Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • RFK Advance | Bristol II

    RFK Advance | Bristol II

    Bristol II Event Info:
    Date: Saturday, Sept. 21
    Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Location: Bristol, Tennessee
    Format: 500 Laps, 266.5 Miles, Stages: 125-125-250
    TV: USA
    Radio: PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90)

    Weekend Schedule:
    Friday: 4 p.m. ET, Practice (USA, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
    Friday: 4:50 p.m. ET, Qualifying (USA, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
    Saturday: 7:30 p.m. ET, Race (USA, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

    Pace Laps:

    • The annual Bristol Night Race plays host this weekend to the final race in the opening round of the NASCAR Playoffs.
    • Brad Keselowski sits below the cut line needing a solid finish to advance into the Round of 12, just behind the No. 11 and ahead of the No. 19.
    • Since Chris Buescher’s win at Bristol in 2022 – the first overall under the RFK banner – RFK has finished top-10 in two-straight Bristol races, with a pair of top-5s each from Buescher (2023 fall) and Keselowski (2024 spring).
    • Keselowski has the third-best average finish of any driver at Bristol in the last four seasons (7.5), with Buescher just behind in fourth at 8.8.
    • Jack Roush has 19 Bristol wins all-time, including 12 in the Cup Series, second-most only behind Michigan (14).

    6 Team Info:
    Crew Chief: Matt McCall
    Partner: Castrol Edge

    17 Team Info:
    Crew Chief: Scott Graves
    Partner: Fastenal

    • RFK team partner HOIST will be activating this weekend in the campground area at Bristol Motor Speedway, centered around its ‘Fuel the Pull’ event. The ‘Fuel the Pull’ will be hosted at the HOIST vendor site stationed in the Souvenir Alley at the All-American Campground, hosting a series of tug-of-war pick-up games, where attendees can compete against friends, enjoy complimentary HOIST beverages and participate in the excitement of the weekend races.
    • Buescher will make an appearance at the HOIST activation on Friday at 2 p.m. for a Q&A with fans in the area.

    Keselowski at Bristol
    Starts: 26
    Wins: 3 (2011, 2012, 2020)
    Top-10s: 10
    Poles: 2 (2020)

    • Keselowski makes his 27th Cup start on the concrete at Bristol this weekend. He has three Bristol Cup wins all-time with 10 top-10s and a 15.8 average finish.
    • He’s coming off a third-place run there this spring, and a P8 finish last fall in this race after starting sixth. In the past four fall races he has finishes of P8, P6, P34 and P3.
    • Keselowski’s three wins at BMS came back in 2011-12, and most recently in 2020.
    • Keselowski has led laps in 15 different Bristol races totaling 1,014 laps, his best total of any track on the circuit outside Richmond (1,280).
    • Keselowski has started top-10 in five of the last six Bristol races, including a pair of poles in 2020. Overall he has a 9.7 average starting position – his best of any track outside of Homestead (8.9). He has 16 starts inside the top-10 in 26 Bristol events.
    • Keselowski also made 14 Xfinity starts at Bristol with one win and eight top-10s, and seven Truck starts with one win and three top-10s.

    Buescher at Bristol
    Starts: 15
    Wins: 1 (2022)
    Top-10s: 5
    Poles: —

    • Buescher enters the weekend with a load of momentum at ‘The Last Great Colosseum,’ coming off three-consecutive finishes of seventh or better. He’s the defending winner of the fall race from two years ago, and has led a combined 187 laps in the last three races alone.
    • He finished seventh at Bristol this spring – after starting 34th – and fourth last fall.
    • Overall, Buescher has five Cup top-10s at Bristol, with an eighth-place finish in the 2020 fall race, and a fifth-place run back in 2016.
    • Buescher has an average starting position of 23.9 with a career-best starting position of 12th (2016).
    • Buescher made five Xfinity Series starts at Bristol with three top-10s and a best finish of third (2015).

    RFK Historically at Bristol
    Cup Wins: 12 (Mark Martin, 1993, 1998; Kurt Busch, 2002, 2003, 2003, 2004; Matt Kenseth, 2005, 2006; Carl Edwards, 2007, 2008, 2014; Chris Buescher, 2022)

    • Runner Up: RFK’s storied history at Bristol began on April 10, 1988 with the No. 6 NCS car earning a second-place finish. Since that time, in addition to the organization’s 11 NCS wins at the track, RFK Fords have finished second at Bristol on 15 occasions (7 NCS, 4 NXS, 4 NCTS).
    • History and Hot Streaks at “Thunder Valley”: RFK’s history at Bristol has been one of hot streaks, including trips to victory lane in 10 of the last 21 seasons at the famed short track. RFK swept the track in 2003 and put a NCS car in victory lane at least once in every season from 2002-2008.
    • Tale of the Tape: RFK has started 223 NCS races at Bristol, recording 12 total wins with 53 top-five and 93 top-10 finishes. RFK Fords have an average finish of 15.7 with 3693 laps led all-time.

    RFK Bristol Wins

    1993-2 Martin Cup

    1996-1 Martin NXS

    1997-1 Burton NXS

    1998-2 Martin Cup

    2002-1 Busch Cup

    2003-1 Busch Cup

    2003-2 Busch Cup

    2004-1 Busch Cup

    2004 Edwards Truck

    2005-2 Kenseth Cup

    2006-2 Kenseth Cup

    2006 Martin Truck

    2006-2 Kenseth NXS

    2007-1 Edwards NXS

    2007-2 Edwards Cup

    2008-2 Edwards Cup

    2009-2 Ragan NXS

    2014 -1 Edwards Cup
    2022-2 Buescher Cup

    Last Time Out & Where They Stand
    Watkins Glen: Buescher earned the first road course win of his career Sunday at the Glen, overcoming three late-race restarts and retaking the lead from road course ace Shane Van Gisbergen. Keselowski finished 26th.

    Points Standings (6: 14th, 17: 18th): Keselowski sits 12 points behind the cut line entering Bristol.

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

    Bass Pro Shops Racing: Martin Truex Jr. Bristol Advance

    Martin Truex Jr.
    Bass Pro Shops Night Race at Bristol Advance
    No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE for Joe Gibbs Racing

    Event Overview

    ● Event: Bass Pro Shops Night Race (Round 29 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 7:30 p.m. EDT on Saturday, Sept. 21
    ● Location: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway
    ● Layout: .533-mile concrete oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 500 laps/266.5 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 125 laps / Stage 2: 125 laps / Final Stage: 250 laps
    ● TV/Radio: USA Network/ PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● One More Chance to Advance: After being involved in an accident in a late-race restart Sunday at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International, the New Jersey native sits 15th in the 16-driver playoff standings, 14 points below the top-12 cutline with one race remaining in the Round of 16. Only the top-12 drivers in points after Bristol advance to the next playoff round.

    ● Truex has three top-five finishes, five top-10s and has led a total of 341 laps in 34 career NASCAR Cup Series starts on Bristol’s concrete surface. Truex’s average Bristol finish is 20.2.

    ● Memory Lane: While Truex is still seeking his first Bristol win in NASCAR’s top series, he has visited victory lane at the East Tennessee track in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Truex brought home the win at Bristol in the spring 2004 race during the first of his back-to-back Xfinity Series championships, which came in 2004 and 2005.

    ● Truex has traditionally struggled at Bristol, but this season’s first trip to Bristol in March helped him and his Bass Pro Shops team gain confidence on the half-mile bullring. He brought home a runner-up finish to JGR teammate Denny Hamlin, leading 54 laps in a race where tire management was the story of the day. In his 33 races on the Bristol concrete prior to the March race, Truex had led a double-digit number of laps just four times. It was his most laps led in a race there since he led 52 laps in the August 2019 race. Prior to joining JGR in 2019, Truex led 116 laps in the spring 2017 Bristol race in a Toyota for Furniture Row Racing.

    ● Looking for 35: Truex’s win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon in July 2023 was his most recent Cup Series win, the 34th of his career, tying him with 2004 champion Kurt Busch for 25th on the all-time Cup Series win list.

    ● Ahead at this Stage: Truex has accumulated 64 stage wins since the beginning of the stage era in 2017. He is the only driver with 10 or more stage sweeps, with his latest sweep coming at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn in August 2023. Truex scored his fourth stage win of the season Sunday at Watkins Glen, leading the field across the line at the end of Stage 1.

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

    If tire wear is a factor again at Bristol like it was in the spring race, how confident are you in your tire management skills to manage that?

    “Yeah, I’m certainly looking forward to it more than in past years. Bristol has been in the past, just ‘hammer it’ as hard as you can all day. Track position was huge. Tires didn’t really wear out and it was all about pit stops, restarts and track position. Now, in the spring, it was like old-school racing. I enjoyed that more and had better success at it than I did in previous years at Bristol, so I’m excited for that and I think it’s a good opportunity for us with our Bass Pro Shops Camry.”

    What are your thoughts on racing at Bristol, especially with this being a playoff cutoff race?

    “Bristol hasn’t been my favorite place, but we’ve had some good runs there, too. I think we’ve been competitive there over the years. It’s a place that’s tight and things happen fast there, so you have to be on your toes. Always really excited to be a part of how great the crowd is there, and the fans love that place. Obviously the spring race there was very encouraging, and hope we can run up front all night like we did there in March and have a shot to make it through to the next round. Would be great to have another strong run there and finally get a win at Bristol with our Bass Pro Shops Camry. We’ll see how it plays out.”

    Does going to Bristol make you nervous or does the spring race result give you and the team a bit more confidence going into this weekend?

    “We’ve run well there at times, like the spring, for sure. We’ve certainly struggled at times, but I think everybody has. That place is tricky with the spray, and the groove moving around. We won’t race where we practice. It’s a little bit of a challenge there, but all of the times we’ve run there, it’s always been a flat tire or a loose wheel. I can’t even use both hands to count all of the times that has happened. It’s just been a tough place, hopefully no bad luck this weekend and we can go just have a smooth race and hopefully have the performance to get the job done.”

    Is your approach going to be to try to point your way on to the next round?

    “That’s the goal every week – try to get as many points as you can. You want to run up front and be in the mix with whatever position you are in. We certainly try to do that and maximize stage points and do everything we can. Some of it is out of our control and we can only focus on what we can control. It is going to be tough to point our way in, but it is a long race and a lot can happen, especially at a place like Bristol, so we are looking forward to the opportunity.”

    How will you balance keeping track of where your fellow playoff drivers are versus what you are doing on Saturday night?

    “You kind of just take it as it comes. Right now, we know where we stand and what we have to do, but things change, and if things change in a major way, they will let me know, but we just have to go race and do the best job that we can do no matter what everyone else has going on.”

    No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Team Roster

    Primary Team Members

    Driver: Martin Truex Jr.

    Hometown: Mayetta, New Jersey

    Crew Chief: James Small

    Hometown: Melbourne, Australia

    Car Chief: Chris Jones

    Hometown: Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia

    Race Engineer: Jaik Halpainy

    Hometown: Blockville, New York

    Spotter: Drew Herring

    Hometown: Benson, North Carolina

    Road Crew Members

    Underneath Mechanic: Ryan Martin

    Hometown: Mechanicsburg, Virgina

    Mechanic: Todd Carmichael

    Hometown: Redding, California

    Interior/Tire Specialist: Tommy DiBlasi

    Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

    Engine Tuner: Beau Morton

    Hometown: Lake Havasu City, Arizona

    Transporter Driver: Kyle Bazzell

    Hometown: Fairbury, Illinois

    Transporter Driver: Eddie DeGroot

    Hometown: Baldwinsville, New York

    Over-The-Wall Crew Members

    Gas Man: Matt Tyrrell

    Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

    Jackman: Caleb Dirks

    Hometown: Riverside, California

    Tire Carrier: CJ Bailey

    Hometown: Outer Banks, North Carolina

    Front Tire Changer: Thomas Hatcher

    Hometown: Middleburg, Florida

    Rear Tire Changer: Lee Cunningham

    Hometown: Leaf River, Illinois

  • CHRIS BUESCHER CAPTURES WIN AT WATKINS GLEN, MARKING 4-IN-A-ROW FOR FORD PERFORMANCE

    CHRIS BUESCHER CAPTURES WIN AT WATKINS GLEN, MARKING 4-IN-A-ROW FOR FORD PERFORMANCE

    BRISTOL, TN – September 16, 2024 – Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing’s Chris Buescher won Sunday’s Go Bowling at The Glen, completing a 4-in-a-row streak for Ford Performance and Roush Yates Engines. This weekend’s win marked Buescher’s first win of the season, 143rd NASCAR Cup Series win for car owner Jack Roush, and sixth since the forming of Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing.

    “Congratulations to Jack, Brad, Scott, Chris, and everyone at Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing on the race win at Watkins Glen,” said Doug Yates, President and CEO of Roush Yates Engines. “What an incredible drive and finish by Chris Buescher. The No. 17 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing team worked their way to the front of the field for the win at the Glen.”

    “That’s such a good BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang. This team is so great. Our long run speed was just phenomenal. I thought we lost it there on that last one and to stay right there with him. That was the spot he was better than us and he missed it, so I tried a crossover. He went to cut and just hard racing there. It’s just such an awesome finish. To be that good for so much at the end of the race, all race, to get a win is good. We came here to be a spoiler and we’re gonna do that,” commented Buescher.

    Sunday’s race marked the first time that Watkins Glen International has hosted a playoff race. Four Ford Performance drivers started from the top-10: Team Penske’s Austin Cindric in P5, Team Penske’s Joey Logano in P7, Stewart-Haas Racing’s Noah Gragson in P9, and Front Row Motorsports’ Michael McDowell in P10.

    The action-packed race started with a crash just past the bus stop on lap 1, involving multiple playoff drivers. Several cars pitted before the end of the first stage, shaking up the finishing order. Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe finished the stage in P3 along with Team Penske’s Austin Cindric in P5. An accident on lap 38 of 40 in the second stage caused it to end under caution with four Ford Performance drivers finishing in the top-10: Team Penske’s Joey Logano in P3, Wood Brothers Racing’s Harrison Burton in P6, and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe and Ryan Preece in P7 and P9.

    The final stage of the race was filled with action. With under 20 laps remaining, RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher passed Joey Logano after turn one to take the lead. Shortly after, the caution flag came out for debris left on the track following an incident. With 7 laps remaining, a crash in turn 4 brought out a caution. With three laps to go, another caution was thrown after two cars collided just before the esses, causing the race to go into overtime. During the overtime restart, Shane Van Gisbergen passed Chris Buescher for the lead but became loose on entry to the bus stop chicane allowing Chris Buescher to close in on him with his No. 17 RFK Racing Ford. The two drivers made contact in the carousel, but Buescher surged ahead to make the race-winning pass, crossing the finish line 0.979 seconds ahead of Van Gisbergen.

    Five Ford Performance drivers finished in the top-10: Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe in P6, Front Row Motorsports’ Michael McDowell in P7, Stewart-Haas Racing’s Ryan Preece in P9, and Team Penske’s Austin Cindric in P10.

    The NASCAR Xfinity Series also raced at Watkins Glen International on Saturday. Joey Logano, driving for AM Racing, finished in P9.

    The NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series both compete this weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tennessee.
    39 CHAMPIONSHIPS – 470 WINS – 435 POLES

    About Roush Yates Engines
    Roush Yates Engines is a leading-edge engine development company based in Mooresville, NC consisting of two state-of-the-art facilities – Roush Yates Engines and Roush Yates Manufacturing Solutions, a world class AS9100 Rev D/ISO 13485 certified CNC manufacturing facility. The company’s core business includes designing, building and testing purpose-built race engines.

    Ford Performance in partnership with Roush Yates Engines is the exclusive engine builder of the NASCAR FR9 Ford V8 engine.

    With an unparalleled culture of winning and steeped in rich racing history, Roush Yates Engines continues to follow the company’s vision to lead performance engine innovation and staying true to the company’s mission, provide race winning engines through demonstrated power and performance.

  • Rush Truck Centers Racing: Chase Briscoe Bristol Advance

    Rush Truck Centers Racing: Chase Briscoe Bristol Advance

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

    Event Overview

    ● Event: Bass Pro Shops Night Race (Round 29 of 36)
    ● Time/Date: 7:30 p.m. EDT on Saturday, Sept. 21
    ● Location: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway
    ● Layout: .533-mile, concrete oval
    ● Laps/Miles: 500 laps/266.5 miles
    ● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 125 laps / Stage 2: 125 laps / Final Stage: 250 laps
    ● TV/Radio: USA / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Notes of Interest

    ● Chase Briscoe comes into the Bass Pro Shops Night Race at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway 11th among the 16 drivers in the NASCAR Playoffs. Only the top-12 drivers in points after Bristol advance to the next playoff round, and Briscoe sits just one spot above the playoff bubble with a six-point advantage over 13th-place Denny Hamlin. Briscoe can either maintain that advantage at the end of Saturday night’s 500 lapper around the .533-mile oval or punch his ticket to the Round of 12 with a victory.

    ● The Bass Pro Shops Night Race will mark Briscoe’s fifth career NASCAR Cup Series start on Bristol’s concrete surface. The driver of the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Stewart-Haas Racing has two top-15 finishes, with his best effort being 13th, a result earned twice – in his first Cup Series start at Bristol in September 2021 and in his last Cup Series start at the track in March.

    ● Despite limited NASCAR Cup Series experience at Bristol, Briscoe has always felt comfortable at the high-banked, .533-mile oval. In fact, Bristol’s layout harkens back to two other high-banked venues Briscoe competed on as he climbed the racing ladder. Salem Speedway and Winchester Speedway, both in Indiana, provided Briscoe with a hint of what throttling around Bristol’s 28 degrees of banking would be like. Salem is a .555-mile oval with 33 degrees of banking and Winchester is a half-mile oval with 37 degrees of banking. Briscoe made three ARCA Menards Series starts at Salem and one at Winchester. In his three starts at Salem between 2015 and 2016, Briscoe won two poles (April and September 2016), led a total of 155 laps, and scored two finishes of sixth or better, with his best result being fifth in his debut at the track in 2015. In his lone ARCA race at Winchester in 2016, Briscoe dominated by winning the pole, leading the most laps (142 of 200) and winning the race by 1.132 seconds.

    ● In the NASCAR Xfinity Series, where Briscoe competed from 2018 through 2020 before earning his promotion to the NASCAR Cup Series, Bristol was one of Briscoe’s best tracks. He made six Xfinity Series starts at the track and, in his last four starts, Briscoe never finished worse than fourth. In fact, he capped off his Xfinity Series career at Bristol in the best way possible – with a win. Briscoe won the 2020 Food City 300 in September, vanquishing the back-to-back runner-up finishes he earned in his two prior starts at Bristol in August 2019 and June 2020.

    ● Briscoe competed at Bristol for the first time in 2017 when he drove a Ford F-150 for Brad Keselowski Racing in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race. Briscoe acquitted himself well, qualifying 15th and finishing 12th. It remains his only Truck Series start on Bristol’s concrete.

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

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

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

    How much confidence did that win in the regular-season finale at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway give you, knowing that you get it done when you need to get it done?

    “A lot, and not just myself, but as a race team. We all kind of knew we could win. As a group, we’ve won before, but it had been almost two years. The pit crew guys, it was the first win for almost all of them, and they always thought they could win but, until you do it, you really don’t know. Just the confidence that comes along with winning goes a long way. Specifically, winning at Darlington, the Southern 500, it’s a crown-jewel race for us and, arguably, one of the hardest races on the entire schedule to win. So the confidence that comes along with that, knowing if we can win the Southern 500, then why can’t we win this week at Bristol? I definitely feel like our team as a whole has way more confidence. We kind of walk with more swagger. We just feel better about it. And to do it the way we did it, beating Kyle Larson, beating Kyle Busch, it’s not like we lucked into a win. We literally ran top-three from mile one to mile 500. Just all that kind of combines itself into having a lot of confidence, and I certainly feel like we have that right now.”

    Do you get updates about where the other playoff drivers are during a playoff race? If so, does that impact how you drive?

    “You’re definitely aware of those playoff guys, especially if some of them have trouble, just because then you can kind of balance your risk versus reward. If there are six playoff guys who are having a bad day and you’re running 12th, it’s not the worst thing in the world to finish where you’re at instead of trying to risk getting to ninth and you end up losing six or seven more spots. You’re definitely trying to balance that all out. During the regular season, you don’t really have a whole lot of that, but once the playoffs start, you’re really only racing the other 15 guys. The unique thing is that the non-playoff guys are still out there with us, but from a points standpoint, you’re just trying to race those other 15 guys and trying to take points away from them, so you base your strategy off that, you base your race off that. It’s definitely unique compared to other sports where we’re in the playoffs, but we’re still competing against people who aren’t in the playoffs.”

    Bristol is an elimination race. What’s the feeling knowing four playoff drivers won’t advance?

    “Going into Bristol, it’s an elimination race – and really, any elimination race, whether it’s Bristol or another round, or for us like it was at Darlington – you just know that you have to do everything perfectly. You can’t have any big mishaps, you can’t have a bad night on pit road, and you can’t make a big mistake on the racetrack. At the end of the day, you’re probably not going to win every elimination race, even if you do everything perfectly. But if you do everything perfectly that night, you can go to bed and hang your hat on the fact that you did everything you could and the points just weren’t enough. I think that’s the biggest thing going into an elimination race – not eliminating yourself and just putting together the most solid night you can from start to finish.”

    What’s the intensity of a playoff race at Bristol?

    “No matter if you’re a playoff driver or you’re not a playoff driver, when you go to Bristol, especially for the night race, it’s intense. Everything is electric, and there’s just a certain intensity in the air. And then you throw in the fact that it’s a cutoff race, that 16 guys are going to get whittled down to 12, there’s a different feeling in the air, a different intensity, and that’s what makes the Bristol Night Race even cooler.”

    Do you consider yourself an underdog in this playoff race?

    “I don’t consider ourselves to be an underdog. Some people might’ve already written us off, but for myself and our entire race team, we all feel like we can win it all. That’s probably crazy from a guy who didn’t look like he was even going to be a part of it, but the way we look at it is if we can win the Southern 500, we can win probably any race throughout the entire season. It’s probably the hardest race on the schedule to win and, for us, the big thing was that all of us thought we could win, but we didn’t know we could win. And now we know that we can win, and to do it the way we did it, the confidence and the momentum that comes with that is unique and something that I don’t think any other race team can match right now.”

    Knowing you’re down to the final races with Stewart-Haas Racing, how much pride do you have to finish on a high note?

    “A ton. I grew up a diehard Tony Stewart fan and just a fan of Stewart-Haas Racing. That was my favorite team growing up, so there’s a lot of pride for me that, first off, goes with just getting in the 14 car, let alone wearing that Stewart-Haas Racing badge for 320-plus employees. For us to be able to win when we did, in our final season, when we honestly had every reason to give up, and for us to keep fighting and keep going and bringing cars to the racetrack and to win, did a lot from just a company standpoint. That was the last race before the playoffs started, and if we don’t win that race, then there’s no shot for any Stewart-Haas car to win the championship. One of my guys said it best the other day, ‘If we didn’t win that race, everybody was already counting down the days to the end of the season.’ Now, they’re so excited and we’re just counting down the days to the next race. It’s changed the entire atmosphere at the shop, the morale, people are excited again, and that’s something that as a company we hadn’t had in a couple of years, so it’s pretty cool to be the guy who gets to bring that to the shop.”

    Does Stewart-Haas shutting down at the end of the year provide more fuel to you and the rest of the team?

    “Yeah, I think so. No other team can compare to what we’re going through, and no other team has the emotions that we do, so I think that’s what makes us so scary. We have a lot on our shoulders and there’s a lot of pride that comes along with that. We’re just a unique race team right now. And every other team in the playoffs, they’re trying to figure out how to make four cars fast in the playoffs. Hendrick’s got four cars in the playoffs, JGR has four cars in the playoffs, our place has four cars, but only one of them is in the playoffs, so all of the focus is on the 14 car, and I think that makes it a little easier for us.”

    Explain how being the lone car from Stewart-Haas in the playoffs is better than being part of a four-car team with all of their drivers in the playoffs?

    “There’s probably a disadvantage if you’re just a one-car team in general and you’re the only car in the playoffs, but I do think there’s a big advantage of being a four-car team and only having one car in the playoffs. Those other four-car teams have to focus on all four of their cars and bring their best to the racetrack every single week. And even on the racetrack, they’re all going to be fighting amongst each other, not giving each other a break. With me, I have three teammates out there who are going to do essentially everything they can to help me on the racetrack, and they can race the other guys a little bit harder than they would race me. Then even just preparing the racecars, we can take everything, the best of the best from each racecar, personnel, whatever it may be, and apply it to our car. So I definitely think there’s an advantage to being in the position that we’re in compared to them.”

    What are your expectations heading into Bristol?

    “Bristol is definitely a big question mark. We don’t know if the tires are going to last 150 laps or if they’re going to last 40 laps. Bristol is a place where we’ve been really good. We’ve qualified well and we’ve run up front. We had a good test there a month and a half ago. NASCAR was gracious enough to give us a test there thinking we weren’t going to make the playoffs. Now we’re in the playoffs, so it’s a great thing that we got to go up there and test. Hopefully, we can bring something back that’s going to be competitive there and be in the mix all night long.”

    What did you learn during that Goodyear tire test at Bristol?

    “I honestly have no idea. I seem to think it won’t be like it was in the spring, but my crew chief and engineers do. I could see it going either way. Everybody says it was temperature related. Who knows? If guys start running at the top, the top will probably come in and rubber up, but I don’t know why it wouldn’t go back to the way it was before, but I also don’t know why it did what it did the first time. I don’t know what to expect.”

    The tire wear we saw the last time the NASCAR Cup Series raced at Bristol – did you like it or dislike it?

    “It was definitely unique. I liked the fact that there was a little more strategy involved. And I even felt like, on the driver’s side, it put a little more in your hands instead of whoever had the best car was going to be really good. We probably don’t need it as drastic to where they just blow out, but I do think a good mix of that would be really cool to have, especially for the short-track races, for sure.”

    It seemed like a return to old-school racing where tire management was the key to success. In all the racing that you’ve done in your career, was there a track or style of car where you had to manage your tires that you ended up relying on for that Bristol race?

    “I’d never done any of that type of racing at any time in my career where you had to save tires. Everything I grew up doing was the complete opposite of that. But last year, I was able to run two Late Model races, one at North Wilkesboro and one at Florence, South Carolina, and the Florence race, specifically, at the beginning of the race I remember we rode around quarter throttle just saving tires and it felt very similar to that. I texted the guy I drove for, Chad Bryant, after the Cup race there at Bristol and I was like, ‘Man, I was so glad I got to run those races because I would’ve been so lost without them.’ Definitely felt like it was a lot like that and I feel like you saw all those guys with Late Model experience run so well.”

    How do you save your tires? You have to continue to race, but what is that balance between racing for the position you have now and the position you want to have later?

    “It’s just a risk-versus-reward thing. You know you have to get to X-amount of laps. Tony (Stewart) actually told me that your tire is like a battery. You only have 100-percent battery at the beginning and every time you push it or use more energy or use more of that tire, you’re never getting that percentage back. You have to just understand what that risk versus reward is and if you feel like you can get a couple of spots and only use maybe eight percent of your tire wear, then maybe that’s worth it.”

    If you had tire fall-off where the track still rubbered up, would you need 1,000 horsepower, or are you in the camp that wants both tire fall-off and more horsepower?

    “If we can have both, might as well take it. If you have more horsepower, it’s just going to make things harder for the drivers. I think if the tire is where it normally is, then 1,000 horsepower only helps. But if we have a tire that lasts only 30 laps, then you might only use 600 horsepower, so you don’t really even need 1,000. It just depends on how the tire is and how the race is playing out. It’s different every week, so I’d say it’s what you have versus what you need.”

    With six Xfinity Series starts at Bristol – your last of which ended in victory lane – do you feel you have a good handle on the racetrack despite limited Cup experience on Bristol’s concrete?

    “I don’t know. I feel like Bristol is one of those places you never really feel like you have it conquered, by any means. I’ve been able to have speed there in the past. The Xfinity car and the Cup car definitely race totally differently around Bristol. But I feel like I’ve always had speed at Bristol, I just haven’t been able to put the whole race together, especially on the Cup side. I definitely have struggled to get a good finish there even when we’ve had speed. Physically, it’s probably the most demanding race of the year. But I feel like it’s one of my more favorite racetracks that we go to. I always look forward to going there and having a lot of fun when I’m there. I just need to obviously find that little bit more. I feel like I understand it 90 percent, I just have to find that other 10 percent.”

    Bristol is a tough place, period. It’s an even tougher place to win. How satisfying was your Xfinity Series win at Bristol in September 2020, which came during COVID?

    “It was a super-cool race. That was one of my favorite races we won that year. That was honestly the only race that had fans during COVID and I just remember how cool it was that I was finally able to celebrate one of those wins with fans. I hadn’t been able to do that all year long. Any racecar driver, they want to win at Bristol. We talk about driver’s racetracks, and when you look at the list of guys who have won there, it’s a really special list to be on. To walk out of there with a sword is a super-cool thing, and especially to win at Bristol at night, it’s one of the most marquee events to win at. To be able to do that was really special.”

    When your car owner, Tony Stewart, first talked about Bristol, he said it reminded him of Winchester Speedway and Salem Speedway. Did you think that’s an apt analogy?

    “I definitely think they’re really similar. I’ve been able to run at Winchester, that’s actually where I got my first stock car win, so a super-special place. For me, it definitely reminds me a lot of Winchester, and it reminds me a lot of Salem – Salem’s 25 minutes from where I grew up. So I’ve had a lot of experience watching cars on super-high-banked racetracks and it definitely reminds me a lot of both those places. When I was in the ARCA Series, I remember when I went to Bristol for the first time in a Truck, it seemed very similar to Winchester. There are not a lot of racetracks in the world that have 30-plus degrees of banking, and any time you can get experience on them, it’s a big deal.”

    How important is patience at Bristol, and when do you also have to determine when enough is enough and assert yourself so you’re not getting taken advantage of out there on the racetrack?

    “It’s hard. I feel like you’re not ever patient at Bristol. I feel like you’ve just got to go. Just from the racetrack side of things, you literally have to attack it every single lap. If you take just a second to breathe, it seems like you’re going to go slower, so you have to constantly be in attack mode. Even the racing of the cars, I feel like you’re constantly trying to be extremely aggressive, not necessarily using your bumper, but just trying to get under them or try to get around them. There’s really no time to take a break there just because if you waste even five laps to get around a guy, the leaders are coming. So you’ve got to be extremely aggressive there all day long, and that’s why you see a lot of wrecks there, as well.”

    You first saw Bristol back in 2017 when you competed in a Truck Series race. Was that an eyes-wide-open moment?

    “From the racetrack side of things, it wasn’t anything crazy just because I’d run at Salem and Winchester. But that was one of the only tracks I remember walking into as a driver thinking how cool it was, I was finally able to run at that racetrack. I remember even my dad was like, ‘Man, this is so cool that you’re getting to race at Bristol.’ It’s a special place. It’s one of those places you dream of getting to race at.”

    No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Team Roster

    Primary Team Members

    Driver: Chase Briscoe

    Hometown: Mitchell, Indiana

    Crew Chief: Richard Boswell

    Hometown: Friendship, Maryland

    Car Chief: J.D. Frey

    Hometown: Ferndale, California

    Engineer: Mike Cook

    Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

    Spotter: Joey Campbell

    Hometown: Berlin, Connecticut

    Over-The-Wall Members

    Front Tire Changer: Shayne Pipala

    Hometown: Frankfort Square, Illinois

    Rear Tire Changer: Dakota Ratcliff

    Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee

    Tire Carrier: Jon Bernal

    Hometown: Holland, Michigan

    Jack Man: Kapil Fletcher

    Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

    Fuel Man: Corey Coppola

    Hometown: Bluefield, West Virginia

    Road Crew Members

    Underneath Mechanic: Stephen Gonzalez

    Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

    Interior Mechanic: Trevor Adams

    Hometown: Plymouth, Wisconsin

    Tire Specialist: Keith Eads

    Hometown: Arlington, Virginia

    Shock Specialist: Brian Holshouser

    Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

    Engine Tuner: Jon Phillips

    Hometown: Jefferson City, Missouri

    Transporter Co-Driver: Todd Cable

    Hometown: Shelby, North Carolina

    Transporter Co-Driver: Dale Lackey

    Hometown: Taylorsville, North Carolina

  • Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Watkins Glen

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Watkins Glen

    Go Bowling at The Glen: Watkins Glen International
    Watkins Glen, NY – September 15, 2024

    AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 AUTOTRADER FORD MUSTANG

    START: 5TH STAGE ONE: 5TH STAGE TWO: 23RD FINISH: 10TH POINTS: 3RD

    RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric recorded a solid 10th-place finish at Watkins Glen International – the first of two road courses in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs – and currently sits third in the postseason standings, 43 points above the elimination line heading into the Round of 16 finale at Bristol Motor Speedway. Cindric qualified fifth and hovered around that position for the opening stint, scoring six Stage points with a fifth-place finish in Stage 1. He informed the Autotrader team that his car was a bit on the tight side and headed to pit road for fresh tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment. The No. 2 Ford Mustang restarted 24th as a plethora of other cars visited pit road prior to the end of the Stage. It was a relatively calm second segment, as Cindric remained around that position until returning to pit road with just a few laps remaining in the Stage. Shortly after the stop, a caution slowed the field and the segment ended under yellow with Cindric being scored 23rd. The 26-year-old driver lined up 16th for the restart of what would be a chaotic dash to the checkered flag. Various incidents brought out the yellow flag, but Cindric and the No. 2 team continued to gain position, ultimately securing a top-10 finish as the series heads to Bristol Motor Speedway for the third and final race in the opening round of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

    CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “The No. 2 Autotrader team did a great job bringing a fast car to the track and we were able to execute well enough to get a good finish and solid points. We were probably a little bit better than 10th, but collecting points is really important the first couple rounds. There was a little bit of stress in just trying to make sure the car was straight on all those restarts, but overall, we had great speed in our Ford Mustang.”

    RYAN BLANEY No. 12 MENARDS/PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

    START: 30TH STAGE ONE: 38TH STAGE TWO: 38TH FINISH: 38TH POINTS: 8TH

    RACE RUNDOWN: Ryan Blaney and the No. 12 Menards/Pennzoil Ford Mustang’s day came to an early end after getting caught up in a multi-car incident on the opening lap Sunday at Watkins Glen. As the field made its way through the bus stop for the first time, contact between the Nos. 7 and 8 sent cars spinning as Blaney slowed to avoid but ultimately made contact with the No. 6 who checked up ahead of him, causing damage to the left front. Blaney reported an issue with the steering column while stopped at the exit of the bus stop, necessitating a tow back to the garage which signaled the end to the 12-team’s afternoon. With the 38th-place result, Blaney drops to eighth in the playoffs standings but remains 29 points above the cut line heading into the final race of the Round of 16 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

    BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “I don’t even know what happened, honestly. We stacked up and I caught someone in the left front and it completely broke the steering. I don’t know if we could have fixed it. But that is the frustrating part, just didn’t even give us a chance and just ended our day without even letting us look at it before it is in the garage. It’s unfortunate. We’ll go on to Bristol next week.”

    JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

    START: 7TH STAGE ONE: 17TH STAGE TWO: 3RD FINISH: 15TH POINTS: 1ST (ADV)

    RACE RUNDOWN: Joey Logano raced his way to a 15th-place finish Sunday at Watkins Glen coming off last week’s win at Atlanta to advance to the Round of 12 in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs. Logano kept the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford in and around the top-10 for a majority of the opening stage before he was called to pit road with three laps to go in the first segment to gain track position heading into Stage 2 as he lined up fourth for the ensuing restart. As the field was coming to two to go in the stage with Logano running third and the leaders planning to pit before the stage end, the caution flag flew as the 22-team settled for a third-place finish in the second segment. The 22-team made the call to not pit during the stage caution in order to maintain track position as Logano battled to keep cars behind him on fresher tires. A caution on lap 47 prompted crew chief Paul Wolfe to bring Logano to pit road on the edge of their fuel window to make it to the end, setting Logano up to restart 25th with 41 laps to go. As the green flag pit cycle began with 30 to go, Logano worked his way to the lead with 22 laps remaining while working to hold off the Nos. 71 and 5 who were on similar strategies. Logano was brought to pit road with 12 to go for his final stop of the day and was on his out lap when the caution came out, allowing him to jump a group of cars that opted to pit under yellow. After lining up 16th for the following restart with seven to go, a pair of cautions set up a green-white-checkered finish as Logano fought his way to a 15th-place finish.

    LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “Solid day for us overall. Obviously, we’re racing for playoff points coming off the win last week and we were in position to take Stage 2 before the caution forced us to settle for third. Our strategy at the end got us out front in clean air but we just weren’t able to work our way back through the field in those last few restarts.”

    The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Bristol Motor Speedway for the final race of the Round of 16 on Saturday, September 21. Coverage of the Bass Pro Shops Night Race begins at 7:30 p.m. ET on USA, PRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

  • Buescher Stuns Playoff Field in Victory at Watkins Glen

    Buescher Stuns Playoff Field in Victory at Watkins Glen

    BuildSubmarines.com Earns First Win, Also Buescher’s First Victory on a Road Course

    WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (Sept. 15, 2024) – Chris Buescher finally got the road course victory he’d been searching for, winning Sunday’s race at Watkins Glen in dramatic fashion. The victory marks Buescher’s first of the season and also the first for BuildSubmarines.com.

    “That’s such a good BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang,” Buescher said after the win. “This team is so great. Our long run speed was just phenomenal. I thought we lost it there on that last one and to stay right there with him.

    “That was the spot he was better than us and he missed it, so I tried a crossover. He went to cut and just hard racing there. It’s just such an awesome finish. To be that good for so much at the end of the race, all race, to get a win is good. We came here to be a spoiler and we did that.”

    It took two restarts in the final laps to decide it, as Buescher maintained his lead the first two attempts before immediate yellows were again displayed. The third – in NASCAR Overtime – was a different story as road course ringer Shane Van Gisbergen got the best of the No. 17 on the initial restart. However, Buescher chased him down, ultimately overcoming the No. 16 on the back of WGI to take the checkered flag.

    The win marks RFK’s second of the year after Brad Keselowski won Darlington back in May. It is the sixth victory under the RFK banner (since 2022) and 143rd overall for Jack Roush in NASCAR Cup Series action.

    6 Recap
    Keselowski had an eventful afternoon in the 220+ mile race. After starting 28th, Keselowski pitted just prior to the opening stage break to finish 25th. However, he was caught speeding on the stop and was forced to restart at the tail of the field.

    He rolled 31st at lap 24, and 12 laps later hit pit road again for service. This time the team was assessed a uncontrolled tire penalty, again putting the King’s Hawaiian Ford to the rear.

    He restarted 26th for the third stage, and when the caution flew just four laps later, he pitted in what – at the time – looked to be the final stop. That strategy kept Keselowski on track until 11 laps remaining, as he got as high as second trying to stretch the run on fuel.

    However, he ultimately pitted at lap 79 from the eighth position, just prior to a caution a lap later. At that point his fuel was ample to the finish, but five laps later he was involved in a caution with the No. 24, forcing him to pit road for multiple damage repairs. From there, Keselowski crossed the line 26th.

    17 Recap
    Buescher slowly but surely used his long-run speed to reverse the course of a starting spot of 24th. Like Keselowski, Buescher hit pit road prior to the stage one end for the first service of the day at lap 17. He would finish the stage in 22nd, but restarted ninth for stage two at lap 24.

    His next stop came under green-flag conditions at lap 36 from P10, before finishing stage two 15th.

    Buescher fired off 10th for stage three at lap 42, and had worked his way to sixth by lap 49. From there, he quickly picked off spot after spot in the next few laps, working all the way to second by lap 56, before taking the lead at lap 57 for the first time.

    With many of the cars at the time short on fuel, all Buescher needed was a clean stop and a clean race track, and he got both. It took 15 laps from the time of the stop (lap 58) to when he retook the lead, but he did just that at lap 73, leading the next 16 laps on the field.

    Then, with 10 to go, the No. 21 lost a tire resulting in debris on the track. A handful of cars pitted for fresh tires, but Buescher remained on track, leading the field back to green at lap 83. That sequence happened again, this time resulting in a restart with three to go. He maintained the lead again in that sequence, before the final yellow flew immediately.

    Van Gisbergen initially took over the lead from the No. 17, but Buescher maintained and set up the perfect pass in the carousel, driving past for the victory. In all, Buescher led 19 laps, second-most of any driver.

    Up Next
    Bristol Motor Speedway hosts the final race in the Round of 16 of the NASCAR Playoffs. Race coverage next Saturday night is set for 7:30 p.m. ET on USA, with radio coverage on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90).

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

  • Rick Ware Racing: Go Bowling at The Glen from Watkins Glen International

    Rick Ware Racing: Go Bowling at The Glen from Watkins Glen International

    RICK WARE RACING
    Go Bowling at The Glen
    Date: Sept. 15, 2024
    Event: Go Bowling at The Glen (Round 28 of 36)
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series
    Location: Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International (2.45-mile, seven-turn road course)
    Format: 90 laps, broken into three stages (20 laps/20 laps/50 laps)
    Note: Race extended two laps past its scheduled 90-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.

    Race Winner: Chris Buescher of RFK Racing (Ford)
    Stage 1 Winner: Martin Truex Jr. of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
    Stage 2 Winner: Ross Chastain of Trackhouse Racing (Chevrolet)

    RWR Race Finish:

    ● Justin Haley (Started 36th, Finished 29th/ Running, completed 92 of 92 laps)
    ● Kaz Grala (Started 38th, Finished 35th/Running, completed 87 of 92 laps)

    RWR Points:

    ● Justin Haley (32nd with 399 points)
    ● Kaz Grala (35th with 171 points)

    RWR Notes:

    ● This was Haley’s fourth NASCAR Cup Series start at Watkins Glen. His best finish remains 18th, earned in August 2022.
    ● This was Grala’s first NASCAR Cup Series start at Watkins Glen.

    Race Notes:

    ● Chris Buescher won the Go Bowling at The Glen to score his sixth career NASCAR Cup Series victory, his first of the season and his first at Watkins Glen. His margin of victory over second-place Shane Van Gisbergen was .979 of a second.
    ● Buescher was the 15th different winner in the 28 NASCAR Cup Series races run this season.
    ● This was Ford’s 737th all-time NASCAR Cup Series victory, its eighth of the season and its fourth straight. Ford driver Harrison Burton won Aug. 24 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway, Briscoe won Sept. 1 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, and Joey Logano won last Sunday at Atlanta.
    ● This was Ford’s ninth NASCAR Cup Series victory at Watkins Glen. The manufacturer won its first race at the track on July 18, 1965 with Marvin Panch.
    ● Thirty-one of the 38 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.

    Next Up:

    The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Bass Pro Shops Night Race on Saturday, September 21 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway. The race begins at 7:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • Stewart-Haas Racing: Go Bowling at The Glen from Watkins Glen International

    Stewart-Haas Racing: Go Bowling at The Glen from Watkins Glen International

    STEWART-HAAS RACING
    Go Bowling at The Glen

    Date: Sept. 15, 2024
    Event: Go Bowling at The Glen (Round 28 of 36)
    Series: NASCAR Cup Series
    Location: Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International (2.45-mile, seven-turn road course)
    Format: 90 laps, broken into three stages (20 laps/20 laps/50 laps)
    Note: Race extended two laps past its scheduled 90-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.

    Race Winner: Chris Buescher of RFK Racing (Ford)
    Stage 1 Winner: Martin Truex Jr. of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
    Stage 2 Winner: Ross Chastain of Trackhouse Racing (Chevrolet)

    SHR Finish:

    ● Chase Briscoe (Started 12th, Finished 6th / Running, completed 92 of 92 laps)
    ● Ryan Preece (Started 21st, Finished 9th / Running, completed 92 of 92 laps)
    ● Noah Gragson (Started 9th, Finished 11th / Running, completed 92 of 92 laps)
    ● Josh Berry (Started 31st, Finished 25th / Running, completed 92 of 92 laps)

    SHR Points:

    ● Chase Briscoe (11th with 2,049 points, six points ahead of top-12 cutoff)
    ● Josh Berry (24th with 481 points)
    ● Noah Gragson (25th with 460 points)
    ● Ryan Preece (27th with 442 points)

    Playoff Standings (with one race to go before Round of 12):

    1. Joey Logano (2,084 points) 1 win
    2. Christopher Bell (2,089 points) +46 points
    3. Austin Cindric (2,086 points) +43 points
    4. Alex Bowman (2,084 points) +41 points
    5. Daniel Suarez (2,079 points) +36 points
    6. Tyler Reddick (2,073 points) +30 points
    7. Chase Elliott (2,073 points) +30 points
    8. Ryan Blaney (2,072 points) +29 points
    9. Kyle Larson (2,069 points) +26 points
    10. William Byron (2,068 points) +25 points
    11. Chase Briscoe (2,049 points) +6 points
    12. Ty Gibbs (2,049 points) +6 points
    13. Denny Hamlin (2,043 points) -6 points
    14. Brad Keselowski (2,037 points) -12 points
    15. Martin Truex Jr. (2,035 points) -14 points
    16. Harrison Burton (2,029 points) -20 points

    SHR Notes:

    ● Briscoe earned his eighth top-10 of the season and his second top-10 in four career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Watkins Glen.
    ● Today’s finish equaled Briscoe’s best road-course result in the NASCAR Cup Series. He finished sixth in 2021 at both Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, and Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin.
    ● Briscoe’s sixth-place result bettered his previous best finish at Watkins Glen – ninth, earned in his first NASCAR Cup Series start at the track in 2021.
    ● Briscoe finished third in Stage 1 to earn eight bonus points and seventh in Stage 2 to earn four more bonus points.
    ● Preece earned his third top-10 of the season and his first top-10 in four career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Watkins Glen.
    ● This was Preece’s third straight result of 18th or better. He finished 12th Sept. 1 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway and 18th last Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
    ● Preece’s ninth-place result bettered his previous best finish at Watkins Glen – 17th, earned last year.
    ● Preece finished ninth in Stage 2 to earn two bonus points.
    ● Gragson earned his 13th top-15 of the season and it came in his first career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Watkins Glen.
    ● This was Gragson’s best road-course finish in the NASCAR Cup Series. His previous best was 14th, earned in July in the Grant Park 165 on the streets of downtown Chicago.
    ● This was Berry’s milestone 40th career NASCAR Cup Series start.
    ● This was Berry’s best road-course finish in the NASCAR Cup Series. His previous best was 32nd, earned in June at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway.

    Race Notes:

    ● Chris Buescher won the Go Bowling at The Glen to score his sixth career NASCAR Cup Series victory, his first of the season and his first at Watkins Glen. His margin of victory over second-place Shane Van Gisbergen was .979 of a second.
    ● Buescher was the 15th different winner in the 28 NASCAR Cup Series races run this season.
    ● This was Ford’s 737th all-time NASCAR Cup Series victory, its eighth of the season and its fourth straight. Ford driver Harrison Burton won Aug. 24 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway, Briscoe won Sept. 1 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, and Joey Logano won last Sunday at Atlanta.
    ● This was Ford’s ninth NASCAR Cup Series victory at Watkins Glen. The manufacturer won its first race at the track on July 18, 1965 with Marvin Panch.
    ● There were seven caution periods for a total of 21 laps.
    ● Thirty-one of the 38 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.

    Sound Bites:

    “It was huge. It’s what we needed to do – score stage points and run good in the race, and we were able to do that. It was a really good, solid day for our HighPoint.com Ford. I felt like I could’ve gotten a couple more points, but just didn’t want to risk it there at the end. I knew I was in a pretty good position compared to a lot of the field, so we did what we needed to do and now we just need to go do that same thing next week. We need to just hit singles and doubles and don’t do anything crazy. As long as we just execute all day long, it should be enough. We’ll just go on to Bristol and see what we can do.” – Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 14 HighPoint.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “The day didn’t start out very well, but it got a lot better. It was pretty chaotic and, ultimately, we had a pretty good car. Track position was everything today. Knowing where we were and never having it. Chad (Johnston, crew chief) was aggressive on the strategy and made the right calls to get us track position and we kept it. Ultimately, we got the race finish that we deserved, even with those late-race cautions” – Ryan Preece, driver of the No. 41 Mohawk Northeast Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “I just had a good practice and qualifying and tried to figure this place out. I’d never raced here, so I lost some spots early in the race. Then we worked really hard getting track position. Drew (Blickensderfer, crew chief) and the rest of the Bed Bath & Beyond team called a great race, strategy-wise. I just need to clean some stuff up on my part. But I’m grateful for this team.” – Noah Gragson, driver of the No. 10 Bed Bath & Beyond Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    “We had, honestly, a really good day, I just hate that we didn’t finish where we should’ve. We were poised there to take an easy top-10, which would’ve been a great improvement for us, but unfortunately it just didn’t pan out there at the end. Everybody did a great job and we’ll get ready for the next one.” – Josh Berry, driver of the No. 4 Bed Bath & Beyond Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Next Up:

    The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Bass Pro Shops Night Race on Saturday, Sept. 21 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway. The third race in the 10-race NASCAR Playoffs starts at 7:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • RCR NCS Race Recap: Watkins Glen International

    RCR NCS Race Recap: Watkins Glen International

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 Get Bioethanol Chevrolet Team Survive Wild Watkins Glen International Race with Never-Give-Up Mentality

    Finish: 29th
    Start: 23rd
    Points: 30th

    “Our No. 3 Get Bioethanol Chevrolet team never gave up today, but it was definitely a challenging race for us at Watkins Glen International. The handling of our Chevy was evil all day. We had no grip and we were sliding everywhere. Crew chief Justin Alexander made great calls for adjustments throughout the race, but we’ll have some work to do before we come back to this track. We were able to race our way to as high as seventh today, but we lacked downforce whenever we didn’t have track position. We were in a tough spot for a lot of the race, but luckily this team managed to avoid some big wrecks today. We’ll regroup and head to Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday night.” -Austin Dillon

    Kyle Busch and the No. 8 zone Chevrolet Team Persevere with Lead Lap Finish Despite Lap One Incident at Watkins Glen International

    Finish: 30th
    Start: 13th
    Points: 20th

    “We had a lot of confidence heading into Watkins Glen International based on my past success at this track and our RCR team’s performance over the past several weeks. It’s a shame we got turned around on the first lap of the race. I got whacked in the left rear and spun around in the bus stop. From then on out, it was about survival and salvaging what we could. Crew chief Randall Burnett and all the guys on the No. 8 zone Chevrolet team did a great job making repairs and we were able to finish on the lead lap. It was certainly not the day we wanted though. We’ll regroup and head to Bristol Motor Speedway.” -Kyle Busch

  • Kaulig Racing Race Recap | Go Bowling at The Glen

    Kaulig Racing Race Recap | Go Bowling at The Glen

    SHANE van GISBERGEN
    No. 16 WeatherTech Camaro ZL1

    • Shane van Gisbergen qualified third for the Go Bowling at The Glen.
    • As the field took the green flag and came up to speed, an incident on lap one resulted in a caution. Van Gisbergen maintained his starting position of 3rd. On lap 14, he advanced one position to second. Immediately following, on lap 15, Crew chief Travis Mack made the call to bring the No. 16 WeatherTech Chevrolet to pit under green flag for four tires and fuel. Van Gisbergen rejoined the field in 15th. Maintaining position, Van Gisbergen completed the stage in the 15th position.
    • The No. 16 WeatherTech team strategized to stay out during the stage-break caution and started the second stage in second place. Van Gisbergen reported the car was really, really good with just a little tightness when approaching the leader. Consistent in his lap times and positioning, the plan was to battle for the lead for 18 laps before planning to pit. A caution occurred with two laps remaining in the stage, resulting in the decision to alter the race strategy. The No. 16 WeatherTech team elected to stay out and concluded the stage second on the leaderboard.
    • The No. 16 team chose to stay out at the stage-break caution, starting the final stage in second, where he battled for 15 laps before dropping to fourth.The No. 16 team opted to pit for fuel and four fresh tires with 32 laps remaining in the race, and Van Gisbergen re-entered the field 33rd. Advancing through the field, Van Gisbergen was scored second when a caution occurred with 10 laps remaining. After a series of late-race cautions, Van Gisbergen restarted third, as the field went into overtime. After taking over the lead, Van Gisbergen made contact with a competitor on the final lap and lost the lead position, ultimately finishing second.

    “Gutted for the whole team, just had a driver error. I knew Chris [Buescher] was really going to send it and push me if he could get there. As I turned and got a bit loose, I clipped the inside wall. Our WeatherTech Chevrolet was really good. The race was awesome with Ross [Chastain] and Chris [Buescher] and the others at the end. I’m gutted we couldn’t get it, but I had a lot of fun, but I’m pretty angry at myself.” – Shane van Gisbergen  

    DANIEL HEMRIC
    No. 31 Cirkul Camaro ZL1

    • Daniel Hemric qualified 27th for the Go Bowling at The Glen.
    • The field completed only one lap, before the first caution flag flew, and Hemric made it through unscathed, restarting 22nd on lap 26. He quickly drove into the top 20 on the restart and remained on track, while some elected to short pit the stage. Hemric finished the opening stage in 10th place.
    • Hemric radioed that the No. 31 Cirkul Camaro ZL1 was initially tight handling throughout the first stage. He pitted during the first stage break for tires, fuel, and adjustments, before starting the second stage from 28th place. The team elected to short pit the second stage, taking four tires and fuel. The second caution of the day came out as Hemric blended back onto the track, ending the stage under caution. Hemric was scored 32nd.
    • Having just pitted before the caution, Hemric stayed out during the second stage break and started the final stage from 21st place. The next caution came out on lap 46, as Hemric had worked his way up to 20th place. He was called to pit road for four tires and fuel, before restarting 26th with 41 laps remaining. Crew Chief, Trent Owens made the call to pit under green from 17th place on lap 61. After briefly veering off track, Hemric settled back into the top 25. The fifth caution of the day came with just 10 laps remaining, and Hemric pitted for four tires and fuel to finish out the race. He restarted 27th with seven laps remaining, but a wreck on the restart brought the yellow flag back out, as Hemric sat 25th. During the caution, Hemric voiced concerns of an axel issue on the No. 31 Chevy. He laid back, restarting 30th, before an overtime-inducing wreck brought out the final caution. Hemric nursed the No. 31 Chevy to finish 31st.

    “Super frustrating finish to what started out as a solid day for this No. 31 Cirkul team. We had a really good first stage, and Trent [Owens] had a good strategy that we thought would put us in a good position there at the end. Unfortunately, the same axel issue that the No. 13 had, plagued us as well with just a couple laps to go.” – Daniel Hemric  

    AJ ALLMENDINGER
    No. 13 Go Bowling Camaro ZL1

    • AJ Allmendinger qualified sixth for the Go Bowling at The Glen.
    • On the initial start, Allmendinger gained one position before the caution came early on lap two. The field restarted on lap six when Allmendinger’s day ultimately came to an end due to a mechanical failure. Allmendinger finished the day in 36th place.

    “It’s disappointing. It’s hard to tell, but I thought the initial first lap there, it felt like it fired off really well. The No. 13 Go Bowling Chevy, we’ll never know. It was a good weekend. I’m disappointed, just because Go Bowling put their belief in me and put their product on the race car. I felt like we were going to at least have a shot at running up front and maybe win this thing. It’s just one of those years.” – AJ Allmendinger  

    About Kaulig Racing

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