Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • DiBenedetto Finishes 19th at Indianapolis

    DiBenedetto Finishes 19th at Indianapolis

    Matt DiBenedetto and the No. 21 Red Kap/Menards Ford Mustang ran among the top 10 – and often among the top five – in Sunday’s Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway before a last-lap crash dropped him to 19th at the finish.

    But the 11 Stage points he earned allowed him to move up two spots in the points standings to 12th place, which means he’ll get to draw for one of the top-12 starting positions for next Sunday’s Quaker State 400 at Kentucky Speedway.

    Sunday’s race started late due to lightning in the area, but when the green flag dropped, DiBenedetto quickly moved up from his 15th starting position.

    He had moved into ninth place when the yellow flag flew for a competition caution period at Lap 12.

    The Red Kap/Menards crew opted for a two-tire change, so DiBenedetto moved up to sixth place for the restart and ran in the top 10 until the end of the first 50-lap Stage, where he finished seventh and earned four Stage points.

    He stayed on the track during the ensuing caution period and restarted in third place. A lap after the green flag flew he moved into second place, ran there for several laps and then was running third when he pitted for tires and fuel during a caution period at Lap 77.

    Back under way he ran in the top five for the remainder of the second Stage and finished that segment in fourth place, earning seven more Stage points.

    After another pit stop, DiBenedetto restarted the race’s final segment in 12th place but quickly worked his way back into the top 10. He took four more fresh tires on a stop at Lap 134 and rejoined the race in ninth place.

    He was running seventh when race leader Denny Hamlin blew a tire and crashed while leading with six laps to go.

    That set up an overtime run to the finish. DiBenedetto and Austin Dillon were battling for sixth place on the last lap when contact sent them both spinning, dropping Dillon to 18th and DiBenedetto to 19th.

    “We had a good run all day,” DiBenedetto said. “The car was solid all day, and the race was dependent all on track position with this high-downforce racing.”

    He said he hated that he couldn’t close out an otherwise exceptional day with a top-10 finish.

    “On the last lap I got under the 3 car [Austin Dillon] getting into Turn Three,” DiBenedetto said. “He just didn’t quite give me enough room getting in the corner, and we got together, unfortunately.

    “The Stage points saved us.”

    ###

    ABOUT RED KAP®

    Red Kap® manufactures comfortable, durable apparel for more than 16 million hardworking professionals and offers unmatched service to approximately 8,000 distributors. For over 90 years, the company has provided everything from work shirts and pants to jackets and coveralls for a variety of industries, like manufacturing, food service and construction, while specializing in performance workwear for the automotive and transportation industry. Red Kap® is a division of VF Imagewear, Inc., which is part of VF Corporation, the world’s largest apparel manufacturer. Visit redkap.com for more information.

    Menards

    A family owned company started in 1958, Menards is headquartered in Eau Claire, WI. Menards has more than 300 retail stores located throughout the Midwest in the states of IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, MI, MN, MO, NE, ND, OH, SD, WI and WY. Menards is known throughout the home improvement industry as the low price leader. It’s famous slogan “Save Big Money at Menards” is widely known and easy to remember. For more information, visit Menards.com, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter, Instagram or Pinterest.

    Wood Brothers Racing

    Wood Brothers Racing was formed in 1950 in Stuart, Va., by Hall of Famer Glen Wood. Wood Brothers Racing is the oldest active team and one of the winningest teams in NASCAR history. Since its founding, the team won 99 races (including at least one race in every decade for the last seven decades) and 120 poles in NASCAR’s top-tier series. Fielding only Ford products for its entire history, the Wood Brothers own the longest association of any motorsports team with a single manufacturer. Glen’s brother, Leonard, is known for inventing the modern pit stop. The team currently runs the Ford Mustang driven by Matt DiBenedetto in the famous No. 21 racer.

  • Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Indianapolis

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Indianapolis

    Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report
    Track: Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Race: Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400
    Date: July 5, 2020
    ____________________________________

    No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – Brad Keselowski
    Start: 9th
    Stage 1: 9th
    Stage 2: 14th
    Finish: 4th
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 161/161
    Laps Led: 0
    Point Standings (behind first): 3rd (-88)

    Notes:

    Brad Keselowski scored a fourth-place finish in the Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The driver of the Discount Tire Ford Mustang grabbed his sixth top-five finish of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season and third in 11 starts at Indianapolis.

    Keselowski is third in the NASCAR Cup Series driver standings, 88 points behind leader Kevin Harvick.

    Keselowski started ninth and inside the top-five for much of Stage 1. The final laps of the opening 50-lap segment got dicey, thanks to a caution on lap 40. Keselowski pitted on lap 42 for four tires but was shuffled back to 10th-place for the restart on lap 46, thanks to a variety of pit strategies among the leaders. He briefly fell back to 11th but passed two cars on the final lap of the stage to finish ninth. Crew chief Jeremy Bullins made the call to stay on the track during the stage caution and Keselowski restarted sixth when the race went green on lap 55.

    Keselowski said the No. 2 Ford Mustang was tight at the beginning of Stage 2. He was running ninth when the caution came out on lap 73 and pitted during the yellow for four tires and an adjustment to free up his Mustang. He had a close call on lap 88 when Ryan Blaney spun and hit the outside wall while running beside him in Turn 3. Keselowski pitted for four tires during the caution and restarted 21st with just nine laps left in the stage but rallied back to finish 14th when Stage 2 ended on lap 100. Bullins made the call to pit during the stage caution for four tires and fuel and Keselowski restarted 17th when the race went green on lap 105.

    Over the final 56 laps, Keselowski steadily worked his way through traffic while at the same time managing tire wear. He climbed up to third position by lap 133 when the caution flag waved during a cycle of green flag stops. Keselowski pitted for four tires on lap 134 and restarted seventh with fresher tires for run to the finish.
    The call for tires proved to be a big advantage. Keselowski was sixth when leader Denny Hamlin hit the wall on lap 154, pushing the race into a NASCAR Overtime finish. The driver of the Discount Tire Ford restarted fifth in the two-lap dash to the finish. He picked off fourth on the restart and held firm to the position over the final lap to claim fourth-place finish.

    Quote: “I think we were kind of up and down. We started ninth or 10th and just kind of hung around sixth or seventh and couldn’t quite make the pass. Our car was really, really fast in clean air, but I couldn’t run in traffic. We’d run up to cars and get stopped and would kind of ride. Then we started to see the tire issues and tried to be really smart about that and try not to beat ourselves, keep tires on the car.”

    _______________________________________________

    No. 12 Menards/Atlas Ford Mustang – Ryan Blaney
    Start: 12th
    Stage 1: 13th
    Stage 2: 31st
    Finish: 32nd
    Status: Accident
    Laps Completed: 96/160
    Laps Led: 0
    Point Standings (Behind First): 4th (-103)

    Ryan Blaney started 12th and finished 32nd in Sunday’s Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. After an early race pit road incident, the driver of the Menards/Atlas Ford Mustang was working his way back towards the front when he was involved in an accident on lap 89.

    Blaney worked his way up to sixth by lap five. A competition caution would waive on lap 12 and the leaders would come to pit road. Blaney would receive right side damage when multiple cars got together near the entrance of pit road. The team would make repairs to his Ford Mustang and the High Point, N.C. native would rebound to finish Stage 1 in the 13th position.

    Blaney would restart ninth after staying out under the stage break. He would fall to 12th after being stuck on the bottom lane for the restart. On lap 89 while racing the No. 95 car, the two made contact and unfortunately, Blaney ended up in the turn three wall.
    The Todd Gordon-led crew would try to make repairs and reach minimum speed, but the damage proved to be too much, and team was forced to retire the Menards Ford on lap 96.

    Blaney now sits fourth in the NASCAR Cup Series standings, 103 points behind leader Kevin Harvick.

    Quote: “It was a tough day for our Menards/Atlas Ford Mustang. We had the incident on pit road and tried coming back through the field and got in an accident. Appreciate my guy’s hard work and we’ll get ready for Kentucky.”

    ___________________________________

    No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang – Joey Logano
    Start: 1st
    Stage 1: 16th
    Stage 2: 18th
    Finish: 10th
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 161/161
    Laps Led: 14
    Point Standings 6th (-110)

    Notes:

    Joey Logano started from the pole and finished in the 10th position in Sunday afternoon’s Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 in the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang. The team battled an extremely tight condition for most of the event, with Logano running outside the top-20 for a portion of the second and third stage. Logano survived a wild NASCAR Overtime and brought the Shell-Pennzoil Mustang home in the top-10.

    Logano led the opening 12 laps prior to the competition caution, reporting he needed more turn from the center off on all four turns of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Throughout the first stage, Logano continued battling a tight condition, despite the team making air pressure adjustments. Unfortunately, a slow pit stop and other teams electing to take two tires dropped Logano out of the top 10, finishing 16th in the first stage.

    With the loss of track position, Logano continued battling the tight handling condition in the second stage, despite making a wedge and air pressure adjustment early in the stage. The changes didn’t seem to make a major impact on the Shell-Pennzoil Mustang, especially trapped in dirty air, resulting in an 18th place stage result for Logano.

    In the final stage, Logano continued reporting that the Shell-Pennzoil Mustang was struggling in dirty air, becoming too tight to turn the center of the corners. The team elected to stay on the track when others pitted, cycling Logano to the sixth position. Logano maintained in the top 10 until the team elected to pit at lap 130 for the final stop.
    With NASCAR Overtime, Logano lined up in the 12th position for a potential final restart, the last car who remained on the track with the late caution. Logano survived last lap carnage and finished in the 10th position.

    Quote: “That was an extremely hard-fought top-10 finish today in the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang. We just battled extremely tight most of the day, especially in the dirty air. Clean air we were okay, but we really struggled in traffic. The crew made changes on it all day, we’ll get it figured out and go from there.”

  • RCR Post Race Report – Brickyard 400

    RCR Post Race Report – Brickyard 400

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 Dow Salutes Veterans Chevrolet Team Lead Laps and Earn Stage Points at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

    Finish: 18th
    Start: 16th
    Points: 16th

    “We had a really good Dow Salutes Veterans Chevrolet today at the Brickyard and it was fun to be able to earn Stage points in Stages 1 and 2 and lead laps. Our Chevy was handling really well all day so we really only needed to make small adjustments throughout the race. Justin Alexander made great calls to help us get track position. Clean air is huge. We made the decision to stay out when the caution flag was displayed at the end of Stage 3. That put us in a great position for a two-lap shootout to the checkered flag. We were racing for sixth but tangled in Turn 4 coming to the checkers and ended up backing into the wall. Definitely not the finish we wanted or deserved today, but I’m proud of our effort. We had a lot of positives with earning Stage points and leading laps. It was also an honor to race with the names of 1200 veterans on the car on Independence Day weekend. I want to thank Dow for helping us to honor the true heroes.”-Austin Dillon

    Tyler Reddick and the No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Team Grind it Out for Top-10 Finish at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

    Finish: 8th
    Start: 13th
    Points: 18th

    “We had a great No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet when we could run in clean air and record some good lap times. Like a lot of our competitors today, we struggled in dirty air. Any time we were battling someone side by side or from behind them, our car would just build way too tight and make it tough to gain or hold track position. We had an up-and-down day, falling back early and then playing some strategy to stay out to start Stage 3 from the fifth spot. Once the race restarted for Stage 3, we were able to hold on to that position for a while before having to make our final green flag stop of the day. Unfortunately, a yellow came out when our pit stops were cycling through, trapping us a lap down and forcing us to take the wave-around and get shuffled back in traffic again. When that final yellow flag came out and set us up for a green-white-checkered finish, my crew chief Randall Burnett made the call to come in for four fresh tires and put us 16th for the restart. I was able to capitalize on the final restart and race up to eighth place, which is a great finish for our day. We had to grind it out today, but it turned out in our favor.” -Tyler Reddick

  • Michael McDowell Scores Top-10 and Personal-best Finish at Indy with CarParts.com

    Michael McDowell Scores Top-10 and Personal-best Finish at Indy with CarParts.com

    Track: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, 2.5 Mile Oval
    Race: 16 of 38
    Event: Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 (400 miles, 160 laps)

    Michael McDowell
    No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang

    Started: 27th
    Finished: 7th

    Stage One: 15th
    Stage Two: 16th
    Stage Three: 7th

    Michael McDowell and his No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang took the green flag in Sunday’s Brickyard 400 from the 27th position. Under the Competition Caution on Lap 12, a multi-car incident would occur directly behind the pit stall of the No. 34 and a loose tire from the No. 12 car was sent flying into the rear of the No. 34 Ford, causing minor damage. McDowell would need to make a second trip down pit road for minimal repairs. The caution flag would again fly late in the first stage and Crew Chief Drew Blickensderfer would call McDowell down pit road for 2 tires and fuel. The No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang would go on to finish Stage 1 from the 15th position. Under the Stage 1 caution, McDowell noted that his race car was “a little tight.” He also mentioned that his “corner speed was good, just lacked a little straightaway speed.” He pitted for 4 tires and fuel.

    During Stage 2, McDowell noted that his No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang was still lacking “a little speed down the straightaway,” and then on Lap 74, told the team that he had a strong vibration. McDowell would bring his race car to pit road under green for 4 tires, fuel and a trackbar adjustment. He would momentarily go one lap down before the caution flag flew seconds later, making the No. 34 the Lucky Dog, and allowing McDowell to get back on the lead lap. McDowell would finish Stage 2, 16th. Under the Stage 2 caution, the No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang would take 4 tires, fuel and a packer adjustment.

    In the final stage of Sunday’s 400-mile race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang showed good speed as McDowell navigated his race car into the Top-10. Another caution would come on Lap 132 and Blickensderfer called the No. 34 to pit road for 4 tires, fuel and a wedge adjustment after McDowell noted that his race car needed more “rear grip on the long run.” McDowell was running 11th as another caution would occur on Lap 153; setting up an overtime finish to which McDowell would restart 9th. In the final two laps of Sunday’s race, McDowell and his No. 34 CarParts.com | PowerStop Ford Mustang, with help from spotters Rocky Ryan and Tony Arnold would race their way to a 7th-place finish at the Brickyard; earning both McDowell and Front Row Motorsports new career-best finishes at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    McDowell on Indianapolis:

    “Another great finish for us. Another solid top 10. It’s such a big run for us. I’m so proud of everybody at Front Row and Bob Jenkins for giving me this opportunity. It’s taken so long to be this competitive and I’m so thankful to have the opportunity. To have CarParts.com and PowerStop and Love’s Travel Stops and FR8Auctions and all our partners throughout the year, Speedco — so many great people that make this possible and we’re doing it. We’re doing it every week. We’re definitely way more competitive than we’ve ever been and it’s a lot of fun.”

  • CHEVY NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Post-Race Notes and Quotes

    CHEVY NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Post-Race Notes and Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    BIG MACHINE HAND SANITIZER 400
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    JULY 5, 2020

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd MATT KENSETH, NO. 42 MCDELIVERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    8th TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 CHEDDAR’S SCRATCH KITCHEN CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    9th BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    11th CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    13th KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    2nd Matt Kenseth (Chevrolet)
    3rd Aric Almirola (Ford)
    4th Brad Keselowski (Ford)
    5th Cole Custer (Ford)

    The NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Kentucky Speedway with the Quaker State 400 Presented by Walmart on Sunday, July 12th, at 2:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES (INCLUDING FULL POST-RACE PRESS CONFERENCE

    TRANSCRIPT FOR MATT KENSETH):
    MATT KENSETH, NO. 42 MCDELIVERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 2nd
    “It was a great day for the 42 team today. It’s always nice to be up front and be in contention late in the race. Chad did a great job on the box with his calls today. We had a really good strategy and the best tires coming to the end of the race, lining up fourth behind the leader late in the race, but just couldn’t get it done to take the lead. I tried everything to get to the front, but just didn’t have quite enough to get around the No. 4 car. If we had gotten to the lead though, I know we would have been hard to beat. All in all, though, a great race for us. It felt good to run up front and was a confidence booster for all of us. Looking forward to getting to Kentucky and carrying that momentum forward.”

    HEY, HOW ABOUT THAT? WERE YOU THINKING THE NEW TIRES MIGHT BE ENOUGH TO PASS THE NO. 4 OF KEVIN HARVICK?
    “Man, that No. 4….even the No. 10 (Aric Almirola) and the No. 41 (Cole Custer) and the No. 14 (Clint Bowyer) which, I ran by earlier; they were just really, really fast. Like, I could get a run through (Turns) 2 and 4 and I thought I could run a little faster, but I could never get a big enough run to make the pass. Chad (Johnson, crew chief) did a spectacular job with adjustments, with strategy. I had the best tires. I was restarting fourth on the outside behind Denny (Hamlin) on the second to last restart, and I just couldn’t get up there and quite get it done. We’ve come a long way here in the last couple of weeks. It seems like we’re really gaining on it, so it was a fun day for sure.”

    EARLIER IN THE WEEK, YOU WERE SAYING THIS IS ONE OF YOUR BEST RACE TRACKS AND THAT YOU HAD CONFIDENCE; BUT DID YOU REALLY THINK IT COULD BE A TOP-FIVE DAY?
    “Well, I’d hoped so. We always come with the goal of winning. I feel like what makes good and bad race tracks most of the time, I feel like, is good cars and getting in position and pit stops and all the things they did to get us there. But I felt like this has been one of my better places. I’ve never been able to look at that win, but we’ve ran pretty competitive here at times. I feel like Pocono is one of my weakest and we ran pretty competitive last week. Hopefully we can carry the momentum and go to Kentucky and have a good run.”

    TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 CHEDDAR’S SCRATCH KITCHEN CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 8th
    “We had a great No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet when we could run in clean air and record some good lap times, but unfortunately we struggled in dirty air, like a lot of our competitors today. Any time we were battling someone side by side or from behind them, our car would just build way too tight and make it tough to gain or hold track position. We just had an up-and-down day, falling back early and then playing some strategy to stay out to start Stage 3 from the fifth spot. Once the race restarted for Stage 3, we were able to hold on to that position for a while before having to make our final green flag stop of the day. Unfortunately, a yellow came our when our pit stops were cycling through, trapping us a lap down and forcing us to take the wave-around and get shuffled back in traffic again. When that final yellow flag came out and set us up for a green-white-checkered finish, my crew chief Randall Burnett made the call to come in for four fresh tires and put us 16th for the restart. I was able to capitalize on the final restart with fresher tires and race up to eighth place, which is a great finish for our day. We had to grind it out today, but it turned out in our favor.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 9th
    “I guess it is good to be frustrated when you finish in the ninth-place. All-in-all, it was a good day for this No. 43 World Wide Technology (WWT) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE. It was fast. We just did not have the handling underneath us. It was good down the straightaways. It did not want to turn very well – specially behind traffic. One of the more frustrating days being behind cars and just trying to maneuver. So, coming out of there with a top-10 finish is good momentum going to the Kentucky Speedway – another good track for us. We will continue the good vibes and keep staying on Jerry (Baxter, crew chief) to produce good finishes for us.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 13th
    “This was an Indy race to forget today. We had to make too many unscheduled returns to pit road, which cost us a lot of track position. We just had an unbelievably tight handling Monster Energy Camaro in traffic, I just could cut through the corners to make any passes Obviously I was hoping for better results for #700 today.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO MILITARY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 14th
    “A nice 14th-place finish at Indy for our GEICO Military team. It was a crazy one, but overall, it was a really solid day. From start to finish, we had speed and these are the types of cars that I knew we could bring to the track that would make a difference. I’m very proud of Matt (Borland) and all of my Germain Racing guys for their hard work. To finish the first two stages in 11th and 12th and then finish the race in 14th is a great day for our program. This is our fourth top-15 finish of the season and we are going to keep stacking those up. We’ll go get them in Kentucky and keep this momentum rolling.”

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 DOW SALUTES VETERANS CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 18th
    “We had a really strong Dow Salutes Veterans Chevrolet today at the Brickyard and it was fun to be able to earn Stage points in Stages 1 and 2 and lead laps. Our Chevy was handling really well all day so we really only needed to make small adjustments throughout the race. Justin Alexander made great calls to help us get track position. Clean air is huge. We made the decision to stay out when the caution flag was displayed at the end of Stage 3. That put us in a great position for a two-lap shootout to the checkered flag. We were racing for sixth but tangled in Turn 4 coming to the checkers and ended up backing into the wall. Definitely not the finish we wanted or deserved today, but I’m proud of our effort. We had a lot of positives with earning Stage points and leading laps. It was also an honor to race with the names of 1200 veterans on the car on Independence Day weekend. I want to thank Dow for helping us to honor the true heroes.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 27th
    “Our Liberty University Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE was super-fast today. It just sucks because we have had a lot of these things happen this year. It’s not a fault of anyone, it just happens and it’s a bummer for sure. We’ve had fast cars and it feels like we always have bad luck when we do. That’s what hurts even more. We just need to bring that same speed to Kentucky and hopefully we won’t have any issues there. To be leading the race like that and have a tire issue is, I guess, a good way to go out. We’ll just see what we can do in Kentucky.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 CHEVYGOODS.COM/ADAM’S POLISHES CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined by accident on lap 132; Finished 30th
    “I wish we could have some luck here in Indy. Every time we come here, something happens. We had a pretty decent car, but through a series of events it just got worse. We suffered a tire issue right before we made a green flag stop, which ended our day. I hate it for my guys and everyone at Hendrick Motorsports because they have been putting in a ton of hours both at track and at the shop. We will move on to Kentucky and I hope we bring some luck with us.”

    JUSTIN ALLGAIER, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in multi-car accident at the entrance to pit road on Lap 17 – Finished 37th
    WHAT WAS YOUR VANTAGE POINT AS YOU WERE COMING DOWN PIT ROAD?
    “Kind of like it always has been in the past here. Starting in the back trying to go forward, the No. 15 (Brennan Poole) actually got in the back of me. I didn’t know if I got (hit) the gentleman on the No. 12 (Ryan Blaney’s crew member) or not. Once the wreck started happening in front of us and we all got bottled-up there, one car after another were getting run into. It’s just a shame. I hate it for these guys on this Ally No. 48. They’ve done such a great job. They’ve prepared so well for the circumstances. Obviously, our hearts and thoughts are for Jimmie (Johnson) and his family right now. That’s the most important piece of all this is getting him back to the race track soon. And, I wanted to do well for them today and it’s disappointing to be standing here talking to you (TV interviewer) unfortunately. But we’ll go on. I don’t know what next week looks like yet. We’ll go run the Xfinity Series race and go have a good shot at it. It’s a disappointing way to end the Brickyard 400.”

    WHAT DID IT MEAN TO BE THE ONE TO GET THE CALL TO STEP IN FOR A SEVEN-TIME CHAMPION?
    “I told Mr. Hendrick and I told Jimmie as well how honored I was that they would ask me to be in this role. It means a lot. It means a lot as a driver and just everybody involved, and my family. I’d like to get the opportunity again.”

    MATT KENSETH, NO. 42 MCDELIVERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE, PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
    THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by Matt Kenseth. We’ll go right to questions.

    Q. Can you talk about the restart. At that point how much of a chance do you have? Aren’t you dependent on the guy behind you as what you do on the restart?
    MATT KENSETH: Yeah, I mean, all four of those cars were really, really fast. They just had a ton of raw speed. Aric was great. He was ready and pushed me. I didn’t do the best job taking off. I didn’t want to get a penalty for jumping the start. I started going, he pushed me. Didn’t look like Kevin was going, so I hesitated just that beat that kind of got Kevin out there.
    He still pushed me up there pretty good. Couldn’t get going that fast. Once we got through one and two, we were pretty fast again. Just not fast enough. Really the restart before that was our chance. We had on four new tires, lining up behind Denny who was the control car, the leader. Had Kevin underneath me. Was able to get around him and clearing him, kind of in second place.
    Kevin had so much speed he pulled up behind me in the backstretch and pretty much pushed me down the whole straightaway. When we got about three‑quarters of the way down, he took a left and passed me. There was just no way for me to defend that one. Those guys were really, really fast.
    Our McDonald’s Chevy handled great today. We were really fast. If we would have been up front, we would have been hard to beat. I just didn’t have enough speed to get around Kevin.

    Q. You were talking earlier today to us about trying to pick things up for this group. How do you feel about today?
    MATT KENSETH: I certainly wasn’t flawless today. I could have done a little bit better on a couple of those restarts, particularly the last one. But I feel a lot more comfortable than I have been for sure.
    I think really Pocono was a big step forward for us. It was the first time, our finishes don’t look spectacular, 11th and 12th, but we’ve been finishing 20th and 25th. Obviously it’s a much better car and team than that.
    I feel like we had done some stuff at Pocono that really seemed to work for me and directionally seemed to be better. The car drove pretty good here the whole entire day, too. I’m hoping we can just carry that momentum into Kentucky, just keep moving forward with that. Hopefully get to the front like we did today, running up front where this team belongs.

    Q. You’ve been a part of a lot of Brickyard 400s. Do you think this race today maybe has done enough to put to bed the story of moving this race from the oval to the road course at least for another year?
    MATT KENSETH: I mean, I was listening to Aric for a while. I thought he said it pretty good. I think it’s one of those racetracks that we need to race at as long as we can. It’s arguably the most famous speedway in the world, or one of them.
    To be able to race on the ovals with the Cup cars, which is the highest form of stockcar racing here, we should be on the big track as well. I don’t think it would be bad to maybe test the road course and look into it, maybe do a second race on a road course, kind of like the INDYCARS did this week.
    I really do think the Brickyard 400 has a lot of prestige. It’s not a southern race, but similar to the Southern 500, races like that. I think there’s a few of those races you sure would hate to see disappear.

    Q. You mentioned how big of a weekend or important Pocono was. What was it you feel you were able to hit on that translated to Indy, momentum or whatever?
    MATT KENSETH: Well, I mean, not really going to give you particulars obviously. I think not having a lot of practice, then you run a race at a track, you move onto the next track. A lot of stuff we do with racecars is track specific. We’re trying to find those things that maybe are not so much track specific and try to find some trends in what we were either doing or not doing, try to get everything moving kind of in the right direction.
    I just felt like we had a lot of positives there, had a much better feel for the car. Felt like we were able to make some adjustments, move towards the front at times.
    Pocono and Indy are really different racetracks, too. The best adjustment you can make to these cars, particularly this rules package, is track position. We’ve been starting 20th every week with no practice, haven’t been at some of these tracks in a couple years, hard to get going. These last couple weeks we’ve had great strategy, good pit stops, able to get some good air, dissect the car, make some changes, try to get it more to my liking or kind of what we’re looking for.

    Q. With the lack of practice, how do you feel the team is adjusting to you and you to the team through the last races now?
    MATT KENSETH: Hopefully it’s a little better. They’re probably pretty darn disappointed the first couple months. The last couple weeks obviously have been better. Last week wasn’t a home run by any means, but like my engineer said it’s a base hit, kind of got rolling a little bit. This was certainly a great day for us. Hopefully we can build on it, have another good run next week.

    Q. You’ve been around long enough that you remember when we ran this track in July, the hottest part of the summer. This being a 4th of July weekend, how different is that than what used to be run? Do you like the fact it is in the heat of the summer and following the patriotic aspect of that when you talk about the history of the Brickyard?
    MATT KENSETH: Well, I don’t know that it really matters to me necessarily when we run it. To be honest, it’s been such a strange year, obviously no fans, media and stuff at the racetrack. They all kind of blur together. I have to think about it when I realized yesterday was the 4th.
    I don’t know. I mean, I heard Aric talking about it, he’s a little bit full of it. Nobody likes to melt in a racecar. Some people probably hate it more than others, but nobody really likes melting in a racecar.
    Some of these days races, certainly tonight it got real late, pretty dark, wasn’t that hot. Certainly there’s some coming up that have the potential to be pretty hot. Kentucky and Texas, some of those races.
    I don’t know. It doesn’t matter to me really what time of year we come here. I did really always enjoy the weekends here when you had IRP, Thursday, Friday, then Friday, Saturday watching the trucks, the Xfinity cars over at IRP, then the Cup cars here being the Cup race. That was always fun. That always used to be in August, a weekend I always looked forward to.

    Q. Rough go since the first race at Darlington. How much confidence does this race give you going forward to Kentucky and the rest of the season as a whole?
    MATT KENSETH: Whenever you run well, you build more confidence, not just for myself but for the team and everybody involved. Running bad has opposite effect. Certainly we had a good day starting off at Darlington. I was super sloppy and rusty, we still finished 10th.
    Just kind of downhill from there. We went back and were a little faster. I hit the wall, got a bad finish. Nothing was going really well. Like I said, we had a couple decent races last weekend with no mistakes, no problems, no issues, got decent finishes. Today we were able to be competitive, run up front. Chad had great calls, really good calls. Gave me everything I needed to win the race. I’m a little disappointed I couldn’t get it done honestly. Had the best tires, gave me good track position. Couldn’t quite get the 4 car.
    When you run well, it builds confidence. But you have to go out and do it each and every week.

    Q. You’ve won so many races, a championship. Is confidence still something you need, something that’s important to any driver?
    MATT KENSETH: Yeah, for sure. I mean, it’s easy for anybody to get kind of beat up. You try to keep it in perspective. You go try to do better every week, try to do the best job you can do at controlling the things that are in your control, kind of not worry about the rest.
    Certainly you have all those weeks where you’re running in the 20s with a team that we know is capable of running like we ran today. That’s kind of tough on your ego, confidence, whatever. Even walking through the shop you thing they are whispering, Got the short straw with this replacement driver (laughter).
    Certainly when you run bad, you never feel good about it. When you run better, certainly builds confidence. Kind of shows us all as a group that we can do it.
    THE MODERATOR: Matt, thank you for your time.
    MATT KENSETH: Thanks, guys. Appreciate it.

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with 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.

  • Early Pit Road Incident Ends Buescher’s Chances Early in Indy

    Early Pit Road Incident Ends Buescher’s Chances Early in Indy

    Indianapolis, In. (July 5, 2020) – Chris Buescher’s race was cut short on Sunday, when a chaotic multi-car incident on pit road collected his No. 17 SunnyD Mustang on lap 12 of the crown jewel NASCAR race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The team persevered and remained on track for the remainder of the race, ultimately collecting a 31st-place finish.

    Starting positions were randomly drawn based on owners points, with Buescher and the 17 team drawing the 20th position. The SunnyD Mustang fired off from that spot to begin the 400-mile race, quickly working its way up to 18th on the initial start. Several laps into the race, Buescher radioed that his Ford had a tight handling condition. As the team worked on a plan to loosen up the Mustang, Buescher dropped several spots in advance of the competition caution. He was scored 24th as the yellow flag came out for the scheduled break on lap 12.

    As the field made its way to the pits, several cars checked up and caused a pile up that completely blocked the narrow IMS pit road. Buescher was able to slip through but received heavy damage to the nose and rear of his Mustang. The team worked on the damage until the red flag was displayed to clear pit road, and then again when the caution came back out.

    Buescher was able to make minimum speed when the race returned to green, which allowed the team to continue working on the damage. Buescher was the only one of the cars that received major damage in the wreck able to continue in the race and was scored 35th after the wreck.

    The team continued to work hard to fix the damage and improve handling conditions throughout the remainder of the race, and multiple incidents allowed the team to pick up several spots in the race. Buescher was ultimately scored with a 31st-place finish.

    The NASCAR Cup Series returns to action next weekend in Kentucky. Coverage begins at 2:30 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

  • Newman’s Day Ends Early at Brickyard 400

    Newman’s Day Ends Early at Brickyard 400

    SPEEDWAY, Ind. (July 5, 2020) – In an action-packed stage one at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Ryan Newman had a tire go down early, ultimately causing damage he was unable to overcome, ending the day early for the Oscar Mayer Ford Mustang to finish 34th.

    For the fifth race in a row, weather had an impact on raceday as lightning entered the Indianapolis area right around race time (4 p.m. ET), delaying the start to just past 5 p.m. ET. After the random draw for starting positions, Newman rolled off 13th for the 160-lap event.

    With a competition caution at lap 12, Newman ran 21st, reporting he was tight inside his Oscar Mayer machine. Under yellow – with the whole field pitting for the first time for service – a multi-car incident ensued near the entrance of pit road, resulting in a red flag.

    Newman, a native of Indiana, was ahead of the incident, running 19th by the restart at lap 18. With 10 to go in the stage, a tire went down on the right side of Newman’s Ford, resulting in hard contact with the wall. After multiple trips to pit road, Newman restarted five laps down for stage two, but ultimately was forced to the garage due to the prior damage.

    Next up, the NASCAR Cup Series heads to Kentucky Speedway for a 400-mile event next Sunday afternoon. Race coverage begins at 2:30 p.m. ET on FS1, and can also be heard on PRN and SiriusXM Channel 90.

  • CHEVY NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Post-Race Notes and Quotes

    CHEVY NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Post-Race Notes and Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    BIG MACHINE HAND SANITIZER 400
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    JULY 5, 2020

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd MATT KENSETH, NO. 42 MCDELIVERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    8th TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 CHEDDAR’S SCRATCH KITCHEN CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    9th BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    11th CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    13th KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    2nd Matt Kenseth (Chevrolet)
    3rd Aric Almirola (Ford)
    4th Brad Keselowski (Ford)
    5th Cole Custer (Ford)

    The NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Kentucky Speedway with the Quaker State 400 Presented by Walmart on Sunday, July 12th, at 2:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    MATT KENSETH, NO. 42 MCDELIVERY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 2nd
    “It was a great day for the 42 team today. It’s always nice to be up front and be in contention late in the race. Chad did a great job on the box with his calls today. We had a really good strategy and the best tires coming to the end of the race, lining up fourth behind the leader late in the race, but just couldn’t get it done to take the lead. I tried everything to get to the front, but just didn’t have quite enough to get around the No. 4 car. If we had gotten to the lead though, I know we would have been hard to beat. All in all, though, a great race for us. It felt good to run up front and was a confidence booster for all of us. Looking forward to getting to Kentucky and carrying that momentum forward.”

    HEY, HOW ABOUT THAT? WERE YOU THINKING THE NEW TIRES MIGHT BE ENOUGH TO PASS THE NO. 4 OF KEVIN HARVICK?
    “Man, that No. 4….even the No. 10 (Aric Almirola) and the No. 41 (Cole Custer) and the No. 14 (Clint Bowyer) which, I ran by earlier; they were just really, really fast. Like, I could get a run through (Turns) 2 and 4 and I thought I could run a little faster, but I could never get a big enough run to make the pass. Chad (Johnson, crew chief) did a spectacular job with adjustments, with strategy. I had the best tires. I was restarting fourth on the outside behind Denny (Hamlin) on the second to last restart, and I just couldn’t get up there and quite get it done. We’ve come a long way here in the last couple of weeks. It seems like we’re really gaining on it, so it was a fun day for sure.”

    EARLIER IN THE WEEK, YOU WERE SAYING THIS IS ONE OF YOUR BEST RACE TRACKS AND THAT YOU HAD CONFIDENCE; BUT DID YOU REALLY THINK IT COULD BE A TOP-FIVE DAY?
    “Well, I’d hoped so. We always come with the goal of winning. I feel like what makes good and bad race tracks most of the time, I feel like, is good cars and getting in position and pit stops and all the things they did to get us there. But I felt like this has been one of my better places. I’ve never been able to look at that win, but we’ve ran pretty competitive here at times. I feel like Pocono is one of my weakest and we ran pretty competitive last week. Hopefully we can carry the momentum and go to Kentucky and have a good run.”

    TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 CHEDDAR’S SCRATCH KITCHEN CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 8th
    “We had a great No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet when we could run in clean air and record some good lap times, but unfortunately we struggled in dirty air, like a lot of our competitors today. Any time we were battling someone side by side or from behind them, our car would just build way too tight and make it tough to gain or hold track position. We just had an up-and-down day, falling back early and then playing some strategy to stay out to start Stage 3 from the fifth spot. Once the race restarted for Stage 3, we were able to hold on to that position for a while before having to make our final green flag stop of the day. Unfortunately, a yellow came our when our pit stops were cycling through, trapping us a lap down and forcing us to take the wave-around and get shuffled back in traffic again. When that final yellow flag came out and set us up for a green-white-checkered finish, my crew chief Randall Burnett made the call to come in for four fresh tires and put us 16th for the restart. I was able to capitalize on the final restart with fresher tires and race up to eighth place, which is a great finish for our day. We had to grind it out today, but it turned out in our favor.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 9th
    “I guess it is good to be frustrated when you finish in the ninth-place. All-in-all, it was a good day for this No. 43 World Wide Technology (WWT) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE. It was fast. We just did not have the handling underneath us. It was good down the straightaways. It did not want to turn very well – specially behind traffic. One of the more frustrating days being behind cars and just trying to maneuver. So, coming out of there with a top-10 finish is good momentum going to the Kentucky Speedway – another good track for us. We will continue the good vibes and keep staying on Jerry (Baxter, crew chief) to produce good finishes for us.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 13th
    “This was an Indy race to forget today. We had to make too many unscheduled returns to pit road, which cost us a lot of track position. We just had an unbelievably tight handling Monster Energy Camaro in traffic, I just could cut through the corners to make any passes Obviously I was hoping for better results for #700 today.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO MILITARY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 14th
    “A nice 14th-place finish at Indy for our GEICO Military team. It was a crazy one, but overall, it was a really solid day. From start to finish, we had speed and these are the types of cars that I knew we could bring to the track that would make a difference. I’m very proud of Matt (Borland) and all of my Germain Racing guys for their hard work. To finish the first two stages in 11th and 12th and then finish the race in 14th is a great day for our program. This is our fourth top-15 finish of the season and we are going to keep stacking those up. We’ll go get them in Kentucky and keep this momentum rolling.”

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 DOW SALUTES VETERANS CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 18th
    “We had a really strong Dow Salutes Veterans Chevrolet today at the Brickyard and it was fun to be able to earn Stage points in Stages 1 and 2 and lead laps. Our Chevy was handling really well all day so we really only needed to make small adjustments throughout the race. Justin Alexander made great calls to help us get track position. Clean air is huge. We made the decision to stay out when the caution flag was displayed at the end of Stage 3. That put us in a great position for a two-lap shootout to the checkered flag. We were racing for sixth but tangled in Turn 4 coming to the checkers and ended up backing into the wall. Definitely not the finish we wanted or deserved today, but I’m proud of our effort. We had a lot of positives with earning Stage points and leading laps. It was also an honor to race with the names of 1200 veterans on the car on Independence Day weekend. I want to thank Dow for helping us to honor the true heroes.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 27th
    “Our Liberty University Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE was super-fast today. It just sucks because we have had a lot of these things happen this year. It’s not a fault of anyone, it just happens and it’s a bummer for sure. We’ve had fast cars and it feels like we always have bad luck when we do. That’s what hurts even more. We just need to bring that same speed to Kentucky and hopefully we won’t have any issues there. To be leading the race like that and have a tire issue is, I guess, a good way to go out. We’ll just see what we can do in Kentucky.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 CHEVYGOODS.COM/ADAM’S POLISHES CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined by accident on lap 132; Finished 30th
    “I wish we could have some luck here in Indy. Every time we come here, something happens. We had a pretty decent car, but through a series of events it just got worse. We suffered a tire issue right before we made a green flag stop, which ended our day. I hate it for my guys and everyone at Hendrick Motorsports because they have been putting in a ton of hours both at track and at the shop. We will move on to Kentucky and I hope we bring some luck with us.”

    JUSTIN ALLGAIER, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in multi-car accident at the entrance to pit road on Lap 17 – Finished 37th
    WHAT WAS YOUR VANTAGE POINT AS YOU WERE COMING DOWN PIT ROAD?
    “Kind of like it always has been in the past here. Starting in the back trying to go forward, the No. 15 (Brennan Poole) actually got in the back of me. I didn’t know if I got (hit) the gentleman on the No. 12 (Ryan Blaney’s crew member) or not. Once the wreck started happening in front of us and we all got bottled-up there, one car after another were getting run into. It’s just a shame. I hate it for these guys on this Ally No. 48. They’ve done such a great job. They’ve prepared so well for the circumstances. Obviously, our hearts and thoughts are for Jimmie (Johnson) and his family right now. That’s the most important piece of all this is getting him back to the race track soon. And, I wanted to do well for them today and it’s disappointing to be standing here talking to you (TV interviewer) unfortunately. But we’ll go on. I don’t know what next week looks like yet. We’ll go run the Xfinity Series race and go have a good shot at it. It’s a disappointing way to end the Brickyard 400.”

    WHAT DID IT MEAN TO BE THE ONE TO GET THE CALL TO STEP IN FOR A SEVEN-TIME CHAMPION?
    “I told Mr. Hendrick and I told Jimmie as well how honored I was that they would ask me to be in this role. It means a lot. It means a lot as a driver and just everybody involved, and my family. I’d like to get the opportunity again.”
    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with 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.

  • Toyota Racing NCS Post-Race Recap — Indianapolis 7.5.20

    Toyota Racing NCS Post-Race Recap — Indianapolis 7.5.20

    BUSCH SCORES TOP 10 RUN TO LEAD TOYOTA AT THE BRICKYARD

    Denny Hamlin crashes from the lead with less than 10 laps remaining due to a tire failure

    INDIANAPOLIS (July 5, 2020) – Kyle Busch (sixth) led Toyota with a top-10 finish at the Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sunday evening.

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Race 16 of 36 – 400 miles, 160 laps

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, Kevin Harvick*
    2nd, Matt Kenseth*
    3rd, Aric Almirola*
    4th, Brad Keselowski*
    5th, Cole Custer*
    6th, KYLE BUSCH
    12th, CHRISTOPHER BELL
    20th, DANIEL SUÁREZ
    28th, DENNY HAMLIN
    29th, TIMMY HILL
    33rd, ERIK JONES
    38th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Skittles America Mix Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 6th

    What were you battling throughout the race?

    “We just kept getting off on pit strategy with the Skittles America Mix Camry. We had a valve stem come out fo the left rear on a stop and that put us in the back. Then we had vibrations at various points throughout the race with different sets of tires so we had to stay on top of that and make sure we changed those. Each time, that would put us on the back. I struggled to pass anybody most of the day, but somehow got spots on restarts. I was able to salvage a sixth-place finish and will head to Kentucky next week.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 28th

    What are you thinking following that hard hit in the closing laps?

    “It’s just tough. I hate it for the FedEx team. We didn’t do what we needed to do and it didn’t work out for us today. I had a fast car obviously and was stretching it out there but wasn’t pushing right front at all. It’s kind of roulette if you’re going to get one that will stay together or not and mine didn’t. You saw the end result. These big races — things don’t go my way all the time. We’re still going to go next week and try to win the next one. We’ll do all we can.”

    What has it been like battling with Kevin Harvick each week?

    “It’s been a great battle and those guys are great competitors. The last few weeks, it’s been a head-to-head with me and him. There’s probably not another guy I would rather battle with each and every week. Congrats to them and their team, they did a great job. Obviously, we had two very, very close and equal cars. They got it today.”

    ERIK JONES, No. 20 Stanley Security Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 33rd

    That was a really hard hit, Erik. It looked like it took your breath away. What did you feel?

    “The Stanley Camry was pretty quick. We were kind of just trying to move to the front and get some track position and I guess we had a right front go down. I felt it pop, and I was kind of along for the ride. It was a pretty hard hit. It’s a shame. The Stanley Camry was fast. I think we just needed to get up front a little more and we could have contended. It’s a shame; it’s kind of the story of our season. We’ve just had a rough year, and things are just not going our way. Hopefully, we can just turn it around, keep bringing fast cars and have things turn around for us.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 19 Auto Owners Insurance Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 38th

    Engine issues for Martin Truex Jr., then he got caught up in that incident on pit road. Martin, how do you sum up a short day like this?
    “Terrible. Disappointing. We really only ran one lap up to speed, then we ended up having that engine deal, so it’s just disappointing. Our Auto Owners Camry felt amazing. I thought that we were going to have a great day. We ran a lap and a half, I guess, and it was feeling really good and then engine went down. The deal on pit road, that kind of happened to us last year. I almost aborted. I almost said I’m going to wait and come around the next lap, but the guys really wanted to get under the hood and assess the engine, and come to find out it was just a spark plug problem, so we could have easily fixed it and had a really good day. Thanks to Auto Owners and Toyota and everyone that supports us. We will come back strong and hopefully get them next week.”

    # # #

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. and North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands. During that time, Toyota has created a tremendous value chain as our teams have contributed to world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 40 million cars and trucks in North America, where we have 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama (10 in the U.S.), and directly employ more than 47,000 people (over 36,000 in the U.S.). Our 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.) sold nearly 2.8 million cars and trucks (nearly 2.4 million in the U.S.) in 2019.

    Through the Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit www.toyotanewsroom.com.

  • John Hunter Nemechek Post-Race Report: Indy

    John Hunter Nemechek Post-Race Report: Indy

    Track: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, 2.5 Mile Oval
    Race: 16 of 38
    Event: Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 (400 miles, 160 laps)

    John Hunter Nemechek
    No. 38 Fire Alarm Services, Inc. Ford Mustang

    Started: 19th
    Finished: 15th

    Stage One: 17th
    Stage Two: 17th
    Stage Three: 15th

    After a delayed start due to lightning in the area, John Hunter Nemechek took the green flag in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the 19th position. At the Competition Caution on Lap 12, he radioed to the team that his No. 38 Fire Alarm Services, Inc. (FAS) Ford Mustang was snug in all four corners and that he needed “help with turn center off.” He was on pit road for 4 tires, fuel and a track bar adjustment when a wreck happened on pit road directly in front and alongside Nemechek’s pit box, but he did not sustain any damage. He would stay there for a brief red flag and restarted the race in 21st place. Through the rest of Stage 1, Nemechek tried to experiment with the throttle and his driving line, but still struggled to “keep it turning in traffic.” He would take the green- and-white checkered flag in the 17th position.

    Crew Chief Seth Barbour made the call for Nemechek to stay out at the Stage 1 Caution, allowing him to start Stage 2 in 11th place. He still battled some tightness in traffic with his No. 38 FAS machine but noted that he was good running by himself. By the end of Stage 2, Nemechek radioed to tell the team that previous adjustments had helped and that he could turn better in traffic, but he could still stand to be a tick freer. He would finish Stage 2 in the 17th position.

    Nemechek took the green flag to start the day’s Final Stage in the 18th place. During a caution on Lap 124, Nemechek noted that his No. 38 FAS Ford Mustang was “free to fire off” and “tightened up as the run goes on.” He managed to stay inside of the top 20 for much of the stage. When a caution came out with less than 10 laps to go, Nemechek did not pit and restarted P13. He was involved in a last-lap wreck, but kept it rolling to take the checkered flag in 15th place.

    Nemechek on Indianapolis:

    “It was a hard-fought day for our No. 38 Fire Alarm Services, Inc. Ford Mustang. We were tight in traffic to start and it was difficult to keep the car turning when I was behind another car. Seth and the crew made some good adjustments throughout the day that helped our handling a lot. We got caught up there at the end, but still had a decent top-15 day. I’m proud of our Front Row Motorsports team’s continued effort in the shop and at the track each week. Huge shoutout to FAS and Digital Ally Body Cameras for coming on board with us today. We’ll regroup this week and come back ready for Kentucky.”