Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Toyota Racing – Weekly Preview – 02.21.24

    Toyota Racing – Weekly Preview – 02.21.24

    This Week in Motorsports: February 19 – 25, 2024

    · NCS/NXS/NCTS: Atlanta Motor Speedway – February 23-25

    PLANO, Texas (February 21, 2024) – NASCAR’s three national series head to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the second race of the 2024 season. Toyota scored top-three finishes in all three national series races at Daytona last weekend, looking for more this weekend in the Peach State.

    NASCAR National Series – NCS | NXS| NCTS

    New Camry XSE Next Gen strong out of the gate … Toyota’s new Camry XSE Cup race car has had a strong beginning to its NASCAR Cup Series campaign. Toyotas swept the Duels at Daytona last week with victories by Christopher Bell and Tyler Reddick, followed up by four top-ten finishers in the Daytona 500 with Bell, Bubba Wallace and LEGACY MOTOR CLUB’s John Hunter Nemechek and Erik Jones. The Camry XSE has another chance to show off its superspeedway performance this weekend in Atlanta.

    Optimal start in the Toyota family … With the seventh and eighth place finishes by Nemechek and Jones at Daytona, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB claimed their first double-top-10 as an organization since the team’s debut last season. Both drivers have had past success at Atlanta Motor Speedway, to which the same feat and more could be accomplished this weekend.

    Hamlin returns to favorable Atlanta … Coming off a solid run at the Daytona 500, Denny Hamlin heads back to Atlanta Motor Speedway, which has provided success for the 43-year-old. Hamlin has a 2012 victory to go along with six top-fives and 10 top-10s at the Georgia track. A second win at Atlanta Motor Speedway would give Hamlin the 52nd of his career and his 49th with Toyota.

    Creed brings superspeedway success to Atlanta … In his debut with Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) and in a Toyota GR Supra last weekend, Sheldon Creed nearly snatched victory, coming home second in the Xfinity Series season opener at Daytona. Creed’s runner up finish helped JGR claim two of the top five positions with teammate, Chandler Smith, finishing fifth in a strong start to 2024 for the team. Creed also enters Atlanta with consecutive second-place superspeedway finishes, providing confidence his first career win could be this weekend at the similar-styled Atlanta Motor Speedway.

    Nemechek looking for repeat win at Atlanta … Nemechek will once again do double duty and pilot the No. 20 Toyota GR Supra for Joe Gibbs Racing. He looks to go back-to-back at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the Xfinity Series as the North Carolina native made his way to victory lane last summer, which was one of his seven victories in 2023.

    Truex keen to continue Atlanta success … Joe Gibbs Racing’s Ryan Truex has had a great deal of success in his Xfinity Series career at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The 31-year-old has finished in the top 11 in each of his starts, including consecutive third place finishes. After a strong showing at Daytona Monday night, Truex has his eyes set on career win number two this weekend.

    Howard piloting No. 1 Tundra TRD Pro … Twenty-two-year-old, Colby Howard, will be behind the wheel of the No. 1 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro this weekend for TRICON Garage. The South Carolina native is making his debut with Toyota in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series after two starts in a Toyota Camry in ARCA at Sonoma Raceway and Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in 2022. Howard has 51 career Truck Series starts with one career top-five and four career top-10s.

    Heim returns to home track … Marietta, Georgia’s, Corey Heim, will make his third career Truck Series start at his home track this weekend, which is also the site of his first career victory (2022). Coming off a second-place finish last weekend at Daytona, the 21-year-old is eager for his first win of 2024.

    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.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR – 2024 Atlanta 1 Advance

    Ford Performance NASCAR – 2024 Atlanta 1 Advance

    ATLANTA 1

    Saturday, Feb. 24 — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, 2 p.m. ET (FS1)
    Saturday, Feb. 24 — NASCAR Xfinity Series, 5 p.m. ET (FS1)
    Sunday, Feb. 25 — NASCAR Cup Series, 3 p.m. ET (FOX)

    All three of NASCAR’s top touring series will be in action for the second straight week to start the 2024 season as Atlanta Motor Speedway plays host to three races in two days, highlighted by the Cup Series event on Sunday afternoon.

    LOGANO LOOKING TO DEFEND

    Joey Logano passed Brad Keselowski on the final lap to win last year’s Ambetter Health 400, giving Ford its first NASCAR Cup Series win of the 2023 season. Ford dominated the weekend as Logano won the pole and led all 60 laps to win Stage 1. After Austin Cindric won Stage 2, it turned into the Keselowski and Logano show as the two drivers took turns trading the lead over the final 52 laps. Logano got alongside Keselowski coming off turn two and made the winning pass going into turn three to complete a banner day that saw eight Ford drivers lead for a combined 221-of-260 laps.

    JOEY LOGANO: “I call it (Atlanta) kind of a confused racetrack. It doesn’t know if it wants to be a superspeedway or a mile-and-a-half. It seems like you’re wide-open all the way around it most of the time. If you’re leading, for sure, but there are other times where you’re hanging on and you’re in the back and you’re lifting and all that stuff. Honestly, it’s similar to what Daytona was like before they repaved it years and years and years ago, where it had some bumps and some character and the tires would fall off to where you had to kind of hang on and handling came into play. The same thing can happen there.”

    CHASE BRISCOE: “I think it is the most mentally draining racetrack we have on the schedule. Daytona and Talladega have always been mentally draining at the end of the day, but you go to Atlanta and things happen four times the speed because you lose a mile with that racetrack. It’s an interesting track because it races like a superspeedway, but it’s still an intermediate. The corners didn’t change. The radius of the corners, all of that is still the same that we’ve always had, so it’s not like a Daytona or a Talladega where your car goes around there wide-open super easy. You’re manhandling the car at all times, so Atlanta is a very challenging racetrack and by far the most mentally draining with just how much your brain is trying to process and listen to your spotter, but then actually applying what your spotter is saying is hard because things happen so fast there. It’s a tough one for sure.”

    RYAN PREECE: “The runs that we get at Atlanta are far greater than any other superspeedway runs that we get, but the handling in Atlanta means so much more. It is actually tricky. Some teams concentrate on trimming out, and I think a lot of it is weather-oriented, but you need to have a really good handling car at Atlanta.”

    KESELOWSKI GETS FIRST CUP WIN FOR MUSTANG

    Brad Keselowski gave Mustang its first NASCAR Cup Series victory as he held off Martin Truex Jr. at the finish line to win the Folds of Honor 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in 2019. Keselowski, who was battling an illness all weekend and had Austin Cindric standing by in case he needed relief, led the final 33 laps to post his 28th career victory. In all, Ford led 177 of the 325 laps and won for the third straight year at the 1.5-mile track.

    SWEEP DREAMS

    Marvin Panch was the first driver to sweep both AMS races in a single season when he did it in 1965 with the Wood Brothers. Georgia native Bill Elliott posted a pair of season sweeps (1985 and 1992) and won five times overall while Carl Edwards registered the first win of his career at the speedway in 2005 and matched it later that fall.

    LORENZEN LAPS THE FIELD

    Ford went to victory lane at Atlanta Motor Speedway for the first time in 1961 when NASCAR Hall of Famer Fred Lorenzen captured the Festival 250 on July 9 while driving for Holman-Moody. He did it in dominating fashion as well by lapping the field. Lorenzen, who led 52 laps on the day, beat runner-up Bob Welborn by one lap in his 1961 Ford. Richard Petty finished third that afternoon, but was three laps down. That victory served as a springboard for Lorenzen’s future success at AMS, which included becoming the first driver to win the Atlanta 500 three straight years (1962-63-64).

    HERBST PICKING UP WHERE HE LEFT OFF

    Riley Herbst, driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Stewart-Haas Racing, finished the 2023 season on a roll as he netted his first victory and posted five straight top-five runs. The 2024 campaign started in much the same fashion as he led eight laps in Monday’s rain-delayed United Rentals 300 before finishing sixth to lead all Ford drivers. This will mark Herbst’s eighth career NXS start at Atlanta, where he has four top-10 and a pair of top-5 efforts.

    ATLANTA ALREADY ON CRAFTON’S WIN LIST

    Matt Crafton, driver of the No. 88 Menards Ford F-150, led Ford last week in Daytona with a seventh-place finish in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season opener, and he comes into Saturday’s scheduled race looking for his second victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Crafton, who has 15 career series wins on 11 different tracks, went to Victory Lane at AMS in 2015 after leading 85-of-130 laps.

    FORD’S ATLANTA CUP SERIES WINNERS

    1961 – Fred Lorenzen

    1962 – Fred Lorenzen

    1963 – Fred Lorenzen

    1964 – Fred Lorenzen and Ned Jarrett

    1965 – Marvin Panch (Sweep)

    1967 – Cale Yarborough and Dick Hutcherson

    1968 – LeeRoy Yarbrough

    1969 – LeeRoy Yarbrough

    1975 – Buddy Baker

    1978 – Bobby Allison

    1981 – Neil Bonnett

    1985 – Bill Elliott (Sweep)

    1987 – Ricky Rudd and Bill Elliott

    1990 – Morgan Shepherd

    1991 – Mark Martin

    1992 – Bill Elliott (Sweep)

    1993 – Morgan Shepherd

    1994 – Ernie Irvan and Mark Martin

    1997 – Dale Jarrett

    2002 – Kurt Busch

    2005 – Carl Edwards (Sweep)

    2008 – Carl Edwards

    2017 – Brad Keselowski

    2018 – Kevin Harvick

    2019 – Brad Keselowski

    2020 – Kevin Harvick

    2021 – Ryan Blaney (1)

    2023 – Joey Logano (1)

  • Bass Pro Shops Racing: Martin Truex Jr. Atlanta Advance

    Bass Pro Shops Racing: Martin Truex Jr. Atlanta Advance

    Martin Truex Jr.
    Atlanta Advance
    No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry TRD for Joe Gibbs Racing

    Event Overview

    ● Event: Ambetter Health 400 (Round 2 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Feb. 25
    ● Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway
    ● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 260 laps/400 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 60 laps / Stage 2: 100 laps / Final Stage: 100 laps
    ● TV/Radio: FOX / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● Prior to the 2022 season, the 1.5-mile Atlanta oval was repaved, its banking in the turns increased from 24 to 28 degrees, and the track reconfigured to vary from 40 to 55 feet. The frontstretch width is now 52 feet while the backstretch and turns are set at 42 and 40 feet wide, respectively. With the repave and reconfiguration, the racing at Atlanta was drastically changed and now more resembles racing at the superspeedways at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway and Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.

    ● Looking for No. 1: Truex is still seeking his first Atlanta win, old configuration or new. Among his 28 starts at Atlanta, Truex has finished second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, 10th, 11th and 12th in Cup Series races during his career at the 1.5-mile oval.

    ● Truex has six top-five finishes and 13 top-10s and has led a total of 388 laps in 28 career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Atlanta. Truex’s average Atlanta finish is 15.6. In his last 13 races at Atlanta – 11 on the old surface and four since the repave and banking reconfiguration, Truex has scored six top-fives and 11 top-10s there.

    ● Ahead at this Stage: Truex leads the NASCAR Cup Series with 62 stage wins since the beginning of the stage era in 2017. He is the only driver with 10 or more stage sweeps with his most recent stage sweep at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn last August.

    ● With his 15th-place finish in Monday’s rain-delayed season opener at Daytona, Truex heads to Atlanta 16th in the standings with 24 points, 22 out of the lead.

    Martin Truex Jr., Driver of the No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry TRD

    What is your relationship with crew chief James Small like, and how has it evolved over the years?

    “It’s been fun. We joke and laugh about it sometimes, he’s high-strung and I get frustrated at times on the radio. I think we have a good relationship where we understand each other and we know our attitudes and how we work and the way we work together behind the scenes. And we are always pulling in the same direction all the time despite what we say on the radio at times. We both have our moments and maybe get too wound up, and we sort of make fun of it afterward and move on. I just really enjoy James’ work ethic and how hard he works and how bad he wants it, that’s what keeps us going.”

    The JGR lineup has a different dynamic than a lot of other race teams with two veteran guys in Denny Hamlin and yourself, and two young guys in Christopher Bell and Ty Gibbs. What is that dynamic been like and what do the young guys bring to the table?

    “If you look at Christopher, you really can’t look at his age or how long he’s been around, you look at his last two seasons – they’ve been phenomenal. He hangs around all year long and then the playoffs start and every week he’s up front, on the pole, leading laps and in the conversation. A lot of that has to do with Adam (Stevens, No. 20 crew chief). He’s been a great crew chief for a long time and won championships, and he’s seen it all and has a lot of experience. I think those two make a great combination. It’s fun and interesting to hear and see Christopher’s comments and the way he approaches things. Then you throw Ty (Gibbs) in there, with last year being only his first year but a really impressive rookie year. He brings yet another thought process and approach to how we do things, so I think we all approach it a little differently, all of us. Even Denny and I, we do things a lot differently and talk about things and look for different things. We have a good mix of different guys who really add a lot and, when you mesh it all together, you really have good results.”

    With the repaving and reconfiguration of the Atlanta oval in two years ago, would you qualify it as a superspeedway-style race, and what are the new challenges there because of those changes?

    “It’s definitely a superspeedway-style race, no question about it. Last spring, we led some laps and we were leading there and had a late caution and restarted on the front row. We got a good shove down into (turn) one and (turn) two, and (Corey) Lajoie was leading the inside lane and got up inside of me, and Chase Elliott was stuck up in the middle of us and got us three-wide and got into me and shoved me up the hill and got me out of line, and that was it. Sort of what happens at those types of places – you can be in the best spot possible, but you have to count on other guys to help you and sometimes it just doesn’t work out. All I can do is hope we are in the same position this weekend with our Bass Pro Shops Camry TRD and maybe things will work out a little bit better in our favor and we can bring home the win.”

    Did superspeedway racing change with the NextGen car the past two years?

    “I think superspeedways probably haven’t changed much as opposed to some of the other types of tracks. Just the way you can bump draft with this car is totally different than the previous-generation cars. I think right now there are a lot more options as far as what lanes work. It used to be that you never wanted anyone on the outside, and now you can pass guys on the bottom a bit easier and that sets up some other opportunities. I feel like the racing has been fun on superspeedways, but you have to be really aggressive, as well.”

    No. 19 Bass Pro Shops 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: Marquill Osborne

    Hometown: Cornelius, NC

  • RFK Advance | Atlanta I

    RFK Advance | Atlanta I

    Atlanta Event Info:
    Date: Sunday, Feb. 25
    Time: 2:30 p.m. ET
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Location: Hampton, Georgia
    Format: 200 Laps, Stages: 60-100-100
    TV: FOX
    Radio: PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90)

    Weekend Schedule:
    Saturday: 11:30 a.m. ET, Qualifying (FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
    Sunday: 3 p.m. ET, Race (FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

    Pace Laps:

    • Atlanta Motor Speedway hosts race No. 2 on the NASCAR Cup Series season this weekend, marking two-straight Speedway races to kick off the 2024 campaign.
    • Jack Roush has 13 wins all-time in Atlanta including six in the Cup Series.
    • Both RFK drivers in Brad Keselowski and Chris Buescher led laps in both Atlanta races a season ago, with Keselowski finishing a close second in the spring event in 2023.

    6 Team Info:
    Crew Chief: Matt McCall
    Partner: King’s Hawaiian

    17 Team Info:
    Crew Chief: Scott Graves
    Partner: BuildSubmarines.com

    Keselowski at Atlanta Motor Speedway
    Starts: 18
    Wins: 2 (2017, 2019)
    Top-10s: 11
    Poles: —

    • Keselowski makes his 19th Cup start at Atlanta this weekend where he is a two-time winner with an average finish of 13.9.
    • Keselowski won at the now Superspeedway first in 2017 after starting fifth and again in 2019.
    • Most recently, he led laps in each of the Atlanta races a season ago – a combined 66 laps – finishing second last spring after starting fourth. Last fall he finished sixth in a race shortened by rain.
    • Overall he’s led laps in 10 different Atlanta races and finished top-10 11 times.
    • He carries an average starting position of 14.9 into the weekend with a career-best effort of P2 in 2014. Overall he has six top-10 starts, including a P4 starting spot last spring.
    • He also made eight Xfinity Series starts with six top-10s including two P2 finishes. He also made four Truck starts.

    Buescher at Atlanta Motor Speedway
    Starts: 11
    Wins: —
    Top-10s: 3
    Poles: —

    • Buescher makes his 12th Cup start in Atlanta where he has three top-10s and a best finish of seventh (twice – 2021, 2022). He also finished ninth in 2019.
    • Last season he was leading laps in the spring and was caught up in an incident under 100 laps shy of the finish. He finished 15th in the fall race after also leading 39 laps.
    • Buescher has an average qualifying position of 18.9 with a career-best effort of seventh last spring.
    • He also finish fourth in the Xfinity Series in 2015.

    RFK Historically at Atlanta
    Cup Wins: 6 (Mark Martin, 1991, 1994; Kurt Busch, 2002; Carl Edwards, 2005, 2005, 2008)

    • RFK at Atlanta: RFK has 277 starts at AMS in NASCAR’s three major touring series totaling 13 wins, 60 top fives, 114 top-10s and nine poles while leading 3,264 laps and turning over 106,000 miles.
    • AMS/RFK History: RFK competed in its first NASCAR event at AMS on March 20, 1988, finishing 31st after getting involved in an early crash. Just three years later the organization claimed its first win there in the fall of ‘91 with the No. 6 Ford. RFK won its first of seven NXS races at the track in the spring of ’97. The team’s top outing at AMS came in the fall of 2005, when the organization placed four cars inside the top seven, with three cars finishing in the top five including race winner Carl Edwards. Altogether, in the two races at AMS in 2005, RFK posted six top-five finishes and two wins.
    • Spring Forward: All but one of RFK’s Cup wins at AMS came in the fall, with the only spring win coming in 2005. Three of RFK’s seven NXS wins came in the fall.

    RFK Atlanta Wins

    1991-2 Martin Cup

    1994-2 Martin Cup

    1997-1 Martin NXS

    1998-2 Martin NXS

    2000-1 Martin NXS

    2002-2 Busch Cup

    2005-1 Edwards Cup

    2005-1 Edwards NXS

    2005-2 Edwards Cup

    2008-1 Kenseth NXS

    2008-2 Edwards Cup

    2011 Edwards NXS

    2012 Stenhouse NXS

    Last Time Out & Where They Stand
    Daytona: All three of RFK Fords were unfortunately caught up in incidents in the Monday running of the Daytona 500. Buescher led the group with a 18th-place finish, with David Ragan finishing 20th in the No. 60 Ford, and Keselowski 33rd.

    Points Standings (17: 21st, 6: 31st): Buescher sits 21st through the first race in the points season, with Keselowski in 31st.

    By the Numbers at Atlanta

    Race Win T5 T10 Pole Laps Led AvSt AvFn Miles
    196 6 39 75 4 57683 2193 17.7 17.8 86524.5
    56 7 19 31 5 10362 961 10.8 11.3 15543
    25 0 2 8 0 2988 110 12.6 17.3 4482
    277 13 60 114 9 71033 3264 15.7 16.2 106549.5

  • HaasTooling.com Racing: Ryan Preece Atlanta Advance

    HaasTooling.com Racing: Ryan Preece Atlanta Advance

    RYAN PREECE
    Atlanta Advance
    No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

    Event Overview

    ● Event: Ambetter Health 400 (Round 2 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EST on Sunday, Feb. 25
    ● Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia
    ● Layout: 1.54-mile oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 260 laps/400 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 60 laps / Stage 2: 100 laps / Final Stage: 100 laps
    ● TV/Radio: FOX / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● Ryan Preece finished 23rd in the season-opening Daytona 500, held Monday after persistent rain postponed The Great American Race to the President’s Day holiday. Preece overcame adversity early when on lap six he was tagged by another car in the left-rear quarter panel, turning Preece across the frontstretch grass and toward pit road. Preece deftly kept his No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang from hitting the wall, and after a trip to pit road for four fresh Goodyear tires, Preece returned to the race.

    ● Despite his Daytona 500 result, Preece still left Daytona a winner. The Stewart-Haas Racing driver won on Tuesday night prior to the Daytona 500, taking the checkered flag at New Smyrna (Fla.) Speedway in the 50-lap Tour-type Modified feature at the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing. Preece took the lead on lap 16 from Craig Lutz and maintained the top spot the rest of the way, even as Ron Silk, winner of the prior two Tour-type Modified races at New Smyrna, closed in during the waning laps. The victory was Preece’s 13th World Series win.

    ● Atlanta Motor Speedway has been around since 1960, but the Atlanta track Preece and his NASCAR Cup Series brethren will compete on this Sunday is only two years old. The 1.54-mile oval was reconfigured after the final race of the 2021 season. The banking was increased from 24 degrees to 28 degrees and the track was narrowed from 55-feet wide to 40-feet wide, and it was all covered in fresh asphalt. The goal of the reconstruction was to recreate the kind of pack-style racing seen at the behemoth, 2.5-mile Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway and the even bigger 2.66-mile Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. Drivers competed on the new layout for the first time in March 2022 and the Ambetter Health 400 will be the fifth Cup Series race on the revamped track.

    ● The Ambetter Health 400 will mark Preece’s seventh NASCAR Cup Series start at Atlanta, the last two of which came last year. His first four starts came on the old configuration, where his best finish was 25th, earned twice – March 2021 and July 2021. Preece logged his best Atlanta result in his most recent start at the track – 24th last July.

    ● Outside of the NASCAR Cup Series, Preece has three other Atlanta starts. He ran two NASCAR Xfinity Series races at the track, each on the old layout, with his best result being seventh in February 2019. Last March, Preece competed in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Atlanta, where he also finished seventh.

    ● Back with Preece and the No. 41 Ford Mustang at Daytona for the second weekend in a row is HaasTooling.com, the cutting tool division of Haas Automation. HaasTooling.com allows CNC machinists to purchase high-quality cutting tools at great prices. Haas cutting tools are sold exclusively online at HaasTooling.com and shipped directly to end users. Haas Automation, founded in 1983, is America’s leading builder of CNC machine tools. The company manufactures a complete line of vertical and horizontal machining centers, turning centers, rotaries and indexers, and automation solutions.

    Ryan Preece, Driver of the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang

    How much does the racing at Atlanta emulate the racing you just experienced at Daytona?

    “I would say Atlanta versus Daytona, they’re the same but they’re different. They’re different because Atlanta is still a mile-and-a-half, so we’re restricted on horsepower, we’re wide open like a superspeedway, but the runs happen twice as fast. Handling is, by far, way more important than it would be at Daytona. Not only that, it’s a lot tighter of a corner, so when you’re going into turn three and you’re three-wide and four-wide, it gets tight really quick.”

    Did Daytona provide some understanding of how you think the racing will be at Atlanta?

    “Right now, it’s about trying to understand where your aero balance is and how much the body has changed and what you need to do to adapt to that. I feel like Daytona has given us a good idea that our tools are really close, but it’s about trying to have an understanding of what you need to change going into Atlanta and how much different your car is going to be.”

    Single-car qualifying is all the track time you’ll have at Atlanta prior to Sunday’s race. How do you prepare for the race when you know so little about how your car will perform?

    “You go into it completely blind. There’s nothing like showing up at a racetrack and going green and not really having an understanding of where you’re going to be. I guess that really just emphasizes how close the tools you’re using are as far as making sure your car drives well. But, yeah, we’re going to be completely blind.”

    Is competing at Atlanta mentally taxing?

    “Well, it’s different than it used to be, for sure. It’s not like the old Atlanta where you had balanced shifts and you were trying to take care of your tires. Now, it’s about positioning yourself in the right lane, and potentially you can see handling becoming an issue and people trying to hang onto the draft. It’s going to be very mentally taxing, so hopefully our cars are really fast. That fixes everything.”

    What do you need in your racecar to be fast at Atlanta?

    “You need downforce, you need horsepower, really you need everything. Ultimately, if someone asks me that question, I’d say you need the total package. If you don’t have a lot of horsepower, or a really good-handling racecar because it has plenty of horsepower but a lot of drag, you could potentially struggle.”

    Daytona and Talladega races are known to be a crapshoot, where there are so many things out of your control. Is that also the case at Atlanta, or are you still able to make a little bit of your own luck at Atlanta?

    “I feel like at Atlanta you can control your destiny a little more. Yeah, you’re going to have to have track position, but if you have a really good-handling racecar at Atlanta, you’re going to have a good day. At Daytona, sometimes it’s just luck of the draw.”

    How much has changed for you and Stewart-Haas this year compared to previous years now that Kevin Harvick has moved to the FOX broadcast booth and is no longer your teammate?

    “We have four drivers with four completely different personalities. I’m different from Chase (Briscoe) and Noah (Gragson) and Josh (Berry), as they are different from me, so I feel like there are certain traits that I have that push them, as well as certain traits they have that push me. So, I feel like it complements each other as well. At Stewart Haas, we hear everybody, and as you heard Tony (Stewart) say, mediocrity isn’t acceptable. I’m a racecar driver. I’m somebody who’s very passionate about what I do. And I do it outside the Cup Series and I don’t accept mediocrity. I know, within our 41 team, we didn’t have the year we wanted, but we set some of the foundation that we needed going into this year, and now we’re going to go do what we need to do. As a racecar driver, to have a long-lasting career, you need to win races, and I’m sick of talking about not winning.”

    No. 41 HaasTooling.com Team Roster

    Primary Team Members

    Driver: Ryan Preece

    Hometown: Berlin, Connecticut

    Crew Chief: Chad Johnston

    Hometown: Cayuga, Indiana

    Car Chief: Jeremy West

    Hometown: Gardena, California

    Engineer: Marc Hendricksen

    Hometown: Clinton, New Jersey

    Spotter: Tony Raines

    Hometown: LaPorte, Indiana

    Over-The-Wall Members

    Front Tire Changer: Devin Lester

    Hometown: Bluefield, West Virginia

    Rear Tire Changer: Kevin Teaf

    Hometown: Tallahassee, Florida

    Tire Carrier: Chad Emmons

    Hometown: Tyler, Texas

    Jack Man: Kapil Fletcher

    Hometown: Ft. Lauderdale, Florida

    Fuel Man: Dwayne Moore

    Hometown: Griffin, Georgia

    Road Crew Members

    Front End Mechanic: Joe Zanolini

    Hometown: Sybertsville, Pennsylvania

    Interior Mechanic: Robert Dalby

    Hometown: Anaheim, California

    Tire Specialist: Matt Ridgeway

    Hometown: Carrollton, Georgia

    Engine Tuner: Jimmy Fife

    Hometown: Orange County, California

    Transporter Co-Driver: David Rodrigues

    Hometown: Santa Clarita, California

    Transporter Co-Driver: Charlie Schleyer

    Hometown: Youngsville, Pennsylvania

  • Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats Racing: Noah Gragson Atlanta Advance

    Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats Racing: Noah Gragson Atlanta Advance

    NOAH GRAGSON
    Atlanta Advance
    No. 10 Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats Ford Mustang

    Event Overview

    ● Event: Ambetter Health 400 (Round 2 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EST on Sunday, Feb. 25
    ● Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia
    ● Layout: 1.54-mile oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 260 laps/400 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 60 laps / Stage 2: 100 laps / Final Stage: 100 laps
    ● TV/Radio: FOX / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● Even though Noah Gragson is still new to Stewart-Haas Racing and the Ambetter Health 400 NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway marks just his third race with the team, he brings a dose of familiarity to the Georgia track. Gragson’s No. 10 Ford Mustang carries a similar paint scheme to the one he ran for the majority of his NASCAR Xfinity Series career, where he was a 13-time race winner and perennial championship contender. Black Rifle Coffee, Ranger Boats, TrueTimber and Winchester Repeating Arms adorn Gragson’s car for the second straight race after debuting with him in the Daytona 500, where Gragson led five laps on the way to a ninth-place finish.

    ● Atlanta Motor Speedway has been around since 1960, but the Atlanta track Gragson and his NASCAR Cup Series brethren will compete on this Sunday is only two years old. The 1.54-mile oval was reconfigured after the final race of the 2021 season. The banking was increased from 24 degrees to 28 degrees and the track was narrowed from 55-feet wide to 40-feet wide, and it was all covered in fresh asphalt. The goal of the reconstruction was to recreate the kind of pack-style racing seen at the behemoth, 2.5-mile Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway and the even bigger 2.66-mile Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. Drivers competed on the new layout for the first time in March 2022 and the Ambetter Health 400 will be the fifth Cup Series race on the revamped track.

    ● The Ambetter Health 400 will mark Gragson’s fifth NASCAR Cup Series start at Atlanta, with all of his prior starts coming on the updated configuration. The driver of the No. 10 Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats Ford Mustang earned his best Atlanta finish in his third Atlanta start – 12th in March 2023.

    ● Gragson has experience on the old and new versions of Atlanta. He has six NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at the track, the last two of which came in 2022, the first year of the reconfiguration. He finished among the top-10 in all but one of his Xfinity Series starts at Atlanta and his best finish was a second-place drive in June 2020.

    ● Gragson also has two Atlanta starts in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. He finished 14th in his first Truck Series start at the track in 2017 and then earned a second-place finish when he returned to Atlanta in 2018, leading the first 43 laps.

    Noah Gragson, Driver of the No. 10 Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats Ford Mustang

    How much does racing at Atlanta emulate what you just experienced at Daytona?

    “It’s hard to tell what we’re going to have at Atlanta. Handling definitely comes into play more so than at Daytona. Still, at Daytona, you have handling issues if you get held on the bottom. It just seems like everything happens a little bit faster at Atlanta. The straightaways are shorter, so you don’t have the time to mount your runs. It’s different than the superspeedways. There’s a lot more pushing on the straightaways at Daytona and Talladega. At Atlanta, you can’t really get locked up for the whole straightaway and get away. Everybody’s super tight together. It’s a mix between an intermediate track and Daytona and Talladega. It’s a little bit of a different form of racing.”

    Is competing at Atlanta mentally taxing?

    “Atlanta is mentally taxing. You’re still having the same thought processes that you do with superspeedway racing, but it’s just faster. You’re mentally drained after Atlanta.”

    Single-car qualifying is all the track time you’ll have at Atlanta prior to Sunday’s race. How do you prepare for the race when you know so little about how your car will perform?

    “I think qualifying at Atlanta is a lot more sketchy than at Daytona and Talladega. It’s the same format where you don’t have any practice time. It’s way more sketchy to go out there and hold it wide open, and the track seems like it’s always a little bit dirty during those qualifying sessions. It bit some guys last year in the first Atlanta race, running the top on their out lap, they get loose or what-not. Drew (Blickensderfer, crew chief) and the team say that it’s going to be really secure during qualifying and probably a little more sketchy during the race, for whatever the reason. That’s kind of the opposite of what I’ve had in the past. I feel like it’s really sketchy during qualifying and it drives better in the race. Stewart-Haas sat on the pole there last year. They always bring fast Ford Mustangs for these superspeedway qualifying efforts, so I’m excited for it.”

    Are you wide open every lap at Atlanta?

    “You’re wide open in qualifying. In the race, you’re working the throttle more. At Daytona and Talladega, you’re more pacing the throttle to save fuel, where at Atlanta, you’re lifting out of the gas because you’ll get tight or loose behind guys and you have to really play with the timing on your throttle for when you get runs up to guys. You’re playing with the throttle because of handling.”

    What do you need in your racecar to be fast at Atlanta?

    “You’ve got to be fast and you can’t be too draggy. It’s bitten me in the past where we started the race tight and I couldn’t make any passes, and then we kept on freeing the car up, loosening it up, and probably got past the neutral point in the balance and got too loose and I ended up wrecking. But the freer we got it, the faster I went. So it’s a fine line of what’s enough, and that’s what I’m trying to figure out, what’s too much, what’s enough, but you definitely have to be handling good to be able to tug on the wheel and keep the thing wide open.”

    Daytona and Talladega races are known to be a crapshoot, where there are so many things out of your control. Is that also the case at Atlanta, or are you still able to make a little bit of your own luck at Atlanta?

    “It’s probably the same as far as making your own luck and getting to the front. You can work your way up to the front, you just really don’t want to get stuck in the back. With green-flag pit stops, the commitment line starts early and they start taking pit-road speed into turn three and you run the apron all the way through (turns) three and four during green-flag pit stops. That makes it a little bit different and it bites some guys, but for me, I take the same mindset going into Atlanta as I do Daytona and Talladega.”

    Stewart-Haas Racing had an off year in 2023 and the organization is expecting a turnaround in 2024. Do you feel added pressure to perform?

    “We use it as motivation. We all want to be leaders. We all want to be the best teammates possible, and we all want to work together to be a part of this deal. It takes everyone’s effort, and if we can be better than we were yesterday, that’s how we’re going to be successful in the long run.”

    What are your expectations for this year?

    “This is an incredible opportunity. At the same time, you know there’s going to be challenges along the way. There’s going be adversity. There’s going be good runs and bad runs, but it’s how you react to it and how you keep on moving forward each and every race. It’s easy when you’re winning, and I’ve kind of learned that over the past couple of years. When we were in the Xfinity Series, we literally could do no wrong, but the flip side of winning all those races was that I kind of lost my grounding in a sense of, ‘Hey, I’ve got to keep on working at this.’ It’s not always going to come as easy as it did in my final year in Xfinity. It was somewhat of a rude awakening in 2023. Obviously, we didn’t unload with race-winning speed, ever, so that was a big challenge. I’ve done a lot of self-reflecting and soul searching over the past handful of months and trying to become the best leader possible. I think that’s what in 20 years when I look back I feel like, man, if I was the best leader for my team and the best piece of the puzzle for my team and did the best job, I’ll be satisfied with myself.”

    You’re still able to connect with partners, and that’s on display again this week with Black Rifle Coffee, Ranger Boats, TrueTimber and Winchester Repeating Arms on your racecar. How important as these partnerships?

    “We have a lot of great support. It’s just relationships and being able to bring value to a partner and say, ‘Hey, what’s our plan here? How do we achieve it and go above and beyond?’ I can confidently say that we do go above and beyond and we’ve got a lot of great partners that allow us to do this. It’s great to be back with Black Rifle Coffee and TrueTimber and to also start a relationship with Ranger Boats and Winchester. It’s really special to be able to introduce them on a familiar scheme that we’ve had over the past handful of years in the Xfinity Series.”

    No. 10 Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats 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: John Casper

    Hometown: Salisbury, North Carolina

    Transporter Co-Driver: Matt Murphy

    Hometown: Augusta, Georgia

  • Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – DAYTONA 500

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – DAYTONA 500

    DAYTONA 500
    Daytona Beach, Florida – February 19, 2024
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY – NASCAR 101

    AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 DISCOUNT TIRE FORD MUSTANG

    START: 6TH STAGE ONE: 15TH STAGE TWO: 2ND FINISH: 22ND POINTS: 11TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric, driver of the No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang, was in contention to etch his name in DAYTONA 500 history as a two-time champion in the closing laps of Sunday’s 66th running of the Great American Race until chaos struck on the final lap. Cindric, the 2022 DAYTONA 500 winner, rolled off the grid from the sixth position and remained a force throughout the opening 65-lap segment alongside his Team Penske teammates Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano, but as varying pit sequences played out, Cindric finished Stage 1 in the 15th position. Under the Stage break, Cindric headed to pit road for four fresh tires and fuel in advance of the Lap 71 restart. As the field went three-wide early in second segment and the momentum of the lanes fluctuated, the No. 2 shuffled positions, rejoining the top 10 just 20 laps into Stage 2. The 25-year-old racer returned to pit road for a swift fuel-only pit stop before ultimately taking the race lead on Lap 118. Cindric, in a side-by-side battle with Kyle Busch for the sprint to the Stage end, finished the segment second to teammate Blaney after the hard-charging driver powered around the No. 2 Ford Mustang on the final lap. Pleased with the handling of the car, Cindric visited the Discount Tire pit crew once again for new tires and fuel ahead of the restart. Cindric maneuvered his way back to the front of the pack as the action intensified, vying for the race lead until getting collected in a last-lap accident that relegated the Team Penske driver to a 22nd-place finish.

    CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “A really unfortunate end. We had a shot to win the DAYTONA 500 in the No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang. We were really in great position with the outside lane breaking up and kind of one-on-one with the 24 with the whole pack behind, so you can’t really ask for anything else other than that out of myself and the team. It just sucks a little bit.”

    RYAN BLANEY No. 12 MENARDS/PEAK FORD MUSTANG

    START: 32ND STAGE ONE: 32ND STAGE TWO: 1ST FINISH: 30TH POINTS: 23RD

    RACE RUNDOWN: Despite starting at the tail end of the field for the 66th running of the DAYTONA 500, Ryan Blaney and the No. 12 Menards/PEAK team were in contention for the race win until a multi-car incident with eight laps to go dashed their hopes Monday night. After crew chief Jonathan Hassler’s strategy call to not pit following the first caution of the day on lap five, Blaney took the ensuing green flag from the inside of row one as he and the No. 20 – who also stayed out during the caution – controlled the pace of the field while trying to conserve fuel during the first long, green flag run of Stage 1. The Team Penske Fords all hit pit road together under green on lap 40 for fuel but were not able to keep pace with the lead pack as Blaney was scored 32nd at the conclusion of the opening stage. Following a four-tire stop prior to the start of Stage 2, Blaney charged to the front of the field using the third lane on the outside and was scored sixth in the running order by lap 75. A fuel-only stop on lap 115 under green saw Blaney cycle back to third before cutting to the inside of the No. 2 in turn four on the final lap of Stage 2 to pick up his first stage win of the season. Blaney took the green flag for the final stage from the outside of row two but faded to the tail end of the lead pack during the initial run. With 20 laps to go, Blaney and a host of Ford teammates hit pit road for fuel only as the Menards/PEAK Mustang cycled back to ninth in the running order with 16 laps remaining. Blaney and teammate Joey Logano led a hard-charging third lane with under 10 to go as the field was committed to running three-wide, but contact in the middle lane sent the No. 6 up the track and set off a multi-car incident in turn three, collecting Blaney and ending his night eight laps short of the checkered flag in Daytona.

    BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “You’re kind of always watching when you’re in there and especially if you’re on [the top lane] you can kind of watch and see how well their pushes are and it just looked like the 48 kind of got the 24 out of shape and just happened to get the 6 in the right-rear and unfortunately we were in the top lane. It’s an early end to our night, but we were up there in it and just wasn’t our weekend.”

    JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

    START: 1ST STAGE ONE: 11TH STAGE TWO: 21ST FINISH: 32ND POINTS: 30TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: After claiming Team Penske’s first-ever DAYTONA 500 pole award Wednesday night, Joey Logano and the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang led the field to green in Monday afternoon’s 66th running of The Great American Race. Logano led his first of a race-high – and DAYTONA 500 career-best – 45 laps prior to a green flag pit stop for fuel only on lap 40 that saw the No. 22 battle back through the field for an 11th-place finish in Stage 1. Following a four-tire stop and a round of adjustments at the stage break, Logano lined up to restart 11th before forming a third lane on the outside that worked its way to the front of the field. Logano was one of several cars to hit pit road under green on lap 111 for fuel only and led the group off pit road from the first pit stall. After cycling back to seventh in the running order after green flag stops were complete, Logano was shuffled out of the lead pack and ultimately settled for a 21st-place finish in Stage 2. Logano lined up 13th to begin the final stage and worked all three lanes as momentum shifted constantly, allowing him to move back into the top-10 with 50 laps to go. The Shell-Pennzoil Mustang was back out front with 38 to go before the Fords hit pit road for their final fuel stops of the night as Logano found himself battling for the lead in the outside lane with under 20 laps remaining. With teammate Ryan Blaney pushing Logano to the front with eight laps to go, contact in the lane below the pair of teammates sent the No. 6 up the track and into the left rear of Logano, setting off a multi-car incident in turn three that brought an end to Logano’s bid for a second DAYTONA 500 title.

    LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “That’s very much how speedway racing is. It’s part of it. You’re pushing and shoving there at the end. We had the cars that could take it and were doing really well. I had Blaney behind me. I thought, ‘Man, if I could pick one, that’s the one I want. I’m in a great position here’ and just had to find the right opportunity to slip the 1 again because the 6 wasn’t working with us, so I felt if I could keep the 12 with me I’m going to be in a decent spot, but it just didn’t work out. The car was so fast. The car was the fastest car on the track. I could lead a line. Whenever we weren’t saving fuel she was a rocket ship. It’s just how this game works. The wreck always starts in the front and you hope you’re in front of it. Second place isn’t far enough ahead.”

    The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the Ambetter Health 400 on Sunday, February 25. Coverage begins at 3:00 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

  • All Three RFK Cars Collected in Multi-Car Incidents in Daytona 500

    All Three RFK Cars Collected in Multi-Car Incidents in Daytona 500

    Chris Buescher Finishes Organization-Highest 18th Following Multiple Crashes in Closing Laps

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 19, 2024) – RFK Racing was on the wrong end of the big one in the Daytona 500, as all three Fords were collected in multi-car incidents. As a result, Chris Buescher was credited with an 18th-place finish, David Ragan finished 20th, and Brad Keselowski 33rd in the ‘Great American Race.’

    The 66th running of the Daytona 500 was pushed to Monday due to heavy rain in the Daytona Beach area most of Saturday, and all of Sunday. Keselowski began the day from the 16th position with Buescher in 19th, and Ragan in 40th.

    The race opened with a strange opening stage of 65 laps, dominated by fuel strategies and various packs throughout the field. RFK’s three Fords finished 20th (Keselowski), 22nd (Buescher) and 26th (Ragan) at the end of the 65-lap stage.

    Stage two ran caution-free with Keselowski crossing the stripe 12th, Buescher 10th – earning stage points – and Ragan in 25th in the BuildSubmarines.com Ford.

    From there, Keselowski and Ragan methodically worked their way to the front as the No. 60 led once for a pair of laps, and Keselowski led the race two different times for a handful of laps. Keselowski ran third with 20 to go with Ragan just in front.

    Then, as the laps continued to wind down, Keselowski was P2 with eight to go, and was hooked in the right rear, resulting in a massive crash that collected 23 different cars. That incident ended Keselowski’s quest for a Daytona 500.

    “I don’t know,” Keselowski said after the incident. “I got hit in the back, so I couldn’t really tell you. It’s a shame. I was kind of making a move for the lead with eight laps to go in the Daytona 500 and I’m here talking to you. It’s just one of those deals. We were mixed up in the middle of the soup most of the race. We executed really well in the final stage and put ourselves in position, but that’s just the way Daytona goes.”

    Buescher unfortunately sustained heavy damage to his Fastenal Ford in the same crash, which ultimately proved to be too costly for him to remain competitive in the final restart and closing laps.

    “We had a fast Fastenal Ford Mustang and I am excited about that heading into next week,” Buescher added. “That is about where my excitement ends on the day. The crash, that sucks, there is no way around that. That definitely ruined our ultimate result. It was a really strange race. One of the most frustrating races I have been a part of in a long time. Tons of fuel saving and it was all about the pit stop, one pit stop for every stage and then some massive blocks by single cars that weren’t up to speed. It is a lot different than the last go around. I didn’t have as much fun as I hoped to but we will be good for next weekend.”

    Ragan did skirt through that crash mostly unscathed, giving him a chance on the final restart. After restarting outside the top-10, he unfortunately was collected in a crash that occurred coming to the white flag, which ultimately ended the race under yellow.

    Up Next
    Atlanta Motor Speedway hosts race two on the NASCAR Cup Series season next weekend. Race coverage Sunday is set for 2:30 p.m. ET (FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

    About RFK Racing
    RFK Racing, entering 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.

  • Rick Ware Racing: Daytona 500 Race Report

    Rick Ware Racing: Daytona 500 Race Report

    RICK WARE RACING
    66th Running of the Daytona 500
    Date: Feb. 19, 2024
    Event: 66th Running of the Daytona 500 (Round 1 of 36)
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series
    Location: Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway (2.5-mile oval)
    Format: 200 laps, broken into three stages (65 laps/65 laps/70 laps)
    Race Winner: William Byron of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 1 Winner: Chase Elliott of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 2 Winner: Ryan Blaney of Team Penske (Ford)

    RWR Finish:

    ● Riley Herbst (Started 36th, Finished 24th / Running, completed 199 of 200 laps)
    ● Justin Haley (Started 22nd, Finished 26th / Running, completed 199 of 200 laps)

    RWR Points:

    ● Justin Haley (27th with 12 points)
    ● Note: Herbst is a fulltime driver in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and is not eligible for points in the NASCAR Cup Series.

    RWR Notes:

    ● This was Herbst’s second career start in the Daytona 500. His best Daytona 500 finish remains 10th, earned last year.
    ● This was Haley’s fourth career start in the Daytona 500. His best Daytona 500 finish remains 13th, earned in 2020.

    Race Notes:

    ● William Byron won the Daytona 500 to score his 11th career NASCAR Cup Series victory and his second at Daytona.

    ● There were five caution periods for a total of 20 laps.

    ● Twenty of the 40 drivers in the Daytona 500 finished on the lead lap.

    ● Byron leaves Daytona as the championship leader with a four-point advantage over second-place Alex Bowman.

    Sound Bites:

    “Obviously, we would’ve loved to have had a better finish for the No. 15 Monster Energy Zero Sugar team, but Daytona is such an unpredictable race, and you never know what’s going to happen in those last laps. We did our best to stay out of trouble and probably would’ve been in a good position if we didn’t have to spend some extra time on pit road early on. I’m proud of the team. They stuck with me and if there had been another caution at the end, I think we could’ve had something for them.” – Riley Herbst, driver of the No. 15 Monster Energy Zero Sugar Ford Mustang

    “Our No. 51 team did great working through the adversity that comes with a race at Daytona. It was good to get up front and work with our Ford teammates. That was something I was really looking forward to and it was nice to be able to show early on that we’re capable of being there. We’ve got some things to clean up on pit road, but that’s expected with a new team. I feel good about what we did overall.”– Justin Haley, driver of the No. 51 Tree Top/Fraternal Order of Eagles/Jacob Ford Mustang

    Next Up:

    The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Ambetter Health 400 on Sunday, Feb. 25 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The race begins at 3 p.m. EST with live coverage provided by FOX and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • Stewart-Haas Racing: 66th Running of the Daytona 500

    Stewart-Haas Racing: 66th Running of the Daytona 500

    STEWART-HAAS RACING
    66th Running of the Daytona 500
    Date: Feb. 19, 2024
    Event: 66th Running of the Daytona 500 (Round 1 of 36)
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series
    Location: Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway (2.5-mile oval)
    Format: 200 laps, broken into three stages (65 laps/65 laps/70 laps)
    Race Winner: William Byron of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 1 Winner: Chase Elliott of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
    Stage 2 Winner: Ryan Blaney of Team Penske (Ford)

    SHR Finish:

    ● Noah Gragson (Started 38th, Finished 9th / Running, completed 200 of 200 laps)
    ● Chase Briscoe (Started 20th, Finished 10th / Running, completed 200 of 200 laps)
    ● Ryan Preece (Started 25th, Finished 23rd / Running, completed 199 of 200 laps)
    ● Josh Berry (Started 30th, Finished 25th / Running, completed 199 of 200 laps)

    SHR Points:

    ● Chase Briscoe (13th with 29 points)
    ● Noah Gragson (15th with 28 points)
    ● Ryan Preece (25th with 14 points)
    ● Josh Berry (26th with 12 points)

    SHR Notes:

    ● Gragson earned his second top-10 in four career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Daytona.

    ● This was Gragson’s third career start in the Daytona 500 and it resulted in his best Daytona 500 finish. His previous best result in The Great American Race was 24th, earned last year.

    ● Gragson led once for five laps – his first laps led at Daytona.

    ● Briscoe earned his second top-10 in seven career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Daytona.

    ● This was Briscoe’s fourth career start in the Daytona 500. His best Daytona 500 finish remains third, earned in 2022.

    ● This was Preece’s fifth career start in the Daytona 500. His best Daytona 500 finish remains sixth, earned in 2021.

    ● This was Berry’s first career start in the Daytona 500, but his second career NASCAR Cup Series start at Daytona. He finished 22nd in the Coke Zero Sugar 400 last August.

    ● Berry led one lap to score his first lap led at Daytona.

    Race Notes:

    ● William Byron won the Daytona 500 to score his 11th career NASCAR Cup Series victory and his second at Daytona.

    ● There were five caution periods for a total of 20 laps.

    ● Twenty of the 40 drivers in the Daytona 500 finished on the lead lap.

    ● Byron leaves Daytona as the championship leader with a four-point advantage over second-place Alex Bowman.

    Sound Bites:

    “We led some laps early, but we came down there at the end to fix some damage right before the final restart. We didn’t have a whole lot of area to go, but I guess it’s better than being wrecked. Overall, we’ll take a top-10. We kind of got pinned on the bottom and didn’t have a lot of room to go and then the race ended. I feel so good being behind the wheel. This whole Stewart-Haas team did a great job, especially getting the backup car going.” – Noah Gragson, driver of the No. 10 Black Rifle Coffee/Ranger Boats Ford Mustang

    “Anytime you can finish this race in one piece is nice. It was hard to get track position. It seemed like wherever you kind of fell in after two or three laps of green-flag pit stops, you just kind of ran there the whole time. That was a weird race. It seems like every time we run these superspeedways it turns into more and more of a fuel-mileage race. I thought we would be OK there at the end and we had to start 12th or 13th on the restart and it was hard to do anything. We were all kind of bottled up. Coming out of here with a 10th-place finish and missing the wrecks and not being in a huge points whole is nice. We have to play the same game next week at Atlanta and, hopefully, we can do it again, but a couple of spots better.” – Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 14 Mahindra Tractors Ford Mustang

    “Speeding on pit road screwed us, and then ending it was not getting the Lucky Dog when we should’ve gotten the Lucky Dog. I felt like we earned our right with seven to go to get the Lucky Dog and to at least compete for a top-five or a top-10, or put ourselves in position there, but we had it taken away for no reason. Frustrated is definitely the word right now.” – Ryan Preece, driver of the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang

    “I feel like I learned a lot and raced well. There were a couple moves I wish I could have back maybe here or there but, overall, I was pretty happy we could work toward the front and maintain it. I thought the car was really good. I just hate we got turned on pit road. That got us behind. We were able to get in the Lucky Dog position but it just didn’t work out there at the end. Overall, it was a good night to learn. I just hate we didn’t get the finish we deserved.” – Josh Berry, driver of the No. 4 SUNNYD Ford Mustang

    Next Up:

    The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Ambetter Health 400 on Sunday, Feb. 25 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The race begins at 3 p.m. EST with live coverage provided by FOX and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.