Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Larson Works Overtime To Win Dramatic Brickyard 400 in Return to Oval

    Larson Works Overtime To Win Dramatic Brickyard 400 in Return to Oval

    INDIANAPOLIS (Sunday, July 21, 2024) – Less than two months separated agony from ecstasy for Kyle Larson at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    Larson left IMS on May 26 disappointed after finishing 18th in his first Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge start after qualifying fifth and leading four laps in “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.” On Sunday, Larson stood triumphantly on Victory Podium and kissed the fabled Yard of Bricks after completing a wild climb to an overtime victory in the Brickyard 400 presented by PPG.

    “This is just such a prestigious place, such hallowed ground,” Larson said. “Pretty neat just to get an opportunity to race here on the oval again. What a job by our team. Never gave up at all. We just fought and dug and had things work out.

    “I love all you Indiana fans, and I know you guys love me, too. How about we come back next May and try to kiss these bricks in an Indy car? I think everything comes full circle, and everything’s meant to be. And today definitely felt meant to be for us.”

    Larson, who started fifth, won the race under caution in the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet on the second attempt in overtime. Pole sitter Tyler Reddick finished second in the No. 45 The Beast Unleashed Toyota. Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Ryan Blaney finished third in the No. 12 Menards/Atlas Ford fielded by IMS owner Roger Penske’s team.

    2021 Cup Series champion Larson earned the record-extending 11th Brickyard 400 victory for Hendrick Motorsports on a day in which team chairman Rick Hendrick led the field to the green flag as the honorary driver of the Chevrolet Camaro Pace Car.

    This was the first win on the iconic 2.5-mile oval for Larson, as the Brickyard 400 returned to that circuit for the first time since 2020 after three years on the 14-turn, 2.439-mile road course at the Racing Capital of the World. But it was the second IMS victory for Larson, who won the Driven2SaveLives BC39 USAC Midget race in 2021 on The Dirt Track at IMS, a quarter-mile dirt oval inside Turn 3.

    Larson’s path to victory was paved by equal parts of aggression and good luck. He drove his way through the field after his last pit stop on Lap 123, slicing up and down the entire width of racing surface to gain ground on the leaders.

    He took advantage of fresher tires than the leaders to reach the top five by passing Denny Hamlin on Lap 148 and climbed to fourth by passing Zane Smith on Lap 149. By then, Larson latched onto the rear bumper of Daniel Hemric’s No. 31 Cirkul Chevrolet. 2018 Brickyard 400 winner Brad Keselowski led in the No. 6 Body Guard Ford, with Blaney second.

    But Keselowski made his previous pit stop on Lap 102, and his fuel-saving efforts appeared to maybe need more caution laps to try and stretch to the finish at the regulation distance. That gamble rolled snake eyes when Kyle Busch’s No. 8 Cheddar’s Patriotic Chevrolet and Hamlin’s No. 11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota made side-to-side contact in Turn 3 on Lap 158, triggering a caution that forced overtime.

    As the field lined up to take the green flag for the first overtime restart on Lap 162, Keselowski took the inside lane, with Blaney to his outside and Larson behind Keselowski in third. But Keselowski’s car began to run out of gas, and he dove into the pits. Larson moved from third to first in the restart order in the inside lane and powered past Blaney in Turn 1 on Lap 162, taking a lead he would never lose.

    “I knew the 6 (Keselowski) was probably going to run out if it went green, and at the restart, I couldn’t believe they stayed out,” Blaney said. “I knew there was no way they were going to make it, so I obviously chose the top (lane) because he might run out in the restart zone. And he runs out coming to the green, so he gets to go to pit road and the 5 (Larson) gets promoted. Luck of the day right there, I guess.”

    But there still was more drama. As Larson gapped Blaney in the short chute between Turns 1 and 2 on the restart, a five-car chain reaction collision occurred at the end of the front straightaway and in Turn 1. That triggered another caution and then a red flag lasting 17 minutes to straighten a concrete barrier at the exit of pit road moved by contact in the incident.

    Larson’s car needed a bump start from a tow truck on the front straightaway to restart after the red flag period ended. At the restart on Lap 166, Larson and Blaney made side-to-side contact before Turn 1, with Larson pulling ahead and staying out front down the back straightaway. Meanwhile, the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford of Ryan Preece spun in Turn 2 and was mired in the infield grass in Turn 2.

    The field continued to race under green, with Larson taking the white flag in the lead on Lap 167. Preece tried to drive his car out of the grass but couldn’t due to a flat tire, and the caution flag flew to end the race. Larson had enough fuel to cruise around and take the checkered.

    “With the way the strategy was working out, with Brad running out of fuel and me inheriting the front row and all that, just a lot had to fall into place,” Larson said. “Thankfully it did. I just can’t believe it. It’s surreal to win here.”

    Reddick, who led a race-high 40 laps, passed Blaney on the last lap to take second place.

    The next major spectator event this season at IMS is the TireRack.com Battle on the Bricks IMSA sports car event Sept. 20-22 on the IMS road course. Visit IMS.com to buy tickets or for more information.

  • CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Kyle Larson, Chevrolet Take 2024 Brickyard 400 Victory

    CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Kyle Larson, Chevrolet Take 2024 Brickyard 400 Victory

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT
    JULY 21, 2024

    Kyle Larson, Chevrolet Takes 2024 Brickyard 400 Victory

    · In the NASAR Cup Series’ return to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval, Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson became the next driver to add to Chevrolet’s legacy at the famed 2.5-mile venue – driving his No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 to the win in 30th anniversary of the Brickyard 400.

    · The victory marks Larson’s fourth trip to victory lane in NASCAR’s top division in 2024 – making the 31-year-old Elk Grove, California, native the winningest driver in the series this season.

    · The trip to victory lane is Larson’s 27th triumph in 352 NASCAR Cup Series starts. This marks the 2021 champion’s third crown jewel victory, with his other crown jewel victories including the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (May 2021) and the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway (Sept. 2023).

    · Larson extended Chevrolet’s series-leading win record on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval configuration to 18 victories in 28 NASCAR Cup Series races – a winning percentage of 64.3 percent at the 2.5-mile oval.

    · Chevrolet now sits at a double-digit win count in NASCAR’s top division this season, with Larson taking the Bowtie brand to its 10th victory in 22 NASCAR Cup Series this season.

    INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (July 21, 2024) – Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1, added to Chevrolet’s legacy at the “Racing Capital of the World” by taking the checkered-flag in the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The victory – Larson’s fourth win of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season and his 27th all-time in NASCAR’s top division – comes in NASCAR’s much anticipated return to the track’s famed 2.5-mile oval configuration, marking the crown jewel event’s first appearance in the Next Gen era.

    “What a job by our team,” said Larson. “I mean, never gave up at all. We had the pit stop issue there early on. Just fought, dug and had things work out. Just can’t thank them enough. HENDRICKCARS.COM, Valvoline, Chevrolet, JINYA Ramen Bar, Prime; all the fans, too. I love you, Indiana fans. I know you guys love me, too.”

    Larson added to an already prestigious list of drivers that have taken the Bowtie brand to victory lane at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, with the 31-year-old Elk Grove, California, native delivering Chevrolet its 18th victory in 28 all-time NASCAR Cup Series races at the 2.5-mile oval. This isn’t Chevrolet’s first trip to victory lane at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this season. Larson’s victory is the manufacturer’s second crown jewel triumph at the famed oval this season, with Team Chevy’s Josef Newgarden also driving his No. 2 Chevrolet to his second-straight victory in the Indianapolis 500 just a few months ago.

    The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Richmond Raceway with the Cook Out 400 on Sunday, August 11, at 6 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on the USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10:

    POS. DRIVER

    1st Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1

    8th Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Freeway Insurance Camaro ZL1

    10th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1

    WITH 22 NASCAR CUP SERIES RACES COMPLETE:

    Wins: 10

    Poles: 7

    Top-Five Finishes: 39

    Top-10 Finishes: 82

    Stage Wins: 12


    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:

    Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 1st

    Kyle, you just won the Brickyard 400. You’ve won some big races in your career. This is Indianapolis. Is this ranked No. 1 now?

    “It’s for sure up there. Like you mentioned, this is just such a prestigious place.. such hallowed ground. Pretty neat to get an opportunity to race here on the oval again.

    What a job by our team. I mean, never gave up at all. We had the pit stop issue there early on. Just fought, dug and had things work out.

    Just can’t thank them enough. HENDRICKCARS.COM, Valvoline, Chevrolet, JINYA Ramen Bar, Prime; all the fans, too. I love you, Indiana fans. I know you guys love me, too. How about we come back next May and try to kiss these bricks in an INDYCAR?”

    Does this make up for the month of May when you left disappointed?

    “It does.. I guess a little bit. I wish we could have got to do both and run the 600. We had a phenomenal car for that race, too.

    I think everything just comes full circle. Everything is meant to be. Today definitely was meant to be for us. With the way the strategy was working out, Brad (Keselowski) running out of fuel and me inheriting the front row; a lot had to fall into place. Thankfully it did.

    I can’t believe it. It’s surreal to win here. Can’t wait to kiss the bricks with my team. Rick Hendrick, who is here; my family, my friends. My parents are here. We’ll be celebrating these next couple weeks.”

    AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Campers Inn RV Camaro ZL1

    Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident in Stage Two.

    Finished: 37th

    Allmendinger on the accident that ended his day early at Indianapolis Motor Speedway:

    “I just saw everyone start checking up. I actually saw the No. 21 (Harrison Burton) on the bottom, so I went to go to the middle. Right as I went to the middle, the No. 24 (William Byron) was coming across. It’s just kind of the story of the year.. wrong place, wrong time.”

    How sketchy was it in the back of the pack?

    “I mean on the restarts, everyone is going to be aggressive because you know that’s the time to make up the most starts. It’s tough to pass. I felt like on our No. 16 Campers RV Chevy, we missed it. At the beginning of the race, we were really loose, so we lost some track position. We started getting it back. I felt like we kind of got into that 15th to 20th place range that we thought we would be. It’s just disappointing, but it’s part of it. The way the wreck happened, it was kind of out of my control.”

    William Byron, No. 24 Valvoline Camaro ZL1

    Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident in Stage Two.

    Finished: 38th

    Byron on the accident that ended the No. 24 Valvoline Camaro ZL1 team’s race early:

    “We got back there in traffic. It seemed like the pit stop sequence didn’t go our way there. The No. 14 (Chase Briscoe) was just being a squirrel back in the pack. He drove up in front of me. I had to lift way off the corner and I got run over. Hate it for our team. We had an amazing No. 24 Valvoline Chevy. We were running there on the right strategy in the top two or three; got back there in the pack and got wrecked. Appreciate everybody at Valvoline, Chevrolet. We had a great car. We’ll go on over the break and try to get some more wins.”

    Is it even more frustrating that it’s the Brickyard?

    “Yeah, I mean it sucks. We put a lot of effort into this race, but we put a lot of effort in every week.”

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Kleenex 100 Years/Donors Choose Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 11th

    “Our No. 47 Kleenex 100 Years / Donors Choose Chevy was really good. Qualifying was really solid yesterday and that set us up to get points in both stages. The way those cautions fell, we could have done with one less of them. Running in the top-10 there, it sputtered a little bit coming to the white and then the caution came out, so that was a fortunate one.

    All-in-all, happy about our day and good momentum going into the off weekends. We have had a solid month-and-a-half; two crashes late in the race, and a set of top-15s. Other than that, we have been battling for top-10s, so really happy.”

    Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 31st

    “Bummer of a day. We didn’t really have a very good day going with our No. 48 Ally Camaro. We were pretty fast in clean air, but just really tight in dirty air. We were stuck in traffic there, and getting blocked all the way down the straightaway for 27th was pretty frustrating. We just didn’t need to be that far back in position. We should have been running better than that and eventually the way the strategy and the cautions fell, we got buried there. We had a lot going on and my ass was on fire at one point, so interesting day, for sure.”

    Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Zeigler Auto Group Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 12th

    “It was just hard to keep on the right end of it with fuel strategy and everything, but I think we did a really good job. The yellow caught us off guard, but I think that was the difference maker in us making it. Our No. 77 Zeigler Auto Group Chevy was super strong, and to be able to capitalize from Saturday was big. We put ourselves in a hole, but we were able to claw our way up when it was really hard to pass. We put together a really good day for the No. 77 team.”

    Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Freeway Insurance Camaro ZL1

    Finished: 8th

    “The No. 99 Freeway Insurance Chevy team did a great job with the strategy. Our car wasn’t horrible, we just never had the track position that we wanted to, to show the speed of the car. We needed to be faster on the straightaways. But all-in-all, I felt like we had a decent Chevy. Still have some work to do, but the team executed a great strategy, so we will take it.”


    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.

  • Blaney Leads Ford with Third Place Run at Indianapolis

    Blaney Leads Ford with Third Place Run at Indianapolis

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Brickyard 400 Post Race | Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Uunday, July 21, 2024

    UNOFFICIAL FORD FINISHING RESULTS

    3rd – Ryan Blaney

    6th – Todd Gilliland

    7th – Austin Cindric

    9th – Noah Gragson

    16th – Michael McDowell

    18th – Cody Ware

    20th – Justin Haley

    21st – Brad Keselowski

    22nd – Chris Buescher

    26th – Ryan Preece

    34th – Joey Logano

    35th – Josh Berry

    36th – Harrison Burton

    39th – BJ McLeod

    Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Menards/Atlas Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 3rd)

    “It was hard fought. I thought we had a really good shot to win today. I appreciate Menards and Atlas and Ford and the 12 group for putting us in position. Our car was fast and I thought we had really good strategy. We were the front guy of having to save a little bit of gas but I thought we put ourselves in a great spot. I knew the 6 was probably going to run out if it went green. We came to the restart and I couldn’t believe they stayed out. Ther was no way they were going to make it. So I obviously chose the top because he might run out in the restart zone. And he winds up coming to the green so he gets to go to pit road and the 5 gets promoted. Luck of the day right there I guess. I don’t even know what to get mad about. I am mad about losing this race because I thought we were in the perfect position. Once I lost control of the race, obviously I would have been on the bottom, but I thought the 6 would run out in the restart zone or on the back. It stinks to lose it that way. I appreciate the effort. I hate we don’t get to celebrate with Mr. Penske and with everyone from Penske here. That stings a lot. We just have to keep going, that is all we can do.”

    DO YOU SEE ANY WAY TO CHANGE THAT RESTART SITUATION AS LATE AS IT HAPPENED AFTER THE CHOOSE? IS THERE ANY OTHER WAY TO DO IT?

    “Yeah, call it off and rechoose. Because now you promote the third place guy before the second place guy if the leader has problems. That isn’t right. It is just dumb luck. At this race track where the bottom is preferred. I don’t know. I am just upset. That is a heartbreaker. We did everything right today. We were in prime position to win and it just didn’t work out for us. I just got unlucky. I am not going to sleep very good tonight, I will tell you that. I appreciate Team Penske and everybody for the fast car. We have been super fast and it showed again today. It just wasn’t meant to be.”

    Todd Gilliland, No. 38 gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 6th)

    “I think our Mustang was really competitive. We were a little tight on exit the whole race, but that is part of it. Our car had good speed when we stayed up there. It was an interesting race. It was hard to pass. We didn’t do good on the strategy for the middle part of the race but then it put us in a position where it worked out for us at the end. Just disapointing a little bit. I was fourth on the last restart and probably should have chose the bottom looking back on it, but that is how it goes sometimes. You live and you learn.”

    Austin Cindric, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 7th)

    “I did my race team zero favors today with qualifying as poorly as I did putting it in the wall and then speeding on the first pit stop. Good rally by everybody. I felt like our Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse was quick today, we just had to get it in the right place on the race track. We saved fuel and Brian did the right things with strategy and we earned a good result because of it. I wish it would have gone green there at the end because I think I would have gotten a few more spots with the fuel situation. Overall, a nice reward going into a little break here.”

    Noah Gragson, No. 10 Bass Pro Shops Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 9th)

    “We struggled at the beginning part of the weekend and definitely grateful to come back. I don’t know officially where we will be with those guys running out of gas off of Turn 4, but we had plenty of fuel. Drew Blickensderfer called a great race and it is always fun to have Bass Pro Shops on the hood. We struggled on Friday in practice and got a little better in qualifying, qualified 21st and we just made progress all day. We got a Stage point in Stage 1. Strategy, you never know when the caution is going to come out, but Drew made some great calls. I had more gas than the rest of them there and for a second I thought it was going to be Nashville 2.0 with a bunch of restarts but we were able to hang on and come out of here unscathed.”


    Joey Logano, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Accident Quote)

    WHAT HAPPENED? “It seems like they were three wide a couple of rows behind me and the wreck caught me, unfortunately. It looks like Hocevar sent it down the center and just kind of stuffed it in there late. That seems like something he has done a lot recently. Unfortunately it caught up to me. He right reared Jimmie into my left rear and nosed our Shell Pennzoil Mustang into the wall. It is a bummer. You come here to Indy once a year and all you dream of is kissing the bricks. My team gave me a great race car and we were the leader of our strategy and that is kind of all you can hope for, to et to the lead of your strategy. And we were going to have a shorter pit stop and we were going to try to gain some spots the restart as a lot of guys were staying out. We could have a shorter stop than them and that is when we were going to cycle back up to the front, hopefully, but we never got to see it through.”

    Josh Berry No. 4 Panini/Caitlin Clark Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Accident Quote)

    WHAT HAPPENED? “I am not entirely sure without seeing the replay. It looked like the 19 got spun out and we were all just stacking and I think I got clipped from behind and turned into the wall. It is an unfortunate end. It has been a tough weekend. Today, our car was really competitive. I was happy with the car. We started in the back and never could get the track position. I had a tough day on pit road too. Every time we got to the top 20 we would get knocked back.”

    WHAT WAS YOUR FIRST EXPERIENCE LIKE RUNNING THE OVAL HERE?

    “It was a lot of fun and honestly I had a good experience today. We passed cars and had a good balance throughout the race. I was happy with it. We needed something strategy wise to go our way to get up front. All in all the guys did a great job. I put us in a hole qualifying but the car was pretty solid today. We have some things to clean up but we will go get ‘em next time.”

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Indianapolis Post-Race Report – 07.21.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Indianapolis Post-Race Report – 07.21.24

    REDDICK, BELL AND WALLACE EARN TOP-FIVES IN THE BRICKYARD 400
    Reddick leads the most laps from pole and finishes runner-up in Crown Jewel return

    INDIANAPOLIS (July 21, 2024) – Starting from pole and leading the most laps (40), 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick came home second in Sunday’s Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Reddick had speed all day in his No. 45 Toyota Camry XSE, leading the majority of Stage 1 as cars split strategies throughout the stage and race. Towards the end of the 160-lap race, Reddick faced an issue on pit road, but methodically marched his way through the field in the final 30 laps and was within striking distance of his second win at the “Racing Capital of the World,” on the final restart, but settled for second. With the result, Reddick remains 15 points behind the regular season points lead. The runner-up finish was Reddick’s series-leading 15th top-10 finish of the season and fifth top-10 in a row.

    Christopher Bell and Bubba Wallace also finished the day in the top-five, coming home fourth and fifth, respectively. Both Camry XSEs hung around the top-10 most of the afternoon and converted on solid finishes as cars dove for pitlane over the final few caution flags, to earn their seventh and fourth top-fives this season. The result from Wallace now puts him less than 10 points out of the Playoffs.

    John Hunter Nemechek also had a solid day with his No. 42 Toyota Camry XSE, starting 10th and leading 14 laps in Stage 2, but got caught up in a Stage 3 incident, which resulted in a 29th-place finish.

    Toyota Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Race 22 of 36 – 160 Laps, 400 Miles

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

    1st, Kyle Larson*

    2nd, TYLER REDDICK

    3rd, Ryan Blaney*

    4th, CHRISTOPHER BELL

    5th, BUBBA WALLACE

    23rd, TY GIBBS

    27th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.

    28th, ERIK JONES

    29th, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK

    32nd, DENNY HAMLIN

    33rd, JIMMIE JOHNSON

    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Finishing Position: 2nd

    Talk us through your race today and those late-race restarts?

    “Yeah, I mean me and Kyle (Larson) just, were the first few cars on that alternate strategy. We had that issue on pit road. I think he had some issue on pit road as well that put him back there. Just didn’t have anything to lose. A great effort by all of us, the car went through the field. Unfortunately, when Kyle got to me and passed me like he did, I wasn’t expecting it. It was really creative, and he continued to catch the rest of the field and pass cars. I wish I could’ve seen that one coming and maybe defended that better. It was a great way to make a pass. It unfortunately means we bring home our Beast Unleashed Toyota Camry second. But good points day. Didn’t score as many as the 5 (Larson), but nonetheless, a fairly-solid points day.”

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

    Finishing Position: 4th

    How was the race today?

    “It was a little bit of a struggle today for our Rheem Camry, but Adam (Stevens, crew chief) and William (Hartman, engineer) and (Chris) Whitenight (engineer) had a great strategy and we were able to run it out of gas and get a good finish out of it. Something to build on and hopefully we can improve after the break and come out strong for Richmond.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, No. 23 U.S. Air Force Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

    Finishing Position: 5th

    How was your race?

    “We were fifth – what a day. I just did not do a good job on Friday and Saturday and set us behind for track position. I really didn’t know what our car had, but I knew the people we had on it and that is what matters the most. I appreciate Bootie (Barker, crew chief) and the gang for just giving me a car to work with. The No. 23 U.S. Air Force Toyota Camry was really, really fast. It felt really good. After a few laps, I was like, I don’t know what we have – but it is good to be back on the oval. The finish is making my mood better, but it was really difficult to pass. All-in-all, a good day. A good points day.”

    JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 42 Pye Barker Fire & Safety Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB

    Finishing Position: 29th

    Walk us through what happened on that incident?

    “I changed lanes there after the start/finish line, went to the bottom. I had a pretty good run. Everyone started checking up going into (turn) one. I checked up and I think I got hooked in the left rear here. Not really sure, moved down and I think Daniel (Hemric) got me. It stinks. Our Pye Barker Toyota Camry XSE was really fast today. We led laps. Not leading laps just in a speedway race, actually leading laps there. Proud of all the guys. Proud of the effort. Pye Barker Fire & Safety colors looked really good today. Thank you to everyone. Toyota, TRD (Toyota Racing Development, Inc.). Everyone to keep us safe. That was a really hard hit. But overall, really excited for a couple weeks off after the last few weeks. But, proud I’ve been able to show speed three of the last five weeks. Looking forward to getting back after the break and seeing what we can do.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 32nd

    Are you okay and what happened?

    “I couldn’t see. There was a car coming across the track and I hit him.”

    Why were the restarts so hectic today?

    “It was because you couldn’t pass. Yeah, we’re all just running in a line there and saving fuel. It’s like a speedway race. But you know, we were doing everything we could to get to the finish. Didn’t make it.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, No. 84 Carvana Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB

    Finishing Position: 33rd

    What happened there?
    “I was cruising along on the bottom and got hit in the right rear and got turned into the outside fence at that point. Those restarts are just so aggressive, everybody is pushing to get to the end of the race, and it is go time. Sadly, those pushes didn’t line-up right. I don’t know what started that but something on the outside happened, and they collected me and off and around we went. It was great to be back. Our cars were driving nice all weekend. Unfortunately, in qualifying, we just missed our balance, but very competitive in the race. We drove from 33rd to 17th, and then actually got to 11th there. All-in-all, a strong Carvana Camry, and it felt nice behind the wheel. I’m starting to understand the Next Gen vehicle. I think our group is starting to understand what we need for the cars. It was a great day for us in general. 42 (John Hunter Nemechek) has been in the top-five all day, so hopefully we can have a good finish.”

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. for more than 65 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our nearly 1,500 dealerships.

    Toyota directly employs more than 49,000 people in the U.S. who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of more than 34 million cars and trucks at our nine manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 10th 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 28 electrified options.

    Through its Driving Possibilities initiative, the Toyota USA Foundation has committed to creating innovative educational programs within, and in partnership with, historically underserved and diverse communities near the company’s U.S. operating sites.

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

  • TEAM PENSKE AND PPG EXTEND LONG-TERM PARTNERSHIP

    TEAM PENSKE AND PPG EXTEND LONG-TERM PARTNERSHIP

    Josef Newgarden to Continue Racing No. 2 PPG Chevrolet in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES

    MOORESVILLE, NC (July 21, 2024) – The 40-plus year partnership between Team Penske and PPG – one of the longest-running business relationships in motorsports history – will continue in 2024 and beyond with today’s announcement of a multi-year extension of PPG’s sponsorship across the team’s NASCAR and INDYCAR programs.

    The distinctive blue-and-white PPG paint scheme will continue to be featured in NTT INDYCAR SERIES competition as two-time series champion and back-to-back Indianapolis 500 winner, Josef Newgarden, will race the No. 2 PPG Chevrolet in 2024 and into the future. Under the partnership extension, PPG will continue to serve as an associate partner on the No. 12 Chevrolet driven by two-time INDYCAR champion Will Power, and the No. 3 Chevrolet driven by six-time INDYCAR SERIES race winner Scott McLaughlin. PPG will also continue as a Team Penske partner in the NASCAR Cup Series, serving as an associate sponsor of the No. 2 Ford Mustang driven by 2022 DAYTONA 500 champion Austin Cindric, the No. 12 Ford Mustang driven by reigning Cup Series champion Ryan Blaney, and the No. 22 Ford Mustang driven by two-time Cup Series champion Joey Logano.

    “Our relationship with PPG was really one of the first business-to-business partnerships of its kind in motorsports,” said Team Penske President Tim Cindric. “It began over 40 years ago and we are really proud of everything we have accomplished together on and off the race track. Their commitment to motorsports has been far-reaching. We are looking forward to continuing to wear their colors in the winner’s circle for years to come.”

    The Team Penske and PPG partnership began with the 1984 INDYCAR SERIES season. Over the last 40-plus years, Team Penske and PPG have amassed unparalleled successes together. Notable accomplishments include, 17 Indianapolis 500 victories, 11 INDYCAR titles, four NASCAR Cup Series championships, three DAYTONA 500 wins, seven NASCAR Xfinity Series titles, four Australian SuperCars Championship triumphs and a Bathurst 1000 victory.

    “I am honored and excited to continue representing PPG in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES,” said Newgarden. “They are a legacy partner not only of Team Penske, but of the series as well. A company with terrific products deserves a beautiful paint scheme and the No. 2 PPG Chevrolet certainly has that. Fans love it as much as we do. I have a lot of wins with PPG and I am looking forward to plenty more in the future.”

    Building on the partnership with Team Penske, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS) also announced today that PPG has extended its title sponsorship of the NASCAR Cup Series Brickyard 400, a crown jewel of the NASCAR season, for multiple years. In addition, PPG will continue as the Official Paint and Finishing Supplier of IMS.

    “We are excited to build upon our extensive history with Team Penske, INDYCAR, and IMS,” said Tim Knavish, PPG chairman and chief executive officer. “To be able to expand and strengthen these relationships speaks to the commitment and success we’ve had together. I look forward to seeing the PPG name on Team Penske cars and at the Brickyard 400 for years to come.”

    Team Penske’s most recent NASCAR victory at IMS came with Cindric in 2021 on the famed facility’s road course behind the wheel of the No. 22 PPG Ford Mustang. Team Penske and PPG have visited victory lane together 13 times across INDYCAR and NASCAR competition as a primary partner.

    “For more than four decades, PPG has been one of the most trusted, innovative and dedicated partners in motorsports,” said Roger Penske. “We look forward to building on our long-term relationship with PPG at Team Penske for many years to come. We are also excited about the opportunities that lie ahead as we continue to feature PPG and their commitment to enhancing our communities across INDYCAR and at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.”

    ABOUT PPG: WE PROTECT AND BEAUTIFY THE WORLD®

    At PPG (NYSE:PPG), we work every day to develop and deliver the paints, coatings and specialty materials that our customers have trusted for 140 years. Through dedication and creativity, we solve our customers’ biggest challenges, collaborating closely to find the right path forward. With headquarters in Pittsburgh, we operate and innovate in more than 70 countries and reported net sales of $17.7 billion in 2022. We serve customers in construction, consumer products, industrial, and transportation markets and aftermarkets. To learn more, visit www.ppg.com.

    ABOUT TEAM PENSKE

    Team Penske is one of the most successful teams in the history of professional sports. Cars owned and prepared by Team Penske have produced more than 630 major race wins, over 690 pole positions and 44 championships across open-wheel, stock car and sports car racing competition. Over the course of its 58-year history, the team has also earned 20 Indianapolis 500 victories, three Daytona 500 Championships, a Formula 1 win, victories in the 24 Hours of Daytona and the 12 Hours of Sebring, along with a win in Australia’s legendary Bathurst 1000 race. In 2024, Team Penske currently competes in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES and the NASCAR Cup Series. Through a Team Penske global partnership, Porsche Penske Motorsport races in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and the World Endurance Championship this season.

  • Toyota Racing – NCS Indianapolis Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 07.20.24

    Toyota Racing – NCS Indianapolis Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 07.20.24

    Toyota Racing – Tyler Reddick
    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    INDIANAPOLIS (July 20, 2024) – 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick was made available to the media on Saturday after earning the pole position for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It is Reddick’s second pole position of the season (Darlington) and eighth overall. Reddick also won the pole on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course in 2022, before winning the race that same season.

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

    Can you tell us more about that lap and what it means to be racing on the oval this weekend?

    “I was one of the last cars to go in Group B, so I watched a lot of drivers in round one have issues in turn four and a couple of other areas on the race track. It definitely seemed like it was easy to overstep the boundaries. I wanted to put down a good lap in that first round – and it was a very solid lap. We knew we had a solid car, and it was going to be important to make the right adjustments and back it up in round two. We had a little bit of pace fall off in round two from round one at first, but nevertheless, I thought we did a good job with the adjustments, and we were able to lay a lap down good enough to claim the pole.”

    How excited are you to race on the oval this season?

    “I have been excited to return and race on this oval, but I’ve been torn, naturally, because we’ve ran the road course here and have been very strong. I got my second career win here, so I was a little conflicted, but certainly I could see it in my team and at the shop – a lot of individuals that have ran the Brickyard for a lot of years, on the team, are really excited to return. You could see it in the fans, and in some ways, myself. It was a different feeling coming here and running the road course than it is when you run the oval, so I’m glad we are able to come back and give it another shot, especially on the 30th year of running here. There is a lot of huge moments that have happened here, so I’m glad to be back on the oval and excited for what the day may hold for us tomorrow.”

    Would it be different for you to win on the oval?

    “I feel like I celebrated pretty hard when I won here in 2022, so I just hope to match it again.”

    Are you expecting to be able to pass tomorrow or not?

    “I think when cars have kind of stacked up with one another – there will be opportunities to pass, but what we had in practice was cars were pretty strung out, and not really running in tight traffic for long periods of time. The tires hold on better. These tires have shown more to be sensitive to heat more so than wear. It is kind of a peak of what it could look like, but I expect when we are more packed up – like we saw in qualifying today – it is easy to make mistakes, when those mistakes happen, drivers will have opportunities to pass. That’s how I’m looking at, but certainly, if you take five of the strongest cars and line them up, it will be really hard for the guy in fifth to make a charge to get through all of them. You are really counting on somebody to make a mistake and get too aggressive, lose the nose or get loose to really be able to make a move.”

    How important is it to start on the pole?

    “It’s a big deal. Just starting towards the front is huge, but any additional spots we can get, once we got inside the seventh/eighth window is going to be huge for stage points in the beginning if it plays out, somewhat naturally, but also pit road here is narrow. These cars are wider than the gen 6 car, and the gen 6 race here that I was a part of, pit road was sketchy already, so expect pit road to be pretty chaotic already for the majority of the field and us having the option to choose first is going to really help us, I feel.”

    When Denny Hamlin is starting next to you, does it make you race any differently?

    “Well, if I tear it up, he’s paying for it (laughs). It’s his car. I try not to use that against him. I honestly feel like we race each other very fair, but hard. I’ve learned a lot about racing from him as well. I feel like we have a good level of trust and respect for one another, but obviously, when we come to a place like this (Indianapolis Motor Speedway), I know how badly he wants to win here. And I know how bad I want to win here. It’ll just be something we’ll have to manage throughout the day, and we’ll just see how it goes. Obviously, he and the 11 team are stout. The 5 (Kyle Larson), the 9 (Chase Elliott), those are guys that have been good all year long. But yeah, I wonder if that’s something he thinks about while we’re racing. Like ‘man, if he uses me up?’ Is he thinking about fixing up his race car or worried about his race?”

    Did you know you had the pole at the end of the lap?

    “Yeah, the last I heard is we needed to run a 49.50 at least, so I don’t know what Chase (Elliott)’s exact time was, but that was our target. I knew turn one was pretty bad on my behalf and knew I was going to have to hit it perfect the remainder of the lap and we did.”

    How does this pole compare to the pole you earned on the road course in 2022?

    “I feel like it’s equal of importance, for sure. But it certainly felt like in 2022, we were very strong and the margin of error to lose the pole was greater. So, I knew we had to be close to perfect today. I still wasn’t, honestly. But we did a good enough job in the rest of the three corners to be able to capture it. I feel like both are just as important as the other in regard to your race the following day. It’s just a great thing we were able to accomplish today.”

    After being the fastest in practice and today, what perspective do you have going into the race tomorrow?

    “Yeah, we have a good opportunity in front of us. But we know a lot of the guys right there behind us are really good at making overnight adjustments and doing what they need to do. I mean you look at guys like the 12 (Ryan Blaney) and what they did at Pocono this past weekend. Jumping under a different strategy put him in position to be able to win the race at Pocono. So, we have to be mindful of all potentials for how the race unfolds tomorrow. But certainly, having track position in the beginning can get you stage points.”

    About Toyota

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

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

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

  • Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Cup Qualifying

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Cup Qualifying

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Brickyard 400 Qualifying | Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Saturday, July 20, 2024

    FORD QUALIFYING RESULTS
    7th – Ryan Blaney
    8th – Michael McDowell
    12th – Joey Logano
    16th – Harrison Burton
    20th – Chase Briscoe
    21st – Noah Gragson
    23rd – Chris Buescher
    24th – Todd Gilliland
    26th – Brad Keselowski
    31st – Ryan Preece
    35th – Justin Haley
    36th – Cody Ware
    37th – Josh Berry
    38th – Austin Cindric
    39th – BJ McLeod

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Atlas Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Qualified 7th)

    “I thought on my first run I left some out there because didn’t want to overdrive it. You saw some guys miss 4 or 2, so I kind of left some out there. I thought we had more speed in it and we adjusted on it a little bit but I didn’t get as clean of a lap my last one as I did the first one. Overall I am proud of the 12 Menards/Atlas Ford Mustang. I feel like we had good race pace yesterday, especially the longer run. Hopefully that comes into play tomorrow. It is nice to be back out here. A big weekend for us and Mr. Penske and everyone at Team Penske. We will try to get a Mustang in victory lane. We can see the front, we just have to figure out how to get a few spots further up.”

    How much extra pressure are you putting on yourself knowing how much this place means to Roger (Penske)?

    “I think everybody knows in our camp how important this place is. It is so well known that it isn’t even talked about, it is just a given when you sign up to drive or work at Team Penske. You know this place means a lot. We are going to try to do it. We have to try to match the IndyCar folks and Joseph (Newgarden) this year giving Roger his 20th. It would be cool to sweep Indianapolis with the IndyCar and NASCAR teams. Hopefully we can have a shot tomorrow with one of our cars and I think we have a decent shot.”

  • Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Justin Haley)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Justin Haley)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Brickyard 400 Media Availability | Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Saturday, July 20, 2024

    Justin Haley, an Indiana native, returns to his home track in the middle of a highly successfucl season. Haley talked about what it means to race on the oval at Indianapolis in the Brickyard 400 for the first time and more.

    JUSTIN HALEY, No. 51 Fraternal Order of Eagles Ford Mustang Dark Horse

    Justin, what is it like coming home to Indianapolist and running on the oval at IMS?

    “Great opening question there, I really appreciate that. It’s obviously cool. Being from Indiana, me and Chase Briscoe, obviously are from here, and racing at the Brickyard for the first time is obviously cool. Yesterday in practice, it’s definitely tricky in this car. I’m just trying to get everything worked out. I spent a lot of summers here watching the Brickyard, a lot of springs in May coming here watching the Indy 500 and things like that. I have spent a lot of time here. Now I live in North Carolina but it is always good to be back home and I appreciate the fans that come out and know that you are from Indiana. I feel like there are a lot of fans that respect that too so it’s always cool.”

    Justin, with your move to Rick Ware Racing this year, what are some things that have happened there that surprised you or maybe caught you off guard that you had not anticipated?

    “It’s definitely been a big transition for me, probably bigger at the start of the year than what I realized it was going to be. Robbie Benton, Rick Ware, made the transition as smooth as possible. Just from the aspect of being with a new manufacturer like Ford and the transition and their their sim software and their people working with them, their engineering side of things, to Roush Yates engines, it’s completely different procedures and different engine operations than what I was used to at my previous race team. So I think we’ve surprised ourselves at some places and ran really good and in other places. I think we’ve shown some weak spots and worked hard to improve those. The truth is we’re still the smallest Cup team, right? We have no direct manufacturer support and we’re trying as hard as we can with what we have. At the end of the day, we’re racing against teams that have a lot more resources than we do and I think we’re fighting hard and when we do have good days it’s definitely rewarding.”

    Do you have some kind of alliance with RFK?

    “Yeah, we do have an alliance with RFK. I think probably people think that’s more than what it is. We still build the race cars ourselves. We still mount the bodies ourselves. RFK gives us general setup info. And then I personally do simulator work with RFK every once in a while to help them. But yeah, RFK with their relationship with Ford is limited to what they’re available to give us, right? We definitely get plenty, and I’m appreciative of Brad Keselowski and everyone at RFK. It’s still not like getting direct information from Ford, right? I mean, it’s still going through the processes. I feel like we do a lot with what we can, and definitely our relationship with RFK helps a lot. Without that we would have nothing, right? We wouldn’t even know where to start. So, yeah, it’s just part of the business.”

    You mentioned just how it’s tricky getting back out there on the oval. How would you describe those challenges going back to the oval?

    “It is difficult. The cars are kind of in between gears from fourth to fifth gear, so that’s a challenge. It’s just a tough track with our aero package and how much we’re lifting and things like that. It definitely took a lot, right? It’s not like as easy as you think it would be for how big of a track it is and how the corners seem the same. We struggled a little bit in practice yesterday but starting to get the hang of it.”

    When you look over the next five races, where do you feel like over those five your team is best to have your best performance and why?

    “I’m not sure. Every week I feel like we’re good at one place and bad at another. I mean honestly it’s just how close do you unload or not. Especially with the short practices, you can’t really do much with your race car. I feel like we’ll be strong at Richmond and Darlington. Obviously, we were really quick in the spring, finished ninth. So it kind of seems like the more mechanical grip, low grip racetracks are where we’ve been strongest at. We’re really strong at Iowa and Nashville and Darlington. We’re just kind of taking it week by week. The past two weeks, Pocono and the practice yesterday haven’t obviously been the greatest for us. We really struggled last week with the high-speed racetrack. This week, we seemed to struggle in practice. We’re working hard. We’re definitely in the depth of the season now and trying to pull from all our resources. So yeah we just got to take it week by week. Obviously we have two weeks off here after tomorrow and try to get ahead as much as possible.”

    Some guys go in dirt race over the break, some guys go on vacation. What’s your plan for the Olympic break?

    “I have no plans. I’m doing sponsor appearances the whole time so not a day off for me. No vacations, no anything planned, nothing cool. So yeah, I haven’t been dirt racing in a while, unfortunately. I’d like to get back to it. Just too busy right now on the Cup side.”

    Now that you’ve looked back at what Rick Ware has done this first half the season, what are those next steps? What are those next goals, those next milestones that you’re hoping to achieve with the team the rest of this season and then even in 2025? What are you hoping to contribute? What are you hoping the team can kind of figure out to get those next steps for you guys?

    “We just have to acquire more resources, more people, just keep building. At the end of the day, it’s just how many engineers you have on the pit box. I mean, that’s all it is now. I’d like to be better. Without our COTA DQ I think we’d be 26 in points, which is stellar. That’s ahead of a lot of teams that have a heck of a lot more than we do. It’s literally just giving it everything you have every week. I really appreciate the guys on the 51 team and the 15 team. They work harder than anyone. I’m sure every driver would say that but we don’t have a lot. We don’t have a lot of people at the shop right now building our cars for what would be next week if we were racing next week. My road crew is pretty much the guys that also build the car at home and they stay a long amount of hours to get prepared for the next week to even get a car to the racetrack. We’re just trying to do everything we can. Obviously when you get into the depths of the season you always feel like you’re behind and you’re trying to catch up and get to a good place. We’ve been bringing cars home in one piece, which is obviously helpful, but we’re just working hard every week trying to get our race cars to the track. I think our hauler for Pocono left Thursday evening and the garage was open Friday morning. So it’s just a lot of hard work. I don’t think people probably appreciate or realize how hard we are working to be competitive.”

    You’re an Indiana native. Any memories of coming here and where did you sit and everything?

    “I have one memory. My grandfather, before he passed away, had sponsored Sam Schmidt’s IndyCar with Townsend Bell, I believe, was the driver in one of the Indy 500s. That was kind of like his last hoorah. So yeah, Brown Ability sponsored Townsend Bell and Sam Schmidt’s car. My whole family was up in the Pagoda watching the Indy 500. I’m not sure what year that was, but that was probably my coolest memory of coming here. I don’t even know if I was really racing yet. I think I was doing quarter midgets or maybe mini sprints somewhere or something like that. But that is definitely my coolest Indianapolis Motor Speedway memory for sure.”

  • Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Haas Factory Team Announcement)

    Brickyard 400 Media Availability (Haas Factory Team Announcement)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Brickyard 400 Media Availability | Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Saturday, July 20, 2024

    In a press conference Saturday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Cole Custer announced his return to the NASCAR Cup Series in 2025 with Haas Factory Team. The 26-year-old racer from Ladera Ranch, California, will drive the No. 41 Ford Mustang Dark Horse with sponsorship from Haas Automation and HaasTooling.com. Below is a full transcript from the announcement.

    MODERATOR: Thank you very much for joining us today on a great day for racing here at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Featured here today on the middle of the desk is reigning NASCAR XFINITY Series champion and the current XFINITY Series points leader, Cole Custer. Besides Cole, it’s Haas Automation Director of Motorsports, Carl Cline, and Haas Factory Team President, Joe Custer.

    Cole, I guess I need to start off with an apology. When I sent out the media alert earlier this week, it was on a Haas Automation letterhead and I think everyone had to figure out if you were announcing your NASCAR plans or if you were replacing Kevin Magnussen over at Haas F1 Team. So, the floor is yours. Please clear the air for us.

    COLE CUSTER: “This is really exciting. Ever since me going back to the Xfinity Series, to get the opportunity back at the Cup level again was the biggest goal. So, to have this opportunity to get to drive for Haas Factory team next year is huge for me. I think we can do some really special things with the resources that we have as a team. We’re ready to just get to work and get some great people. I think we’ll be able to compete with the best.”

    Carl Cline, Haas Automation Director of Motorsports. There’s a significant history with Cole representing Haas Automation. Can you shed some light on his tenure with the team and why Gene Haas, the founder and president of Haas Automation, wanted him in, not just his brand of race cars, but his race cars and Haas factory team.

    CARL CLINE: “Absolutely. Cole’s been around Haas Automation and Haas Racing since he was born. I remember back in the day we were living in California, Joe and I, him and my brother Troy, we had a race team out there and off-road trucks, sprint cars, things of that nature. Joe would bring Cole to the shop every now and then when he was two or three years old and we had a bunch of tires hanging out over in the corner over there, sprint car tires, very big, and we’d lose him every now and then. We’d have to go try to find him and we’d find him trapped in one of those tires, hanging out in there. So he’s been around the Haas culture for his whole life. He’s been around Haas Automation his whole life. He understands what Haas Automation’s goals are. And their goal is selling machine tools. They’re the largest machine tool manufacturer in the United States already. They launched Haastooling.com. They’ve sold over 3 million bits and tools to customers already. Cole fits that bill for us. Cole understands what his job is for Haas Automation. Gene has weighed it heavily and understands that Cole is a winner. He has won at every level. He’s won in the Truck Series, he’s won in the Xfinity Series, and obviously the champion, Mike has pointed out, Cup Series as well. Gene is expecting him to be very competitive, and believes in him wholeheartedly that he’ll be a winner in the Cup Series. So for Haas Automation and Gene, he was the right pick. And we’re very happy to have him on.”

    Joe Custer, president of Haas Factory Team, beyond Cole driving for the team in 2025. You secured some pretty crucial components from the competition side. Tell us a little bit about that as this team gets ready for next year.

    JOE CUSTER: “Yeah, we’re excited. So, we made our announcement that Haas Factory team was formed and since that moment we’ve been focused on the future, obviously finishing strong at Stuart-Haas, but also putting together the resources necessary to compete for wins and a championship. So I can tell you today we’ve secured an agreement with RFK as a technical alliance between the two of us. Taking all the resources that we bring to the table and combining it with their success and the resources they have, we look forward to RFK and Haas Factory team competing for wins and championships shoulder to shoulder. So along with Ford as a partner, we’re lacking no resources going into next year. People-wise, human capital, I’m happy to say we’re well on the way there to putting together the team capable of competing for wins, and we’re focused on everything related to human capital, from the pit crew to engineering resources. We’re there for next year prepared. So we won’t have any excuses going into next year. We’ve got the driver, we’ve got the team, we’ve got the relationship, we’ve got the OEM. We’re all set. We will continue to run our Xfinity program at the highest level. There are things that we’re going to add to the program for next year that will make it even more competitive. We appreciate what NASCAR’s doing to make that series thrive, and so we’re excited about that as well. My job is to provide the resources necessary for the team to be successful and we’re well on its way.”

    Cole, there aren’t a lot of drivers who get second opportunities at the top level in NASCAR. I know you’ve talked before about some of the things you’ve learned in your return to the Xfinity Series. What makes this the opportunity that you think will make your stay more permanent?

    COLE CUSTER CONTINUED: “I think just what you said, going back down to the Xfinity Series and really learning what I need to do better. I think one of the biggest things is just how you work with your team, because at the end of the day, every single driver in the Cup Series can probably go out there and go fast. But it’s a matter of how you consistently get that speed and how you can work with your team to get the feel that you need in the car consistently. So I think being able to have those skills more polished now, and I think, obviously, just like my dad said, I think having the resources to go out there and compete with the best out there. I’m really excited. I think we can do some great things.”

    And for Joe, you talked about having the resources and the alliance with RFK. Doing this in the NextGen model, is it a little easier or maybe less difficult step for a single-car operation now than maybe what had been in the past?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “It’s quite a bit different for sure. The resources necessary are different. Gene’s committed to it. I think the future is more things like software development, sim, a different set of tools in the toolbox. We can check the box on the physical parts and pieces and capital investment that we had and the successes we enjoyed at Stewart-Haas were using a different set of tools than the NextGen is offering. So candidly, we’re leaning on Brad (Keselowski) and his group at RFK to add to what our knowledge base is and help us evolve. We’re really excited about the leadership Brad’s taken at RFK and the group they’ve got. We’re a fit. We’ve had a number of meetings and we’re aligned. Strategically, we feel what they feel and we feel there’s resources that we can offer that can make their program stronger and vice versa. So, yep, that’s where we’re at.”

    Can any of you walk me through the process of, from the time you guys announced that you would be forming Haas Factory team to compete in Cup, what the driver search was like? Was it pretty cut and dry that it was gonna be Cole in the car, or did you have any other conversations? What was that like?

    CARL CLINE CONTINUED: “It wasn’t cut and dry. There were a lot of drivers put on the list and quite frankly, Gene didn’t make the decision until not very long ago. And he apologized for not being here. He’s in Europe on business. But it wasn’t cut and dry. There were pros and cons and drivers and who would represent Haas Automation and their growth with their product and their new company, HaasTooling.com. So there was a lot that went into it and it was a couple of months of trying to figure that out. At the end of the day, Cole’s pedigree, if you will, from winning, Gene wants to compete and he expects the team to be put in place, to put Cole in place to win races, that is the goal. Joe’s job is to build that team and get those people in place to make Cole competitive and at that point, it’s Cole’s job to get the job done. Gene wholeheartedly believes that he can do that and he has proven he can do that. The Xfinity champion, he’s won everything he’s driven. So we don’t expect anything different from that side, but it wasn’t cut and dry for sure.”

    Joe, you mentioned the Xfinity Series program, obviously with Cole going to Cup next year. Riley Herbst not having announced anything yet, have you initiated any conversations on who’s going to drive for the Xfinity teams next year? Where does that stand?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “Thank you, yeah, we have. Riley, we would love for him to come back and we’ve made him an offer to do so, but they’re looking at the whole sport. I’m pretty excited about our Xfinity program. I’m going to brag on it a little bit. We started a few years ago, naturally, and Kevin Harvick and Cole, that first year helped us build it, and Richard Boswell and there’s a number of people that were instrumental. But when you look at what it has produced, three people, maybe four in the Cup Series. I’m not sure statistically since we started that there’s a more successful program that’s delivered more drivers to the Cup Series. That has resulted in no lack of interest in our cars next year. Candidly, there was concern about stability and whether we were going to be here at the same level as Stewart-Haas operated. I can tell you we are, if not a bit higher level. Ford is a big supporter of the program, the Xfinity program, and there was no lack of interest in drivers. We’re getting close to announcing where we’re at on drivers for Xfinity and I think you’ll see that we intend to run for the same goals this year. Put both our drivers into the Final 4 and compete for the championship in Phoenix both this year and next year and the year after. We are focused on the CW relationship, a seven-year program. We started that a year ago when the CW was announced, that whole program, and we are building parts and pieces, working with NASCAR to find efficiencies so that we can compete at the highest level with our eight teams, our two cars and our technical partners. We’re super thrilled with what the 39 car has done this year, and that’s also driven interest in our program, because that’s a family-run operation out of Georgia that has had a chance to win week in and week out. We’re very excited that Rod Sieg has believed in our program and has looked to the future. So that’s driving interest, that there’s more to it than just our two drivers that are killing it. There’s also the resources behind the program. So we’re pretty excited about Xfinity you can tell.”

    Cole, have you had any discussions with Brad Keselowski or anything about maybe a third running any of their Cup cars this year or any other additional cup races just to prepare for next year?

    COLE CUSTER CONTINUED: “I haven’t. I mean obviously that’s not a bad idea, but at the moment no, nothing for sure on that.”

    Joe, as far as the alliance with RFK, will you all still be assembling your own cars? Will this be like your Hendrick relationship that you had early on, more or less? Can you give us maybe a little bit of perspective on it?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “There are elements similar, but we don’t manufacture as much anymore, naturally. So, we’re working more towards, with them — it’s an open book, 100%. And we’re focused on software, sim, things of that nature with those folks for next year. There’s already a relationship on the aero side, but what we plan on bringing to the table is some of the systems and dynos and things of that nature, the capital investment items that we have in our shop, and they’re looking at some of the human capital and engineering resources from them. So it’s a little different than the Hendrick model but the willingness and the open book is there, and again Brad’s really stepped up and we’re excited about that relationship.”

    Cole, returning to the Cup Series a second time, what did you learn from your first go-round in the Cup Series that you can now apply and maybe you’ll look better on the second round?

    COLE CUSTER CONTINUED: “Well, I think at the end of the day, it’s as competitive as it’s ever been. You see 30 guys out there that can probably legitimately go win any given weekend. So you have to be very smart about how you navigate a weekend and through a season because there’s going to be times where you’re not where you want to be. You have to lead your team in the right direction. So it’s a very tough level right now and I think having that experience of knowing how to get back on track, knowing what to really look for and how to fix your problems. At the end of the day there are very few weekends that go perfectly. So, if you can figure out how to fix your problems and fix them better than other teams, you will find yourself at the front.”

    Joe, SHR has four charters, they’re selling three. We know that the car number is 41, but I’m curious what charter is Haas keeping then that’s going to apply to the 41 car?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “It’s the 41. It’ll be the 41 all around.”

    Joe, how important was this relationship with Ford and RFK, and also, are you gonna keep the entire Haas campus?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “Yes to the Haas campus. There won’t be any resource that’s not retained on the property. Naturally, some cars, by rule, and some haulers will go away, but the rest of all the infrastructure, all the IP, everything, servers, data, let alone the equipment, is all retained. As far as the relationship with RFK, we looked at several, candidly, different ways to go. Just candidly, like Carl said, we looked at different drivers, because Gene has no intention of being part of something that’s not successful or isn’t pointed toward success. He has built a company over the years that takes time, he understands that, but he wants to see improvement and people held accountable. So I think we’ve got that culture right now. I think we’ve had it in the Xfinity program and I think we’re focused on that same culture in the Cup program. RFK has that same program. I was impressed with how Brad started that. It didn’t go well at the start with RFK, but you didn’t see wholesale firing of crew chiefs and thrashing and unstable. He held the tiller firm, and now look at what they’re doing. And that impressed me, candidly because it’s not easy. This stuff is easy to start blaming and pointing fingers. You better dig deep, and you better be willing to be part of the solution and not point the finger or this deal goes south pretty quick. We’ve been able to do that in the Xfinity program and we’re headed towards that with the Cup program for next year.”

    Cole, the Cole Custer from 2020 who went to the Cup series and the Cole Custer that’s going to go back in 2025. How would you describe yourself as a driver and a person through that time period?

    COLE CUSTER CONTINUED: “I just probably definitely matured a lot. I’ve always been the quieter guy, but I think that was kind of where I needed to grow a little bit is how you work with your people and how you get the car, how you need it every weekend. I think working on that was a big thing. And obviously now having a wife and a kid on the way, everything’s calmed down a little bit. Not that I was crazy before, I don’t think, but it’s just a little bit more solidified of who I am and what we’re looking for and what I need to look for also in the sport and in the cars.”

    Cole, with you driving both the 00 and 41 extensively with Haas, was there a difficult decision in trying to choose one number over the other for the Cup team?

    COLE CUSTER CONTINUED: “I mean, at the end of the day, for me, I’ll drive whatever number it is. Obviously had a lot of success in the 00, but we won a Cup race in the 41, so it’s up to Gene and whoever wants it. It doesn’t matter to me.”

    CARL CLINE CONTINUED: “I can tell you that Gene picked the 41. He wanted to stay with the 41. And there’s a lot of equity for Haas-Automation and their distributors and his company in the 41.”

    Joe, as you referenced, a lot of success with the Xfinity program. And brought up a lot of young drivers. Ford probably doesn’t have as robust of a development program compared to the other OEMs. With your Xfinity program, is that what you’re looking at? I know you talk about wanting to be in the championship next year but are you setting up as more of a development program in the Xfinity Series?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “I would argue Ford does have it. I know that’s a common thing, but again, look at the facts. We put a lot of drivers into the Cup Series, and I think the definition, in my mind, the definition of a successful development program is, is Ford part of putting Cup drivers, new drivers into the Cup Series? And if you look at the facts, I think we’ve been successful at that. So yes we want to continue. Now the situation with us at Haas Factory Team is we have to win at that level. So we are willing to look at all options as far as drivers go. Maybe somebody that’s already in the sport. Maybe somebody that’s a Cup driver that comes down. Because we’ve got to put cars in the winner’s circle, we’ve got to sort out our equipment because our business model is reliant on having technical partners to keep the program healthy. If we don’t win, and if we are not a leader at the track, then our other teammates, you know, the Sieg’s, the etc., they find it hard to believe that we can deliver the kind of data and leadership that’s necessary for them. So it’s a different model. Candidly, part of our game plan is for drivers to come in to those teams as well as ours. Whether they go from theirs to ours, maybe, maybe not. All options are open. But we envision eight successful car Xfinity teams showing up to every race next year and the year after with a high level of competency and the ability to win. If you look at the statistics, it’s been almost 10 years since a non-Cup team won. Yes, you can argue at certain tracks, Daytona or Talladega after a wreckfest. But I look back to Kurt Busch winning with KBM as the last time a non-affiliated team won an Xfinity race. I don’t think that’s in CW’s best interest. I think it’s in the best interest if there’s more winners in the mid-pack, and we’re trying to be part of that solution in offering resources and whatnot for folks like the Siegs to compete for wins. I think that’s compelling.”

    Among the drivers that potentially could be available for you in the Xfinity Series would be somebody like Hailie Deegan. Now, she does not have the success, but you just talked about the CW and promotion and marketing and things like that. Is she somebody that is a candidate or somebody who could fit into a role with what you’re trying to do, because it seems like there’s some things there that would fit well.

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “Yes, we’ve spoken with her. Obviously, she was with one of our technical partners. So that’s a challenge, right, to see what the future is with her. We believe there’s more in her, and we want to be part of that, but that’s for future conversations. I’ve challenged Cole with being a leader, and we need leaders in the Xfinity series. He may not want to hear it, but I’ve told him before, the proudest day I would have is if he shoved one of our technical partners across the finish line. I think that’s what differs our program from other Xfinity teams. You see them wrecking each other and having drama within their camp. We’re not part of that. We don’t tolerate that. We know it happens, but we have to hold our drivers and our teams accountable for our group and we want to have a leader that can do that. I think he’s done a decent job at that. We still need to shove somebody across the finish line.”

    Cole, if you don’t know, your Pocono win was the 100th win in the Xfinity series for NASCAR Next Alumni. So what has that program meant to you?

    COLE CUSTER CONTINUED: “Yeah, that was a really cool program. I don’t think they have anything like it right now, it doesn’t seem like, but there’s a lot of guys that are in that deal. You know, even Brandon McReynolds, I was teammates with him over there, he’s standing over there. But he works at a high level in the sport now. It’s cool to see people that you’ve been around for — that was 10 years ago, and seeing how that’s progressed and seeing those same guys have success. It’s really cool that that program was around. It just gave people something to strive for, I think, too, when you’re a younger guy, to be a part of that program.”

    Joe, we’ve asked Cole this multiple different ways, and you just touched on it a moment ago, but what have you seen in him? I know you have a bit of a biased view, but from his first stint in Cup to where he is today, how would you describe that transformation?

    JOE CUSTER CONTINUED: “Yeah, it’s tough on me, or tough on us because of the conflict. But probably the biggest thing is leadership and understanding how to hold himself and the team accountable. I think he’s done a good job of that in the Xfinity program. He’s been on record, we didn’t start out the way we wanted. We thought we’d maybe have double-digit wins last year. And we didn’t. So what are you going to do about it, right? What are you gonna do about it? And so he held himself accountable, and he worked with his team, and he worked with himself, and I think that’s the next step that we look for is the leadership piece of it, and that’s coming along. He’s done a great job with our technical partners working with their drivers, and whether it’s tire fitting and doing stuff for the simulator, and showing up early when they’re not there to get the simulator sorted, so when they show up, the thing’s badass and competitive. And so things like that, I think he’s grown and accepted the challenge of how can he make himself better. As a single car team, there’s gonna be elements of it that are a challenge, but Barney Visser didn’t do so bad with that challenge. I know where RFK stands as a partner, so I think he’s going to be asked to be a leader, but also fit in with the RFK folks and help get every ounce of speed we can out of that program into his car and be held accountable for that. We have to be held accountable as well on the team side. So that’s where we’re at.”

  • Cole Custer Returns to NASCAR Cup Series in 2025

    Cole Custer Returns to NASCAR Cup Series in 2025

    Reigning NASCAR Xfinity Series Champion Will Drive No. 41 Ford Mustang with Sponsorship from Haas Automation and Technical Support From RFK Racing

    SPEEDWAY, Ind. (July 20, 2024) – In a press conference Saturday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Cole Custer announced his return to the NASCAR Cup Series in 2025 with Haas Factory Team.

    The 26-year-old racer from Ladera Ranch, California, will drive the No. 41 Ford Mustang Dark Horse with sponsorship from Haas Automation and HaasTooling.com. It was also announced that Haas Factory Team will have a technical alliance with RFK Racing and receive additional support from Ford Performance.

    Custer is the reigning NASCAR Xfinity Series champion and current Xfinity Series point leader who secured his spot in the NASCAR Playoffs with a victory last Saturday at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway. His move to Haas Factory Team in 2025 brings Custer back to the NASCAR Cup Series, where he was the 2020 Rookie of the Year and a race winner in just his 20th career start – July 12, 2020 at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta.

    “Cole has represented Haas Automation for more than half his life and he’s delivered results every step of the way. He just wins, and he’s proven that repeatedly,” said Gene Haas, founder and president of Haas Automation and the owner of Haas Factory Team.

    “On his way to winning the Xfinity Series championship last year, Cole really carved out an identity for himself, on the track and off. He brings home trophies and he races people clean. He’s earned a lot of respect from his peers, and he’s a genuine personality whose hard work resonates with our customers.

    “The NASCAR Cup Series is tough, but Cole is coming back wiser and tougher. We’re very happy to have him in our colors and in our racecar.”

    Custer first won for Haas Automation nearly 13 years ago when he earned the 2011 USAC National Focus Young Guns Championship. In the 22 victories he has earned since across the NASCAR K&N Pro Series, ARCA Menards Series, NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Xfinity Series and Cup Series, all have come while representing Haas Automation.

    “I’ve grown up with Haas Automation, and having their name on my firesuit is something I take a tremendous amount of pride in. I’m driven to win for Gene and everyone at Haas Automation because they’ve been such a big part of my career,” Custer said.

    “Haas Factory Team will essentially be a new race team next year, and it’s going to take all of us to build it into an organization that can go out and win races. I want this opportunity and I’m ready for this challenge.”

    Before Custer sets his sights on 2025, he will continue his title defense in the Xfinity Series. Fourteen races still remain this season, with Saturday afternoon’s 62-lap race around Indianapolis’ 2.5-mile rectangular oval next up for Custer and his Xfinity Series counterparts. Live coverage begins at 3:30 p.m. EDT on USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.