Tag: nextera energy resources 250

  • Third-place finish solidifies Roper’s bonafides as a serious Truck competitor

    Third-place finish solidifies Roper’s bonafides as a serious Truck competitor

    One thing that could be taken away from the last lap of Friday’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Daytona is that Cory Roper did not show up to stroke around in his underfunded Roper Racing Ford. He saw the opportunity come to take the lead at Daytona late in the going, took it, and almost pulled off the upset win on the final lap before being passed on the final stretch by Ben Rhodes and Jordan Anderson and ultimately finishing third.

    “I knew I was a sitting duck whenever I didn’t feel a push,” Roper said in Zoom media availability post-race. “I knew I got too far off out coming off of (turn) 2 and got too big of a gap. I’m still learning where I need to position things in the truck to be able to race something like this different than anywhere else. I wish I had another shot at that, but you gotta be grateful for what you’ve got, we’ll take it, move on and build from it.”

    The Vernon, Texas native made his national touring debut in Spring 2018 at Martinsville in his No. 04 F-150, finishing 13th after starting 17th. From there he proceeded to have several strong runs such as climbing to second at Daytona in 2019 before contact with the wall ended his day, or a fifth-place qualifying effort at Las Vegas in late 2019 (that was derailed in an early incident with Matt Crafton).

    Roper also proved himself to be a stout qualifier, having posted three top-15 qualifying runs including his top-five appearance at Las Vegas, despite limited sponsorship and limited equipment. Regardless, incidents involving the No. 04 Ford have been few and far between, as Roper doesn’t seem to overdrive himself or his truck’s limitations. That, along with his stout runs, managed to help Roper Racing land sponsor opportunities from CarQuest Auto Parts and Alliance Aviation, who adorned his truck Friday night.

    This has come quite a long way from the group who used to camp out at Texas Motor Speedway every time NASCAR came through Fort Worth. It’s only fitting that Roper ended up earning his first top-10 ever at Texas, a ninth in June 2019. Granted that was an attrition-filled event, but it only backed up the notice that Roper takes care of his equipment and has a tendency to keep his truck out of trouble.

    All said, Roper’s presence in the garage serves as a reminder to the old-school racers of the sport’s history. He hasn’t bought out another ride with family or sponsor money; rather, he took his money and decided to start and build a team from the ground up. At first it was with old equipment bought from Brad Keselowski Racing and Shane Whitbeck as the Crew Chief, but as time has gone on he’s managed to build his team and his group up and just like fellow underdog owner/driver Anderson, Roper found himself in the spotlight at Daytona.

    Rhodes expressed admiration for Roper in Victory Lane, saying that there was a need for more guys like him and his Roper Racing group in the NASCAR garage. Given the outcome Friday night and what led up to it for Roper and Roper Racing, that’s a valid statement to make.

  • Hill’s Daytona win solidifies Hattori Racing as Toyota powerhouse

    Hill’s Daytona win solidifies Hattori Racing as Toyota powerhouse

    When 2018 Gander Outdoor Truck Series champion Brett Moffitt was released from Hattori Racing Enterprises following his title win only to be replaced by underdog Austin Hill for the 2019 season, there were questions, of course. Moffitt was a proven winner, Hill was not. Moffitt could contend on any race track, Hill only had a few strong runs. Moffitt was a champion, Hill wasn’t.

    Yet there was little doubt that the move to HRE could end up making a winner out of Hill, which is exactly what happened Friday night when he won the NextEra 250 at Daytona. Hill, who led the most laps (39), managed to stay out of trouble the most during the caution-filled event and nab the first Truck Series win of his career. Hill is the sixth driver to score his first truck series win at Daytona International Speedway.

    Regardless of Hill’s current employer, the fact that he won so soon out of the gate is still surprising. He came into the 2019 season with only a top-five and eight top-10s under his belt, with a career-best finish of fifth at Texas last fall. All of of which occurred over a span of 51 starts since 2014 while driving for a spate of owners, from Ricky Benton’s No. 92 team to his own family team’s No. 20 to Young’s Motorsports last season. In short, he hadn’t accomplished much during his time in the Truck Series. To be fair, though, his first full campaign in the series was 2018, where he managed to grab the bulk of his top-10 finishes.

    Meanwhile, by proving themselves an organization that can produce multiple winners, HRE has also shown themselves to be an adequate foil to the Toyota dominance of Kyle Busch Motorsports, an organization long thought to be the gold standard for Toyota in the Truck Series. However, while KBM fields multiple entries for both title pursuit and driver development, HRE has the luxury of a competitive single-car team to pursue victories and championships with.

    This is the way the sport should be. A team which started out as a solid mid-pack/occasional contender has grown enough and established itself enough that it is now a contender for wins and championships, and right now it holds seven wins with two drivers and a championship – all since the beginning of the 2018 season. They are setting a great pace for themselves in terms of success, and although Daytona is known to be a wild card – emphasis on “wild” – Shigeaki Hattori and Crew Chief Scott Zippadelli know now how to build a team around a driver. Ryan Truex was a consistent finisher with them, Moffitt was a champion with them, and now underdog-turned-winner Hill is bringing home the trophy from Daytona for them.

    It wasn’t too long before the 2018 season started that Moffitt was on a job hunt, with only a win at Michigan in 2016 to his credit. Imagine what Hill can accomplish this season with such an established team. If he can win at Daytona, then it isn’t a matter of if he can win again in the No. 16, but when.

    Here’s a hint: Soon.

  • Grala Wins Carnage-Filled Truck Race at Daytona

    Grala Wins Carnage-Filled Truck Race at Daytona

    A few hours after earning his first pole in NASCAR, Kaz Grala was in the right place on the final lap to drive through a field of wrecking trucks to win the season-opening NextEra Energy Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway.

    With two laps to go, Johnny Sauter, who won stages 1 and 2, jumped down in front of Grala on the ensuing restart and led the field into Turn 1. Exiting Turn 2, Sauter jumped from the bottom line to the top to block the advance of Matt Crafton. After moving down, the outside line pushed Crafton to the lead. Sauter worked his way alongside Crafton in Turn 1 but found himself sandwiched in between Crafton on the bottom and Ben Rhodes on top.

    Exiting Turn 2, Rhodes, who was receiving a bump draft from Grant Enfinger, got loosened by his teammate, turned down and clipped Crafton’s truck. His truck did a 180 spin and the combination of air rushing under the back of his car and being hit by Sauter lifted his truck into the air, flipped it in a corkscrew motion and landed on all four wheels.

    Twelve trucks were involved in the final lap wreck.

    Grala, who was behind Crafton when he was clipped by Rhodes, was leading when the caution flew and declared the race winner.

    He was so overrun with elation, he could barely answer how he won the race.

    “Oh I wish you could tell me,” he exclaimed to Hermie Sadler in victory lane. “Oh my gosh. Yeah, I didn’t know what I was doing. I don’t know how to do a doughnut. I don’t know how to do a victory lap like that. I just know *can’t make out* That was freaking awesome! I can’t believe we won Daytona! This completely changes our season and the way that we can play it. This is huge for our organization and for myself, for Jerry, for GMS, Keith Lewis. I can’t even believe this.”

    Sadler asked him about his final 20 laps where he fell back and worked his way through the field.

    “My radio chord came out on lap 79. So I drove almost to the end of the race no…Oh my God, someone flipped! (Referring to Crafton’s flip on the final lap as he watched a replay of it in victory lane) I drove almost the rest of the race without a radio on and barely through the green-white-checker, I got a radio on. Honestly, I got lucky coming out of (Turn) 2 there. I just didn’t lift and lucky everything went crazy around me. (I) hope everybody’s alright there, but oh I’m so happy with (how) that played out. I can’t even believe it.”

    On the second lap of the event, there was a 17-truck wreck that was triggered by Chase Briscoe catching Noah Gragson at the wrong time, loosened him and turned him into the wall. Gragson came back down the track and clipped Austin Cindric, sending him into the outside wall. The rest of the trucks scattered and ran into one another, trying to avoid other spinning trucks in a plume of smoke.

    There a few other smaller wrecks scattered through the race, including one involving race leaders Christopher Bell and Brett Moffit coming to the line at the end of stage 1.

    This Camping World Truck Series race was the first NASCAR points-paying race to utilize stages, or segments, in any of its three national series.

    The first stage was rather competitive with four lead changes in the first 20 laps, eight of which were run under caution.

    The second stage was more collected with the field riding single-file for most of the 14 laps run under green (six under the caution from the end of stage 1). Other than a half-spin by John Hunter Nemechek in Turn 3 on lap 38, which didn’t bring out a caution, nothing threatened to break up the flow of the race until the end of stage 2 on lap 40.

    Timothy Peters exited pit road first and restarted as the race leader. It only took Sauter two laps to work his way back to the lead, which he swapped with Rhodes a few laps later. The caution flew with 30 laps to go for a four-truck wreck.

    With 23 to go, the field formed up into a single-file train hugging the bottom line. This was broken up by Nemechek spinning out on the backstretch with six to go, setting up the two-lap shootout and final lap wreck.

    The race lasted one hour, 55 minutes and 38 seconds at an average speed of 129.720 mph. There were 14 lead changes among nine different drivers and six cautions for 29 laps.

    Grala leaves Daytona with a 14-point lead over Sauter.

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  • Mayhem Breaks Out in the Truck Race Late at Daytona

    Mayhem Breaks Out in the Truck Race Late at Daytona

    As is typically the case at Daytona, hell broke loose in the last few laps.

    As the field of trucks was hurdling down the backstretch at Daytona International Speedway with seven laps to go in the NextEra Energy Resources 250, Timothy Peters nudged Cameron Hayley out of place. This sent the No. 13 ThorSport Racing Toyota up the track into the side of John Hunter Nemechek. Just as he got his car straight, he was turned again down through the grass.

    Matt Crafton, Grant Enfinger, Rico Abreu and Austin Theriault were among the 18 cars collected in the Big One.

    Peters insisted he wasn’t to blame for the wreck.

    “It ain’t all my fault,” he screamed over the radio.

    Hayley said, “that’s Daytona.”

    “It was hard racing,” Hayley said. “I guess we just caught bumpers the wrong way. (Timothy) Peters got into the back of me. It’s just tight racing. It’s so hard there at the end, everyone’s bumping into each other and trying to hold a pretty wheel. I guess that’s Daytona, but it sucks for my guys because they worked so hard.”

    This wreck forced NASCAR to red-flag the race for 30-minutes. After the cleanup was complete, it set up the final restart leading to the multi-car wreck on the final lap in Turn 1.

    Johnny Sauter was ahead of Ryan Truex when the caution flew and scored his 11th career victory in the Camping World Truck Series. It was also his first win since 2014 and the first ever win for Chevrolet in the Truck Series at Daytona.

  • Joey Coulter, No. 21 Allegiant Travel Chevrolet Daytona International Speedway Pre-Race Report

    Joey Coulter, No. 21 Allegiant Travel Chevrolet Daytona International Speedway Pre-Race Report

    NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES

    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY

    FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2014

    ALLEGIANT ON BOARD: GMS Racing is proud to welcome Allegiant Travel back to the team, as the brand will sponsor Coulter’s No. 21 Chevrolet Silverado for the season opening NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event at Daytona International Speedway.

    FRESH START: As Coulter embarks on his fourth full season in the Truck Series, the 23-year-old does so with a new team and crew chief. GMS Racing tapped Coulter to drive the No. 21 Chevrolet when the Charlotte, N.C. based team decided to compete full-time in the Truck Series. On top of Coulter’s pit box will be crew chief Jeff Stankiewicz. The pair worked together for the first time at the open test session in January.

    RCR ALLIANCE: Beginning with the 2014 season, GMS Racing entered a technical alliance with Chevrolet and Richard Childress Racing (RCR). In addition, Coulter’s team will utilize Earnhardt Childress Racing (ECR) engines to provide top-notch horsepower. GMS Racing acquired the assets of RCR’s truck program, marking a reunion for Coulter in equipment, as he drove a Chevrolet Silverado for RCR for two seasons (2011, 2012), posting one win, three poles and 28 top-10 finishes.

    COULTER TO THE RESCUE: During Coulter’s drive to Daytona last Wednesday prior to the ARCA Racing Series event, the driver lent a hand to a fellow garage member. As a snowstorm hit the Carolinas, Coulter stopped at a gas station and saw FOX Sports 1 reporter Kristen Beat. Needing help to drive through the hazardous road conditions, Coulter took the wheel and drove Beat through the weather.

    SPECIAL GUEST: Former PGA Tour Champion Bob Lohr will be a special guest of the No. 21 team at Daytona. Lohr was a member of the PGA Tour as an exempt player for 12 consecutive seasons (1985-1996), before competing on the Nationwide Tour from 1997-2004. Currently, Lohr is a certified golf instructor at Leadbetter Golf Academy at Champions Gate in Orlando, Florida.

    AUTOGRAPH SESSION: Coulter will join fellow Truck Series competitors on Friday, February 21, from 2:30-3:30PM for an autograph session in the Daytona Fan Zone.

    JOEY COULTER QUOTE: “I’m really looking forward to getting into the No. 21 Allegiant Travel Chevrolet this week. Ever since we came down to Daytona and tested last month, I’ve been ready to get the season started. It’s a nice feeling to be back behind the wheel of a Chevrolet and in equipment I’m familiar with. The GMS Racing team has been putting in a lot of work to get us ready for this race and now it’s time to go have some fun.”

    ABOUT ALLEGIANT, Travel is our deal. ® Las Vegas-based Allegiant Travel Company (NASDAQ: ALGT) is focused on linking travelers in small cities to world-class leisure destinations. The company operates a low-cost, high-efficiency, all-jet passenger airline through its subsidiary, Allegiant Air, while also offering other travel-related products such as hotel rooms, rental cars, and attraction tickets. All can be purchased through the company website, allegiant.com. The company has been named one of America’s 100 Best Small Companies by Forbes Magazine for four consecutive years.

    ABOUT GMS RACING, LLC: GMS Racing, formerly known as Gallagher Motorsports, competes full-time in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards with drivers Joey Coulter and Spencer Gallagher. Formerly based out of Las Vegas, Nevada, home of Allegiant Travel, GMS Racing is now housed in a state of the art 32,000-square-foot shop in Charlotte, North Carolina.

  • “A Frenchman In NASCAR” Comes Alive at Daytona

    “A Frenchman In NASCAR” Comes Alive at Daytona

    MOORESVILLE, NC – February 17, 2014 – While his story may be quite a bit different than the character Jean Gerard that Will Ferrell created in the popular movie “Talladega Nights” a real life Frenchman is coming to race at Daytona this weekend as Nice, France native Michel Disdier will get behind the wheel of the SS Green Light No. 07 Chevy Silverado for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season opening Nextera Energy Resources 250 on Friday night at the Daytona International Speedway.

    Michel visited the USA during a school exchange program years ago and he fell in love with the speed of the high-banked superspeedways. He has spent the last 20 years dreaming about running a NASCAR race at 180 mph on the 2.5-mile Daytona tri-oval. After attending the season ending race at Homestead-Miami in 2002, the French road-racer returned home and has worked twelve years to catch his break racing across the Atlantic from his native homeland. “I have some fans coming to Daytona from France so I hope to put on a good show for them.”

    Michel’s first North America race was in the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series back in 2007 and he has made eleven starts in the ARCA Series over the last six seasons with a best finish of eleventh last year at Daytona. “Racing has been my life and although most of my experience has been on road racing circuits in Europe I have always dreamed of racing in NASCAR,” Michel said. “I will have the chance to show what I can do at the Nextera Energy Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway in a NASCAR Camping World Truck and that is all I am focusing on right now. I feel I am ready and am prepared to do well.”

    “With less than one week until the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Daytona, I am of course very excited. For me it has been a long time coming and all the training and preparation will soon be put to the test,” Disdier continued. “I thank everyone who was there for me over the years and I hope I will make them proud.”

    SS Green Light Racing owner/crew chief Bobby Dotter will guide Disdier’s NASCAR debut. “Michel has a lot of enthusiasm and desire to compete in NASCAR, the guys have worked hard in the SS Green Light shop to prepare the No. 07 Silverado. We want him to run well and to help him realize his passion of racing in Camping World Truck Series.”Friday night Michel Disdier will live his life-long dream at Daytona, “I may live in France but now I feel like I am coming home to the USA.”

    The Nextera Energy Resources 250 is the 314th consecutive NCWTS start for the SS Green Light Racing team, a streak that dates back to 2001. The race will prelude Sunday’s 56th running of the Daytona 500.

    Practice for the NCWTS Nextera Energy Resources 250 will be Wednesday February 19th from 2:30 p.m. to 3:50 p.m. and Thursday February 20th from 1:30 p.m. to 2:50 p.m. and 4:40 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. On Friday February 21st there will be two laps of qualifying at 4:10 p.m. and the green flag will fly for the Nextera Energy Resources 250 at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time. The race will be shown live on FOX Sports 1 and will also be broadcast via on the Motor Racing Network and on SIRIUSXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

     

  • Crunching the Numbers: Daytona

    Crunching the Numbers: Daytona

    Photo Credit: Rusty Jarrett MRD/CIA
    Photo Credit: Rusty Jarrett MRD/CIA

    As the 2013 season gets underway this weekend at Daytona for the Sprint Cup Series, Nationwide Series, and the Camping World Truck Series, it’s time once again to analyze the statistics and see just who you should be watching this weekend at the “World Center of Racing”.

    First on the docket of racing this weekend will be the Camping World Truck Series, which will take to the high banks Friday night in the Nextera Energy Resources 250.

    Top 10 Camping World Series drivers at Daytona International Speedway (last 10 races):

    Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
    John King 1 1 1 1 0 6 23.0 1.0
    Todd Bodine 8 2 6 7 0 136 9.0 5.4
    Timothy Peters 5 1 2 3 0 17 23.0 6.4
    Kyle Busch 4 0 3 3 0 18 19.2 7.8
    Ty Dillon 1 0 0 1 0 0 4.0 9.0
    Clay Greenfield 1 0 0 1 0 0 26.0 10.0
    Chris Fontaine 2 0 0 1 0 0 19.0 13.0
    Justin Lofton 3 0 1 1 0 0 17.0 13.0
    Dusty Davis 1 0 0 0 0 0 16.0 13.0
    Matt Crafton 10 0 1 4 0 1 16.2 14.6

    Who to Watch: Defending winner John King returns in 2013 after winning in his first attempt last year in a wild finish. King will be with a different team, but is batting 1.000 in his career at Daytona, so he will definitely be one to keep an eye on. Todd Bodine leads the series regulars with 2 wins and an average finish of 5.4. Other series regulars who run well at Daytona include Timothy Peters with 1 win and an average finish of 6.4 and Ty Dillon, who finished top 10 in his first outing last year. Throw in Cup regular Kyle Busch with an average finish of 7.8 and Friday night’s Truck race should be a great race, as usual.

    Next up will be the Nationwide Series taking on the famed 2.5 superspeedway in Florida in the Drive4COPD 300 on Saturday afternoon.

    Top 10 Nationwide Series drivers at Daytona International Speedway (last 10 races):

    Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
    Tony Stewart 6 4 4 5 1 146 10.2 4.2
    Austin Dillon 2 0 2 2 0 8 23.5 4.5
    Kurt Busch 2 1 1 2 0 65 9.5 5.5
    Kyle Busch 10 0 5 7 0 132 12.9 8.7
    Matt Kenseth 3 0 1 2 0 39 7.3 9.7
    Brian Vickers 5 0 2 4 0 12 17.2 11.8
    Kasey Kahne 6 0 1 4 0 5 14.5 12.5
    Dale Earnhardt Jr 8 1 4 5 0 62 8.5 12.8
    Parker Kligerman 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.0 13.0
    Elliott Sadler 4 0 1 3 0 49 9.5 13.8

    Who to Watch: The field will be stocked full of Cup regulars, with Tony Stewart as best by far when the Nationwide Series rolls into Daytona. Stewart has 4 wins in 6 starts and has finished no worse than 10th in all but 1 start. This year should be more of the same from Stewart as he will be the one to beat for the win. Others to keep an eye on will be Austin Dillon with a 4.5 average finish in 2 starts, as well as the Busch brothers and Matt Kenseth, all of whom have an average finish of 9.7 or better. Should be another exciting race for NASCAR’s 2nd tier series.

    Rounding out the weekend will be Sunday’s 55th running of the Daytona 500, which should be even more of a spectacle than usual with the points race debut of the Gen6 car.

    Top 10 Sprint Cup Series drivers at Daytona International Speedway (last 10 races):

    Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
    Carl Edwards 10 0 3 7 1 2 14.4 11.1
    Matt Kenseth 10 2 5 7 1 164 15.7 11.1
    Tony Stewart 10 2 3 4 0 149 13.3 12.0
    Kevin Harvick 10 1 2 5 0 90 15.7 14.1
    Kurt Busch 10 0 4 6 0 82 20.3 14.4
    Dale Earnhardt Jr 10 0 3 5 1 78 9.0 14.9
    Kasey Kahne 10 0 2 5 0 24 15.0 15.5
    Bobby Labonte 10 0 1 2 0 3 28.0 16.3
    Paul Menard 10 0 0 3 1 37 20.8 16.6
    Kyle Busch 10 1 3 4 0 252 13.9 16.8

    Who to Watch: The top 10 is a virtual who’s who of restrictor plate masters with recent Daytona winners Matt Kenseth, Tony Stewart and Kevin Harvick, who have 5 wins among them in the last 10 races at Daytona, being book-ended by a consistent Carl Edwards and Kurt Busch. All 5 of these drivers have an average finish of 14.4 or less over the last 10 races and all of the top 10 drivers could be threats for the win on Sunday. The one X-factor, however, will be the debut of the Gen6 car and the vast array of unknowns associated with it, so anyone could be a winner in the “Great American Race” this year.