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  • CHEVROLET NCS AT PHOENIX: Race Win Recap

    CHEVROLET NCS AT PHOENIX: Race Win Recap

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    PHOENIX RACEWAY
    UNITED RENTALS WORK UNITED 500
    TEAM CHEVY RACE WIN RECAP
    MARCH 12, 2023

    BYRON DRIVES CHEVROLET TO FOURTH CONSECUTIVE WIN OF 2023 AT PHOENIX
    Team Chevy Drivers Take Five Positions of Top-10

    William Byron became the first repeat winner of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season, powering his No. 24 Valvoline Camaro ZL1 to the win at Phoenix Raceway.

    • The win is Byron’s sixth victory in 184 career starts in NASCAR’S premier series.
    • The win marked Byron’s first NASCAR Cup Series victory at Phoenix Raceway.
    • Chevrolet has now won the first four NASCAR Cup Series points-paying races in 2023 with Byron becoming the series’ first repeat winner of the season.
    • This marks the first time since 2001 that a single manufacturer has won the first four NASCAR Cup Series races in a season, which was last accomplished by Chevrolet.
    • Byron’s victory marked Chevrolet’s 26th NASCAR Cup Series win at Phoenix Raceway, extending its series-leading record at the track.
    • The winningest brand in NASCAR Cup Series history, Chevrolet now has 837 all-time NASCAR Cup Series victories.

    AVONDALE, Ariz. (March 12, 2023) – An overtime finish determined the winner of the NASCAR Cup Series’ (NCS) United Rentals Work United 500 at Phoenix Raceway, and it was William Byron and the No. 24 Valvoline Camaro ZL1 team that came out on top. The 25-year-old Hendrick Motorsports driver proved to be a contender all race long, taking the Stage One win and leading 64 laps en route to becoming the first repeat winner of the season in NASCAR’s premier series.

    “I owe the last couple of weeks to Rudy (Fugle, crew chief),” said Byron. “He’s done a really good job strategy-wise, and execution-wise, we’ve done a good job to put ourselves in those positions on the front row with a shot at the end. Thanks to everybody back at Hendrick Motorsports putting together great cars and just doing a great job. It’s a big credit to them, the engine shop, Mr. (Rick) Hendrick and everybody.”

    As a caution flew with 10 laps remaining in the race, pit strategy shook up the lineup for the late-race dash to the finish. Race winning crew chief Rudy Fugle called Byron down pit road, utilizing a two-tire strategy to give the team a front-row restart position with three laps to go. Taking the green, Byron was scored in the second-position when another caution forced the race into an overtime finish. Hitting his marks on the final restart, Byron took the lead on lap 316 and never looked back; driving his Chevrolet team to back-to-back trips to victory lane.

    The winningest manufacturer in NCS history, Chevrolet has now gone four-for-four in NCS wins this season. This marks the first time since 2001 that the same manufacturer has won the first four points-paying races of the season in NASCAR’s premier series, with Chevrolet being the last to accomplish that feat.

    The Bowtie brand was a consistent fixture at the front of the field throughout much of the race. Larson drove his No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 to the Stage Two win, giving Chevrolet its seventh NCS stage win of the season. Four Chevrolet drivers led a combined 280 of the race’s 317 laps. Larson led a race-high 201 laps, followed by Byron (64 laps led), Erik Jones (64 laps led) and Ross Chastain (one lap led).

    With four points-paying NCS races in the books, the Bowtie brand has now occupied at least 50 percent of the top-10 in each of the series’ races this season. Posting a nearly dominant weekend, Larson and the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team ultimately took the checkered flag in the fourth position. Alex Bowman drove his No. 48 Ally Best Friends Camaro ZL1 to a ninth-place finish, making the 29-year-old Arizona native the only driver in the series to collect a top-10 finish in each race this season. In just his second start since becoming the fill-in driver for the injured Chase Elliott, Josh Berry (No. 9 Kelley Blue Book Camaro ZL1) took home a 10th-place finish to put all four Hendrick Motorsports Camaro ZL1’s in the top-10. Kyle Busch (No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Camaro ZL1) recorded an eighth-place finish to give Chevrolet five top-10s to round out the series’ western swing.

    Chevrolet will look to keep its winning streak alive as NASCAR’s premier series takes on Atlanta Motor Speedway in the Ambetter Health 400 on Sunday, March 19, at 3:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 VALVOLINE CAMARO ZL1;

    RUDY FUGLE, CREW CHIEF, NO. 24 VALVOLINE CAMARO ZL1; AND

    JEFF GORDON, VICE CHAIRMAN, HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS – Press Conference Transcript

    THE MODERATOR: We are going to begin our post race media availabilities. We are now joined by our race-winning crew chief, Rudy Fugle.

    You started the race strong, finished with a win. Talk to us a little bit about your race.

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, no, William did a great restart, got the lead I think after lap one. We set sail and did well.

    Ended up getting beat off of pit road. Pit stall one had a lot to do with that. Qualifying on the pole was big from them. Outmatched a little bit on pit road, never could get it back.

    From there we kind of were tighter in traffic, tried to work on it to make it freer. Got way too free in stage three. Got an adjustment on the green flag pit stop. We were okay again, just too far behind.

    Two weeks in a row we get that caution. Pit crew did a good job of getting us out on the front row. William did an awesome job. Second chance at a restart, did an amazing job, we won the race.

    THE MODERATOR: We’ll go ahead and open it for questions.

    Q. It was you and the 5 in front today. Without giving too much, what do you think you guys have hit on that have allowed you to have success?

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, just a little bit of everything. Specifically 24 team is focused in the simulation program all off-season. We worked really hard, especially on Las Vegas and Phoenix ’cause they’re super important in the Playoffs.

    We had fresh information. Run Vegas with four to go, Phoenix obviously the last race of the year, you race them early in the year. Makes sense to work on those. Most of our focus to start with. Hope to take notes from these two races to propel ourselves to the first third, half of the year.

    THE MODERATOR: We’re also joined by Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman, Jeff Gordon.

    We’ll continue with questions.

    JEFF GORDON: First let me say how proud I am of this guy, this team. Nobody works harder. All these guys work hard.

    Over the off-season I came in one day, was it right after Christmas?

    RUDY FUGLE: Day after Christmas.

    JEFF GORDON: I came to the office, this guy was there all by himself. I’m so proud of this guy and the efforts they’re putting in, see the results.

    Q. We saw during the race that Kyle had a very dominant car. Unfortunately couldn’t win. I suppose like in other motorsport categories with your crew chief colleagues you share information, technical information. How identical are the Hendrick cars?

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, if you get down to the nitty-gritty, the last 15, 20% of everything, they’re a little bit different.

    We work together really well. Cliff and I were chatting about what strategy we were going to do. Open in the chat multiple times if we were going to take four or two, how we were going to do it. Even racing against each other, fully working together. We work together great, all four crew chiefs, all four teams.

    But, yeah, we prepare the cars. We look at each other’s cars all week long, make adjustments. Each driver is a little bit different. So last 15, 20% is different.

    Q. If one Hendrick driver is struggling, you take over the setup of another driver?

    RUDY FUGLE: Definitely. We made a lot of changes their direction after Friday practice. Saturday morning came in and changed geometry and other things, too, to chase the 5, because they were a little bit better than us, yes.

    Q. Jeff, knowing your new position with Hendrick Motorsports, do you still have time to do some races?

    JEFF GORDON: If I do, please stop me. I like to drive, love to get out there and run laps. I know I can’t be as competitive as what I used to be. I prefer not to race.

    I’m enjoying this challenge, working with these guys, our marketing and PR group. Obviously Rick has been an incredible mentor to me over the years. On the business side, working with NASCAR, tracks, others in the industry. It’s something I’m dedicating most of my time to these days.

    I also have two kids. Family stuff, too. I did do a race last year, though. That was fun.

    Q. (No microphone.)

    JEFF GORDON: I did it. It reminded me why I shouldn’t be out there racing (smiling). Took all the fun right out of it as soon as I was two seconds off the pace.

    Q. You touched on the two-wheel strategy. Was this strategy talked about before the race or at any point during the last yellow you were saying you might do four wheels or…

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, no, as soon as the caution came out, we were chatting. We have a live chat. We were talking about what we were going to do.

    Having that openness, racing for a win as teammates, is huge and vital. This week I may have swung Cliff one way, last week he may have swung me a different way at different times. It’s great teamwork.

    Q. A conversation you were having actively with William, too?

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, no. We kind of tell him the code word we think we’re going to use for there, make sure he’s not totally against it.

    We see a whole lot more of the race than he does. We have a whole lot more of the history, so yeah.

    Q. You have a little bit of the drama on Friday with them taking the pieces. Do you consider winning a race on a weekend where you have maybe a little bit of a distraction more of an accomplishment or just kind of separate, not in your head at all?

    JEFF GORDON: You’re looking at me. He won the race. I’ll let him answer it first.

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, I mean, it’s a test of mental strength. That’s just what it takes to be really good in this series. We have to think about what the task is. We have to focus on this weekend. That’s what we all did.

    JEFF GORDON: I’d just say I was proud of these guys. I mean, this organization has a lot of depth. They’ve been through a lot of different experiences over the years. To lean on those in different positions or leadership or crew chiefs that have been around so much, whether you’re a young guy on a team or somebody who has been around, it’s nice to know you can lean on one another through times like that.

    But I’m probably most proud of these guys went through that, then they went out there. We had the pole, third. The other two guys were fast, just slipped up a little bit. All four cars in the top 10 today.

    I think that really solidified some of the hype and things that were being focused on on Friday. These guys have speed in the car. There was nothing, not last week, not this week, that was getting them to Victory Lane other than a lot of hard work and great teamwork.

    Q. Maybe the consensus over the last few years is that Byron is maybe the third or fourth guy on the team. Can he carry the banner for Hendrick Motorsports? What do you see in Byron that maybe you don’t see in some of the other drivers?

    RUDY FUGLE: We have four capable teams and four capable drivers of carrying the banner every weekend. Pretty amazing. We see it in different phases.

    Different things affect race outcomes sometimes: the way certain drivers race, what they’re good at, good at qualifying or not, that kind of stuff.

    Week in and week out, we see it, we have four capable drivers, four capable teams. That’s amazing.

    Then William, just he’s the guy that has gotten here by being one of the best at preparing during the week, then you add the experience that he’s starting to get over and over and over now. You’ll see the fruits of all of his hard work paying off. That’s what I’m super proud.

    JEFF GORDON: I’ll just add to that.

    You can look at other driver/crew chief combinations and teams over the years at Hendrick. To me, especially the perspective I have now, it’s just really great to see a team mature, a team grow, a team evolve. You see all the things that they’re doing behind the scenes to get there.

    They didn’t just show up at the racetrack and all of a sudden, bam, they clicked on it. These guys have had to work really hard to get there.

    I see a progression with William ever since he came to Hendrick. Got to remember how young he was coming into the Cup Series, so much to learn. Young in racing in so many ways.

    When Rudy came to Hendrick, the instant connection and chemistry between these two was so obvious. It just took the whole team up to another notch. I think now they’re just building on that.

    It’s a lot of fun to watch and see.

    Q. Bowman scoring four consecutive top 10s, you have to be happy with the consistency?

    JEFF GORDON: 100%. Blake Harris coming onboard. New combination driver/crew chief. To see them click as early on as they have.

    I think one of the reasons why that worked, kind of came to, was because the confidence both Alex had in Blake and Blake had in Alex. It’s nice to see that it’s paying off for them on the racetrack.

    Q. Josh Berry, you were the first guy up to his car after he finished. What have you seen? It’s a tough situation for him to be in, but just to be able to step in, second start in a Hendrick car, top 10, pretty solid.

    JEFF GORDON: I’m really impressed with today’s effort. I was on the 9 box most of the race. It didn’t start off so great. To see them just continue to work through changes on the car, changes of the track conditions, just continue to push forward.

    Then he was mixing it up, man. On those restarts, he was right in the middle, three- and four-wide. I was a little bit nervous because they’re pretty deep in points and needed a solid finish.

    It was great to see Josh get that. That’s going to build his confidence. I don’t think anybody can explain how difficult a situation this is. I mean, an Xfinity car today could not be more opposite than what the Cup car is throughout the history that I can recall of those things being so different than they are today.

    To get out of an Xfinity car and hop into a Cup car that’s so different I think is a big, tall task. We put him in a bad situation last week. This week I saw him putting in the effort and the time, the sim, getting fitted in the seat, doing his homework. It really showed up.

    Q. Jeff, what was the process like in deciding to have Josh in the car, also having your buddy Rodney Sandstorm at COTA? Who approached who about that?

    JEFF GORDON: Well, I think Jeff Andrews touched on this this week.

    Not always, but maybe this really started a few years ago, where you kind of have to have a backup plan. Sort of started with COVID. It’s continued on since then of if something were to happen, a driver could get sick, a driver could get injured, that you have something in place that can happen immediately.

    We’ve gone down the path of not having a game plan, and it’s really difficult to find somebody. Sometimes they’re already on their way home, already left the racetrack.

    Have a relationship with JRM, with their drivers, having a backup plan in place. I don’t know that Josh has ever really gotten an opportunity with Hendrick before, so that was a team decision, a lot driven by Alan and who he thought would fit in with their team, personality-wise. I think they’re making the right decision.

    As far as the road course, I think the road course just opened up the door for should we look at an option that is sort of a road-racing option. We feel confident in Josh, want to keep Josh in the car as much as possible.

    I raced with Jordan Taylor. He’s very talented. He’s been in our Garage 56 car, showing a lot of speed. Just the right timing, place to be able to pull that off.

    Q. Rudy, how much of a threat did you consider Harvick even on Friday?

    RUDY FUGLE: We recognized him right away. We were doing all our comparing to the 4 and the 5. He might not have felt it or people may not have been talking about him, but we knew, we were watching.

    I just felt like this was going to be his kind of race, right? You look at that long green-flag run in stage three, with no downforce, a bunch of dirt racers, Harvick wrapping the bottom, and William being disciplined. Discipline for running and being really good, which Kevin is amazing at. A bunch of guys that aren’t afraid to slip and slide and figure out where the grip’s at.

    Yeah, they did great. They’ve been good this year, so we’re going to have to contend with them a lot.

    Q. Jeff, how much of a concern is having parts taken, even if it’s for further evaluation, especially in this era because of the single supplier issue that the penalties can be significantly more severe?

    JEFF GORDON: I can tell you it was weighing on all of our minds coming into today. Certainly will continue.

    We had some conversation, will continue to have conversations, with NASCAR. Every situation is sort of unique, but this is a more unique one than I’ve seen in a while where there’s been a lot of communication back and forth on this particular part, especially for this racetrack because they did a parity test in the wind tunnel.

    I think it really opened up the door for some miscommunication. I don’t want to go any further than that. We’ll continue to just share all the facts and be transparent with NASCAR as we have been so far.

    Q. William and Rudy, second year in a row this 24 team is the first team with multiple wins. Last year you got that second win at Martinsville. This year earlier. How important is it for you guys to get this early start? What can you do to keep this consistency going?

    RUDY FUGLE: Yeah, I think you got to get the wins while you’re hot. You got to capitalize. Super good. Our focus is nothing different now. Hit the reset button and how do we do it again.

    Put the hard work in every single day, keep grinding. That’s our focus.

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, I mean, I think last year, even though we won early, we didn’t really know the car or understand the car. We were kind of just adapting to what we had. We were just making the most of an unpredictable situation with the entire field. There was a lot of attrition in the races, a lot of just weird things that were happening.

    I feel like now it’s strength on strength. It feels different. It feels like we’re more consistently towards the front and we’re leading laps.

    We just want to focus on our processes during the week. I think our processes this week were kind of frustrating because we didn’t really get to do the things we wanted to do. Everyone was a little tired. We did that Charlotte test. There was a lot going on on the outside. It was a little frustrating going into today, but it’s cool to see that we can overcome those things and still get a win.

    THE MODERATOR: Jeff and Rudy, thank you.

    We’ll continue with questions for William.

    Q. What does it mean to you to continue to put the 24 in Victory Lane and carry that legacy on?

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, I mean, when I first started out, it was a lot of pressure. Going into my rookie year with not having any Cup starts, I don’t think you really understand the magnitude of that shift.

    I think everyone prepares you for it, going from Xfinity to Cup, but the level this is, it’s so different, so many details that go into it. That was a lot of pressure.

    I think once we got a win under our belt, once we kind of got some consistency going, you stop thinking about that, start thinking about how can we just build this team into something that we want long-term.

    It’s just cool to have a group of guys around me that we’ve really built from the ground up with Chad, then when Rudy took over, brought a couple more people in that I was really comfortable with and trusted, like my spotter. It’s just been a good progression.

    Q. Can you give us your assessment of the new car, how you felt it changed over last season.

    WILLIAM BYRON: New? Like aero package?

    Q. Aero package.

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, I thought it was really difficult to drive. Like from an objective standpoint, I know we were competitive, but I didn’t think we could pass any better. There’s still some work to do there with something going on with how tight they get in traffic.

    I mean, yeah, they were certainly hard to drive. Think that’s a good test to see who is the best out there. Kyle is probably the most naturally talented. I think it just shows, like, guys were having to drive their cars and manage that. It made for a really difficult challenge inside the race car.

    How many times I slipped, how much slip was too much, how much was enough to keep going fast. That was a good challenge. It kind of I think put our car control on display.

    Q. Can you take me through the last restart. High lane, all of a sudden it seemed to thrust forward. Did you get a good push from Reddick, were you unstable?

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, so the restart, the launch went well for me. I had a really good launch. No wheel spin. At that point I was just focusing how can I get through the gears, how can I side draft Kyle. When they all pulled down to the apron, the outside guys at a bit of a disadvantage because of the distance. Trying to stay as close as I could there.

    Then it’s who can beat each other to the corner without hitting the wall. We both got in there deep, both were up the track. He held me really tight there through the middle of one and two, off of two. There was just enough grip up there. I think I was just far enough up on him I was able to stay in it.

    We were obviously dragged back. I got that big push from Tyler down the backstretch. That was huge. He drilled me, but we’re not going that fast. It was nice. That kind of got me out in some clean air.

    Q. You’ve won two races in remarkably similar fashion. Was it weird going through that? Feel like déjà vu out there?

    WILLIAM BYRON: I wasn’t counting my blessings. I was kind of like, man, it went so good last week, I’m probably going to end up crashing here (smiling).

    When you have that level of commitment, you know you have on a green-white-checkered to come out the other side. It’s either going to go really good or not.

    Yeah, I don’t love winning races that way. It’s very stressful. It’s a lot of tactics going on with the restarts. But it’s fun. It’s a good challenge for us because you’re all tired, you’re all into that long-run mode mentally, then you have to have a pit stop and somehow reset and get into how do I get a good restart.

    Q. Looking ahead to November, what were some things you learned today that will benefit you?

    WILLIAM BYRON: I mean, the cars are going to change a tremendous amount. That I kind of keep in the back of my mind.

    As far as the balance goes, I thought we had the balance really good to start the race. I was sliding around a lot. Seemed to be sliding less than everybody else.

    Just when I got back in second, the dirty air is so significant, I just started to get tight. I started to contribute my issues to that. Then we just got the back out of the track.

    Yeah, we had to try something to try to close that gap. It just seemed like there was a bubble there. As soon as I was hung up in second, I just focused on trying to be consistent and maybe we get to lap traffic and something would happen.

    I think overall throughout the race, there’s still some work to do myself to just know what I need, then also managing the car. The brakes were kind of hot. I did a lot throughout the race messing with the brakes. I just got ’em too hot doing some stuff. Need to work on some of those technique things.

    Q. You said earlier the car was difficult to drive with the new aero package. That’s for everybody. Is there a possibility you go maybe and have a meeting with NASCAR technical department to make improvements, proposals?

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, for sure. We have meetings almost every weekend. That’s been a big thing since probably the middle of last year. We start having meetings with NASCAR. It’s been really productive.

    Yeah, I definitely think we need to kind of objectively look at was this a better race or not. That’s really what it comes down to. From my standpoint, yeah, it tests me a lot more, but there’s still some element we have to figure out with how tight the cars are.

    I think, yeah, we’ll keep working through that. I’m open to anything. I just want us to have options as drivers. I want it to be hard to drive, but I also want to be able to pass.

    Q. (No microphone.)

    WILLIAM BYRON: I don’t know. I just kind of see what they bring to the track, adapt that week, yeah.

    Q. Was there much of a concern that you and Larson were going to wreck each other on the last restart?

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, I mean, in my situation having a win, him not having a win yet, like, I assumed he would be more aggressive. But my counter was that I got a win, I’m going to do whatever I can, too. It was a game of chicken a little bit.

    Yeah, I mean, I have a lot of trust in Kyle. He’s an amazing driver. We’ve gotten to know each other off the track. I feel like we always communicate well.

    Yeah, I don’t know how to answer that. I wasn’t really thinking through that situation. I was just kind of going wherever he was, trying to be a little bit better.

    Q. I asked Rudy and Jeff about everyone in the Hendrick camp seems capable of carrying the banner. Maybe consensus in the past was you are the third or fourth guy. As the years go on, do you believe you’re capable of carrying that banner? Got to be validation you are maturing.

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, I think people around me have always kind of helped me understand that I’m young. Max and my dad, just everyone, my dad especially, he’s a big stats guy. He’s like, Man, you’re young. Just give it some time.

    I’m very impatient, so I like things to happen quick. That’s how it happened for me coming up through.

    This level is so different. Took a lot of homework, a lot of details. I think the fact that I started later than most driving was a little bit — it took some time to bridge that gap at this level. Now that gap is bridged obviously.

    Yeah, I just feel like it’s a constant evolution, just trying to continue to get better.

    Q. You ran with Larson all week in Vegas last week, today as well. What does the two wins do for your team’s momentum and confidence?

    WILLIAM BYRON: Yeah, I mean, I think Cliff and Rudy work really well together. I think all the crew chiefs do. But Cliff and Rudy sit next to each other in the meetings. They spend a lot of time. They kind of came in the Cup Series at the same time. Cliff had one year on Rudy. They came in with a new driver, new situation.

    I feel like they get along really well. They’re very different. I feel like there’s some camaraderie there. It’s not a surprise we’re both running well. I wouldn’t be surprised if all four of us are running well. Everyone communicates really well.

    I think in some ways Kyle and I’s driving style, I try to adapt to whatever the setup is, and I think he kind of does the same.

    THE MODERATOR: Thanks, William.

    About Chevrolet
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  • Kyle Larson tops Cup Series qualifying to win Busch Light Pole at Phoenix

    Kyle Larson tops Cup Series qualifying to win Busch Light Pole at Phoenix

    Kyle Larson was fasted in NASCAR Cup Series qualifying at Phoenix Raceway and claimed the Busch Light Pole Award for Sunday’s United Rentals Work United 500. He led the session in his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet with a 130.237 mph lap, earning his second career pole at Phoenix and his 15th career pole.

    Larson also topped the practice session Friday and explained the significance of starting on the pole at the one-mile track.

    “It means a lot,” Larson said. “Qualifying is really important here. We got the pole in 2021 and that really helped us win the championship race. Joey (Logano) had an extremely fast car in the fall last year, but he got the pole as well and won. So I think that number one pit stall means a lot.

    “Happy to be quick this weekend,” he added, “quick in practice and have it translate to qualifying.”

    Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin was second fastest (129.931 mph) followed by Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron (129.922 mph). Brad Keselowski will start fourth in the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford (129.762 mph) and JGR’s Christopher Bell rounded out the top five at in his JGR Toyota (129.580 mph).

    Ross Chastain, Michael McDowell, Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch and Erik Jones completed the top-10 in qualifying.

    The United Rentals Work United 500 is scheduled for Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX with radio coverage by MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    Starting Lineup:

  • NASCAR Launches Immersive Gaming Experience ‘NASCAR Speed Hub’ on Roblox

    NASCAR Launches Immersive Gaming Experience ‘NASCAR Speed Hub’ on Roblox

    The new experience brings together the Roblox community around NASCAR’s past, present and future

    Daytona Beach, Fla. (March 10, 2023) – ‘NASCAR Speed Hub’ today makes its virtual debut on Roblox. NASCAR Speed Hub is an immersive experience that lets players design cars, unlock exclusive virtual items, play mini games, and connect to other popular experiences on the platform. Partnering with metaverse studio Dubit, NASCAR’s Roblox experience also builds around a popular collaboration with Jailbreak developers Badimo.

    “This is the next step in expanding NASCAR’s presence in the metaverse and engaging with the community in unique and creative ways,” said Nick Rend, NASCAR managing director of gaming & esports. “At NASCAR we want to encourage the emerging generation of digital natives to manifest their passion for NASCAR racing their own way. NASCAR Speed Hub on Roblox is an exciting new space that lets players create and evolve their NASCAR story on their terms.”

    NASCAR Speed Hub is an immersive 3D experience filled with social experiences. Players can unlock virtual items, customize cars, and learn about NASCAR Racing in a fun, creative, and playful environment on the Roblox platform that’s connecting millions of people through shared experiences.

    At the heart of the hub is a time trial that allows players to collect currency and upgrade their car. Upgrades are a critical component to competing for bragging rights on the global leaderboard. The ‘Quest for Diamonds’ is a mini game that sees NASCAR’s 75th Anniversary diamonds spread throughout partner games which are accessed through the hub.

    “We are thrilled to bring the excitement of NASCAR to the Roblox platform in a unique way, involving the phenomenal community of builders,” said Andrew Douthwaite, Dubit chief commercial officer. “Roblox has a vibrant platform of designers and players, and when it came time to launch a persistent space, it was important for NASCAR to also include creators.”

    Jailbreak players who complete a time trial in NASCAR Speed Hub will earn a limited time NASCAR-themed 75th anniversary skin as part of a new vehicle launch.

    “NASCAR’s passion for community building on the Roblox platform is remarkable,” said Alex Balfanz, co-founder of Badimo. “Our fans loved the Jailbreak x NASCAR experience and the virtual items we previously launched are some of the most talked about in our community.”

    The NASCAR Speed Hub will eventually include additional user generated and official content.

    About NASCAR

    Celebrating its 75th Anniversary in 2023, the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR sanctions races in three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series™), four international series (NASCAR Brasil Sprint Race, NASCAR Mexico Series, NASCAR Pinty’s Series (Canada), NASCAR Whelen Euro Series), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour) and a local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races annually in 12 countries and more than 30 U.S. states. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).

    About Dubit

    Dubit is a global studio that builds branded metaverse games, experiences, and events. Its team of over 140 professionals provides brands and agencies with the production, marketing and research services to develop, launch and promote successful experiences in the metaverse. Dubit has recently built games and concerts for clients such as H&M, Nickelodeon, UEFA, The Grammys, Samsung, and Hyundai. Dubit has also partnered with over 100 experiences across Roblox to provide brand integrations into already popular games. Brands can harness these established audiences, and Dubit’s portals and technology allows it to direct this traffic into a client’s branded game.

    Dubit launched the Metaverse Gaming League, the first esports league in the metaverse. Streamed every week, the League links up client brands and partner games and gives away thousands of dollars in prizes.

    About Badimo

    Badimo was created in 2017 by two longtime friends, Alex Balfanz in Florida and his partner Keanu in Arizona, with a passion for creating games they themselves wanted to play. Their biggest project, Jailbreak, was an instant success when it was launched six years ago. Jailbreak has been played more than 6 billion times by hundreds of millions of players around the world and has seen more than 100 major content updates over the years. For more information, you can follow Badimo on Twitter @Badimo.

  • Mobil 1 Brings Motorsports Legend Jenson Button to NASCAR

    Mobil 1 Brings Motorsports Legend Jenson Button to NASCAR

    Championship-Winning Formula One and Sports Car Driver To Run Three NASCAR Cup Series Races with Debut March 26 at COTA

    KANNAPOLIS, N.C. (March 9, 2023) – Jenson Button, the 2009 Formula One world champion whose versatility as a racecar driver extends well beyond his nearly two-decade F1 career, will continue to diversify his racing resume by running three NASCAR Cup Series races in 2023.

    With support from Mobil 1, the world’s leading brand of synthetic motor oil, Button will make his Cup Series debut March 26 at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas. He will then compete in the inaugural Chicago Street Race on July 2 before culminating his three-race Cup Series slate Aug. 13 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course.

    Rick Ware Racing (RWR) will field the No. 15 Mobil 1 Ford Mustang that Button will drive in each Cup Series race. Marketing and promotional support is being facilitated by Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR), Mobil 1’s longtime NASCAR team partner. RWR and SHR collaborated in similar fashion last year for multiple races with a handful of drivers.

    “We are thrilled to celebrate Jenson Button as he makes his debut in the NASCAR Cup Series and support him on his journey to making one of his racing dreams a reality,” said Rob Shearer, Director of Global Lubricants Marketing Services, on behalf of Mobil 1. “We’re driven by the love of driving and committed to helping more people get behind the wheel – wherever they may be. Through our partnership, we hope to continue to inspire and serve drivers everywhere – encouraging them to get more out of their drive and reconnect with the adventure of the open road.”

    Button won 15 grands prix, including a dominant six-win campaign in 2009 that netted him the F1 title. Upon retiring from F1 in 2017, the British driver has taken on a variety of challenges. It began with sports cars in the Japanese Super GT Series’ GT500 class, where he won the 2018 championship. He then ran a five-race stint in the 2018-2019 FIA World Endurance Championship, a drive that included the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Button has even competed in off-road endurance racing, running the Mint 400 and the Baja 1000 in 2019.

    Mobil 1 has been there for nearly all of it, with Button’s NASCAR endeavor another chapter in a partnership that began 20 years ago.

    “I won the world championship with Mobil 1, and 14 of my 15 wins in Formula One were with Mobil 1, as well as winning the Super GT championship with them. We’ve had a really close relationship over the years and I can’t think of a better partner,” Button said.

    “Mobil 1 has been a big part of making these NASCAR races happen for me, so I’m very thankful to them for giving me this opportunity. I look forward to working alongside the brand to get the best out of every race weekend.”

    Through their shared love of driving and deep history in motorsports, Mobil 1 and Button will connect with the racing community in new and exciting ways – with a focus on delivering exclusive content and uniting driving enthusiasts through activations and experiences.

    “Our love for racing at Mobil 1 runs deep, and we’re proud to compete and play a role in so many different series,” said Jei Gort, Global Motorsports and Sponsorships Manager, on behalf of Mobil 1. “This partnership with Jenson intersects two of racing’s most prominent series – NASCAR and F1 – and we’re very excited to be a part of his pursuit for success in NASCAR’s premier division. Through our collaboration, we aim to further celebrate the love of driving and elevate the passion for motorsports.”

    Button is one of F1’s most tenured drivers with 306 career starts. His final F1 start was the 2017 Monaco Grand Prix when he subbed for Fernando Alonso, who skipped Monaco to compete in the Indianapolis 500. Button’s last fulltime F1 season was 2016.

    “The reason I was able to stay in Formula One for so long was because I always felt I was learning. There was always something new in terms of technologies, or I could still improve my driving or engineering skills within Formula One. When I got to my 17th year in F1, I felt like I lost that hunger a little bit because it wasn’t new anymore. There wasn’t something new to learn,” Button said.

    “Stepping away from F1 gave me the opportunity to try different series that excited me. I raced Super GT in Japan. I raced at Le Mans. I raced off-road because it was another skill to learn. You put yourself in a slightly vulnerable position because it’s not your complete skill set, and there’s still more to learn to be as good as the best. I love that challenge of driving new things. It’s slightly out of my comfort zone, and I found that out with off-road trucks.

    “Obviously, racing a Cup car is very different than what I’m used to. It’s a lot heavier with a lot less power and, basically, no downforce. It’s got a sequential gearbox where you need to blip the throttle, so there’s lots of stuff to learn in a very short space of time.

    “But I just get excited about that new challenge, and when I throw myself into something, I am 100 percent in. I’m not just doing it for fun in some one-off. I want to be competitive, and I know that to be competitive, it’s going to take a bit of time. That’s why doing these three races works very well this season.”

    Button isn’t totally unfamiliar with a NASCAR Cup Series stock car. He is part of the Garage 56 driver lineup, which is taking a slightly modified Cup Series car to this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans June 10-11 at Circuit de la Sarthe.

    “The first time I jumped into the Garage 56 car, it was like, ‘What have I done? This is so different,’ and that lasted about four laps. Then it was like, ‘Hang on, it’s still a racecar. It’s got four tires that touch the road. It’s a mechanical racecar, which is even better for learning.’ I’ve really enjoyed the challenge,” said Button, who has now tested the Garage 56 car at Sebring (Fla.) International Raceway, Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway and earlier this week at COTA.

    “A Cup car has a lot less downforce and is a lot heavier, but the Garage 56 car has given me an idea of what it will be like along with a direction, which is really useful. I know in my first race I’m not expected to be qualifying right at the front and I’m not expected to be fighting for a victory. I have a lot of respect for the drivers racing in the Cup Series. There’s so much talent there, whether it’s on ovals or road courses.

    “Ten years ago, people used to say NASCAR guys can’t drive around a circuit, but I think they’ve proven that they can. Every time an ex-F1 driver gets in a stock car these days, they struggle initially. It takes a while for them to get up to speed, so I don’t expect to be right at the front, straight away. That’s why, for me, doing more than one race is really key so I can get the best out of myself and the best out of the car.”

    When it comes to expectations, particularly at COTA where Button made five F1 starts, he has no predictions.

    “The most important thing for me is to enjoy it,” Button said. “I want to feel comfortable in the car knowing that I can get as much out of the car in any situation as other people out on track. The result is the result and we’ll see what happens, but I want to get the confidence to brake as late as I’d like, to carry the speed through the high-speed corners, and to be able to race close – wheel-to-wheel with the pack.”

    If there is one person who understands the transition Button will face going from open-wheel racecars to stock cars, it is Mobil 1 ambassador Tony Stewart. Before he became a three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, Stewart was the 1997 IndyCar Series champion. Stewart even has a bit of Formula One experience – he drove Lewis Hamilton’s 2008 championship-winning McLaren MP4-23 on June 14, 2011 at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International in a seat swap orchestrated by Mobil 1.

    “It’s always a challenge to try a new racing discipline, and the best thing you can bring to a new opportunity like this is an open mind,” Stewart said. “Jenson has been doing that his entire career. Those F1 cars evolve every year, and Jenson always found a way to adapt. And when he got out of F1, he jumped into sports cars and won another championship. He’s even done off-road. There’s very little that he hasn’t experienced in a racecar. He’s new to NASCAR, but he’s not new to racing. This is going to be fun for all of us, and we’re very appreciative of Mobil 1 for making it happen.”

    Button’s NASCAR Cup Series debut begins on Saturday, March 25 at COTA with practice and qualifying for the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix. The 68-lap race around the 3.426-mile, 20-turn road course gets underway at 3:30 p.m. EDT on Sunday, March 26 with live coverage provided by FOX and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

  • Hendrick Motorsports to enter four Xfinity Series races in 2023

    Hendrick Motorsports to enter four Xfinity Series races in 2023

    HENDRICKCARS.COM RETURNS TO SPONSOR NO. 17 CHEVROLET

    CONCORD, N.C. (March 8, 2023) – For the second consecutive season, Hendrick Motorsports will run a limited NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule with primary sponsorship from HENDRICKCARS.COM. This year’s four-race slate will feature three of the team’s NASCAR Cup Series drivers with leadership from a pair of winning crew chiefs.

    In 2023, the No. 17 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet Camaro will be entered March 25 at Circuit of The Americas with William Byron, June 10 at Sonoma Raceway with Kyle Larson, Aug. 19 at Watkins Glen International with Alex Bowman, and Sept. 2 at Darlington Raceway with Larson. Veteran crew chiefs Greg Ives and Kevin Meendering will oversee the effort.

    Hendrick Motorsports entered four Xfinity Series races in 2022, earning two pole positions, two runner-up finishes and three top-five results in its first action on the circuit since 2009. Overall, the organization has recorded 26 wins and one driver’s championship (2003) in the series.

    “Watching the No. 17 return to the track last year was very special,” said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports and chairman and CEO of Hendrick Automotive Group. “It was fun being back in the Xfinity Series and seeing a great return from our HENDRICKCARS.COM sponsorship. The team had strong results on the track, but we didn’t quite get to victory lane. Having unfinished business gives us extra motivation this season.”

    The No. 17 car number has a rich history with Hendrick Motorsports. NASCAR Hall of Famer Darrell Waltrip drove it to nine wins for the team from 1987 to 1990, including in the 1989 DAYTONA 500. The car number was also driven by Ricky Hendrick in various races, including in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series in 2000 and 2001. This year, the HENDRICKCARS.COM paint scheme will again be based on the No. 17 truck driven by Hendrick during his 2001 rookie season.

    “We learned a lot in 2022 and felt the extra seat time was valuable for our drivers,” said Jeff Andrews, president and general manager of Hendrick Motorsports. “Bringing back the program was an easy decision, but we know competing at a high level in the Xfinity Series takes a big commitment. We’re going to throw everything we have at these four races. Winning with the No. 17 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevy is the priority.”

    HENDRICKCARS.COM is Hendrick Automotive Group’s online destination for new and pre-owned vehicle shopping, locating centers for service and collision repair, exploring career opportunities, and learning about vehicle investment protection. It also sponsors Larson’s No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports team, NHRA champion Greg Anderson and other racing efforts at the grassroots level.

    ABOUT HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS:
    Founded by Rick Hendrick in 1984, Hendrick Motorsports is the winningest team in NASCAR Cup Series history. At the sport’s premier level, the organization holds the all-time records in every major statistical category, including championships (14), points-paying race victories (292) and laps led (more than 77,000). It has earned at least one race win in a record 39 different seasons, including an active streak of 38 in a row (1986-2023). The team fields four full-time Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entries in the NASCAR Cup Series with drivers Alex Bowman, William Byron, Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson. Headquartered on more than 100 acres in Concord, North Carolina, Hendrick Motorsports employs approximately 600 people. For more information, please visit HendrickMotorsports.com or interact on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

    ABOUT HENDRICK AUTOMOTIVE GROUP:
    Representing 132 franchises and 25 manufacturer nameplates from the Carolinas to California, Hendrick Automotive Group is the largest privately held automotive retail organization in the United States. Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, the company employs more than 10,000 people in its 95 dealership locations, 21 collision centers and four accessories distributor installers in 13 states. For more information, please visit HENDRICKCARS.COM.

    ABOUT HENDRICKCARS.COM:
    HendrickCars.com is the online home for everything Hendrick Automotive Group. Visitors can shop thousands of new or pre-owned vehicles, locate centers for service and collision repair, receive a value to sell or trade their car, chat online with customer service, discover career opportunities, learn more about vehicle protection programs, and explore how the company gives back to the community.

  • Hendrick Motorsports statement on Chase Elliott

    Hendrick Motorsports statement on Chase Elliott

    CONCORD, N.C. (March 7, 2023) – As NASCAR Cup Series star Chase Elliott recovers from a leg injury, Josh Berry will continue to drive the No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for Hendrick Motorsports at upcoming oval tracks while road racing standout Jordan Taylor will compete for the team at Circuit of The Americas.

    Elliott, 27, suffered a fractured tibia while snowboarding in Colorado on March 3 and underwent successful surgery that evening. He was released from the hospital Saturday and did not race Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, marking the first missed start of his career. The 2020 Cup Series champion is currently rehabilitating in Colorado. His recovery is expected to last approximately six weeks.

    “We’re focused on getting Chase back to 100%, so we’ll take however much time is necessary and make sure he has the best resources available,” said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports. “Josh was impressive this weekend under difficult circumstances, and we look forward to having him drive the oval tracks until Chase is able to return. Jordan is a world-class road racer and has recently been working with our Garage 56 team preparing for the 24 Hours of Le Mans. He’ll be able to step in and do a great job at COTA.”

    Berry, 32, filled in for Elliott at Las Vegas, finishing 29th in his third career Cup start. Driving for Hendrick Motorsports affiliate JR Motorsports, the Hendersonville, Tennessee, native is a five-time race winner in the NASCAR Xfinity Series: Martinsville Speedway (2021), Las Vegas (2021 and 2022), Dover Motor Speedway (2022) and Charlotte Motor Speedway (2022).

    Taylor currently competes in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship for Corvette Racing. The Orlando, Florida, native won the 2017 24 Hours of DAYTONA and the 2017 championship in the IMSA prototype class. Although the March 26 race at Circuit of The Americas will represent his first career Cup Series start, the 31-year-old driver has competed at the road course multiple times, including two wins (2016 and 2017) in four IMSA appearances.

    ABOUT HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS:
    Founded by Rick Hendrick in 1984, Hendrick Motorsports is the winningest team in NASCAR Cup Series history. At the sport’s premier level, the organization holds the all-time records in every major statistical category, including championships (14), points-paying race victories (292) and laps led (more than 77,000). It has earned at least one race win in a record 39 different seasons, including an active streak of 38 in a row (1986-2023). The team fields four full-time Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entries in the NASCAR Cup Series with drivers Alex Bowman, William Byron, Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson. Headquartered on more than 100 acres in Concord, North Carolina, Hendrick Motorsports employs approximately 600 people. For more information, please visit HendrickMotorsports.com or interact on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

  • William Byron leads 1-2-3 Hendrick Motorsports sweep at Las Vegas

    William Byron leads 1-2-3 Hendrick Motorsports sweep at Las Vegas

    March 5, 2023
    By Reid Spencer
    NASCAR Wire Service

    LAS VEGAS—William Byron won the most important race of Sunday afternoon—by inches off pit road.

    Quick work by Byron’s pit crew enabled the driver of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to beat teammate Kyle Larson off pit road for an overtime restart in the Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, and that was the decisive factor in Byron’s fifth career NASCAR Cup Series victory.

    When Aric Almirola spun into the Turn 4 wall with four laps left of a scheduled 267, the race turned upside down. Larson held a two-second lead at that point and appeared the almost certain winner.

    After NASCAR called the fourth and final caution, Martin Truex Jr. stayed on the track, with Byron, Larson and most of the other contenders pitting for two tires. Byron’s crew was a fraction of a second faster on the stop, and Byron claimed a front-row starting spot for the overtime to Truex’s outside.

    On the first overtime lap, Byron surged past Truex as the cars entered Turn 3 at the 1.5-mile track and pulled away to win by.622 seconds over Larson and by .766 seconds over teammate Alex Bowman. It was the third time Hendrick Motorsports had finished 1-2-3 in a Cup Series event.

    The drivers accomplished the feat with their fourth driver, Chase Elliott, watching from North Carolina with team owner Rick Hendrick. Elliott broke his left tibia in a snowboarding accident in Colorado on Friday and will miss multiple races as he recovers from surgery.

    Josh Berry, substituting for Elliott, finished 29th, two laps down, in his first race in NASCAR’s Next Gen car.

    “Yeah, just been really confident about the group of guys that I have on this 24 team,” said Byron, who led 176 of 271 laps, swept the first two stages and won for the first time at Las Vegas. “They work extremely hard, and we spent a lot of time in the offseason just going through running at the sim (simulator) with Chevy and running on iRacing and just trying to get better as a race car driver and as a team.

    “Thinking of Chase back home. Wish he was out here with us. He’s a great race car driver, great teammate. Wish he was out here.”

    For the overtime restart, Larson chose the inside lane behind Truex and was bottled up behind the No. 19 Toyota. But Larson acknowledged the race was lost on pit road.

    “Damn,” Larson said with a wry laugh. “It’s just part of Cup racing. It seems like kind of laps down, lap by lap, and then, sure enough, the yellow lights come on. You’ve just got to get over that and then try to execute a good pit stop, and I thought I did a really good job getting to my sign, and getting to the commitment line.

    “I had a gap to William behind me, and their pit crew must have just done a really good job and got out in front of us, and that gave up the front row. I knew I was in trouble with the 19 staying out. I felt like William was going to get by him.

    “Yeah, just a bummer that we didn’t end up the winner, but all in all, William probably had a little bit better car than I had today, and their pit crew executed when they needed to there at the end.”

    In the overtime scramble, Bubba Wallace finished fourth and Christopher Bell fifth, both in Toyotas. Austin Cindric, who had been lapped at one point, recovered to run sixth as the top-finishing Ford driver. Truex, Justin Haley, Kevin Harvick and Daniel Suarez completed the top 10.

    In a race that featured 13 lead changes among eight drivers, Larson took the top spot in Lap 196, after restarting third behind Denny Hamlin and Bowman on lap 190. The 2021 series champion extended his advantage to nearly five seconds over Byron during an exchange of green-flag pit stops before Almirola’s accident caused the fourth caution on Lap 263.

    Byron had cut Larson’s lead to two seconds before the accident forced overtime.

    The first caution for an on-track incident didn’t occur until Lap 183, nine laps after the final stage went green. Pole winner Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch were running three-wide through Turn 4 when disaster struck.

    With Keselowski’s No. 6 Ford in the middle, Logano ran out of room to the outside, and after contact with Keselowski’s car, Logano’s No. 22 Ford bounced off the wall and spun into the infield grass.

    Logano brought his car to pit road, but his crew couldn’t repair the Ford before the seven-minute time limit ran out under NASCAR’s damaged vehicle policy.

    Asked whether Keselowski pinched him into the corner, Logano replied, “Yeah, he did. I’m sure he didn’t mean to do it. It is what it is. What are you going to do, right? We got fenced.”

    NASCAR Cup Series Race – Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube
    Las Vegas Motor Speedway
    Las Vegas, Nevada
    Sunday, March 5, 2023

    (2) William Byron, Chevrolet, 271.
    (6) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 271.
    (11) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 271.
    (13) Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 271.
    (10) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 271.
    (9) Austin Cindric, Ford, 271.
    (15) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 271.
    (27) Justin Haley, Chevrolet, 271.
    (14) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 271.
    (24) Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 271.
    (12) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 271.
    (8) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 271.
    (3) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 271.
    (5) Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 271.
    (34) Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 271.
    (21) Aric Almirola, Ford, 271.
    (7) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 271.
    (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 271.
    (22) Erik Jones, Chevrolet, Accident, 270.
    (19) Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 270.
    (18) Chris Buescher, Ford, 270.
    (4) Ty Gibbs #, Toyota, 270.
    (31) Ryan Preece, Ford, 270.
    (16) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, 270.
    (17) Michael McDowell, Ford, 270.
    (35) Harrison Burton, Ford, 269.
    (26) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 269.
    (20) Chase Briscoe, Ford, 269.
    (32) Josh Berry(i), Chevrolet, 269.
    (25) Noah Gragson #, Chevrolet, 269.
    (28) Todd Gilliland, Ford, 268.
    (36) BJ McLeod, Chevrolet, 266.
    (29) JJ Yeley, Ford, 265.
    (33) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 265.
    (30) Cody Ware, Ford, 259.
    (1) Joey Logano, Ford, DVP, 183.

    Average Speed of Race Winner: 142.98 mph.

    Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 50 Mins, 35 Secs. Margin of Victory: .622 Seconds.

    Caution Flags: 4 for 26 laps.

    Lead Changes: 13 among 8 drivers.

    Lap Leaders: J. Logano 1-9;W. Byron 10-36;B. Keselowski 37;T. Reddick 38-40;W. Byron 41-185;D. Hamlin 186-195;K. Larson 196-220;W. Byron 221;A. Bowman 222-223;B. Keselowski 224-227;K. Larson 228-265;W. Byron 266;M. Truex Jr. 267-269;W. Byron 270-271.

    Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): William Byron 5 times for 176 laps; Kyle Larson 2 times for 63 laps; Denny Hamlin 1 time for 10 laps; Joey Logano 1 time for 9 laps; Brad Keselowski 2 times for 5 laps; Martin Truex Jr. 1 time for 3 laps; Tyler Reddick 1 time for 3 laps; Alex Bowman 1 time for 2 laps.

    Stage #1 Top Ten: 24,5,1,20,11,19,48,23,8,6

    Stage #2 Top Ten: 24,5,48,19,20,23,1,11,6,4

  • CHEVROLET NCS: Byron Delivers Chevrolet’s Third Consecutive NCS Win at Las Vegas

    CHEVROLET NCS: Byron Delivers Chevrolet’s Third Consecutive NCS Win at Las Vegas

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    LAS VEGAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    PENNZOIL 400
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    MARCH 5, 2023

    BYRON DELIVERS CHEVROLET’S THIRD CONSECUTIVE NASCAR CUP SERIES WIN OF 2023 AT LAS VEGAS
    Team Chevy Drivers Sweep Top-Three

    After sweeping the stage wins and leading a race-high 176 laps, William Byron and the No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1 team captured their first win of 2023 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    · The win is Byron’s fifth victory in 183 career starts in NASCAR’S premier series.

    · The win marked Byron’s first NASCAR Cup Series victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    · Hendrick Motorsports recorded a one-two-three finish with Byron leading teammates Kyle Larson (second) and Alex Bowman (third).

    · Chevrolet is now three-for-three in NASCAR Cup Series points-paying races in 2023, with Byron becoming the third driver from the third different Chevrolet team to claim a victory and a playoff berth.

    · Byron’s victory marked Chevrolet’s 11th NASCAR Cup Series win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and the manufacturer’s fourth win in the series’ past six races at the 1.5-mile Nevada oval.

    · For the second consecutive NASCAR Cup Series race, Chevrolet drivers have swept the top-three finishing positions.

    · The winningest brand in NASCAR Cup Series history, Chevrolet now has 836 all-time NASCAR Cup Series victories.

    · Chevrolet earned victories in all three NASCAR national series races at Las Vegas Motor Speedway this weekend: William Byron (NASCAR Cup Series), Austin Hill (NASCAR Xfinity Series) and Kyle Busch (NASCAR Camping World Truck Series).

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 RAPTORTOUGH.COM CAMARO ZL1 – RACE WINNER

    “I’ve been really confident about this group of guys on the 24 team. They work extremely hard. We spent a lot of time int he offseason just going through and running at the sim with Chevy and running on iRacing and just trying to get better as a racecar driver and as a team. It’s all about the team. It’s a great pit crew. We’re also thinking of Chase (Elliott) back home. We wish he was out here. He’s a great racecar driver and great teammate. I wish he was out there. Thanks to Mr. H (Rick Hendrick) and Jeff Gordon. I know he’s watching. This RaptorTough.com Chevy was awesome. When we got back in traffic, it was a little tight but we knew we had speed so just had to have the right things play out. Rudy (Fugle, crew chief) made a good call, so it was good.”

    ON THE FINAL PIT STOP: “The one pit stop they had where we lost the lead, I slid through the box or slid long so that delayed the stop. That was on me and I knew they could get it done in the end. Rudy has been under the weather all day so he’s been really quiet on the radio. Luckily, it worked out there. Just thanks to all the fans for coming out. I always love racing at Vegas and how you move around. I’m excited for the year.”

    MORE ON THE WIN AND PIT CREW: “It was awesome. They did a great job all day. The one pit stop that I messed up, I slid long and we lost the lead. So they just did an amazing job all day. We wanted to bring this thing out (oversized victory hat), too. It was something I saw in the NFL and wanted to do it. It’s pretty cool. It’s got all our sponsors nice and big.”

    HOW BADLY DID YOU NEED THIS RACE? “It’s been tough. Honestly, we started out and speed in the first two races but we just didn’t put it all together. We had speed at the (Daytona) 500 and had speed at California and had some issues. So it just worked out. It’s awesome.”

    THOUGHTS ON THE FINAL RESTART: “I was focused on getting a good launch and launch with the 19 and see what happened from there. I’m fortunate that it worked out the way it did. Rudy made a great call, and we were able to put a little bit of a block on the 11 to keep him behind us. It worked out.”

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st William Byron, No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1
    2nd Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1
    3rd Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    8th Justin Haley, No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Camaro ZL1
    10th Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Tootsies Orchid Lounge Camaro ZL1

    TOP-FIVE UNOFFICIAL RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st William Byron (Chevrolet)
    2nd Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
    3rd Alex Bowman (Chevrolet)
    4th Bubba Wallace (Toyota)
    5th Christopher Bell (Toyota)

    The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Phoenix Raceway with the United Rentals Work United 500 on Sunday, March 12, at 3:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 2nd

    IT LOOKED LIKE YOU HAD IT IN HAND. WHAT WERE YOUR THOUGHTS WHEN THE CAUTION CAME OUT?

    “Damn. It’s just part of Cup racing. It seems like you count the laps down lap by lap, and then sure enough the yellow lights come on. You just have to get over that and try to execute a good pit stop. I thought I did a really good job getting to my sign and getting to the commitment line. I had a gap to William behind me, so their pit crew must have done a really good job and got him out in front of us. So that gave up the front row to us. I knew I was in trouble with the 19 staying out. I felt like William was going to get by him. It’s a bummer that we didn’t end up the winner, but all in all William probably had a little better car than I had today and their pit crew executed when they needed to at the end.”

    MORE ON LATE CAUTION:

    “You can’t fuss about it too much. You just try to get focused on the pit stop and try to execute and do a good job. I felt like I did everything on my end good. I had a gap to the 24 behind me when we got the commitment line. I got to my sign good and got to pit-road speed good and all that. Their pit crew must have done a really good job. He edged us out there on pit road, and that was the race. It’s part of Cup racing. These are really, really tough to win and you have to execute from top to bottom. We did a good job today but their pit crew was a little faster on the last stop. A bummer but all in all I’m happy and proud of the effort from our Hendrick team. I’m looking forward to getting to Phoenix next week.”

    JOSH BERRY, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 29th

    “It was a lot of fun. Really I thought the first half of the race went pretty well. We were really close, right on the edge of staying on the lead lap or not. We just needed a couple more cautions to just give ourselves a better chance.

    The second half of the race, we had an issue going on with the throttle or something because every time I was letting off, it was hanging wide-open. I was just trying to nurse it home and keep it out of trouble.”

    They told you to have, so did you have fun?

    “Yeah, it was a lot of fun. I learned a lot, especially in the first two stages. I think we definitely saw at times we were running some pretty good lap times. Just struggled with dirty air; knowing where to put the car and how to do that. There’s a lot of learning to be done, but all-in-all, it was still a pretty good time.”

    JUSTIN HALEY, NO. 31 LEAFFILTER GUTTER PROTECTION CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 8th

    “We had a really good long run car today and this is our Fontana car. We’re one of like three teams, three individual cars that repaired our stuff and brought it this week. I’m proud of the effort and the grind. They hung a body in this thing in the snow in Fontana a few days ago. That’s pretty awesome for our little team. I appreciate Matt, Chris, and everyone at Leaf Filter. This was a good run for us, especially with the start of season we’ve had.”

    ERIK JONES, NO. 43 ALLEGIANT CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 19th

    “Not the finish we deserved today. The guys gave me a fast Allegiant Chevy and we were running really well, even made our way to the top 10. Unfortunately, we got behind and made some adjustments to free up our car in traffic, but ended up making ourselves too loose for when we were on clean air. We had some tire issues late and that put us in the back and wrecked on the last lap. We just need to clean things up and come back stronger next week at Phoenix.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 3rd

    YOU HAD A GOOD DAY AND DROVE YOUR WAY FORWARD. WHAT MORE DID YOU NEED TO DRIVE TO VICTORY LANE AGAIN?

    “We were really fast in Stage Two. I was a little indecisive with what I wanted in the racecar. There were times I was a little free and times where I was a little snug. I hedged us to securing the back of the racecar a little bit and got us too tight for Stage Three, so that’s on me. Every change I wanted, I got. I just got us a little bit too tight. I’m really proud of the 48 team. I’m really pumped for HMS to be 1-2-3. I’ve been on the good side of those consecutive finishes so now I’m on the other side. But it was a fun race with our teammates. I’m glad we were able to get a 1-2-3 on the last restart. Rudy is a little under the weather so hopefully that gets him feeling a little better than he was this morning.”

    YOU MAY HAVE HAD A CHANCE:

    “I just got us too tight in Stage Three and tried to be really aggressive to make up for it on that last restart. I had a shot at it but was a couple of rows too far back to start. I’m really proud of Hendrick Motorsports. To be 1-2-3 is really awesome. Our Ally Camaro was really good, especially in Stage Two. I just asked for the wrong adjustments probably. I’m excited with the way the year has started and hopefully we keep the momentum rolling next week at Phoenix.”

    DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 TOOTSIES ORCHID LOUNGE CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 10th

    “It was a roller coaster. We had a fast car all day. Some runs were better than others. I felt like at times that we had a car capable of fighting for the win. For some reason, I felt like we had a set of tires that was a little weird there and we lost some track position. Then we had a bad stop on the last one and lost another few seconds. It was a little difficult because we had to overcome a lot. But overall the car had speed and the car was capable of running in the top-five. That is very promising.”

    THREE TOP-10s IN THREE RACES. IS THAT THE EXPECTATION NOW?

    “No. It’s to win.”

    NOAH GRAGSON, NO. 42 SUNSEEKER RESORT CAMARO ZL1

    Finished: 30th

    “An up-and-down day. I felt like we had good speed, just lost a couple of laps on the first pit stop speeding on pit road, making mistakes and speeding again on my pass-through penalty during the first green-flag pit stop, and that put us behind all day. Proud of this Sunseeker Resorts LEGACY MOTOR CLUB team for not quitting all race. I felt like we had good speed, just a couple of laps down at the end. We’ll keep working on it.”

    TEAM CHEVY RACE HIGHLIGHTS:

    Stage One

    · William Byron (No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1) led the field to the green from a front-row starting spot, marking the third consecutive week that a Chevrolet driver posted a top-two qualifying effort.

    · When green-flag pitstops got under way, race leader Byron brought his No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1 down pit road on lap 37 for four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment. Byron re-took the lead on lap 41 after green-flag pit stops cycled through.

    · Byron went on to lead 67 of 80 laps in Stage One, taking the checkered flag for his first stage win of 2023.

    · Five Chevrolet drivers scored stage points with top-10 finishes in Stage One:

    1st William Byron, No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1

    2nd Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1

    3rd Ross Chastain, No. 1 GlobalTranz Camaro ZL1

    7th Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

    9th Kyle Busch, No. 8 Alsco Uniforms Camaro ZL1

    Stage Two

    · The second round of pit stops took place during the stage break, with the No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1 pit crew getting Byron off pit road first to give the Chevrolet driver a front-row starting spot for the beginning of Stage Two.

    · The race continued at a caution-free pace, forcing the field to make another round of green-flag pit stops at the stage’s halfway point.

    · Byron led the field to the end of Stage Two, giving the Chevrolet driver a sweep of the race’s stage wins. This marks the first time in Byron’s NCS career that he swept stage wins in a single race.

    · Byron’s stage win sweep brings Chevrolet to a total of five stage wins in 2023.

    · Byron continued setting a dominating pace, leading 152 of 165 laps recorded at the end of Stage Two.

    · Hendrick Motorsports teammates went one-two-three at the conclusion of Stage Two with Byron leading Kyle Larson (2nd) and Alex Bowman (3rd).

    · Team Chevy Stage Two: Top-10

    1st William Byron, No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1

    2nd Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1

    3rd Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

    7th Ross Chastain, No. 1 GlobalTranz Camaro ZL1


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

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Ericsson Survives Chaos To Win Season Opener in St. Petersburg

    Ericsson Survives Chaos To Win Season Opener in St. Petersburg

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Sunday, March 5, 2023) – Marcus Ericsson dodged multiple incidents in a chaotic season-opening race for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, winning the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding on Sunday in a day overflowing with drama.

    2022 Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge winner Ericsson earned his fourth career NTT INDYCAR SERIES victory by 2.4113 seconds in the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Chip Ganassi Racing Honda over runner-up Pato O’Ward in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet.

    Ericsson, who started fourth, took the lead when O’Ward slowed suddenly exiting Turn 14 on Lap 97 of the 100-lap race when his engine shut off momentarily due to a brief fire in the plenum chamber of his powerplant.

    “I feel bad for Pato for having the issue, but that’s racing,” Swedish driver Ericsson said. “You need to get there to the finish line. We were having such a good weekend. The car was fantastic all the way through. We were hunting him down, putting the pressure on, and that’s when things happen. It was a hell of a start to the season.”

    Six-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Scott Dixon finished third in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. Alexander Rossi finished fourth in the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet in his debut with the team after seven seasons at Andretti Autosport.

    Callum Ilott rounded out the top five after starting 22nd in the No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, with his 17 spots gained the most of any driver in the race.

    O’Ward took the lead on Lap 74 when leader Scott McLaughlin in the No. 3 DEX Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet and second place Romain Grosjean in the No. 28 DHL Honda collided while dueling side by side for the lead, both plunging into the tire barriers in Turn 4. McLaughlin had just exited the pits on cold Firestone tires after Grosjean had pitted earlier and was on warm rubber, and McLaughlin took responsibility for the incident in a post-race interview.

    McLaughlin and NTT P1 Award pole sitter Grosjean were the dominant drivers out front, leading 37 and 31 laps, respectively.

    On the ensuing restart on Lap 79, O’Ward built a 2.8-second lead in just one lap and appeared to be destined for victory. But Ericsson steadily chipped at O’Ward’s gap, helped by saving twice as much Push-to-Pass time as O’Ward for the final stint of the race.

    Ericsson pulled to within one-half second of O’Ward on Lap 97 when O’Ward’s car suddenly slowed with the plenum problem and then regained speed.

    “We did everything right today,” a crestfallen O’Ward said. “There’s always something. The boys deserved that. Compared to where we were here last year, this is a massive step. But we gave that one away. We can’t have that happen anymore. I know we’re second, but …”

    Ericsson slipped past O’Ward, taking the lead for the first time and cruising to the checkered flag to enthrall a chanting corps of Swedish fans in the grandstands. Ericsson will split $10,000 with his Chip Ganassi Racing team and his chosen charity, Riley Children’s Foundation, for his victory as part of the PeopleReady Force For Good Challenge.

    Two major incidents on the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit thinned the 27-car field in the first half of the race.

    On a restart on Lap 41, Rinus VeeKay’s No. 21 Bitnile.com Chevrolet nosed into the barriers in Turn 4 amid heavy traffic. The No. 30 Kustom Entertainment Honda of Jack Harvey had nowhere to go and plowed into the back of VeeKay. Then the trailing No. 27 AutoNation Honda of Kyle Kirkwood hit the rear of Harvey’s car and vaulted over that machine and VeeKay’s wounded car.

    Harvey was taken to a local hospital in stable condition for further evaluation as a precautionary measure, according to INDYCAR Medical Director Dr. Julia Vaizer. The other drivers in the incident were unhurt.

    The race started with a chaotic incident on the first lap. Felix Rosenqvist’s No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet and Dixon’s car made side-by-side contact in Turn 2, with Rosenqvist being shoved into light wall contact.

    That minor clash triggered a big, chain-reaction collision involving six cars that wiped out two teams’ hopes for a strong finish in the race. Drivers involved: Meyer Shank Racing teammates Helio Castroneves in the No. 06 AutoNation/Sirius XM Honda and Simon Pagenaud in the No. 60 AutoNation/Sirius XM, AJ Foyt Racing teammates Santino Ferrucci in the No. 14 AJ FOYT RACING/SEXTON PROPERTIES Chevrolet and rookie Benjamin Pedersen in the No. 55 AJ FOYT RACING/SEXTON PROPERTIES Chevrolet, rookie Sting Ray Robb in the No. 51 biohaven Honda and Devlin DeFrancesco in the No. 29 EVTEC Honda.

    DeFrancesco’s car was tossed into the air in a pirouette when T-boned by Pedersen in the unfolding maelstrom. None of the drivers involved in the incident was hurt.

    The next NTT INDYCAR SERIES race is the PPG 375 on Sunday, April 2 on the 1.5-mile oval at Texas Motor Speedway.

    Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding Results

    1. (4) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 100, Running
    2. (3) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    3. (9) Scott Dixon, Honda, 100, Running
    4. (12) Alexander Rossi, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    5. (22) Callum Ilott, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    6. (20) Graham Rahal, Honda, 100, Running
    7. (10) Will Power, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    8. (7) Alex Palou, Honda, 100, Running
    9. (11) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 100, Running
    10. (16) David Malukas, Honda, 100, Running
    11. (13) Marcus Armstrong, Honda, 100, Running
    12. (21) Agustin Canapino, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    13. (6) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 99, Running
    14. (26) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 99, Running
    15. (5) Kyle Kirkwood, Honda, 97, Running
    16. (23) Sting Ray Robb, Honda, 96, Off Course
    17. (14) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 95, Running
    18. (1) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 71, Contact
    19. (8) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 51, Retired
    20. (2) Colton Herta, Honda, 49, Contact
    21. (24) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 41, Contact
    22. (19) Jack Harvey, Honda, 41, Contact
    23. (15) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 0, Contact
    24. (17) Santino Ferrucci, Chevrolet, 0, Contact
    25. (18) Devlin DeFrancesco, Honda, 0, Contact
    26. (25) Simon Pagenaud, Honda, 0, Contact
    27. (27) Benjamin Pedersen, Chevrolet, 0, Contact

    Race Statistics:
    Winner’s average speed: 86.047 mph
    Time of Race: 2:05:30.7907
    Margin of victory: 2.4113 seconds
    Cautions: 6 for 26 laps
    Lead changes: 6 among 6 drivers

    Lap Leaders:
    Grosjean, Romain 1 – 31
    McLaughlin, Scott 32 – 34
    Dixon, Scott 35 – 37
    McLaughlin, Scott 38 – 71
    Malukas, David 72 – 73
    O’Ward, Pato 74 – 96
    Ericsson, Marcus 97 – 100

    NTT INDYCAR SERIES Point Standings: Ericsson 51, O’Ward 41, Dixon 36, Rossi 32, Ilott 30, Rahal 28, Power 26, Palou 24, Lundgaard 22, Malukas 21, McLaughlin 20, Armstrong 19, Canapino 18, Daly 16, Kirkwood 15, Grosjean 14, Robb 14, Newgarden 13, Rosenqvist 11, Herta 10, VeeKay 9, Harvey 8, Castroneves 7, Ferrucci 6, DeFrancesco 5, Pedersen 5, Pagenaud 5

  • Frost Works Late Shift To Win St. Petersburg Season Opener

    Frost Works Late Shift To Win St. Petersburg Season Opener

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Sunday, March 5, 2023) – Danial Frost took the lead on a late restart and powered away to win the season-opening INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg on Sunday, earning his second career victory in INDYCAR’s development series.

    Frost, from Singapore, crossed the finish line in the No. 68 HMD Motorsports with DCR car 1.8038 seconds ahead of teammate and rookie Nolan Siegel in the No. 39 HMD Motorsports with DCR machine. Jacob Abel finished third in the No. 51 Abel Motorsports car.

    “I couldn’t believe it at the end,” Frost said. “I was still driving until the checkered, and as soon as we passed the checkered, I was like, ‘OK, we won!’ So, it feels amazing.”

    Christian Rasmussen finished fourth in the No. 6 HMD Motorsports with DCR machine, while Hunter McElrea rounded out the top five in the No. 27 Smart Motors car fielded by Andretti Autosport.

    Frost earned his first win since last May at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course by squeezing past leader Siegel on the first full lap after a restart on Lap 38. Siegel ran wide in Turn 2, and Frost took advantage to grab the lead.

    “I kind of planned it out that everyone else was shooting in (Turn 1) and going wide, so I tried to take a different approach and go inside and get a switchback,” Frost said. “It’s been working for me all race, so I might as well do the same thing. It paid off, so No. 1 in the end. It’s perfect.”

    Frost then pulled away over the last two laps. He started seventh, tying the record for the longest climb to victory in this race, as Felix Serralles also won from that spot on the starting grid in 2016.

    The decisive move by Frost was one of 119 on-track passes in the frantic, 55-minute race on the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit that includes the downtown streets of St. Petersburg, Florida, and a runway at Albert Whitted Airport.

    Abel and Siegel both laid claim to victory during the race but ended up settling for their respective first career podium finishes in INDY NXT by Firestone.

    Siegel, from Palo Alto, California, took the lead on Lap 35 after a restart in which leader Abel and second-place Rasmussen slid wide in the inviting Turn 1, giving Siegel an opening for the top spot.

    “I’m really proud of the effort,” Siegel said. “Starting sixth, this is not an easy place to pass. We were hoping for as good of a recovery as we could get. Obviously, that win would have been the best recovery, but I think this is a really strong performance. We just missed out on it that tiny little bit on that last restart.”

    Abel, from Louisville, Kentucky, led a race-high 27 laps. He took the lead for the first time on Lap 8 when pole sitter and leader Louis Foster slid wide while fending off Rasmussen for the lead in Turn 1 on a restart. Much like Siegel’s dash to the front, an alert Abel saw the opening and capitalized.

    Foster, from England, made contact with the wall on the lap where he lost the lead and was forced to the pits for repairs of a broken left-rear toe link on his No. 26 Copart/USF Pro Championship car fielded by Andretti Autosport. He ended up 14th, running at the finish.

    The next INDY NXT by Firestone race is the INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of Alabama on Sunday, April 30 at Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham, Alabama.

    INDY NXT by Firestone GP of St. Petersburg Results

    1. (7) Danial Frost, 40, Running
    2. (6) Nolan Siegel, 40, Running
    3. (2) Jacob Abel, 40, Running
    4. (3) Christian Rasmussen, 40, Running
    5. (12) Hunter McElrea, 40, Running
    6. (17) Ernie Francis Jr., 40, Running
    7. (10) Josh Green, 40, Running
    8. (8) Reece Gold, 40, Running
    9. (4) Rasmus Lindh, 40, Running
    10. (5) Kyffin Simpson, 40, Running
    11. (14) Colin Kaminsky, 40, Running
    12. (19) Christian Bogle, 39, Running
    13. (18) Jamie Chadwick, 39, Running
    14. (1) Louis Foster, 38, Running
    15. (9) Matteo Nannini, 34, Contact
    16. (15) Josh Pierson, 26, Contact
    17. (16) James Roe, 23, Mechanical
    18. (13) Jagger Jones, 3, Contact
    19. (11) Enaam Ahmed, 0, Contact

    Race Statistics
    Winner’s average speed: 77.977 mph
    Time of Race: 00:55:24.0489
    Margin of victory: 1.8038 seconds
    Cautions: 5 for 13 laps
    Lead changes: 3 among 4 drivers

    Lap Leaders
    Foster, Louis 1 – 7
    Abel, Jacob 8 – 34
    Siegel, Nolan 35 – 38
    Frost, Danial 39 – 40