Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • CHEVROLET NASCAR: JR Motorsports 2025 Daytona 500 Announcement Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVROLET NASCAR: JR Motorsports 2025 Daytona 500 Announcement Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    JANUARY 15, 2025

     Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kelley Earnhardt Miller, co-owners of JR Motorsports; Chris Stapleton, 10-time Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter and musician; and Justin Allgaier, 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series Champion; met with the media to announce that they will join forces to field the Chevrolet organization’s inaugural entry in the NASCAR Cup Series in the 2025 Daytona 500.

    Media Availability Quotes:

    MODERATOR: We are joined by some great guests with Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kelley Earnhardt Miller, Justin Allgaier and Chris Stapleton. Dale, in the interest of time, I will kick it over to you. Obviously a big day for JR Motorsports with a big announcement today. Explain to us how all of this came together.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “Yeah, thanks for joining us. We spent the whole day here at Whiskey River out on our property; capturing a lot of content, talking to Chris (Stapleton) and Justin (Allgaier), and visiting with

    Kelley. There’s been a lot of work that went into putting this program together; designing a race car, logistics, and our roster of mechanics and all the people that we will need to go to the racetrack. Buying our race car and putting it together, it’s been a lot of fun.. a lot of work. But we’re now starting to get a dose of reality and get to know each other, right? It’s really the first time me and Chris have been around each other, so really enjoyed the day. I can’t wait to see the reaction on social media. We know we have a lot of people that follow JR Motorsports and pull for our success, and we’re excited to see how they all feel about the Daytona 500 and us having an entry.”

    Justin, for you, obviously winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship in November and now the opportunity to run the Daytona 500 in 2025 – I would have to say, you’ve had a great winter. Tell us a little bit about your outlook as this opportunity came together and you get the chance to pilot the car.

    Justin Allgaier: “I mean, obviously, it’s an amazing opportunity to win the championship last year and to kind of finally check a box that we’ve tried to check at JR Motorsports for so long with myself and with the team. And, you know, when I got brought into the office to discuss this, I thought I was being called to the principal’s office, to be honest with you at first. I wasn’t really sure what to expect. When they were explaining some of the process about it, I kind of didn’t put myself in the position of them offering me the job to drive the car. I just thought they were kind of filling me in on what the plans were for JR Motorsports. And so when the opportunity was presented to obviously drive the car and to be a part of the foray for JR Motorsports in the Cup Series – I mean, that’s a big opportunity. I take a lot of pressure on myself in that moment to see this organization compete on the grand scale of the Cup Series.. something that I am surprised that has never come to fruition before this point. But then to add somebody like Chris Stapleton and Traveller’s Whiskey into this – to see how involved Chris has been in this process and how much passion he’s had. I mean, really, in the conversations of what’s going back and forth between him and the team, and then just today to see his passion for this, is really, really cool for me and something that I’m not taking lightly. I know that it’s going to be a stacked field at the racetrack. There’s a lot

    of open cars trying to battle for a few spots. But, you know, this is.. as somebody that’s been a part of the Cup Series, it’s great to get back. But this is a lot bigger than that for me. This is about seeing JR

    Motorsports make this transition for this race. And, you know, who knows if there will ever be another JR Motorsports Cup Series entry. But regardless, there will always be one ‘first’, and this is obviously something that’s really, really important to all of us.”

    Chris, for you, just tell us a little bit of what it means to you to be able to bring your whiskey brand to put on a car in conjunction with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and the relationship you guys have. Tell us a little bit about how that came together from your perspective and being able to see that brand on the race track.

    Chris Stapleton: “I’m not sure it’s fully sunk in. But yeah, it’s one of these things that you kind of think about.. what’s the coolest thing we could do with the whiskey brand? Well, maybe we should put it on a race car. And I happen to know Rick Hendrick, and Rick kind of hooked me up with Dale (Earnhardt Jr.). This opportunity came up and I was like – well, we’ve got to do that. So I went and talked to my partners in the whiskey and I said – hey, we’ve got to make this happen.. let’s make this happen. And they agreed. This is the best possible way that we could, you know, introduce our brand to the fans of the sport. And beyond that, I just think it’s super cool to see it on the car. You know, selfishly, I think that’s one of the things I wanted out of it the most, is just to see this thing happen. And now, like Dale said, a lot of realities are setting in like – oh, we’re entering a car in the Daytona 500 all of a sudden, and it’s just going to be a lot of fun. I’m excited to see what happens and, you know, enjoy just the whole thing.. the experience of it.”

    A question for all of you. First, I want to know why Justin Allgaier? I mean, obviously, there’s a lot of drivers within the JRM camp, and now it’s out of the JRM camp. So, why is

    Justin the guy?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “For me, there’s a lot of layers to this. Obviously JR Motorsports, myself and Kelley (Earnhardt Miller) entering a Cup car in any race is a big deal for us. But this is also a bit of a continuation, at least for me personally, of celebrating Justin’s (Allgaier) championship – achieving a goal that, like you said, we’ve been after for a long time. We’ve came so close and we’ve had some really, really tough, heartbreaking moments, but it’s really strengthened our bond and partnership. And so when we were starting to talk about doing this, I think me and Kelley both knew that we had to consider Justin as the driver. And as all of that played out toward the end of last year, it was a no-brainer that that was what we needed to do. I want to let Kelley speak to this, too, because she’s probably more aware of this than I am.. but with Traveller, we want them to have a great experience. We know what Justin’s capable of doing outside of the car, as well as inside the car. And so we know that as a driver and through marketing engagement, that Justin will make sure this is a great experience for Traveller, Chris and his team.”

    Kelley Earnhardt Miller: “Yeah, speaking to that part of it – you know, not only just having your brand on the car, but we want to make sure it’s a great marketing opportunity for the brand.. for the brand to

    grow and for the fan base to get acquainted with the Traveller brand. And so as Dale alluded to – Justin being with our organization so long, he just goes above and beyond anything that’s asked or not asked. He’s always there for his partners. He’s there for our team partners. And so we know that Justin will do a great job, not only around the Daytona 500 when we get the opportunity to get out there and attempt to qualify, but really all year long, for this partnership and what it means to the Traveller brand. We’re just excited that Justin was our guy and that he said ‘yes’ the day that we brought him into the principal’s office.”

    Justin, we talked a lot last year, last November, about whether or not the championship was

    something that you could have ended your career having or not. And I’m

    curious, how much did you think at this stage of your career about your two

    Daytona 500 starts? Did you feel like you needed to have a Daytona 500 start with a quality team,

    quality people, to make your career feel complete?

    Justin Allgaier: “You know, I don’t know. I think for me, the interesting part of this is that I’m probably more excited about what I said earlier with this being JR Motorsports’ first Cup Series start. I love where I’m at. I love being a part of this organization and the people that I’m around. Dale, Kelley and L.W. are obviously the face and the upfront part of it, but it goes all the way through the organization; all the employees.. all the men and women that are part of it. You know, as large as our group has gotten, it’s still a family and it’s still the family feel. And I feel like, you know, with what Chris has brought with Traveller’s Whiskey, that feel is the same, right? It’s about just enjoying the experiences; being in the moment and kind of living present in the moment. This is something, for me, that’s really, really cool. And, you know, the championship last year was awesome, but I had conceded to the fact that I wasn’t really sure that that was ever going to happen. When we finally pulled it off, it was like – man, that’s a really cool, big moment. Seeing the excitement of our entire group at the shop was a big deal. And so this just takes that the next step further and I’m really proud to represent not only JR Motorsports, but the Traveller’s Whiskey brand. And like I said, we have our work cut out for us to even make the race, but there will be nothing cooler than if we can line up on Sunday. I told Chris already that the thing that I’m looking forward to the most, the thing that I miss the most, is the flyover and those chills of the pre-race moment of that event. There’s nothing like it in our sport. I stick around every year for Sunday and walk pit road and think about the days that I was there racing it. I don’t have to do that this year, hopefully. I can hopefully be there in a fire suit and getting my focus on for the race, and that’s really something that’s important for me.”

    This is a pretty cool deal. Dale, you kind of touched on it in your last response, but can

    you just kind of express what this means to have your entry in the Daytona 500? I know that this race means so much to you on so many levels..

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “Yeah, I still don’t feel like that. Like Chris said, I still feel like it’s still sinking in. I did tell Kelley that I wanted to be present for all the moments. And so from the moment we started to, you know, select the chassis and purchase the car; start to build, find the components, and get the components. And even going through that with NASCAR and understanding that whole process is really unique and new, compared to how things work in the Xfinity Series. So I want to be involved or at least a witness to everything. I’m going to be on pit road when the car is pushed out for qualifying. I’ll be there when it’s going out for practice. I’ll be there when they unload it on Wednesday at the racetrack. I want to go through tech. I want to see everything. I don’t know what’s realistic because there will be some other obligations, but I’m approaching this like it’s a one and only opportunity.. a dream come true. I told Kelley that I want her there for all of it, as well, because we’ve done this together from the start. This was something that we really waited for the right moment, and Chris and his brand, Traveller and their excitement around it feels nice and genuine. They’re experiencing it for the first time, as well. So yeah, we’re all kind of going through that.”

    Chris Stapleton: “There’s a lot of synergy in that way, I think.”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “Exactly, so it’s really cool. It’s hard to put it into words right now, but I think to Justin’s point – I told him, if we’re fortunate enough for everything to go well and we can be there on the grid for the 500, that pre-race moment is going to be very emotional, and really, really cool. So, you know, once it’s on the grid, it’s out of my hands, but getting it there is going to be a lot of fun.”

    Kelley, if I could just follow up and get your answer to that question and what it means to you to be a part of this endeavor from the Earnhardt family side of things.

    Kelley Earnhardt Miller: “Yeah, I can’t really sum it up any better than Dale did. You know, we talked about the opportunity. We’ve been talking about the opportunity to be in the Cup Series. And obviously, we’re a family of racers. This is our life. This is our passion. And so to be able to have a Cup entry at the Daytona 500 – a place that’s really special to us.. a place where the Earnhardt’s have had a lot of history and a lot of success with both my dad and Dale – you know, it’s just really kind of full circle. This is the perfect situation, the right moment, as Chris said. So we’re just pretty thankful and glad to be here.”

    Chris, when you look at being teamed up with this legendary family.. forget about the business side of it. What does that mean to you, personally?

    Chris Stapleton: “More things that aren’t really sinking in. You set out to do things and you meet people sometimes, and these are good people, beyond just being Earnhardt’s. It’s very important to me

    to be in business with good people. I love that we’ve built something together, even though we’ve had this short period of time to do this thing in. I’m so grateful that they were willing to let me participate in the world just a small bit. And it really is, you know, it’s one of those surreal things that you get to experience.. once in a lifetime. Like I said, they don’t know.. they said they don’t know; it might be the only one we ever get a piece of, you know, or get to sit there and… It’s stuff you dream up that doesn’t happen, you know? And this is one of them. This is one of them. It’s one of those moments. Today has felt like, particularly with the car reveal, it became so real when the sheet came off the car. I was like – oh, this is not a napkin drawing anymore, or some ‘pie in the sky’ idea that we think would be cool. This is something we’re really going for and really trying to do, and I’m thrilled to be rolling the dice and taking the risk with them. I think it’s a wonderful energy. There’s great energy around it, for me.”

    Justin Allgaier: “It’s also surreal to be sitting next to a legend in the music industry, right? You know, I mean, I see these guys (Dale and Kelley) all the time, and they’re amazing and they’re legends in the sport. But to have all of this is – I’m still pinching myself, to be honest with you.”

    As you guys have built JR Motorsports and done this in kind of your own way, and obviously, Dale, you had your career in your own right and a lot of fans have followed you because they followed your dad. Going into the Cup Series for the first time, was there ever a sense that you wanted to do it for yourselves, you wanted to do it for the company, but you also wanted to do it for those fans that have stuck by you guys and the Earnhardt’s for so long? What do you think your dad would think about this?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “Well, I hope that he’d be excited about it. I’m sure he would have told us how we should have done it differently (laughs). But, you know, he was also always very supportive. So I think he would be excited about this. I do feel a bit of an obligation with our connection to the fan base. I do feel that obligation to like achieve and have milestones as an owner. And so yeah, you’ve heard the rumblings over the years that fans are excited or hopeful of a potential Cup opportunity for us. And so yeah, there’s pressure not only on me and Kelley — Kelley said it the best the other day.. she’s like we’re a family, and we race and racing is what we do. We’re always going to race. And you know, we find a way to get to the racetrack and compete because that’s what we’ve always done and what we want to do. We’ve always wanted to race in the Cup Series, we were just waiting on the right pieces to fall into place. For our fans, there will be some pressure to go out there and get the car in the field; get it on the grid so that we can all enjoy this.”

    When you guys have done things, it’s always been the No. 8, 88 or 3 with those connections. The No. 40, obviously with the connection to the sponsor, how cool is it going to be to kind of do something a little bit different?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “I’ll let Chris talk a little bit about this, but Justin mentioned this – Chris was very involved and he knows what he likes. He knows what he wants this brand to be become and what they’re creating with Traveller. And so we were more than excited to allow them all of the creative influences that they wanted; to be able to have the race car on the racetrack that they want. As a traditionalist and someone that is a bit of a history buff, I was a bit surprised about how I felt about this because I didn’t mind what the number was. I was just hopeful to be able to put it together and get it on the racetrack. And the fact that there’s a connection for Chris and his team to the number makes it matter to me.”

    Chris Stapleton: “Well really, the number – obviously Traveller Whiskey is blend number 40. We tried over 50 different blends before we picked the blend that goes in the bottle. I didn’t really know how much it was really, not necessarily a problem – but when I said can it be No. 40.. I was kind of throwing it out in the air, like will we have to check to see if we can have that? And I’m just like – oh, okay, yeah, it’s cool. But it really worked out for, you know, I think it’s a nice synergy to have that cue. I like Easter eggs and things like that on bottles and now on a car. And I wanted the car to also look like JR Motorsports, but also Traveller Whiskey. I wanted it to really look like both of those things, and I think we achieved that with what we did with the car. That was really my goal.”

    Can you give more insight on bringing Greg Ives on board for this? I know you guys have a history together and you’ve both won at Daytona, but what else went into that business decision?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “I saw how many times he’s qualified a car on the front row at Daytona (laughs). I’m like, do you have any magic left, Greg? Let’s go to the track and see what we can do.

    But you know, I think being an open car, there’s some challenges to get into the field. It won’t be easy. There will be some very tough competition. I was confident that Greg understood, better than anybody, the things that we would all need to gather into place to go there with the best opportunity we could. And me and him are just really great friends, and I just trust him wholeheartedly with his decisions. And I don’t think he’ll be too annoyed with me standing over his shoulder throughout the whole process and asking him all kinds of silly questions. That went into the thought process, as well. He’s got a great track record, in terms of qualifying, and that hopefully can be a big assist for us.”

    Justin Allgaier: “I think a follow-up on that too is that – you know, Greg has been on the Xfinity Series car for Hendrick Motorsports on the No. 17. We have a really good working relationship with him back-and-forth on the Xfinity Series side. He actually came to us for some help whenever they started running the No. 17 car. Greg has gotten to work really closely with all of our crew chiefs and all of our drivers, and he’s got a really good understanding – I mean, he was a championship crew chief at JR Motorsports. He understands the business really, really well, and I think that gives some comfort when you look at trying to assemble people for this organization and for what we’re trying to accomplish. It gives that little bit of comfort that I think makes a big difference. Dale’s got a comfort. I’ve got a comfort. And I’m sure Kelley has a comfort. Chris, he doesn’t know yet..”

    Chris Stapleton: “I have comfort because they have comfort (laughs).”

    Justin Allgaier: “When we got the news about Greg, it was really, really cool because I think he’s a great person to have on the box for the race.”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “I’ll say this too about Greg – he worked at JR Motorsports for a while and was the crew chief on my car. But over the course of the last several years, there’s been moments where we’ve brought him into the building at JR Motorsports.. we were struggling a little bit in certain particular years and he came in to be an advisor for us and take a bit of a 40,000 feet view of what we’re doing to help us find ways to get ourselves back on track. So we utilize Greg all the time and his expertise has been beneficial to JR Motorsports, even over the past recent years, to try and continue our success.”

    Justin, Dale referenced the challenge of making the Daytona 500. If you do have to race into the event through the Duels, with this being such a huge stand for JR Motorsports, can you kind of take me through what the emotions will be like.. trying to not just make the race, but keeping the car clean to get to Sunday?

    Justin Allgaier: “We’ve had a lot of pressure.. Phoenix is a great example of what not to do in those moments (laughs). But I think one of the things for me that’s been important – Greg and I have talked about this, and we’ve talked about this internally – but I think your mindset has to be to try and go qualify. That has to be number one. That’s the easiest way to do it because then you can race the Duels in a different capacity. You can allow yourself to do a little bit more learning. You can work on some of the things that are going to be key for the race. You can work on some setups, balance changes and things like that. If you don’t qualify in and you have to race your way in through the Duels, I think your mindset changes. You know, we’re all understanding of what can happen in the Duels. I mean, we can have something happen coming to the green.. anytime in those races. We’ve seen it time and time again. I remember watching last year with Jimmie Johnson trying to race his way in – I remember thinking to myself that if I were ever in that position and you know you’re going to have to go for it, you just kind of have to lay caution to the wind and you’re going to have to go and try to see what you can accomplish.

    Number one, I have a great mentor in superspeedway racing. Number two, we’ve had success on superspeedways in the past. We’ve won at Daytona, not this past summer but the summer before, in the Xfinity Series. So I think there are things that we have going for us in that capacity, but it’s not lost on me how much pressure there is in this. L.W., who’s sitting off camera here, he told me to just go focus on doing all that we can do. But I do take a lot of pride in this process and what that’s going to look like. I have to do a lot more homework before Daytona. I have to understand the drivers. Watching footage from practice is going to be important. Looking back on SMT data from past races. Watch how drivers made their way in. I look at pit road.. that could equally be the difference maker in whether we make the race or not. There’s a lot that goes into this. We still have to try and go win in the Xfinity Series.. that’s first and foremost on what we have, too. A lot of effort and time goes into this, but I look at who’s assembled and I look at the whole process – it just feels right. As Chris has already said, it just feels right. I feel like if there’s ever an opportunity to do this, it’s definitely this year.”

    What’s it going to be like to see that car on the track for the first time? Are you going to be nervous? Are you going to be excited? Have you kind of imagined what it’s going to be like?

    Chris Stapleton: “I have nothing to compare it to, so I imagine I’m going to be excited and then maybe nervous. I don’t know.. these guys are kind of laughing because (inaudible).. it looks like one thing on paper, but it’s another thing when it’s sitting out here in front of the building. And then it looks like a whole other thing when it’s out on the track. I think they’re speculating what is going to happen when I see that. I don’t know.. I really don’t know. We’ll have to take bets or something (laughs).”

    In terms of the business and racing sides, what aspects are going to be most important to you or what will you go back to review everything from this process?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “Well, I think – you know, obviously, this is a tough one to answer because you would hope fans would understand the answer to this question. Performing on the racetrack is absolutely important. We do want to go and win the pole and win the race every time we show up. But given the circumstances and Chris and Traveller have trusted us with their brand and to go represent them well – I think at the end of the day, I want them to be happy with the experience and be glad that they did it and did it with us. And so that’s probably the first thing that you want to feel on Monday morning after the Daytona 500. Everything else is secondary to that. We want to go race well and do well. We’re definitely going to be thinking about that very thing all weekend long as we go through the process of qualifying, practicing and so forth. But in the end, none of that matters if Traveller doesn’t enjoy the experience and Chris doesn’t enjoy the experience because that partnership is how this comes together. I think that Kelley and I are both extremely confident in our people at JR Motorsports that they will deliver, and we chose the right driver to make sure those boxes are checked for our partners. And so that’s probably the most important thing. And then again, yeah – going and racing.. going and running well.”

    Chris, you have that friendship with Rick Hendrick dating back a few years, but do your ties with NASCAR kind of date back beyond that? What does that kind of look like?

    Chris Stapleton: “You know, it would be a waste of time for me to sit here and talk about racing when you have these people sitting here that can do it so well. One time, I sat in on a major league baseball hitting meeting, and they were going through all these things that I had no idea went into it. That’s how I felt like hearing these guys talk about what needs to happen for this to happen.

    I’m excited to partner with them and to kind of build off of what Dale was saying – I’m so pleased that you want us to be happy, but we’re already happy as partners with what we’re doing. Everything that I’ve ever dreamed this could be is happening right now. And now I want you guys to go out and do what you do. That’s what I want you thinking about.. doing what you do. I love to see great people being pros at what they do, and that’s what this is right now. It’s going to happen. It’s going to look good. It’s going to feel good. Just entering the track to qualify, that’s going to feel good, and that’s what I’m looking for out of it.”

    Dale, when was the first time you guys started talking about this deal, and when did it start feeling like it could be a reality?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr: “I hope Kelley has a better memory than I do..”

    Kelley Earnhart: “July.. So yeah, we were presented with the opportunity, like Chris had alluded to his friendship with Mr. Hendrick, and this was something they had interest in doing. We were able to put all of our heads together on the marketing side. I have to give a big kudos to my team at JR Motorsports for working with their team; understanding what kind of objectives had in this process and putting together a plan that they liked and that they felt would work for their brand to bring this all together. You know, we’ve been working on it since the summer. Not a long time, but not too short of a time. We’re here and we’re excited to make it happen in February.”

    About General Motors

    General Motors (NYSE:GM) is driving the future of transportation, leveraging advanced technology to build safer, smarter, and lower emission cars, trucks, and SUVs. GM’s Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC brands offer a broad portfolio of innovative gasoline-powered vehicles and the industry’s widest range of EVs, as we move to an all-electric future. Learn more at GM.com.

  • Fulltime NASCAR Cup Series Drive for Cody Ware in 2025

    Fulltime NASCAR Cup Series Drive for Cody Ware in 2025

    Fourth-Generation Racer To Pilot No. 51 Ford Mustang Dark Horse for RWR

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (Jan. 15, 2025) – Cody Ware is a fulltime NASCAR Cup Series driver. The 29-year-old from Greensboro, North Carolina, will contest the entire 2025 Cup Series schedule behind the wheel of the No. 51 Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Rick Ware Racing (RWR). Billy Plourde will be his crew chief.

    In 2024, Ware competed in nine Cup Series races and earned the second-best average finish among drivers who ran a limited Cup Series schedule. Ware’s average result of 21.0 was second only to A.J. Allmendinger, who competed in 16 races and earned an average finish of 20.5. Buoyed by a career-best finish of fourth in the Aug. 24 Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway, Ware bested Shane van Gisbergen (12 starts, 22.8 average finish), B.J. McLeod (seven starts, 28.3 average finish), Kaz Grala (24 starts, 28.5 average finish), Derek Kraus (six starts, 29.7 average finish), Jimmie Johnson (nine starts, 30.6 average finish), Austin Hill (four starts, 31.8 average finish) and J.J. Yeley (eight starts, 33.6 average finish).

    “The NASCAR Cup Series is where every driver wants to be and I’m grateful to be back fulltime,” Ware said. “I’ve improved as a driver and RWR has improved as a team, and this is, by far, the best opportunity I’ve had in NASCAR. I aim to make the most of it and earn the respect of my competitors.”

    Ware began racing at 16, following in his family’s footsteps as a fourth-generation racer. It was a late start considering many drivers begin their careers at age 5 in go-karts, but since climbing into a Legend Car and running upward of 50 races in his first season, Ware has seemingly been making up for lost time. After racing Late Model stock cars in 2012-2013, Ware began his NASCAR career in earnest in late 2013, securing a handful of starts on the NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour before racing across the NASCAR Mexico Series, NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2014. On March 5, 2017, Ware made his Cup Series debut at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

    Outside of NASCAR, Ware has made his mark in sportscar racing. He won the 2019-2020 LMP2 championship in the Asian Le Mans Series with co-driver Gustas Grinbergas. In a prelude to that title, Ware was the 2014 Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America Rookie of the Year. Last January at Daytona, Ware piloted a Ligier JS P320 to a podium finish in the IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge LMP3 class. Ware has also competed in Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup and the NTT IndyCar Series.

    “Cody made a lot out of the nine races he ran for us last year and proved that he was deserving of a fulltime opportunity,” said team owner Rick Ware. “Running a part-time schedule isn’t easy because it’s hard to develop consistency when you’re out of the car for weeks on end. But Cody made it work and he and crew chief Billy Plourde developed a good rapport. It made sense to see what could come of their collective efforts when they’re working alongside one another week in and week out. A full season together provides the best chance for everyone to succeed.”

    The 2025 Cup Series season begins with the exhibition Cook Out Clash Feb. 2 at historic Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, before the 36-race slate of points-paying events kicks off Feb. 16 with the 67th Daytona 500. Both races will be broadcast live on FOX and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    About Rick Ware Racing:

    Rick Ware has been a motorsports mainstay for more than 40 years. It began at age 6 when the third-generation racer began his driving career and has since spanned four wheels and two wheels on both asphalt and dirt. Competing in the SCCA Trans Am Series and other road-racing divisions led Ware to NASCAR in the early 1980s, where he finished third in his NASCAR debut – the 1983 Warner W. Hodgdon 300 NASCAR Grand American race at Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway. More than a decade later, injuries would force Ware out of the driver’s seat and into fulltime team ownership. In 1995, Rick Ware Racing was formed, and with wife Lisa by his side, Ware has since built his eponymous organization into an entity that fields two fulltime entries in the NASCAR Cup Series while simultaneously campaigning successful teams in the Top Fuel class of the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series, Progressive American Flat Track and FIM World Supercross Championship (WSX).

  • CHEVROLET INDYCAR: Santino Ferrucci Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVROLET INDYCAR: Santino Ferrucci Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS
    INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
    PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
    JANUARY 14, 2025

    SANTINO FERRUCCI, driver of the No. 14 AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet, met with the media at the NTT INDYCAR SERIES Content Days in Indianapolis, Indiana.

    Press Conference Transcript:

    MODERATOR: Continuing on, joined now by Santino Ferrucci, back with the No. 14 AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet, beginning his eighth year in the NTT INDYCAR Series, an NTT P1 award winner in Portland and two top 5s last season, looking to build on that a little bit more. I know you’re anxious to get back in the car.

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I’m anxious to get back in the Chili Bowl car, too, in like three days.

    Q. You’re busy this week, huh?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, as well as a lot of drivers from INDYCAR go to do Daytona 24 and I’m out, ripping it, slinging mud, man.

    Q. What do you like most about that?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: It’s old school racing, super grass-roots. A lot of fun. It’s probably one of the most competitive events for racing, 390 entries, boils down to 24 at the end on Saturday.

    It’s a good challenge. It’s a different discipline. I feel like a lot of people can go and drive a prototype or GT car with all the aids and assists, and this is tough.

    Q. I assume it doesn’t take a while to convince you to do something like this. AJ is not that one.

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, and Larry (Foyt) is coming out for Friday, for Freedom Night, so it’ll be exciting to have the boss there.

    Q. Santino, in some ways you and David are a little bit similar. You’re kind of like birds of a feather. You both have a sense of humor, always look at the fun side of life. How cool is it going to be to have him as a teammate?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I think it will be really nice. It’s nice to spend some time with him here on content days. Definitely change of pace for me to learn a new teammate. Everything that’s been going on has been a good time. I haven’t hung out with him outside of work yet, so we’ll fix that, I’m sure, throughout the year. But yeah, it’ll be a good year together.

    Q. Also FOX is knocking it out of the ballpark in terms of promotion and marketing and getting the word out about INDYCAR and they’re the home of INDYCAR and making you guys recognizable athletes. How cool is it to be part of that?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Man, the fact that Tom Brady is in our commercial is pretty stout. I’m not gonna lie.

    The fact that FOX has taken this on and is doing what they’re — even their set here today with all the tracks and the time, money and effort they’re putting into this is incredible for the series, for the sport, for us as drivers.

    It’s going to build our brands. It’s going to make us known and hopefully back to that level to where we can compete with Formula 1 and NASCAR on a weekend basis for viewership and audience.

    Q. Obviously you had a really strong year last year. What can you do to build on that for this season?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, so towards the end of the year we definitely picked up the pole, the two top 5s, really strong run in Nashville with another — I think we qualified in the top 5 if it wasn’t for the engine penalty.

    But all of that is just building on the success that we had throughout the year, building setups, building books. Our engineering staff last year was almost completely brand new, so it took a while for us to learn, and the Penske alliance, as well, for us to learn that, and we started to figure out towards the end of the year. Not having an off-season, a lot of sim time with Chevrolet and continuing to work all under one roof now since our shop is now in Indy. My shop is not based in Houston. It’s going to be game changing, and I think we can just expect more success, just more time 5s, hopefully some more poles, and that maiden win.

    Q. It’s been a couple of years since you’ve had a teammate to push you a little bit and that you might be able to learn from. How much are you looking forward to that?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Trust me, the last two teammates that I had were pretty awesome in that regard. My first year Sebastien Bourdais was awesome to say the least, and then working with Palou who I had known from Europe was also really, really good, and it was a challenge for us both to push each other in the right way.

    Having someone like David, it should be no different. Just keep pushing each other, trying to make each other better, the same with every teammate that we’ve had. Just keep trying to push each other in the right direction.

    Q. Big change in the off-season, the departure of Michael Cannon, someone you’ve had a great working relationship with. Obviously he’s a big part of the secret sauce of why the Foyt team has risen up, but I’m sure he’s not the entire part of it. What is the expectation for this year with that relationship going away?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Trust me, I’ve known Cannon since I came into the sport. In 2018 I got and still have a fantastic relationship with him. He’s someone that I call to chat and BS with from time to time.

    Yeah, obviously it’s a bummer. Sometimes the stars just don’t always align. I drive the car, and I’m very, very confident in our engineering staff this year. We have Mike Armbrester who’s going to lead my car; James Schnabel who’s going to move over to Malukas’s car; and with Adam Kolesar and CJ Nielsen and Collin Hendershot, we have a very, very solid engineering program going right now.

    A lot of that I do believe is thanks to Mike, and I wish him very much the best of luck at PREMA. They’ll be a force at Indy, I’m sure. A little concerned racing against them. It’s always tough.

    Q. We’ve heard a lot of drivers talk about getting in the sim and not having a lot of time in this off-season to get behind the wheel of something. You’re doing that this weekend with the Chili Bowl. When I spoke with you at Milwaukee or Iowa, you said you learned a lot of things in that Chili Bowl that you used on the ovals as far as sliding around and how to work a car. How much is this week doing the Chili Bowl prep for some of these ovals we’re going to see this year?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: A lot. You look at Milwaukee, all the slider passes that we made, all the positions gained, and the two cars that were doing it the most were Daly and myself, both of which have NASCAR experience, dirt experience.

    So understanding those lines where the track can move, it was a big advantage, especially for people that hadn’t raced there. It definitely showed, he got himself a podium and we had two top 5s.

    The Chili Bowl for me, it’s probably the only time I get out of a car after an event and I’m kind of shaking because it’s just so unnatural and it’s such a challenge for me that my nerves and my body is just very much like it is at the speedway here when you’re qualifying. Everything is just dialed up to 10.

    So it’s nice to kind of be practicing that and working on stuff like that mentally before I get back in the INDYCAR because everything slows right back down once I get behind the wheel of the 14.

    Q. Last season we were talking a little bit and you said you felt like 2025, you have a legitimate shot at a championship. Now we’re in 2025. Still feel like a championship potential season?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Oh, yeah. I think when I said that, I think a lot of people kind of laughed at me. You look at where we would have finished in oval points, and then you look at how we did at the end of the year for the last leg of the season. I wasn’t messing around when I said I think we can run for a championship.

    Yeah, there’s a lot that goes into it, but the biggest part is consistency, and that’s one thing that I know we have, and that’s something that you can’t teach.

    Finishing almost all but two races last year, just one mechanical and one I’m not sure from Toronto, I think that shows. I think if we put that to this year and what we had going at the end of last year plus the development all winter long being under one roof, we’re going to be a force.

    Q. How do you temper those expectations and also championship is a culture, and how has that evolved in maybe even the off-season with AJ Foyt Racing and holding people accountable and being sure that you don’t lose anything from last season but take that next step?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I think one of the biggest things in motorsports is, one, I’m very thankful I’m in this position. Very lucky to be here. Very lucky to be driving the 14. You’ve got to have fun. The most fun I’ve had in this car were at races in Milwaukee. We’re joking on the road. We’re having a good time, we’re passing cars. Pull up Portland, I mean, going down the backstretch, just remembering those types of emotions is why we do it.

    Racing is 99 percent disappointment. Just the nature of the game, unfortunately.

    I think having that very positive, happy, we-love-what-we-do mentality and that small-team mentality is what’s going to propel us to keep those expectations at bay and to keep pushing every weekend to want to make ourselves better.

    Q. Back to the Chili Bowl. How mindblowing is that event? Talking about unnatural, you’re racing indoors at an exposition center. By the time you go through all those elimination rounds, it really is the best of the best of the best of the best racers in the world competing for that. When you look at that as an event, how mindblowing is it?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: It’s incredible. I mean, it’s kind of strange to me that I’m still the only INDYCAR driver other than — well, Katherine now this year — that really competes in it. I think part of the reason is because it’s humbling, man. It’s tough to go into a building and just get rocked by some of these kids because they’ve been — they’re also kids, too.

    You have like 15 and 16 year olds out there that they race every weekend, are very, very good at the midget stuff. For someone that comes in gets six laps of practice and runs it once a year, it’s a hard transition to manage.

    But I love it. It’s the best of the best. The A feature on Saturday night is always one of the coolest races to watch. You have Kyle Larson, Christopher Bell, Ty Gibbs, all these big NASCAR names, Kyle Busch going this year.

    I think that goes to show what that race means in the oval world, in the grass-roots, NASCAR world in general. And yeah, I hope to make A Main on Friday night. That’s my goal. If I can do that, I would be incredibly happy. It would be like a win.

    Q. Speaking of kids, do you expect to see Brexton in that race someday soon?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I’m not sure how old he is –

    Q. He’s got a few years to go.

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, I mean, even with the micro stuff, yeah, that’s primarily why I don’t run the micros is just the age range is a little bit different. Just the maturity in the Chili Bowl and the midgets, you’ve got to have a lot of respect for those guys because they’re not — it’s not like you’re getting in the 24-hour cars with the full body cage and fenders and everything. These things, when they go — trust me, I know, I’ve hit the fence. It’s not fun.

    The respect level and maturity level of the Chili Bowl is also part of the reason why I keep going back, too. You get a lot of respect going there, and I try to show it, too, but I also try to stay out of my own way sometimes because that happens.

    Q. Santino, just kind of curious, what is the next step that you’d like to see AJ Foyt Racing make in development to take that next step, and then how do you get that development when you have this technical partnership with Penske?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Honestly, our next step is just going to be finding that rhythm like we did last year. That’s the biggest key. We have our setups in our books. It’ll just be really breaking into that top 5 rhythm. You’ve got the top 10 rhythm down pretty good; I’m sure of that. So it’s just taking that next chink of armor off, and to do that, everything has to go right.

    Every weekend you can’t be missing time on tests, you can’t be missing practice time. Every second out there will count for us, especially when you want to make a championship run. Last year we weren’t exactly the cleanest in the pits and in the garage with trying to get changes done, and same at testing, we lost a lot of time and we lost a lot of time at the speedway. That’s going to be a big change for this year is that type of seat time and track time and being precise and correct on all those behind the pit lane changes that are going to be the biggest challenge.

    Q. You kind of touched on it about your NASCAR experience. Been a lot of rumors floating around about you possibly doing the double or possibly running Daytona. Is that true? And if it is an opportunity, what type of ride would it take to get you to do Daytona or the Charlotte 600?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I think the double is something I looked into, and I talked to Larry about this. It’s one thing for the NASCAR drivers to come to INDYCAR. You look at Larson, he can jump from a top ride in the Coke 600 in NASCAR into a top ride at the speedway and have a really good fighting chance.

    It’s another to go the reverse route to find a top NASCAR ride that’s open because the equipment over there really, really matters.

    Running something like Daytona would be a bit more appealing. I’ve never thought about it just because of the new car and all that stuff. I do like my time in Xfinity, though. I love those cars. They’re old school. They race well on the mile-and-a-half tracks. I very much enjoyed my time driving those and would not mind getting back into — getting behind the wheel of one of those cars again in my future, probably after the INDYCAR season because it’s tight this year.

    But yeah, I don’t know, never looked at Daytona. The Coke 600 I think is just too difficult of a race to jump into a Cup car and do from the reverse side of things. But maybe one of those days, you never know.

    Q. Your personality, we talked about this last season. Your confidence level is through the roof. Does the personality come out of the confidence, or does the confidence come out of the personality?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Oh, man, trick question there. A little bit of everything. I’ve always been very true to who I am, especially being in INDYCAR. I’ve been very fortunate that the fans and the people of INDYCAR and everyone here has accepted me for me, which is awesome, and it gives me that confidence to push myself to be better and to continue being true to who I am as a human being.

    Yeah, so it goes hand in hand.

    Q. Over the off-season, I believe I’m right in saying that the team moved all their operations into Indianapolis instead of splitting it between Indianapolis and Texas. Is the centralization something you can see benefiting the team?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Oh, that was the next step. That was one of the things from the ’24 season to the ’25 season that will help us — like I was saying, getting that track time, minimizing mistakes. Now you have the engineers overlooking the car here in Indy, making sure that the mechanics are doing everything correct and as guided.

    It’s just all the meetings are now in house. There’s no one playing telephone tag or if there’s a quick question you don’t have to try and get a hold of somebody and wait and delay. You just walk and switch rooms. Having that is going to be huge.

    The Texas shop in Houston, I loved it because it was a three-hour drive from my house, so I was at that shop all the time and I loved going down there. I loved the Waller shop. AJ is always down there, so I got to spend a lot of time with him.

    So I’m going to miss that side of things now that everything is in Indy, but as far as performance goes, this was a very much needed thing.

    Q. Have you been able to see the new car yet?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: The new INDYCAR?

    Q. Yeah, 2027.

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I saw one render for it back in the drivers’ meetings about a month ago.

    Q. You got any thoughts on it?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Not in particular. I trust that the series is going the right direction. I trust that Penske Entertainment, they’ve done so many things right since they’ve taken ownership. I believe in what they’re doing and believe in the product that they’re trying to create. I believe in them pushing Dallara correctly to build a good-looking, very fast and competitive race car because the product that we currently have right now, it’s going to be hard to beat. It’s good.

    Q. Relating a little bit to Chili Bowl, obviously AJ comes from a midget background, very well-known down here in New Zealand along with Mel Kenyon when they used to come down here together. How does AJ feel about you being in Chili Bowl? Does it make him kind of get back to those roots of how his original racing took place?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, I feel like that’s one of the big things or the big draws that AJ had towards me as a driver when I started was that I’ve done dirt racing, done NASCAR. I want to continue to pursue it.

    Trust me, if I could channel my inner AJ this week, that would be awesome. I’d like to have 1/1,000 of his dirt knowledge. It would be better than what I’ve got. Yeah, I’ve been in his office and he’s pulled earnings back from the ’50s when they paid out like a dollar for winning races in like this little Manila envelope. It’s so cool. He has so much history with the dirt racing and him being able to share those experiences and stories with me is something that I’ll forever cherish.

    I cannot take for granted spending time with him. He is the GOAT. He is the greatest of all time of any driver in my opinion, one of the smartest people I’ve ever met in racing.

    Yeah, I hope that he appreciates it. I do it partly because of him. Yeah, it’s a great sport, and I think it’s a great discipline to have.

    Q. You just touched on it briefly before, but the tension at Chili Bowl is one thing, but you talk about that and the comparison to the Indy 500. First of all, this is making you mentally fit for the season. I was amused by the comparison of maybe the whole day at Indy versus Chili Bowl. This is mentally a very tough event, both of those, but you go into it that much smarter come St. Pete because you’ve had these racing miles under you?

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: Yeah, for sure. You guys also definitely have some good Kiwis in the race there, without a doubt, so I got to meet Pickens who’s one of them. He’s a good dude.

    Yeah, it’s weird, you get out of the car after going 240 miles an hour around qualifying and you’re on the ragged edge and the hair is up on the back of your neck, your legs are shaking, everything is kind of dough. It’s not my favorite time to be in the car, and it puts you out of your comfort zone, and that’s where you learn the most about yourself.

    The Chili Bowl car is no different from that. I get out of the car, I wish my friends had a video of me getting out of the car after the first practice on Sunday. I literally, my feet almost couldn’t touch the ground, they were just vibrating from the adrenaline.

    Like I said, you learn the most about yourself when you push yourself to your own limits, and that’s what really the Chili Bowl is doing for me.

    Q. You may have some karma going into the Chili Bowl seeing as how it’s AJ’s 90th birthday on Thursday.

    SANTINO FERRUCCI: I may need him to send me a prayer. Oh, my gosh.

    About General Motors

    General Motors (NYSE:GM) is driving the future of transportation, leveraging advanced technology to build safer, smarter, and lower emission cars, trucks, and SUVs. GM’s Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC brands offer a broad portfolio of innovative gasoline-powered vehicles and the industry’s widest range of EVs, as we move to an all-electric future. Learn more at GM.com.

  • RFK Racing Names Derrick Finley as Crew Chief for No. 60 Ford in 2025 NASCAR Cup Series

    RFK Racing Names Derrick Finley as Crew Chief for No. 60 Ford in 2025 NASCAR Cup Series

    CONCORD, N.C. (Jan. 14, 2025) – Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing (RFK) has announced that NASCAR veteran Derrick Finley will serve as the Crew Chief for the organization’s third NASCAR Cup Series entry, the No. 60 Ford Mustang driven by Ryan Preece, in the upcoming 2025 season.

    Finley, who joined RFK in 2022, brings over 20 years of experience as a NASCAR crew chief. In addition to leading as a crew chief on multiple occasions, his career within the NASCAR ecosystem includes roles such as Director of Operations, Technical Director, and Competition Director with various organizations. RFK will rely on his strategic insight, leadership skills, and technical expertise to ensure that the No. 60 is fully integrated into RFK as it expands to a three-car organization in 2025.

    Notably, Finley served as the crew chief for the #Stage60 program throughout the 2024 season, leading the No. 60 team in three races with drivers David Ragan (Daytona), Cam Waters (Sonoma) and Joey Hand (Chicago).

    “We’re thrilled to have Derrick lead the No. 60 team,” said RFK driver/co-owner Brad Keselowski. “His experience and technical knowledge of the sport will play a crucial role in the initial development and growth of the No. 60 team.”

    “I am incredibly excited to lead the No. 60 team,” said Finley. “I’m looking forward to working with Ryan (Preece) and the entire team. It’s a great opportunity to help start up a new team as we continue to grow at RFK Racing.”

    “Derrick will be a big help in getting the team integrated in the RFK processes” added Preece. “His experience with the procedures the organization has in place will help lay the foundation for the No. 60 car.”

    Finley, who holds a mechanical engineering degree from the University of New Mexico, provides a unique blend of hands-on technical and engineering experience that will be of great benefit to the young team.

    The No. 60 team will kick off its season with the Busch Light Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium (Feb. 2) before heading to Daytona Beach, Florida, for the famed Daytona 500 (Feb. 15).

    About RFK Racing
    RFK Racing, in its 38th season in 2025, 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.

  • Spire Motorsports, Michael McDowell Partner with B’laster for 2025 NASCAR Cup Series Campaign

    Spire Motorsports, Michael McDowell Partner with B’laster for 2025 NASCAR Cup Series Campaign

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (January 14, 2024) – Today, Spire Motorsports announced B’laster Holdings will join the team’s family of partners and serve as the primary sponsor for 2021 Daytona 500 winner Michael McDowell in two NASCAR Cup Series races in 2025. B’laster will also maintain an associate sponsorship presence with McDowell and the No. 71 Cup Series team across the 2025 season.

    The B’laster livery will be showcased aboard McDowell’s No. 71 Chevrolet for the April 27 Jack Link’s 500 at Talladega Superspeedway and again when NASCAR’s senior circuit makes its debut at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City June 15.

    Founded in 1957, B’laster’s portfolio of products includes penetrants, lubricants, cleaners, solvents, removers, grease, protectants, and refrigerants. The Ohio-based company first partnered with McDowell for multiple races during the 2024 season and has maintained a presence in NASCAR since 2019.

    “B’laster and NASCAR go hand-in-hand,” said B’laster Products President & CEO, Randy Pindor. “It was a no-brainer for us that we wanted to continue to have a presence in the Cup Series. Michael McDowell really made some waves in 2024, and we are excited to be able to continue working with him and the Spire Motorsports team for 2025.”

    McDowell, a native of Glendale, Ariz., is a veteran of 501 starts and a two-time Cup Series race winner. He made his series debut in 2008 and has since recorded six pole positions, 11 top-five and 44 top-10 finishes in NASCAR’s premier division.

    “I’m thrilled to have the B’laster team join me at Spire Motorsports in 2025,” said McDowell. “B’laster was with me last year and I am thankful to have them partner with our No. 71 team. B’laster is so important to both the automotive and powersports spaces and their products are second to none. I hope I can take the B’laster colors to Victory Lane and make the most of our partnership.”

    McDowell comes to Spire Motorsports from Front Row Motorsports where he was the organization’s leader in wins, starts, and top-five finishes. In addition to his victory in the 2021 Great American Race, the father of five proved his versatility with a road-course win in the 2023 Verizon 200 at the Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He earned NASCAR Cup Series Playoff berths in 2021 and 2023.

    The 67th running of the Daytona 500 will be televised live on FOX, Sunday, Feb. 16 beginning at 2:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time and will be the first NASCAR event streamed live on Amazon Prime. The first of 36 points-paying races on the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series schedule will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    About B’laster Holdings…
    B’laster Holdings has a portfolio of strong brands that consumers rely on to get the job done. With a legacy going back to 1957, B’laster prides itself on serving its customers with flexibility, while being a fun, people-focused place to work. Its brands include B’laster, AC Avalanche, Casite, Gunk, Liquid Wrench and Titeseal.

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

    In 2025, Spire Motorsports will campaign the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolets in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team will also field the Nos. 07, 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Silverados in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series and the No. 77 Chevrolet in the ARCA Menards Series in select events.

  • 2025 DAYTONA 500 Sold Out

    2025 DAYTONA 500 Sold Out

    NASCAR will once again kick off its season in front of a full house of fans at The World Center of Racing

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (January 13, 2025) – Daytona International Speedway announced today that the 67th running of the DAYTONA 500 is officially sold out, with fans expected to pack the historic racing venue once again for NASCAR’s 2025 season opener.

    Along with the sellout announcement, the World Center of Racing has also released the date for next year’s DAYTONA 500, which will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026.

    Year after year, the Great American Race reigns as one of the most anticipated events in the motorsport world, and starting today, fans can sign up for exclusive pre-sale access for infield camping and tickets to next year’s event to ensure they secure their seats in advance.

    “The DAYTONA 500 continues to be a spectacle of elite racing and entertainment, and the consecutive sellouts just prove this event is one of a kind,” said Frank Kelleher, President of Daytona international Speedway. “You can quite literally feel the atmosphere from the moment Speedweeks begins. The crowd is buzzing with excitement and every team, from the driver to the crew chief, is eager to get their season started. It all comes to a head when that green flag drops on Sunday, Feb. 16, and I can’t wait to see what this year’s DAYTONA 500 has in store for us.”

    After a wildly competitive 2024 season that saw 18 different race winners, three of the closest finishes in NASCAR history, and crowned Joey Logano as a three-time Champion, the season opening DAYTONA 500 is sure to be a thriller.

    Last year, William Byron came out on top after a hectic last few laps, earning his first DAYTONA 500 Championship and securing the victory for Hendrick Motorsports in their 40th anniversary year. He’ll become the latest driver to attempt back-to-back victories of The Great American Race. The last driver to win consecutive DAYTONA 500s was Denny Hamlin, who earned the title in 2019 and 2020.

    Though grandstand tickets and camping are sold out for Sunday’s marquee event, limited upgrades and premium packages are still available. Fans can also catch plenty of the action during the multi-day racing and entertainment extravaganza that is Speedweeks Presented by AdventHealth.

    The competition begins on Wednesday, Feb. 12 with DAYTONA 500 Qualifying presented by Busch Light, setting the front row for The Great American Race. Qualifying also sets the field for a pair of head-to-head battles in the Duel At DAYTONA on Thursday, Feb. 13, where drivers fight for their starting position in the 67th running of the DAYTONA 500.

    The intensity increases on Friday, Feb. 14 as the CRAFTSMAN Truck Series season-opening Fresh From Florida 250 takes the green flag under the lights of the famed track. Then on Saturday, Feb. 15, fans can enjoy a jam-packed day of on-track action with the kickoff to the ARCA Menards Series season followed by the United Rentals 300 NASCAR Xfinity Series race.

    Then on Sunday, after a performance filled with international chart-toppers from Mr. Worldwide himself, drivers in the NASCAR Cup Series will fire up their engines and get the 2025 season underway in this year’s DAYTONA 500.

    With all four series kicking off their season at Daytona, each driver will be fighting to start their year with a win, putting everything on the line at one of the biggest races on the schedules. Fans can enjoy the fierce competition all week long, as well as multiple different entertainment performances, fan activations and race day festivities.

    For more information on Speedweeks Presented by AdventHealth or for further details on the 2026 DAYTONA 500, please visit www.DAYTONA500.com.

    About Daytona International Speedway

    Daytona International Speedway is a state-of-the-art motorsports facility and was awarded the SportsBusiness Journal’s prestigious Sports Business Award for Sports Facility of the Year in 2016. Daytona International Speedway is the home of The Great American Race – the DAYTONA 500. Though the season-opening NASCAR Cup Series event garners most of the attention – as well as the largest audience in motorsports – the approximately 500-acre motorsports complex, also known as the World Center of Racing, boasts the most diverse schedule of racing on the globe. Some of the exciting racing events include January’s Rolex 24 At DAYTONA and Roar Before The Rolex 24, February’s DAYTONA 500 and Speedweeks Presented by AdventHealth, March’s Bike Week At DAYTONA featuring DAYTONA Supercross and the DAYTONA 200, the August Coke Zero Sugar 400 weekend, and much more. The Speedway grounds are also used extensively for other events that include concerts such as Welcome to Rockville, sporting events including CLASH DAYTONA, civic and social gatherings, car shows, photo shoots, production vehicle testing and police motorcycle training.      

    About NASCAR

    The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 14 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR sanctions races in three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series™), four international series (NASCAR Brasil Series, NASCAR Canada Series, NASCAR Euro Series, NASCAR Mexico Series), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour) and a local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in five cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races annually in 11 countries and more than 30 U.S. states.

    For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, X and Facebook.

  • Beard Motorsports Announces Plans for 2025 Daytona 500

    Beard Motorsports Announces Plans for 2025 Daytona 500

    Fortify Building Solutions Will Back Single-Car Effort and Driver Anthony Alfredo in 67th Running of the ‘Great American Race’

    MT. PLEASANT, Mich. (Jan. 9, 2025) – Beard Motorsports announced today that it plans to qualify for the 2025 Daytona 500 NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway. Driver Anthony Alfredo will be back behind the wheel of the Beard Motorsports Chevrolet, which will be dressed in the colors of Fortify Building Solutions.

    Started by the late Mark Beard Sr., Beard Motorsports is owned and operated by the Beard family with Linda Beard at the helm, and her children, Amie Beard-Deja and Mark Beard Jr., overseeing the daily operations. The 2025 season is Beard Motorsports’ ninth participating in select events that make up the NASCAR Cup Series schedule, and the season-opening Daytona 500 will mark the team’s seventh start in the “Great American Race” since making its debut in that event in 2017.

    “It’s an honor to be talking about our ninth season competing in the NASCAR Cup Series,” said Beard-Deja, executive vice president of Beard Motorsports. “This obviously started as a passion project for my dad and has become a labor of love for our family. We put in a lot of hard work and that is evident by the product we bring to the track every time we show up. It’s a credit to the team of people that we have assembled to prepare our racecars, and it all starts with our crew chief Darren Shaw, who has been busy preparing the car for the 2025 Daytona 500.

    “We are thrilled to have Anthony Alfredo back behind the wheel of the No. 62 Chevrolet and are very honored to continue the relationship we have started with Fortify Building Solutions. To have that brand continue its support of Beard Motorsports means a lot.”

    Fortify Building Solutions, part of Cornerstone Building Brands, offers North America’s most extensive selection of high-quality metal roofing, wall panels and metal building solutions to local builders, contractors and homeowners through retail storefronts across the country. The brand’s more than 20 branch locations supply professionals and homeowners with hometown service and support, backed by a nationwide manufacturing and distribution network. The company partnered with Beard Motorsports during the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season, sponsoring the No. 62 entry in the Oct. 6 YellaWood 500 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.

    “We are thrilled to continue this partnership with the Beard family and Anthony Alfredo,” said Rayome Soupiset, general manager of retail direct at Cornerstone Building Brands. “Fortify Building Solutions is about serving our communities at the local level and positively contributing to the communities we operate in. As we expand our footprint in Florida and across the Southeast, we’re excited to be a part of the 2025 Daytona 500 and share in the excitement of NASCAR with our customers and employees. We believe the NASCAR platform is an excellent way to amplify the Fortify Building Solutions brand, but more importantly, that this partnership with the Beard family and Anthony represents a shared commitment to local community, perseverance and excellence.”

    Since making his NASCAR debut in the Craftsman Truck Series in 2019, Alfredo has been busy making a name for himself in the NASCAR garage. The native of Ridgefield, Connecticut, has competed in all three of NASCAR’s top touring series and has been a regular in the NASCAR Xfinity Series the last three seasons. Alfredo raced the Beard Motorsports entry in three Cup Series races in 2024, earning a career-best finish of sixth in the April 21 GEICO 500 at Talladega.

    “The NASCAR Cup Series is the goal for every driver that goes the NASCAR route,” Alfredo said. “The Beards gave me this chance to race for them last year and I couldn’t be happier to be back competing with them again in 2025. They are such a great family and the team does a great job bringing fast cars to the track. We learned a lot together in 2024 and I think it will be a difference-maker for us going into this season.

    “And to further this relationship with Fortify Building Solutions is an amazing opportunity. It’s a relationship that means a lot to me, given my family’s background in the metal building construction industry. As the brand expands nationally through local storefronts, it’s providing faster service to the communities they serve without losing the personal touch. I think we have a great opportunity to do some amazing things to promote the speed and service their customers can expect.”

    More information regarding Beard Motorsports’ plans for the 2025 NASCAR season will be announced at a later date.

    About Fortify Building Solutions

    Fortify Building Solutions is proud to provide builders, contractors and homeowners – across local communities and nationwide – with the broadest selection of metal roofing, wall and building products through its vast manufacturing and distribution network. As part of the Cornerstone Building Brands family, the brand is dedicated to offering personalized support and service to help its customers through every step of their project.

    About Cornerstone Building Brands

    Cornerstone Building Brands is a leading manufacturer of exterior building products for residential and low-rise, non-residential buildings in North America. Headquartered in Cary, North Carolina., the company serves residential and commercial customers across the new construction and Repair & Remodel (R&R) markets. Its market-leading portfolio of products spans vinyl windows, vinyl siding, stone veneer, metal roofing, metal wall systems and metal accessories. Cornerstone Building Brands’ broad, multichannel distribution platform and expansive national footprint includes approximately 18,000 employees at manufacturing, distribution and office locations throughout North America. Corporate stewardship and environmental, social and governance responsibility are embedded in the company’s culture. It is committed to contributing positively to the communities where people live, work and play. For more information, visit www.CornerstoneBuildingBrands.com.

  • Front Row Motorsports, Zep Announce Partnership for Noah Gragson

    Front Row Motorsports, Zep Announce Partnership for Noah Gragson

    Zep to Serve as Official Cleaning Supplier of Front Row Motorsports

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (January 9th, 2025) – Continuing to grow its network of partners before the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season begins, Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is excited to announce a new partnership with Zep. The cleaning supplier will be represented as the primary partner on the No. 4 Ford Mustang Dark Horse in two NASCAR Cup Series events, collaborating with FRM and Noah Gragson throughout the season to promote their line of cleaning solutions. Additionally, Zep will serve as a season long associate partner on all FRM vehicles, including the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series.

    Whether in industrial or retail settings, Zep is the go-to cleaning brand for professionals and is recognized as a leading innovator, producer, and distributor of maintenance, cleaning, and sanitation solutions. Zep is excited to enter this new partnership that will designate the brand as the “Official Cleaning Supplier of Front Row Motorsports”.

    “Zep is excited about our new partnership with Front Row Motorsports as the official cleaning brand throughout their organization,” said Greg Heyer, Executive Vice President Retail Sales and Marketing, Zep. “We look forward to working with Noah Gragson and the No. 4 team as the primary sponsor at some key races this season and help bring FRM to victory lane!”

    Gragson will debut the No. 4 Zep Ford Mustang Dark Horse in June at the Atlanta (Ga.) Motor Speedway on Saturday, June 28th. In the NASCAR Xfinity Series, the 1.54-mile intermediate speedway has statistically been a good track for Gragson, having earned three top-5’s and five top-10’s and averaged a finishing position of 8.3. The Saturday night race is scheduled for 7:00 PM ET and will be the first race of the season televised on TNT Sports. Fans can also tune into the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM channel 90 to listen to the action live.

    “We are thrilled to welcome Zep as the official cleaning supplier of Front Row Motorsports for the 2025 season,” said Noah Gragson. “Their industry-leading cleaning products will play a key role in maintaining the high-performance standards we strive for both on and off the track. With Zep’s support, we are excited to build a successful partnership that enhances our team’s performance and makes a lasting impact throughout the season.”

    Zep’s second primary race is August 23rd at the famed Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway for the Coke Zero Sugar 400. In the Xfinity Series, Gragson has one win at the 2.5-mile superspeedway, capturing the checkered flag in 2020. In the Cup Series, Gragson has one top-5 and two top-10’s. His career best finish of fifth came in 2022. Fans can watch the action live on NBC or tune in to the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM channel 90 to listen in.

    ABOUT ZEP, INC.

    Zep, Inc. is a leading innovator, producer, and distributor of maintenance, cleaning, and sanitation solutions for industrial and institutional, retail, and food & beverage customers. Zep possesses a large portfolio of premium solutions built over an 85-year legacy of developing the most effective products trusted by professionals and consumers to get the job done right the first time.

    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. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

  • Tim Brown and Rick Ware Looking Forward to Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium

    Tim Brown and Rick Ware Looking Forward to Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Clash at Bowman Gray Media Availability | Wednesday, January 8, 2025

    Rick Ware Racing announced last month that Tim Brown, the Bowman Gray Stadium record holder with 101 career wins and 12 championships, will race the team’s No. 15 Ford Mustang Dark Horse in the upcoming Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium. Brown and team owner Rick Ware answered questions today from the media about how this opportunity came about and the special personal bond they’ve shared for decades.

    TIM BROWN, No. 15 Rick Ware Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT HAS THE REACTION BEEN LIKE SINCE THIS ANNOUNCEMENT WAS MADE A FEW WEEKS AGO? “It’s honestly been overwhelming. When Rick and I talked about it a month or so ago it was like, ‘Man, you’ve got be cool,’ but now that it’s actually coming to fruition it’s mind blowing. Anybody that knows me it’s very seldom that I’m ever speechless, but this has kind of made me speechless. I was talking to Mike Arning a few minutes ago that I never knew this would blow up to be such a big story and how cool it is for myself and my family and here for everybody at RWR and everyone in the short track racing world. It’s pretty cool news.”

    HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE HITTING YOU UP FOR ADVICE AT THIS TRACK? “Actually, it’s the opposite. A lot of the Cup drivers that I’m buddies with like, ‘Man, I was gonna get you to be my driver coach or something,’ so now I don’t even talk with those guys because we want to go run as good as we can and not help those guys out at all.”

    WHAT’S THE PROCESS BEEN LIKE AT THE SHOP WITH ALL OF THE DIFFERENT THINGS LIKE SEATS? “We’re actually working on the seat stuff today, but it’s actually really cool with the guys that we have here. We’re a tightknit little family here at RWR and everybody has really taken a lot of pride in the car that we’re building for myself to go run up there. It’s a really neat deal to be able to get to work on the car that you’re gonna drive with a bunch of your closest friends and co-workers. It’s a pretty cool deal.”

    IF THIS IS A SUCCESS, COULD IT LEAD TO OTHER OPPORTUNITIES AT OTHER SHORT TRACKS AND RACES IN THE FUTURE? “That would be a better question for Rick. I’m a racer. I’d race anytime, anywhere that I could, so you’d probably have to ask Rick that one.”

    YOU’VE TESTED CUP CARS BEFORE, SO IS THERE A COMFORT LEVEL IN MAKING THIS TRANSITION? “For sure. I’ve done a lot of testing in the Cup cars over the years, but just not this particular car, but as far as the weight and the power and all that, I’m definitely used to that from years and years of testing. This new car is definitely different, so there will be a learning curve there, but we’ll go do our best and hopefully we’re competitive and have a shot at winning this thing.”

    HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE BOWMAN GRAY TO SOMEONE WHO HAS NEVER SEEN IT? “They call it the Madhouse for a reason. That place is super exciting because it’s the pinnacle of short track racing. When you’re driving a modified there, the thing is turning 8500 rpm’s and really loud, but you can hear the fans cheering you or booing you when you’re actually racing, and I don’t know that there’s any Cup track that you could hear that, so it’s definitely different. The fans there are super passionate. Just the history of the place. It’s gonna be an awesome show, I believe.”

    DO YOU FEEL THE HISTORY WHEN YOU GET THERE AND WALK THROUGH THE GATE? “Absolutely, and one cool thing about racing there is just about every Saturday night a family will come through there and they may be from Florida or California or Texas and they’re like, ‘Hey, we took our family vacation to come here and see this place,’ and then go up to the Blue Ridge Mountains or go do some cool stuff around North Carolina, but they actually spend their family vacation just to come and witness the stadium. That’s how historical the place is and that’s pretty neat, and now the Cup Series is coming there. That’s gonna just boost it even more, I believe.”

    WHAT’S IT GOING TO BE LIKE AND SEE THE TRACK IN A NEW LIGHT WITH SAFER BARRIERS AND FRESH PAINT? “It is. I’ve actually seen a couple photos floating around and it doesn’t even look like the same place. You see an aerial view of it and the track looks similar, but as far as the new walls and the SAFER barrier and new catchfence and lighting, it’s like a brand new place. How cool is that, too, that it’s something we and the people that race their weekly and the fans that come there weekly will be able to enjoy that also for a long time to come, not just for one weekend here.”

    HOW DO YOU THINK THE CUP CARS WILL RACE THERE? WHAT WILL THE RACE BE LIKE? “Man, I’m hoping it’s gonna be a really good race. The fear that I have is the cold. If it’s really, really cold – like 30 degrees and the track is cold and the tires are cold – that we’ll be slipping and sliding quite a bit. Racing at the stadium is hard. I think it’s gonna be more difficult than even racing at the Coliseum in L.A., just because of the asphalt difference and the weather, the temperature difference, but it’s gonna be the same for everybody. I think the bottom will definitely be dominant and you just have to have your car turning really good in the center and have plenty of forward drive and you’ll be fine.”

    HOW DID YOU GET STARTED WORKING WITH CALE YARBOROUGH’S TEAM IN HIGH SCHOOL? “I was right out of high school, but my grandfather, Eb Clifton, he owned race cars that raced at the stadium since the beginning of the stadium, and he was buddies with Junior Johnson and Cale and all those guys because he had some Grand National cars they called them back in the day that ran the circuit. I was actually gonna go to college and be a design engineer because my grandpa thought that would be the best thing to do. Well, he had some conversations with some people and Ken Glenn was the crew chief for Cale Yarborough at the time and Ken was like, ‘Hey, man. I really need a guy now and we’ll pay you pretty decent,’ so that’s how that started and I’ve been doing it ever since.”

    HOW MANY FAMILY MEMBERS AND FRIENDS DO YOU ANTICIPATE COMING TO WATCH YOU AT THE CLASH? “As many as I can have there, for sure. My son, Cam, and my daughter, Marley, she’s only three but she’s already a racer. Everything that she and Cam do is a competition, so I definitely have to have them there and my wife, Megan, to support us. My brothers been my right-hand man my entire racing career, so I’ve got to have him there. My mom, hopefully, and just anybody and everybody that’s had a part to do with Tim Brown from 1992 when I started racing to today. I’d love to have them be there and have a part in it.”

    DOES CAM FULLY UNDERSTAND WHAT THIS MOMENT IS? “Yes. He’s eight years old and he absolutely, 100 percent understands the importance of it and how big it is because that’s all he talks about. Since I was able to show him the first rendering of the car that Rick shared with me and Robby, I took it home and showed Cam and told him he can’t tell anybody and he teared up and was like, ‘Dad, this is so cool. I can’t believe it,’ and then once we made the announcement, Cam was going to school and telling all his seven and eight year old buddies that his dad is gonna be a Cup driver. Marley is talking about it and Cam. It’s so cool. It makes me proud just for that side of it all alone. That makes it feel like to myself that all of the work I’ve put in and sacrifices I’ve made for 33 years of doing this is coming to fruition.”

    WHAT ARE THE THINGS YOU’RE PERSONALLY WORKING ON WITH THE CAR THAT YOU WILL DRIVE? “Pretty much, I’d say 60 percent of the car. I definitely have a big part in all of the suspension parts, the racks, the steering, even help install the motor, the seat interior, rear suspension – all of it, basically. I don’t have anything to do with the body hanging and things like that, but all of the mechanical stuff I’ll have a part in.”

    I’M ASSUMING YOU’VE SAT IN THE CAR AT SOME POINT. WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO DO THAT FOR THE FIRST TIME AND HAS ANYTHING HIT YOU DURING THIS PROCESS? “Here at RWR, I drive our race cars on the chassis dyno every Friday, so I sit in them quite a bit, but this one is a little bit different because I know this is actually a race car I’m going into battle with. It’s pretty cool from that side of it to just sit in it and realize in the moment that, ‘Hey, I’m gonna actually get to race this one.’”

    HOW AGGRESSIVE DO YOU THINK THE RACING WILL BE AND HOW MUCH DO YOU THINK THE ADVANTAGE WILL GO TO THOSE WHO HAVE MORE EXPERIENCE THERE? “Those are great questions and I think you’re gonna have to be super aggressive just to get the tires to fire to make lap times. I also think that any driver that’s had any laps around the stadium is gonna have an advantage over any driver that hasn’t just simply for the fact that the grip level there is totally different. The line is different. The place is just unique. It’s completely flat. There’s no banking at all and that’s a unique place all on its own. As far as being aggressive, we hope our car is fast enough that you really don’t have to be that aggressive, but you’ll have to go into each circumstance and do what you have to do to get in the show and run as well as you can. If that means putting the bumper to somebody and moving them to get by, that’s what we’ll have to do.”

    WHAT HAVE YOU FOUND WORKING AT RICK WARE RACING? “A little tidbit of information there is that myself and Rick and my brother, we’ve been friends that goes back thirty years, I would say – 25 at least. When Rick was racing himself years and years ago, me and my brother were young and just trying to work on race cars and do things that we could to race our cars, so we would help Rick out and actually worked for Rick some, and then when I departed from RFK, Rick and Robby offered me a job here at RWR to work full-time and it’s like home to me. It’s really a good place to work. Rick and Robby and Craig, Ken, everybody here, Tommy, all the people are super. They’ve got a great group of guys here working on race cars. It’s a bunch of racers here building race cars to go compete and that’s what I am, so I fit right in here. I’m right at home and it’s really been a blessing to me to be part of RWR and just to get the opportunity to drive for Rick and Lisa and the whole Ware family, it is just unbelievable to me, honestly.”

    CAN YOU WALK US THROUGH HOW THIS CAME ABOUT AND DID YOU EVER THINK AN OPPORTUNITY TO RUN A CUP CAR, LET ALONE AT BOWMAN GRAY, WOULD BE POSSIBLE? “I didn’t. I’ll be honest with you, once I turned about 30 years old, I kind of gave up on my lifelong dream of being a Cup driver, just because I had seen that transition to where, one, you either had to be 12 or 13 years old and get signed or, two, you had to have big money to pay an owner to let you drive, so I had already given up on that dream, but I actually think it was a text that Rick sent me. He was like, ‘Hey, man. Did you hear the Clash might go to Bowman Gray next year?’ I was like, ‘What?’ And then Rick was something like, ‘Man, if that happens, we’ll see what we can do to get you in the car.’ And I was like, ‘Heck, yeah. How cool would that be?’ When finally the announcement was made that the Clash was coming to the stadium, I think Rick and Robby were the first ones to call or text me that night and were like, ‘Hey, we’re gonna make this happen.’ I was like, ‘Heck, yeah.’ So, naturally, I want to go tell everybody, but you can’t, so it’s been tough. I tell you the hardest part of this for me has been keeping, because I’ve known about it for awhile. Rick and Robby and everybody has been working so hard behind the scenes to put this together for me and we’ve had a bunch of conversations, but keeping it from my wife and my kids and my brother and my race team – influential people in my life that I really care about – that’s the hardest part of it because you love these people so much and you want to be able to share everything with them, and when it came out I’ve had people come up to me and were like, ‘Man, I thought we were tight. Why didn’t you tell me this?’ I was like, ‘I couldn’t.’ So, it’s been a really cool experience so far and I can’t thank Rick and Lisa and everybody at RWR enough for this opportunity.”

    WERE YOU SEEING ANY OF THE REACTION TO THIS ANNOUNCEMENT OR HAVE PEOPLE BEEN INFORMING YOU? “Mike Arning and his staff have been awesome because I don’t do social media. I try to stay away from it just because as a racer there’s probably more people out there that don’t like you than do like you, and I’m a pretty passionate guy, so it’s best if I just stay off of Facebook and social media, but Mike has been great about sharing all of the posts and things like that. When other Cup drivers and owners are reaching out to you it’s like, ‘Man, this is cool. This is really awesome. Good job. Congrats.’ That’s when you realize that this is a really big deal, so I’m just very blessed and fortunate to have this opportunity. It’s just so cool.”

    HOW IS THE BALANCING ACT BETWEEN WORKING FULL TIME AT RWR AND THEN YOUR OWN RACING TEAM ON THE WEEKENDS? “I hope my wife is listening because the balancing act falls on her because basically Megan has to run our entire household as far as getting the kids to school and home and feeding them and putting them to bed because my day starts at 3:30-4:00 o’clock in the morning and it ends about 10 o’clock at night. I live an hour-and-a-half from work and then my shop is 15 minutes from the house, so I’ve dedicated my whole life to it. She knew that going in. When we dated I was a racer, so we got married and she kind of understood it, but it’s just what I do. That’s what racers do. We do what we have to do to go compete at the highest level that we can and it’s tough. I really don’t have a balancing act. It’s a hard conversation to have every now and then of like, in my world, and I hate to say this, I can’t really prioritize anything because working for a Cup team or even on my race car, you never know what that day has in store for you. If NASCAR makes a rule change or someone comes out with a part that’s better that will make us faster, like for my deal, then you’ve got to stay and get it done. So, it’s very important as a racer to have a wife that understands and doesn’t complain and fuss about it too much. Megan is how I survive, basically.”

    WHAT ABOUT THE LOCAL FANS WHO COME TO BOWMAN GRAY EVERY WEEK AND SIT IN THE SAME PLACE? HOW DO YOU DESCRIBE THEM AND THEIR PASSION WEEK IN AND WEEK OUT? “It’s really, really cool because I’ve done it long enough now that I’ve seen fans of mine that have kids and have grown up to be fans, so I’ve raced long enough not to see a couple generations of fans come through there, and it’s really cool how they all sit in the same place every week and they have for 25 or 30 years. That’s really cool. I tell this story a lot, but I grew up there watching racing and sitting in the stands and I knew that I was gonna race the following year and I was telling the family I was sitting with, ‘Hey, I’m gonna be out there racing next year in a modified,’ and they were like, ‘Man, you’re crazy. There ain’t no way.’ Because here I am just a little kid that’s been watching races there for a long time and then, sure enough, I wound up racing. They’re older now, but they still come by and it’s like, ‘Man, we can’t believe we sat in the stands with you thirty some years ago and you told us you’d race and now you’ve won 101 races and 12 championships here.’ That’s really cool just to have that kind of following and they’re there every Saturday night that place is open. And not only them. There are thousands of families that are like that and are there religiously every Saturday night.”

    RICK WARE, Owner, No. 15 Rick Ware Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT WENT INTO PUTTING TIM IN THE CAR FOR THIS OPPORTUNITY? “I listened and Tim was a little short on some of the fill of the information because there’s so much back story to him and his family and the stuff in the past. This really started back in the Gen 6 car when the modifieds had been gone from Martinsville for I think 10 years or so, and then the modifieds were gonna come back and I said, ‘Man, we need to figure out a way to maybe get you there for that race’ because he was gonna be looking forward to running that race with the modifieds. I actually talked to Burt Myers as well. This was when we were running a couple of full-time cars in Gen 6 and so the idea was to sell that idea to NASCAR to get them both approved to be at Martinsville, which we did. Anybody that follows Bowman Gray and those guys knows that we’ve got an inherent storyline immediately, so that almost happened. For a variety of different reasons it just didn’t. Tim was talking about going to work for Yarborough back in 1994 and actually Tim was already working for me part-time with my career and Ken Glenn, who was a neighbor of mine in Greensboro, was the crew chief for him and he introduced me to Tim probably in ‘92 or ‘93, so we’ve been friends ever since and just a great guy, and then we got involved with him, I think it was 2008, which I think is the first year of the Madhouse that we kind of teamed up with him there and had the Circle K Thirstbuster car and he won the championship and it was just a great scenario. So, we’ve since worked with him on all kinds of different projects and done some different racing with his backup car at different times and different drivers, so he’s just a fantastic guy. He’s an extremely hard worker and just a great race driver. In my opinion, race drivers to a certain degree, given the tools, they can compete with a wide variety of people on certain tracks. If we were to take him to a road course, he’s probably going to struggle, and maybe even some different size ovals, but he’s run modifieds at three-quarter miles and half-miles and Bowman Gray, so he’s a racer and it really wasn’t much of a stretch. It was just a little bit unique to make your debut at something like the Clash as opposed to someplace like say Martinsville that we’re talking about it.”

    WAS IT A NO BRAINER TO PUT TIM IN THE CAR ONCE IT WAS DECIDED BOWMAN GRAY WOULD BE THE SITE? “When they started talking about it, immediately me and Tim started scratching our head and the thought process was, ‘Hey, let’s go see the feasibility of it.’ It was gonna depend a lot on whether or not we were running – was it gonna be a third entry as an open or was it gonna be the second car as an open. There are a lot of different scenarios, but we were pretty adamant that we were gonna do all that we could do to take him there. It would have been different if it would have been cross country because there’s a lot more involved, but being that it’s local and he had a huge following, it just kind of made sense to finalize what we actually started three or four years ago. He was talking about working on the car and if anybody knows Tim he’s extremely anal. He’ll push people out of the way. He’s gonna touch every piece of that car, so he selfishly has an agenda to touch every piece, make it as good as he feels he can make it and that’s the way he is with his modified as well. He’s hands-on, so it’s cool that he can work on something that’s gonna be his car. He takes a lot of pride in that and, frankly, me and Lisa take some pride in being able to offer that opportunity to Tim because we’ve known him and his wife and his family forever. When me and Robby started talking about it I was like, ‘Man, we’ve got to figure it out and make it happen.’”

    WHAT ARE YOUR PLANS FOR THE 15 CAR AND DO YOU HAVE A TIMETABLE TO NAME A DRIVER FOR THE 51? “We’re working really hard on that. Every day we’re getting closer and putting pieces together. That’s a big 800-pound gorilla that we’re piecing together bit by bit and we’ll be making some announcements soon on that, but it has given us the opportunity to do this deal with Tim, which is what we’re extremely excited about right now.”

    WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR RWR AND WHAT DO YOU SEE IN TIM THAT HE DOESN’T SEE IN HIMSELF? “Again, I view him as a race driver first. Now, Bowman Gray is truly unique in that when we went to the Clash, they laid down fresh asphalt and it was amazing. I couldn’t believe the asphalt stayed in good shape and it was smooth and there was a lot of grip. If I’m not mistaken, they tore it up and re-laid it again. The difference with this is that it is extremely porous. It’s very wore out. I’m not so sure that you’re not trying to hook up on pieces of the stone in between the asphalt that’s gone away. If you’ve gone there a fair amount and watched those guys qualifying on evenings when it has been cold more so than normal, you have to have a lot of patience. It’s so easy to overdrive those corners, which it is at any quarter mile, but especially there. The exiting is gonna be even more narrow because you’re losing approximately just shy of three feet on each side because of the SAFER barriers, but there is a value to having, I don’t know, a million laps around a place. There is an advantage. These are the best guys in the world racing these cars, so they have good cars and they’re good drivers. We’re putting our best foot forward. I think he’s putting a lot of expectations on himself just because that’s the kind of person he is. He’s one of those guys who isn’t gonna go somewhere unless he thinks he can win. That’s a little bit tougher attitude to have at the Cup level because there’s a lot of other guys that have the same attitude, just like the short track, but we’re trying to give him all that anybody could. I think he’s gonna do really well. I think if you look at some of the great drivers that haven’t even made the main events the last two years, it’s not so much a function of they are not driving, it’s a function of the whole oval package just couldn’t get that last thousandth of a second. The field is so tight. What I like about having him there is, it was mentioned earlier, normally half the crowd that’s sold out hates and boos for Tim. The other half immediately love him, but I feel like even the people that hate him at Bowman Gray are happy for him because they respect what he’s done. They respect the tenure and the fact that he’s a good race driver and sometimes you hate good race drivers, so that portion I like. I think it’s good for the overall sport. It so cool that NASCAR has taken over this track. They’re giving it a coat of paint, but it still has an old-school feel and if people haven’t been there, it’s like the first time going to Bristol, if you haven’t been there it’s hard to explain it to somebody. It’s just gonna be a win-win for everybody. I’m just really excited about it.”

    DO YOU LIKE THAT IT’S UNPREDICTABLE AND HARD AND WE DON’T KNOW WHAT’S GOING TO HAPPEN? “One hundred percent. Again, just mentioning some of the people that are outstanding short track racers that didn’t make it in the Clash and some that did that were a surprise. If we were going to a mile-and-a-half or back at Daytona, I think you could probably pick 10 cars that you would expect to be qualified up front, and then teams would team up, but here, if you happen to get the car and get some forward bite to get the car turning and not overdrive the corner, I think you can have some really good championship drivers that may just overdrive the corner because they had to go out early or it was just colder than they thought. So, yes, I think from start to finish, from practice all the way to the checkered flag, I think the whole world is gonna be watching, literally around the world because there is no other racing going on at that time of the year.”

    WHAT ELSE ARE YOU HOPING HE’LL GET FROM THIS EXPERIENCE BY BEING ABLE TO RUN THIS RACE? “Racers are inherently always looking forward, so there’s talk of ‘what if we could put together something and maybe run the second Martinsville later on in the year.’ That’s what racers do. We’re adding, so we’re trying to find a way to go do something cool. I think there’s a lot of opportunity, potentially, for that. Is this a scenario that we can build a base of local support and he does this for the next 10 years if it’s there? I’m not sure, but I want him to get out of it is obviously as a former driver that didn’t make it and is a team owner now, I understand what it’s like to go do something that you’ve dreamed about doing. Running a Cup car for anybody that’s grown up around here, I mean, it’s like the holy grail of motorsports. I’m just glad to be able to be part of being able to give that to him and the fact that he has his kids there. I brought my kids there at a young age when he was still racing and winning championships, and for him to be able to have his son there, his family, and for him to be able to be at a place that’s kind of his house, I hope he can just absorb it. I hope the weather is fantastic and the place is off the hook. It may lead to a whole lot more things. That’s definitely a possibility, but, for sure, I want him just to absorb it and enjoy it because as racers we’re here today and before we got on this call we’re talking about two weeks later at Daytona. Then we’ve got to go straight to Atlanta. You’re burning through the moments and the memories, so I just hope he can absorb it and I hope he just has a fantastic run.”

    WHAT HAS THIS MEANT FOR YOU TO BE INVOLVED IN GIVING HIM THIS OPPORTUNITY AND ALSO SEE SUCH A POSITIVE REACTION FOR YOU AND YOUR PROGRAM TO DO THIS? “I think from a marketing standpoint it worked out really well and sometimes that’s part of what you have to do as a business and a race team, but I can promise you it started with doing something really cool for a really good friend. The byproduct is that it has garnered a whole lot of attention and the reason being is he’s that outstanding of an individual. I’m thankful that we could be able to do it. Lisa has been around and Lisa was excited about doing it. There have been many a nights that we’ve been there late with our boys and him. He’s been instrumental with helping my family through the development and driver approval process throughout the years, so we are like a family and we see each other on a regular basis, but we work really hard. It’s one of those things that it’s hard to have win-wins, especially where we are in the Cup Series, trying to claw up both performance-wise and stature and acceptability. We’ve worked really, really hard in Robby and Tommy Baldwin have really been a part of that. Of course, you’ve got Tommy who is knee-deep in modifieds as well, so over here at RWR it’s kind of the modifieds against the world, but it’s just cool. I’m very thankful and part of how it’s grown too is Tim mentioned earlier that you’ve got to give a hand out to Mike Arning of True Speed because he’s helped educate the whole country about what’s happening. I think it’s gonna be good for the sport and good for television and good for the Cup Series.”

    WHAT ARE THE SPECIAL MEMORIES AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR YOU TO HAVE GOTTEN THAT ONE CUP START IN 1990 AT WATKINS GLEN? “For me, using that particular race as an example, I won’t say that I raced against the greatest names in racing, but I got to compete with the greatest names in racing. That’s part of it – the people that you look up to and what it took to even make that happen. It was insurmountable, especially at that time with where I was and to be able to do that, and even that was a bizarre scenario because I subbed for Rick Mast, who was running a race, I think, at either Orange County or South Boston and there was a conflict and he really wasn’t a road course racer and I had road course experience, so we filled in for Bobby Jones and the 22 car that Rick Mast normally drove, so it was a bizarre set of circumstances, but I was on Cloud Nine. But it comes and goes and all you think about is trying to get to that next scenario. Me and Lisa like the fact that, I want to say in a 10-year period, I’m pretty confident that statistically we’ve probably given more drivers their first Cup start than I’m gonna say the top 10 teams combined. Maybe those stats are a little off, but it’s pretty significant and part of that is just the opportunity. I’m a racer and there’s a soft spot there, and I do see things through the eyes of people when they’ve had good weekends, bad weekends and this got announced relatively early in that I’m happy that it’s been a month-and-a-half or two month process for him as opposed to, ‘hey, somebody got hurt, you fit in the seat, do you want to drive?’ And you’ve got 24 hours. He’s being able to really absorb it and that’s important to me, just as a friend and seeing things and being a family in racing. It’s important to me and Lisa to be able to do those things.”

    WHAT IS IT LIKE TO SEE THIS EXPERIENCE THROUGH HIS EYES AS SOMEBODY WHO HAD THAT SHORTER WINDOW? For him, I think he had probably a little bit longer ramp up for it and it’s cool just being at the shop. As you mentioned, we have Tim Brown and we have a young guy named Andre that has run at Bowman Gray in a mini stock car, I think. Chad Blount’s run an Xfinity car. Billy Plourde has run late models up north. We have a lot of racers here, so it’s great because we have a lot of ribbing and joking around and everybody is expecting him to sit on the first couple of rows because if he’s not in the first couple of rows every Saturday night, he’s pissed off and throwing something. So, it’s good to see how the interaction is in your work place and just to have the support, and he’s actually been able to share it with a group of people that normally you wouldn’t be able to because these are his peers and there’s a lot of camaraderie and there’s just a whole lot of respect, so it’s really cool from that standpoint.”

    DO YOU THINK YOU GUYS COULD BE PUTTING MORE INTO THIS SINCE IT’S A LOCAL RACE AS OPPOSED TO ACROSS THE COUNTRY, AND COULD OTHER TEAMS BE LOOKING AHEAD TO DAYTONA? “I think because the first race of the year and there’s a fair amount of time, and the race is kind of a get out of jail free card in that if you piss people off in points races, somebody may be putting you on a list. I saw at the Clash last year, if you’re standing down in the middle of the track – I mean, you could just see the cars. It’s just like being at Bowman Gray or a short track. You can’t stand in the middle at Bowman, but you can really see what goes on and there’s a lot of roughing up because you don’t have any choice. You have to move somebody pretty much to get by and that’s the way it is at Bowman Gray on a regular basis, so I think a lot of people put a lot of effort into it because, first off, they’re racers and they want to win. I don’t know what it pays to win, but it’s decent. It’s a cool trophy. It’s the Clash. It’s the first race of the year. It’s an inaugural event and for people who put those in their trophy case it’s really cool. Are we putting more than normal? I wouldn’t say we are, but we’re trying to go to every track right now as prepared as we can, but going back to Tim Brown personally, he’s the kind of guy that will triple check something just because of his OCD. He wants it to be perfect, so he’s gonna prepare like it’s a million dollar to win modified race that if he doesn’t win he’s expected to. But it’s one of those races where a lot of different people can win, so we are preparing for it from that standpoint.”

  • Fastenal and RFK Racing Celebrate 15 Years of NASCAR Partnership

    Fastenal and RFK Racing Celebrate 15 Years of NASCAR Partnership

    Fastenal Returns as One of the Sport’s Longest-Tenured Brands

    CONCORD, N.C. (Jan. 8, 2025) – RFK Racing and primary partner Fastenal Company (Nasdaq: FAST) will celebrate their 15th season of partnership in 2025. Fastenal, which recently extended its relationship with RFK, is one of the longest-tenured brands in NASCAR. When Fastenal initially teamed up with RFK in 2010, they were paired with NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Carl Edwards. Today, Fastenal is a primary partner for NASCAR Champion Chris Buescher and his No. 17 Ford, serving as the longest-tenured brand within RFK’s large family of partners.

    “We’re incredibly proud to celebrate 15 years with Fastenal,” said Steve Newmark, President of RFK Racing. “They have been an integral part of our journey, both on and off the track, and their ‘Blue Team’ has become part of the RFK family. They’re integrated into everything we do, and their supply chain expertise is critical to our ability to build and maintain fast race cars. We look forward to building on this strong foundation to achieve even greater things together in the years to come.”

    “Our partnership with RFK Racing has elevated and strengthened the Fastenal brand with millions of NASCAR fans,” said Fastenal’s CEO, Dan Florness. “It’s more than just putting our name on the car. We work closely with their team to achieve our marketing goals, and they rely on our team for supply chain expertise. We’re excited to continue the collaboration in 2025.”

    Fastenal’s iconic blue paint scheme will return to the track with RFK in 2025 and beyond, with Chris Buescher driving in most of the events. 2025 will also see an expanded presence of Fastenal’s Body Guard® brand on the track. The orange and black Body Guard® paint scheme will grace all three RFK Racing entries during the season, including team co-owner Brad Keselowski (No. 6) and team newcomer Ryan Preece (No. 60).

    A Look in the Rearview Mirror

    • With Fastenal as the primary partner, Carl Edwards and the No. 60 Xfinity Series team won the 2011 owners’ championship. The Fastenal brand was also on board when Buescher’s No. 60 secured the 2015 Xfinity Series championship.
    • Fellow NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Matt Kenseth has also appeared behind the wheel of a Fastenal Ford for RFK Racing, as have Greg Biffle, Trevor Bayne, and Bubba Wallace. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. piloted the No. 17 Fastenal Ford in the Cup Series from 2015 to 2019. Overall, Fastenal has supported, and served as a primary partner with, nine different RFK drivers during the partnership.
    • Fastenal Fords have made just shy of 300 starts with RFK Racing in NASCAR action since 2010. During that time, RFK and Fastenal have accumulated 10 victories and 87 top-10 finishes together to go along with a pair of NASCAR Championships.

    About RFK Racing
    RFK Racing, in its 38th season in 2025, 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.

    About Fastenal
    Fastenal provides a broad offering of industrial supplies, including fastener, safety, and metal cutting products, to manufacturing, construction, and state and local government customers through more than 3,600 in-market locations (branches and customer-specific Onsite locations) spanning 25 countries. With continual investment in tailored local inventory, dedicated local experts, and flexible FMI® (Fastenal Managed Inventory) and digital solutions, Fastenal helps its business partners achieve product and process savings across the supply chain – a “high-touch, high-tech” approach encapsulated by its tagline, Where Industry Meets Innovation™. Fastenal’s local service teams are supported by 17 regional distribution centers, a captive logistics fleet, multiple teams of industry specialists and support personnel, and robust sourcing, quality, and manufacturing resources, enabling it to grow by getting closer to customers and providing innovative and comprehensive solutions to customer supply chain challenges.

    Additional information regarding Fastenal is available on the Fastenal Company website at www.fastenal.com.