotes:

    I know this is always a special weekend for you. What are your emotions like going into this weekend?

    “Yeah, it’s nice to be able to get back to the hometown; have an opportunity to come out here and race again. It’s been awhile since we’ve gone to victory lane at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, being 2009. We’ve had some really strong runs here as of late. I think three, third-place finishes in the last four or five races; or four, third-place finishes.. something like that.

    It’s nice to get here. Certainly wish the weather was better. Seven days ago, it was beautiful here, and then NASCAR came to town (laughs).”

    Yesterday, your teammate in the Truck Series, Rajah Caruth, got his first career win in NASCAR. What were the conversations like after the race?

    “Yeah, I just sent him a note late last night when we got done and was congratulating him; telling him he did a great job and how well of a race that he ran. His race craft was really good. We ran side-by-side a lot. We had an issue last year at a race that I had to sit him down and talk to him about, and it seemed like he really listened. He did a great job, and he’s well deserving of the victory. They were fast. It’s cool to see a Spire truck win all three truck races this year.”

    You mentioned the weather – how much impact did the wind have yesterday, and how much do you expect it to have tomorrow?

    “Yeah, I mean the wind isn’t terrible for us on the race track. It’s more uncomfortable or wears on you a little bit when you’re in the grandstands probably as a race fan. You know where the wind is blowing, so you kind of have to drive a little bit differently as you would on how you attack the corners, whether you’re in a head wind or a tail wind. And then also, just being around traffic – when you want to make your moves and what straightaway you feel like you’re best prone to be able to make that pass on somebody with head wind or tail wind.”

    It’s a small sample size, but to be leading the points after two races has to be more advantageous than feeling like you have to fight your way out of a hole, is it not?

    “Definitely. I’ve always been a strong proponent of getting a good start to the season; having a strong start, whether it’s winning races or just coming out with top-10 finishes to kind of build your foundation to your season. I feel like the first two weeks – if I would have restarted one lane different on the last restart for Daytona, we would have finished fourth. So we could be talking about a fourth and a third, which would be really good. And we’ve actually been collecting a few stage points here so far this year, which has been good. A little bit of a struggle today.. little behind on the eight ball and not where we want to be with our Camaro. Hopefully we can fine-tune it in for tomorrow. There’s really not much we can do with impound and going into the race, but we’ll go to work.”

    You talked a little bit about Rajah Caruth. Several of the Cup drivers have said that he’s come to them for advice and has been willing to listen. I’m curious, with Brexton coming through the ranks, how important is that for a driver to take that feedback and make something into it? Is Brexton spending any time iRacing.. is he ready for that yet? We see Rajah and William Byron – is this just going to be another tool in the toolbox to get young drivers up to speed?

    “Yeah, definitely. It certainly is. With the release on iRacing coming this week of our home track Millbridge and the micro program being on there as well, he’s going to get a lot of seat time on iRacing to be able to prepare himself. The season there starts up in a couple of weeks.

    Just talking with these young guys – we’ve been through it with Christopher Bell, Erik Jones and the Bubba Wallace at KBM, and now Rajah is just another one of those. Being in the driver’s meeting with him this past week and trying to talk through some of the things he learned last week or he had questions on – I first saw him on pit road over there yesterday after qualifying and he’s right up on me like, ‘hey man, what do you think? What do we have to do.. what’s this, what’s that.’

    He’s good. He doesn’t ask dumb questions. He’s like, ‘this might be a dumb question’, and I’m like ‘actually, it’s not’. So you kind of get an understanding, and being in that boat for me for 12 years, I kind of know where some of these kids are coming from with their inexperience.”

    Looking at your upbringing, coming up through the ranks of racing – how would an iRacing simulator have helped you along the way? Are you kind of sad that you didn’t get to do some of the stuff that these young guys are doing? Do you think it will help them in the long run and getting more into the sport?

    “Well Jerry (Jordan), I’m not that old (laughs). They had this thing called NASCAR 2000 on Papyrus, if you remember. I burned laps on that thing like it was nothing. The ‘R’ button was my favorite button.. restart, restart, restart. I think I was so good at restarts throughout my entirety because I would restart, restart, restart (laughs).

    But no, if I didn’t qualify good on a race or something, I’d always try to figure out how fast I could get to the lead and pass cars. I wish I could turn the competition down here in real life, you know, and get back towards the front again, but these guys are tough.

    I did some of that stuff. I remember being a kid.. I think I was 13 or 14 years old and just starting racing legends cars. I ran a full season on the Cup calendar with the Cup cars. Like every Sunday while the Cup races were happening on TV, I’d either be watching or I’d be running my own, you know what I mean. It was always pretty fun that I got a chance to do that after our Friday and Saturday nights of racing right over here at the Bullring.”

    What were your thoughts on Atlanta? From a mental standpoint, were you exhausted after the race? How do you feel about going back there for the playoff opener in September?

    “I think I was too mad to be exhausted. Being that close to winning a Cup race is certainly one for the books, but also a bit frustrating. Obviously just not being able to execute everything I needed to do and I thought about doing, I just didn’t think of it in the moment. I knew ahead of time, but just wasn’t able to get it through when I needed to.

    But looking back on it.. seeing it as a finish, the attention that it got and some of the media stuff that I did during the week – it was really cool to get some notoriety and get some for our sponsors, as well as our sport. To be that close in a third-place finish.. again, it stings to be third. I’d much rather be the guy on top, being able to take home a trophy.

    It was an intense race all throughout. I don’t think you really saw much lollygagging like we did at Daytona.. you know, a lot of part-throttle, saving fuel and all that sort of stuff. We didn’t get a chance to see some of that at Atlanta, really. There were some crashes.. single-car stuff and a couple-car stuff. Obviously the first lap.. if that didn’t happen, I think you would have had everything that a race would need.”

    Do you think it will be more intense in the playoff race?

    “It’s the playoff opener, right?”

    Yes..

    “No.. you would think that these guys would make it less intense because it’s the playoff opener and you don’t want to knock yourself out or take a chance of ruining a points day. It becomes really important to get points. I think early in the season, like that race right there with Daytona and Atlanta to kick-off the season – everybody is going for broke. They all know they have a chance to win. You’re going to see anybody and everybody try to score a win, right? And so, when you get down to that Atlanta race in the playoffs… yeah, guys that are outside of the playoffs still want to win to make their year, but I would think it would be a bit calmer.”



    About Chevrolet

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Logano Extends Ford Mustang Dark Horse Pole Streak to Three

    Logano Extends Ford Mustang Dark Horse Pole Streak to Three

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Pennzoil 400 Qualifying | Saturday, March 2, 2024

    FORD MUSTANG DARK HORSE REMAINS PERFECT WITH THIRD STRAIGHT NASCAR CUP SERIES POLE TO START 2024

    • Joey Logano extended the Ford Mustang Dark Horse pole streak to three after putting his car on the pole for the second time this season.
    • This marks the first time since 2022 that Ford has won three straight series poles, dating back to when Ryan Blaney won three in a row at Phoenix, Circuit of the Americas and Richmond.

    Ford Performance Top-10 Qualifying Results:
    1st – Joey Logano
    3rd – Austin Cindric
    6th – Chase Briscoe
    9th – Chris Buescher
    12th – Michael McDowell
    15th – Ryan Blaney
    25th – Brad Keselowski
    26th – Josh Berry
    29th – Harrison Burton
    30th – Noah Gragson
    31st – Todd Gilliland
    32nd – Kaz Grala
    35th – Justin Haley
    36th – Ryan Preece

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – POLE-WINNING PRESS CONFERENCE

    NASCAR SHOWED US YOUR GLOVE TODAY. ROGER SAID HE SPOKE TO YOU AND WAS DISAPPOINTED IN THAT. WHEN THE TEAM COMES TO YOU AND SAYS WEAR THIS GLOVE, YOU JUST SAY OK? “Yeah. That’s how a lot of things work. As a driver, you work with the team and, hey, I’m gonna take a portion of responsibility of that too, obviously. I should. I put the glove on. I didn’t build the glove or make it on my own. I can’t sew, but that’s what it was. We had conversations about it. What I’m proud about with this team is, yeah, that was a tough situation for us. It was hard to go through and embarrassing for sure, but the fact we got through it and just move on and focus on the next week. We showed that we have some speed in our race car and to be able to put it on the pole here, to me, is a statement type lap so I’m proud of that.”

    DO YOU WANT TO SAY IF YOU WORE THE GLOVE AT DAYTONA? “No.”

    DOES THAT MAKE THIS POLE MEAN ANYMORE BECAUSE YOU HAD SPEED? “I’ve got plenty of motivation, really ever since you said I wasn’t gonna make the playoffs this year. I’ve had plenty of motivation, so I’m in a good place.”

    DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU PUT YOURSELF IN ANY KIND OF UNSAFE POSITION? “No. I personally did not. I would never have put myself in a situation where I feel unsafe. I have kids. I have a wife. I have a family that I care way more about than race cars, so, no, I didn’t feel concerned about what we did. I didn’t race with it. Qualifying on speedways is pretty simple.”

    ARE YOU SURPRISED BY THIS POLE? “I didn’t expect it when I saw our short run speed in practice. I was like, ‘This might not be where we need to be.’ We showed that we had great long run speed. Our second run we made an adjustment and went back out and was like, ‘Oh, wow. We’re really competitive. The car is driving pretty good.’ So I felt good about that, but our short run, like fire off, we weren’t real fast and we weren’t far up the board. And then we barely made it through the first round just by the skin of our teeth. And then being able to make some adjustments. I was proud of what Paul and the guys were able to do to make an adjustment with the car driving closer to perfect and for the second round and being able to put it up here. I really didn’t think after the first round we had a chance of putting it on the pole, so I’m proud of the adjustments that we made there. We’ve got some work to do tonight, for sure, but the first pit stall is nice. Obviously, starting up front for the Pennzoil 400 in the Pennzoil Mustang is huge for our race team, so that makes dinner tonight a little bit easier for me, so that part is good and then we’ll fire off tomorrow and hopefully get a little bit more short run speed and we can make our long runs really good.”

    DINNER WITH PENNZOIL? “Yeah.”

    WE SAW YOU DO THIS LAST YEAR AND WE ALL KNOW HOW THE RACE WENT. HOW OPTIMISTIC ARE YOU ABOUT THE NEW BODY STYLE THAT YOU’LL HAVE THE LONG RUN SPEED? “We’re still uncertain of what the new Mustang Dark Horse will be like. It’s really challenging to unload at a track like Vegas with limited practice, where you can’t change many things. We can’t go throwing springs and stuff at this car and you’re going off of really not much physical notes with this car – some of what we had last year, but the aero numbers are different with this car and you’re putting a lot of trust into what the wind tunnel numbers spit out, and how much of it is real and how much of it is fabricated or different. There’s a lot of what ifs between sim world wind tunnel world to reality. There are a lot of things that can be different, so it’s really hard to make those changes to your car and getting that balance right. It took us a couple runs, obviously, to do that. We still have a lot to learn with the car, but it’s a good start for sure.”

    DID THE WIND PICK UP IN ROUND TWO AND WAS ONE AND TWO THE DIFFERENCE? “I’ve got to think it’s wind that made the difference because the first run I was pretty slow through one and two all the way through the corner, so the only thing I could think of that changed for straightaway speed wasn’t our change by no means. It had to have been by the wind. Maybe I had a big gust that first run or something that held me back a little bit because it doesn’t seem to make sense. If we were really good through one and two on the second time. The first time we were horrible through there, you’re wide-open either way, so the only variable there is really the wind.”

    IN REGARDS TO THE GLOVE, IS IT MORE IMPORTANT TO FEEL BETTER THAN TO WORRY ABOUT THE GLOVE TYPE SITUATION? “I didn’t feel better after it, I can tell you that much. Directionally better, how much better? Probably nothing. That’s the part that hurts the most. It isn’t even worth it. It didn’t do anything to speak of. It’s directionally an area that everybody goes to try to block that hole. You see everyone put their hand there. We just tried to cover more space.”

    CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “That’s a great start for us with our Fastenal Ford Mustang. I’m happy with the speed we showed there. I was happier the first round. I don’t know. I thought we hit our marks a little better the second round. I was wide-open in one and two and really thought that was gonna be a better lap, but it looks like our speed crossed the line into turn one was down. You can’t use it for everything right now, but there’s no part of me that says wind did not play some kind of factor in this qualifying today. I’m a little bummed by that part of it, to be on the bottom half of that top 10, but knowing what we have and the capability in our race car gives me a lot of hope going into this thing tomorrow.”

    CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Mahindra Tractors Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It was a solid day for us. Starting off in practice our car was really close. There’s definitely some things we could do better from a balance standpoint, but it had speed. We were able to be the quickest in practice over all the Hendrick cars, so that’s something to be proud of for us. Qualifying was really good that first round. The second round, truthfully, I felt like the wind was a big part of why I didn’t go any faster, and then I kind of messed up a little bit in three and four, but for us to slow down as much as we did I feel like that’s got to be wind related. But we’ve got a really good starting spot for tomorrow. That’s gonna be critical with how hard it is to pass, so I’m excited from that standpoint. Our car could be a little bit better, I think, but it’s definitely gonna be in the mix all day tomorrow. That’s exciting.”

    AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It was a good step for us. I think Brian and the guys did a really great job with qualifying changeover. I think we made some smart adjustments from practice and even between round one and round two to even pick up, where I feel like it’s probably rare to pick up. I’m really proud of the effort there. The guys have done a really great job to start the year. It’s a good starting spot for the race, but it’s 400 miles with a lot different conditions. Hopefully, this wind calms down a little bit too.”

    JOSH BERRY, No. 4 Mobil 1 Take 5 Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “Honestly, it felt pretty good. I feel like he made some good adjustments there for qualifying. Really, I just wish I could do it again. I felt like I gave up a little bit of time coming to the green, just getting up to speed, but the lap itself felt good. I feel like our car is solid. I’m not saying that we can drive through the field and dominate the race, but I feel we can have a solid day tomorrow and learn a lot.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Solomon Plumbing Ford Mustang Dark Horse – DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU’RE IN A HOLE POINTS-WISE? “Yes and no. I want to win races, so points don’t really mean anything once you win. I’m not where I want to be in points, but in a position to win races and that’s gonna pay off eventually.”

    WHEN IS THE POINT YOU NEED TO START TAKING CHANCES TO WIN RACES? “We’re way too early for that. Right now, we just need to do what we can do and go out there and win races and be competitive.”

    WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR OUT OF THE NEW FORD BODY HERE? “Last year, we had a really good race, solid execution, great pit stops, great strategy, good restarts, but we just didn’t have the raw speed to win the race. We did everything you need to do, but were just lacking the raw speed. We’re looking for the Ford body to give us the raw speed to go with the execution that we showed here last fall. If we can do that, we can win.”

    HARRISON BURTON, No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “Not last weekend because we were able to at least keep going. When I first got clipped in the first wreck and spun, I was getting ready to ask that question, but I realized we didn’t have any damage so that was good. We ended up having a good day where we ran up front and got caught in the last wreck and were able to rebound again. In Daytona, I was asking that a little bit, but as long as we’re able to have a chance to overcome it, I’m happy still. Obviously, it was frustrating to maintain track position all day and lose it late, but that’s part of those races. If you can keep going, you’re normally pretty thankful.”

    HOW DO THINGS FEEL GOING INTO THIS WEEKEND? “I think everyone in the garage is feeling like this is where the year starts and where we have to separate ourselves and see where we all are. The first two are wild cards and now we’re gonna really settle in. I’m excited to see how the new Ford Mustang Dark Horse drives.”

    JUSTIN HALEY, No. 51 Ohanafy Ford Mustang Dark Horse – HOW HAVE THESE FIRST TWO RACES GONE FROM YOUR STANDPOINT? “it’s good. Everyone at RWR and RFK and Ford Performance has been awesome. I feel like I’ve been on the Ford simulator more than I ever have been in a Cup simulator before, and that just leads to preparation for this weekend. The transition has been smooth. I feel like this weekend isn’t life or death on where our pace is because I still feel like there’s a lot of potential to be unlocked for us. I feel like we’re not really in a position quite yet to see where our speed is at, so I’m just continuing to build and try to extract that potential each week.”

    THERE HAVE BEEN GLIMPSES OF YOU AT THE FRONT EACH WEEK, SO HOW DOES THAT FEEL? “There’s a lot on the communication side of things with a new spotter and new crew chief. We definitely have had speed. I don’t feel like we’ve lacked speed up to this point, especially in the race. We just have to work on executing. Cup races are long and there are a lot of pit stops and a lot of execution, so we’ll just keep working hard.”

    KAZ GRALA, No. 15 N29 Capital Partners Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I think we got a taste of where the aero balance shift is on the new Ford body last week, so I’m glad that I did that race and was able to give the feedback. For the 15 team, I’m in it most of the season, but we’ll have a few different drivers through that car at various points, so for my crew chief the challenge that gives him is how can he keep up with feedback being different driver to driver. At least last week, the way I described the car feeling, we can use that for this week and have a direction for it. I think we figured out the differences in this new body. We’ve applied what we believe will balance that out for today.”

    Ryan Preece, driver of the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse, was involved in a practice accident during practice. Here are his comments after being evaluated and released from the infield care center. Preece will be going to a back-up Ford Mustang Dark Horse for tomorrow’s race.

    RYAN PREECE, No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse – ‘I don’t know if it bottomed out or what, but we lost all the grip there in one and two. It was pretty unexpected.”

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT LAS VEGAS 1: Daniel Suarez Media Availability Quotes

    CHEVROLET NCS AT LAS VEGAS 1: Daniel Suarez Media Availability Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    LAS VEGAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    PENNZOIL 400 PRESENTED BY JIFFY LUBE
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MARCH 2, 2024

     DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 FREEWAY INSURANCE CAMARO ZL1, met with the media prior to the NASCAR Cup Series’ practice and qualifying session at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    Media Availability Quotes:

    Obviously you won last week, but what made it so much fun throughout the race from the driver’s seat?

    “You know, I think that every time you win a race, it’s already special. But if you can pick winning from five-seconds ahead or winning in a finish like Atlanta, I would definitely pick that one every day of the week. It was just very intense racing. I would say that the entire race – I felt it behind the seat and I’m sure you guys felt it from the media center and fans at home and at the race track, the intensity of the race was very high the entire race. It was probably one of the most intense races I’ve been a part of. To be able to survive that and to be in contention at the end to be able to pull off the win that close with two other great race car drivers is quite special. I truly enjoyed that. There are a lot of great people from my team there that night – the CEO of Freeway Insurance, people from Coca-Cola, just so many great people that got to enjoy the victory with us. It was a lot of fun.”

    What was the party like after the win? What has this week been like for you?

    “You know, I’m not a huge party guy… I don’t even drink alcohol (laughs), but I definitely enjoyed it. I took a day to enjoy it and really live in the moment. But really you can’t do that for too long. In my mind, I’ve already been asked these questions and having fun with it.. but in my mind, I’m already thinking about practice, qualifying and how we’re going to be able to put together a fast lap today. That’s the way I also approached the week. I spent the entire week talking about it, but after Monday or Tuesday, I had already flipped the page. I had the opportunity to go to Nashville on Wednesday or Thursday.. I can’t remember, there’s been so much that has happened over the last week. But I had a great time there with Pitbull on stage. It was fun.. it was a lot of fun. I enjoyed it a lot. But the reality is that in my mind, I was already past that. I was already thinking about Las Vegas. But I enjoyed it a lot and my team did, as well. Hopefully we can have more moments like that one this year.”

    We saw the photo of the car at the shop and that celebration, but have you given thought to the fact that you’re pretty much locked into the playoffs at this point?

    “You know, a few people have asked me that question about the playoffs. But to me, honestly I haven’t even thought about that. I haven’t even thought about the playoffs. We have a long way to go before the playoffs. In my mind, I don’t want to be one of those drivers that wins one race to get into the playoffs and that’s it. I don’t want to be part of that. The goal here is to do more than that; be strong in the regular season. I know that to be able to contend for the championship, you have to win three or more races, and that’s the goal for our team. The goal is to build a strong season where we have stage points and wins, so that when we get into the playoffs, we can say we made the playoffs but in a strong fashion. That’s the goal and everyone at Trackhouse Racing is working very hard to be able to deliver that.”

    You won last week, so Max Verstappen had to win this week to keep up with the family?

    “(laughs) Yeah.. the thing about Max (Verstappen) is that he makes it look easy. He’s done a great job the last few years.. his entire team, as well. He’s putting the bar pretty high, so I have work to do.”

    The wind this weekend; how much does that concern you?

    “Yeah, we talked about it as a group. I didn’t really realize how big it was until I got here. On the interstate coming here, it was full of dust and pieces of debris flying everywhere. It’s going to be tricky, but the beautiful thing is that it’s going to be the same for everyone. Everyone is going to struggle with the same thing. Our group on the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevy team, we’ve prepared extremely well and I think we’re as prepared as we can be. We have some ideas, some options, of things to do for the wind because tomorrow, luckily, it won’t be this hard. So yeah, we may have to adjust aggressively for it today, but tomorrow is going to be a little bit more normal. It’ll be windy still, but not as windy as today.”

    You and Rajah Caruth both have unconventional paths to get into NASCAR. You can share in the difficulties it takes just to get to this level. Can you speak on his victory for last night?

    “You have no idea how happy I was for him. He’s a great young man. Not just a very talented race car driver, but also very dedicated. We get to see each other almost every week, training or doing different things, and I like him a lot. I consider him a friend.

    He knows this, and will know this, but the first win is always the most difficult one to get. I’m sure he’s going to win at least a few times this year. He’s very disciplined and he works hard. He’s been strong the last few weeks. I’m very happy for him. Obviously he made history last night, being the third African American driver to win in the NASCAR national series, and he’s very special. He’s also a graduate of the Drive for Diversity program, just like myself, Bubba Wallace and many others. So very happy that we’re seeing good talent from the Drive for Diversity program coming to a national series and being successful.”

    Back-to-back examples of the Drive for Diversity program working?

    “Of course. I mentioned this a week or two ago, that the Drive for Diversity program has changed quite a bit since Bubba Wallace and myself were there 10 years ago. 10 years ago it was very good.. we had a good opportunity. It was a good program. But today, it’s a great program, and I’m very happy to see that. 10 years ago, it was a great program to give you an opportunity for the K&N Series and the ARCA series. But to make the jump to a national series, it was very difficult. You had to be lucky and you have to be very, very good to get an opportunity.

    Today, the Drive for Diversity program is so involved in the Truck Series and that’s very special.. very special because giving an opportunity to these young guys like Rajah (Caruth) and Nick Sanchez to get an opportunity in the Truck Series and perform at a very competitive level. We didn’t have that 10 years ago, so I’m very happy for them. I’m very happy that the Drive for Diversity program continues to grow and continues to get better.”

    Next weekend at Phoenix Raceway, they’re going to have the “Viva La Fiesta”. Just curious to hear your overall excitement for that event and the importance of that cultural presence and impact over there.

    “Yeah, of course. I think that every time that I come to the west coast to Las Vegas, Sonoma, Auto Club Speedway was very, very big.. Phoenix and Los Angeles – it’s amazing to feel an incredible amount of support from the Latino community, and I feel very, very proud to be the face of this community in the Cup Series. We embrace it and I’m very happy that the race tracks embrace it with us, as well. The “Viva La Fiesta” in Phoenix is just a small example of that. We’re going to be having a great time in Phoenix next week.”

    When you scored your first victory at Sonoma Raceway, it was in the middle of the season. This year, you’re two races in and you’re essentially guaranteed a playoff spot. Does that give you an opportunity to gamble in order to try to get some more stage points and playoff points throughout the year?

    “I think so, yeah. I had a meeting with my crew chief about it. It definitely gives us a lot more freedom. We want to gamble wisely.. you don’t want to do just wild gambles and hope for the best, like a stage running long and hoping for things to just fall in your lap. But you can gamble a little bit in the setup.. you can gamble a little bit on the strategy. You can push the limits a little bit harder in a few areas. I think it’s a very good thing.

    But with that being said, it’s also very important to continue to be consistent.. to continue to be strong and to have in mind that – yeah, we’re in the playoffs, but in my mind, one win won’t do it to be able to get to Phoenix to fight for a championship. You have to really build your resume over the year, and we have to continue to do that. If that’s what it takes to be consistent, to gamble or whatever that may be – we’ll have to figure it out and do it. But I think honestly, this weekend for us is going to be a very, very important weekend. It is for everyone. It’s going to be a very, very important weekend because, as we all know, we have a lot of 1.5-mile tracks and this is the first one with this package. We have to see where we stack up; where we’re strong and the areas that we aren’t very strong that we have to work on. We’re going to find out a lot of things today and tomorrow, and I’m very excited for that.”

    Go back to Atlanta again – you, Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch are crossing the line all at the same time. What are you thinking? Go through the whole conversation on the radio up until you know that you won.

    “Yeah, it was definitely tricky and a little stressful, especially the last couple of laps. I really wanted to be on the outside to have a shot to attack the No. 12 (Ryan Blaney). But unfortunately, the person that was behind me and pushing me was his teammate. So I wasn’t really getting a lot of help to build runs. At that point, it was going to take a little bit of situational things to be able to make a run at it. Luckily, the No. 8 (Kyle Busch) was able to build a run at it with the No. 23 (Bubba Wallace). I was able to stay close to the No. 8 and that’s what created the three-wide.

    At that point, once you get three-wide getting into turn three and we’re side-drafting hard exiting turn four – at that point, you’ve already used your bullets. You already did what you had to do and at that point, you’re just hoping that you’re the one. I knew that I was inching ahead of the No. 8.. I was slowly moving ahead of the No. 8 when I did my last side-draft. But I had no idea about the No. 12.. he was so far on the inside and the No. 8 was blocking my view to the No. 12 that I had no idea. I knew he was there, but I didn’t know where he was. So when they told me that we got the No. 8, but the No. 12 was very close, I was nervous because I had no idea. Like if they were telling me that the No. 8 beat us by a nose or we beat him by a nose, I would have believed it because I could see him. Like I said, I knew on the No. 8 but I didn’t know on the No. 12. By the time that we crossed the start-finish line and the time that we actually knew that it was us, it was probably a minute but it felt like three hours (laughs).

    But yeah, it was quite special. It’s always fun to get victories like this. I hope that I get an opportunity to experience many, many more in this fashion because in this fashion, like I said, it’s quite a bit more intense and thrilling than winning races by three, four or five-seconds.”

    The last year or so, there’s been a lot of talk amongst drivers regarding the lack of respect that has been shown when racing, especially when coming to the start-finish line. Was there any worry in your mind that you were possibly going to get punted, or there was going to be contact by somebody else trying to move you out of the way for the race win?

    “You’re talking about when we were already three-wide, or before that?”

    So even just coming down the backstretch, when you guys were trying to make the runs and coming out of the turn three when you were trying to make your move to take the lead, were you worried that somebody was going to throw an aggressive block?

    “I was a little bit on the No. 2 (Austin Cindric) because I knew I couldn’t trust him, especially because his teammate was in the lead. He didn’t want to push me. He was pushing me just enough to stay up there, but never hard enough to make a run on the No. 12. I had to make sure that when he was pushing me, I was on my toes of where he was going to go because I didn’t know if he was actually going to push me or he was going to do something else. Like I said, on the back-straightaway, he never touched my bumper because he was lifting so much. But I have raced with Ryan (Blaney) for many years, along with Kyle (Busch), as well – when we were three-wide, we didn’t want to hit each other. Lets say that if Kyle and I were hitting each other, that was going to give Blaney the win. If Blaney and Kyle were hitting each other, that was going to give me the win. So at that point, we knew it was in our best interest not to touch because whoever was touching the other one, it was going to affect us, too. So if it was a battle between two cars, yeah, you may touch a little bit more because it’s a different situation. But with three cars, you’re in a different spot. You’re not fighting one guy, you’re fighting two. So it’s a little bit more complicated.

    I feel like there’s a lot of lack of respect many times, but that’s what makes racing fun, too. Right there at the end, we raced with respect because it was in our best interest, so it worked out that way.”

    Did you have any interaction with Pitbull at the concert? Just talk about the experience of being introduced and coming out on stage.

    “That was quite an experience. I wasn’t thinking much about it when they told me I was going to do that. And then I had a little talk with Pitbull before he performed and he said – yeah, I’m going to bring you on stage and then you can talk and then we can have a shot of my tequila together. I don’t drink, that’s why I got drunk with one shot (laughs). It was very improvised, but it was amazing. I wasn’t thinking much about it. When I was in the moment.. when he introduced me and I was talking to all the people there, I mean the energy was unbelieve.. unbelievable when people were screaming. I don’t know if Nashville is normally like this or it was because Pitbull was there or maybe I just got lucky, but there were a lot of Mexican flags with the fans, and people were getting crazy. I was talking in Spanish.. actually I got nervous, I should have spoken English a little bit too, but I did my entire speech in Spanish and people were getting crazy. It was a great time. It was a great experience. Pitbull is such a rockstar. That guy is unbelievable.. the way that he performs; the way he drives people is unbelievable. I’m very happy and I’m very proud to have Pitbull as part of Trackhouse.”

    I saw you interacted with a post on Twitter of a woman that was sobbing in the grandstands when you won. She said she had been a fan of hers your whole career, and to be present in Atlanta just brought her to tears. What does that make you feel like?

    “Yeah, it was very special. It’s very special because many of these people.. not all of them, but many of these people have had a very similar journey as myself… coming from Mexico or somewhere else in Latin America and just having the same obstacles; not speaking the language and just trying to find an opportunity. I feel like that’s the reason why we connect so well because – yeah, maybe I’m driving race cars for a living, but at the end of the day, we’re the same. We came from the same place and we came with a very similar journey. It’s quite special to give those experiences to my community, to my people, and I hope that I get the opportunity to do that many more times this year and in the future. It’s quite special to be able to have my people so excited and so proud. It’s a feeling that’s just different and I’m very lucky to be in this position and to be the one to actually make those kinds of things happen.”

    We’re seeing the growth amongst the fanbase with minorities and people that don’t come from the traditional racing background over here in NASCAR. What do you think is the next step to continue this amazing growth?

    “Yeah, you know I think the next step – I talked about this in Atlanta, but I think the next step is to become one of those drivers that when you win, you’re not very surprised that they have won. Who is in that category.. Kyle Larson, William Byron, Joey Logano, Kyle Busch, all those guys that win often. They win every single year and they’re in the playoffs every single year. Not just attending the playoffs, but fighting in the playoffs.. that’s the goal. I’m not OK being an ‘OK driver’ or a ‘good driver’ anymore. I had this conversation with my team in the offseason. Everyone on the team has to have the same mentality. If 50 percent of the team wants to be great, but the other 50 percent is OK with being good, that won’t work. Everyone has to have the same mentality, and my goal is to go to the next step.. to go to the next level. I feel like right now, I have the team to do it. The team is in the same mindset of myself, and I have to take advantage of that. I have to bring this group to the next level to be able to get used to that. To be able to not just win one race a year once in a while, but to win three, four or five races a year. That’s my goal and that’s what we’re working towards for this season.”



    About Chevrolet

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

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

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

    Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway Competition Notes

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (February 29, 2024) – The West Coast swing begins for the NASCAR Cup Series and Michael McDowell as the No. 34 Ford Mustang Dark Horse heads to the Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway.

    McDowell heads west after an impressive showing at the Atlanta Motor Speedway, capturing his first career pole and finishing 8th-place. His 1.5 average starting position is currently tied for first with Joey Logano and he will be making his 220th start with Front Row Motorsports, the most Cup starts in team history.

    Track activity will begin with practice and qualifying on Saturday, March 2nd at 2:00 p.m. ET. The 400-mile event will take place Sunday, March 3rd at 3:30 p.m. ET and will be televised live on FOX. Fans can also listen in on the action live from Sirius XM and the Performance Racing Network.

    No. 34 Love’s Travel Stops Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

    DRIVER MICHAEL MCDOWELL:

    “Looking ahead to this weekend at Las Vegas and with this group, I’m confident that we can get a top-10 at this track and keep building momentum. We had a really fast car at Atlanta, and we feel that our Ford Mustang Dark Horse has been solid. There isn’t doubt that we’re going to have speed and make the best race calls. So, yeah, I feel good heading into Las Vegas and getting another solid result.”

    CREW CHIEF TRAVIS PETERSON:

    “This weekend at Las Vegas will be a real test for how our season is going to look. Coming off back-to-back speedway style races we’ve had a lot of speed and hopefully that translates to this weekend. I’m excited to get the new Dark Horse Mustang on a mile and half track and see what we can do, hoping for big gains from how we ran on intermediate tracks last year.”

    “Vegas is a fast and fairly rough race track so hopefully we have hit the setup right and can allow Michael to search around the track and find the speed and grip we need for another day running up front.”

    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.

  • Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway Competition Notes

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (February 29, 2024) – Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 Ford Mustang Dark Horse kick off the West Coast Swing this weekend at the Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway.

    Gilliland comes into Vegas after showing a strong performance at the Atlanta (Ga.) Motor Speedway, leading not only the race-high, but a career-high 58 laps. It is the most laps a Front Row Motorsports car has led in 1,304 starts at the Cup level. Gilliland also leads the Cup Series in laps led with 74. Gilliland will be making his fifth start looking to improve on his average finish of 26.5 at the track.

    Track activity will begin with practice and qualifying on Saturday, March 2nd at 2:00 p.m. ET. The 400-mile event will take place Sunday, March 3rd at 3:30 p.m. ET and will be televised live on FOX. Fans can also listen in on the action live from Sirius XM and the Performance Racing Network.

    No. 38 gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

    DRIVER TODD GILLILAND:

    “Atlanta definitely seems like a missed opportunity, but it’s in the past. I’m confident Ryan (Bergenty) and the team will bring me a fast gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse. We’ve shown that we have the speed, but just have to execute. Vegas in my eyes is the first true race where at Daytona and Atlanta, is just such a gamble with drafting and the usual superspeedway chaos.”

    CREW CHIEF RYAN BERGENTY:

    “It’s frustrating we weren’t there at the end at Atlanta, but we still came out of the race with some stage points and respect. Todd (Gilliland) wasn’t up front out of coincidence, he controlled the race and showed that he belongs up there. I’m proud of him and this team and I’m confident that we will leave Vegas with a solid result.”

    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.

  • RCR Race Preview: Las Vegas Motor Speedway

    RCR Race Preview: Las Vegas Motor Speedway

    Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Cup Series at Las Vegas Motor Speedway… In 84 NASCAR Cup Series starts at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Richard Childress Racing boasts 12 top-five and 28 top-10 finishes. In 2023, Kyle Busch led RCR with a third-place finish in the fall event at the Nevada oval.

    Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Las Vegas Motor Speedway… RCR has five wins at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, most recently by Austin Hill in March 2023. Other drivers to win in Xfinity Series competition for the Welcome, N.C., based organization include Kevin Harvick (2004), Jeff Burton (2007), Austin Dillon (2015) and Tyler Reddick (2019). RCR has racked up four poles in the Xfinity Series at Las Vegas Motor Speedway with drivers Kevin Harvick (2007), Ty Dillon (2014), A. Dillon (2015) and Myatt Snider (2020).

    BIG POWER to Start 2024… ECR Engines has enjoyed a strong start to the 2024 NASCAR season. The company powered Daniel Suarez to victory one week ago at Atlanta Motor Speedway. ECR has dominated the start to the Xfinity Series season winning both races, both poles and leading 76.81% of the total possible laps.

    Catch the Action on Saturday… The NASCAR Xfinity Series The LiUNA! at Las Vegas Motor Speedway will be televised live on Saturday, March 2, beginning at 5 p.m. ET on FS1. The race will be broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    Follow Sunday’s Action at Las Vegas… The NASCAR Cup Series Las Vegas 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway will be televised live on Sunday, March 4, beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX. The race will be broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 BetMGM Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway… In 17 NASCAR Cup Series starts at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Austin Dillon has two top-five and three top-10 finishes, including a best performance of fourth in 2020. Dillon has completed 99.6% of all the laps run at the 1.5-mile oval.

    Former Winner… Dillon is a two-time winner at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The 2013 NASCAR Xfinity Series Champion went to Victory Lane in Xfinity Series competition at the track in March 2015, leading 183 of the scheduled 200 laps. Dillon also has a NASCAR Truck Series win at the track in September 2010.

    About BetMGM… BetMGM is a market-leading sports betting and gaming entertainment company, pioneering the online gaming industry. Born out of a partnership between MGM Resorts International and Entain Group, BetMGM has exclusive access to all of MGM’s U.S. land-based and online sports betting, major tournament poker, and online gaming businesses. Utilizing Entain’s U.S.-licensed, state-of-the-art technology, BetMGM offers sports betting and online gaming via market-leading brands, including BetMGM, Borgata Casino, Party Casino, and Party Poker. Founded in 2018, BetMGM is headquartered in New Jersey. Always Bet Responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, Call 1-800-GAMBLER.

    Meet Dillon… On Saturday, March 2 from 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. local time, Dillon and his RCR teammate Kyle Busch are scheduled to participate in an autograph session on behalf of BetMGM at the Mandalay Bay Sportsbook.

    AUSTIN DILLON QUOTES:

    What are your thoughts on Las Vegas Motor Speedway?

    “I can’t wait to get to Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It’s one of my favorite racetracks. It’s big, fast, bumpy, and it has a lot of lines that you can choose. It’s going to be a great race weekend for everyone coming to check us out. We’re on a mission on the No. 3 team to turn our luck around and Las Vegas is the perfect place to do that.”

    How has racing on 1.5-mile tracks with the Next Gen car changed and how do you think it’s improved?

    “I think the racing on the 1.5-mile tracks is probably the best racing we have now with this new car. It seems to put on a good show, and you find certain times and tracks that race really competitively. The restarts are really pretty wild.”

    Kyle Busch and the No. 8 BetMGM Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway… Kyle Busch made his first NASCAR Cup Series start at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 7, 2004, and since then, he has gone on to achieve much success at his home track. In 2009, Busch won from the pole position, the only driver in track history to accomplish the feat. The Las Vegas native has racked up 12 top-five and 15 top-10 finishes, including five top-five results in the last six Las Vegas races (dating back to 2021). Busch also has secured two pole positions (2008 and 2009) at the 1.5-mile track.

    An Impressive Track Record… Busch owns numerous Cup Series records at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.He is the youngest race winner (23 years, 9 months, and 27 days) and owns the most top-five (12) and top-10 finishes (15). He is also tied for most poles (two) among active drivers entering this weekend’s race.

    Leading the Points… Busch leads the NASCAR Cup Series driver standings by one point ahead of second-place William Byron. This is the first time the driver of the BetMGM Chevrolet has led the standings since winning the Cup championship at Homestead in 2019 (145 races).

    Just how close was the finish in Atlanta? Busch finished third in a thrilling three-wide photo finish battle for the win one week ago at Atlanta Motor Speedway, a scant .007 seconds behind the race winner, marking the closest final margin between first and third in NASCAR Cup Series history.

    About BetMGM… BetMGM is a market-leading sports betting and gaming entertainment company, pioneering the online gaming industry. Born out of a partnership between MGM Resorts International and Entain Group, BetMGM has exclusive access to all of MGM’s U.S. land-based and online sports betting, major tournament poker, and online gaming businesses. Utilizing Entain’s U.S.-licensed, state-of-the-art technology, BetMGM offers sports betting and online gaming via market-leading brands, including BetMGM, Borgata Casino, Party Casino, and Party Poker. Founded in 2018, BetMGM is headquartered in New Jersey. Always Bet Responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, Call 1-800-GAMBLER.

    Meet The Drivers… Busch and teammate Austin Dillon are scheduled to meet with fans at the Mandalay Bay Sportsbook on behalf of BetMGM on Saturday, March 2. The appearance will be from 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. local time and is limited to the first 100 fans who receive a wristband.

    KYLE BUSCH QUOTES:

    What do you see as the role of sports betting in sports?

    “It’s huge. I think there’s a huge market for it. I grew up in Las Vegas, obviously, and a lot of betting and gambling happens there. It feels like I’m the natural fit for that. Thanks to BetMGM for being associated with a Vegas cat like me. It’s a huge market. A lot more states are coming up with releasing the regulations and allowing sports betting to happen in their states. I feel like that’s only a good thing for the industry, just having that chance.”

    What’s your responsibility as an athlete in all that?

    “Well, I mean, obviously, I feel like for us, keeping the integrity of the sport. You’re not going to do anything that hurts the things that you’re supposed to do behind the wheel and also just making sure you deliver the message of safe betting as well.”

    What do you remember of your first NASCAR Cup Series win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in 2009 and what did that victory in front of the home crowd mean to you?

    “It was huge and such a cool deal. That to me felt like my Daytona 500. I’ve had some big wins. I’ve won Indy. I’ve won the Southern 500. I’ve won the Coke 600, All-Star Race, all that stuff. But the Vegas win, it was just such a relief and such a monumental win for me because I remember I grew up right down the street watching that place be built.”

    Is there less pressure when you go back to Las Vegas Motor Speedway?

    “Because I’ve won there, yes, there’s less pressure, but I’ve never backed it up. You still want to win there every time you go, being the hometown. I think I have four or five third-place finishes there in the last six or seven races. We’re right there, we just don’t get it.”

    Jesse Love and the No. 2 Whelen Chevrolet Camaro SS at Las Vegas Motor Speedway… Jesse Love will make his inaugural start at Las Vegas Motor Speedway this Saturday. The 19-year-old has attended races at the 1.5-mile oval in person, but Friday’s practice will mark his first laps on the Nevada surface.

    Two for Two… With securing pole positions at both Daytona International Speedway and Atlanta Motor Speedway, Love is the first driver in NASCAR Xfinity Series history to win consecutive poles in their first two starts in the series.

    Did You Know? Continuing to add to his resume, Love is the first driver to win Stage One in each of the first two races in a Xfinity Series season.

    Lap Leader… Love has led over 60% of laps competed through the first two Xfinity Series races. The Menlo Park, California native has paced the field for a total of 191 laps – 34 at Daytona International Speedway and 157 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Love is also the first driver of 2024 to surpass 100 laps led across NASCAR’s top-three series.

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

    JESSE LOVE QUOTE:

    What are your thoughts heading into Las Vegas Motor Speedway and your first mile-and-a-half race in the Xfinity Series?

    “I feel like I know more of what to do and what not to do on an intermediate track than I did on a superspeedway. I have confidence heading to Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the fact that I personally have laps at a mile-and-a-half track in an ARCA car and our Whelen Chevrolet should be fast once again. There is a little bit of an unknown in going to a mile-and-a-half for the first time specifically in a Xfinity car, but that’s a more positive than negative unknown. Our No. 2 team has come out of the gate strong and while we wanted the win last week in Atlanta, we can take that strong run and build off of it.”

    Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation and Logistics Chevrolet Camaro SS at Las Vegas Motor Speedway… Austin Hill has made five career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, earning one win and three top-10 finishes. In eight NASCAR Truck Series starts at the Nevada speedway, Hill has led a total of 80 laps and captured two wins (fall 2019, fall 2020), four top-five, and six top-10 results.

    Undefeated in 2024… With back-to-back wins at Daytona International Speedway and Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hill remains undefeated in 2024 and holds the lead in the driver championship point standings.

    Did You Know? Hill is the fourth driver in Xfinity Series history to win the first two races of season, joining Dale Earnhardt (1986), Chad Little (1995), and Tony Stewart (2008). If Hill is able to capture the checkered flag on Saturday, the 29-year-old will become the first driver in Xfinity Series history to win the first three races of a season.

    Defending Race Winner… Hill enters Saturday’s race as the defending Xfinity Series race winner at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Last March, the Winston, Georgia native started from the ninth position and drove forward to claim the Stage 2 victory. Running in second place with 10 laps to go, Hill consistently chased then leader Chandler Smith to make a late-race pass and secure the victory. This marked Hill’s second win in the first three races of the 2023 season.

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

    Meet Hill… On Saturday, March 2 at 11:00 a.m. local time, Hill is scheduled to visit the South Point Casino booth in the Las Vegas Motor Speedway Fan Zone to sign autographs and greet fans.

    Immediately following, on Saturday, March 2 at 11:20 a.m. local time, Hill will sign autographs at the RCR Merchandise Trailer located in the Fan Zone at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Stop by to meet the eight-time Xfinity Series winner and purchase new gear.

    AUSTIN HILL QUOTE:

    Talk about returning to Las Vegas Motor Speedway as the defending race winner.

    “I’ve always had good fortune at and have loved going to Las Vegas Motor Speedway. I had success there during my Truck Series career and now I’ve won a Xfinity Series race as well. Statistically, I have run well there throughout my career. I expect big things when we hit the track. Our Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet should be capable of running up front and the No. 21 team hopefully will have a shot at the win. These first three races to start this season are our cup of tea. We won all three last season, have two already this year, and our goal is to keep the momentum going.”