Category: Truck Series PR

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Press Release

  • Lawless Alan – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Lawless Alan – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Race Advance – DoorDash 250 (75 Laps/149.25 Miles) | Sonoma Raceway
    Saturday, June 11 | Sonoma, Calif. | 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: FS1 | Radio: Motor Racing Network (MRN), Sirius XM Ch. 90
    Team: No. 45 AUTOChargit Chevrolet Silverado
    Driver: Lawless Alan (Los Angeles, Calif.) | Crew Chief: Darren Fraley
    Follow the Team: @NieceMotorsport; @lawlessalan25

    Alan on returning to road course racing at Sonoma Raceway: “I’m excited to go to Sonoma with the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series this weekend. I ran there a few weeks ago in the TransAm TA2 event to get a better idea of what the layout is like. Although it wasn’t the exact course that we’ll be running this weekend in the Truck Series, it was a good experience to get a feel for the track and I’m looking forward to having a strong run after the speed we showed at Gateway.”

    Alan at Sonoma Raceway: Alan makes his first career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start at Sonoma Raceway Saturday. Alan has made two TransAm TA2 appearances at Sonoma – most recently on April 28 – May 1 in the TA2 Round 5 event in which he ran to an 11th-place finish. He also made one K&N Pro Series West start at Sonoma in 2019, finishing 24th after starting 13th.

    On the Truck: Alan will pilot the No. 45 AUTOChargit Chevrolet Silverado Saturday at Sonoma Raceway.

    Last Time Out (Toyota 200 – Start: 24th / Finish: 18th): Despite suffering nose damage on the initial start of Saturday’s Toyota 200, Alan battled through a tight-handling condition through most of the race as the No. 45 team worked to remedy the issue. Alan was scored as high as 11th on the day and showed speed late to position himself for a top-15 finish, but the rookie was collected in the last lap incident in turn two and scored 18th at the time of caution.

    About Niece Motorsports:

    Niece Motorsports is owned by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. In 2022, Niece Motorsports enters its seventh season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Niece also owns Niece Equipment, which has for over 40 years provided clients with reliable products at competitive prices. Niece Equipment’s reputation is built on service, integrity and dependability. The company provides water and fuel/lube trucks that are engineered with quality and durability in mind for the construction and mining industry. Follow the team on Facebook and Instagram @NieceMotorsports as well as Twitter @NieceMotorsport.

    Media Inquiries: media@niecemotorsports.com www.niecemotorsports.com

    About AUTOChargit:

    AUTOChargit designs, manufactures and installs EV charging systems for automated and conventional parking applications. AUTOChargit can decrease capital expenditures by up to 75 percent by providing automated coupling and decoupling of EV charging stalls from the power source. For conventional parking applications, a single 40-AMP circuit coupled with a single AUTOChargit System can be multiplexed to four, eight, or 12 stalls. Each charging stall is individually metered for the exact tracking of electricity usage. The AUTOParkit Mobile APP provides a touchless experience for the user.

    About AUTOParkit:

    AUTOParkit™ designs, manufactures, and constructs fully automated parking systems for new and existing buildings. AUTOParkit system structural steel and modular design can provide double the capacity of a traditional parking garage, providing up to 17 LEED points and drastically reducing construction time. AUTOParkit automated systems are 40 percent less expensive to operate, safer for the user and reduces carbon emissions associated with parking by more than 80 percent. AUTOParkit’s charging pallets provided by AUTOChargit, are a fast and convenient way of charging EVs and Hybrids. AUTOChargit’s patented technology allows for shuffling charged vehicles cutting infrastructure costs by up to 80 percent.

    For more information on AUTOParkit, visit www.autoparkit.com

    Follow Lawless Alan on Instagram and on the web: @lawless_alan / www.lawlessalanracing.com

  • Kris Wright – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Kris Wright – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Race Advance – DoorDash 250 (75 Laps/149.25 Miles) | Sonoma Raceway
    Saturday, June 11 | Sonoma, Calif. | 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: FS1 | Radio: Motor Racing Network (MRN), Sirius XM Ch. 90
    Team: No. 44 F.N.B. Corporation Chevrolet Silverado
    Driver: Kris Wright (Wexford, Pa.) | Crew Chief: Wally Rogers
    Follow the Team: @NieceMotorsport; @KrisOnNASCAR

    Wright on making his debut at Sonoma Raceway: “I am excited to get back to a road course this weekend – especially to a track that I have never been to before. This will add to my growing NASCAR resume, I am learning a lot in this season. The 44 Niece Motorsports team is clicking more and more, I think we will have fun together driving this California track.”

    Wright at Sonoma Raceway: This weekend marks Kris Wright’s first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series appearance at the 1.99-mile, 10-turn road course.

    On the Truck: Wright will pilot the refreshed F.N.B. Corporation paint scheme for Saturday’s DoorDash 250 at Sonoma Raceway.

    Last Time Out (Toyota 200 – Start: 17th / Finish: 33rd): Wright was collected in an incident in turn three on lap 93, forcing him to spin and make contact with the outside wall. The No. 44 F.N.B. Corporation team worked to make repairs to the rear of its Chevrolet Silverado, but were forced to take it behind the wall, resulting in a 33rd-place finish.

    About Niece Motorsports

    Niece Motorsports is owned by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. In 2022, Niece Motorsports enters its seventh season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Niece also owns Niece Equipment, which has for over 40 years provided clients with reliable products at competitive prices. Niece Equipment’s reputation is built on service, integrity and dependability. The company provides water and fuel/lube trucks that are engineered with quality and durability in mind for the construction and mining industry. Follow the team on Facebook and Instagram @NieceMotorsports as well as Twitter @NieceMotorsport.

    Media Inquiries: media@niecemotorsports.com www.niecemotorsports.com

    About F.N.B. Corporation

    F.N.B. Corporation (NYSE: FNB), headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is a diversified financial services company operating in seven states and the District of Columbia. FNB’s market coverage spans several major metropolitan areas including: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Baltimore, Maryland; Cleveland, Ohio; Washington, D.C.; and Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham and the Piedmont Triad (Winston-Salem, Greensboro and High Point) in North Carolina. The Company has total assets of approximately $42 billion and nearly 340 banking offices throughout Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maryland, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Washington, D.C. and Virginia.

    FNB provides a full range of commercial banking, consumer banking and wealth management solutions through its subsidiary network which is led by its largest affiliate, First National Bank of Pennsylvania, founded in 1864. Commercial banking solutions include corporate banking, small business banking, investment real estate financing, government banking, business credit, capital markets and lease financing. The consumer banking segment provides a full line of consumer banking products and services, including deposit products, mortgage lending, consumer lending and a complete suite of mobile and online banking services. FNB’s wealth management services include asset management, private banking and insurance.

    The common stock of F.N.B. Corporation trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “FNB” and is included in Standard & Poor’s MidCap 400 Index with the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) Regional Banks SubIndustry Index. Customers, shareholders and investors can learn more about this regional financial institution by visiting the F.N.B. Corporation website at www.fnbcorporation.com.

    Follow Kris Wright on Instagram and on the web: @KrisOnNASCAR / KrisWrightMotorsports.com

  • Carson Hocevar – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Carson Hocevar – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Race Advance – DoorDash 250 (75 Laps/149.25 Miles) | Sonoma Raceway
    Saturday, June 11 | Sonoma, Calif. | 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: FS1 | Radio: Motor Racing Network (MRN), Sirius XM Ch. 90
    Team: No. 42 Worldwide Express Chevrolet Silverado
    Driver: Carson Hocevar (Portage, Mich.) | Crew Chief: Phil Gould
    Follow the Team: @NieceMotorsport; @CarsonHocevar

    Hocevar on the weekend at Sonoma Raceway: “I’m feeling better every day and I’m looking forward to being behind the wheel of the No. 42 Worldwide Express Chevrolet this weekend. I’m thankful for Daniel’s willingness to step up this weekend for our No. 42 team. None of this is possible without the great partnership Niece Motorsports has formed with Worldwide Express and Trackhouse Racing.”

    Daniel Suárez on standby for Hocevar in Sonoma: As Carson Hocevar continues to recover from injuries sustained during a last lap accident in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) event at World Wide Technology Raceway on June 4, Daniel Suárez, driver of the No. 99 NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet for Trackhouse Racing, has been tabbed to be on standby in the event of a driver change during Saturday’s DoorDash 250 at Sonoma Raceway.

    Hocevar at Sonoma Raceway: Hocevar makes his first career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start at Sonoma Raceway Saturday.

    On the Truck: Hocevar will pilot the No. 42 Worldwide Express Chevrolet Silverado Saturday at Sonoma Raceway.

    Last Time Out (Toyota 200 – Start: 12th / Finish: 24th): Hocevar ran to a 13th-place finish in Stage One before a round of adjustments at the stage break positioned the No. 42 team to run up front with the leaders. Following several cautions and varying pit strategies, Hocevar turned in a sixth-place finish in Stage Two and assumed the lead to start the final stage after staying out under caution.

    Hocevar went on to lead eight laps when the field went back green before settling into second-place, but was involved in the caution on lap 108, forcing him to restart 23rd. He made his way back up inside the top-10 in eighth prior to overtime, but was collected in a multi-truck incident on the last lap to result in a 24th-place finish.

    About Niece Motorsports:

    Niece Motorsports is owned by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. In 2022, Niece Motorsports enters its seventh season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Niece also owns Niece Equipment, which has for over 40 years provided clients with reliable products at competitive prices. Niece Equipment’s reputation is built on service, integrity and dependability. The company provides water and fuel/lube trucks that are engineered with quality and durability in mind for the construction and mining industry. Follow the team on Facebook and Instagram @NieceMotorsports as well as Twitter @NieceMotorsport.

    Media Inquiries: media@niecemotorsports.com www.niecemotorsports.com

    About Worldwide Express:

    Worldwide Express, LLC, is a full-service, non-asset-based logistics provider offering access to industry-leading small package, truckload and less-than-truckload shipping solutions and managed transportation services. The family of brands, comprised of Worldwide Express, GlobalTranz and Unishippers, serve more than 120,000 customers spanning from small and mid-size businesses to larger enterprises, with unmatched carrier options and strategic guidance for their supply chains.

    With an annual systemwide revenue approaching $4 billion, the company is the second-largest privately held freight brokerage and largest non-retail UPS® Authorized Reseller in the country. Through a selective portfolio of 65+ LTL and tens of thousands of truckload carriers, and powered by proprietary technology, clients benefit from an award-winning, relationship-backed approach to solving their shipping needs. To learn more about the brands, visit wwexracing.com.

  • Ross Chastain – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Ross Chastain – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Race Advance – DoorDash 250 (75 Laps/149.25 Miles) | Sonoma Raceway
    Saturday, June 11 | Sonoma, Calif. | 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: FS1 | Radio: Motor Racing Network (MRN), Sirius XM Ch. 90
    Team: No. 41 Worldwide Express Chevrolet Silverado
    Driver: Ross Chastain (Alva, Fla.) | Crew Chief: Cody Efaw
    Follow the Team: @NieceMotorsport; @RossChastain

    Chastain on making his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut at Sonoma: “I’m looking forward to going road course racing at Sonoma for the first time in the Truck Series with Worldwide Express. The road course program at Niece Motorsports has continued its upward progression in recent years as the Truck Series schedule has called for it and we’re ready to add another win sticker to our Worldwide Express Chevrolet Silverado out West this weekend.”

    Triple Digit Starts in the Truck Series: Chastain makes his 100th career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start Saturday at Sonoma Raceway. Through 99 career races spanning 12 seasons in the series, Chastain has four wins (Kansas 2019, Gateway 2019, Pocono 2019, Charlotte 2022), 18 top-fives, and 43 top-10s.

    Chastain at Sonoma Raceway (NCWTS): Chastain makes his first career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start at Sonoma Saturday.

    Chastain has made two starts in the NASCAR Cup Series at Sonoma Raceway, one each during the 2019 and 2021 seasons. He ran to a seventh-place finish in 2021 after starting 29th to secure his first career top-10 at the California road course.

    On the Truck: Chastain will pilot the No. 41 Worldwide Express Chevrolet Silverado Saturday at Sonoma Raceway.

    Last Time Out (North Carolina Education Lottery 200 – Start: 5th / Finish: 1st): Ross Chastain wheeled the No. 41 Worldwide Express Chevrolet to Niece Motorsports’ fourth victory in team history Friday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway in his 99th NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) start. Chastain led four laps Friday night en route to the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 victory after assuming the lead following a caution on the first green-white-checkered attempt.

    The win marks Chastain’s fourth career NCWTS win and first since 2019. He has also won two NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) races this season at Circuit of the Americas (March 27) and Talladega (April 24). Chastain owns all four of Niece Motorsports’ victories to date in the NCWTS and marks his and the company’s first trip to victory lane since 2019.

    About Niece Motorsports:

    Niece Motorsports is owned by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. In 2022, Niece Motorsports enters its seventh season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Niece also owns Niece Equipment, which has for over 40 years provided clients with reliable products at competitive prices. Niece Equipment’s reputation is built on service, integrity and dependability. The company provides water and fuel/lube trucks that are engineered with quality and durability in mind for the construction and mining industry. Follow the team on Facebook and Instagram @NieceMotorsports as well as Twitter @NieceMotorsport.

    Media Inquiries: media@niecemotorsports.com www.niecemotorsports.com

    About Worldwide Express

    Worldwide Express, LLC, is a full-service, non-asset-based logistics provider offering access to industry-leading small package, truckload and less-than-truckload shipping solutions and managed transportation services. The family of brands, comprised of Worldwide Express, GlobalTranz and Unishippers, serve more than 120,000 customers spanning from small and mid-size businesses to larger enterprises, with unmatched carrier options and strategic guidance for their supply chains.

    With an annual systemwide revenue approaching $4 billion, the company is the second-largest privately held freight brokerage and largest non-retail UPS® Authorized Reseller in the country. Through a selective portfolio of 65+ LTL and tens of thousands of truckload carriers, and powered by proprietary technology, clients benefit from an award-winning, relationship-backed approach to solving their shipping needs. To learn more about the brands, visit wwexracing.com.

    Follow Ross Chastain on Instagram and on the web: @rosschastain / rosschastain.com

  • Dean Thompson – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Dean Thompson – DoorDash 250 Race Advance

    Race Advance – DoorDash 250 (75 Laps/149.25 Miles) | Sonoma Raceway
    Saturday, June 11 | Sonoma, Calif. | 7:30 p.m. ET
    TV: FS1 | Radio: Motor Racing Network (MRN), Sirius XM Ch. 90
    Team: No. 40 Worldwide Express/GlobalTranz/Unishippers Chevrolet Silverado
    Driver: Dean Thompson (Anaheim, Calif.) | Crew Chief: Joe Lax
    Follow the Team: @NieceMotorsport; @deanthompsonr

    Thompson on making his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Debut at Sonoma: “I’m excited to head back to my home state and to a track that I have familiarity with in Sonoma. The ability to compete in the ARCA Menards Series West race will be a good confidence-booster for me prior to running the Truck Series race and that ability to bring some notes back to our No. 40 Worldwide Express team works as an advantage for us this weekend.”

    Thompson at Sonoma Raceway: Thompson makes his first-career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start at Sonoma Raceway Saturday. He made one ARCA Menards Series West start at the California road course in 2021 and ran to a sixth-place finish after starting 13th.

    Thompson will also run the ARCA Menard Series West General Tire 200 at Sonoma on Saturday at 2:30 p.m. ET in the No. 40 Thompson Pipe Group Chevrolet.

    On the Truck: Thompson and the No. 40 Chevrolet Silverado will have the Worldwide Express/GlobalTranz/Unishippers paint scheme on display for Saturday’s NCWTS race at Sonoma Raceway

    Last Time Out (Toyota 200 – Start: 25th / Finish: 14th): Thompson and the No. 40 Worldwide Express team had their strategy go their way Saturday at Gateway to come away with a 14th-place finish. Thompson ran as high as ninth in the race and was the highest-finishing Niece Motorsports entry on the afternoon.

    About Niece Motorsports:

    Niece Motorsports is owned by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. In 2022, Niece Motorsports enters its seventh season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Niece also owns Niece Equipment, which has for over 40 years provided clients with reliable products at competitive prices. Niece Equipment’s reputation is built on service, integrity and dependability. The company provides water and fuel/lube trucks that are engineered with quality and durability in mind for the construction and mining industry. Follow the team on Facebook and Instagram @NieceMotorsports as well as Twitter @NieceMotorsport.

    Media Inquiries: media@niecemotorsports.com www.niecemotorsports.com

    About Worldwide Express

    Worldwide Express, LLC, is a full-service, non-asset-based logistics provider offering access to industry-leading small package, truckload and less-than-truckload shipping solutions and managed transportation services. The family of brands, comprised of Worldwide Express, GlobalTranz and Unishippers, serve more than 120,000 customers spanning from small and mid-size businesses to larger enterprises, with unmatched carrier options and strategic guidance for their supply chains. With an annual systemwide revenue approaching $4 billion, the company is the second-largest privately held freight brokerage and largest non-retail UPS® Authorized Reseller in the country. Through a selective portfolio of 65+ LTL and tens of thousands of truckload carriers, and powered by proprietary technology, clients benefit from an award-winning, relationship-backed approach to solving their shipping needs. To learn more about the brands, please visit www.wwex.com, www.globaltranz.com and www.unishippers.com.

    Follow Dean Thompson on Instagram and on the web: @deankthompson / deanthompsonr.com

  • John Hunter Nemechek – No. 4 Persil Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks Sonoma Preview

    John Hunter Nemechek – No. 4 Persil Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks Sonoma Preview

    John Hunter Nemechek: Driver, No. 4 Persil Toyota

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
    Event: DoorDash 250, Race 12 of 23, 75 Laps – 20/25/30; 149.25 Miles
    Location: Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway (1.99-mile 12-turn road course)
    Date/Broadcast: June 11, 2022, at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

    Neme’chek’ the Facts:
    John Hunter Nemechek and the No. 4 Persil team travel west to Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway where they’ll be looking to rebound from a 35th-place finish last weekend at World Wide Technology Raceway. Nemechek was battling for position inside the top 10 during Stage Two when he was part of a six-truck incident and after his crew surveyed the damage, the determined they were unable to continue in the race. The 35th-place finish snapped a career best run of seven straight top-10 finishes for Nemechek.

    While he hasn’t competed in a race at Sonoma, Nemechek has nine road course starts in Camping World Truck Series action. In those nine starts, he has record one win, – at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in 2016 while driving for family-owned NEMCO Motorsports- 37 laps led, five top-five and six top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 8.4.

    Persil will make their first start in the Camping World Truck Series onboard Nemechek’s No. 4 Tundra TRD Pro at Sonoma. Developed in 1907, Persil was the first self-acting detergent. Its revolutionary formula that released oxygen during washing made strenuous rubbing of the laundry superfluous. Ever since, Persil has always set the pace of time to serve society’s changing needs, combining innovation and continuity.

    Nemechek currently leads all Camping World Truck Series regulars in poles (four), average starting position (6.6), and average running position (8.395). He is also second in driver rating (103.5) and third in laps led (171). The second-generation driver sits fourth in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship standings, just 22 tallies behind reigning champion Ben Rhodes.

    Nemechek is a 12-time winner in Camping World Truck Series action, winning at least one race each season from 2015 to 2018 for his family-owned team, NEMCO Motorsports, and returning to victory lane in 2021 and 2022 with KBM. Across 135 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, he has compiled six poles, 1,352 laps led, 45 top-five and 73 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.5.

    Eric Phillips returned to lead the No. 4 team in 2022. His 42 career Truck Series victories make him the winningest crew chief in Truck Series history, with 33 of those coming while at KBM including five last year. Phillips led the No. 18 team at KBM in its debut season in 2010 and helped build the organization into one of the premier teams in all of NASCAR before departing at the end of the 2014 season. Under his guidance, the No. 18 team won eight races in its inaugural campaign and became the first team in Truck Series history to capture an owner’s championship in its first season of competition. In 2014, the Illinois native led the No. 51 team to an owner’s championship and his team’s 10 wins spearheaded KBM to a single-season Truck Series record of 14 wins. Phillips has been atop the box for five road course starts in Camping World Truck Series action. In those five starts, his drivers have tallied 17 laps led, four top-five and four top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 4.4.

    John Hunter Nemechek Career Highlights:

    • Twelve-time winner in Camping World Truck Series action, winning at least one race each season from 2015 to 2018 for his family-owned team, NEMCO Motorsports. Across 135 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, has compiled six poles, 1,352 laps led, 45 top-five and 73 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.5. Registered a career-high and series-leading five victories in 2021 and earned the NCWTS Regular Season championship and third in the final standings after qualifying for the Championship Four for the first time in his career.
    • Produced three top-10 finishes and an average result of 22.4 while competing for rookie of the year honors in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2020. He recorded a career-best eighth-place finish twice, both coming at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.
    • Across 61 career XFINITY Series starts, has totaled two wins, one pole, 510 laps led, 17 top-five and 36 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 11.8.

    John Hunter Nemechek’s No. 4 Persil Tundra TRD Pro:

    KBM-61: The No. 4 Persil team will unload KBM-61 for Saturday’s race at Sonoma. Nemechek raced this Tundra once earlier in the season when he brought home a runner-up finish at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in March. Nemechek also piloted KBM-61 twice in 2021 with finishes of third at the Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway Road Course and 12th at COTA.

    Click for KBM-61 Performance Profile:
    KBM Notes of Interest:

    • KBM drivers have recorded one win, 120 laps led, 13 top-five and 15 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.3 across 35 starts on road courses.
    • Erik Jones picked up the organization’s lone road course victory in 2015 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada.
    • KBM holds the Camping World Truck Series records for most career wins (94) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). With his victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway on March 19, Corey Heim became the 18th different driver to win a Truck Series event for KBM. In addition to collecting a series-record seven Owner’s Championships, the organization has produced two championship-winning drivers: Erik Jones (2015) and Christopher Bell (2017).
    • The No. 4 has 17 career victories at KBM and was the number for both of the organization’s driver championships.
  • Daniel Suárez on Standby for Carson Hocevar in Sonoma

    Daniel Suárez on Standby for Carson Hocevar in Sonoma

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (June 8, 2022) – As Carson Hocevar continues to recover from injuries sustained during a last lap accident in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) event at World Wide Technology Raceway on June 4, Daniel Suárez, driver of the No. 99 NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet for Trackhouse Racing, has been tabbed to be on standby in the event of a driver change during Saturday’s DoorDash 250 at Sonoma Raceway.

    The Niece Motorsports No. 42 Chevrolet Silverado will debut the Worldwide Express paint scheme as both Hocevar and Suárez represent the Dallas-based logistics provider for Niece and Trackhouse, respectively.

    “We’re fortunate to have as dedicated a partner there is in the sport in Worldwide Express, who, along with Ross Chastain, has strengthened our connection with Trackhouse Racing to give us an opportunity to remain competitive this weekend with Daniel behind the wheel if the situation calls for it,” said Niece Motorsports general manager Cody Efaw. “We’re appreciative of Daniel’s efforts and the commitment of Worldwide Express to make this weekend possible. We’re proud of everything Carson and the No. 42 team have accomplished and look forward to watching them compete for a championship this year.”

    “First, we are fans of Carson and what he has done during this season,” said Trackhouse owner and founder Justin Marks. “We are also very aware of the importance of Niece Motorsports to Ross Chastain and the relationship they have built over the years. Add in the commonality of a sponsor like Worldwide Express, who is committed to both Niece and Trackhouse, and we were very happy to help this weekend in Sonoma. If necessary, Daniel will do a great job in representing Trackhouse, Niece, WWEX and Chevrolet while Carson recovers and gets prepared for a championship run later this season.”

    Hocevar, who is in his second full-time NCWTS season, enters the 12th race of the season eighth in driver points and ninth in owner points standings. The 19-year-old has three top-fives and five top-10 finishes this season and has led 143 laps – ranking fourth in the Truck Series.

    “I’m feeling better every day and I’m looking forward to being behind the wheel of the No. 42 Worldwide Express Chevrolet this weekend,” Hocevar said. “I’m thankful for Daniel’s willingness to step up this weekend for our No. 42 team. None of this is possible without the great partnership Niece Motorsports has formed with Worldwide Express and Trackhouse Racing.”

    “I’m happy to help out Carson and the Niece Motorsports No. 42 team this weekend,” said Suárez. “I hope Carson is on his way back to feeling 100 percent. I hope he can go out and give Worldwide Express a good show. If they need me in relief, I’ll do my best to get them a good finish.”

    Suárez has competed in 28 Truck Series races in his career posting a victory at Phoenix Raceway in 2016, 10 top-five and 16 top-10 finishes. His most recent race was at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in 2021 when he finished 17th on the dirt.

    Saturday’s DoorDash 250 will be broadcast live on FS1 and the Motor Racing Network (MRN) on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90 at 7:30 p.m. ET.

    About Niece Motorsports:
    Niece Motorsports is owned by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. In 2022, Niece Motorsports enters its seventh season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Niece also owns Niece Equipment, which has for over 40 years provided clients with reliable products at competitive prices. Niece Equipment’s reputation is built on service, integrity and dependability. The company provides water and fuel/lube trucks that are engineered with quality and durability in mind for the construction and mining industry. Follow the team on Facebook and Instagram @NieceMotorsports as well as Twitter @NieceMotorsport.

    About Trackhouse Racing:
    After retiring from a driving career in NASCAR and sports cars, Justin Marks created Trackhouse Entertainment Group in 2020 with the goal of creating a racing brand that transcends the sport. The Nashville, Tennessee company formed Trackhouse Racing that took to the track in 2021 with Daniel Suárez behind the wheel. In January 2021, the team announced a partnership with international superstar entertainer Pitbull who has been a frequent guest at NASCAR races and elevated Trackhouse’s presence through inclusion in several of his songs and music videos over the last two years. Midway through the 2021 season, Trackhouse Racing purchased the NASCAR assets of Chip Ganassi Racing and began the 2022 season as its own two-car team with Suárez and Ross Chastain as drivers. Chastain gave the organization its first victory at Circuit of the Americas in Austin Texas on March 27 and won again at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway on April 24.

    About Worldwide Express:
    Worldwide Express, LLC, is a full-service, non-asset-based logistics provider offering access to industry-leading small package, truckload and less-than-truckload shipping solutions and managed transportation services. The family of brands, comprised of Worldwide Express, GlobalTranz and Unishippers, serve more than 115,000 customers spanning from small and mid-size businesses to larger enterprises, with unmatched carrier options and strategic guidance for their supply chains.
    With an annual systemwide revenue approaching $5 billion, the company is the second-largest privately held freight brokerage and largest non-retail UPS® Authorized Reseller in the country. Through a selective portfolio of 65+ LTL and tens of thousands of truckload carriers, and powered by proprietary technology, clients benefit from an award-winning, relationship-backed approach to solving their shipping needs. To learn more about the brands, visit wwexracing.com.

  • Chandler Smith – No. 18 Safelite Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks Sonoma Raceway Preview

    Chandler Smith – No. 18 Safelite Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks Sonoma Raceway Preview

    Chandler Smith: Driver, No. 18 Safelite® Toyota

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
    Event: DoorDash 250, Race 12 of 23, 75 Laps – 20/25/30; 149.25 Miles
    Location: Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway (1.99-mile, 12-turn road course)
    Date/Broadcast: June 11, 2022, at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

    Chandler Chatter:
    Chandler Smith and the No. 18 Safelite team head to Sonoma Raceway for Saturday’s DoorDash 250. It will be Smith’s first trip to Sonoma in any series and just his fifth career start on a road course in NASCAR Camping World Truck Series action. Across his first four starts, his fifth-place result earlier this year at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Tex. has been his best result.

    Smith’s strong showing at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway last week helped catapult him up to second in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series regular season point standings, where he sits 17 points behind reigning series champion Ben Rhodes with five races remaining in the regular season. Smith led 40 laps, won the opening stage and despite suffering damage to his Safelite Tundra TRD Pro when another competitor slid up the track into him while battling for the lead, came back to finish third.

    Through the first 11 events of the season Smith ranks first among Truck Series regulars in quality passes (483), second in average finish (9.1) and average starting position (7.3), third in driver rating (102.0) and fourth in average running position (8.812) and fastest laps run (69). He has produced one win, 96 laps led, five top-five and eight top-10 finishes in his sophomore campaign.

    The Georgia driver earned NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year honors in 2021 and finished eighth in the championship standings after producing two victories, one pole, 213 laps led, six top-five and nine top-10 finishes in his first full-time season. He earned his first career Truck Series victory at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in September and in the series finale at Phoenix (Ariz.) Raceway earned his first career pole and swept all three stages en route to his second victory.

    In addition to his Truck Series schedule in 2022, Smith is competing in a three-race schedule with Sam Hunt Racing (SHR). Smith finished 38th in his series debut at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway after a mid-race wreck and finished 21st at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway. His final race with SHR will come Oct. 22 at Homestead-Miami (Fla.) Speedway.

    Veteran crew chief Danny Stockman will once again call the shots for Smith and the No. 18 team in 2022. Stockman’s drivers have produced six victories at KBM across his first two seasons, including two with Smith behind the wheel in 2021. The veteran crew chief captured a Truck Series championship with Austin Dillon in 2011 and also won an Xfinity Series championship with Dillon in 2013. Stockman’s lone visit to Sonoma as a National Series crew chief resulted in a 24th-place finish with Austin Dillon in the 2019 Cup Series race at the California road course. He was atop the pit box for David Mayhew’s runner-up finish in the NASCAR West Series event in 2019. Smith’s fifth-place finish at COTA earlier this year was his best result across five races in Truck Series action on road courses.

    Safelite, the nation’s largest provider of vehicle glass repair, replacement and recalibration services, returns to KBM for a fifth season and will be the primary sponsor on Smith’s Tundra TRD Pro Tundra for 16 races this year, including Saturday’s race at Sonoma. Charge Me will serve as an associate sponsor on the bedtop of Smith’s No. 18 Tundra TRD Pro this weekend. Charge Me was founded on the principle that the electric vehicle (EV) revolution will require robust infrastructure support at all levels.

    Chandler Smith, Driver Q&A:
    You are 17 points out of the lead with five races remaining. How do you like your chances of winning the regular season championship?
    “With the stretch of top-10 finishes we have had recently with our No. 18 Safelite/Charge Me team we have definitely put ourselves back into a position to fight for the regular season championship. That will be our main priority these next five races because winning the regular season championship comes with a good chunk of playoff points, so getting those points would definitely be beneficial for our team when the playoffs start.”

    We are in a stretch of races at very unique tracks, is it fun taking on a new challenge each week?
    “It’s definitely a fun stretch where last week we went to what I would classify as a short track and then coming we have a couple road course races, a dirt race and Nashville Superspeedway. I think NASCAR has done a good job making the Truck Series schedule unique, but if I had it my way I’d add in a few more short tracks because those are my favorite.”

    Sonoma is a new track for you. How do you prepare for a track you’ve never been to?
    “To prepare for Sonoma I’ve watched a lot of film and spent a lot of time at TRD on the simulator. I feel like I’ve been pretty fast on the road courses for as few of them as I’ve raced. I’m as prepared as I possibly can be for Saturday and really looking forward to the challenge of taking on a new road course.”

    Chandler Smith Career Highlights:

    • Across 49 career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts has recorded three wins, 402 laps led, 19 top-five and 26 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 13.6.
    • Earned NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year honors in 2021 and finished eighth in the championship standings after producing two victories, one pole, 213 laps led, six top-five and nine top-10 finishes in his first full-time season. He earned his first career Truck Series victory at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in September and in the series finale at Phoenix (Ariz.) Raceway earned his first career pole and swept all three stages en route to his second victory.
    • Has posted an average finish of 29.5 across two NASCAR Xfinity Series starts in 2022, with a best result of 22nd coming at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway.
    • Has collected nine wins, 10 poles, 1783 laps led, 22 top-five and 29 top-10 finishes en route to an average finish of 5.4 across 34 career ARCA Menards Series starts.
    • Has numerous Super Late Model victories across his career, including two marquee wins: the Snowball Derby at 5 Flags Speedway in Pensacola, Fla. (2021) and SpeedFest at Watermelon Capital Speedway in Cordele, Georgia (2018). Will compete in several Super Late Model events around his Truck Series schedule in 2022.

    Chandler Smith’s No. 18 Safelite Tundra:
    KBM-72: The No. 18 Safelite team will unload KBM-72 for Saturday’s race at Sonoma. It is the same Tundra TRD Pro that Smith raced to a fifth-place finish with at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Tex. in March.

    KBM-72 Performance Profile
    KBM Notes of Interest:

    • Across 35 starts on road courses, KBM drivers have earned one win, 13 top-five and 15 top-10 finishes, with an average starting position of 9.4 and an average finish of 12.3.
    • Erik Jones picked up KBM’s lone road course victory in 2015 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ont.
    • KBM holds the Camping World Truck Series records for most career wins (94) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). With his victory at Atlanta (Ga.) Motor Speedway, Corey Heim became the 18th different driver to win a Truck Series event for KBM. In addition to collecting a series-record seven Owner’s Championships, the organization has produced two championship-winning drivers: Erik Jones (2015) and Christopher Bell (2017).
    • The No. 18, the number which was on the first Tundra that went to victory lane for KBM in 2010, has 24 career victories.
  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Hailie Deegan Heading Back to Native California for Sonoma Event

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Hailie Deegan Heading Back to Native California for Sonoma Event

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
    Sonoma Advance | Wednesday, June 8, 2022

    Hailie Deegan, driver of the No. 1 Monster Energy Ford F-150 in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series for David Gilliland Racing, was a guest today on the weekly Ford Performance media call. She answered questions from the media about her season to date and this weekend’s return to Sonoma Raceway.

    HAILIE DEEGAN, No. 1 Monster Energy Ford F-150 – WHERE ARE YOU ON THE AGGRESSION SCALE? “It’s really crazy in the Truck Series. I feel like there’s a lot that happens during these races, a lot of chaos, so I think that it’s hard to avoid it. I think sometimes if you don’t stand up for yourself or do what they’re doing to you back, you’ll get run over quick and it happens quick. So, I think just from now on, and I feel like I’m trying to do more of it, is just racing people how they race me. Someone like, for instance, Ross Chastain. When he comes down to the Truck Series he races aggressive, but he does it in a respectful way. We can race each other really, really hard, but in the most respectful way. We’re not just cleaning people out. He’ll race me hard and I’ll race him hard back and it’s super respectful, so that’s what I like. I really, really like that and I think there are some instances where there are a few drivers in the Truck Series that the moment they get to me they try and move you and you’re like, ‘What did I do?’ But I think that it kind of depends on who you’re racing around. You kind of have to know who you’re racing around and I feel like that affects it a lot is everyone that you could be around at that moment you have to decide like, ‘OK, how are they gonna race me? Are they gonna race me with respect or am I gonna get buy them and they’re just gonna try to wreck me the next corner?’”

    WHAT ABOUT LAST WEEKEND? YOU WERE THE CENTER OF A LITTLE BIT GOING ON? “Are you talking about with the 52? I think that what initially all started it was it happened going into turn one – kind of on the frontstretch but in turn one – I was kind of hanging on the 42’s left-rear, just trying to pull him back before we got to the entry of the corner, and I think when I did that I was just so close to the 42 that the rear – because of the skew and everything the rears are out just a little bit more – and I think it just barely got into Freisen, but it was enough to kind of upset my truck and kind of put me a little bit into the 42, so I didn’t mean to do anything to the 42 at all or Freisen, but it was just kind of like more of a racing situation. Honestly, I didn’t even know really what happened. It’s not like you can see very well out the right-rear, so I think that it was just kind of a racing little mishap of racing each other hard. I’ve been used up, I feel like, by quite a few people on track and I thought I was just racing hard. I didn’t think there was much wrong with it. Obviously, if I would have wrecked him or anything like that, yeah, I would have felt bad and it wouldn’t have been intentional, but I felt like we were racing pretty hard right there for the position we were in and then he ended up driving me down track and stuff. It was just a mess, but I think that’s just kind of what comes with it. I’m no stranger to being flipped off on the track. It’s become a pretty common thing, but I feel like it happens a lot during these races. I feel like it kind of goes back and forth during the whole race with a lot of people and not just me, but seeing it from an outside perspective. There’s just a lot of chaos in the Truck Series and I think it’s almost a discipline issue. It’s like if you’re building a building and it has no structure, it’s gonna fall apart. If you’re raising a kid with no discipline, they’re not gonna behave the best way possible and I feel like the Truck Series, kind of what’s lacking right now is that discipline. You’ve got a lot of young kids in there trying to prove themselves and then you have some of the older talent that has a lot of experience and it’s not meshing well. I feel like there needs to be some structure to it in order to get it under control because I know, at least for me, if I’m gonna go hit somebody or wreck somebody if there is a black flag or some sort of discipline, some type of repercussion that I could face because of it, I’m probably gonna decide whether or not to do that and not just instantly do it because you know there’s nothing bad that’s gonna come of it after.”

    SO IT’S KIND OF LIKE THE WILD WILD WEST? “I haven’t seen many people get penalized in the Truck Series for what happens on track. It’s kind of disheartening because you wish there were situations you’re in like, ‘Man, I didn’t deserve that,’ and I just get put in these positions and I know there are other drivers that probably feel the same way, but I feel like there needs to be more discipline and structure in the Truck Series.”

    NASCAR SHOULD TAKE MORE OF A ROLE? “If we decide that’s a racing incident, all good. But if you see it’s blatantly intentional or something like that, I don’t know exactly how you’d do it, but as I was growing up if you did that you get put to the rear. That’s enough discipline to make someone have to decide and make a decision. Should I take that risk or should I not?”

    WHAT IS IT LIKE TO INSPIRE WOMEN WHO WANT TO BE DRIVERS? “I love seeing girls get into racing, especially from a young age. When you see little girls around the racetrack or even coming up to me and saying ‘I started racing because of you.’ Or have their parents come up to me and say, ‘I got my daughter into racing because she watched you race and it made her want to get into racing.’ I love that. I honestly think that some of my best motivation comes from that – to show that I’m inspiring girls to get into racing and show that it is possible. Yeah, it may be hard, but it’s possible.”

    IF THERE WAS A SONG FROM ANY GENRE THAT DESCRIBES YOU AS A PERSON AND DRIVER, WHAT WOULD IT BE? “That’s a hard one. I think it kind of depends what kind of mood I’m in. My categories vary. One day it’s like 90’s rap. Sometimes it’s kind of sad, like Lana Del Ray, and then you have my old 80’s rock. I have three different genres I go to depending on my mood.”

    ANY POSITIVES YOU’VE TAKEN AWAY FROM THE START OF THE SEASON? “Yeah, for sure. I feel like me as a driver, I’ve improved. There’s been a lot of stuff this year where we’ve gone into little situations or just like on track stuff to where you just get into someone else’s mess that happened, or just little things happening. At Gateway, we had the generator overheat in qualifying, so we weren’t able to cool down the truck, which means you can’t tape off, which taping off in qualifying at somewhere like Gateway, talking to some of the other drivers who have been there a lot and crew chiefs in the Truck Series, that’s worth like six-tenths. So, that affects my starting position and then Ilmore was just pulling some of the data and stuff off all of the trucks and they noticed that on our truck something with the fuel pressure wasn’t right, so they ended up changing up the fuel cell. So instead of starting 26th, which is already not great, we had to start at the rear, so I feel like it’s very hard to overcome a lot of those things happening and I guess it’s just luck. I don’t really know what to say, but there’s a lot of stuff that’s out of my control right now that’s happening and It’s hard as a young driver who it’s only my second season in the Truck Series, I didn’t get much practice last year and there’s only 20 or 30 minutes of practice usually at most of these tracks this year, it’s hard to overcome a lot of that stuff when you’re still trying to learn yourself and trying to take in as much information yourself when you’re starting at the rear trying to just get to where you want to be and go from there and actually go and develop and improve.”

    WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO RACE IN YOUR HOME STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIS WEEKEND? “I’m excited. I’ve raced at Sonoma before in the K&N Series. I’ve qualified on the pole there before and it’s fun. I mean, I kind of got used to, when I raced on the west coast in the K&N Series, driving on those tracks and they had no grip, none, because they’re sitting in the sun for all those years and it just lacks a lot of grip. That’s kind of what I got used to and I feel like that’s why I was pretty decent at Sonoma when we went there for the first time. You kind of get the luxury once you start racing on the east coast that these tracks have a lot more grip than they do on the west coast, so I’m excited to go back there. I think I’ve got some good notes from the year’s past of me going there. Obviously, they trucks haven’t been there since ‘98, so it’s hard to go off notes from then, but I think having that little bit of experience in the west series is gonna help a lot – just firing off in practice, knowing what you want out of the truck, knowing how it kind of should feel and have at least an idea of it, and knowing those kind of markers on the track, so I’m excited. I’ve been using the Ford sim a lot and trying to get some more laps there. Joey Hand has been helping me on the sim, just kind of perfecting and tweaking little things that, in his opinion as a road course racer, could make me better on road courses.”

    DOES YOUR SRX EXPERIENCE AT KNOXVILLE GIVE YOU AN EDGE FOR NEXT WEEKEND? “I love Knoxville. Knoxville is a really cool track to drive on and racing the SRX Series was really fun. It was crazy how comparable the SRX cars were to the truck handling-wise. I feel like it was a lot of fun and I feel like it translated pretty well and I feel like going back there it’s probably gonna be pretty crazy, like how it was last year, but I think with the experience we have there we should be pretty good.”

    WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE TRACK ON THE SCHEDULE AND WHY? “I am a big fan of mile-and-a-halves. I just enjoy it. I feel like there’s a lot of information I’ve learned over the last year-and-a-half in the trucks and I think that in the mile-and-a-half stuff I’m able to apply it a lot more, just because it kind of slows down a little bit. You’re kind of having a little bit more time to kind of decide what you’re gonna do. I feel like it opens my mind to be able to use other things that I’ve learned the last year-and-a-half and apply them a little bit better, but mile-and-a-half stuff is really fun for me. I think Kansas, Vegas, those are kind of my favorite tracks. Gateway, obviously, I was really looking forward to for this year, but it didn’t go as planned. We got a decent finish away from it, but I had higher hopes for Gateway and I think my truck was pretty good that if we weren’t in the situation even before the race that we were in, we probably could have gotten a better finish.”

    HOW DOES THE K&N CAR COMPARE TO A TRACK ON A ROAD COURSE? “I’ll let you know after. I’m hoping it compares pretty good because I do have a lot of notes from back then of me asking other drivers what to do, so I have their notes too, which is pretty nice. I’ve had the same laptop for six years, so that’s a plus. I think that going back to Sonoma in the truck is gonna be a little bit different. Obviously, the racing is probably gonna be a lot harder. This is a lot deeper field of good competition, but I think, at least for me, it gives me an idea of what to do. It gives me a base to go off of. Obviously, you could go in a couple different directions with stuff, but I feel like I have a good, solid base from being there in the K&N race.”

    HOW HAVE YOU SEEN YOURSELF GROW ON AND OFF THE TRACK SINCE JOINING THE TRUCK SERIES? “I think last year I was lacking a little confidence in myself, just like when you go from running top three, top five every single week in K&N, ARCA, that kind of stuff – able to hop in dirt cars and do really good – and then all of a sudden you get in the Truck Series and you’re like, ‘I’m getting in wrecks every single weekend. Is my reaction time terrible? What’s going on?’ I live a little bit sometimes too much in the moment and I feel like it kind of hurts me because if there’s a problem right now, I want to fix it right now. That’s not always the case when it comes to racing stock cars. It doesn’t always work out like that, so I’ve kind of had to get used to that and kind of accept what I was working with and making the best of it, and trying to fix little things as we go and not try to fix everything right then in the moment. It’s tough. I mean, it’s very, very tough, but I think we’re just trying to do the best we can right now and just kind of get as many good finishes as we can, staying out of all the wrecks happening because I swear every single race in the Truck Series only half the field finishes.”

    HOW ENJOYABLE WAS RUNNING SRX LAST YEAR? “It was a great experience. I never would have thought I would be sitting around at an autograph session with Bill Elliott. I was right next to him talking to him the whole time, and it’s crazy when you bring this older generation of racers – some are retired and some still race, but you bring them together. For me, this is my best opportunity to get the most information possible as a driver and kind of learn the ropes of everything from people who have, first of all, made it to that level, been at that level for a long time, and are out of it now because they’ve been so successful. I think there’s a lot of good advice and good tips you can learn from those type of guys and I’m excited to go back. That was a great experience. I don’t think I could complain about one thing in the SRX Series.”

    HOW VALUABLE IS IT BEING AROUND THOSE GUYS AND HOW MUCH CAN YOU BRING INTO THE TRUCK SERIES? “I think when you learn anything from drivers who have had a lot of success that you can apply those really anywhere. I feel like I have this toolbox and I’m always trying to add new tools to it. I feel like you can take a lot of things away, whether you apply them in the Truck Series or dirt racing or SRX Series, wherever you apply them as a driver or it could just be literally applying them in your life. I think there’s a lot of things you can take away from people who have experience.”

    IS IT A DIFFERENT EXPERIENCE RACING AGAINST THOSE GUYS WHO HAVE MORE EXPERIENCE AS OPPOSED TO THE TRUCK SERIES, WHERE THE COMPETITORS ARE YOUNGER? “For sure, 100 percent. I think when you have these guys who have been racing for so long and they, first of all, have earned their respect, but they’re respectful when they’re racing around you because they know that you’re young and you’re trying to learn from them. So, I really look at it is how they race me, I try to race people back with, but, obviously, I’m gonna have a lot more respect right from the get-go of those guys’ experience.”

    AT THE START OF THE YEAR THERE WAS SOME TALK ABOUT XFINITY RACES FOR YOU THIS YEAR. IS THAT STILL A POSSIBILITY? “It’s tough trying to get funding midway through the season or trying to figure things out for a potential end of the year deal for at least me in these situations. We’re still working on it and trying to do what we can, but there’s nothing we really have set in stone at all right now. It’s all just kind of seeing what we could possibly do in the future. I wish I had an answer because I want answers myself, but nothing set yet.”

  • GMS Racing NCWTS Race Preview: Sonoma

    GMS Racing NCWTS Race Preview: Sonoma

    Grant Enfinger, No. 23 Champion Power Equipment Chevrolet Silverado RST
    Sonoma Raceway Career Stats

    • Grant Enfinger will make his first start in any series at Sonoma Raceway on Saturday.

    NCWTS Road Course Career Stats

    • Canadian Tire Motorsport Park Starts: 3, Best start: 11th, Best finish: 13th (twice)
    • Circuit Of The Americas Starts: 2, Best start: 16th, Best finish: 4th (2021), Top 5s: 1, Top 10s: 2
    • Daytona Road Course Starts: 1, Best start: 17th, Best finish: 7th (2020), Top 10s: 1
    • Watkins Glen Starts: 1, Best start: 30th, Best finish: 38th (2021)

    2022 NCWTS Season Stats

    • Starts: 11, Best start: 3rd, Best finish: 2nd (Charlotte), Top 5s: 3, Top 10s: 6, Laps led: 19, Current points position: 10th
    • About Champion Power Equipment: Since 2003 Champion Power Equipment has earned a reputation for designing and producing the market’s finest power equipment. From our original headquarters in Santa Fe Springs, California, Champion has expanded its North American footprint to include facilities in Jackson, Tennessee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Toronto Canada. Today, Champion’s product line has expanded to include portable generators, home standby generators, inverter generators, engines, winches and log splitters. With over 2.5 million generators sold in North America, Champion is a market leader in the power equipment field. Visit ChampionPowerEquipment.com for more information.
    • Chassis History/Info: Grant Enfinger will compete with GMS Racing chassis no. 138 in the DoorDash 250 at Sonoma Raceway. This Chevrolet was built in 2021, and was driven to two top-five finishes on the road course races at Circuit Of The Americas and Watkins Glen International with Sheldon Creed. Enfinger raced this Silverado RST at COTA earlier this season, where he earned his first top-ten finish of the year.
    • Playoffs Outlook: Though a crash in the series’ most recent race at World Wide Technology Raceway set Enfinger and the No. 23 Chevy back in points, the team has high hopes for the remaining five races of the regular season at Sonoma, Knoxville, Nashville, Mid-Ohio, and Pocono. Heading into Wine Country, Grant sits in 10th position in the points standings, boasting a 44 point gap to the playoffs cutoff line.
    • Driver Appearances: Grant Enfinger will participate in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series driver autograph session on Friday afternoon underneath the front stretch grandstands at Sonoma. Fans are encouraged to attend to meet their favorite NCWTS drivers from 4:30 PM to 5:15 PM local time. – GE Quote: “I’m looking forward to getting to Sonoma, which is a track I’ve never been to before. It’s been quite some time since the trucks last raced there, so it will be cool to scratch a new track off my bucket list. The layout is very technical, and there’s some pretty wore out asphalt there, so we should have some tire fall off to make the race interesting. I can’t wait to learn the track and I’m sure Charles will have us a solid Champion Power Equipment Chevrolet, so I look to do my part and have a good day.”

    Jack Wood, No. 24 Cooks Collision Chevrolet Silverado RST
    Sonoma Raceway Career Stats

    • NKNPSW Starts: 1, Best start: 23rd, Best finish: 16th (2019)

    NCWTS Road Course Career Stats

    • Circuit Of The Americas Starts: 2, Best start: 27th, Best finish: 28th (2021)
    • Watkins Glen Starts: 1, Best start: 27th, Best finish: 25th (2021), Laps led: 1

    2022 NCWTS Season Stats

    • Starts: 11, Best start: 11th, Best finish: 13th (Atlanta), Current points position: 25th
    • About Cooks Collision: This week, Jack Wood will celebrate some family history this weekend by running a special Cooks Collision paint scheme at Sonoma. Owned and operated by the Wood family, Cooks Collision was the largest family owned collision repair shops in the in the U.S. In 2018, the company was sold by the family to a group of investors, and is operated today under the Caliber Collision banner. The family will thank over sixty ex-employees from the company by inviting them to watch their colors hit the racetrack one final time.
    • Chassis History/Info: Jack Wood will race GMS Racing chassis no. 140 on Saturday at Sonoma Raceway. This chassis joined the team’s fleet in 2021, and was driven to two top-ten finishes at Circuit Of The Americas and Watkins Glen International by Zane Smith. Most recently, this Chevrolet was driven by Wood at COTA, where a late race incident relegated him to a 32nd place finish.
    • Double Duty: In addition to competing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series DoorDash 250, Jack Wood will also be racing in the ARCA Menards Series West General Tire 200 on Saturday. Wood will drive the No. 21 entry for Bill McAnally Racing, a technical partner of GMS Racing. The ARCA West race is set to go green at 2:30 PM ET and will be broadcasted live on FloRacing, followed up by the Camping World Truck race at 7:30 PM ET on FS1.
    • Hometown Hero: Growing up in nearby Loomis, California, Jack Wood will get to visit his home track of Sonoma Raceway in front of a large local crowd of friends and family. As a kid, Wood attended countless races at the 1.99-mile road course before starting his career as a professional NASCAR driver. With the series returning to the facility for the first time since 2000, this weekend marks one of the industry’s highest anticipated stops on the calendar, but it is especially near and dear to the twenty-one-year-old.
    • Sunoco ROTY Update: Wood and the No. 24 team earned a 19th place finish in the series’ most recent outing at World Wide Technology Raceway, dropping down one spot in the Sunoco Rookie Of The Year standings. Looking ahead to Sonoma, Jack is 31 points behind leader Corey Heim, and 15 points behind Lawless Alan in second.
    • JW Quote: “I can’t wait to go to my home track this week in Northern California. I grew up only about an hour away from Sonoma, and there has been a lot of time and effort put in behind the scenes for this race. I think we are going to have a good chance at producing a solid run. I’m so excited to have Cooks Collision on our No. 24 Chevy this week, we will have a bunch of former employees that worked for the company over the past 40 years, so it will be great to celebrate and commemorate all of the memories from over the years.”

    ABOUT GMS RACING:

    GMS Racing competes full-time in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series operating the No. 23 and the No. 24 Chevrolet Silverado RSTs, as well as the ARCA Menards Series with the No. 43 Chevrolet SS. Since the team was formed in 2012, GMS Racing has won five titles across multiple series, including the 2016 and 2020 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship, the 2015 ARCA Menards Series championship, as well as the 2019 & 2020 ARCA Menards Series East championships. GMS has grown to occupy several buildings located in Statesville, N.C. including operations for GMS Fabrication. The GMS Racing campus also houses operations for Petty GMS, a two car full-time NASCAR Cup Series team formed in 2021.

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