Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Atlanta Post-Race Report – 09.08.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Atlanta Post-Race Report – 09.08.24

    BELL, REDDICK EXTEND PLAYOFF ADVANTAGES WITH STRONG FINISHES IN ATLANTA
    Bell scores third straight top-five and fifth top-10 in the last six races

    HAMPTON, Ga. (September 8, 2024) – Christopher Bell (fourth) and Tyler Reddick (sixth) both overcame adversity on pit road to lead Toyota with strong top-10 finishes at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday evening.

    Bell earned his third straight top-five finish with his fourth place run, and moved to 40 points above the Playoff cutline, while sixth-place finisher Reddick is now 33 points to the good.

    Denny Hamlin is two points up on the cut line, while Ty Gibbs moved from 15th to 12th overall – one point to the good. Martin Truex Jr. was having a good race but was involved in a wreck not of his own making. The 2017 NASCAR Cup Series champion is 19 points down with two races remaining in the round.

    Toyota Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Atlanta Motor Speedway
    Race 27 of 36 – 260 Laps, 400.4 Miles

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, Joey Logano*
    2nd, Daniel Suarez*
    3rd, Ryan Blaney*
    4th, CHRISTOPHER BELL
    5th, Alex Bowman*
    6th, TYLER REDDICK
    17th, TY GIBBS
    24th, DENNY HAMLIN
    26th, ERIK JONES
    29th, BUBBA WALLACE
    33rd, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
    35th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    CHRISTOPHER BELL, No. 20 Rheem Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 4th

    Strong finish, Christopher. Can you talk about your run today

    “I’ll take it. To walk out of here with a top-five in probably our worst track on the schedule – that was really good and I’m proud of the effort on this Rheem Camry. We had a lot to overcome with a bad qualifying run, and then really bad pit stall selection. There was a lot of adversity that we had to fight through, and that was a freaking blast. It was so much fun. The whole race was super intense, and everybody did a good job not to wreck more.”

    How was it to have Adam Stevens back on the pit box?

    “It was nice to be back in rhythm and back with a normal voice up there.”

    TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Jordan Brand Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    Finishing Position: 6th

    How was your car overall?

    “Our Jordan Brand Toyota Camry was really, really good in certain aspects of the race, but in others – we were a little bit off. It is what it is. I think considering the highs and lows of the day, and the unfortunate circumstances of the 99 (Daniel Suarez) being behind us – and the 22 (Joey Logano) being in front of me – just being boxed in most of the day on pit road. We didn’t even have green flag stops, so getting boxed in almost every time really hurt us.”

    How chaotic was pit road?

    “It was a nightmare, honestly. You just don’t want to get into too much trouble on pit road, and it seems like that was all we really had.”

    It was a good points day. What are your thoughts on a top-10 finish?

    “Yeah, it was about surviving. It looks like some of the guys in the 16 had issues as well, so we will see how it all shakes out, but for us, we avoided disaster and that was the most important thing today.”

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

    Finishing Position: 17th

    Can you talk about your finish?

    “I didn’t do a good job blocking, and I take responsibility of not finishing great at all. It is my fault, but I’m glad we finished the race and got some points. It is definitely frustrating. We were up there, and didn’t finish it well, but it is part of it. I’m just glad we can walk out of this place with a good points day with our He Gets Us Camry.”

    How hard is it to balance that you had a car that could win, with also needing to finish?

    “It is definitely hard, because you want to stay out of the wrecks and stay up front, but it is like a light switch – I just made the best of what I had and kept momentum going and got to the front. I just didn’t do the rest of the job.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 Mavis Tire Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 24th

    What happened in that final crash?

    “Just saw cars turning sideways in front of me. Tried to avoid wrecks all day and just got in the last one.”

    Were you always waiting to the end to make a move?

    “I thought at the very end we got the Mavis Tire Camry kind of where it needed to be, but by then, you were kind of dealing with a log jam of a couple of lanes that are kind of blocking things and you couldn’t go much of anywhere, so I just tried to avoid the wrecks. I was trying to get 20 points out of the day. That was my goal – just get 20 however we could, obviously, starting in the back didn’t help with that. We did the best we could, and then got in a wreck that probably cost us eight to 10 spots or so.”

    Does a weekend like this concern you?

    “No, not really. I did what I wanted to do and that was lay in the back most of the race, and try to see what attrition came about, again – 20 points seemed really possible, but came up a little short of that today.”

    About Toyota

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

    Toyota directly employs more than 63,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 47 million cars and trucks at our 12 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 13th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 29 electrified options.

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

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT ATLANTA 2: Post-Race Report

    CHEVROLET NCS AT ATLANTA 2: Post-Race Report

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    ROUND OF 16: RACE ONE
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT
    SEPTEMBER 8, 2024

     Suarez Leads Chevrolet with Runner-Up Finish in 2024 Playoff Opener at Atlanta Motor Speedway
    Four Team Chevy Playoff Contenders Earn Top-10 Finishes

    •  Gearing up for a campaign for his second career NASCAR Cup Series championship, Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson laid down a qualifying lap that earned the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team a seventh-place starting position for the first race of the Round of 16.
    • With just five laps complete, Larson showed early speed in his Hendrick Motorsports-prepared Chevrolet; quickly moving up into third and settling into position for much of the opening stage. While looking to capitalize on a handful of opportunities to take the lead, Larson unexpectedly took a hard hit midway through the corner; suffering damage that would end the day early for the No. 5 team.
    • The first caution of the day also ultimately brought the race to the end of Stage One. Team Chevy’s playoff contender Alex Bowman led the Bowtie brand to the end of the stage – collecting a third-place finish in the stage. Joining Bowman in the top-10 included Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ross Chastain, Chase Elliott and William Byron in the fifth through eighth positions, respectively.
    • With a third-place finish in Stage One, crew chief Blake Harris called Bowman to pit road for four tires and fuel. With a quick stop by the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet pit crew, Bowman won the race off pit road to lead the field to the green flag for the start of Stage Two.
    • The 100-lap stage saw much of the field settle into a two-by-two formation, with Team Chevy’s other remaining playoff contenders occupying top-10 running positions. The lead pack began to shuffle positions once the stage hit 10-laps-go. Bowman went on to lead the Bowtie brand with yet another third-place result in Stage Two – leading Suarez (fourth), Byron (fifth), Stenhouse Jr. (sixth), Chastain (seventh) and Elliott (eighth).
    • The beginning laps of the final stage saw a handful of Team Chevy drivers looking to pull of a playoff upset, Kyle Busch and Chastain making an appearance in the top-five as the race returned to caution conditions with 53 laps to go. Sitting in the second position, crew chief Randall Burnett opted to gamble and capitalize on track position – giving Busch a front-row starting position for the green-flag with 49 laps to go.
    • As intensity ramped up, a strong contingency of Camaro ZL1’s occupied much of the lead pack, with Team Chevy drivers occupying six of the top-eight running positions as the race hit 25-laps to go.
    • Enduring a green-white-checkered finish, the track’s defending winner, Daniel Suarez, posted his third-straight podium result at Atlanta Motor Speedway – leading Chevrolet with a runner-up finish in his No. 99 Quaker State Camaro ZL1.
    • Four of Team Chevy’s playoff contenders drove their Camaro ZL1’s to top-10 results in the Round of 16 opening race, with Suarez leading Alex Bowman in fifth; Chase Elliott in eighth; and William Byron in ninth.
    • Despite an unfortunate early ending to his race, Larson’s playoff points cushion keeps the 32-year-old Elk Grove, California, native above the playoff bubble, with the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team heading to Watkins Glen in the 10th position and 15-points above the cutline.


    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd Daniel Suarez
    5th Alex Bowman
    7th Kyle Busch
    8th Chase Elliott
    9th William Byron

    WITH 27 NASCAR CUP SERIES RACES COMPLETE:
    Wins: 11
    Poles: 7
    Top-five finishes: 49
    Top-10 finishes: 105

     UP NEXT: The second race of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 16 gets underway at Watkins Glen International with the Go Bowling at The Glen on Sunday, September 15, at 3 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on the USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.


    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:

    Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1

    Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident in Stage One.

    Finished: 37th

    Larson on the accident that ended the day early for the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team:

    “I’m OK. Thankfully everything held up well inside the car. That was a huge hit. I’m not really sure what caused it. I was actually sort of tight and loaded in the corner. And then I was pretty far around the corner and it just stepped out. I don’t know.. it all just happened really fast.”

    Were you trying to save the car at that point.. was it loading weird to you on that lap?

    “No, I mean I was already loaded in the corner. It just got loose, and when you’re spinning or getting ready to spin, you have to turn right. I just overcorrected, I guess. It’s just a bummer. We’ll see how everything kind of shakes out after today; go onto Watkins Glen and try to have a good day.”

    Did you have any warning? Were you fighting the loose conditions the whole time?

    “No, not at all. Never.. not once. If anything, I was getting tighter and tighter. So yeah, it just caught me way off guard. I was never once loose, even in that corner. And then, it just started stepping out. I corrected it and overcorrected it, I guess.”

    How are you feeling right now?

    “I feel fine. Thankfully, everything held up great in the car, so thank you to Hendrick Motorsports and NASCAR for the safety of these cars.”

    Larson on the next two races in the Round of 16 around the cutline bubble:

    “Yeah, we’ll see how the rest of the race plays out and where the points shake out. I have no idea where I sit currently, but I’ll for sure be much closer.”

    Kyle Busch, No. 8 Global Industrial Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 7th

    Are you satisfied with the result today?

    “No, we needed to win. We started pretty far off with the No. 8 Global Industrial Camaro, but we really worked on it. The guys made some good adjustments and got it to where it was driving really good. Definitely the second-half of the race and the final stage, I felt really positive about it. But then we had to go into fuel-save mode, so we weren’t really able to kind of stretch our legs there. Just played the way the cards were dealt and we came home with a top-10. Certainly felt like we had a shot to win. Felt as good, or better, than the No. 99 (Daniel Suarez), so I was just hopeful that we could keep that track position. Just lost a little bit too much there on that second-to-last restart.”

    Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA / Children’s Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 8th

    Is there just relief getting through today?

    “Yeah, for sure. It’s nice to just have a solid day. We needed a good, solid day for this No. 9 NAPA / Children’s Chevy team. I’m looking forward to getting up to Watkins Glen and seeing how it goes.”

    Overall, how did you feel about the race today?

    “Yeah, it was fine. I think as time goes on, everybody gets better at it, and then it makes everybody just more the same and harder to be different. So, then we just end up clogging up the lanes and you just hope you have track position. Unfortunately, we had that most of the day.”

    Going into next weekend, your thoughts on that. Watkins Glen is a pretty good track for you.

    “Yeah, I’m looking forward to getting up there. Just going to have to qualify well. It’s going to be really, really tough to make any ground on that track. You better bring your A-game on Saturday because I’d say the race is probably going to be lost there.”

    William Byron, No. 24 Relay Payments Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 9th

    This round is kind of ‘survive and advance’. Do you feel like you did what you needed to do today?

    “We did. We had a little bit of handling issues in the first stage, but we overcame that. We got eighth-place stage points. The second stage was pretty good. We were up towards the front. And then in the final stage, we were up in the front the whole time. We were just trying to save fuel. I feel like we did a good job, for the most part. Just the second-to-last restart, I wasn’t quite sure who to push when they were three-wide in front of me, and I got trapped three-wide bottom and lost some spots.

    All-in-all, coming back and finishing ninth is a good day for the No. 24 Relay Payments Chevrolet team.”

    Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 5th

    A 48-point day for the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet team. Tell us about your race here at Atlanta Motor Speedway, and are you satisfied with today?

    “Yeah, it was obviously a really good points day and a good day, overall, after the last month of so. Made a couple of moves there during that third-to-last run that just cost us a lot of track position, and we had to restart 13th there that second-to-last run. Obviously got a lot of it back, but couldn’t get it all back. I would have much rather been sitting in victory lane, but I just didn’t put myself in the best position at the end to be able to do that.

    We had a great No. 48 Ally Chevy. It drove great all day. Little bummed, but definitely a good day for this team.”

    Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Quaker State Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 2nd

    Your last three races at Atlanta, you were second, first and now third. You had a shot at the end of this one. Are you satisfied with today?

    “No, definitely not satisfied. I am happy with it, but not satisfied. I lost my pusher, my teammate. He was doing a great job, and I felt like we were going to have a great shot at it. Ross was doing an amazing job of pushing, and I don’t know if he got a flat tire or something, but once I lost him, I knew it was going to be tough. But, that is part of racing, right?

    I can’t thank everyone enough; Trackhouse Racing, all the men and women. I have to give a shout out here to the race track and Quaker State for helping me design this amazing race car. It was nice to run strong today, but when you are that close and obviously we had a good shot, it’s never too fun.”

    About Chevrolet

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

  • Ford Wins Atlanta Cup Pole For Fourth Straight Time

    Ford Wins Atlanta Cup Pole For Fourth Straight Time

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Quaker State 400 Qualifying | Atlanta Motor Speedway
    Saturday, September 7, 2024

    FORD DOMINATES ATLANTA CUP QUALIFYING FOR FOURTH STRAIGHT RACE

    • Ford has had at least seven drivers qualify in the top 10 in each of the last four Atlanta Cup races.
    • Ford has won the last four NASCAR Cup Series poles at AMS (Logano, Almirola and McDowell twice).
    • Ford has swept the front row in four straight AMS qualifying sessions (McDowell/Blaney (2024-2), McDowell/Logano (2024-1), Almirola/Blaney (2023-2), Logano/Cindric (2023-1).
    • Ford swept the top eight spots in the 2023 spring race.
    • Ford swept the top six spots in the 2023 summer race.
    • Ford swept the top five spots in today’s qualifying session.
    • All three Team Penske drivers have qualified in the top 10 in each of the last four races, including a sweep of the top three spots in the 2023 spring race.
    • Team Penske has had at least one driver start on the front row in each of the last four Atlanta Cup races (Blaney, 2024-2; Logano, 2024-1; Blaney, 2023-2; Logano and Cindric, 2023-1)

    Ford Performance Results:
    1st – Michael McDowell
    2nd – Ryan Blaney
    3rd – Todd Gilliland
    4th – Josh Berry
    5th – Austin Cindric
    7th – Joey Logano
    10th – Chase Briscoe
    12th – Harrison Burton
    13th – Noah Gragson
    17th – Chris Buescher
    19th – Brad Keselowski
    21st – Ryan Preece
    29th – Justin Haley
    31st – Cody Ware

    POLE-WINNING PRESS CONFERENCE

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 3 B’laster Work It Like A Pro Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT DID YOU LEARN TODAY? “I think coming in to this weekend we sat on the pole in the spring race early in the season and felt that pressure to come back here and have another shot at it, so we executed our plan well today. As far as what it gives you as an indication for tomorrow, I don’t think it’s a huge indicator of anything other than we have the same speed we did here last time. The good thing for us was in the race our car raced really well and sometimes you trim them out and you get a lot of speed and you’ll get into the race and it’ll just be a handful, but we led a lot of laps, had a really fast car. I thought we had one of the better driving cars, so I don’t feel like we’re compromising anything going into the race with the speed that we have, and it was the same a couple weeks ago in Daytona. I felt like we had one of the fastest cars there, so it’s just about executing and being there at the end and giving yourself a shot at trying to win the race.”

    IF SOMEONE TOLD YOU THAT YOU WOULD BE TIED FOR THE SERIES LEAD IN POLES ENTERING THE PLAYOFFS HOW WOULD YOU RESPOND TO THAT? “I would have told you you’re lying. One of the goals for this year, you always set goals and some are super lofty and some are more of just personal achievements that you want to achieve. One of our goals this year was to get a pole. Last year, we had a lot of speed and I don’t know how many times we qualified third and fourth and second. A bunch of times and even led a lot of the first round qualifying, and then would get beat by a little bit going into the second round, so it was a personal thing going into this offseason of really focusing on qualifying and trying to get a pole. It’s an important part of a career and stats and we’ve been close. So, I think that more than anything is when we went to Daytona and we sat on the front row and saw how close we were, that was like, ‘Alright, we’re right there. We just have to do everything we can.’ And then we came to Atlanta and obviously got our first one and it’s kind of spiraled since then. Obviously, predominantly it’s been superspeedways. I did get the pole at Gateway, but what I’m probably most proud of our overall qualifying effort. I don’t know if it’s still the case because Darlington was so bad, but going into Darlington we had the best qualifying average of any Ford team for the season, not just for superspeedways. I think we’ve made it to the second round 12 or 14 times, so I’m proud of the speed that we’re bringing to the racetrack. On the flip side, it’s a little bit of a gut check too because we haven’t got to Victory Lane and we’ve had a decent amount of speed, but it’s hard. It’s hard winning races in the Cup Series. We’ve put ourselves in position several times and haven’t got it done, so we’ve still got 10 more shots at it and that’s how we’re looking at tomorrow and how we’re looking at Watkins Glen coming up. We have really good racetracks in front of us.”

    IS THIS A MASTERCLASS OF HOW TO BUILD A TEAM AND GO FROM BUILDING TO WINNING POLES AND RACES? “It’s incredible. Sometimes I think it’s undervalued what Front Row has done and where they’ve come from in the last three or four years to what we’re doing week in and week out. At the other side of it, it’s a compliment that people aren’t really that shocked when we run well or challenge for wins, so it’s going in a good direction. It’s a tremendous amount of work. It’s a tremendous effort by everybody, but we’re still, I don’t want to say small. Bob doesn’t like it when I say small, but we’re still a medium-size team, so to do what we’re doing – not just here, but week in and week out – is a real testament to what hard work and dedication and being resourceful and being efficient can do because I promise you we’re not spending the most and we don’t have the most people, but we have a great group of men and women who fight really hard and this Next Gen car has given us the platform to do what we’re doing. Without that, it would have been a really tough road, but from that point forward we’ve been in the game and I think we’ve done a good job of trying to stay in the game. It’s getting harder and harder. It always does, like when you have the big powerhouse teams they always figure it out a little bit better as time goes on and you see that with Hendrick and with Gibbs and some of the other teams that are consistently fighting for those wins week in and week out. They’ve separated themselves a little bit, but we’re still in the game and this car has given us that opportunity.”

    HOW DO YOU PREPARE FOR THE START OF QUALIFYING? HOW DO YOU FOCUS ON THOSE LAPS? “Two parts. For these weekends that do not have any practice, you do a lot of preparation as silly as it sounds because you’re just going around holding it wide-open and hitting your marks and your shifts, but because you don’t have that warm-up, so to speak, you have to get everything right the first time, so there is a lot of pressure to do that. You study and you execute your plan, and then on race day, more than anything, the preparation that you do during the week of which line you’re going to choose if you do get the pole, which lanes had momentum and what the handling and the balance did and how you have to move around. You do all of that leading up to it and then when you get in you just get laser focused on the task in front of you and you switch gears. The switching gears part is pretty fun because all the way up to the race you’re signing autographs and you’re doing interviews and it’s not that you’re not in the game, but you can’t be. You’re not locked in and then you get in the car and you click the belts and then all of a sudden it’s like a switch, it’s like a mode and you just get laser focused and locked in. It’s a cool feeling. It’s an adrenaline rush. I don’t know if it’s the same for everybody. Some guys will probably hear that and be like, ‘What? This guy is taking his job way too serious,’ but, to me, it’s awesome when you get in that locked in zone and you’re ready to go.”

    WHAT’S IT GOING TO TAKE TO BE UP FRONT TOMORROW AND CONTEND FOR THE WIN? “It’s tough when you’re the pole-sitter because you’re trying to control the race and you’re trying to control the runs, but you’re also the sitting duck that people are building runs on and dragging back and building momentum. The last time here, I kind of let the first part of that race play out, but wanted to stay near the front in those first two rows, but you need to learn what your car is gonna do and balance and all that. We were able to win the first stage here in the spring race, so I felt like our car drove well and we did what we needed to do, so, to me, it’s more about just keeping yourself in position. It’s not do or die. It’s not a lap one, lap two, lap 10 and you’ve got to block every lane and every run that’s coming, but ideally you want to keep control of the race as long as you can. We all know that’s hard for the pole-sitter. It’s a great idea, but it’s hard to do without making big moves all the time and you kind of run out of those big moves eventually, so you try to save them for the end or at least try to take that approach. This is one of those races though where handling will matter. It will matter more so than Talladega and Daytona. We saw that in the first race here. If you’re able to take a run and stay wide-open and stay committed, you could clear a car and get back in line, where Daytona and Talladega it’s hard to actually clear somebody like that. I think there’s an extra emphasis on your car driving well and then when you get down to the end it’s just being in the right spot at the right time with the right push and hope nothing around you goes too far sideways.”

    HOW CONFIDENT WERE YOU ON GETTING THE POLE? “Not super confident. I don’t think you ever go into it like, ‘Oh, we’ve got this.’ I knew that we would have a shot at it, but I knew when Blaney went faster than us that first round, even though it was only by a few hundredths, you know that it’s gonna come down to executing everything perfectly, where if you’re talking about a tenth, it’s hard to make up a tenth. But it’s easy to mess up a couple hundredths, so you’re nervous about doing your job well to make sure you give yourself the best chance. I think Daytona a few weeks ago we had everybody covered by more than a tenth and so it was less nerve racking and then this one I felt like it was gonna take everything being done perfect to have a shot at it.”

    IS IT STARTING TO SINK IN THAT THE RACES ARE RUNNING DOWN WITH YOUR TIME AT FRONT ROW? “No, not yet. I haven’t let it creep in. I kept telling everyone we’re just focused on winning a race to get in the Playoffs. Now we’re here. The Playoffs are happening and I’ve just redirected that focus on winning a race before the season is over, so I haven’t really allowed myself to get to that place yet. It’s gonna be tough. There’s no doubt about it. This is home for me. It’s been home for me. It wasn’t an easy decision. As weird as it might sound, I feel like I’ve already mourned that decision if that makes sense – when it first happened of ‘do I really want to do this? This is where you’ve been and potentially where you could be and could finish’ and all those things. So, it was a tough decision. It wasn’t like I went into it like, ‘Here we go.’ It wasn’t a fun decision. It’s hard when you’re that close with people and your team and you felt like you’re a part of it, so I feel good about my decision though. I don’t have any regrets, but I know Phoenix is gonna be tough. It will be tough for sure because of what we’ve done and what we’ve built here. It’s a different atmosphere than any other race team that I’ve been to and we’ve accomplished a lot together. Obviously, they’ll continue to go on and accomplish a lot. They have a great program and great drivers coming into it, but I’ll wait until Phoenix to really start thinking about it.”

    WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO WIN FOUR STRAIGHT SPEEDWAY POLES? “I don’t want this to come off as saying this wrong, but I think it means a whole lot more to the team, just that we’re bringing the fastest car to the racetrack and it’s hard to do. I know some people will sit there and be like, ‘Oh, it’s just a superspeedway,’ but the amount of detail and the amount of hours that go into making a superspeedway car fast, and the fact that we’re doing it better than everyone else right now is a huge testament to what the team is doing and how hard they’re working. These are hard. They’re hard to get. It’s not easy, so to get four in a row is remarkable and so, for me, what’s gratifying is just seeing my guys hard work pay off and seeing how excited they are, and I know that I have the fastest race car to compete with tomorrow in the race. It gives me confidence going in there to do my job and try to win the race. But, I’m really proud. It’s a proud moment. I think it was a huge moment in Daytona when both of our cars were on the front row. We were almost there again today and it’s an accomplishment that is not the end all, be all. It’s not the greatest thing. Winning tomorrow would be better, but it’s still something to be celebrated because of how hard it is to do at the top level of our sport.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Dent Wizard Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WAS THERE ANY PART OF THE TRACK YOU WANTED A BIT MORE? “I don’t know. It’s hard to tell here. We just slowed down a little bit on our second run and I think the 34 picked up a little bit, but, overall, it’s a good day. We have good speed. We’re starting on the front row, so I’m proud of the effort and excited for tomorrow.”

    ANYTHING YOU WANT TO CHANGE ON YOUR CAR? “You can do little changes for the race tomorrow, just kind of air-pressures and stuff like that, but I don’t know. I felt pretty decent in qualifying handling-wise, but getting in the pack is a whole different thing. It’s nice that we have the track position and I think the speed is good to hopefully control a lane, and I’m sure we’ll get back in the pack tomorrow at some point and we’ll see how I am in traffic. It’s all good right now. It’s a solid starting spot and I’m looking forward to hopefully being able to control the first part of the race, especially the first stage, and then see how it shakes out from there.”

    AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Menards Quaker State Mustang Dark Horse – “I think once again the Fords at speedways are really, really strong. I felt like our car handled extremely well in qualifying, which it’s not something you necessarily have to worry about here, but I think it just bodes well for us for the race tomorrow. I’m excited about it and feel like we can have a shot at the win.”

    TODD GILLILAND, No. 38 CITGARD Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “Our cars have been really fast at all the superspeedways and it feels like we actually have cars very, very capable of winning every single superspeedway at this point and that doesn’t last forever. It always goes in waves, so, to me, even Daytona felt like a little bit of a missed opportunity with how fast my car was. I felt like even when I was in the back I could go to whatever line I felt like it would really move the line forward and those are hard to come by in these type of races when everyone is so close. I’m excited about it. I think we definitely need to take advantage of it while our cars are this fast.”

    THAT FIRST POLE IS SO CLOSE, BUT JUST OUT OF YOUR GRASP. “Overall, qualifying went great. That’s the tough part. You can’t be too disappointed with third. Honestly, I was more disappointed at Daytona because I actually thought that one was really within our grasp. This week, it was kind of unrealistic to pick up more than a tenth to those guys because those guys are picking up more, too. I wasn’t as heartbroken this time. At Daytona, I was heartbroken. Overall, we just have some really, really fast Ford Mustangs coming out of Front Row Motorsports.”

    CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Mahindra Compact Tractors Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “We ended up 10th there and I’m not really sure how we slowed down in the second round. I guess we didn’t slow down, everybody else kind of sped up, but I’m not really sure what happened there. We have a good starting spot. We’re starting inside the top 10 and should have a good pit stall selection, but it’s really hard to say what you’ve got just running one lap around here, but so far so good. It’s a good start to the weekend. Starting 10th is a lot better than starting 30th, so we’ll just have to see what we can do with it tomorrow.”

  • McDowell Earns Pole in Bennett Qualifying

    McDowell Earns Pole in Bennett Qualifying

    HAMPTON, Ga. (Sept. 7, 2024) – Michael McDowell continued his pole-winning ways at Atlanta Motor Speedway by taking the top qualifying spot in Bennett Transportation and Logistics Qualifying on Saturday afternoon in preparation for the NASCAR Cup Series Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart.

    The driver of the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford laid down a lap of 30.926 seconds at 179.267 mph on the 1.54-mile intermediate track that races like a superspeedway. He was second after Round 1 of qualifying.

    McDowell earned his first career pole position in his 476th career NASCAR Cup Series race on Feb. 24 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. He has since captured the top spot for four consecutive superspeedway races and has started all five of the 2024 season’s superspeedway races from the front row.

    Joining McDowell on the front row for Sunday’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart (3 p.m. ET, USA, PRN Radio) was Ryan Blaney, who wheeled his No. 12 Team Penske Ford to a lap of 30.999 seconds at 178.844 mph.

    “I don’t think you ever go into it (qualifying) like ‘oh, we got this’,” said McDowell when asked about his confidence going into the qualifying session for Race 1 of the Round of 16 Playoffs. “I knew that we’d have a shot at it. But when Blaney went faster than us that first round, even though it was only by a few hundredths (of a second), you know that it’s going to come down to executing everything perfectly.”

    The balance of the top 10 were: Todd Gilliland (No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford); Josh Berry (No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford); Austin Cindric (No. 2 Team Penske Ford); Kyle Larson (No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet); Joey Logano (No. 22 Team Penske Ford); Austin Dillon (No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet); William Byron (No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet); and Chase Briscoe (No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford).

    Tickets for Sunday’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart are available online at www.AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com or by calling 877-9-AMS-TIX.

    About the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart:

    The Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart kicks off the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs. 16 drivers begin their quest to hoist the Bill France Cup on Atlanta Motor Speedway’s high banks on Sunday, Sept. 8.

    Accompanying the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart is the Focused Health 250 on Saturday, Sept. 7. With just three races remaining in the NASCAR Xfinity Series regular season, the rising stars of NASCAR will have added pressure to secure their place in the postseason with a trip to victory lane.

    More information on the Sept. 6-8 Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart weekend and ticket availability can be found online at AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com.

    Follow Atlanta Motor Speedway:

    Keep track of all of Atlanta Motor Speedway’s events by following on Twitter, Instagram, and become a Facebook fan. Keep up with all the latest news and information with the Atlanta Motor Speedway mobile app.

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Atlanta Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 09.07.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Atlanta Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 09.07.24

    Toyota Racing – Tyler Reddick
    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    HAMPTON, Ga. (September 7, 2024) – 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick was made available to the media on Saturday prior to practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

    TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Jordan Brand Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    With how daunting the first round is, how helpful are those Playoff points are that you earned for winning the regular season championship?

    “Well our approach doesn’t change for the Playoffs or for the opening round for the Playoffs, but certainly having those Playoff points helps in case it does get a little bit out of hand with these first three races. There is just a lot of uncertainty. I feel like that this is a track that races like a superspeedway – handling comes into play and people, drivers do have issues in the car and spin and crashes happen. If you look at Watkins Glen, just with what the tire could do there, there is uncertainty there, but when I go through these first three, I feel good about the speed that we had. Granted here in the Spring, we wrecked here on lap two and we didn’t learn from that previous race, but we’ve been solid here and just seeing how fast the Toyotas were in Bristol – even though again, we were in an early wreck – I feel good about that one as well. We should have speed here at the first three, so we will just keep the approach that we’ve been having all summer long – just trying to score as many points as possible and stay in the top-five all day, and if we do that, we also, as a bonus, will have a shot at winning a race at the end of the day.”

    How much more prepared are you for your second Playoffs with 23XI Racing?

    “I think our biggest thing is more so going into the Playoffs last year is just being more consistent. Last season, coming out of Charlotte, we were like 30 points out of the lead, and we gained a lot of ground and kind of had a really good early Spring into Summer push, we just had a lot of bad races over the course of the summer. I feel like we did we did a good job correcting that for the first and second round of the Playoffs, ultimately in the round of 8, we kind of lost a little speed and had some of our worst races of the year. I think that is the biggest thing – just work on being consistent. We’ve done a good job with that over the summer stretch. I don’t see any reason why that would change for us. I just feel like the more and more we get into this season, the more comfortable we get with how we’ve been running. The confidence is on our side I think.”

    How are you feeling?

    “Better, thankfully. It took until I think – Thursday was the really first normal day. It took a lot longer than I thought it would to run its course, but thankfully good to go and ready for this one.”

    Is it frustrating as a driver with how much uncertainty is there in the first round?

    “No, it is in our control. Maybe a wreck that happens in front of you is out of your control, but how you end up in that position is. Obviously, we know that qualifying is not our strength – we know that we will probably be starting back there in the mess a bit, but it is in our hands to get in front of it or get out of there, so it is very much in our control I feel like. We got to do the Watkins Glen tire test, so naturally we feel pretty good about the laps we got to have there. It is probably one of my worst road courses, of the ones we go to. The speed of the Toyotas in Bristol in the Spring helps with that. Our car was really torn up – we were damaged early on in that race, and I still felt like we if our car would have been 100 percent we would have been really strong. I’m feeling good about it.”

    How have you seen the growth of 23XI?
    “It is just little steps, just working on the process that we have, our preparation – fine tuning it every single step of the way. There is not one big thing, right? Just a lot of good people working together on the road and back at Airspeed to help achieve those goals. It has been really cool to just see that continued path – we really haven’t hit a spot where we leveled off and sat there for a while. It seems like we continue to gradually climb and improve and as the year goes on. I’m really excited about that, but it is what we need to contend with some of the top teams and drivers that have been around for a long time. We will keep after it.”

    How did being able to run last season with 23XI help you set up the foundation to have the on-track success you have had?

    “It definitely played a huge factor in it. I have all the faith in the world that the cars would have been as fast but seeing that we just have great people and smart people at Joe Gibbs Racing as well that play a big role in where our cars are at on the race track too. They would have had the speed and potential, with or without me, but certainly, some of the things that me and Billy (Scott, crew chief) have been able to work on, some of the things we got to work on a year on back at the COTA tire test to just make the road course program better. Those things were really beneficial, certainly, just for the team chemistry side of it. That extra year has really helped us hit our stride this year.”

    What did you have to go through with Billy Scott to build that relationship and chemistry?

    “We just had to go through races. The more time we’ve had together – we’ve got to experience the highs and the lows – and understand how to navigate them as a team. I think that just experience can be invaluable as a team, the more we know each other the more instinctively we know what’s going to happen next without really having to talk about it or letting it play out. I think that experience for both of us has really helped us a lot. We brought in Nick Payne (spotter), who is kind of new to the sport – was doing Xfinity and Trucks, no full time Cup gig, and starting fresh with him. Just having the consistency across the board with the team really helps.”

    How important is it to stay even in the car and not let the emotions get the best of you?

    “Very important. If emotions get the best of you, it’s easy to make some poor decisions right? That more times than not just make your day worse. Just have to keep a level head and think what the next restart, the next lap – what the future scenario is. You try to respond more than react, but it is tough when you are strapped in the car, it is hot, not having a good day, it is easy to get frustrated and certain times, it is probably good to let it out, but it is definitely easy to do – and it is something that I’ve had to learn – to figure out how to digest the bad and the good and move on from it, and approach the next scenario with as level head as possible.”

    Did you ever imagine growing up racing Kyle Larson that you would be amongst the top drivers in NASCAR?

    “I mean Kyle (Larson) – definitely when he left the outlaw kart stuff and started running midgets and sprint cars – it was very automatic. I could tell watching from a far that he was going to go wherever he wanted to go. On my end, I didn’t know if it was going to work out. It kind of looked like the door was coming to a close, and then I got a break – started working with (Ken) Schrader, won a race. I definitely saw Kyle getting here, but I didn’t, at times, think it was going to work out for myself, but thankful it did. It is really cool that two kids that grew up racing at Cycleland Speedway in go karts, all those years ago, are doing that on the Cup side now. “

    About Toyota

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

    Toyota directly employs more than 63,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 47 million cars and trucks at our 12 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 13th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 29 electrified options.

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

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT ATLANTA 2: William Byron Media Availability Quotes

    CHEVROLET NCS AT ATLANTA 2: William Byron Media Availability Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    QUAKER STATE 400
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    SEPTEMBER 7, 2024

     William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Relay Payments Camaro ZL1, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series qualifying session at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

    Media Availability Quotes:

    I know it’s been talked about extensively – you guys started off really hot and slowed during the summer, just like last year. How do you recapture the early season momentum at the start of these playoffs? How much of the summer was you guys trying things and preparing for what you need for the playoffs?

    “Well I mean, yeah, we finished second two-and-a-half weeks ago at Michigan, so I feel like we’ve been pretty good; hit or miss, though. Some of those tracks during the summer aren’t as good for us as a team, but we’ve really circled all of the playoff tracks and worked really hard to have our best at the end of the year. So yeah, I think once you win two or three races early in the season, like I said this week, the goal is to try and stack playoff points. If you can’t do that, then the goal is to try and position yourself well for the fall and all the tracks in the playoffs. So, I feel good about that. We’ve had success here at Atlanta. Although it can be unpredictable, I feel like as I’ve studied and watched it back; a lot of times if you’re up in the front and making good decisions, you can kind of control your destiny here. I think that’s the goal for us.. try to have a good day today in qualifying. Not quite sure what kind of speed we’re going to have in qualifying because you want to be able to have enough pace in the pack and everything like that; enough grip. Hopefully we can make the top-10 and go from there.”

    How much more do you feel like is in the driver’s hands here at Atlanta, compared to the traditional superspeedway like Daytona and Talladega?

    “Yeah, it’s kind of an old school race, in a sense. But I mean, I think we’ve seen it get two and three wide here. I feel like as you get down to the end of the race, it’s going to be two and three wide, just like it is at any other plate race once everybody gets their stuff handling a little better. We just have to see what the offset is from spring to fall here with the track. It looks a little bit grayer walking in, but you never know until you get out there kind of what the handling is like. It seems like every time we watch the Xfinity race here, we get a little bit fooled because their package has less downforce. So just not completely sure what to learn from today, other than try to go out there and have a good qualifying lap.”

    You’ve been in the playoffs enough times to kind of know how things go. But this year, we have Atlanta to start, another road course at Watkins Glen, and then another speedway and road course in the Round of 12. Given that change, how much more uncertainty and anxiety do you think there is among the playoff drivers, and how much validity do you think there is to the idea that we could see surprise drivers not advance through the first couple of rounds?

    “Yeah, I mean it’s going to be crazy. You know, you’ve got two superspeedways and two road courses in the first two rounds, so it is crazy. It’s going to put an emphasis on being good at those places and being good at road courses, especially when there’s two of them now and not just the ROVAL anymore. You know, I think for us, it’s just race-by-race. Try to show up here; put a good effort in and see what we can get out of this weekend and then that really dictates the pace for the next weekend.

    There are definitely a lot of elements of the first two rounds that are pretty unpredictable, but you’re going to see the teams that can handle the adversity and work through that really thrive.”

    Projecting to 2025, Talladega is going to be in the Round of Eight next year. Do you think there’s value in having that wild card element that deep into the playoffs?

    “Yeah, I mean I’m not a big fan of it, but I’m not really thinking about next year, yet. Really just thinking about Atlanta.”

    A couple of weeks ago at Daytona, you said that following the 500 win, you’re more relaxed and more confident at that track. Is the mindset the same here, and has that changed at all with this now being a playoff race?

    “Yeah, I mean I think we know what it takes to win here, for sure. It’s just constantly changing because the track is losing grip. It’s changing every time we come back here; the setups are evolving. We just have to continue to evolve with the ‘new’ Atlanta that it is. I don’t think until we get eight, nine, 10 years down the road, will we really know what this place takes and kind of what it evolves into. It could lose a lot of grip over the next three or four years and become spread out. It is different than Daytona, for sure. The reasons I felt relaxed there is just because we were coming back there after winning a big race.”

    What was the game changer for you at Watkins Glen last year that allowed you to go on and win that race?

    “I feel like it started two years before that when we had a test there. We tested in 2022 with the Next Gen car; had a really good two-day test. That really kind of contributed to a lot of the setup items for the company there and build a good baseline. Unfortunately we didn’t have a good weekend that weekend. I think we had a battery issue. We qualified fourth and had to start in the back. We didn’t quite have our balance the way we needed to get through traffic, so we didn’t have a great weekend. But I feel like that is where it started. I had the Xfinity race that year in 2022, as well. And then coming back in 2023, I just felt like I was well prepared; knew the place, knew what we needed to focus on. Fortunately the baseline setup we built had good benefits when we unloaded in 2023. We were really fast off the truck. In the race, we were a top-three car. It was just about trying to get out front and have good pit sequences under green.”

    How much will the pits come into play at Watkins Glen?

    “Oh, it’s going to be huge. If you pass one or two cars a run, that’s a really good run at Watkins Glen in the Next Gen car. It’s going to be huge. Strategy is going to be big. You’re just going to have to do a good job in qualifying to put yourself on the offensive side, where you’re ahead of everyone else. If you can qualify in the top five or six, you put yourself in a really good spot.”

    Walk us through how you prepare mentally for a race? Is it different, mentally, coming to a track like this, as opposed to a road course race?

    “Yeah, it’s a little different. The stress of what you can’t control is a little higher at a place like this, so you try to put that away; set that aside. I feel like when you go to a place like here, you’re preparing for what moves you need to make. And you’re also just making sure that you’re doing a good job executing the little things. Like when we go out here to qualifying, making sure that I’m getting through the shift points good; getting off pit road well. A lot of detail here with pit road and the change in speed under green and under caution. So, you’re thinking about how you can maximize your green flag rolling time and yellow flag rolling time.

    Yeah, I mean it’s just different. There’s probably not as much for Atlanta, really. But then for Watkins Glen, there’s a lot of physical prep; a lot of mental prep. It’s a tough place. I’m running double-duty next weekend, so I’ll have a lot of laps. I’ll try to take good notes and understand the track because there’s a lot of changes at Watkins Glen with the curbing.”

    Is there any advantage to staying in the back of the pack a little bit early on to see how things are developing in the race, or do you want to race up front the whole time?

    “Yeah, I mean a lot of the wrecks happen in the middle. So, if you’re in the back, you’re in a bad spot. But yeah, I mean if you’re going to ride – like let’s say you’re really trying to avoid a wreck, you’re going to get way back. But no, I don’t think you will here because track position is important and handling matters. It takes a long time to get back to the front, so you’re going to spend most of your time in this race up in the front, if you can. If you can’t, you might try to save fuel and jump the strategy.”

    About Chevrolet

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

  • Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Josh Berry Looks Ahead to Sunday’s Atlanta Cup Race

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Josh Berry Looks Ahead to Sunday’s Atlanta Cup Race

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Quaker State 400 | Atlanta Motor Speedway
    Saturday, September 7, 2024

    Josh Berry, driver of the No. 4 Decisely Insurance Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Stewart-Haas Racing, stopped by the infield media center at Atlanta Motor Speedway before qualifying to answer questions from the media.

    JOSH BERRY, No. 4 Decisely Insurance Ford Mustang Dark Horse – YOU HAVE A NEW SPONSOR ON THE CAR. “We’re really excited to have Decisely Insurance on the car this weekend. It’s a really good-looking car. It’s purple and should really stand out on the racetrack, so we’re excited to welcome them to the sport. It’s the first race for them and the first race for us. It’s exciting to bring new partners in for us amidst everything that’s going on, so it’s a benefits-based company here in Georgia that is growing really fast and this is a home race for them. We’re gonna have a bunch of their employees and partners with us here this weekend, so we’re excited for it.”

    DO YOU FEEL YOU CAN PLAY SPOILER THIS WEEKEND? “Yeah, I think so. Obviously, we had a really good car at Daytona with a lot of speed. We were in great position there until we weren’t, so we feel like we had a strong car here in the spring. I feel like I’ve grown and learned a lot since then. I put us in a hole speeding on pit road in the spring, so we’ve ironed all of that stuff out hopefully. Car handling does matter a lot here, just because how the draft is and how tight the track is. You can tell the cars that are comfortable and handling well, so if we can check those boxes at the beginning of the race and we stay out of trouble, I think we’ll have a shot at it at the end.”

    HOW DO YOU BALANCE THESE LAST 10 RACES TO FINISH STRONG WITH SHR BUT ALSO TRYING TO TAKE SOME NOTES FOR NEXT YEAR WITH THE 21? “Nothing has really changed for us. Obviously, we would love to be in the Playoffs. We’ve been working all year trying to get better. It’s been a little up and down, but we’ve had a lot of great races. We’ve had a couple bad ones, but we’ve had a lot of great races in there too, so I think we just need to keep trying to be more consistent. That’s all we’re lacking. It’s pretty apparent when we have the speed and we might find ourselves to the front, we pass cars, we get up there. I think for us we’re trying to add a little bit more consistency and enjoy these last 10 races together. That’s a big part of it too, and obviously Chase being in the Playoffs is great for the company. He drove a fantastic race last week. He really did and I think between both of us, I think both of our cars were fast enough to win and he was able to get it done, so that was really cool for everybody at the company, too.”

    HOW DO YOU STAY GROUNDED DURING EVERYTHING GOING ON? “I don’t know. To be honest, the last couple of years have been a whirlwind, and I think even sitting here today I never would have thought I would be in this situation and this would all happen like it has even this year. I don’t even know if I really know what to expect anymore. Obviously, I’m proud of the job we did this year amidst everything going on. To have landed the opportunity with the Wood Brothers and the 21 car is something I’m excited for. That’s a great group with a great legacy in the sport. There’s a ton of backing from Ford and Team Penske and everything that I think a group and being a part of that program is really gonna help me grow and work on some of the things that I need to do better on the track. Aside from everything else that’s been going on, I think none of us would have thought we’d be in this position that we have been in, but it is here and we’ve got 10 more weeks together to keep racing and enjoy our time together. Then we’ll all go our separate ways.”

    HAVE YOU HAD ANY CONVERSATION WITH HARRISON ABOUT TAKING OVER THE 21 NEXT YEAR? “Not specifically. Obviously, I reached out to all of those guys after the Daytona win and congratulated them, but we’re all professionals. We’ve all been doing this stuff a long time and there’s no awkwardness or hard feelings there. Obviously, I’m cheering for those guys. They’re in the Playoffs. They’re focused. I’m staying out of everything they have going on. They’re focused on their Playoff run these next few weeks and I’m gonna let them do their thing.”

    DO YOU FEEL YOU HAVE AS GOOD A SHOT AS ANYBODY TO WIN THIS RACE TOMORROW? “Yeah, I think so, but I think these races ebb and flow. Some weeks you definitely have the races where it seems like if you just survive you get a good finish, but there are some times the cream really does rise to the top and stays up front the whole race. I think it’s really important to have your car handling good where you can race up front all night and then there is definitely some fate involved in being there at the end, but I feel like we have as good a shot as anybody coming here. We just have to execute and stay out of trouble.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT WHAT BRISCOE’S WIN MEANT TO SHR? “I think it was just a really cool moment for everybody there. There’s been a transition period ever since obviously it was announced they were closing down and selling charters. We lost some people initially and then now who is left are the people that are gonna ride this out – racers that aren’t gonna quit on us and keep building fast race cars and doing whatever they can to get in Victory Lane. I know that everybody has been working extremely hard all year, but especially recently trying to do everything we can to make that push to hopefully get a car into the Playoffs and go to Victory Lane, so it’s a big deal to win a race like that. Like I said, he did a great job. Who knows what’s gonna happen these next 10 weeks for them, but just getting there is a big deal and I think we all recognize that.”

    YOU HAVE TIES TO THE LAST TWO WINNERS IN THE SPORT. WHAT IS THAT LIKE? “I think that obviously the Daytona win, that’s great for their program. It’s a huge deal for the Wood Brothers. I would have loved to win the 100th race, but it was Harrison’s day and he capitalized and won, but it’s great for that program and the Wood Brothers that I’m gonna benefit from next year. So, it’s exciting for them and the same with Chase. I think that was really exciting for everybody at Stewart-Haas to see that win and the job that those guys did. It was a big morale boost for everybody, but nothing really changes. Everybody has been working their guts out all year trying to win races, but it’s still cool to get a reward for all of their hard work and it was fun to see that for sure. I think the only thing that really sticks out to me through the whole thing is thinking about how important it is to win a race to make the Playoffs. I’m not 100 percent sure on this, but I would say some of those guys that missed it were probably 11th or 12th in points. It’s so important to win a race when you get the opportunity. I think that’s the biggest thing I’ve taken from it the last couple weeks going into next year is that if you want to make the Playoffs, you better plan on winning.”

    HAVE YOU THOUGHT ABOUT WHAT YOU WOULD DO OR HOW AGGRESSIVE THIS WILL MAKE YOU IN THE FUTURE? “I don’t know. If you get in those situations, capitalizing on it is incredibly important. We talk about points and we look at the points. Even as a team we look at them all year long and stage points and this and that, and then you come down to it and unless you’re in the top 10, you’re probably in danger. So, unless you’re in the top 10 or you’re racing for the regular season championship or something like that, then the points matter. They do matter, but it’s just such a unique scenario of what’s happened and how it’s played out the last few weeks, having those new winners. I don’t know that my mindset changes in any way, but if you’re gonna fall back on points, you better have a lot of them.”

    SO DO YOU KNOW WHAT TO EXPECT THIS WEEKEND WITH THE TRACK CONTINUALLY AGING? “Yeah, it’s definitely changing. Every time we get here the asphalt color looks lighter and lighter, so it’s gonna continue to evolve. It’s warmer this time around. It’s not gonna be super hot, but it’s gonna be warmer, so handling should be a bigger deal than maybe what we had in February, but this place is kind of coming into its own. The next few years as it continues to age a little bit and lose some grip, it’ll be really interesting to see how it plays out and become kind of a hybrid between a superspeedway pack race and an intermediate track. I think handling is gonna be more important this time around than February, but we’ll have to see.”

  • RCR Race Preview: Atlanta Motor Speedway

    RCR Race Preview: Atlanta Motor Speedway

    Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta Motor Speedway… In 163 NASCAR Cup Series starts at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Richard Childress Racing has earned nine wins and four pole awards, including Kevin Harvick’s emotional victory in 2001. Dale Earnhardt won eight times at the Hampton, Ga., track under the RCR banner (1984-fall, 1986-fall, 1988-spring, 1989-fall, 1990-spring, 1995-fall, 1996-spring, 2000-spring). The Welcome, N.C., team has 31 top-five and 62 top-10 finishes at Atlanta and has led a total of 3,008 laps at the 1.54-mile oval.

    RCR in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Atlanta Motor Speedway… RCR has recorded six NASCAR Xfinity Series wins at Atlanta, led by Austin Hill’s three victories (2022-fall, 2023-spring, 2024-spring). Jeff Burton (2006 and 2007) and Kevin Harvick (2013) also secured victories at Atlanta with RCR. As an organization, RCR has piled up 17 top-five and 32 top-10 finishes over a span of 62 starts at the Peachtree State track.

    Catch the Action… The Focused Health 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway will be televised live on Saturday, September 7 beginning at 3 p.m. ET on USA. The race will be broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    The Atlanta 400 at Atlanta Motor Speedway will be televised live on Sunday, September 8 beginning at 3 p.m. ET on USA. The race will be broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 BREZTRI AEROSPHERE® (budesonide, glycopyrrolate, and formoterol fumarate) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Atlanta Motor Speedway… In 15 NASCAR Cup Series starts at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Austin Dillon earned a best finish of sixth in March 2021. In four NASCAR Xfinity Series and four NASCAR Truck Series races at the Hampton, Georgia track, Dillon has posted seven top-10 results and never finished worse than the 11th position.

    BREZTRI AEROSPHERE® (budesonide, glycopyrrolate, and formoterol fumarate) Team Up with Dillon… Dillon and the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing team will be supported by BREZTRI AEROSPHERE®, an AstraZeneca product, at Atlanta Motor Speedway. This partnership is about more than just racing. You can learn more about Austin Dillon and his family’s personal connection to the brand at Breztri.com. AstraZeneca is a global, science-led biopharmaceutical company that focuses on the discovery, development, and commercialization of prescription medicines in Oncology, Rare Diseases, and Biopharmaceuticals, including Cardiovascular, Renal & Metabolism, and Respiratory & Immunology. AstraZeneca operates in over 100 countries and its innovative medicines are used by millions of patients worldwide.

    Take Me Out to the Ball Game with the Braves… On Friday, September 6, Dillon is scheduled to attend the Atlanta Braves game as part of NASCAR Night on behalf of BREZTRI AEROSPHERE® (budesonide, glycopyrrolate, and formoterol fumarate). Dillon’s No. 3 Chevrolet will make a lap on the warning track prior to the first pitch and be on display at The Battery outside of Truist Park before the game.

    Meet Dillon… Before the green flag on Sunday, September 8, fans will have two opportunities to meet Dillon in the fan midway at Atlanta Motor Speedway. At 11:50 a.m. ET, the veteran racer is scheduled to sign autographs at the RCR Merchandise Hauler. Directly after at 12:15 p.m. ET, Dillon will answer fan questions at the Team Chevrolet Display.

    AUSTIN DILLON QUOTE:

    Do you like Atlanta Motor Speedway?

    “I enjoy racing at Atlanta Motor Speedway. It’s interesting with the drafting style racing there now. Coming up with a gameplan is going to be key. When you don’t have a game plan that you can fully commit to, you can get stuck in the middle and that usually doesn’t turn out well. The track itself is still changing. RCR and ECR Engines always bring fast superspeedway cars with a lot of power though, so we need to capitalize on the weekend overall.”

    Kyle Busch and the No. 8 Global Industrial Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Atlanta Motor Speedway… Kyle Busch has two victories (2008 and 2013), 10 top-five, and 14 top-10 finishes in 29 NASCAR Cup Series starts at Atlanta Motor Speedway. In the most recent Cup Series event at the Georgia track, the Las Vegas, Nevada native scored a third-place result, finishing .007 seconds behind race winner Daniel Suarez in a thrilling three-wide photo finish. Busch is tied with Jimmie Johnson for the most laps led (586) at the 1.54-mile speedway. In addition, the veteran racer has three NASCAR Xfinity Series and seven NASCAR Truck Series wins at Atlanta.

    Riding Momentum… In the last three Cup Series events, Busch has posted three top-five finishes, including consecutive second-place results at both Daytona International Speedway and Darlington Raceway.

    Did You Know? Busch is the youngest winner in Cup Series history at Atlanta Motor Speedway, earning the 2008 spring event victory at just 22 years, 10 months, and 7 days old. Busch also leads all active drivers with 23 lead lap finishes at the 1.54-mile oval.

    Cup Series Debut for Global Industrial… This weekend marks Global Industrial’s debut as a primary partner in NASCAR’s premier series. The partnership between the Port Washington, N.Y. company and RCR began in 2021, as the value-added distributor has been a multi-race primary partner in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

    About Global Industrial Company… Global Industrial Company (NYSE:GIC) is a value-added distributor. For 75 years, Global Industrial has gone the extra mile for its customers, currently offering hundreds of thousands of industrial and MRO products needed to run businesses and facilities. Global Industrial is committed to its customer-centric strategy, and utilizes a team of subject matter experts, Global Industrial Exclusive Brands™ products and national vendor relationships to help customers succeed. Global Industrial. “We Can Supply That®”.

    KYLE BUSCH QUOTES:

    One of the best complete weekends that you’ve had this season was at the spring race at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Does that give you and the No. 8 team confidence going back this weekend?

    “Absolutely it does. We had a game plan on what we needed to be better. We came back with more speed and a lot better car for the spring Atlanta race this year. I’m hoping that that same amount of notes and success translates to the race this weekend.”

    You have top-five finishes in the last two races at Atlanta Motor Speedway. What does it take run well there?

    “Atlanta now takes a lot of speed, but also a car that handles well. You have to pick the right line at the right time to get yourself in a spot where you can log some laps, especially in the middle stage of the race, and not get caught up in a crash when cars start to handle differently and mistakes are made.”

    Earlier this year at Atlanta Motor Speedway, you picked up a lot from the first round to second round in qualifying. How rare is that?

    “I would think that qualifying and picking up speed from round to round is very rare. When you’re in speedway qualifying scenarios, it’s a little easier to pick up because all the oils and bearings get hot and everything just moves a little bit more freely, so you should go a little faster on the second round. Tire wear and fall off is not something that you’re worried about with the newer surface yet.”

    Jesse Love and the No. 2 Samsara Chevrolet Camaro SS at Atlanta Motor Speedway… Jesse Love will make his second NASCAR Xfinity Series start at Atlanta Motor Speedway this Saturday. After delivering a dominating performance in February, the 19-year-old drove his No. 2 Chevrolet to a 12th-place result in his inaugural race at the Hampton, Georgia facility.

    Looking for Redemption… Earlier this season, in just his second career Xfinity Series start, Love put his speed on display at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The Menlo Park, California native earned the pole and led 157 of 169 total laps before running out of fuel in the closing laps.

    Primary Debut… In addition to serving as a full-season associate partner on Love’s No. 2 Camaro, Samsara will make their debut as a primary partner in NASCAR at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Samsara will host 40 guests for an at-track experience on Saturday. Their video-based safety, vehicle telematics, and equipment monitoring solutions have been implemented into RCR’s fleet to increase safety, efficiency, and sustainability of its operations.

    About Samsara… Samsara (NYSE: IOT) is the pioneer of the Connected Operations™ Cloud, which is a platform that enables organizations that depend on physical operations to harness Internet of Things (IoT) data to develop actionable insights and improve their operations. With tens of thousands of customers across North America and Europe, Samsara is a proud technology partner to the people who keep our global economy running, including the world’s leading organizations across construction, transportation and warehousing, field services, manufacturing, retail, logistics, and the public sector. The company’s mission is to increase the safety, efficiency, and sustainability of the operations that power the global economy.

    JESSE LOVE QUOTE:

    Describe your thoughts on returning to Atlanta Motor Speedway after your strong performance earlier this season.

    “I’m excited to go back to Atlanta Motor Speedway. To think in only our second race together, we were able to win the pole, led over 150 laps and almost win the race is something for us to be proud of. It gives our No. 2 team a lot of confidence going back there again. Our expectation is to do the same this weekend though. The Richard Childress Racing Chevrolets at drafting tracks are extremely fast, and I know Danny (Stockman) and the guys have been working hard to give us another opportunity. We hope to get Samsara up front in their debut race and maybe even take them to Victory Lane.”

    Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation and Logistics Chevrolet Camaro SS at Atlanta Motor Speedway… Austin Hill has five career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Atlanta Motor Speedway, earning three wins and a second-place finish while piloting the No. 21 Bennett Transportation and Logistics Chevrolet. Hill has led at least one lap in each of his five starts, totaling 206 laps pacing the field. In addition, Hill has six NASCAR Truck Series starts at the Hampton, Georgia facility, posting one pole (2019), two top-five (2020, 2021) and three top-10 results (2019-2021).

    Most Recent Race Winner… Hill enters Atlanta Motor Speedway as the most recent race winner. Earlier this season in February, the No. 21 Chevrolet started from the second position, ran inside the top-10 for the majority of the event, and captured the victory once again at Hill’s home track. This marked Hill’s second victory of the year, as the RCR driver secured the checkered flag in the first two Xfinity Series races.

    Georgia Boy Returns Home… Hill is a native of Winston, Georgia, sited 60 miles from Atlanta Motor Speedway. The 30-year-old started his motorsports career racing bandolero and legends cars on the frontstretch quarter-mile oval. Hill’s family continues to live in the Peachtree State and will be in attendance for Saturday’s race.

    Going Gold for Bennett’s 50th… Located a short 15 minutes from Atlanta Motor Speedway, Bennett Transportation and Logistics’ headquarters are based in McDonough, Georgia. Celebrating their 50th Anniversary in 2024, Bennett Family of Companies will have over 400 guests on site to watch Hill compete. For the first time this season, the No. 21 Camaro will debut a special gold design that features Bennett’s special 50th anniversary logo on the hood.

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

    AUSTIN HILL QUOTES:

    What have you learned about the new track surface at Atlanta Motor Speedway? What do you expect from this race in particular, as you search for your fourth win at the track?

    “The new configuration at Atlanta Motor Speedway is nothing like the old Atlanta. It’s a drafting style track now, but it’s also a different style of drafting. The technique is different than what you need at Daytona International Speedway or Talladega Superspeedway. I’ve noticed that over each race on the new surface, the track is changing and progressing. It’s losing grip and handling is becoming more of an issue. We still want to be fully trimmed out to have the speed, but the car also needs to handle. It’s difficult on drivers to balance the want for the car to drive well and the want for the car to have speed. Earlier this year in the first race at Atlanta, my car didn’t handle well, but it had really good speed. There seems to be a lot more single file racing, and all drivers are fighting for the top lane. It’s hard to make lap time work on the bottom because you will get bogged down or the car doesn’t handle well enough to draft down there. If the temperatures are hot enough, I’m interested to see if there is a breakaway on the field – maybe the first five cars have their group and then you have the rest of the field. It will depend on how much speed your car has. We will have to wait and see if it happens, but it seems to be trending that way.”

    Bennett Transportation & Logistics is celebrating their 50th Anniversary this weekend with a special gold car. Talk about what it means to race this design.

    “I’m excited to run a fully gold car to celebrate Bennett’s 50th Anniversary. It’s going to shine bright on track and hopefully we will be able to take it and the hundreds of Bennett guests to Victory Lane again. There is a lot of pressure to perform well in this car, but I expect us to run up front, led laps and be in contention at the end of the race. Bennett has been a huge supporter of my Xfinity Series career and it’s an honor to represent them on a weekly basis. To have a huge crowd of Bennett truck drivers, employees, and family members on site – at both of our home tracks – is special. Our No. 21 team is focused on winning the race trophy, but we also want the Bennett qualifying trophy too.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Cup Series Playoff Media Day Availabilities

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Cup Series Playoff Media Day Availabilities

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Playoff Media Day | Charlotte Convention Center
    Wednesday, September 4, 2024

    NASCAR held its Cup Series Playoff Media Day at the Charlotte Convention Center on Wednesday, September 4. Ford has a manufacturer-high six drivers in the field of 16 and each answered questions from the media. Here are their respective availability sessions.

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – ANOTHER PLAYOFF. WHAT’S DIFFERENT THIS YEAR? “Not much. It’s the same stuff (laughing).”

    ARE DRIVERS MORE AGGRESSIVE THESE DAYS THAN IN THE PAST? “Yeah. There’s no doubt that ever since the Next Gen car was introduced the aggression level has gone to a whole new level mainly because the cars are pretty tough and the field is closer than ever, so there’s less give-and-take. Passes are harder to make for that reason, so it just ends up being a little bit more intense.”

    ARE YOU AT ALL SUPERSTITIOUS WITH THE EVEN YEAR, ODD YEAR THING? “No, it’s just ironic. That’s how it’s worked out, but I don’t think there’s anything behind that.”

    ALL OF YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP 4 APPEARANCES ARE EVEN YEARS. “I know. I hope there is. This year I’ll say I’m superstitious, does that sound good? Next year, I won’t (laughing). I’m pretty basic and maybe more factual about things than that stuff. That stuff can get in your head more than anything, so I just go do my thing and if it works out like that, cool, we’ll have a cool story to talk about again.”

    DOES THE FACT YOU’RE GOING INTO THE PLAYOFFS AS THE NINTH SEED WITH SEVEN PLAYOFF POINTS VERSUS 2022 AS THE NUMBER TWO SEED WITH 25 POINTS, DOES THAT CHANGE YOUR APPROACH? “It doesn’t right now. It can change because you’re just in a different spot, but the first race of each round I always look at as maybe the most important race of each round because it sets you up. How we get out of Atlanta will adjust how we go to Watkins Glen and the approach of how we get through the race. It’s one race at a time. Is it nice to have more Playoff points? Absolutely, it’s nice to have that. Can we win from where we’re at? Absolutely, we can win from where we’re at. We can do that for sure, but it’s just a little more challenging position.”

    DO YOU WORRY ABOUT SPOILER DRIVERS IN THE PLAYOFFS? “If we can win, great. If we can’t win, a non-Playoff driver is what you want because that’s not taking a spot up in the next round, so that’s what you would want.”

    CAN ANYONE WIN HALF OF THE PLAYOFFS LIKE WE’VE SEEN BEFORE WITH THE CURRENT CAR? “Yeah, you look at the Playoff schedule and you’ve got two superspeedways, you’ve got two road courses in there. There are some tracks that are pretty unique to say the least and it’s hard to say what can happen in those races. Is it possible, yeah, it’s possible – probably more so now for a few reasons. One, the field is closer than ever, too. The track schedule is one piece of it, but the field being so tight now with this Next Gen car, it’s gonna be really hard to do. Think about this. Think about those days where every year there were usually two cars that won seven races, give or take. Now, there’s not really that anymore. It’s just harder to rack up those seasons where you have the fastest car and that car wins nine in a year, like when Harvick did that. That’s not happening anymore.”

    WILL WE EVER GET BACK TO THAT? “I don’t think so because of the parity of the cars at this point.”

    WHAT ARE THE TROUBLE SPOTS ALONG THIS 10 RACE STRETCH? “It’s hard to look at what the trouble spots are and things like that. You’ve got to go one race at a time. You know where you’re at right now. You’re at Atlanta and you’ve got to go perform down there. If you don’t, then you put yourself in a little tougher spot for the next two races, but I don’t think there’s one thing we’re looking at like, ‘This is what we have to do.’ The schedule is so unique at this point. The field is so close. All it takes is a couple things to be on the very top. It takes a couple weekends. You win the right one, you gain a little momentum, you find a little speed in your cars and the next thing you know you win the championship. We’ve seen that story play out. I’ve been in that story and seen it play out. I think Blaney experienced that last year. You’ve just got to survive and get through the rounds and you don’t know what the next round can be. They all kind of take on their own unique personality.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT HAPPENED IN THE ACCIDENT AT DARLINGTON WITH YOUR ARM? “My elbow got hurt in that deal and kind of made my hand not feel great, either. It’s funny how all the stuff is connected, but I was OK the next couple days and ready to go.”

    AS THE DEFENDING CHAMPION HAS YOUR PERSPECTIVE ON HOW TO GET BACK THERE CHANGED AT ALL? “I definitely think you’re more confident in trying to get back to Phoenix. It’s not as simple as just do what you did last year, though, but I feel like once you have that experience and you persevere through the three rounds to get there, then I think it really motivates your team and just gives them a level of confidence of like, ‘Hey, we know we can do this. We’ve been there before and now let’s try to figure out a way to do it again’ and accept all the challenges that are gonna be thrown at you and use your experience to your advantage. So, hopefully, we can bring that same intensity that we did to the Playoffs last year again. The first couple of rounds were a little funky, obviously, but it’s the same for everybody so hopefully you kind of stay clean the first round. I think that’s the biggest thing. It’s like finish where you are supposed to finish. You never know what’s gonna happen, but I think our group is doing really well right now. The last two weeks obviously haven’t been very fun ending up on the hook, but it was none of our doing. I don’t think that’s really bothered us at all. We’re just ready to go and Atlanta is the first task in a task of 10 that we have to achieve.”

    DO YOU FEEL BETTER PREPARED? IS THIS TEAM IN A BETTER POSITION THAN A YEAR AGO? “Yeah, definitely. I said it a couple months ago. I thought our group was in a great spot mentally, performance-wise, whether that’s on pit road or the racetrack. I feel like we’re really good. I thought at this time last year we were kind of scrounging to try and figure out how we were going to perform how we need to because we were off a little bit and this year I think we’re in a much better spot, so hopefully we can continue to bring that same pace and continue to learn on the pace that we’ve been bringing the last few months. This group is in a way better spot and our Team Penske group as a whole is in a much better spot as well. Hopefully, that means a lot for all three of our cars and the 21 to make a good run at it.”

    YOU ARE THE LOWEST SEEDED DRIVER TO WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP. DOES THAT CHANGE THE NARRATIVE THAT IT IS POSSIBLE TO COME FROM THAT FAR BACK TO WIN? “It’s definitely possible, for sure. You never know who is gonna turn it on. All of these teams are really good. All the drivers are really good that they can get rolling. We were seeded lower than where we should have been because we had such a rough summer, but that shows. We didn’t have a lot of Playoff points last year going into it and we just outperformed people. We just outran people, but you never know who is gonna catch fire. It could be the team that’s been fantastic all year. It could be a team that’s started to creep into the picture. It could be a team that gets hot in the Playoffs like we kind of did last year, so it just all depends what drivers and teams can step it up and that’s a huge thing in the Playoffs. You see a lot of people make mistakes and things like that and it’s who can make the least amount of mistakes, who can rise to the occasion, and who has the speed in their car to perform. If you have those three things, you have a good shot at it.”

    WHAT DOES IT SAY THAT YOU WERE ABLE TO STEP IT UP? “I definitely think it speaks a lot to your mentality. I feel like when you go into it, even like the whole playoffs for us – even the first half we weren’t great. I wrecked in Texas in the Round of 12 opener and then we went and won Talladega. We just didn’t let it bother us. We just had the end goal in mind and I even think the end goal in mind is different this year than last year in just how you approach it because we hadn’t won a championship last year and we still believed 100 percent in ourselves that we could do it, and now you have that championship on top of it and now we like 1000 percent believe that we can do this again. So, we’ll take what we learned last year and what we did well from a mentality standpoint of just worrying about ourselves and believing and trusting each other. I’ve always told my guys, ‘Hey, you guys are the best of the best. You’re good enough if you bring 100 percent of your effort to the racetrack each weekend, we’re gonna be really tough and we’re gonna have a great shot to win.’ That’s all I ask is just bring 100 percent of yourself and do the best effort that you can and that’s all you can ask for. I think that showed a lot last year and I think that knowingness that we’ve done it before definitely motivates our guys a lot, and I think that’s a positive for sure.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR BRISTOL EXPECTATIONS? “I don’t know what to expect. I know they did a tire test there two or three months ago. They said it was the same tire and they had no issues apparently, so I don’t know what to expect. We’ll see. I think all the teams would probably get nervous and you’re gonna come with way less cambers, way aggressive on toe, and just try to make a tire last. I think that’s what’s gonna make everyone nervous because you have no idea what the tire is gonna be. You never know if they’re telling you the truth on if the tire is the same or not. I don’t know, so we’ll see. And I don’t really know how they’re gonna do the track prep either. I’ve been hearing rumors that they’re gonna prep the track differently, whether that’s with resin or PJ1. PJ1-branded resin is what I’ve been told – like off brand PJ1, I don’t know – so that’s why that first round is such a toss up. You’ve got Atlanta and the Glen. This new tire we have at The Glen falls off like four seconds and then the Bristol tire it might fall off your race car, so I don’t know what to expect, but hopefully we don’t have any blown tires. But I think everyone is gonna know what to expect a little bit more going back. No one knew in the spring what the race was gonna be like and I think that’s what threw a curveball for everybody.”

    HOW DOES FORD OR TOYOTA STOP HENDRICK AT WATKINS GLEN? “They’ve been really good there. Hopefully, the new tire kind of changes some of that. I feel like when it’s that big of a change, you really have to switch up your rear cambers, your front cambers, your toes, all that stuff that are really important on road courses, so we’ll see. I think maybe that tire change is the best thing for us trying to get Hendrick off the top there at The Glen, where they’ve been dominant. We’ll see. That will be an interesting race for sure. I’m happy The Glen is honestly in the Playoffs. I think that’s a cool area. The people there love it and it’s gonna be a good race, too, especially if you have the fall off that they’re advertising. That’s what that place needs and hopefully it turns the tables and we can run a little better than we have in the past.”

    DOES THE TIRE AT WATKINS GLEN DE-INCENTIVE PITTING BEFORE THE STAGE ENDS WHERE YOU DON’T WANT TO RESTART ON TWO OR THREE LAP OLDER TIRES? “I don’t know. You’re gonna have everybody be in different positions. If you can grab some stage points, you’re probably gonna do that and it depends where you’re running. If you’re top five and you feel like you’ve got winning pace, maybe if the leader pits you have to make a big decision of do you go grab nine or 10 stage points and restart in the back? You have to see how big the fall off there is. Like, ‘Hey, is two laps gonna be three-quarters of a second of fall off if you have two lap older stuff?’ I don’t know. Is that gonna overcome the track position? That’s like all in-game decisions that crew chiefs and drivers have to kind of assess and make, so we’ll get a good idea of that in practice, like seeing the fall off after maybe a cycle on tires, and then where you’re running for sure will determine, and where you’re at in points. If you need points and praying for points, then you’ll probably just stay out and take the hit and probably restart 30th or 25th, but it’s all situational.”

    IS THERE ANYTHING TO BEING THE CHAMPION AND HAVING A TARGET ON YOUR BACK? “I don’t think so. I’ve gotten wrecked a lot this year, more than other years, so I don’t know if that means I have a bullseye on my back. I don’t know. I feel like I’ve gotten wrecked way more this year than I have in the past. I don’t think it’s intentional, but it just seems that way. I don’t think there’s a bullseye on our back, but I feel like we kind of took it as like, ‘Hey, we’ve got to defend our championship.’ We’re still in title defense. Until the year is over and you don’t win it, you’re still in title defense, so I think that’s motivated us a lot of everyone is kind of gunning for you. That goes to the crew guys and the pit crew guys and engineers and Jonathan. Everybody is envious of where you’re at. Everyone wants to take it away from you and they want all the outside to stop talking about you being the champ. They want to be that because I was the same way before we won the championship, so I think that really motivates us that everyone is looking at you. They know how good of a team this team is and that’s what I’ve told my guys. I want to scare every other team. I want you guys to be so good that everyone is nervous about us when we unload and that’s kind of the mindset that we’ve tried to have because I think that’s a great mindset for everyone on the team to have is like, you want everyone worrying about you because you can be that dangerous, and I think we definitely are and hopefully that carries over.”

    IS IT POSSIBLE WITH THE NEXT CAR THAT SOMEONE COULD WIN HALF THE PLAYOFF RACES? “Yeah, it could be. You never know. Someone could definitely do it. We’ve seen people go on streaks and stuff like that, and I think as this new car has gotten learned a little bit – it’s not even a new car anymore – you’re gonna be able to see that. I think teams go on streaks and as we can find new things that stack up and mean more, I feel like you might, but it’s hard to tell. You never know who is gonna get going on any given week. I can’t sit here and predict who is gonna be good at Atlanta because it’s a speedway, but at The Glen I have no idea who is gonna unload and be fast. You have a small idea who has been good at road courses through the years, but it could change week to week, so I try not to think about, ‘Oh, this team could run off six wins in a row here.’ You just never know.”

    YOU DON’T SEE A FAVORITE FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP DO YOU, OTHER THAN YOURSELF? “There’s definitely guys that are super strong right now. I say anyone can catch fire in the championship, but there are still teams that have performed really good and who have been running good lately. The 5 is obviously fantastic. The 11 is really good. The 20 car is super good. The 45 has showed a lot of speed, so those guys are really, really fast right now and we’re gonna have to compete with, for sure. I think everyone is kind of looking at those three or four guys who have been really good and consistently fast and haven’t really had any issues. I think those are guys you definitely look at and you know they’ll be strong.”

    IS THERE ANYONE UNDER THE RADAR THAT COULD MAKE SOME NOISE? “You never know. I think honestly that Ty Gibbs has been under the radar a little bit just because he hasn’t won, but they’ve been really good. Their team is strong. The Toyotas are fast and he could definitely be one that can be dangerous this year.”

    WHAT DO YOU PUT YOUR ODDS AT TO WIN THE TITLE AGAIN AND WHAT ARE THE POTENTIAL TROUBLE SPOTS? “I think I’m obviously gonna have 1000 percent confidence that we can get to Phoenix. I think you have the oddballs. The first round is a really weird oddball and you’re gonna see some surprise people go home, I feel like. You’re just gonna have issues at Atlanta. You’re gonna have issues at Watkins Glen and you’re gonna have to throw a Hail Mary at Bristol. Hopefully, we’re not one of those people, but you just never know what can happen. I honestly feel like the rounds for our group get stronger each one, like just the way we perform at tracks and our past success there. The Round of 8 is great for us. Those are tracks we run really well at and hopefully we can get there and then perform there as well. I just try to take one race at a time, though. I just try not to have any blow ups, like you don’t want any issues or foolish things or mistakes that you make that really put you behind the eight-ball, but I think this group can definitely do it. It’s just a matter of staying clean and doing our job.”

    DOES IT MATTER ABOUT BEING THE DEFENDING CHAMPION? “We’re going for a new one. We’re still defending it until someone takes it. I would like to not have that happen, so we’ll see.”

    HOW DID YOU FEEL AFTER THE ATLANTA PHOTO FINISH? “That was definitely an exciting finish. I didn’t feel upset about it. It was pretty wild and I kind of put in my head like, ‘I’ve won them by that much, too.’ So, the fact that I lost one by half a foot I can’t really be mad about it. I’ve won more than my fair share of what I honestly should have won, just by odds, by a foot or two. It was just a neat finish. I didn’t know who won. That was interesting because the ones I’ve won, like Talladega, where it was super close and it was just me and another car side-by-side and I can kind of see I beat that guy. But, me, when I was the bottom of three, I couldn’t see Daniel but I knew I beat the 8 and I didn’t see the 99, so I really thought we won just because I couldn’t see Daniel’s car, and then Timmy told me that he got us, but that was a great finish, a spectacular finish. Like I said, that’s like the only time I wasn’t upset about running second at all. It was like, ‘Oh, we didn’t win. Well, that was still a good night.’”

    NOW THAT IT’S THE PLAYOFFS SHOULD WE EXPECT ATLANTA TO BE THAT EXCITING AND COMPETITIVE? “I don’t know. I really don’t know what to expect going into this weekend – how aggressive people are going to be. You just never know how these things are going to go. It could be really, really calm, for the most part, until the end or it could just be chaos the whole time. I have no idea.”

    WHICH WOULD YOU PREFER? “I would prefer to lead every lap and stay in front of all that stuff. I’ve been wrecked enough at speedways this year, just plowing into other people’s crap. I’m talking about other speedways. I’ve wrecked a lot this year and just been forced into these wrecks and it just gets old. I’ve always approached speedways as trying to control the race. That’s where I feel the most comfortable. That’s where I feel the most safe, like I am making my moves as the leader, and I like to think I try to be smart in where I pick to block or not. I feel like I don’t throw dumb blocks that will get me wrecked because I don’t want to wreck and I don’t want to wreck the field, so I try to control the race and the flow of it and that’s really the same mindset I’m gonna bring into Atlanta.”

    IS THIS THE START OF YOUR PLAYOFF BEARD? “I shaved Sunday, so it’s coming in. Every year it grows quicker and quicker and it gets more gray quicker, too. It’s started.”

    DO YOU FEAR ANY SPOILERS IN THE PLAYOFFS? “It might. You never know. Honestly, if I can’t win one of the Playoff races and a non-Playoff guys wins it, that’s great because a Playoff guy that I’m facing doesn’t move to the next round. So if Shane goes and wins The Glen and I can’t win it, it’s fine with me. It’s just another person who isn’t locked into Round 2, but, yeah, you could definitely see that, especially this weekend. Like you said, at The Glen with A.J. and Shane. I think A.J. is running, I don’t know, but you could definitely see that.”

    WHO ARE THE THREE DRIVERS YOU TRUST MOST TO VY FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP WITH YOU? “I don’t trust any of them. I don’t care if I’m great friends with them or not, at that point, they’re just all competitors and that’s how I’ve always looked at it. I’ve been fortunate to have some really good friends that I grew up racing with that I race with on Sundays now, amazing friends off the track, but once you put the helmet on you respect the hell out of each other and you’re gonna give each other more room than maybe other guys, but you’re still competitors. You’re gonna race incredibly hard. Me, Bubba and Chase, we race each other the hardest out of anybody, but we respect each other while we’re doing it. We’re gonna give each other adequate space, but you’re still gonna race them hard. Any one of them you’re going to treat the same.”

    WHAT IS BIGGER FOR YOUR LEGACY, WINNING THE DAYTONA 500 OR A CHAMPIONSHIP? “I don’t know. I was fortunate to win the championship and I haven’t won the 500 yet. I’d like to win a 500. Would I pick a 500 over another championship? I don’t know. That’s a tough question. The 500, to me, is super tantalizing because I’ve been so close to it two or three times. I’ve just missed out on it. That’s such a hard race to win, too. A championship is hard to win, so I really don’t know what I’d want to pick. Either one of the two is fine with me. If I can get another championship or a Daytona 500, I’m gonna be happy with whatever one I’m lucky enough to win.”

    HAVE YOU TALKED TO HARRISON OR AUSTIN ABOUT THE PLAYOFFS? “I haven’t talked to Harrison about it yet, or really Austin about the Playoff outlook. I’m not the type of guy who is gonna go up to you and be like, ‘You should do this.’ I’m gonna help you out if you want help. I’m an open book when it comes to that stuff, but I’m not someone who is just gonna tell you how I think you should do it. Who am I to say that? Everyone has their own opinion, but I would say to Harrison, I remember my first Playoffs. It’s really intimidating because there’s a lot of pressure on you to perform well, but I think the main thing is to have fun with it. You’re racing for the Wood Brothers. You have a shot to do well. Try to move forward in the rounds and just have fun, and try not to have the pressure get to you. Just go do the best that you can and I know it’s hard to do when it’s your first one and he’s in the position that he’s in of trying to make an impression for next year, but I guess that would be my advice to him.”

    DID YOU LEAN ON BRAD OR JOEY AT THE TIME? “Yeah, I talked to Brad and Joey a little bit before my first one, just kind of what I should look for, what’s a good mindset and stuff like that. They helped me out a lot with advice that they would tell me, so that was pretty nice of them to do.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang – DO YOU THINK ANYONE COULD WIN HALF OF THE PLAYOFF RACES AGAIN WITH THIS NEXT GEN CAR? “I think those days are probably behind us. With the old car you would get ahead as a driver and a team, particularly with the car and its overall potential. This car it’s significantly harder to do that, so the era of dominance is really over – at least with the current rule settings, which is intentional. There are parts that are to be lauded about it and parts to be celebrated and so forth, and parts to be hated, but the reality is of this era that you’re not winning five NASCAR Playoff races. For the first time in our sport’s history of the Playoffs at the Cup level, the season champion didn’t win the last race last year, and I don’t think that’s meant to be an indictment on Blaney or any winner. It’s just that’s the way the format is, particularly with the new car, so it’s different for sure.”

    HOW WIDE OPEN DO YOU SEE THIS CHAMPIONSHIP GOING IN? “I remember when we went in the 2018 Playoffs and everybody thought it was the big three. The big three, they’re gonna win it. And then all three of them were on the press conference table after the race was over because none of them won it. That’s what we get for trying to predict this. We always start the Playoffs thinking we know what’s gonna happen and something happens that we go, ‘I didn’t see that coming.’ And, I don’t think this one will be any different.”

    SO DOES THAT MAKE IT HARDER TO IDENTIFY WHO MIGHT RISE THROUGH THE RANKS? “I think it makes it more fun, especially if you’re one of those people that likes to fill out a bracket because there’s no way you’re getting it right. Wasn’t it last year where five percent of the brackets were left after race two or three? It was ridiculous, so I suspect it will be the same thing.”

    HAVE YOU SEEN THE AGGRESSION LEVEL RISE UP MORE THIS YEAR THAN THE PAST? “Every year the racing changes a little bit. It’s hard to quantify it. You really only notice it when you zoom out and you look at five and 10 year trends, where in the year you really tend to not notice it. Richmond, I think, was an example of another escalation, but then NASCAR tried to draw some lines in the sand, so that will de-escalate it for a little bit, and then it will come back and it’ll escalate. It’s almost always a factor of how NASCAR steps in.”

    DO YOU GET A SENSE THE TIRE WILL CHANGE STRATEGY AT WATKINS GLEN, ESPECIALLY AROUND THE STAGES? “Watkins Glen is a big wildcard. There are a lot of question marks about how that race is gonna play out. I can’t sit here today and say that I understand enough about it. We’re kind of living one race at a time and right now that race is Atlanta, but I would say there are a couple races that are circled and Watkins Glen is gonna be one of them.”

    HOW DOES HAVING ATLANTA AND WATKINS GLEN IN THE PLAYOFFS CHANGE THE COMPLEXION? “Darlington was kind of like this known entity. Everybody knew going into that race what to expect. Atlanta, not so much. There are a lot more unknowns. I think that changes the perception of that first week of the Playoffs. The first week of the Playoffs is really important. It really sets the tone in my eyes for how it’s gonna go. If you have a bad week in week one, it’s hard to dig out of it. Atlanta, it’s easy to have a bad weekend.”

    HOW DO YOU BALANCE THE EFFORT IN THE TEAM BETWEEN YOU IN THE PLAYOFFS AND CHRIS STILL TRYING TO GET A WIN? “I want to make our way in the Championship 4 and finish second at Phoenix and him win it. That would be the best way that we could ever go out. That would be the best way to finish the season, but there are probably thirty-some other guys that wouldn’t like to see that. That said, we want to see him get a race win. We want to see the 6 car make a deep run in the Playoffs and have a shot at the championship.”

    HOW DO YOU MANAGE THAT? “Nothing different than what we’ve been doing. We bring the best cars we can every week for both teams. We don’t take any sacrifices.”

    ARE YOU CONSUMED WITH THE CHAMPIONSHIP? “It’s a great opportunity. These are moments in your life you don’t get back. It’ll never be 2024 again. I’ll never be in this spot again of having this particular opportunity to win the championship. I just want to make the most of it.”

    HOW DO YOU DEAL WITH THE PRESSURE AFTER ALL OF YOUR EXPERIENCES? “Experience certainly makes you a little more chill, I think. You know what to value and what not to value and you just want to apply that wisdom wisely.”

    ARE YOU ABLE TO SHUT OFF THE RACING WHEN YOU COME HOME TO THE FAMILY? “Yes and no. I could always be better than that. My family is certainly a blessing and I try to enjoy those moments when I can, but the work never stops.”

    IS YOUR LITTLE BOY LIKE YOU? “It’s a little too early to tell. He’s very adorable, so maybe more like his mom.”

    WHAT IS THE EFFECT OF CHRIS NOT MAKING THE PLAYOFFS? “We’re gonna definitely take a reboot and look at everything on his team and what we need to do better for next year and come back strong.”

    DO YOU THINK HIM BEING OUT GIVES YOU GUYS A BETTER CHANCE TO WORK ON THINGS WITH HIS CAR? “Yeah. We might take some chances that we normally wouldn’t take.”

    AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse – HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE PLAYOFF FORMAT? “I think it’s difficult to think of. I can’t really say that I’ve put a whole lot of thought into it. I’m more of a don’t try and change what the game is, but just maximize the game that you’re playing, so I can’t say I’ve really thought much about it.”

    FOUR PENSKE CARS IN THE PLAYOFFS. HOW MUCH OF A BENEFIT IS THAT? “I think it’s great. I think it makes things pretty easy on what the goals are throughout the shop. I feel like, in a lot of ways, playoffs sometimes ramps up and it’s a lot easier just to do that across the board than to not, and I think morale is obviously really high having everybody a part of this and trying to keep it as long as we can.”

    FORD HAS MORE CARS THAN ANYONE ELSE. IS THAT A BENEFIT AS WELL? “Yeah, in some ways I don’t think it’s much different than the information we’ll get from those teams for most of the year, and there’s obviously still a lot of Fords still competing in the rest of the races this season, so I think the information flow doesn’t change.”

    WHAT TRACK SCARES YOU THE MOST IN THE FIRST ROUND? “Bristol is definitely the most unpredictable track in this round, let alone just because of the tires from the spring race, but that’s just how it’s been over the last couple of years. It’s a track that I really love going to. It’s a track that I feel confident at, but there are a lot of factors there, whether if that’s been mechanical failures with the car or obviously the tire issues in the spring. You want to be as secure as you can going into that one.”

    DO YOU FEEL YOU’VE GOTTEN BETTER AT TIRE MANAGEMENT OVER THE COURSE OF YOUR CUP CAREER? “Probably not over the course of my Cup career. I’m just not convinced that that’s gonna be 100 percent the game, so as far as Bristol is concerned. I’m kind of prepared for anything.”

    HOW DO YOU CHARACTERIZE YOUR REGULAR SEASON? “It’s a difficult question because I think there are some pretty obvious highs and lows that the stat line does and doesn’t highlight, but from a team standpoint I’m proud of everyone sticking to the process and kind of the narrative that we’ve laid out to start the year. We’ve got a lot of young guys and a lot of roles that they haven’t been at this high level for that long, including myself, and I feel like it’s a lot of fun to have a team that young, but sometimes it takes a lot of patience, just like with having a younger driver and an inexperienced driver. Patience has probably been the name of the game for me because I kind of want it yesterday type thing, and that’s the expectation, but to have the opportunity in the Playoffs and have a lot of the correct pieces is just about putting the picture together on a more consistent basis.”

    HOW DOES IT FEEL TO HAVE ALL FOUR PENSKE CARS IN THE PLAYOFFS? “It’s huge to be in the Playoffs. That was the only goal that I set out for this year. I’m not much of a numbers goal setter, but Playoffs was a must in my opinion. The only two goals I’ve set for myself personally or professionally this year was make the Playoffs and break 100 golf. That tells you how hard golf is. I’m still working on the other one.”

    WHAT ADVANTAGE DOES IT GIVE YOU WHEN ALL OF YOUR TEAMMATES ARE IN THE PLAYOFFS? “I think it gives the team a more direct focus. I mean, everyone’s got the same things at stake. We all have a lot of the same points, so it’s pretty easy to understand or prioritize what it’s gonna take for all of us to continue to advance forward and understand each other’s shoes, I guess.”

    HOW HAVE YOU CHANGED AND HOW DO YOU DEAL WITH THE PRESSURE DIFFERENTLY THAN YOU DID THE FIRST TIME IN THE PLAYOFFS? “I’ll be honest, I don’t really feel a ton of pressure. I feel like we’re playing with house money. The points reset. We’re right in the middle of everything. We’re seeded 10th, two points to the good. I couldn’t really ask for more based on the season we’ve had, so I’m excited for this great opportunity and anything from here, I feel like, is a bonus. I’m not saying that just to sound content. We have an opportunity to go all the way and that’s exciting.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ABOUT WATKINS GLEN AND THE DECISIONS TO EITHER STAY OUT FOR STAGE POINTS OR PIT FOR TRACK POSITION LATER? “It’s definitely at least spooked some people for sure, and I don’t feel like everyone – at least myself, I’m not 100 percent sure what the level of fall off is that we’re going to experience. It’s not a high fall off racetrack, so is this fall off that’s just a tire disintegrating from being used, or is this driver influenced? Is it wear influenced? Is it heat influenced? All of those things are things that in an extra practice session I’m gonna be able to use and I’m trying to understand more, but you don’t ever really figure it out until the race.”

    DO YOU FEEL IT’S POSSIBLE TO SEE A DRIVER WIN HALF OF THE PLAYOFF RACES LIKE WE’VE SEEN A COUPLE TIMES BEFORE WITH THIS NEXT GEN CAR? “It’s definitely possible. It’s challenging, for sure. I mean, to have a dominant season in this car in this day and age with NASCAR in the Cup Series is pretty difficult. You look at the last couple of years how many different winners we’ve had over the course of a season. Only two guys made it in on points this year. My rookie year, only one guy made it in on points. Last year, I’m sure it was one or two. That says all you have to know about how hard it is to win on a consistent basis in this series is how many winners there are.”

    HOW CLOSE ARE YOU TO BREAKING 100 IN GOLF? “101 two weeks ago. We’re right on the edge. We’re there. I got a snowman halfway through, so it’s in there.”

    WHICH IS GOING TO BE HARDER? DO YOU FEEL YOU’RE ON THE EDGE OF BREAKING 100 OR DO YOU SEE A PATH OF GETTING THROUGH WITH THE WAY THE ROUNDS ARE LAID OUT WITH THE COMPETITION BEING WHAT IT IS? “I feel like both my golf game and my Playoff mentality to get to the next step is to limit mistakes. I feel like the first two rounds of the Playoffs are all about not putting yourself, taking yourself out of it. I feel like when you get to the Round of 8, that’s where you’ve got to find the next gear. That’s where you’ve got to try and win a race to expect to be in the Championship 4. It’s no different than with my golf game. I have the ability to make contact with the ball and make the damn thing go straight. Every once in a while I’ll take a chunk of earth out before I ever even touch the ball.”

    HOW DO YOU VIEW OR BREAK DOWN THE ROUNDS? “My job doesn’t change in all of those, just the importance of certain things kind of shift around a bit when you start getting really narrow, but I don’t think anyone will describe how I race as conservative, so I don’t really anticipate being overly conservative for the next three weeks.”

    HOW MUCH POTENTIAL IS THERE TO HAVE SOME OF THE GUYS WITH FEWER PLAYOFF POINTS TO MOVE UP OR HAVE OTHER GUYS MOVE BACK? “I’m in no different position with only having two points to the good, so that’s where stage points become such a premium to be able to find those, and that’s what really can set you apart more, more than the amount of stage wins I’ve had in a year or whatever else, even just finishing eighth in a stage is gonna double my points position from where I’m at now.”

    WHAT DOES THE ROAD LOOK LIKE FOR YOU TO PROGRESS THROUGH THESE ROUNDS? “Obviously, the different tracks change your preparation and what happens and what not. There are two road courses, two superspeedways. The first two rounds, in my opinion, are about execution, not making mistakes. The second round, that’s where race teams have to come on, find a gear, win a race. So, I think that’s really as simple as it can be. For me, that’s the mentality. We get to the Round of 8, we have to go figure out how to win a race, but until then we have to really eliminate mistakes.”

    PENSKE HAS A QUARTER OF THE PLAYOFF FIELD. WHAT WOULD BE A DISAPPOINTMENT FOR YOU IN THE POSTSEASON? “I think I’d definitely be disappointed to be out of the first round. I think the first two rounds are really about execution and if we’re not able to execute, that’s on us. If you get caught in a wreck and that’s what does it, then that’s what does it. The field is super close right now as far as, yeah, I’m a plus two, seeded 10th out of 16 cars. It’s just incredibly close, so, for us, in my opinion, it’s about being that consistent value, performing at a level that we can perform at, and then we make it to the Round of 8, and I think that’s where you’ve got to find the next gear – anyone really and not just us. Winning Cup Series races isn’t exactly the easiest thing to do and that’s really how you can guarantee yourself in the Championship 4, literally and figuratively, by being a race-winning capable car in that round.”

    ANY ADDED EMPHASIS ON GETTING STAGE POINTS NOW? “They’re a luxury. Diamonds are a luxury, right. I don’t need diamonds to live my life and I don’t need stage points to advance to the next round, but if I finish eighth in the first stage at Atlanta, I double my gap to the cut line, figuratively, so imagine a whole season’s body of work and then your finish after 40 laps in a stage can separate you by everything that you’ve done all year, so, yeah, it’s not a guarantee that you’re gonna get them either in the Cup Series. I think it’s very important if you’re able to get those. It’s a luxury.”

    WILL THERE BE ADDED EMPHASIS OF TRYING TO CAPITALIZE ON THESE FIRST TWO RACES? “I think between that and I feel like Bristol has to be the biggest wildcard in this round. The tires, that was a very unpredictable situation in the spring race and what that meant to how the race looked and how you were gonna have to set up your car, if that’s in fact how we have to set up our car again, to race like that, or just mechanical failures. That racetrack has taken guys out of the Playoffs, out of a shot at a championship because it stressed the cars in a different way than any other racetrack. Bristol is always kind of a wildcard in the Playoffs, but, to your point, I feel like Atlanta and Watkins Glen can both be very strong events for us. We’ve been able to prove that, so all the more reason to have two very good first races.”

    HARRISON BURTON, No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang – DO YOU SEE A PATH FOR YOURSELF IN THE PLAYOFFS? “I see the first round, just taking it one round at a time. You look at the first round, Atlanta is a place we’ve run well in the past. Obviously, just coming off the Daytona win, that’s a place I feel like everyone that’s in the Playoff field could win or everyone could wreck in the first five laps. So, that’s a big roll of the dice, but there’s a huge part the driver plays in decision-making and execution to try and study the best I can for that one. I think that’s a really big thinking type of racetrack. We go to Watkins Glen and there are a lot of new changes that are coming, so whoever embraces those changes the best is gonna have a good day, and grapples those changes the best is gonna have a good day, so we’re really gonna have to focus on that. And then I see Bristol as a really good racetrack for me, a really good racetrack for us. Earlier this year, we qualified well. I was first in our group in practice and felt really confident, and then I was the first one to find out we were gonna be cording tires that day, so we dropped to the back and got stuck in that whole mess and just one of the casualties of not knowing. You just don’t know until the first people start having problems in that type of scenario, but we know how to build a fast race car for that racetrack and I know how to drive it well. That’s obviously another really important one being the last one in the round, so I think Atlanta and Bristol are really big opportunities for us. I think my road course racing has been getting better. I think it’s something I need to continue to work on and Watkins Glen is gonna be a really big test for that with the pressure on, so I’m excited for that challenge as well. I see the bookends of the round being huge opportunities for us that we have to take advantage of.”

    DO YOU SEE THE NEW TIRE CHANGING STRATEGY FOR WATKINS GLEN AT THE STAGE BREAKS? “It’s interesting. The stage lengths are gonna be really hard to do that because you can pretty much just run them straight through. I don’t know. It’s gonna be hard. With the tire wear that we’re gonna have, I’ve seen some stuff of the different tire they’re bringing that’s gonna wear a lot more, so that makes it really hard. I think that’s gonna have to be a game time decision of whether or not that’s available. I think it could be an opportunity for guys who may be thinking, ‘OK, I’m gonna finish 20th today or 15th today, maybe we can maximize our day and grab some points,’ and then try and fight in the back of the pack to get more and more spots and then kind of accumulate the most points that you can. It’s just gonna be hard. I think the way the stages work out, it’s gonna be hard to flip them. It’s gonna be a big challenge.”

    WHAT ARE YOU DOING THIS WEEK WITH IT BEING YOUR FIRST PLAYOFFS? WHAT ADVICE HAVE YOU RECEIVED AND HOW ARE YOU KEEPING YOUR EMOTIONS IN CHECK? “Not a whole lot. For me, the more you build it up in your head, I think the worse you’re gonna perform. I think you just need to understand that it’s the same race I ran last year. I was a part of all the same races, now it just means more. For us, I think using that in a positive way, using that heightened intensity as a positive kind of thing for our team is gonna be really, really good. I think our group is built for that. I think we’ve all been through different scenarios in our different careers, where we’ve had to kind of pull through and come through in big moments, and we showed we could do that in Daytona with everything on the line. Now we just have to continue that momentum and continue that confidence and we’ll see what happens.”

    HOW MUCH DOES YOUR XFINITY PLAYOFF EXPERIENCE HELP? “I think it’s huge. I learned a lot of lessons in those of doing what I said, making it a really big deal. I remember my first year. We get in the Playoffs and we struggle and don’t do very well. I get knocked out of Playoffs and then win two races in a row right after we got knocked out of the Playoffs, which would have got us to Phoenix. It’s like, ‘Oh my gosh.’ It’s just crazy how that all worked out and what could have happened. You just don’t get chances, like I thought in those years in Xfinity I had real chances to win championships. You don’t get those very often, so I learned a lot from that and I think I can take that into this year in Cup, and now that you look at the points we’re right on the cut line. It’s a whole new season for us. Everything that happened beforehand doesn’t matter and we’re just going forward from here and hopefully a new look 21 car, so we’re excited for that.”

    WOULD YOU CATEGORIZE YOURSELF AS AN UNDERDOG? “If I was not a part of this team, I would say the same thing. You can’t help but look at where we were in points, look at how our season had gone, look at the fact that I was on my way out of my job. They were making changes because the performance wasn’t there. I love them and they love me as a person, but we didn’t perform the way we needed to, but now we have this great opportunity to reset all of that. We have a great opportunity to kind of be born again. It’s like, ‘OK, a whole new season right here. Let’s go.’ That is a rare opportunity in sports and a rare opportunity in life to get to do that, so I’m gonna make the most of that. I know my race team is making the most of it. I was at the shop on the way here. I got to go there a little bit and those guys are fired up. That’s so fun. It’s so fun to be a part of a team that’s fighting for something like we are and we’re gonna use that energy in a positive way.”

    DO YOU TALK ABOUT THINGS LIKE NOT MAKING MISTAKES IN THE FIRST ROUND BEHIND THE SCENES? “Yeah, definitely. You see the first round and a lot of guys you see over the years have eliminated themselves. They’ll have plenty of speed, plenty of talent and granted these mistakes happen throughout the year it’s just as big of a deal. When you’re pushing the limits like we are every weekend, you’re gonna screw up. It’s just in the heightened moments everyone is like, ‘Oh my gosh, that guy choked.’ It’s easy to get wrapped up in that, but those mistakes in this Playoff format are just crucial to avoid, so speeding on pit road. Think about how many points you lose if you go from 10th to the tail end of the lead lap. Restart violations. All of these little things that you can do and happen throughout the year frequently in the Playoffs mean that much more and it makes it hard because you don’t want to overstep your bounds, but you have to push the limits or you’re not gonna advance. You have to be on the edge, so riding that edge and not going over it is really hard, but that’s kind of what we do week in and week out. It’s normal, but now it means more.”

    WITH YOUR WIN AT DAYTONA AND MAKING THE PLAYOFFS, DOES THAT GIVE YOU A BIGGER SEAT AT THE FORD TABLE? “Yeah, I think so. I think every time you get a win or you’re in the Playoffs, all of a sudden you become a bigger priority. My last two years that I wasn’t in the Playoffs – and this is how it should be – you’re not as big of a priority. Going to Phoenix, the Ford support is behind the 12 and 22 because they have a chance to win the championship. We have a Ford meeting and what can we do to help and what not, and now hopefully we can be on the other side of that because throughout my career I’ve done a good job and my race team has done a good job of helping people when the time is right, and now that we’re the ones that might need the help, I hope it comes the other way, too. It’s complicated because they’re all racing for their own race, too, and it makes it really hard to ask for help. I don’t want anyone to race you differently, but then you also hope that they give you the same respect you’ve given them in the past.”

    IS IT POSSIBLE TO SEE SOMEONE WIN HALF THE PLAYOFF RACES WITH THIS NEW CAR? “Is it possible? Yes, but less likely than it used to be. Everyone is so close and the tolerances are very small. For example, Darlington we ran last weekend our first run we were way off and then the second run and third run of the race we were one of the best cars on the racetrack. What did we do? It was a couple tenths of air-pressure here and there. I told them in the meeting, I was like, ‘Great job making these massive changes on the car, making the changes you did to make it way better.’ And they were like, ‘Oh, we just did a little it of this here and there. It wasn’t a big change at all.’ I was like, ‘OK.’ And I went from being on track I went from being one of the worst cars to a top 10, top 5 pace race car. It was just like that. That makes it hard. Even throughout a race, much less a season, to keep that consistency in this car is really hard and it creates a lot of parity because everyone is so close.”

    CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Mahindra Tractors Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT DO YOU SEE AS TROUBLE SPOTS ALONG THE WAY AND WHAT ARE YOUR CHANCES OF GETTING TO PHOENIX? “I think the trouble spots, truthfully, are ourselves. Especially last week, if you can win the Southern 500, it’s arguably probably the hardest race on the schedule to win and now that we’ve proven that we can win that race, I think internally we believe that we can win any of them. Our biggest battle, especially in these Playoffs is you’re racing against yourself. You cannot put yourself in a bad spot. You can’t have a pit road mistake. On the racetrack, I can’t put myself in a bad spot or get myself in the wall and lose a ton of points, so you hear when you go to Darlington, ‘Just go race the racetrack.’ Well, to me, in the Playoffs you’re kind of just racing against yourself. You cannot dig yourself in a deep hole and if you do dig yourself in a deep hole, it’s just hard to get out of, and this year, especially with how the Playoffs are – from fifth to dead last I think is like nine points. It’s never been that tight that I can remember, so pointing your way in is going to be a realistic thing to be able to do. We can’t control what the other guys do. We can only control what we do and that’s where I feel like we’re kind of just racing against ourselves.”

    ARE ANY OF THE ROUNDS HARDER THAN ANOTHER? “To be honest with you, I don’t know how it all lays out. I know what the first round looks like, but after that I couldn’t tell you. I just have been trying to take them one at a time. The first round is unique. You go to Atlanta, where anything can happen. And then you go to Watkins Glen, which sounds pretty typical, but we’ve got this new tire and nobody knows what it’s going to do, and then you go to Bristol, where we don’t know if tires are gonna last 180 laps or 40 laps. This first round, I would say, is the most diverse. I don’t think you get much more diverse than three totally different types of racetracks, but I don’t know. I know Martinsville is the second to last race, and I know Talladega is somewhere in there and Kansas and Vegas, but I don’t know what order they’re in.”

    WHAT HAVE THESE LAST FEW DAYS BEEN LIKE? “It’s been really cool, just the dynamic at the shop. If a Stewart-Haas car didn’t win Sunday night, Tuesday morning when everybody came in after Labor Day, it would have probably been the gloomiest, darkest shop in the entire industry, and now we’re probably the most electric, fired-up shop, at least the most fired up I’ve ever seen Stewart-Haas. Everybody’s got a pep in their step. Everybody is excited and if a Stewart-Haas car didn’t win Sunday night, then it would have been hard realistically to probably get cars to the racetrack these final 10 weeks and things probably would have been getting shut off and things like that, so for us to be able to win that race was pretty dang cool, just from the standpoint of what it means for Stewart-Haas Racing, so I’m definitely excited. I feel like it’s one of those things that we all internally feel like we can honestly go win the championship and that’s crazy probably coming from a guy that wasn’t even in the Playoffs until two days ago, but I think internally everybody believes it. We’ve seen Tony do it in 2011 and we’re kind of going with that same mindset. If we can win the Southern 500, why can’t we win more?

    IS THAT THE RALLYING CRY? “Yeah, I think so and I think when you look at the makeup of Stewart-Haas Racing a lot of it stems from Tony and the mental toughness and things that Tony has been able to do. I kind of mentioned it over there, momentum is a crazy thing in sports, and I kind of related it to NC State this past year in the NCAA Basketball Tournament. They go from not even having a prayer of making the NCAA Tournament, to winning the ACC Tournament and going all the way to the Final Four. I feel like we certainly could relate to that. When you have momentum and confidence, it just goes such a long way and I don’t see what team right now in this sport would have more momentum or confidence than we do. It’s just a different feel for the Playoffs than I’ve ever had. The last time I was here, we won the third race of the year and we had all year long to think about the Playoffs and now it’s just totally different. I’m excited and really feel like if we can get to Phoenix, we can get it done there. We’ve already proven it once.”

    HOW MUCH TURNOVER HAS THERE BEEN ON YOUR TEAM SINCE THE ANNOUNCEMENT? “The 14 team, we have not lost any road crew guys, any pit crew guys. There have been a couple shop guys that have left, but literally the day we found out all of the 14 road crew guys went over and met at the setup plate and literally all looked at each other in the eye and went one-by-one in a circle and said, ‘I’m in. I’m in until the end of the year.’ Even if we ran 35th, we were sticking it out to the end. No worries on the 14 side. The other teams have had a couple people leave, but I think it’s gonna be way harder for guys to leave now knowing that there’s a chance we win a championship.”

    IS IT JUST LIKE FLIPPING A SWITCH NOW INTO PLAYOFF MODE? “We’re going every week to win races, so our car preparation doesn’t necessarily change. Our attention to detail doesn’t necessarily change, but I think the mentality probably changes a little bit and then just even our race team. We’re in a little bit different situation. Penske has to worry about four race cars. Hendrick, Gibbs, they all have to worry about four cars. I’m in a really good spot. We have a four car team, but really all the focus is on me for the rest of the year. For us, I think that makes it a little bit easier to just put all the eggs in one basket and hopefully that will pay off for us.”

    WOULD THIS BE THE ULTIMATE TO WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP? “It would be pretty cool, I know that. I can’t think of a better way to end the story that Stewart-Haas Racing has written – to go from being one of the most dominant teams in the sport. It’s no lie that it’s been a struggle the last couple of years, the last race of the year going out on top. It would be pretty cool. I’ve been able to do it at BKR. We didn’t win the championship, but we won the last race and I definitely think we could do it again.”

    YOU MENTIONED NC STATE AND THEIR RUN. DO YOU CONSIDER YOURSELF AN UNDERDOG? “Oh yeah, I love being the underdog. I feel like I’ve been the underdog my whole career and I love feeling like my back is up against the wall, so I love when people doubt us, don’t think that we can do it. It definitely fires me up, motivates me. The last time we were in the Playoffs everybody said we’d be the first team out and we were four laps away from making the Championship 4. I know what our team is capable of and I know what I’m capable of when everything is executed perfectly, and there’s no reason why we can’t be the ones holding up the trophy at the end.”

    WHAT KEPT YOU FROM SHOOTING YOURSELVES IN THE FOOT THE FIRST TIME AROUND IN THE PLAYOFFS? “I don’t know, honestly. I think just trying to understand that risk versus reward. That’s a big thing that you just see guys do time and time again. They just shoot themselves in the foot. I mean, we’ve talked about it my entire career. Whenever the pressure is on, I’ve just seemed to run better and even going back to 2022 I think we had like three top fives and four top 10s all year leading up to the Playoffs and then we had three top fives in a row, six top 10s. We were just able to switch it on. Even just naturally, every season of my career the summer stretch has always been rough and the final 10 are really, really good. I definitely think that these final 10 could be really good for us. They’re all really good racetracks for me and we just have to execute. The Southern 500, like I’ve already said, is arguably the hardest race to win. It takes a good car. It obviously takes driving well and takes good pit stops and we didn’t shoot ourselves in the foot all night. We just stayed consistent. We didn’t hit grand slams, but we just hit doubles, singles all night long on pit road and that’s what you’re gonna have to do in the Playoffs. You can’t have uncontrolled tires. You can’t have pit road penalties. If we just do solid stuff, there’s no reason why we can’t make a deep run.”

    HAVING DONE IT BEFORE HELPS THIS TIME AROUND, KNOWING YOU KNOW HOW TO DO IT? “Yeah, I literally texted the team on Monday. I said, ‘Look guys, we won what people in the industry will probably say is the hardest race to win. If we can win that race, there’s no reason why we can’t win any of these next 10 and we just have to do the same things we did on Sunday night – nothing more and nothing less.’ I think that’s the big thing that’s encouraging for me is that before Sunday night, even our pit crew for example, probably hadn’t ran a couple pit stops under 10 seconds and Sunday night we ran 9.2s and 9.3s and now there’s a difference in thinking you can do it and knowing you can do it, and now our guys know that we can do it and that’s exciting for all of us. Now that we know that we can win, the pit crew guys, I’d never seen them like that before – even our shop crew guys – we all know we can win now and it’s just gonna light a fire.”

    YOUR JACK MAN WAS WORKING OUT MONDAY MORNING. “Yeah, and they didn’t leave the house until 6 a.m. Everybody is fired up. I can assure you there is nobody more motivated in the sport than the 14 guys right now, so it’s an exciting time for me to be able to drive this thing and looking forward to trying to make a run.”

    YOU MIGHT BE THE ONLY GUY IN THE TOP 16 THAT TESTED AT BRISTOL. “Yeah. NASCAR invited us thinking we weren’t gonna be in the Playoffs and we obviously are in now, so we were the only car. Buescher was there. He obviously didn’t make the Playoffs now, but we tested there about a month and a half ago and thought we’d learn a lot of stuff and hopefully we can apply that when we go.”

    WHAT DID YOU LEARN ABOUT THE TIRE? WILL WE SEE THE SAME THING? “I don’t know. I honestly have no idea. I seem to think like it won’t be like that, but my crew chief and engineers do, so I don’t know. I definitely think that I could see it going either way. Everybody says temperature related. Who knows? I think if guys start running up 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. This first round is kind of full of question marks and Bristol is certainly one of them.”

    WATKINS GLEN HAS A NEW TIRE. HAVE YOU LEARNED TO MANAGE TIRES BETTER? “Yeah. I definitely have gotten way better over time than I ever was. This is probably the best I’ve ever been at it, but I’m still not very good at it, so I don’t know. I feel like any time we’re slipping and sliding around are typically better racetracks for me, and I’m pretty excited about the fact that there could be a lot of fall off. This first round, I think, is a great opportunity for us. Bristol, we’ve always been good there. Watkins Glen, road courses we’re pretty good, and obviously the Fords are really, really good at the superspeedways. We know we’re gonna qualify good at Atlanta this week. We’re gonna have a good motor, a good car and we just have to capitalize on that. Hopefully, we can do that.”

    WHAT SCARES YOU? “Honestly, just myself. I can’t eliminate myself. Atlanta does scare me a little bit just because there obviously is the element of stuff happening that’s out of your control. It’s like a Daytona or Talladega, but that can happen anywhere. You never know what can happen, but that would be my biggest fear – something happening that’s outside of our control.”

    DOES THE TIRE AT WGI CHANGE THE STRATEGY FOR PITTING AT THE STAGE BREAKS? “I don’t’ know. I think until we get there it’s hard to say. Obviously, everything they’ve done with testing it’s like four seconds of fall off, but when we get there the track starts taking rubber it could be totally different. It’s hard to say until we actually get there. I don’t know what the stages even look like there, but you would think everybody is probably gonna take stage points that can get them. You just kind of have to do that in the Playoffs. You kind of throw away trying to win the race at the mercy of getting those points, so I would say everybody will probably go for stage points. Maybe the guys who are 30-40 points plus the cut line would fip it, but it’s definitely gonna be interesting because that race everybody else is gonna flip it. Nobody else is racing for points, so you’re gonna go from running in top 10 of the stage to restarting like 30th and then it’s gonna be a race through the field and that’s obviously where it can get hairy.”

    IS IT STRANGE TO START THE PLAYOFFS WITH A TEAM THAT IS CLOSING ITS DOORS AT THE END OF THE SEASON? “If anything, I think that’s what makes us even more scary, truthfully. We all have a chip on our shoulder to prove to the world that we can do it and there’s a lot of guys that still don’t have a job going into next year. They are trying to prove to another team that they can bring race-winning race cars and championship-winning race cars, so it doesn’t scare me. I know that Stewart-Haas is gonna give me everything I need. I know Ford is gonna give me everything I need, so it doesn’t scare me at all that we’re shutting down at the end of the year. If anything, as crazy as it sounds, I feel like it gives us a little bit of an advantage because no other team can relate to what we’re going through and that kind of makes us different.”

    IS IT AN ADVANTAGE FOR YOU TO BE THE ONLY CAR FROM SHR IN THE PLAYOFFS VERSUS TEAMS THAT HAVE FOUR CARS IN? “I definitely think that part of it is an advantage. The Hendrics of the world, the Gibbs, the Penskes, they’re trying to figure out how to make four cars the best they can go every week and then on the racetrack all four of those guys are gonna be fighting each other for points, where I have three teammates out there that can make it really hard to pass them for the other guys and when I get to them they can make it a little bit easier, so I definitely think that’s an advantage for me from on the racetrack and even off the racetrack. A perfect example is the 10 car these next three weeks is gonna go literally identical. Every single piece, part, setup, everything is gonna go identical to how we go, just so they can try stuff in practice and see if we can learn anything. Those other teams that have four cars, they’re not gonna be doing that. They’re gonna be doing everything they can to do for themselves, so that definitely makes it a little bit different for us.”

    NOBODY IS FACTORING THAT INTO IT. THAT DOES GIVE YOU AN ADVANTAGE. “Yeah, I think so. I mean, it’s definitely a unique angle that a lot of the other guys can’t play, not only on the racetrack but even from a personnel standpoint. Hopefully, our pit crew everything goes great, but we can put the best people that are performing the best at any point just because we’re really the only team that matters. I know that sounds kind of selfish, but that really is the truth. That’s all that matters right now at Stewart-Haas is the 14 car, so that definitely plays into us and gives us a little bit of an advantage.”

    DOES YOUR ROUND OF 8 EXPERIENCE A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO HELP THIS TIME AROUND? “I think so. I feel like we weren’t near the race team then that we are now, and we were able to truthfully be like six laps away from making the Championship 4. I know for a fact that I’m a way better race car driver than I was then. From a team standpoint, momentum standpoint, everything, we’re totally different than we were then and we were able to make a deep run. If we just do what we are capable of doing as a team, we can do it. It’s just a matter of doing it consistently. That’s been our biggest hiccup really for the last two or three years is we have flashes of really good speed and running up front and we just haven’t been able to do it week in and week out, but all we have to do is do it for 10 weeks and we can be a NASCAR Cup Series champion. Hopefully, we can put 10 weeks together.”

  • Hendrick Motorsports Media Advance: Atlanta

    Hendrick Motorsports Media Advance: Atlanta

    5 KYLE LARSON
    Age: 32 (July 31, 1992)
    Hometown: Elk Grove, California
    Last Week: 4th (Darlington)
    Crew Chief: Cliff Daniels
    Standings: 1st

    No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

    2024Cup CareerAtlanta
    Races2535613
    Wins427
    Poles521
    Top 5101142
    Top 10131774
    Laps Led1,0898,645440
    Stage Wins10603
    Average Finish13.614.218.8
    • Kyle Larson is the only driver to have led more than 1,000 laps this season. His total of 1,089 is second-best for his career through 26 races behind only his 2021 championship season (1,566).
    • The 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion is the top seed in the playoffs with an eight-point advantage over second place. He enters 35 markers above the elimination line.
    • Larson accounts for 49% of all laps led by Chevrolet drivers in 2024 (1,089 of 2,220).
    • Twelve of Larson’s 27 Cup wins have occurred on eight of the 10 playoff tracks (all but Atlanta Motor Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway).
    • The 32-year-old driver has run a series-high 3,500 laps in the top five in 2024.
    • The Elk Grove, California, native has 9.32 average running position, which also tops the series this season,

    9 CHASE ELLIOTT
    Age: 28 (Nov. 28, 1995)
    Hometown: Dawsonville, Georgia
    Last week: 11th (Darlington)
    Crew Chief: Alan Gustafson
    Standings: 7th (-26)

    No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts/Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

    2024Cup CareerAtlanta
    Races2631211
    Wins1191
    Poles12
    Top 571002
    Top 10121647
    Laps Led2135,308164
    Stage Wins1372
    Average Finish11.612.911.8
    • Chase Elliott enters the first race of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs at his home track of Atlanta Motor Speedway as the seventh seed, nine points above the elimination line.
    • The 2020 Cup Series champion has one win at Atlanta, coming in the summer of 2022 after leading 92 laps.
    • Elliott is one of four drivers with a top-10 average finish in the five Cup Series races at Atlanta since the 2022 reconfiguration (8.75).
    • Elliott has three victories in 39 starts on drafting tracks, most recently in the 2022 playoff race at Talladega Superspeedway.
    • The 28-year-old driver ranks second to teammate William Byron (three) in drafting track wins in the Next Gen car with two.
    • At Atlanta, both the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 and Elliott’s uniform will don special designs created by two Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta patients as part of the Chase Elliott Foundation’s Desi9n to Drive program.
    • Elliott’s uniform will be up for grabs in a sweepstakes fundraiser that runs through Oct. 9.

    24 WILLIAM BYRON
    Age: 26 (Nov. 29, 1997)
    Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina
    Last Week: 30th (Darlington)
    Crew Chief: Rudy Fugle
    Standings: 4th (-18)

    No. 24 Relay Payments Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

    2024Cup CareerAtlanta
    Races2624210
    Wins3132
    Poles113
    Top 55492
    Top 1013963
    Laps Led2592,880173
    Stage Wins1221
    Average Finish14.615.517.7
    • William Byron enters the first round of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs as the No. 4 seed, 17 points above the cutline. This is his sixth consecutive playoff appearance coming off of a Championship 4 showing last season.
    • The Charlotte, North Carolina, native has two wins at Atlanta Motor Speedway coming in the spring 2022 and summer 2023.
    • Since the reconfiguration of Atlanta, Byron has run within the top five for 380 laps – third-most – and within the top 10 for 668 laps – fourth-most.
    • The 26-year-old driver has the most wins on drafting tracks during the Next Gen era with three victories and ranks second in points earned among playoff drivers on drafting tracks this season with 129 points.
    • In the last eight drafting races, Byron has six top-10 finishes, including two wins.

    48 ALEX BOWMAN
    Age: 31 (April 25, 1993)
    Hometown: Tucson, Arizona
    Last Week: 19th (Darlington)
    Crew Chief: Blake Harris
    Standings: T-12th (-35)

     No. 48 Ally Racing Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

    2024Cup CareerAtlanta
    Races2631512
    Wins18
    Poles14
    Top 56382
    Top 1012913
    Laps Led141,315
    Stage Wins6
    Average Finish15.219.618.4
    • This weekend’s start of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series playoffs at Atlanta Motor Speedway marks Alex Bowman’s sixth appearance the postseason (2018-2022, 2024). Bowman advanced to the round of 12 in each of his past five appearances and made it to the round of 8 in 2020.
    • In seven events at playoff venues earlier this season, Bowman ranks 11th in points (183).
    • The 31-year-old has 12 top-10 finishes this season, already more than he scored in all of 2023.
    • At 11:30 a.m. local time Sunday at Atlanta, Bowman will be at the Hendrick Motorsports merchandise hauler signing autographs for fans with an exclusive wrist band. Want a wrist band? Be one of the first 100 to purchase a No. 48, 1:24 scale diecast at the merchandise hauler on-site. Fans can purchase during operational hours Friday, Saturday and Sunday morning.
    • For four years, Bowman and sponsor Ally have teamed up to support Best Friends Animal Society and their network of partners. Every race weekend, the pair donates $4,800 to help homeless pets. This weekend, the charitable donation will go to Hall County Animal Shelter, located approximately 80 miles northeast of Atlanta Motor Speedway.

    HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS /

    2024All-TimeAtlanta
    Races261,37171*
    Wins9*310*17*
    Poles6**252*5
    Top 531*1,263*65*
    Top 1050*2,162*102*
    Laps Led1,57581,332*3,659*
    Stage Wins121105

    *Most
    **Tied for most

    • Hendrick Motorsports has won three of the five races at Atlanta Motor Speedway under the current configuration put in place in 2022. William Byron has two of those victories.
    • All four Hendrick Motorsports cars are in the playoffs in the same season for the sixth time. The organization has registered 58 playoff wins, the most by 21.
    • Hendrick Motorsports has gone to victory lane 17 times at Atlanta, the fifth-most of any track and the most of any NASCAR Cup Series team. That includes eight different winners, also the most. That list is led by Jeff Gordon with five.
    • The No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevy team leads the Cup Series in fastest average four-tire pit stop time (10.759 seconds) and also turned in the fastest stop of the year, a 9.076-second service at Texas in April. The No. 24 team is sixth in four-tire average at 10.907 seconds and the No. 48 squad is just behind in seventh at 10.977.
    • With five wins at drafting tracks in the Next Gen Car, Hendrick Motorsports leads all organizations.

    QUOTABLE /

    Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on going to Atlanta Motor Speedway: “Going into Atlanta, it’s good to have the points lead. We have run well there but I looked at the stats and I think I have one finish better than 30th since the reconfiguration. Hopefully, we can battle for stage wins and be there at the end.”

    Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts/Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on the eighth edition of the Desi9n to Drive program: “Gavin and Logan have both designed not only my car, but my helmet, my fire suit, my shoes, my gloves. The contest really covered all the bases, and those fellas won. So, I’m excited to see their stuff come to life. It’s always an exciting weekend for me to see their imagination come to life for one, but it’s really better to see them at the track and to host them and for them to come and have an experience. But just to get out there and to see their work on the track has been really fun to be a part of, and I’m looking forward to it again this weekend.”

    William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Relay Payments Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on starting the playoffs: “I feel like for us, having the stamina throughout the year to get to this part of the year and put your best performances on display, so, I feel like we’re in that position where we’re well-positioned. We have good, decent playoff points – we would’ve liked to have had more this year – but decent playoff points and I think we just have to get through the rounds one by one and see how they go.”

    Blake Harris, crew chief of the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on Atlanta Motor Speedway: “I think Atlanta is quite the wild card this year. You’ve got a little bit of everything and a lot of unknowns. I think for us, starting with Atlanta this week, we will certainly focus on trying to stay out of everyone else’s mess. We’ve had some fast race cars there. In the spring (race), think we got wrecked at not even a lap and a half, so we’re just really trying to avoid that and execute at a high level. We’ll do everything in our power to not let the variables get us.”