Category: XFINITY Series PR

NASCAR XFINITY Series Press Release

  • Voyager Digital Extends Crypto-Based Partnership with NASCAR Driver Landon Cassill in Collaboration with Kaulig Racing

    Voyager Digital Extends Crypto-Based Partnership with NASCAR Driver Landon Cassill in Collaboration with Kaulig Racing

    Cassill to Drive the No. 10 Voyager Chevrolet in the NASCAR Xfinity Series

    LEXINGTON, N.C. (December 9, 2021) – Voyager Digital Ltd. (“Voyager” or the “Company”) (TSX: VOYG; OTCQX: VYGVF; FRA: UCD2), one of the fastest-growing, publicly traded cryptocurrency platforms in the United States, today announced a two-year extension of its partnership with Landon Cassill in collaboration with Kaulig Racing, which is adding Cassill to its 2022 NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) lineup. Cassill will be paid fully in a portfolio of cryptocurrencies that includes Bitcoin (BTC), the Voyager Token (VGX), USD Coin (USDC), StormX (STMX) and Avalanche (AVAX) .

    “We built a historic partnership with Landon, as the first NASCAR driver to be paid in crypto, and continuing this journey with him is an incredible ride for Voyager,” said Steve Ehrlich, CEO and co-founder of Voyager. We’re excited about this collaboration with Kaulig Racing and can’t wait to see what is next in Landon’s promising career.”

    Cassill will pilot the No. 10 Chevrolet and compete for the 2022 series championship alongside reigning champion, Daniel Hemric, and Kaulig Racing’s winningest driver, AJ Allmendinger.

    “We are really excited to bring Landon Cassill onboard for the 2022 season,” said Chris Rice, president of Kaulig Racing. “Landon has competed in NASCAR’s top series for many years and has brought with him a pivotal partner in Voyager Digital. We are looking forward to this partnership with Voyager and think Landon will be a great asset to our Kaulig Racing family.”

    Since 2007, Cassill has made a total of 510 starts across all three of NASCAR’s national series, with 176 of those being made in the NXS. Cassill also earned the title of Rookie of the Year in the NXS in 2008, also securing a pole award and five top-10 finishes that same year.

    “Continuing my partnership with Voyager Digital and driving for Kaulig Racing is an incredible opportunity for me,” said Cassill. “I have a world-class partner in Voyager and the best support team in the business with Kaulig Racing. I am excited to not only have a shot to win races, but to also bring awareness to crypto and help educate people in a space that I’ve been personally invested in for a number of years.”

    In addition to its primary partnership, Voyager is teaming up with the crypto cashback platform StormX (STMX) to raise awareness and drive cryptocurrency adoption and payment solutions provider, Usio, Inc. (NASDAQ: USIO). StormX and Usio will be featured on the No. 10 Chevrolet during select races this 2022 NXS season. Additionally, the car will sport a redesigned scheme featuring the phrase “Crypto for All”.

    For the full list of this season’s NXS races, visit: https://www.nascar.com/nascar-xfinity-series/2022/schedule/.

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    About Kaulig Racing™

    Kaulig Racing™ is a full-time multi-car NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) team, owned by award winning entrepreneur, Matt Kaulig. Established in 2016, Kaulig Racing™ has made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started, and made the Championship 4 round in both the 2020 and 2021 seasons. The young team has acquired two NCS charters for the 2022 season, and fields three, full-time NXS entries; the No. 10 Chevrolet driven by Landon Cassill, the No. 11 Chevrolet driven by Daniel Hemric, and the No. 16 Chevrolet driven by AJ Allmendinger. With multiple wins, Kaulig Racing has come to be one of the top competitors on track each weekend. The team made multiple starts in the NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) in 2021 and won its seventh-ever NCS start with AJ Allmendinger’s victory at “The Brickyard” for the Verizon 200 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

    About Voyager Digital Ltd.

    Voyager Digital Ltd. (TSX: VOYG) (OTCQX: VYGVF) (FRA: UCD2) is a fast-growing, publicly traded cryptocurrency platform in the United States founded in 2018 to bring choice, transparency, and cost efficiency to the marketplace. Voyager offers a secure way to trade over 60 different crypto assets using its easy-to-use mobile application, and earn rewards up to 12 percent annually on more than 30 cryptocurrencies. Through its subsidiary Coinify ApS, Voyager provides crypto payment solutions for both consumers and merchants around the globe. To learn more about the company, please visit https://www.investvoyager.com.

    About STORMX

    StormX is a revolutionary app and Chrome extension that aims to make earring crypto as easy as possible. By offering Crypto Cashback, StormX allows its members to receive crypto rewards when they shop online. Boasting over 4,000,000 downloads across Android and iOS, StormX has paid out over $4m in crypto in 2021 alone. With StormX, both crypto-natives and those who are new to crypto have the opportunity to earn on everyday purchases they were going to make anyway.

  • Miguel Paludo Returns to JRM and NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2022

    Miguel Paludo Returns to JRM and NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2022

    Porsche Carrera Cup Brasil Champion to Drive No. 88 BRANDT Chevrolet in Three Events

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (Dec. 1, 2021) – Miguel Paludo will return to JR Motorsports for three NASCAR Xfinity Series road course events in 2022. Paludo, a seven-time champion and current defending winner of the Porsche Carrera Cup, will drive the No. 88 BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet in the NXS races at Circuit of the Americas (March 26), Road America (July 2) and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course (July 30).

    A native of Nova Prata, Brazil, Paludo will compete for JRM in a BRANDT-branded entry in NXS competition for the second straight year. The No. 88 expands BRANDT’s on-track presence to a pair of Chevrolets in the three events. Paludo will race alongside teammate and full-time NXS driver Justin Allgaier, who drives the No. 7 BRANDT Chevrolet.

    “We are back for 2022!” said Paludo during today’s announcement at the BRANDT do Brasil headquarters in Londrina, Brazil. “Last year proved to me that JRM has the best team in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and I can’t wait to get back to the track with this group, especially now that we will have the opportunity to practice and qualify this season. I am very excited to again represent BRANDT and Brazilian agriculture on three of America’s most exciting tracks.”

    Additionally, next season will see the return of weekly practice sessions – which had been temporarily suspended in 2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions – and of the fan-favorite No. 88 to the JRM stable for the first time since 2018. Paludo is set to join team owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. behind the wheel of the No. 88 in 2022. Earnhardt Jr. is scheduled to drive at Martinsville Speedway (April 8).

    “I can’t tell you how proud we are to have our brand on the iconic No. 88,” said Rick Brandt, CEO & President of BRANDT. “To race the same car number that Dale (Earnhardt) Jr. will drive—in front of our best customers and prospects from Brazil—is just humbling to say the least. I can’t wait to watch Miguel in the No. 88 and Justin (Allgaier) in the No. 7 battle it out and fight for wins in three events next year.”

    Embarking on its seventh year of operation, BRANDT do Brasil has seen tremendous growth. With its headquarters in Londrina and manufacturing in Olimpia, BRANDT do Brasil offers a wide range of BRANDT’s proprietary technologies for crops as diverse as coffee, citrus, vegetables, sugar cane, soy and corn to retailers and growers across Brazil.

    Paludo and BRANDT have found success at nearly every level, dating back to when Paludo first drove a BRANDT entry in a NASCAR Camping World Truck series event at Chicagoland Speedway in the fall of 2013. From there, the duo has gone on to earn five championships, 20 wins and 60 podiums in Porsche Carrera Cup Brasil competition.

    Founded in Central Illinois, BRANDT is a fast-growing, family-owned company and a leader in global agriculture. Specializing in innovative products and services to help growers get maximum yield from their crops, BRANDT supplies customers in 49 states and more than 80 countries, including Brazil. The organization has also had a long, rich history in NASCAR, coming into the sport with Allgaier in 2011 before joining forces with JRM in 2016.

    ABOUT BRANDT:
    A leading agricultural company, BRANDT serves growers and farmers around the globe. Founded in 1953 by Glen Brandt and his sister Evelyn Brandt Thomas to help Illinois farmers adopt new and profitable technologies, the company has experienced aggressive growth under the leadership of President and CEO Rick Brandt. BRANDT’s focus is providing the products and services that give growers the best opportunity for maximum return while building a stronger, healthier and more abundant food supply. For more information, visit BRANDT on the web at www.brandt.co.

    ABOUT JR MOTORSPORTS:
    JR Motorsports is the racing operation co-owned by NASCAR Hall of Fame member and 15-time Most Popular Driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kelley Earnhardt Miller and NASCAR Hall of Famer Rick Hendrick. Now in its 20th year of overall competition, JR Motorsports competes in multiple divisions, including the NASCAR Xfinity Series where it currently fields four full-time teams and earned championships in 2014, 2017 and 2018. The company also races in Late Model competition and owns four championships in regional Late Model divisions and added a prized national title in 2020. To learn more about the organization, its drivers and its sponsorship opportunities, visit www.jrmracing.com.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Chase Briscoe Rookie of the Year Transcript

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Chase Briscoe Rookie of the Year Transcript

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Sunoco Rookie of the Year Media Availability | Monday, November 15, 2021

    Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 14 Ford Racing Performance Racing School Ford Mustang, was named the Sunoco Rookie of the Year for the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season. That completed a sweep of sorts as Briscoe also won ROY in the NASCAR Camping World Truck and NASCAR XFINITY Series as well. He was part of a Q&A session on Monday where he discussed the honor.

    CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Ford Performance Racing School Ford Mustang — THOUGHTS ON WINNING ROOKIE OF THE YEAR. “It’s super special. I wish that there was a lot more guys going for it this year. There were only two of us, but it’s still special to win it. For me, I think I put something out after the race, where I never in a million years thought I would get to run one Truck Series race let alone win the Rookie of the Year now in all three. It’s super humbling. It’s super special to be able to be one of the few guys that have won it in all three is really special as well. I’m glad that the first year is over. There was definitely a lot of growing pains and things to learn, but hopefully this is just the first of many years in the Cup Series and something that I can continue to do.”

    WHAT WAS THE BIGGEST SURPRISE TO YOU IN CUP? “The biggest thing is just how competitive it is. You hear all the time how tough the Cup Series is and, for me, that was very real, just how good everybody is and if you think about it, everybody at the Cup level from first place to really the top 30 has won at every level they’ve been in and have been guys that have won their entire career. It’s just a really competitive series. I feel like the racing for 20th place in the Cup Series is some of the hardest racing you’ll do anywhere in the world, so, for me, that was the biggest thing is just how perfect you have to be. There’s a rare group of guys, I’d say only four or five guys week in and week out that can have penalties, have things go wrong in the race, lose all their track position and still drive back to the front. Outside of that, you have to do everything perfect to have a shot to even get in the top 10 and get that track position. It’s so easy to lose it, so that was the biggest thing I would say I learned this year is just how competitive it is and how perfect you have to be to get that track position and have those good finishes because you have to do everything right, whether it’s the strategy of the race, doing things right on the racetrack, pit road, restarts, all those things you have to be 100 percent or otherwise you’re gonna be 25th. In the Xfinity Series and the Truck Series you were able to make mistakes on pit road or not have the best restart and you would normally still recover from it and have a chance to win, where in the Cup Series you just can’t do those things.”

    WAS THERE ONE THING YOU AS A DRIVER HAD TO LEARN OR WAS SPECIFICALLY CHALLENGING FOR YOU? “I think just what I was saying, just how perfect you have to be to even have a chance to run somewhat up front. You could do everything perfect and there are still days where you don’t even crack the top 15, and I think that, for me, was the hardest thing to kind of get used to is just how competitive it is. It is very, very car dependent in the Cup Series at the same time. If you’re not in one of those cars that have extremely good speed that day, it’s hard to make anything out of it just because everybody is so good. So, I think that was the biggest thing that I learned is just it takes everything going right. The preparation at the shop, at the racetrack, pit road, restarts, me being on the right part of the racetrack at the right time — all those things go into it. It’s hard to be a guy that can win races in the Cup Series, for sure.”

    WAS THE SOCIAL MEDIA EXCHANGE WITH DENNY UNCOMFORTABLE WITH YOU? WHERE DOES THAT STAND NOW? “I’m definitely kind of on the easygoing and laid back all the time, pretty quiet. I like to have a good time though at the same time and I just saw a joke there that was kind of too easy not to take, so I did it. But, I don’t have anything wrong with Denny. I haven’t really the whole time. He gets paid the same way I do, to get the best finish for his car as he can just like I’m paid to get the best finish for my car. We may have different opinions on some things, but I wasn’t mad after the Indy deal because I even told him that if I was in your situation I would have done the same thing. I would have ran you wide into turn one. That’s the best opportunity to win the race. I don’t have anything with Denny. I saw a joke there when he was talking about who does he think he is and I just thought it would be too easy not to say the 10,000 comment.”

    HOW ARE YOU DOING AS A DAD? WHAT HAS IT BEEN LIKE? “It’s been incredible. It’s been an amazing time. You never know what it’s gonna be like until you have that happen. He’s almost two months old already and I would say that’s the biggest thing now being a parent. There are two things. One, your phone gets filled up with pictures way quicker and then secondly just how fast time goes. It’s incredible to have him here for a month-and-a-half it seems like just last weekend he was born, and just how quick that time goes. I remember my parents and other people always telling me that it’ll happen in the blink of an eye and it’s so true, so I think, for me, that’s kind of been the biggest takeaway. Outside of that, it’s been great. I feel like definitely he has my temperament. He’s super laid back. He barely ever cries. People all the time are like, ‘Man, we wouldn’t even know he’s here if you didn’t tell us that he was here,’ just because he never cries or never gets upset. The last couple of nights he’s been sleeping all the way through the night, so he’s pretty laid back and chill, so I’m glad that he got that, I guess, from me. It’s been great so far and obviously excited to continue to watch him grow.”

    HOW MUCH WILL THIS AWARD HELP YOU WITH SPONSORSHIP? “It can’t hurt. I think anytime you’re going to sell a new sponsor, a new partnership, you’re always looking to kind of have a resume in a sense of things you’ve been able to do, whether it be winning races or winning awards like rookie of the year or one thing that we still to this day use as the most popular driver thing from the Truck Series. Things like that go a long way, I think, when you’re trying to convince somebody to come on board. It definitely can’t hurt. Anytime you’re winning anything, whether it’s an award like that or a race or anything people want people that are winning things. It doesn’t hurt at all and time will tell if it helps us at all right now, but I feel like it’s definitely something that’s nice to have.”

    HOW COOL IS IT WHEN SPONSORS SEND YOU BABY STUFF? “It’s super cool. That’s the one thing I’m very, very blessed and fortunate. All of my sponsors are people that I consider people family — super close to me — whether it be Huffy or High Point or Ford or Ford Racing School — any of them. They’re all really close to me an personal friends of mine and we feel like we’re all family. Ford just sent us a couple outfits and a blanket with an old Ford pickup truck on it with his name on it. Huffy sent us a bicycle that was all customized with the 14 and said Little Briscoe on it. There’s a lot of cool things that people have sent even outside of sponsors, but sponsors definitely have been really cool to see all of the stuff they’ve kind of gotten creative with to send to Brooks and I know we definitely appreciate it.”

    HOW WERE YOU THINKING ABOUT BROOKS WHEN HUFFY HAD YOU DO THAT BIKE RIDE AROUND THE NEIGHBORHOOD WITH THE KIDS? “Yeah, I was thinking how it’s gonna be pretty crazy how soon he’ll be that age to be riding a bike and hopefully riding a Huffy. It’s definitely crazy, like I said earlier, how fast this last month-and-a-half has gone. It’ll be in no-time he’ll be three and four years old and running around and starting to have his own personality and doing things that he likes. I’m sure he’ll be brought up around racing and a lot of my first racing experiences was riding my Huffy bicycle around the driveway, so who knows, he’s got a Huffy now at the house and maybe he’ll do the same.”

    WHAT VALUES DID YOUR FATHER INSTILL IN YOU THAT YOU HOPE TO PASS DOWN? “I think just treating people the way they want to be treated. That’s something I’ve always tried to do and give everybody the time of day and talk to them and actually have a personal conversation with them. That’s something that I feel like my dad was always really good at was making people feel like he cared and he did care, and that’s something I’ve always tried to do as well. I want Brooks to carry that on. My dad, I remember, Fox did a thing there at the end of their Indy weekend about how people don’t remember Chase as a race car driver, they talk about how Chase is as a person and I hope it’s the same for Brooks. I want people to talk to me about how, I don’t know if he’s gonna race or not, but if he does or he plays baseball I don’t want them to talk about how good he is at something, I want them to talk about how good he is of a kid or as a person. So, just being able to instill all those qualities in him. Obviously, it comes from parenting and that’s something me and Marissa are obviously new at, so we’re gonna have to figure that out together, but I feel like as long as we stay true to ourselves and try to show him the way that we were brought up, hopefully that will carry over to him.”

    HOW MUCH HAS YOUR FAITH CARRIED YOU THROUGH EVERYTHING? “It’s been everything. Whether it’s good or bad times that it’s easy to forget about your faith, and I honestly feel like it’s easier to do it in the good times, but it’s important, I feel like, to stay thankful and stay appreciative. Obviously, in the hard times and the down times it’s easy to look to Him, and that’s something that we’ve tried to do, and we all do it, I feel like, there are times where you fail and times where you do it really well. For me, just trying to stay consistent, whether it is in the good times or the bad times it’s been really important. Obviously, we’ve had good times and we’ve also had bad times and His timing is what’s gonna work out and that’s hard, I think, as a human being to understand his timing sometimes, and you might now always understand it or think that’s what’s right or wrong, but at the end of the day He’s only gonna put on your shoulders what you can handle. I feel like faith has been a huge part of not only my life, but my career as well. There are many a times I thought I was done and just prayed. Open the door if you want it to be open and if it’s closed, it’ll be closed and I’m fine with not racing or whatever you think I need to be doing, just show me. And every time it’s worked out where I get a sponsor at the last minute or a ride opens up at the last minute, so I feel like I’m doing what I was supposed to be doing and trying to let that be my testimony and show other people to Him.”

    WHAT KIND OF ASSURANCES HAVE YOU GOTTEN FROM SHR THAT 2022 WILL BE BETTER? “To me, I agree that if Kevin is not winning it’s hard to expect a rookie to come in and, for me, that’s kind of what I set as my benchmark is just try to — I don’t think anybody here at the company was expecting me to out run Kevin every week, so if I could try to be the second-best car as consistently as possible, that’s what I tried to do. I was looking at stats the other day — somebody posted them on Reddit — and I think we were consistently the second-best car, so just trying to do things like that. On the performance side, it wasn’t the year that any of us hoped for or even expected. I know that we’re trying to turn that around and I heard you say what direction are we going in, I don’t know if anybody knows what the right direction is with this car yet, but I will say that I feel like so far how the Next Gen tests have gone, I feel like we’ve been really good on speed. You never know what guys are showing or what guys aren’t showing, but I do feel like we’re at a good place right now. I guess we’ll know more this Wednesday and Thursday when we go to test, so hopefully we’re continuing to be fast, but I do feel like we’ve been really good from a speed standpoint so far, but it’s hard to say what’s gonna happen. Nobody knows what this car is gonna be like or what it’s gonna drive like 100 percent. Whatever team figures it out is gonna have a huge advantage for a while, I think. Hopefully, we’re that team and we’ve definitely been putting a lot of time into this car and trying to figure out what it likes, so hopefully we can be that team that finds it first.”

    ANY CHANGES TO YOUR TEAM? “Yeah, we’re definitely looking for a spotter right now. We’re talking to a couple different people. Our spotter this past year did a really good job and we’re just trying to make a change to see what it does to our race team. So, we’re definitely talking to a few different spotters and we’ll see what happens. We’re in the market, I guess.”

    WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE OUT OF THIS TEST AT CHARLOTTE? “For me, I just want to see what it drives like on an oval. I felt like it did a lot of things really, really well at the road course or at the Roval. There are some things that definitely still need work on, but it definitely drives really, really good on a road course compared to what we currently have. I’m curious what it’s gonna drive like on an oval. I’m not gonna lie. I am nervous to kind of see what it drives like just because it is gonna be totally different from what we’ve ran in the past, but that’s part of it. You’ve got to adapt and figure it out and I’m excited for that part of it, so I don’t know what to expect. I’m going in open-minded. I’m one of those guys, kind of like Larson. I don’t know anything about the car per se. I don’ t understand the setup side of it. I just go in there and drive it and I’ll tell you what I think. I am looking forward to it this week and hopefully it fits my driving style. It’s gonna fit somebody’s driving style more than others, so hopefully it leans more towards my direction. Outside of driving, I would like to hopefully get around some other cars and maybe just see what it does in dirty air just because it’s obviously gonna be something that we’re gonna have to figure out. Outside of those two things, I’m going in pretty wide-open and just seeing what happens.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL WITH THE STEERING BOX? “I had some issues at the Roval, nothing that you couldn’t drive through. I don’t know if I’d want to run a whole race like that, but for a test I felt like it was OK to do. On the oval, I don’t know what that’s gonna do. Hopefully, it’s fixed. I know there was a test the other week and it sounded like a lot of the issues did get fixed, so until we go and really run them for a long time and do durability testing it’s gonna be really hard to say what the issue is or how to fix it. Hopefully, we can run a lot of laps. Hopefully, there are no issues, but, if there is, it’s nothing that’s too catastrophic. Hopefully, it’s something that happens you can keep the car out of the wall and stuff like that. I’m curious to see what happens on the steering. From a driver’s standpoint, the steering and the pedals are the two most important things as far as our comfort goes, so I would say all of us are kind of hesitant to have a different feeling of steering or pedals and that’s something we’re gonna have to figure out and get used to. So there are gonna be some bugs to be worked out, but I will say I feel like they’ve definitely made it better from what I’ve been told over the last couple times, so hopefully we’ll have no issues this week.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL YOU’VE EVOLVED AS A DRIVER? “I feel like I’ve learned a lot. I feel like I’ve learned to minimize mistakes. I still made too many mistakes, but I do feel like I’ve understood a lot more how to put a race together and there are times to maybe try to go for a spot or maybe not go for a spot and just save your car. That’s the one thing in the Cup Series that was the biggest thing for me is in the past in the Xfinity Series you could hit the wall or you could get into another guy a little bit and it didn’t affect your car at all, where on the Cup side that was one thing I really struggled with early in the year at Homestead, which I feel is one of my better tracks. I wasn’t even comfortable running the wall like I felt like I needed to because I was afraid to get into it, and until 10-15 to go I finally started running hard and we were one of the best cars on the track, but just knowing when to be able to push and how to save your car and now going to this new car I don’t know how much of that is gonna carry over, but still just doing those little things like I was saying earlier is what I feel like I’ve kind of evolved and learned the most about and trying to minimize all of those little things at the beginning of the year. On pit road, I was really, really bad as far as the rolling speed on pit road and getting into my box and out of my box. At Phoenix, I want to say my guys told me we were the second-best on pit road from that standpoint, but just trying to do all of those things better was something I had to do because every little thing matters in the Cup Series. In the past, not that it didn’t matter, it just didn’t make as big of a difference.”

    DO YOU HAVE ANY REGRETS FROM THE PAST SEASON? “No, if anything I would say I wish I would have stood my ground more. I felt like I got pushed around a lot, especially — there’s two different types of racing going on. When you get up towards the front — the top five to 10 guys — the racing is honestly is more clean and guys give-and-take a lot more. You get back around 20th and it’s so cut throat. Guys just take advantage of every little thing you do and I felt like I let guys kind of run over me a lot and not stick up for myself. I felt like I did that so much at the beginning of the year and towards the end of the year they just felt that they could get away with it. So, I wish I would have maybe stood my ground a little bit more at the beginning of the year and just showed I wasn’t gonna let them do that and just raced guys harder. I felt like that was honestly one of my biggest things in the beginning of the year is I raced too clean and gave guys too much room, where in the Cup Series you have to take every inch you can. Off on corner entry, at a place like Martinsville for example, they’re gonna give you a half-a-foot or a foot on corner entry, you’ve got to take that and really try to maximize the corner for yourself instead of trying to help them out. So, at the end of the year, I felt like I did a little better job of that, but I wish at the beginning of the year instead of just trying to stay clean and out of trouble, not racing guys dirty, but just taking every little inch they’ll give you, I feel like, would have been something that would have benefitted me at the beginning of the year.”

  • Tickets go on sale tomorrow for NASCAR Xfinity Series event at Portland International Raceway

    Tickets go on sale tomorrow for NASCAR Xfinity Series event at Portland International Raceway

    NASCAR racing returns to the Pacific Northwest on June 3-4, 2022

    PORTLAND, Ore. (Nov. 10, 2021) – The NASCAR Xfinity Series will make its thrilling debut at Portland International Raceway (PIR) on June 3-4, 2022. Beginning at 10 a.m. PT tomorrow (Thursday, Nov. 11), 2-Day tickets go on sale to the public online at portlandgp.com or by calling 503-400-6070.

    2-Day Grandstand seats, 2-Day General Admission and 2-Day parking passes will be available for purchase starting tomorrow. General admission is free to the event for children 12 and under when accompanied by a ticketed adult. Single day tickets for Friday or Saturday entry only will be released in 2022.

    “For the first time since 2000, a NASCAR national racing series will visit PIR and the Pacific Northwest next year. The excitement increases further tomorrow with the launch of public ticket sales,” said Jerry Jensen, general manager of Green Savoree Portland, LLC, which owns and operates the event at PIR. “Now is the time for fans to secure the best seats for this great new event featuring the rising stars of NASCAR coming to the Rose City. We again want to thank the City of Portland, PIR, Travel Portland and Sport Oregon for helping us make it happen.”

    Grandstand seats are available at three price points. 2-Day Gold located in Grandstand K is $95 per seat and also includes an infield parking pass. 2-Day Silver for Grandstands C2, C3 and C4 is $80, and 2-Day Bronze for seats in Grandstands G, H and J is $70. The grandstand pricing includes gate admission. 2-Day General Admission is $55.

    A 2-Day Parking Pass for a single vehicle space in the Beaches or Broadacre lots is $40. The RV Club is also available for $700 to $900 depending on the spot location which includes eight weekend general admission tickets included in the package price.

    All ticket pricing and options are posted online at portlandgp.com. Stay up to speed on NASCAR’s visit to Portland on social media all year long by following #PortlandNASCAR or by signing up for the E-Club on the website.

    About NASCAR:
    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 consists of three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour), one local grassroots series and three international 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, Americrown Service and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).

    About Green Savoree Racing Promotions:
    Green Savoree Racing Promotions (GSRP) is an Indianapolis-based motorsports event ownership and management company whose subsidiaries own, operate and promote race properties in Lexington, Ohio, home of Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course and The Mid-Ohio School, Portland, Ore., St. Petersburg, Fla., and Toronto, Ontario. These events provide a festival experience and showcase some of the most exciting racing series in the world including the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, the Road to Indy Presented by Cooper Tires open-wheel development series, NASCAR Xfinity Series, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, ARCA Menards Series and more. In working together since 1993, co-owners Kim Green and Kevin Savoree have won four INDYCAR championships, three Indianapolis 500 races and the 12 Hours of Sebring as team principals, and established the first INDYCAR street race in 2004. More information about the company, its subsidiaries, and these events is available on the event websites at gpstpete.com, hondaindy.com, midohio.com and portlandgp.com.

  • Daniel Hemric Wins First NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship

    Daniel Hemric Wins First NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship

    Daniel Hemric Wins First NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship
    Scores First NASCAR Title for Supra with Victory in Season Finale

    AVONDALE, Ariz. (November 6, 2021) – Supra driver Daniel Hemric won his first career NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) championship on Saturday with a victory in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway. Hemric’s championship marks the third Xfinity Series driver title for Toyota.

    TOYOTA FAST FACTS

    • Hemric won one race, claimed 15 top-five results and 21 top-10 finishes over 33 races to claim the 2021 driver’s championship.

    • Hemric captured the first championship for the Toyota Supra and is the third Toyota driver to win a NXS driver’s championship. In addition to Jones, Daniel Suárez (2016) and Kyle Busch (2009) have also won Xfinity Series titles for Toyota in Camrys.

    • Toyota drivers have now earned NASCAR national series titles in three different vehicles as the Camry, Tundra and Supra race cars have all collected championships since Toyota’s entry into NASCAR in 2004.

    • Supra debuted in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at the 2019 season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway.

    • Toyota has earned 181 victories since joining Xfinity Series competition in 2007, with 32 of those victories being in the Supra.

    • Earlier this season, Toyota made it’s 500th Xfinity Series start at the Charlotte ROVAL in October.

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    DANIEL HEMRIC, No. 18 Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

    “Unbelievable. These guys right here have asked me all year how bad do you want it? We gave away one here in the spring. I felt like we had to give one up last week to get here. We were not going to be denied. Thank you Dave Rogers (crew chief). Bill and Cindy Gallaher. Everyone at Poppy Bank. Will Gallaher. They took a chance on me in 2015 in some form or fashion. They stuck with me through times they probably shouldn’t have to be honest with you. I’ve been waiting a long damn time to do that. Thank you Joe Gibbs, everyone at TRD, Toyota, Bell Helmets, everyone here that makes this program what it is. People doubted me. I would do it all over again for a night like this.“

    TONY MUELLER, vice president, integrated marketing operations, Toyota Motor North America

    “We are thrilled for Daniel, Dave and the whole Joe Gibbs Racing team on this incredible achievement. This is the first driver’s championship in the Xfinity Series for the Supra and we are excited to add the Supra badge alongside Camry and Tundra as championship nameplates in NASCAR. Daniel’s season is the epitome of consistency. He’s an exceptional driver and person and we’re excited to join him in celebrating this championship.”

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands plus our 1,800 dealerships.

    Toyota has created a tremendous value chain and directly employs more than 47,000 in North America. The company has contributed world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 40 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama that begins production in 2021.

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

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Cindric’s Runner-Up Finish Leads to Eighth Owner’s Championship for Mustang

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Cindric’s Runner-Up Finish Leads to Eighth Owner’s Championship for Mustang

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Xfinity Series
    Championship Race at Phoenix | Saturday, November 6, 2021

    FORD FINISHING RESULTS
    2nd — Austin Cindric
    4th — Riley Herbst
    17th — Ryan Sieg

    AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 22 CarShop Ford Mustang — POST RACE INTERVIEW:

    WAS THAT GOOD RACING? “If everyone in the stands enjoyed it, it’s good racing. I’m very appreciative of the opportunity to race on such a big stage. The opportunity to race for Roger Penske and represent Ford Performance, our companies and all of our sponsors that have helped us this season. It would have been awesome to finish this out. I felt like we had a dominant race car. I felt like we did everything right. Come up a little bit short. Sometimes it’s like that way. Unfortunately, at the end of both seasonal championships this year I’m getting obviously moved out of the way and doored, but that’s hard racing. That’s why everyone enjoys watching this series. It’s because there’s a lot on the line. I’m thankful for the opportunity and pissed to be second for like the third week in a row.”

    WHAT GOES THROUGH YOUR MIND ON THE OVERTIME RESTART? “I know my left-rear bumper cover is as vulnerable as ever. Obviously, Daniel was in position to be the advocate of that and he certainly used it and he’s the champion because of it.”

    AND YOU WOULD HONOR HIS CHAMPIONSHIP? “Yeah. He’s over there. I’m over here. He’s the champion.”

    BUT IT WAS A GOOD YEAR FOR YOU GUYS. “Yeah, absolutely. That’s why it’s so frustrating to come up so short. One lap. One lap is all you need, maybe one restart. You never know, but to make it this far and have the season we’ve had. The stats obviously show the consistency and the way our team has performed throughout the season. It doesn’t matter what type of racetrack. I work with some of the best people in this sport and I’m a better driver because of it.”

    YOU WON THE OWNER’S CHAMPIONSHIP TO PRESENT TO THE TEAM? “Yeah, that’s really poetic. Obviously, this 22 car has won so many owner’s championships over the years with so many great drivers. My first race in this 22 car was in 2017 and they won the owner’s championship then. I guess I get to close that one out I guess as ironic as that might be.”

    TAKE US THROUGH THE LAST LAP: “Certainly not how I would have wanted it to go. Just trying to get clear off the top. I have put myself in too many bad spots giving people the bottom. I am not sure if I should have drove in shallower or softer or whatever it may be. I feel like I was pretty vulnerable with how close he still was to me and still packing left rear air. I got a little free into three and that is all she wrote. Obviously disappointed to have the car we had and the success we had this year and not be able to close it out. We put ourselves in position and sometimes that is all you can do.”

    HOW DO YOU SUM UP WHAT THIS SERIES HAS MEANT TO YOU IN YOUR CAREER AS YOU MOVE TO THE CUP SERIES NEXT YEAR? “I think it has defined me as a driver in the sport. I mean that in a lot of ways. I’ve shown up not knowing much about what I have been doing. From there, I have driven so many different types of cars and bring all those experiences and probably the most unique situation as possible as far as a competitor and what other drivers might expect from me. I have had to mature a lot and I have had to go from not being respected to where I feel like I am respected and it has been a fun journey. I am very appreciative of it.”

    RILEY HERBST, No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang — “I think we had a little bit going on with the motor and the power-steering, so the short runs we were loose and it was really hard to drive because I couldn’t counter steer to the right, just because the power-steering was going in and out. I was begging for long runs because once we got spread out and I could start just being easier on the front tires and then ultimately be easier on the steering. Thank you to Monster Energy, Ford Performance, Stewart-Haas Racing. It’s a good way to close out this year after kind of a really bumpy year to be honest with you. Hopefully, we can go into 2022 pretty strong.”

    MUSTANG ADDS ANOTHER TITLE — Mustang has dominated the NASCAR XFINITY Series since it joined the circuit full-time in 2011, winning at least one championship in 9-of-11 seasons. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won back-to-back drivers’ championships in 2011 and 2012 while Chris Buescher (2015) and Austin Cindric (2020) have one series title each. Roger Penske has dominated the owner’s championship, winning six times in the last nine seasons, including three in a row from 2013-15. Overall, Mustang has won 12 driver’s and owner’s championships combined.

    MUSTANG NASCAR XFINITY CHAMPIONSHIP STREAK
    2011 — Driver’s Championship (Ricky Stenhouse Jr.)
    2011 — Owner’s Championship (Jack Roush, No. 6)
    2012 — Driver’s Championship (Ricky Stenhouse Jr.)
    2013 — Owner’s Championship (Roger Penske, No. 22)
    2014 — Owner’s Championship (Roger Penske, No. 22)
    2015 — Driver’s Championship (Chris Buescher)
    2015 — Owner’s Championship (Roger Penske, No. 22)
    2017 — Owner’s Championship (Roger Penske, No. 22)
    2018 – Owner’s Championship (Stewart-Haas, No. 00)
    2020 – Driver’s Championship (Austin Cindric)
    2020 – Owner’s Championship (Roger Penske, No. 22)
    2021 – Owner’s Championship (Roger Penske, No. 22)

  • Toyota Racing – NXS Phoenix Post-Race Report – 11.06.21

    Toyota Racing – NXS Phoenix Post-Race Report – 11.06.21

    HEMRIC EARNS CHAMPIONSHIP WITH FIRST WIN
    Daniel Hemric earns first title for the Toyota Supra

    PHOENIX (November 6, 2021) – Daniel Hemric made a last lap pass to win his first race and the Xfinity Series Championship. Hemric is the third driver to win a championship for Toyota in the Xfinity Series and first to win the title in the Supra.

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Xfinity Series
    Phoenix Raceway
    Race 33 of 33 – 200 miles, 200 laps

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, DANIEL HEMRIC
    2nd, Austin Cindric*
    3rd, HARRISON BURTON
    4th, Riley Herbst*
    5th, Justin Haley*
    6th, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
    7th, BRANDON JONES
    15th, DYLAN LUPTON
    21st, DAVID STARR
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    DANIEL HEMRIC, No. 18 Poppy Bank Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 1st

    He climbs out not only as a winner in the Xfinity Series, but Daniel Hemric, you are the champion. Congratulations.

    “Lost my breath. Unbelievable. These guys right here, they asked me all year, How bad you want it? I gave one away here in the spring. Felt like I had to give one up here last week. We were not going to be denied. Thank you, Dave Rogers, Bill and Cindy Gallaher, everyone at Poppy Bank, Lou Gallaher, JR, I’m talking to you. Man, they took a chance on me. 2015, some form or fashion. Oh, they stuck with me through times they probably shouldn’t have, to be honest with you. How about those race fans? That backflip good enough for you? I’ve been waiting a long damn time to do that. Thank you Joe Gibbs, everyone at TRD, Toyota, Bell Helmets. Everyone here that makes this program what it is. I know I’ve given up a lot. People have doubted me. I’ll do it all over again for a night like this.”

    Take us through the last lap. You knew it was possible.

    “I’m blacked out. Blacked out. Just knew I had to be the first one to the line. I thought I let him get too much of a run off of four. Drove into one, knew I was close not to completely use them up, but we work our asses off for an opportunity like this. Excuse my language. This is what it’s all about, winning at the second highest level in all of motorsports. What an honor. Unbelievable. I’d do it all over again. I’ll take all the heartbreaks again to live this right here.”

    You said in the car you’ll never have to answer that again because you are a winner.

    “Absolutely. That’s the greatest feeling in the world.”

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands plus our 1,800 dealerships.

    Toyota has created a tremendous value chain and directly employs more than 47,000 in North America. The company has contributed world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 40 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama that begins production in 2021.

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

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Austin Cindric Championship 4 Media Day Transcript

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Austin Cindric Championship 4 Media Day Transcript

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Xfinity Series
    Championship 4 Media Availability | Thursday, November 4, 2021

    Austin Cindric, driver of the No. 22 Carshop Ford Mustang for Team Penske, will be going for his second straight NASCAR Xfinity Series championship on Saturday night. On Thursday, he met with members of the media as part of Championship 4 Media Day and talked about this weekend’s race.

    AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 22 Carshop Ford Mustang — HOW DO YOU FEEL GOING INTO THIS WEEKEND? “I feel like probably the best thing that I’ve heard all year, that I’ve probably been saving for this moment, came from Chase Elliott. Past success doesn’t equal future success. It’s pretty hard to go back-to-back in races let alone three times at a certain racetrack, but obviously championships as well, so we have that opportunity and I think we’re prepared for it.”

    WHAT HAS YOUR TEAM BEEN MISSING THE LAST HALF A YEAR? “One spot like for the last two, four weeks — however many second-place finishes we have in the playoffs — one spot.”

    IS IT THE OTHER GUY HAS MORE SPEED? ANYTHING YOU CAN POINT TO? “No, I don’t think anything has been a weakness. In some ways, I feel like looking at Kansas we had our best mile-and-a-half race of the year. That’s probably been one of our weaknesses throughout the season and you look at Kansas and we led a majority of the laps. We probably weren’t the fastest car, but able to execute and put ourselves in position. You can look at so many races really within the last 10 weeks that we had a chance to win at, so there’s only so long you can be so consistent and this weekend is the same.”

    ARE YOU SURPRISED KANSAS WAS THE BEST ONE? “Third time is the charm. The third playoff race at Kansas is the charm. We’ve always been fast there, but for whatever reason a lot of chaos. We were fast enough this time to be in front of all of it.”

    CUP RACING IS NEXT FOR YOU. WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED IN THE FEW RACES YOU RAN THIS YEAR? “I think I’ve got a really solid base as far as what to expect and by that I mean I’ve obviously known the entire season — the car is a lot less relevant than the series and the competitors than the racetracks themselves, whether if that’s the flow of restarts or what it takes through the level of competitiveness and, like I said, the competitors. I’ve raced against a lot of the same guys for the last three or four years of my career and I think it was a good wake up call doing some of those Cup races how much different it is when you don’t know the people you’re racing against and vice versa.”

    WHAT WAS THE BIGGEST PART OF THAT WAKE UP CALL? “I think right away in Atlanta for me just on restarts — what to expect, what the mentality is when you’re running 20th. I don’t think I’ve ever run 20th throughout a majority of a race in an actual series ever and that’s like a normality, honestly. I look at guys I’ve raced against in the past and they move up to the Cup Series and, yeah, once you get inside of the top 20 it’s quite challenging and I feel like I got a lot of perspective on what it takes to not only do that, but also what it takes to move yourself forward and run inside the top 15, run inside the top 10 and be competitive.”

    HOW IS IT RACING AT PHOENIX AGAIN FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP? “It’s certainly great to come back to Phoenix. It’s somewhere I probably have more NASCAR starts than any other racetrack dating back to 2015 in the Truck Series, so, for me, there’s a certain familiarity there, but, otherwise, everyone continually steps up their game. We’re not gonna say that if we just show up with the same racecar we had two races ago we’re gonna go out and win the race. We have to continually get better because our competitors are gonna continually get better. It is challenging to win two races in a row let alone three, and obviously championship-wise as well.”

    WHAT HAS THE ANTICIPATION FOR THIS WEEK BEEN LIKE? MORE COMFORTABLE? “I think there’s less newness as far as that’s concerned for me — as far as what to expect out of myself. I learned a lot about what to expect out of myself last year and I feel like I learned a lot in a positive way from the mentality that I took and that I think I’m bringing that mentality back again and it’s the fact that I’m happy to be here. Yeah, I’ve won the championship. It says champion right there, but it doesn’t guarantee me anything on Saturday, so happy to be here, happy to have a shot, happy to be part of the conversation and happy to be driving fast race cars, so looking forward to taking the most of that opportunity.”

    WHAT WOULD IT BE LIKE TO WIN THE TITLE AND BE ABLE TO CELEBRATE WITH FANS? “That would be pretty sweet. I’m not gonna lie, I have thought about that. The number of years I’ve gone to NASCAR Banquets and listened to other people talk about all the great things that have happened to them throughout the year. Yeah, that would be cool if we get that opportunity, but I wouldn’t say that’s a motivator. It’s probably just an added bonus if we’re able to do our jobs.”

    WAS IT DIFFERENT LAST YEAR WITH THE LIMITS THAT WERE IN PLACE LAST YEAR AND HAVING FANS THIS SEASON? “Not that I would say it wouldn’t happen this year, but our team celebration last year was in the parking garage of our hotel in the back of a pickup truck with a cardboard box full of beer. Not as glamorous as you might think, but probably just as effective as a team experience.”

    WHAT’S THE BIGGEST THING YOU LEARNED LAST YEAR THAT CAN HELP YOU WIN THIS YEAR? “At the end of the day it is just a race and I feel like that’s kind of a boring answer, but it is just one race and you have to take all the small details and all the big details of what it takes to win a race and apply them to this weekend, and it can’t be any simpler than that in my mind. I think the only thing that changes for me preparation-wise is I know the three people I have to beat, and that’s different than every other weekend. In some ways, you can say it simplifies it compared to a normal race weekend because you’re normally having to beat 10 other guys and this weekend it’s just three. It’s three of the best in the series, but it’s just three, so, for me, it’s in some ways a numbers game, but otherwise it’s the same job.”

    DO YOU WANT TO KNOW WHERE THE OTHER THREE ARE RUNNING? “If I can’t see them, things are going either really well or really bad, so I’ll certainly understand the situation hopefully as I can see it either in my mirror or in my windshield.”

    WHAT IS THE TRANSITION LIKE GOING FROM MARTINSVILLE TO PHOENIX? “It’s probably the difference of a half-mile — a little more banking. Otherwise, the mentality at Martinsville for a lot of guys was winner takes all, must-win to get in. There was a lot of aggression in all three series, but, otherwise, that all changes in Phoenix for sure.”

    IS IT WEIRD KNOWING YOU MIGHT HAVE TO WIN THREE IN A ROW AT THE SAME TRACK TO WIN BACK-TO-BACK TITLES? “Yeah, obviously to win a title you put the expectation that you have to win the race to win the championship. Yes, there are scenarios in which I don’t have to win, but I’d certainly want to and I’d certainly want to put ourselves in that position, but I think I’ve heard Chase Elliott say it before and I really like this — past success doesn’t equal future success and I’m a believer in that. My race team, I feel like, believes in that because otherwise we’d be bringing the same exact race car that’s sitting in some museum somewhere for Roger. We’d be bringing that same race car and trying to do the same job with it. It’s different. Our cars are different. My notebook is bigger. Our race setups continue to evolve and I have to also know that in the last two races our competitors look at us and say how do we match that and better it, and I have to respect that as a competitor knowing that I have to continually up my game as well as my race team in order to stay in front.”

    IS IT ANY MORE OF CHALLENGE THAN WHAT THEY FACED TO TRY TO BEAT THE GUY WHO WON HERE THE LAST TWO TIMES? “Yes and no. There’s a certain extent where you can’t think for anybody else, so there’s certain limitations that I feel like we have there that we have to continually improve. I guess just as of recent those limitations haven’t been as limiting as others.”

    HAVE YOU THOUGHT OF DOING ANY RALLYCROSS AFTER THE SEASON IS OVER? “I don’t know about that, but Rallycross is a lot of my racing background, so definitely a lot of friends kind of resurfacing as far as that series goes. It’s been fun to watch all that stuff kind of come back together. They’ve got a lot of exciting stuff coming in the future with kind of a new car and a new series, so excited to see all of that. Yes and no. I had some opportunities to go do it, but, otherwise looking forward to watching it.”

    DOES IT GIVE YOU CONFIDENCE THAT THERE HAVE BEEN A FEW BACK-TO-BACK NXS CHAMPIONS IN RECENT YEARS? “It sounds great to me. It absolutely sounds great, so I’ll take it if you’re handing it out, but, otherwise, I’ve got to go get it.”

    DOES IT GIVE YOU CONFIDENCE, THOUGH? “I think the value for me is having another season, whether if that’s letting things slow down, focus on some smaller details that might help me in the future. Those are the things that I feel like I’ve benefited from in the 2021 season versus 2020.”

    WHAT DO YOU WANT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS WEEKEND THAT MIGHT HELP NEXT YEAR WHEN YOU MOVE INTO THE 2 CAR IN CUP? “I’m not sure how much relatability this weekend specifically has to my commitments next year racing the 2 car, but, for me, I’d like to think that this series has probably taught me more than any other series I’ve raced in and whether if that’s the people or my own personal experience and my growth as a driver, but I’d certainly love to end that on the best note possible.”

    HOW EXCITED ARE YOU TO RACE THIS YEAR IN FRONT OF A SOLD OUT CROWD? “I feel like this year is probalby gonna do this venue justice for having a championship race — get a lot of people excited about it because, really, since they moved the grandstands, obviously the infield was a lot more enhanced than it was when I first raced at Phoenix. I’m excited for the feedback and to see what the fans think. Obviously, my job is still the same, but it would be that much more gratifying to have the full support and the full NASCAR fan base excited for championship weekend.”

    HOW MUCH OF A CHANGE WILL THAT BE IN YOUR PERFORMANCE? “I don’t think it changes my performance much. I feel like I’m very self-motivated, otherwise it’s certainly great to see people get excited about our sport. It’s obvious that they’re the backbone of what we do, so to see everyone excited — not just to hear about it but actually physically feel it is pretty cool to experience.”

    HOW WOULD YOU HANDICAP YOUR THREE COMPETITORS? “I look at all three of them and I’d say they have enough strengths to win the championship, so, for me, I have to respect that. I have to try and equalize that. I have to understand what I can do to offset that and take it in stride. I think of the three guys that I’m racing they’re the three best in the series this year and that’s why they’re here, so I’m excited for that challenge and going up against the best.”

    YOU CAME TO DANIEL HEMRIC’S DEFENSE LAST WEEK ABOUT ALL THE QUESTIONS REGARDING HIM NOT WINNING. WAS IT RESPECT FOR A FELLOW COMPETITOR TO SAY SOMETHING LIKE THAT? “I think that’s a good way of characterizing it. I’ve obviously raced against Daniel for a while. He’s been in the series and he’s been in sport for a while and he’s obviously shown that he belongs to whatever extent that may be. Obviously, he’s competitive every weekend. He’s a guy that I feel like I can race hard and very respectfully and I have a great appreciation. It doesn’t take much, but I have a great appreciation for guys that handle themselves that way. Winning a race or not winning a race, whatever it may be, I’ve noticed it in myself — for the longest time it was, ‘Oh, Austin can’t win on ovals. Oh, Austin can’t win on this type of track. Now apparently I can’t win on a short track.’ If you haven’t done something, that’s all people will talk about.”

    SO YOU CAN RELATE TO IT? “I can relate to that, absolutely. You hear with Truex, ‘Oh, he can’t win on a short track,’ and he’s like the guy that dominates most short tracks. It’s one of those things that you have to be aware of, but at the same time it does get old to listen to it after a while and from Daniel’s perspective he can’t just stick up for himself and make a stink about it because then it kind of just makes you look like an ass, but sometimes you need somebody else to do it for you and I have enough respect for Daniel to stick my neck out in that way.”

    WHAT IS THE RESPECT LEVEL BETWEEN THE FOUR OF YOU? “I think the respect level is quite high. I feel like in high-pressure situations Noah and I have really had a relationship put to the test and it’s only positives, honestly. You look at last year at Phoenix coming to the line trying to race for the win and trying to race for the championship he raced me extremely respectfully and the same situation last weekend when he’s trying to race his way in. I’m not gonna put him in the fence for no reason other than trying to win the race and it still felt like I could do it without doing so, and then obviously AJ and I have raced each other hard since I got in the series, so I feel like he and I have a pretty great understanding, but at the same time, to your point about the four of us being polar opposites, we’re all at different points in our career. Obviously, AJ is extremely experienced and just wants to be in the Xfinity Series. Noah is trying to grow his career. He’s coming back for another season. Daniel is probably the most different of us, kind of up and down and back up again, trying to understand where he falls. Obviously, it’s kind of fun because everybody’s motivation level is different and, for me, I’m very self-motivated and I’d love to end this on the biggest high possible.”

    HOW DO YOU DESCRIBE THIS EXPERIENCE OF BEING IN THE CHAMPIONSHIP 4 AND BEING IN PHOENIX? “I think this year we’re gonna get to understand what Phoenix as a host city actually means. I think, for me, that’s the newness, that’s what I’m excited to see because I feel like it is a great venue — even coming here and coming to the convention center and talking to all of you in person. The last time I did this was in 2017 in the Truck Series when I made the Championship 4, so it’s been a while since I’ve kind of felt that — not that I need to feel special in any way, but it’s kind of fun to understand that this is important, this is what matters, this is what we’ve worked the entire year for and not just us but the entire industry.”

    DO YOU FEEL ANY PRESSURE BEING THE LAST HOPE FOR TEAM PENSKE TO WIN A TITLE THIS YEAR? “I feel like that’s pretty hard on our race team. Finishing second in the Indy Car championship is not a miserable season. I know the expectations are high. Obviously, you get all three of our guys in the Round of 8 in the Cup Series. A pretty big bummer for one of them not to be in the Champ 4. I think we’ve got three of the best Cup drivers in our lineup. Obviously, a disappointment, but, to your point, we still get to wave the flag for Team Penske and Ford and I’m excited for that. When I walked in the shop early on Monday morning I’ve never seen that many people surrounding two Xfinity cars in my life, so that gets me excited, that gets me motivated. This means just as much to our race team as anything else, so for me to be the guy that has the opportunity to do it is pretty fun.”

    HOW HAS YOUR RELATIONSHIP BEEN WITH BRAD THROUGH THE YEARS AND HOW DOES IT FEEL TO TAKE OVER FOR HIM NEXT YEAR? “It’s certainly big shoes to fill and obviously Brad has filled a lot of roles for me in my career, whether if that’s as a team owner, as a teammate, even as a kid someone to look up to. I can remember when he came over our house and we played the NASCAR video game in our basement. That progression has been almost strange for me to really wrap my head around. It might be more challenging for Brad because he’s probably been able to witness more than I have just being a kid and not even recognizing some of the people that I’ve been around, but, obviously Brad is at a completely different point in his career. You mentioned the race on Sunday and I even texted Brad after the race. I was the biggest Brad Keselowski fan. I was the believer for the last 90 laps of that race because they came on strong and not to mention it’s the team I’m gonna be working with next year, the same crew chief, and I’ve started to get to know those guys more. I got really excited standing up in my living room yelling at the TV. Obviously, they came really close, but he’s a fighter. He’s a great leader and obviously his presence is felt in our race team and we’re certainly gonna miss him.”

    HOW DO YOU GET UP TO SPEED WITH THE NEW CAR NEXT YEAR? “With challenges comes opportunity. Obviously, I think through the discover process of what works for those cars and understanding how to prepare and what a race is gonna look like in the Next Gen car is a great opportunity for someone like me, but, otherwise, I’m a big believer that the challenges are still gonna remain as far as being a rookie in the Cup Series and how challenging that is. I watch guys that come in and win a bunch of races in the Xfinity Series and move to the Cup Series and they have a tough time for a little while. My expectations are certainly in check for what that may be like, but I think this season — having the opportunity to do some races in the 33 car — has really given me a great base layer at pretty much all types of racetracks to understand what that flow is gonna be like, what that challenge is gonna be like for me and I feel like it’s also given my race team a level of expectation for what to do and with that being said I had some fun in those Cup races, probably more than I was expecting to to be honest. Leading the Daytona 500, making it in by the skin of our teeth and leading laps at COTA, Road America, you name it, it was pretty cool and probably unexpected. I think, for me, one of the bigger challenges that I didn’t foresee is I’ve raced against the same guys for the last four years, give or take, and I’m gonna have new competitors that I’m gonna have to learn and probably more competitors that I’m gonna have to learn as far as how they race and how that plays out because it is a social sport and when you’re spending four hours two inches away from people, you have to be able to trust one another and vice versa — probably more on the other side. They have to be able to trust me, but otherwise it’s a great challenge and I’m looking forward to it.”

    WHAT IS THE ONE CHARACTERISTIC YOU’RE MOST PROUD OF SINCE COMING TO THIS SERIES? “I think it’s a good question. I don’t know if there’s one specific characteristic. I just feel like my transition as far as being a guy that’s in the field to being a guy that’s respected in the field has been the transition for me, and I feel that — even if it’s walking through the garage area talking to guys on other teams and being able to be loose and everyone comfortable around you. I think a lot of people didn’t know what to expect from me early on and that’s understandable — something different, something new, how are you supposed to act? For me, that’s been pretty gratifying to be able to earn that respect the right way. A lot of that is credit to the people around me that have helped me grow into that role and looking forward to kind of closing that chapter this weekend.”

    HOW HAS YOUR DAD HELPED YOU THROUGH ALL OF THAT AND GROWING UP AROUND THIS SPORT? “I think anytime that I’m on the phone and complain about something that involves being a race car driver he tells me you’re the one that wanted to do it, and that’s where the conversation ends. Otherwise, it’s up to me to make those conclusions, but he’s been a great ally for me from a what’s expected and what’s normal standpoint if that makes sense. How to be the best race car driver, he’s lead an organization that expects absolute excellence and so that’s what’s expected out of me as a default, and I feel like that’s benefited me greatly in my career.”

    HAS THAT HELPED YOU WITH THIS OPPORTUNITY TO WIN BACK-TO-BACK TITLES? “It certainly can’t hurt.”

    HOW IS IT DIFFERENT THIS YEAR? “I think there’s less newness as far as what to expect and what that feels like and I learned a lot about myself last year. I was very open-minded about being very self-reflective through the whole process, whether that’s the week leading up to it and making it there and obviously being content with just being part of it — not content in the sense that I’m not motivated to go out and try and be the best, but content with knowing that you’ve just accomplished something that everybody else in the series has tried to do. For me, it’s a great opportunity to go do the same thing. I think the mentality for me is the same. I’ve learned a lot about myself and, like I said before, it’s a great opportunity to close a chapter in a pretty thick book of mine.”

    ANY NERVES? “I don’t really get nervous. I’ll be interested to see if I get nervous before the race on Saturday, but I get confidence from knowledge and feel like we’ve prepared ourselves the best way possible and from there we’ve got a job to do.”

    DO YOU HAVE ANY TARGETS ON YOUR BACK WITH YOUR COMPETITORS? “Not that I’m aware of. I feel like I’ve navigated that, whether if it’s cleverly or consciously, maybe that’s a better word for it. I feel like I have a great respect for the three people I’m racing for this championship and I feel like it’s mutual.”

    WHEN YOU GO TO CUP NEXT YEAR HOW DO YOU THINK ABOUT RACING AGAINST THOSE GUYS AND PROVING YOURSELF? “I think at the end of the day as social as it may be and it may seem, and it certainly is, but the best way to earn respect is to outrun somebody, and that’s as simple as it may come and that may come quickly, it may come slowly, but that’s certainly the goal no matter what. So, if I focus on my job, I think the rest will come.”

    WHAT IS YOUR PHILOSOPHY ON DEALING WITH ISSUES WITH OTHER DRIVERS? “I feel like in the Cup Series, not more sensitive to it, but I feel like there’s a lot more driver to driver communication than there is in the lower series because some of the mentality even if like whether if it’s go-karts, Legends cars or whatever else, it’s like, ‘I’m not gonna be dealing with this guy for that long, so who really cares? That’s probably just a one and done thing and I’m not gonna worry about it.’ That mentality can only get you so far. We’re talking about guys that are five, 10-year veterans of this sport that you’re going to have to deal with if you want to be good at this, so you might as well tread lightly in a lot of situations, but at the same time you have a job to do. The competitor inside you wants to do the best and mistakes can be made. I feel like I’m the first one I’m pointing the finger at myself if it’s my fault and I’ve done that in the past, and I’ve climbed my way up that ladder before, but definitely not gonna speculate on anything I haven’t done yet.”

    WHAT SETS YOURSELF AND YOUR TEAM APART FROM THE OTHER THREE? “I feel like we certainly have a lot of strengths and I feel like one of those is consistency. We’ve been able to consistently execute throughout the year, and I think it’s really shown whether if it’s in points or race finishes or the speed we bring every weekend in our race cars. But I look at the guys that I’m racing against this weekend and a lot of them have strengths that are good enough to win a championship and I will say that I feel like those strengths are not something that we can equal on our race team, so I’m excited for that opportunity — knowing that and I feel confident in that and it’s time to go do it.”

    WHAT MAKES YOU SO GOOD AT PHOENIX? “I’m not sure if there’s one thing or another, but I have always liked racetracks where you can use the brakes and modulate the car throughout a run. Otherwise, I feel like it takes a fast race car to win races, and I’ve had some really fast race cars at Phoenix and kind of my early days trying to learn how to use them, and I feel like I’ve learned a lot from this racetrack and seeing the fruits of that benefit has been fun the last two races.”

    HAS YOUR PREPARATION DIFFERED AT ALL THIS YEAR GOING INTO THIS RACE? “I may pay more attention to some smaller details, but, otherwise, our preparation level as a race team is very consistent with what we had last year. Our process throughout the week has been very consistent and it’s been good to get in a groove. Even as someone who is 23 years old, you spend your whole life and you go to this grade in school, and you’ve got to go to high school and you have all these processes that change constantly, and you always think about how can people get — not in a rut but in a routine year to year to year. You’re looking as an adult. This is probably the most adult I’ve felt because I’ve had a process with my team, with my people that I work with, with my peers and just going and executing on it has been pretty gratifying and that also being a basis of success has been even more gratifying.”

    IS THERE ANYTHING SPECIFIC YOU LIKE TO DO WHEN YOU COME TO PHOENIX? “I’m pretty boring when it comes to race traveling because I’m like, not paranoid, but I’d rather just have a quick meal and go to bed, so I don’t do a whole lot of exploring when I’m racing.”

    THE STAR WAR CONTENT HAS BEEN PRETTY QUITE ON DISNEY PLUS. ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO ANYTHING COMING UP? “I have watched the cartoon ones — the Star Wars Visions. I’ve watched all of those. I think those are pretty good. I’ve actually gotten into watching Naruto lately. It’s very funny because the timing of when Visions came out to when I started watching some episodes of Narato was like very linear, so kind of fun to watch that and learn about that, but really excited about the Book of Boba Fett coming out, Mandalorian. There are a lot of things to be excited about in the Star Wars universe, for sure.”

    HOW WAS THE LAST SEASON OF THE CLONE WARS FOR YOU? “I’m still catching up because I never watched all of the Clone Wars seasons. There’s a lot of Clone Wars to get through, so I’ve tried not to spoil myself with the bad batch yet. Is it worth it? I think so. Slowly but surely it’s worth it.”

    WHAT WILL YOU DO DURING THE OFF-SEASON? “I have four or five Next Gen tests. Those are my circled fun moments.”

    WHAT ABOUT TO RECHARGE? “I guess I haven’t considered that. Maybe sleep in a little bit more. Otherwise, my off-season workouts are more challenging than my in-season workouts. My trainer is certainly looking forward to not caring if I’m sore the next day. Otherwise, I did buy a house last off-season, moved in during the season, kind of be able to get completely settled in. I wouldn’t say that’s a stress release, but it’s maybe something to take my mind off. I usually work my project car during the off-season. I usually get big chunks done on that, so looking forward to getting back to that.”

    HOW DO YOU RELIEVE STRESS? “I’d say from a day-to-day basis I feel a lot of people can relate to just coming home after eating dinner and jumping on the XBox for a couple of hours with your buddies and just decompressing, not even caring about how it’s going, just decompressing about the day and just taking your mind off of everything else. I’d say that’s how I pretty much close out almost every day.”

  • CHEVROLET WINS 23RD NASCAR XFINITY SERIES MANUFACTURER’S CHAMPIONSHIP

    CHEVROLET WINS 23RD NASCAR XFINITY SERIES MANUFACTURER’S CHAMPIONSHIP

    CHEVROLET CLINCHES 23RD BILL FRANCE PERFORMANCE CUP
    Award Recognizes Manufacturer Champion in NASCAR Xfinity Series

    DETROIT – (November 4, 2021) – Chevrolet has secured back-to-back Manufacturer’s Championships in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The 2021 achievement marks the 23rd time the bowtie brand has captured this prestigious honor, more than any other manufacturer.

    The triumph also marks the seventh time Camaro SS has earned the award since becoming Chevrolet’s flagship vehicle in the Xfinity Series in 2013.

    “Chevrolet is honored to again win the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series Manufacturer’s Championship,” said Dr. Eric Warren, Chevrolet Director of NASCAR Programs. “A special thank you goes to all of our Chevy teams and drivers for their tireless work that collectively secured this special recognition for Chevrolet. Being competitive at this level is vital for the development of drivers and crew members. This accomplishment is a testament of the teamwork between the Chevrolet NASCAR Competition Engineering team and the race teams that is required to be successful in one of NASCAR’s top series.”

    Capping off the regular season, Chevrolet placed more contenders in the playoffs than any other manufacturer with seven drivers from four teams in the running for this year’s title.

    With 32 of 33 races complete, eight different Team Chevy drivers have contributed 16 wins: AJ Allmendinger (five wins), Noah Gragson (three wins), Justin Allgaier and Josh Berry (two each), and Justin Haley, Jeb Burton, Brandon Brown, and Myatt Snider (one each). Michael Annett and Brett Moffitt also contributed points toward the championship.

    The 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series season will conclude at Phoenix Raceway on Saturday, Nov. 6 for the series’ Championship race.

    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.

  • Monster Energy Racing: Riley Herbst Phoenix NXS Advance

    Monster Energy Racing: Riley Herbst Phoenix NXS Advance

    RILEY HERBST
    Phoenix NASCAR Xfinity Series Advance
    No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

    NASCAR Xfinity Series Overview
    • Event: NASCAR Xfinity Series Season Finale (Round 33 of 33)
    • Date: Saturday, Nov. 6
    • Location: Phoenix Raceway
    • Layout: 1-mile oval
    • Time/TV/Radio: 8:30 p.m. EDT on NBCSN/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Riley Herbst Notes of Interest

    • Momentum is on Riley Herbst’s side as he heads into the season-ending NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Phoenix Raceway. In the series’ prior race last Saturday at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, the driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing charged from 26th to 10th with less than 60 laps to go. It was his 12th top-10 finish of the season and his third top-12 in a row. It was a strong display of resilience from the 22-year-old racer out of Las Vegas. A five-car incident on lap 194 of the scheduled 250-lap race collected Herbst and dropped him from eighth to 26th. Undaunted, Herbst rallied back, cracking top-10 by lap 227 and surviving a pair of eventful overtime restarts for a hard-earned 10th-place result.

    • When the Xfinity Series rolled into Phoenix back in March for its fifth race of 2021, Herbst emerged with a solid fourth-place finish thanks to some savvy driving in the closing laps. He started 30th after enduring three DNFs (Did Not Finish) in the season’s first four events, but Herbst methodically worked his way through the field and entered the top-20 by lap 12. He continued his forward progress as the race wore on and was sitting seventh on the final restart with three laps to go. He then threaded his way through the cars ahead of him in the closing laps to cross the finish line in fourth. It was his first of four top-fives this season, with the others being a fourth-place drive April 24 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway, a fifth-place run Sept. 11 at Richmond (Va.) Raceway, and a third-place effort Sept. 17 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway.

    • Saturday’s race will be Herbst’s fifth career Xfinity Series start at Phoenix. In addition to the fourth-place result earned in March, he finished among the top-11 in two of his other three starts. Complementing his Xfinity Series outings at Phoenix is a 10th-place run in his lone NASCAR K&N Pro Series West start at the track in November 2019, and a 15th-place drive in his lone NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start in November 2018.

    • While Herbst won’t be racing for the Xfinity Series championship at Phoenix, there’s still a points battle to be fought. Herbst protected his 11th-place position in the drivers’ standings with his 10th-place run last Saturday at Martinsville. At Phoenix, he’ll race to catch 10th-place Jeb Burton, who sits 27 points ahead of him. Herbst finished 12th in points during his rookie season in 2020.

    • Herbst should feel right at home at the desert mile in Arizona. Being a third-generation racer from Las Vegas, he’s taking his family name from the deserts of the southwest to the asphalt tracks of NASCAR. Herbst began racing go-karts up and down the West Coast at age 5. He soon followed in his family’s footsteps in 2006 when he transitioned to off-road racing, where his grandfather Jerry, his dad Troy, and his uncles Tim and Ed, all became Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame inductees after their numerous championship-winning campaigns. But by age 10, Herbst sought a return to pavement, which began with Legends cars before transitioning to Speed Trucks, Super Late Models, the K&N Series, Trucks, and now, the Xfinity Series. After Saturday’s Xfinity Series race he’ll take some time to return to his family’s off-road roots Nov. 15-20 when he participates in the Baja 1000.

    Riley Herbst, Driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang

    It’s the final race of the season. What are your thoughts on the year as you head into the finale?

    “Man, this season has been full of ups and downs. While we struggled in the beginning, we really started to hit our stride over the summer. All of the hard work seemed to be paying off. We didn’t have the playoff run we would’ve liked, but we learned a lot that we can carry over into the 2022 season. I’m excited to continue to get stronger with this team. Ready to finish it out strong in Phoenix.”

    You scored a fourth-place finish thanks to a strong restart in the final laps the last time you raced at Phoenix. What’s the plan heading into Saturday’s race?

    “Last time we were in Phoenix, we had an impressive finish and really started to show what this team could do if presented with an opportunity. We avoided the chaos at the end and brought home a top-five. Heading into this weekend, the ultimate goal is to win, but most of all, we want to finish out the season with another strong finish. This team has worked hard all season long. I know we can get it done.”

    After this race, you get a three-month break until the start of your 2022 campaign. How will you be spending the offseason?

    “The work definitely doesn’t stop in the offseason. After Phoenix, all eyes are on Daytona in February. There’s still work to be done. We want to come out of the gate strong when we unload the car for the 2022 season. I’ll get a chance to go home to Vegas and see my family, so I’m excited. Also, I’m running the Baja 1000 in a couple of weeks, so there’s a lot of stuff going on after the checkered flag this weekend.”

    No. 98 Monster Energy Team Roster

    Primary Team Members:

    Driver: Riley Herbst
    Hometown: Las Vegas, Nevada

    Crew Chief: Richard Boswell
    Hometown: Friendship, Maryland

    Engineer: Justin Bolton
    Hometown: Latrobe, Pennsylvania

    Engineer: DJ VanderLey
    Hometown: Mobile, Alabama

    Spotter: Tim Fedewa
    Hometown: Holt, Michigan

    Over-The-Wall Crew:

    Front Tire Changer: Shayne Pipala
    Hometown: Frankfort Square, Illinois

    Rear Tire Changer: Chris Jackson
    Hometown: Fort Mill, South Carolina

    Tire Carrier: Chad Emmons
    Hometown: Tyler, Texas

    Fueler: James Keener
    Hometown: Fortuna, California

    Jackman: Sean Cotten
    Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

    Road Crew Members:

    Truck Driver: Steve Wood
    Hometown: Eatontown, New Jersey

    Front End Mechanic: Mike Brill
    Hometown: Woodsville, New Hampshire

    Engine Tuner: Willie Pelotte
    Hometown: Oakland, Main