Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Corey LaJoie, CorvetteParts.net to honor Dale Jarrett with Darlington throwback scheme

    Corey LaJoie, CorvetteParts.net to honor Dale Jarrett with Darlington throwback scheme

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (July 9, 2019) – The NASCAR Throwback weekend at Darlington Raceway has become one of the most highly regarded events on the schedule. From the retro schemes honoring those who left their mark on the sport to the retro mustaches, its truthfully an all-around walk back in time.

    Corey LaJoie and Go Fas Racing (GFR) will travel back to the year of 1991 to honor 1999 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion, Dale Jarrett. LaJoie’s GFR Ford will mimic the Nestle Crunch scheme Jarrett powered in the then Busch Grand National Series in 1991.

    The 43-time NASCAR national series winner took the blue and white scheme to Victory Lane five times during the sponsor’s tenure with Jarrett, with two of those victories coming at Darlington. The scheme also made appearances in Victory Lane at Bristol, Charlotte and Rockingham.

    In conjunction with his victorious efforts at Darlington in NASCAR’s second-tier series, Jarrett boasts three wins in the Cup Series at the track “Too Tough to Tame.”

    It’s also fitting that the 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame Inductee wheeled the No. 32 while driving the Crunch scheme just as LaJoie currently races the same number in NASCAR’s premier division. While Jarrett only drove the number in the Xfinity Series, the North Carolina native’s resume also includes a trio of Daytona 500 wins coming in 1993, 1996 and 2000.

    LaJoie is proud to honor such a remarkable driver and his outstanding achievements in our sport.

    “The car looks great and I’ve always been a fan of Dale, so to carry this scheme around Darlington is awesome. I think we did a great job keeping the scheme as close to the original as possible while incorporating the CorvetteParts.net logos into it. I can’t thank Tom and TJ Keen enough for allowing us to run this design – it’s one of my favorite schemes. I might even have to shave myself a mustache so I don’t do the car a disservice,
    ” LaJoie joked.

    The Crunch-inspired scheme will flaunt longtime GFR partner, Keen Parts/CorvetteParts.net. Whether you’re looking for a complete interior for your vintage ’58 Corvette or a performance accessory for your ’09, they have the Corvette part you need and the expertise you want as Corvettes are their sole focus.

    Join us as we venture back in time on Labor Day weekend at the 1.366-mile South Carolina track. NBCSN will carry coverage of the crown-jewel Southern 500 on Sunday, September 1 at 6:00 PM ET.

    ————————————————————–
    About Our Team

    About Keen Parts/CorvetteParts.net:
    Corvettes are all they do, so whether you’re looking for a complete interior for your vintage ’58 Corvette or a performance accessory for your ’09, they have the Corvette part you need and the expertise you want. For your Corvette exterior, they got you covered bumper-to-bumper.  They even have emblems, moldings, grilles, bumpers and brackets, fiberglass, exterior trim and weather stripping. For the interior, they have steering wheels, seats, dash pads, consoles, carpeting, door panels, seat belts, interior trim and fasteners. Under the hood, they’ve got it all from air cleaners to exhaust systems, air conditioning, radiators, and valve covers all the way down to the decals and correct fasteners to bolt it all back together. For more information, please visit www.corvetteparts.net
    or call 1-844-Tom-Keen.

    Get Corey LaJoie Updates:
    To get live updates during the race weekends follow @coreylajoie on Instagram and Twitter. Make sure to give Corey a “like” on Facebook – “@CoreyLaJoieRacing”. For a detailed bio and updated in-season statistics, please visit www.coreylajoieracing.com .

    About Go Fas Racing:
    Go Fas Racing (GFR) currently fields Ford Mustangs in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series for driver Corey LaJoie. Located in Mooresville, North Carolina, GFR has competed in the NASCAR’s premier series since 2014; fielding cars for some of NASCAR’s top drivers, including past champions. To find out more information about our team please visit www.GoFasRacing.com.

  • Haley, Spire Motorsports Win Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway

    Haley, Spire Motorsports Win Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (July 8, 2019) – In an upset of practically unprecedented proportions, Justin Haley, with help from crew chief Peter Sospenzo and Mother Nature, won his first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) race in Sunday’s rain-delayed Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

    Haley, in just his third start in NASCAR’s premier division, drove a smart, patient race while positioning himself to make a run toward the front of the field as the laps wound down in the scheduled 160-lap race.

    When a Lap 118 multi-car incident slowed the field and sent many of the day’s contenders to the garage area early, Haley steered his No. 77 Fraternal Order of Eagles Chevrolet Camaro clear of the carnage, launching a sequence of events that propelled the 20-year-old driver to Victory Lane at the “World Center of Racing.”

    “It’s absolutely a blessing,” said Haley. “It’s pretty incredible that I have so many great people around me who have given me this opportunity to come here, to this level and stage, that we are performing on. Obviously, Todd (Braun – Haley’s uncle and former NASCAR team owner) and my family have done a great job, but the Fraternal Order of Eagles has given me this opportunity with Spire Motorsports and it’s truly a blessing. I never even saw myself running a Cup race until I got a call a few months ago to do Talladega. It’s just unreal and I don’t know how to put it. I don’t know how to feel.”

    Haley started NASCAR’s traditional Fourth of July Weekend 400-miler from deep in the field, with a pre-determined strategy to log miles, stay out of harm’s way and avoid the always imminent “big one.” With veteran NASCAR top kick Peter Sospenzo calling the shots from pit road, Haley clicked off laps and eventually raced himself into position to make meaningful forward progress.

    By the start of the race’s third and final stage, and with the team’s plan beginning to take shape, Haley made the most of his opportunity and when the smoke cleared from the Lap 118 free-for-all, the three-time NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series winner was suddenly in contention for the win.

    As NASCAR gave the field the one-lap-to-go signal following the incident and the leaders headed down pit road, Sospenzo cast his lot and ordered his driver to stay on the track in hopes of outmaneuvering the competition. His plan came to fruition less than a half-lap later when lightning struck within eight miles of Daytona International Speedway, forcing NASCAR to red flag the race with Haley’s No. 77 Chevy atop the scoring pylon.

    Over the next two hours and 12 minutes, Haley waited for the looming rain to settle in once and for all to seal the win or to return to his car and finish the final 33 laps.

    After the extended red flag, that included a lengthy period where it looked like the weather would clear, the approaching storms rolled into Daytona Beach for good. With two of three stages complete, NASCAR declared the race official, affording Haley and Spire Motorsports owners T.J. Puchyr and Jeff Dickerson with their collective crowning achievements.

    “The stars aligned and I didn’t ever think I was going to get redemption back from a few years back in Daytona, and last year when I got the Xfinity win taken away from me,” said Haley of the win and his previous outings at Daytona. “So, to come back and get redemption in the Cup Series is pretty cool and makes that second-place finish with Kaulig Racing last Friday a lot better.”

    Spire Motorsports was founded in 2018 by co-owners T.J. Puchyr and Jeff Dickerson and has competed in every MENCS race this season. Haley’s win marked the team’s first checkered flag in 18 races and the first for Sospenzo since May 2003.

    “It’s obviously a huge, huge moment to win in the pinnacle of our sport at Daytona, no less,” commented Puchyr. “This is it, right? This is the World Center of Racing… Jeff Dickerson and I said we believe in the sport. We believe in the platform that NASCAR provides. This is the American dream. I’ve been coming here sitting on that lawn since I was 10 years old, saying one day we’re going to do this.

    “It’s not lost on me that luck was on our side today. But I’m not going to feel bad about it at all. I’m going to love it. We’re just going to continue to be the Little Engine That Could and build this thing as best we can and go from here.”

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series heads for the Bluegrass State next weekend where rookie Quin Houff will return to the seat of Spire Motorsports No. 77 entry.

    The Quaker State 400 from Kentucky Speedway will be televised live on NBCSN Saturday, July 13 beginning at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. The 19th of 36 races on the 2019 MENCS schedule will be broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    About the Fraternal Order of Eagles …
    The F.O.E. was founded in February 1898 by six theatre owners gathered in a Seattle shipyard to discuss a musician’s strike. After addressing the matter, they agreed to “bury the hatchet” and form “The Order of Good Things.” As numbers grew, members selected the Bald Eagle as the official emblem and changed the name to “The Fraternal Order of Eagles.” The women’s auxiliary traces its roots to 1927. The Fraternal Order of Eagles includes nearly 800,000 members and more than 1,500 locations across the United States and Canada. Stop by one of our locations and see why the F.O.E. is known as People Helping People.

  • RCR Post Race Report – Coke Zero Sugar 400

    RCR Post Race Report – Coke Zero Sugar 400

    Austin Dillon Leads Laps and Wins Stage 2 in the No. 3 American Ethanol Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 Before Being Collected in “The Big One” At Daytona

    Finish: 33rd
    Start: 21st
    Points: 22nd

    “That was definitely one of the best race cars I’ve ever had, so whatever RCR and ECR is doing to build these speedway cars, they need to keep doing it. We were able to work with Team Chevy all day and stick to a strategy to keep the Chevrolet teams up front in the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway. It felt awesome to earn the Stage 2 win and lead a lot of laps in the No. 3 American Ethanol Chevrolet Camaro ZL1. I felt like it was our race to win, but unfortunately it didn’t end up that way. We lost the lead and I really felt it was kind of urgent to get back into the lead because of the lightning and rain coming. I got turned a little bit left and then it shot me down left. It’s just part of this kind of racing. I’m disappointed in how everything went down. I hate wrecking race cars but I’m here for Richard Childress Racing. I bleed RCR and we’re trying to get them in the playoffs.”-Austin Dillon

    Daniel Hemric Finishes 18th in Rain-Shortened Coke Zero Sugar 400 with No. 8 Cessna Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

    Finish: 18th
    Start: 24th
    Points: 24th

    “What a weekend down here in Daytona. We have to thank all of the amazing race fans who stuck it out with all of the weather we’ve had here this weekend. Our No. 8 Cessna Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 was fast throughout the weekend and we had a solid plan to work with our fellow Chevrolet drivers once the race started and that seemed to work out when the green flag flew. We were just biding our time but then made contact with another car exiting pit road, which caused some damage to the right front of the car. The guys were able to fix that damage, but then we got even more damage when the No. 41 came down the track and hit us in the right side. We had significant damage from that and fell two laps down, but these guys never gave up and we kept fighting. We were able to get one lap back because of the wave around, then got the free pass to get back on the lead lap. Unfortunately, the weather came and we never got the chance to go up there and mix it up for the race win. I hate it for all of the guys on this Cessna Chevrolet, the fans here at the track and watching at home, but that’s part of racing. We’ll regroup and head to Kentucky and look to continue our momentum there.”-Daniel Hemric

  • Despite Damage From Late Crash, Menard Finishes 16th At Daytona

    Despite Damage From Late Crash, Menard Finishes 16th At Daytona

    Paul Menard and the No. 21 Menards/Dutch Boy Mustang experienced the typical ups and downs of a Monster Energy Cup Series race at Daytona International Speedway before winding up 16th in a rain-delayed and rain-shortened Coke Zero Sugar 400.

    The 400 was set to run Saturday night, but was pushed back to Sunday due to rain.

    The green flag flew just after 1:00 p.m., and Menard was immediately on the move from 20th place, his starting spot which was determined by owner points after Friday’s qualifying session also was a victim of Florida’s summertime weather.

    By Lap 12 Menard was up to 13th place, and he made his first foray into the top 10 just five laps later.

    Menard, driving with a missing hood flap for most of the first 50-lap stage, wound up 13th at the end of that segment.

    His Menards/Dutch Boy crew repaired the flap during the caution period at the end of the stage, and he rejoined the race in 33rd place. He had climbed to 15th by the time the caution flag was displayed on Lap 60 for a spin by Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

    Menard, despite racing against drivers with fresher tires and running with damage to the rear of his car from contact with Kyle Busch, drove his way into the top 10 and was running seventh with one lap remaining in Stage Two but lost his drafting help and wound up outside the top 10.

    In the final stage, Menard, as he had done throughout the first two stages, worked in the draft with his Ford teammates, running in or just outside the top 10. But it was a push from the No. 11 of Denny Hamlin that propelled him into the lead at Lap 112.

    Menard continued to run in the lead pack until being swept up in an 18-car crash on Lap 120.

    The impact left the Menards/Dutch Boy Mustang with significant damage to the nose, and before the green flag could be displayed, the race was stopped because of lightning in the area and eventually called due to rain.

    Eddie Wood said that while he always prefers to run a race to its advertised distance, sometimes it’s best to let events play out otherwise.

    “You have to be careful what you wish for, especially at a track like Daytona or Talladega,” he said. “We had a lot of damage to the car. The duct work in the front was gone, and the splitter was probably going to be dragging.”

    “On a day like today, it’s best to take what you can get and move on to the next race.”

    Menard and the Wood Brothers team return to the track next week at Kentucky Speedway.

    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 Paul Menard in the famous No. 21 racer.

  • MENCS Toyota Daytona Race Recap

    MENCS Toyota Daytona Race Recap

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Daytona International Speedway
    Race 18 of 36 – 400 miles, 160 laps
    July 7, 2019

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, Justin Haley*
    2nd, William Bryon*
    3rd, Jimmie Johnson*
    4th, Ty Dillon*
    5th, Ryan Newman*
    8th, MATT DiBENEDETTO
    14th, KYLE BUSCH
    22nd, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    23rd, ERIK JONES
    26th, DENNY HAMLIN
    31st, PARKER KLIGERMAN
    *non-Toyota driver

    · Inclement weather ended the race 33 laps from the scheduled finish.

    · Matt DiBenedetto was the highest finishing Toyota Camry driver today with an eighth-place result.

    · This is the second top-10 finish for DiBenedetto in the last three events, and his second straight top-10 result at the summer Daytona International Speedway event.

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    MATT DiBENEDETTO, No. 95 Procore Toyota Camry, Leavine Family Racing

    Finishing Position: 8th

    How did your race go?

    “We worked on the car a lot with adjustments. We got it much better handling. People are really sliding around a lot in the turbulence of the dirty air. We’ve got our car driving good. It leads really good if I can get there, so it has really good speed and it drives good now.”

    Can you talk about making through the big one?

    “Yeah, I couldn’t see anything in the crash other than crap everywhere, so I listened to Doug (Campbell, spotter) 100%. I went wherever he told me. He said go low and I just slammed it down on the apron and hoped no one was underneath me. There wasn’t and we avoided it somehow, so Doug gets credit for that one.”

  • TEAM CHEVY AT DAYTONA 2: Post Race Press Conf. Transcript

    TEAM CHEVY AT DAYTONA 2: Post Race Press Conf. Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    COKE ZERO SUGAR 400
    TEAM CHEVY POST RACE PRESS CONF TRANSCRIPT
    JULY 7, 2019

    JUSTIN HALEY, CAMARO ZL1 SCORE VICTORY AT DAYTONA
    Team Chevy Finishes 1-2-3-4

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (July 7, 2019) – A driver never forgets his first big win, and today 20 year-old Justin Haley became the latest first-time winner with a lifetime of stories to tell. Haley and his No. 77 Fraternal Order of Eagles Camaro ZL1 team made their way through on-track wrecks, pit-road chaos and Mother Nature to be in position to be crowned the winner of the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

    “Congratulations to Justin Haley, Peter Sospenzo, T.J. Puchyr and the entire No. 77 Fraternal Order of Eagles Camaro ZL1 Spire Motorsports team on winning the NASCAR Cup race at Daytona International Speedway,” said Jim Campbell, Chevrolet U.S. Vice President, Performance and Motorsports.

    “The team got to the lead at the right time and they won! I am also so proud of all the Chevrolet drivers, crew chiefs, spotters and competition directors for working together to maximize stage points, the race win, and driver points.”

    After multiple stops and starts as a result of lightning and rain, the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) race was declared official with just 33 laps remaining and with Haley sitting in the No. 1 position. Today was only the third MENCS career start for Haley. The full-time competitor in the NASCAR Xfinity Series is fresh from his runner-up finish in Friday night’s Circle K Firecracker 250 at Daytona Powered by Coke-Cola Xfinity Series Race at Daytona.

    Chevrolet claimed the top-four finishers in today’s MENCS race, which marks the official mid-point of the 2019 season. William Byron, No. 24 Axalta Patriotic Camaro ZL1 was second followed by Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1 and Ty Dillon, No. 13 Geico Camaro ZL1. Kurt Busch finished 10th in his No. 1 Global Poker Camaro ZL1 to give Team Chevy five of the top 10 overall. Additionally, Austin Dillon clinched Stage 2 of the race in his No. 3 American Ethanol Camaro ZL1.

    Ryan Newman (Ford) was fifth to round out the top five finishers.

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season continues next weekend at Kentucky Speedway with the Quaker State 400 on Saturday, July 13th at 7:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on NBC Sports, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    POST RACE PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT:
    Race Winners: Justin Haley, Peter Sospenzo, and T.J. Puchyr

    THE MODERATOR: We are joined by team members of today’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 race winning team, which is the No. 77 Fraternal Order of Eagles Chevrolet from Spire Motorsports driven by Justin Haley. We are joined by team owner T.J. Puchyr and our crew chief Peter Sospenzo.

    Q. T.J., this is an unusual move for you guys as an agency to step into team ownership. Now you’re a race winner, you’ve got more wins than Stewart Haas Racing your partner noted to me. How do you feel? How did you get to this point? And I know that winning races probably wasn’t the immediate goal.
    T.J. PUCHYR: How do I feel? I probably couldn’t explain ‑‑ I think you guys probably all want to go home after the weather this weekend.
    But it’s surreal. It’s obviously a huge, huge moment to win in the pinnacle of our sport at Daytona, no less. This is it, right? This is the World Center of Racing. It says it on the wall. Thank you for the cue card.
    It’s just ‑‑ it’s a huge deal for us. We just wanted to be in control of our own destiny, and we’ve put a lot of money in a lot of people’s pockets in this garage, and there’s a lot of people out there that this we’re doing this as a cash grab the way the charter system works, and quite frankly that’s not true.
    Jeff Dickerson and I said we believe in the sport, we believe in the platform that NASCAR provides, right; this is the American dream. I’ve been coming here sitting on that lawn since I was 10 years old, saying one day we’re going to do this.
    Is this PC in here? How is that going to work? Like f‑‑‑ it, we did it, right? It wasn’t pretty. I’ve lost my fair share of races. We’ve dominated races. I grew up working for Todd Braun. That was my first big job. But I’ve been in racing all my life. My dad was a chassis guy for the Rapid Roman Hall‑of‑Famer Richie Evans.
    So this isn’t new to us. We’ve been doing this a long time, and we’re trying to build something, but the way that this shook out in November of last year, 5‑Hour was a client of ours, Furniture Row was a client of ours, so this is bittersweet. Love Barney Visser, love the Visser family. Joe Garone is sitting somewhere. I hope he’s on his boat enjoying this, but it’s hard. Those were ‑‑ that’s our family, you know?
    So yeah, this means a lot. It’s a big f‑‑‑ing deal. But this is ‑‑ we did it early, and look, it’s not lost on me that luck was on our side today.
    But I’m not going to feel bad about it at all. I’m going to love it. We’re just going to continue to be the Little Engine That Could and build this thing as best we can and go from here.

    Q. Peter, the situation where NASCAR had called the one to go and you guys had stayed out, Kurt went down, what was kind of the thought process there? Did you have an inkling that the weather could play out in your favor, or did you just want the track position and see how it played out if there was another crash? What was the thought process there?
    PETER SOSPENZO: Well, my thought process was even if we had four flat tires, we weren’t going to pit. We were going to ride it out and hope that we get something with the weather in our favor. It was more lightning than it was actually rain at that point in time, but I know you get 30 minutes every time you get a lightning strike within seven, eight miles, whatever it is. It was our only option to try and steal a win, if you want to call it, but there was no way we were coming in. I was actually surprised that a couple of guys in front of us pitted in front of us.
    But my mind was made up ‑‑ really my mind was made up when we got back on the lead lap and noticed that the rain was coming, and I said to myself then, if we get in a position, I’m not going to pit, I don’t care what happens. And it just worked out that way.
    And it was a long time waiting, obviously. I don’t know how long the rain delay was. Had to be like, what, two hours? Yeah, felt like 20 days.
    And it’s been hot down here. It’s been a tough week on everybody. Everybody working, the pit crews, the guys working on the cars, it’s been hot and rainy and you’re fighting weather, fighting this, fighting that, and we just wanted to come here today and have a decent finish, not have any issues, and just finish where we were not getting caught up in any wrecks. You know, and it just worked out. It doesn’t happen that often.

    Q. For T.J., your vision for the sport and the things that you feel like maybe fans or the industry do not understand for the process so far and what you see this team becoming half a decade from now?
    T.J. PUCHYR: We want to compete with the big dogs. That’s why we’re here, right? The messaging from the France family in my opinion for, I don’t know, the last 18 months is a good one. They’re trying to rebuild this thing. They’ve taken a ton of hits, right, but I’m also smart enough to know that this is their sandbox and we want to play in it.
    But we made that choice, right. Jeff Dickerson and I are not wealthy people, right. Went and got a $6 million loan from the bank, so you could have done it, too, okay.
    To sit here and say, I don’t understand it, I don’t know what these guys are doing, you’re here, and it’s like ‑‑ you know, this is NASCAR, right? A lot of us grew up in this. To finish first, your first finish, you’ve got to be in the field.
    I mean, back in the day when we were kids, all of us, how many ‑‑ all these guys from short tracks growing up racing in the sport ‑‑ Ross Chastain ‑‑ it’s like, we’re all just trying to fight and claw every day and make it. But it’s our passion, and we love it. You know, just trying to build something here that we can have, that we can go compete with the lions of the sport, the Hendricks and the Ganassis, the Penskes, the Stewart‑Haases.
    We’re not there today, but today for whatever reason, I can take you down a thousand things. Destiny, I don’t know if Loeffler was toying with me all day, right; he drove for me for seven years with Todd Braun. I don’t know if he couldn’t wait until he thought I was going to have a heart attack and he let the skies open up. Clauson, a lot of guys that have been around us and what we’ve done, this isn’t new for us. This stage and this win is new for us, but this sport and this garage, man, we get up and we breathe it every day, and we fight.
    That’s what we’re going to do tomorrow, too. I’m going to enjoy this a little bit for sure, but tomorrow is Monday; we’ve got to get to work, you know.
    Did I answer all that okay for you?

    Q. Absolutely. And should a sports agency be involved with a team at the highest level of stock car racing?
    T.J. PUCHYR: Fenway is, aren’t they? Fenway Roush? Do they have an agency, Fenway Sports Group? You tell me. I’m asking you. I mean ‑‑

    Q. I don’t know if they’re involved with NASCAR drivers.
    T.J. PUCHYR: What drivers are we involved ‑‑ I mean, I think you need to spend some time and get to know us a little bit more, but that’s okay. It’s a new world. Social media, I get it. But yeah, we can talk all you want.

    Q. Looking forward to it.
    T.J. PUCHYR: Likewise.

    Q. T.J., you guys came in 100 points out of 30th. I think with the win you’re eligible for the playoffs even though Justin is an Xfinity driver. Is there any way that you feel like you can hit 30th to get into the owner’s championship? Is there any way that you can get ‑‑ with this money, buy equipment that can get you there?
    T.J. PUCHYR: I think there’s a way. I think we have stuff in the pipeline. Obviously doing this, gaining control of the charter Monday after Homestead, you know, it’s a lot of work to try and get to Daytona, and Peter and these guys thrashing every day, these guys do more with less. They don’t get the credit that they deserve.
    This is a big shot in the arm for them, but I mean, I think we’ve got some stuff in the works that people are going to be proud of. You know, I’d like to say more. I just can’t yet. We don’t have all the contracts done and we don’t have everything in place. But we’re going to try and get better here every day, bit by bit. But at the same time, as I alluded to the last question with Weaver, we don’t have the deep pockets to go out and just dump it all in, dump it all in, dump it all in. We’re going to build it slow, and when we’ve got money, we’re going to put money in, and when we don’t, we hate it. Right, we hate it, but we’re going to do what we gotta do to show up and fight.
    You’ve been doing this a long time. Peter ‑‑ to see him and for us to be at Talladega and be in that pack and watch J.J. Haley up there fighting for that stage points, like we’re sitting next to each other high‑fiving ‑‑ you’d think we won the race. It was just that type of deal. It’s the underdog story.
    But yes, we’re going to try to get better. Obviously this changes things on some level, but I’d be lying if I said even if I know what that even means today.

    Q. It’s been a long time for you since you’ve been back in Victory Lane, and what was your thought process during this rain delay? And were you in any contact with Justin during that period?
    PETER SOSPENZO: Well, we were. He was by the car, by the pit box for a little while. We were talking a little bit. But last time I won a race was at Hendrick Motorsports with Joe Nemechek at Richmond in a rain‑out, and we still didn’t even get to go to Victory Lane there. We had to go to Victory Lane in the garage. So I was hoping we would get to do that here in the Victory Lane for the Daytona race. But it didn’t work out, but we won the race. That’s all that matters.
    I’ve been doing this since 1979. It’s been a long time. Elmore Lang was my first job in this business. I’ve known you a long time.
    And it’s almost surreal right now that we even won the race, honestly. It really is, because where we’re working now you’ve got to multitask. You’ve got to do 10, 15 jobs because we don’t have the people. We don’t have the resources. But there are a couple of opportunities during the year that we get a chance to maybe, maybe do this right here.
    It feels good, and all my guys, it’s not even going to sink into them until next week when we come to the racetrack and all the other guys from the other teams congratulate everybody. That’s when you realize that you’ve done something pretty special.
    T.J., Justin, I’m happy for this guy right here because he deserves it. He was due. And now he’s a Monster Energy Cup winner. Whatever that list is now, 200 ‑‑ I don’t know how many years, but he’s on that list now. He’s on the shorter list instead of the bigger list for sure, of non‑winners, so I’m really happy for him.
    THE MODERATOR: As we just learned Justin Haley, the race winner, has joined us. Just a couple fun facts about this win today. Justin is the 20th different driver to win his first Monster Energy Series race here at Daytona, the 10th to accomplish it in the July race. Justin is also the second youngest Monster Energy Series winner at Daytona and the youngest to win the July race.
    We will continue with questions for our trio up here.

    Q. About the decision to move the race to August, do you think now that the rain kind of helped you guys in July, would you want to keep it in July for tradition, or do you agree with the decision to move it?
    PETER SOSPENZO: I’ll speak to that. Nobody ever can take this win. We’re the only one to be able to do this. So we made history today. The last race on July 4th weekend.
    JUSTIN HALEY: You summed it up.
    PETER SOSPENZO: It’s not that often you get to make history, and we made history today, the last July 4th race for Daytona. I didn’t even think about that until you mentioned that. It’s pretty big, really.

    Q. Justin, given the way last July played out in the Xfinity race and then the way yesterday played out, do you even go into today’s race thinking there’s a chance, or are you just trying to do the job, take care of the car? How do you go from the mindset of trying to just take care of a car to now you’ve got a chance to win it?
    JUSTIN HALEY: Well, it’s hard. Obviously Spire Motorsports is a new team and they don’t have much over there, so this is one of their only cars, and I junked their Talladega car, which Peter was pretty mad at me for, but I hope I made it up to you with this one.
    PETER SOSPENZO: Oh, yeah, no doubt.
    JUSTIN HALEY: But it’s hard because you have to stay close enough to the draft to stay with the draft. You can’t lose it because then you’ll go multiple laps down, but you have to stay far enough back so that if the big one does occur, you can avoid it, which we did perfectly there on that last caution. It’s definitely kind of like a chess match of keeping a gap enough but not losing it.
    So strategically today I was just riding around, and I would have been really happy with a lead‑lap finish. This is only my third Cup start ever, so there was no expectation to win. There wasn’t even a thought in my mind.
    I was really focused on the Xfinity race. When I finished second in that to Ross, it was a bummer, but happy for everyone at Kaulig Racing. But to come over here at Spire Motorsports and do something pretty special with a new team is definitely unbelievable.

    Q. Justin, do you think if this race had been restarted you still could have won it? And two, I don’t know if you’re religious, but did you literally pray for rain?
    JUSTIN HALEY: Yes, I did pray for rain. But no, probably not. We probably would have gotten ate up pretty quick on the restart there. We don’t have a ‑‑ we own our own motors, so we’re not in the wind tunnel. There’s nothing to it. The guys built the car and rolled a motor out that they’ve been running all year, and it was probably refreshed a few races ago. It’s not like we have any technical alliance or big Cup team motor anything. I mean, it was just ‑‑ like I said, we were just trying to keep the fenders on it. That was the whole goal of the day was just to finish the race with no scratches.
    Probably not. If we would have gotten back green ‑‑ it was really up and down there because we did get back in the car and the skies were pretty clear, and I was like, man, like it’s over, that was our chance. It was a great strategy by Peter to leave me out there when Kurt and Landon pitted because I did see lightning out of my windshield in 3 and 4, a good bit, and I kept calling, I was like, man, there’s definitely lightning.
    And then just kind of ‑‑ the car was far away and we got lucky that they red‑flagged it down the backstretch and took us to pit road, and like I said, it was up and down because we were back in the car and ready to fire them back up and then the rain came. And the rest is history.

    Q. Do you think there was any advantage to running the Xfinity race and then the Cup race? There weren’t too many drivers that did that and you’re one the few. Did it make you more comfortable out there? Did it make you feel better about running today?
    JUSTIN HALEY: No, I’m pretty comfortable superspeedway racing. It’s always been pretty high on my skill set list. If you say ‑‑ I’ve always had pretty good finishes at superspeedways is what I’m trying to say.
    These Cup cars, man, they were a handful to drive. You would think at Daytona you would just be wide open, but we were lifting all the way out of the gas in the center of the corners to keep them underneath us. They were super, super wild to drive. Scary at some points, and especially when you’re three wide, it’s definitely tough.
    The Xfinity cars are a lot easier to drive, and I think it probably took a hand to how hot it was today, and there was really no grip on the track, which you don’t think at Daytona makes much of a difference, but they were sliding around like crazy, and it was definitely a handful.
    Did it help? Probably not, but I always love racing. Any race I can enter is a plus for me.
    PETER SOSPENZO: We didn’t even get in the draft in practice. We made three single‑car runs in practice. That was it. He is a very good speedway racer for not as much experience as he has. But he’s run up front in every one of them, which was a big plus today.
    And him ‑‑ we made that green flag stop, he got on pit road quick, got out of pit road quick, and we were able to get the Lucky Dog, so that was all on him, too, doing that, to put us in position to make the call.

    Q. Do you know where you were at the time of the big accident? Where you were running, what position?
    JUSTIN HALEY: Far enough back that I could miss it but far enough in that I was still in the draft. I don’t know, I was probably five car lengths ‑‑
    THE MODERATOR: 27th.
    JUSTIN HALEY: But that really don’t mean anything, does it? I mean, they were three wide in front of me, so I know I barely got it slowed down, and the biggest thing when they wreck in front of you like that is there’s multiple people behind you so they could run in the back of you, so not only do you have to take care of yourself, you have to look in your mirror, try and avoid the wreck in front of you, and make sure the guy behind you is not running into you, which was key.
    Keith Barnrow, my spotter for this race, did an excellent job and managed me through it, and I don’t know, it was pretty cool.

    Q. Justin, I was talking to your mom, and she was telling me about I guess the first time you got ‑‑ a couple stories, the first time you got in a car, she said it was the day after your grandmother’s funeral, your uncle had it and you saw a car on the wall of the barn and wanted to get in it. Do you recall that day? And again, I know you’re a racing family so that’s probably just second nature, but why you wanted to be in that car that day?
    JUSTIN HALEY: I’m not sure. I didn’t know it was after my grandmother’s funeral, but that’s a fun fact. I knew that the first time I got in it, I believe it was my cousin’s Quarter Midget at the time and it was on the wall, and he was driving around, he let me drive it.
    But I really didn’t have ‑‑ my family has always been in racing, but I really wasn’t grown up like around a racetrack. I don’t think I was really ever to the racetrack. I saw Jason Loeffler a few times at ORP run. We made some trips to Indy with my grandpa, but I personally feel like I had the desire to chase becoming a race car driver. I convinced my mom to let me get a Quarter Midget. At first she said, as long as you can convince your stepdad to do it, then y’all can have fun, and that wasn’t too hard to convince, being that he’s a gearhead himself. Without them two, my stepdad and my mom, obviously this wouldn’t have been possible and everyone else in my family for believing in me and giving me faith.
    But yeah, I don’t know, it’s pretty surreal.

    Q. And one other story she told, I guess she said you were about 10 years old and kind of moving up to a faster Quarter Midget, and she recalled a time when you did that and were really kind of nervous and she said kind of having the conversation with you of, hey, is this going to be fun, are we just going to do this as a fun activity, or is this going to be a serious thing we’re going to do, and she talked about your kind of nervousness with the fast car, but you brought it back in and this is what I want to do. Do you recall that experience?
    JUSTIN HALEY: I think there’s a point in everyone’s life where you have to make a decision. If you’re playing high school football, if you’re going to go play college ball, or if you’re racing, are you going to take it seriously.
    And there was a time in point where I had to get home schooled and take it seriously because I was on the road so much, and I wouldn’t be able to take it seriously if my family didn’t support me through it all. They gave up a lot. My family moved down to North Carolina a few years back to help me chase my dream when I started running K&N East with Harry Scott and Justin Marks, so they took the trip down with me, and like I said, without them, this wouldn’t be possible.

    FastScripts by ASAP Sports

    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.

  • Newman Earns Fifth-Place Finish at Daytona

    Newman Earns Fifth-Place Finish at Daytona

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (July 7, 2019) — Ryan Newman found himself in the right place when Sunday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 was called due to rain as he earned a fifth-place finish in his Roush Performance Ford Mustang, his first top-five of the season.

    Inclement weather was the story all weekend as it forced the race to be postponed to Sunday afternoon. The rain and lightning held off for the first two stages, making the race official before it was eventually called with 33 laps remaining.

    Newman started the day in 18th after qualifying was cancelled on Friday, setting the lineup per the rulebook. Eight laps in the South Bend, Indiana, native reported he was battling loose conditions, before eventually dropping to the back of the pack.

    The team pitted for fuel only at lap 37 and Newman ended the stage 20th, still reporting he was loose in his No. 6 Ford. He lined back up 15th for the second 50-lap stage, which featured three yellow flags. Over the course of the 50 laps, Newman pitted three times before ending the stage in 21st, reporting his handling had turned significantly better.

    During the stage break crew chief Scott Graves made a strategy call for two tires and it paid off, setting him up second for the restart at lap 105. After battling up front, he eventually shuffled towards the rear of the pack, which ultimately worked in his favor after an 18-car incident occurred at the front on lap 118.

    He went on to pit under the yellow for four fresh tires and fuel, but lightning in the area forced the cars down pit road for a lengthy delay as Newman was scored fifth. After another attempt to restart later and an additional delay, NASCAR made the call to end it, resulting in the top five for Newman.

    Newman and the No. 6 team return to the track next weekend at Kentucky Speedway for a Saturday night race under the lights. Race coverage begins at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN. Coverage can also be heard on PRN and SiriusXM Channel 90.

  • TEAM CHEVY AT DAYTONA 2: Race Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT DAYTONA 2: Race Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    COKE ZERO SUGAR 400
    TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    JULY 7, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Justin Haley, No. 77 Fraternal Order of Eagles Camaro ZL1
    2nd William Byron, No. 24 Axalta Patriotic Camaro ZL1
    3rd Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    4th Ty Dillon, No. 13 GEICO Military Camaro ZL1
    10th Kurt Busch, No. 1 Global Poker Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Justin Haley (Chevrolet)
    2nd William Byron (Chevrolet)
    3rd Jimmie Johnson (Chevrolet)
    4th Ty Dillon, No. 13 (Chevrolet)
    5th Ryan Newman (Ford)

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season continues next weekend at Kentucky Speedway with the Quaker State 400 Presented by Walmart on Saturday, July 13th at 7:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on NBCSN, NBC Sports Gold, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES AND QUOTES:

    JUSTIN HALEY, NO. 34 FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES CAMARO ZL1 – Race Winner:
    YOU ARE A MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES WINNER. CAN YOU BELIEVE IT?
    “It’s absolutely a blessing. Its pretty incredible that I have so many great people around me that have given me this opportunity to come here to this level and stage that we are performing on. Obviously Todd and my family have done a great job, but the Fraternal Order of Eagles has given me this opportunity with Spire Motorsports and its truly a blessing. I never even saw myself running a Cup race until I got a call a few months ago to do Talladega. It’s just unreal and I don’t know how to put it. I don’t know how to feel.”

    DID YOU EVER DREAM YOU WOULD RACE ON THIS LEVEL, MUCH LESS WIN HERE?
    “No. Absolutely not. The stars aligned and I didn’t ever think I was going to get redemption back from a few years back in Daytona, and last year when I got the Xfinity win taken away from me. So, to come back and get redemption in the Cup Series is pretty cool and makes that second place finish with Kaulig last Friday a lot better.”

    HOW NERVE WRACKING WAS IT SITTING HERE TALKING TO REPORTERS WHILE YOU WERE WAITING FOR WORD ON THE RACE?
    “I just don’t know. They keep on asking you how you feel and I can’t do anything about it. If we go racing, we go racing. If it rains out, it rains out and we can’t do anything about it. At the end of the day, I was just waiting.”

    “I want to thank Spire Motorsports for giving me this opportunity and also the Fraternal Order of Eagles. This is my third Cup start. Talladega was supposed to be my debut but it didn’t quite go our way. So, we were kind of running around in the back there just trying to stay out of trouble. I saw lightning. I’ve never been too lucky at Daytona. It’s pretty good to be in first.”

    THE CARS LOOK LIKE THEY ARE A HANDFUL
    ‘Yeah, they are. It’s super loose. With the Xfinity cars, they were pretty easy to drive, but it was a lot cooler at night. So, it’s hot and slick out there. It’s just super-hard to hang on to them. I was having to lift. I couldn’t run wide-open on the track or I’d spin out. A lot of car control here at Daytona. And, you really don’t think you should have to, but this package fits that as well.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA PATRIOTIC CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 2nd
    “It took us a little while to get to the front from the back and finish second. So that was good.”

    THIS IS YOUR BEST CAREER FINISH
    “Yeah, you’re up and down a lot here. it would have been cool to win, for sure. But, it would have been a really weird way to win. So, I’m glad that we got the day out of it that we did. I would have liked to go back racing and win it the way I wanted to, but our team did a great job this week managing all the chaos and finishing second with a back-up car is pretty good. Overall it was a good race for us.”

    WOULD YOU SAY IT WAS SUCCESSFUL FOR ALL OF CHEVROLET WORKING TOGETHER TODAY?
    ‘Yeah, it was really successful. All of us worked really well together and I feel like that’s what got us to a second place position. It was great.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 3rd
    “These Ally crew members on this No. 28 Ally team have been working really hard. I think we’re really starting to get our stride as a group now.”

    YOU HAD A SOLID FINISH UP UNTIL THEY RED-FLAGGED THE RACE. WHAT DID YOU THINK YOU COULD GET FROM THERE?
    “You never know. A lot of the aggressive drivers and the strength of the pack was so different. If it did go back to green, I think there was only a handful of cars that were still in good shape. We were certainly willing to do everything we could to get a Hendrick car to Victory Lane, but it is what it is. The race has been called and we’ll take the third place points and head home.”

    HOW DO YOU THINK THE CHEVROLETS WORKED TOGETHER?
    “We did good. It’s hard to predict every scenario. It’s hard to put everybody together and hard to manage. We had to stay very disciplined in the car but I think in general, I netted a better finish as a result in working closely with my Chevrolet teammates.”

    ON THE MULTI-CAR CRASH:
    “We had a bunch of Chevys on the bottom. As we entered Turn 1 I saw the door number on the No. 3 car (Austin Dillon), and I knew things were going down. William (Byron) did a nice job of moving to the top in front of me. A couple of cars disappeared in front of me. And the spinning cars on the outside took out the No. 88 (Alex Bowman) behind me. I was just in a very fortunate position on track and drove through and out without a scratch.”

    ON THE CHEVY PLAN: “It’s been working well. We are still learning how to use each other in the right way and protect as many lanes as possible. We are all committed to the bottom and the bottom seems to prevail some how which is surprising. In the car, it doesn’t feel like that is what is going to work out. But so far it has. So, hats off everyone in the Chevy camp. We are working really well together. My Ally Chevy has been very strong. And I am sitting in a good spot. I hope we go back racing because today is my oldest daughter’s birthday and we are supposed to be fly-fishing. I’m sorry Sweetie – maybe I can bring you a trophy back.”

    ON THE CARS: “Everyone one is getting comfortable with the fact that deeper in the traffic there is less air. We ran front row from the front row to the last row. I think everyone is driving well and being smart but it’s not easy.

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO MILITARY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 4th
    “We didn’t have a chance to race for the win but this was a first top-five and best finish ever and I’m pretty pleased with that. I’m thrilled for our Germain Racing Team. It’s a nice little shot in the arm for our team to get the second half of the season going. There has been a little bit of disappointment the last couple of weeks. So, to be able to have a good finish is going to catapult us in the second half of the season. And hopefully we continue to build off that momentum. I’m proud of our effort today. Sometimes it just seems to work out.”

    ON THE TEAM CHEVY EFFORT
    “I think there is just great leadership at the top at Chevy that got us all together and that we had a game plan before we got to the race track the led us to being successful today as far as keeping our Camaros up front and keeping speed in the cars.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 GLOBAL POKER CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 10th
    YOU NEVER GOT TO HAVE A RE-START. DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU’VE BEEN SNAKE-BIT?
    “I feel like we were in a really good position to win the race and it’s just a matter of when the one random lightning bolt comes down to decide when you make the call. It was a judgment call on their part.

    DO YOU FEEL NASCAR SHOULD OR COULD HAVE DONE ANYTHING DIFFERENTLY?
    “Oh, we could have started the race at 11 am (laughter) and got a full race in.”

    WHAT WERE YOU THINKING WHEN THE FIRST LIGHTNING BOLT HIT? DID YOU THINK NASCAR COULD GET THE RACE RESTARTED OR DID YOU HAVE ONE OF THOSE ‘THIS JUST WASN’T MEANT TO BE’ DAYS?
    “Oh, they had to make a judgment all and they made a judgment call.”

    IT WAS AN EVENTFUL DAY WITH A LOT OF ACTION
    “Yeah, I think we did pretty good to finish tenth considering everything that went on.”

    DID YOU FEEL LIKE THERE WAS A LOT OF AGGRESSIVENESS DURING THE RACE OR WAS IT TYPICAL WITH THE MANUFACTURERS RUNNING TOGETHER? OR, WAS IT MORE DIFFICULT?
    “It was a different race because the manufacturers were working together and then the handling aspect. At Talladega you could hold it wide open pretty easy. At Daytona you’re slipping and sliding and you’re trying to stay teamed-up with the guys that you want to be with. So, today was definitely more challenging.’

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 AMERICAN ETHANOL CAMARO ZL1 – Involved in a multiple-car crash on Lap 118 – Finished 33rd
    ITS HARD TO SEE IF YOU HAD BEEN CLEARED, WHAT EXACTLY HAPPENED AUSTIN?
    “Originally, off of turn four, I thought me and the 9 would be able to get by the 11. But the 9 wasn’t clear. I really thought it was urgent with the lighting and the rain coming. So I jumped up there and had a good push from the 14 and my plan as soon as I cleared the 11 was to cut left and get down again to get with my Chevy teammates. It’s really unfortunate because I had a really fast American Ethanol Chevy. It was cool to win the Stage. Just trying to get a race win. That is all it is. I got turned a little bit left when he went left and it kind of shot me down there and I just kept coming left. I mean, its part of this kind of racing. I was being aggressive and trying to keep the lead, and that is what you get, its part of it. I just thought I would try and keep it up front. We had a fast car and I am really proud of the guys. Hate it went that way and wished we could have worked with the Chevys to finish off what we started.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA BATTERIES CAMARO ZL1 – Involved in a multiple-car crash on Lap 118 – Finished 35th
    WHAT DID YOU SEE THERE?
    “I was just kind of on the bottom pushing along there and I saw Austin get turned around. You just hope you can get left enough, and slowed down enough, to miss it. It’s unfortunate because I thought our NAPA Camaro ZL1 was one of the best ones we have had down here. It’s unfortunate and I hate that happened because I felt like we were doing a pretty good job as a group. Just needed to keep it going.”

    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.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Coke Zero Sugar 400 Post-Race Quotes

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Coke Zero Sugar 400 Post-Race Quotes

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Sunday, July 7, 2019
    EVENT: Coke Zero Sugar 400, Daytona Beach, FL.

    Ford Finishing Results:
    5th – Ryan Newman
    6th – Corey LaJoie
    7th – Aric Almirola
    9th – Matt Tifft
    13th – Michael McDowell
    16th – Paul Menard
    24th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    25th – Joey Logano
    29th – Kevin Harvick
    34th – Clint Bowyer
    36th – Ryan Blaney
    38th – David Ragan
    39th – Brad Keselowski
    40th – Daniel Suarez

    DANIEL SUAREZ, No. 41 Haas Automation Ford Mustang – “I don’t know. I haven’t seen the replay. I don’t really know what happened, I just know a few cars wrecked ahead of me. I was trying to slow down and I bumped the 22 and someone bumped me from behind and we were starting to get it back straight and somebody spun me out and the track bar broke. My car was actually fine. I thought we were going to continue, but unfortunately the track bar broke and it’s something we can’t fix.”

    HOW DID THE FORDS WORK TOGETHER? “We did a good job in the first stage. In the second stage I felt if all of us teammates could get put together we were gonna be fine, but unfortunately we got wrecked before that. It’s a shame because I saw Keselowski in the care center and I know the 4 and the 10 got some damage. There are some good cars out of the race right now.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Miller Lite Ford Mustang – WHAT HAPPENED? “I haven’t seen. I know I was going straight one moment and the next moment I wasn’t. It’s unfortunate. We were all two and three-wide racing and just got tagged from the back. I’m not sure exactly. I know we got to three-wide at the top of three and it looks like Kevin gave me a real straight push. I don’t know. It just took off on me. The Fords were working really hard to run together and Kevin and Joey and Blaney and myself, I thought we were doing really good at it, but for whatever reason the car just instantly turned there. It’s a bummer for everybody, but we’ll move on and hopefully go to the next one and be alright.”

    HOW DO YOU THINK THE FORDS WORKED TOGETHER? “We just don’t right now have the speed that I think the Toyotas and Chevys do on the plate tracks. We’ve been on the other side of that too, where we were faster than them and able to dominate these races. It’s just part of the cycle.”

    IT’S GOOD TO WORK TOGETHER, BUT IF IT GOES BAD A LOT OF YOU CAN GET DAMAGED LIKE THIS. “Yeah, there is definitely some truth to that, but we have to work together if we’re gonna keep up with those other guys. They can just run like a tenth or two faster than we can. Our only shot, really, is to be a band of brothers and I thought the Ford guys did a pretty good job of trying to do that it just didn’t work out.”

    WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE WHEN THE FORDS ARE IN TRAFFIC VERSUS AT THE FRONT? “I’m not sure what we’re missing. I don’t know.”

    DID YOU FEEL IT WAS COUREOUS OUT THERE? “I thought it was really good racing from what I could tell. I can’t say I saw it all, but that was really good racing.”

    DAVID RAGAN, No. 38 MDS Transport Ford Mustang – “I couldn’t tell what happened. I knew we were in the middle and it was a really big accordion effect. I would get a really big run. The 18 would push me, I would push the 2, we would surge for half a lap or a lpa nd then the bottom and the top would surge and we would fall back a little bit back and forth, so I was hoping we could get back in that top lane with a few of the other Fords, where I felt like we could get rolling, but never saw that hole and the next thing I know the 2 is in the wall and the 4 came down and clipped us a little bit.”

    HOW DID THE FORDS WORK TOGETHER? “It’s a double-edged sword. I feel like our Ford Mustangs were all fast and when we can work together it elevates the whole team and that’s a good thing, but when someone makes a mistake or someone hits the wall or someone wrecks you take out three or four cars, so that sucks but hopefully there’s another Mustang that can take the checkered flag and see what happens. That’s just a product of Daytona and Talladega. I used to take it personal and get all mad and frustrated, but it is what it is. I’ve wrecked in the front. I’ve wrecked in the back. When you’re running in big packs like that, big wrecks happen.”

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Mobil 1/Rush Truck Centers Ford Mustang – WHAT HAPPENED FROM YOUR PERSPECTIVE? “I guess he didn’t want me to pass him. I don’t know. I got under him and he blocked, and we got together, I got off of him – moved down and got off of him – and here he comes back down even more and just finally wrecked us all. That’s just part of racing like this.”

    NO CHOICE BUT TO STAY IN THE GAS THERE? “What do you do? That was terrible. That wasn’t even close. When we got together and I pulled off of him to give him some room and then he just never quit coming down and wrecked us all. It’s just part of the racing. You want to blame him. If it would have been anybody else there, they would have probably done the same thing. We had a fast hot-rod, had a good run and was going for the lead and it’s just the nature of this kind of racing. It sucks. You want to be pissed off, frustrated and blame somebody, but at the end of the day it’s just part of racing.”

    HOW DO YOU THINK THE FORDS RACED TOGETHER? “At the end of the day your allies are the Fords. You try to find and try to use them, but a couple times I was in a situation where I couldn’t get up there. I was in the faster line on the bottom and it was two Toyotas, two Chevys and my Ford in there. I’m looking out and there are three Fords in a line out there, so it’s just one of those things.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 BodyArmor Ford Mustang – “I haven’t seen a replay, but apparently it was a case of someone not being cleared at all, so that part is frustrating. It’s one thing if you’re kind of pushing each other and someone gets turned, something like that, but when you just chop somebody like that, from what I hear, it’s frustrating, especially since we were rows back. In both Daytona races this year we’ve been four rows back in the deal and just get absolutely destroyed. There was nowhere to go and none of our doing, so that’s the way it goes.”

    HOW DID EVERYONE WORK TOGETHER IN THE FORD CAMP AND WAS IT CHALLENGING? “It’s challenging. I mean, you see it out there all day with manufacturers working together and snookering each other left and right. That’s kind of how it is nowadays, but I thought we worked together fairly decent It stunk the 2 and the 4 getting tore up there. That took a couple of us out, but that’s just the way it is.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – “I thought things were gonna go a little better today than they ended up. We were able to get a stage win, which was great for our Mustang, but everything was going good until it didn’t.”

    WHAT HAPPENED IN THE ACCIDENT WHERE YOU GOT DAMAGE? “I see what’s happening below me and I’m just on the gas trying to get through it. I was so close. Nowhere else to go and at that point you just go up and you really don’t even lift. You see it happening and you’re just trying to get through it as quick as possible. I was hoping to get through, but just got tagged in the left-rear. It’s part of the game here at the superspeedways. You’re running up towards the front and it’s still not safe. It’s just part of superspeedway racing, but I think the positives are we had a fast car. We had maybe the fastest car if we could just get in line and once we got the lead I felt like we could really maintain and control the race. That’s a positive. That’s a good thing. I thought the Fords worked together really well while we were all still out there, and that’s the positive. A stage win, that’s good.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang – “It was a crazy day. I think every time you come down here to Daytona you hope that you’ve got a shot to win and at certain points throughout the race I thought we would, and then at certain points throughout the race I thought we were in big trouble. To get out of here with a top 10 is a good day and I think points-wise we stayed steady. I think we maybe moved up a spot to 10th in points and we built a little bit more of a gap back to 16th, so that’s important leaving here.” ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN HERE, CAN’T IT? “Yeah, anything is possible when you come here. Just in general anything can happen. Racing is a crazy sport and you never know what to expect.”

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR., No. 17 Fifth Third Bank Ford Mustang – “We were trying to work our way back to the lead and was in the top 10, so we were in decent position, but obviously when the wreck starts on the front row it’s all about luck after that and we weren’t able to get our Fifth Third Ford through that wreck as good as we wanted. I just spent a lot of time on pit road, go a couple laps down trying to fix it, so, all in all, it was a good first two stages when we were strong and felt good, but it just didn’t work out.” YOU WENT THROUGHT THE GRASS AND STILL CAME BACK. “Yeah, luckily we went through the grass backwards, so that was huge.”

    COREY LAJOIE, No. 32 Shine Armor Ford Mustang – “Sixth for us, no matter what the circumstance, is a good day. If you told me I could take a sixth-place finish before we even started I would have taken it to the bank and ran with it. That’s cool for Justin. That’s obviously not how he wanted to win his first race, but at the end of the day there’s no asterisk in the record book and there’s no asterisk in the record book for finishing sixth, either. We had a good Shine Armor car. Our tactic was just to ride and try to miss those big ones and that’s what we did. In hindsight, we shouldn’t have pitted and we probably could have ended up second, but coulda, woulda, shoulda.”

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 Long John Silver’s Ford Mustang – “It’s horrible if we can’t finish this. We have a really fast Ford Mustang, got very minimal damage there. We would be restarting in the top 10 with not a lot of great cars, there are some good cars and we’ve got four pretty fast Ford Mustangs up there that I think can contend for this win, so I would like to get going back again. We didn’t come here to run 10th today. Unfortunately, we had a flat tire in that last accident and had to pit early, so we’re starting a little bit further back, but we’ve got 30 laps to get to the front and I’d like to have a shot at doing it.”

    MATT TIFFT, No. 36 Ron Jon Surf Shop Ford Mustang – “Honestly, for us it doesn’t matter how we get it a top 10 is huge for our team and for Front Row Motorsports any top 10 is awesome. It’s definitely one we’ll celebrate here and a ninth-place finish for our team is awesome. We put ourselves in spots through the race to make sure we were not getting caught up in the big ones and it worked out for us to get a good finish out of it. I probably would have liked to have gotten back going because I felt like we were one of the cars that didn’t have damage, but our Ron Jon Surf Shops Ford Mustang was there at the end inside the top 10, so that’s awesome.”

  • TEAM CHEVY AT DAYTONA 2: Rain Cancels Qualifying

    TEAM CHEVY AT DAYTONA 2: Rain Cancels Qualifying

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    COKE ZERO SUGAR 400
    TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
    JULY 5, 2019

    Qualifying for the Coke Zero Sugar 400 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENSC) race at Daytona International Speedway was cancelled due to inclement weather at the 2.5 mile track.

    The full line-up for Saturday’s race has been set by owner points:

    TOP FIVE IN STARTING ORDER:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Joey Logano (Ford)
    2nd Kyle Busch (Toyota)
    3rd Brad Keselowski (Ford)
    4th Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    5th Martin Truex Jr. (Toyota)

    TOP FIVE TEAM CHEVY DRIVERS IN STARTING ORDER:
    POS. DRIVER
    7th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1
    8th Kurt Busch, No. 1 Global Poker Camaro ZL1
    9th Alex Bowman, No. 88 Valvoline Patriotic Camaro ZL1
    12th William Byron, No. 24 Axalta Patriotic Camaro ZL1
    13th Kyle Larson, No. 42 Credit One Bank Camaro ZL1

    NBC will telecast the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway live at 7:30 p.m. ET Saturday, July 6. Live coverage can also be found on NBCSN Sports Gold, MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    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.