Home Blog Page 1044

Finkea Review: Elevate Your Indices Trading Experience with This Broker

Indices trading allows you to speculate on the entire market’s performance rather than just an individual stock’s performance. Therefore, traders can have a macroscopic view of economic trends and access various opportunities to earn money. This is why indices trading excites many traders. However, your trading skills, experience, and brokerage platform play a critical role in achieving success in indices trading. Meet Finkea, one of the most trusted brokers for financial trading. This financial agency not only offers the best possible environment and trading conditions to engage in indices trading but also provides you with world-class guidance support so that you can improve your trading skills. This article aims to describe how trading with Finkea can elevate your trading experience

What is So Exciting About Finkea?

Support & GuidanceFinkea is developed and managed by several experienced traders who know how to guide traders to financial success. Whenever you encounter an issue regarding financial trading and technical support, you can contact the support team of this financial hub. They will solve your issue immediately. More importantly, to help traders improve their knowledge and trading skills about indices trading, this organization provides them with plenty of educational materials and expert advisors. Every trader will also receive support from an account manager.
SecurityWhen you are investing your money in indices trading, it is quite normal to worry about the security of your fund. This brokerage company takes strong protective measures to safeguard your funds and maintain the secrecy of your documents.
AccessibilityThe Finkea WebTrader platform is accessible through the desktop terminal using any browser and also through the mobile application. Therefore, you can access the global indices markets at any time and monitor your trading positions. With this financial company, you can also trade a wide variety of financial instruments, including commodities, currency pairs, futures, cryptocurrencies, stocks, and many more. 
Tools and FeaturesFrom advanced charts to drawing tools and numerous technical indicators, there are all the necessary trading tools available on this trading platform. These tools will help you understand the market conditions, and the performances of the indices, and identify the right opportunities to make profits.
Trading Conditions At Finkea, traders can choose the most suitable plan for their trading journey as there are five separate account type options available. If you are new to online trading, you can trade with a Trader or Beginner account. Experienced traders can pick an Experienced, Expert, or VIP account and boost their gains utilizing high leverages. You will also benefit from 0.0 Pip spreads and commission-free trading. 

Trade Index CFDs and Earn Healthy Returns with Finkea

With Finkea, you can trade index CFDs and earn from the price differences of the indices. Here, you only need to speculate on the future price. If you want to start your trading journey with a small capital, CFD trading is the best option for you. So, start trading index CFDs now with Finkea and elevate your trading experience with higher leverage and ultra-low spreads.

Indy 500 Décor, Community Initiatives Celebrate, Extend Iconic Month of May

2023 Indianapolis 500 - Pace Car

INDIANAPOLIS (Monday, April 29, 2024) – May is community, and nothing brings people together like the stunning art and fan-friendly events that signal “This is May” throughout Central Indiana.

Whether a lifelong resident or a first-time visitor, these elements energize everyone across Central Indiana and way beyond to celebrate the 108th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge on Sunday, May 26 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

“Community is one of the many ways May is special,” IMS President J. Douglas Boles said. “Throughout the city, our neighbors, partners and local organizations roll out the checkered carpet to welcome visitors and gather together to ensure the Indy 500 is truly ‘The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.’”

Countdown Signage installed this week includes the renaming of downtown Indianapolis streets after Indianapolis 500 drivers and the takeover of the JW Marriott hotel façade and Indianapolis International Airport Civic Plaza.

Additional décor includes the latest collection of Welcome Race Fans art. In collaboration with the Arts Council of Indianapolis, the artwork of Anna Afshar, Lindsey Lord, Miracle Hall (Ratat Rayay), Jaylei Marie Osting and Carlos Sosa Pagán has been installed at locations throughout Indianapolis. Look for the art on Main Street in Speedway, the Indianapolis International Airport, Indianapolis Arts Garden, The Amp at 16 Tech and Clay Terrace Mall, among other locations. Snap a photo and share it on your social media pages with #WelcomeRaceFans to help welcome fans to Indy.

As the calendar turns to May, neighborhoods around the state begin to proudly display their own festive, race-themed decor. It’s common to see black-and-white drapes, checkered pennants, race flags and even homemade decorations at Hoosier homes and businesses.

Embrace the sense of community that embodies Indy during the Month of May by adorning your homes in race-themed decor and by hosting a porch party with neighbors and friends. The community-centric, porch party initiative works in partnership with the Harrison Center for the Arts. The first porch party celebration of the year will take place Friday, May 3 at the Harrison Center. Register your porch party at ims.com/porching.

Race fans also are encouraged to dress themselves in their best and most festive “500” items every Friday in May. 500 Fashion Fridays is a creative and unique outlet for fans to show their Indy 500 pride and excitement for the race. Be sure to share #500FashionFridays photos!

Once you’re dressed in your best, there are numerous ways to celebrate community.

IMS is partnering with Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Indiana to support the “Rally for MENtors: 300 Men in 3 Months” recruitment campaign. To learn more about BBBSCI and how to get involved, visit www.bebigforkids.org/rally-for-mentors-300-men-in-3-months/.

For the third year in a row, IMS will host a naturalization ceremony. On Tuesday, May 14, which is also opening day of practice for the Indianapolis 500, 33 individuals from around the world will be inducted as United States citizens at the Racing Capital of the World. The event will be held in Pagoda Plaza and is open to the public for those attending practice.

Bike to the 500 presented by Bike Indianapolis continues this year with two departure times, allowing the most loyal fans to arrive in time for prerace ceremonies. With parking sold out for Race Day, Bike to the 500 offers fans a safe, environmentally friendly and healthy commute to the Speedway on Indy 500 Race Day. The Race Day commute will begin at the AMP at 16 Tech, and hundreds of bikers will depart that morning for the track. To secure a spot in line on Race Day, cyclists must register in advance here.

To explore the full list of Indy 500 community initiatives and programs, visit IMS.com/Community. To see an up-to-date calendar of events IMS will have a presence at this May, click here.

Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Racing: Chase Briscoe Kansas Advance

CHASE BRISCOE
Kansas Advance
No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Event Overview

● Event: AdventHealth 400 (Round 12 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, May 5
● Location: Kansas Speedway in Kansas City
● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 267 laps/400.5 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 85 laps / Final Stage: 102 laps
● TV/Radio: FS1 / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● The AdventHealth 400 Sunday at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City will be Chase Briscoe’s seventh career NASCAR Cup Series start at the 1.5-mile oval. While Briscoe is still looking for his first top-10 finish at Kansas, he has been quietly consistent, with four finishes among the top-20 and only one result outside the top-25. Briscoe’s best Cup Series finish at Kansas is 13th, earned in September 2022.

● Briscoe’s Kansas record in the NASCAR Xfinity Series was a study in improvement – specifically, rapid improvement. After finishing 30th in his first Xfinity Series race at Kansas in October 2018, Briscoe returned to the track the following October and finished an impressive third after leading twice for 33 laps. He finished 14th in July 2020 but then roared back three months later to utterly dominate. In his final Xfinity Series start at Kansas in October 2020, Briscoe led four times for a race-high 159 laps – all but 41 of the race’s 200 laps. He finished 1.199 seconds ahead of runner-up Daniel Hemric to take the last of his 11 career Xfinity Series victories.

● Briscoe has made two NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts at Kansas. He finished fifth in his first Truck Series race at the track in May 2017 and, in his return to Kansas four years later, he finished 19th (May 2021).

● Briscoe’s epic run to the 2016 ARCA Menards Series title ended with a mic drop at Kansas. Having already sewn up the series title before the last race of the year at Kansas, Briscoe went into the series finale and made that race a microcosm of his season. He won the pole, led twice for a race-high 67 laps (all but 33 of the race’s 100 laps) and then won the race with a 1.464-second advantage over runner-up Austin Cindric. It was Briscoe’s sixth win of the season and he padded his championship tally to an eye-popping 5,290 points, which was 535 points more than his nearest pursuer, Tom Hessert III. In that title-winning season, Briscoe’s average start across 20 races was 4.1 and his average finish was 5.2 with a total of 949 laps led.

● The 2024 season marks the 15th year of partnership between Rush Truck Centers and Stewart-Haas Racing, and it’s a partnership that goes well beyond a design on a racecar. All Stewart-Haas racecars are transported via tractor-trailers from Rush Truck Centers, the premier service solutions provider to the commercial vehicle industry. And those tractor-trailers are supported by the RushCare Customer Support team of parts and service experts, who also provide concierge-level service for scheduling maintenance, technical support, mobile service dispatch and roadside assistance, along with help locating the nearest Rush Truck Centers dealer, and more. Rush Truck Centers is the largest network of commercial vehicle dealerships in North America with 150 locations in the United States and Ontario, Canada, and takes pride in its integrated approach to customer needs – from vehicle sales to aftermarket parts, service and body shop operations, plus financing, insurance, leasing and rental, as well as alternate fuel systems and other vehicle technologies.

● Rush Truck Centers is providing the chance to own a piece of iconic Peterbilt history – the last and only 2025 Peterbilt Model 389X ever produced. Proceeds will be donated to the Wounded Warrior Project to help provide free, life-changing programs and services for America’s heroes and their families. Enter to win at WinTheLast389.com. A donation is not required to enter.

Cummins joins Rush Truck Centers for this weekend’s race at Kansas. Cummins Inc., is a global power technology leader that designs, manufactures, distributes and services a broad portfolio of power solutions. These solutions include advanced diesel, natural gas, hybrid, electric, fuel cell and other technologies. Cummins powers the future through innovations that make people’s lives better. From buses that transport kids to and from school, to the trucks that carry essentials, to construction, mining equipment, trains and ships, and critical backup power for places like data centers and hospitals, Cummins is doing it with the cleanest solutions available. Learn more at cummins.com.

Chase Briscoe, Driver of the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Ford Mustang Dark Horse

While Texas Motor Speedway isn’t an exact copy of Kansas, it’s still an intermediate-style oval. Does your sixth-place run three weeks ago at Texas provide some insight as to how you’ll perform at Kansas?

“I’d like to think it would. Texas is a very unique mile-and-a-half in that you’re way slower in one end than you are in the other. Kansas is also a very unique mile-and-a-half just because it’s very high-speed. I would say it probably has the fastest corner speed of any mile-and-a-half we go to. So if your stuff was OK in (turns) three and four at Texas, I’d say it maybe correlates a little bit to Kansas. Kansas is just so fast and smooth. There are no bumps, no anything, so it’s kind of a weird racetrack. We don’t really go anywhere that’s like Kansas. Our mile-and-a-half stuff’s been pretty good this year. I don’t know if we’re going to have race-winning speed going there, but I do think we’re going to at least be in the hunt.”

Has the new Ford Mustang Dark Horse been an improvement compared to the previous generation Mustang, and will its updated aerodynamics be of help at Kansas?

“The Ford Mustang Dark Horse is 100 percent better, at least for us. I can’t speak for every Ford driver, but for us on the 14, it is 100 percent better. We have more performance and the aero balance is just way more together. The front and back of the car work together a lot more. In traffic, it’s way better. Everything about it has been way better for us. It is weird how it seems some of the Ford teams don’t feel the same, but for us, last year we were so far off that anything was going to feel like an improvement. I feel like Kansas is a place where we can go and run well.”

The Kansas layout looks simple, but is that simplicity a bit deceptive when it comes to turning consistently fast laps?

“Kansas is fairly simple. Out of all the mile-and-a-halves that we go to, I would say in some ways it’s probably the least technical, but in other ways it’s one of the more technical tracks, just because it seems like for whatever reason, especially the last couple of years, Kansas has become a track where everybody runs on the fence. So it’s really, really hard to pass there. Your car does have to be really balanced there just to be able to pass anybody and not get tight behind guys. Any time you run the fence, there’s a technical aspect to it, but at the same time, it’s so high-speed, it’s not like we’re in there doing a lot of stuff with the pedals, but there’s a lot of commitment that comes with that as far as understanding the downforce and where you put your car compared to others. And the other thing that’s really hard about Kansas is just the wind. It seems like that racetrack, more than anywhere we go, your car drives totally different on one end than the other just because of the direction of the wind and how windy it is when we’re there.”

Kansas is another track where you had success in the Xfinity Series. In fact, you ended your career in the series there with a win. What made Kansas work for you in an Xfinity Series car?

“We just had really good stuff, truthfully. I think anybody could’ve driven that thing to win when we won there in the playoffs. I don’t know how many laps we led, but it felt like we led every single one of them. Our stuff was just extremely good, and that’s what it takes at Kansas. It’s one of those places where you’re only going to go as fast as your car allows. It’s a place where the driver, out of all the mile-and-a-halves, probably makes the least amount of difference just because it is so fast. (Kevin) Harvick said all the time, ‘You can’t make a slow car go fast,’ and that’s the truth when you go to Kansas. If your car’s not nearly perfect, it’s going to be a long day for you. So, hopefully, we can take what we’ve learned this year and apply it to Kansas. I feel like at Texas our car was 85 percent, 90 percent close to being perfect, so I feel like we’re right on that window of finding what perfect is, as close as you can be to that. You’re never 100 percent, but you can get to 98, 99 percent, and if we can do that, then we can go to Kansas and run well.”

How much different is a NASCAR Cup Series car at Kansas compared to what you were used to when you were there in an Xfinity Series car?

“The NextGen car is kind of different everywhere. The biggest thing when you got to the Cup Series is that in Xfinity, there are probably only two or three guys whose cars are really, really good and the rest were way off. And if you got to Kansas and you were off, you were way off. But you get to the Cup Series, there are now 25 guys whose cars drive pretty dang good. It just makes it way tougher. I don’t know what my stats have been like at Kansas but they definitely haven’t been good, so hopefully we turn that around when we go back there.”

Your introduction to Kansas was pretty amazing. In the ARCA race in 2016, you won the pole, led 67 of 100 laps, won the race, and that was during a dominating ARCA season. How big of a deal was that win and that kind of domination when you’re really trying to stake your claim to being a professional racecar driver?

“It was huge. ARCA finished their season at Kansas when I was racing there, and we were able to wrap up the championship before even going to Kansas that year. When you already have won the championship, you want to go out winning the race, right? We went in there, sat on the pole and won the race. It was cool. I knew when I ran that race it was probably going to be the last ARCA race I would ever run, so you want to go out on top. But also, I didn’t have anything for sure going into 2017. I was obviously talking to a couple of Truck teams, and when I won that race, that was finally when Ford came and said, ‘Hey, we want you to drive next year for us.’ So it was a big deal to win there and I think about it every time I go back, even though it was eight or so years ago now. That’s kind of where it all started, in a sense. After that weekend was when I finally signed my Ford contract, so it’s always cool to go back.”

You, crew chief Richard Boswell and the entire No. 14 team have been steadily chipping away at the points and rising up the leaderboard. What are some of the things that you and the team have been doing to find that improvement?

“It’s a lot of little things. I’d say the biggest thing is we’ve just tried to be way more consistent with what we bring to the racetrack. In the past, not that we would do a total 180 every week, but I felt like we never really built on anything. We were always like, ‘This looks way better, let’s go do this.’ The next week, it was ‘This looks way better, let’s go do this.’ We just didn’t have a lot of consistency in what our cars were doing. Over the offseason, Boswell and I kind of talked – in the Xfinity Series, that’s kind of the same approach we had that first year, where I’d run a (Kevin) Harvick setup one week and a Cole (Custer) setup another week. And going into 2020, we were just, ‘Let’s just build a setup and let you figure out how it drives and kind of chip away at it little by little.’ That’s kind of the approach we went into this year with, let’s just go back to last season and look at the few racetracks we ran well at, what were the similarities, and let’s just build on that and try to get the same type of driving racecar every week. That’s been big for us. I feel like unloading the car off the truck for practice, I know what the car should do every week. In qualifying, we’ve been good because we can kind of fine tune it and we can learn from it week in and week out. I feel like I’ve done more studying this year than ever before, and a lot of that just goes to having teammates who want to kind of do it with me. Noah (Gragson) and I sit down every Tuesday for an hour and a half. It’s me, Noah, Drew (Blickensderfer, No. 10 crew chief) and Boswell, and we just go through video and talk through things, and I’ve just been way more prepared every week when I go to the racetrack. It’s a lot of little things, but I’d just say trying to be more consistent is the biggest thing.”

No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Cummins Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Chase Briscoe

Hometown: Mitchell, Indiana

Crew Chief: Richard Boswell

Hometown: Friendship, Maryland

Car Chief: J.D. Frey

Hometown: Ferndale, California

Engineer: Mike Cook

Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

Spotter: Joey Campbell

Hometown: Berlin, Connecticut

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Shayne Pipala

Hometown: Frankfort Square, Illinois

Rear Tire Changer: Dakota Ratcliff

Hometown: Nashville, Tennessee

Tire Carrier: Jon Bernal

Hometown: Holland, Michigan

Jack Man: Dylan Moser

Hometown: Monroe, North Carolina

Fuel Man: Corey Coppola

Hometown: Bluefield, West Virginia

Road Crew Members

Underneath Mechanic: Stephen Gonzalez

Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Interior Mechanic: Trevor Adams

Hometown: Plymouth, Wisconsin

Tire Specialist: Keith Eads

Hometown: Arlington, Virginia

Shock Specialist: Brian Holshouser

Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Engine Tuner: Jon Phillips

Hometown: Jefferson City, Missouri

Transporter Co-Driver: Todd Cable

Hometown: Shelby, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Dale Lackey

Hometown: Taylorsville, North Carolina

Single Day tickets go on sale tomorrow for NASCAR Xfinity Series event

Pacific Office Automation 147 set for May 31 – June 1 at Portland International Raceway

PORTLAND, Ore. (April 29, 2024) – Single Day ticket sales launch tomorrow (April 30) at 10 a.m. PT for the third annual Pacific Office Automation 147 at Portland International Raceway (PIR), May 31 – June 1. Tickets are available at RacePortland.com for the race weekend headlined by the NASCAR Xfinity Series and an ARCA Menards Series West race on Friday late afternoon.

Starting tomorrow morning, Friday and Saturday General Admission tickets will be available for $25 and $60, respectively. A 2-Day General Admission ticket is just $75. Single Day Grandstand seats will also be available offering the best vantage points at PIR. Children 12 and under are granted free General Admission when accompanied by a ticketed adult.

“We are excited to see both returning race winners and rising stars of NASCAR compete across both days of the 2024 Pacific Office Automation 147. From Marco Andretti to A.J. Allmendinger, we will have some of the biggest names in racing in Portland for an action-packed weekend,” said Jerry Jensen, vice president and general manager of Green Savoree Portland, LLC, which owns and operates the event at PIR. “We look forward to seeing all our terrific Pacific Northwest race fans back at PIR one month from now!”

The jam-packed weekend of racing begins on Friday, May 31 at PIR where fans will experience exciting sports car competition from PRO3 and ARCA Menards Series West stock car action. At 5 p.m. PT, the ARCA field featuring veteran NTT INDYCAR SERIES driver Marco Andretti, defending series champion Sean Hingorani and returning Portland ARCA winner Landen Lewis will take on the twists and turns of PIR for 57 laps.

On Saturday, June 1, the NASCAR Xfinity Series will take the track for qualifying, autographs and the feature 75-lap race. The 2024 Pacific Office Automation 147 will boast a competitive field of NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers including three-time Supercars champion Shane van Gisbergen (Kaulig Racing) and the past two Portland race winners – A.J. Allmendinger (Kaulig Racing) and Cole Custer (Stewart-Haas Racing). In 2022, Allmendinger won the inaugural Pacific Office Automation 147 after coming from the very back of the field to take the lead on lap 72 of 75. In 2023, Cole Custer beat Justin Allgaier to the finish line by 0.142 seconds after taking the lead late after an overtime restart.

In addition to Single Day tickets, 2-Day Grandstand seats and 2-Day parking passes are still available offering the best weekend value for fans. Grandstands are filling fast, so act soon to secure the best seats for both days.

All ticket pricing and options and event updates including the weekend schedule are posted at RacePortland.com. Stay up to speed on NASCAR’s visit to Portland on social media all year long by following #NASCARPortland or by signing up for the E-Club on the website.

About Pacific Office Automation 147:

Portland International Raceway (PIR) is the home of the Pacific Office Automation 147. PIR is a 1.97-mile, 12-turn permanent road course owned by the City of Portland and operated under Portland Parks & Recreation. Opened in 1960 to host sports car and drag racing, the 268-acre property hosts over 550 events annually including automotive and motorcycle road racing, motocross, cruise-ins and other special events including the Rose Cup Races. The 2024 Pacific Office Automation 147 marks the third annual NASCAR Xfinity Series event at PIR. The inaugural Pacific Office Automation 147 in 2022 featured the first visit to the Pacific Northwest by a NASCAR national racing series since 2000. The Pacific Office Automation 147 is owned and operated by Green Savoree Portland, LLC, which also promotes the 2024 Hankook Portland E-Prix (June 29-30, 2024) ABB FIA Formula E event and BITNILE.COM Grand Prix of Portland (Aug. 23-25, 2024) NTT INDYCAR SERIES event at PIR.

For more information, visit RacePortland.com, ‘like’ its Facebook page @PortlandGP or follow updates on Twitter @Race_Portland and Instagram at @Race_Portland using #NASCARPortland.

PT Autosport set for dual Florida race events this weekend

Alex Sedgwick ready for a Porsche Carrera Cup North America doubleheader at the Miami GP while Henry Drury heads to Sebring for his second Toyota GR Cup weekend

MILLVILLE, NJ (29 April 2024) – PT Autosport will have a “split squad” this weekend, with teams in action at two Florida racetracks. PT Autosport with JDX Racing driver Alex Sedgwick looks to capitalize last year’s first Porsche Carrera Cup North America podium in the Crypto.com Formula One Miami Grand Prix doubleheader, while one of the team’s two junior drivers, Henry Drury, is set for two Toyota GR Cup races at Sebring with his Precision Racing LA w/ PT Autosport team.

Sedgwick has plenty of good memories from last year’s Miami GP, having scored his first Porsche Carrera Cup North America podium. Now he looks to move up the podium, ready to capture his first series victory.

The 25-year-old Warwickshire, UK native came into his second season behind the wheel of the No. 98 PT Autosport Porsche 911 GT3 Cup Car with the intention of contending for the championship title and earned two top five place finishes at the Sebring season opener last month. Sedgwick knows that a full season racing on all but two of the tracks the series will visit in 2024 gives him and his JDX team a solid baseline, especially a circuit like Miami, where none of the teams have tested this season.

“Last year was great,” remembers Sedgwick. “That weekend really seemed to be when I started to click with the car. The lack of testing or practice actually helped, as everyone was on a more even playing field. We were unlucky not to come away with a double podium due to a penalty in race one, but it’s definitely somewhere I’m hoping to make a step forward. It’s a high commitment, high-speed track with little run off so being able to learn/adapt quickly with limited practice time will be key.”

Meanwhile, in central Florida, Drury and Precision Racing LA w/ PT Autosport head to Sebring determined to move up the grid in the pair of Toyota GR Cup races, on the heels of Drury’s solid series debut at Sonoma earlier in the month.

The 24-year-old English born, Tampa, Fla. resident – winner of the inaugural PT Autosport Aspiring Driver Shootout – acquitted himself well in his first professional weekend, though the finishes did not reflect how quickly he got up to speed behind the wheel of the No. 88 PT Autosport Toyota GR86 Cup Car.

His performance was particularly impressive given the fact that issues with Sonoma’s full track re-pave cost the participants a test day and two full practice sessions. Drury had just one 30-minute practice, late Friday night in damp and cold conditions, to get up to speed.

“I was just so excited to get started at Sonoma and prove myself, to get to work and show that I deserve my place here,” said Drury. “I think we left Sonoma feeling that we’d missed out on a few opportunities, that we didn’t quite show where we think we can be on the grid. So I think my mindset is still the same as we head to Sebring, that we’re still determined to prove that we’ve got what it takes to be up at the front.

Drury has not raced there himself, but he has worked with Sedgwick at both of Sedgwick’s Porsche Carrera Cup North America races at Sebring – and appreciates the coaching he received from Sedgwick during the Sonoma weekend and leading up to this weekend.

“I did a racing school at Sebring but only on the ‘boring half’ of the circuit corners,” smiles Drury. “So it’s been good to have Alex as a resource. We’re going over footage from his races at Sebring and from my races at Sonoma and trying to put everything together to make sure that we go into the weekend and start things off strongly.”

“I was super impressed with Henry’s performance at Sonoma, especially since it was his first professional race,” said Sedgwick, who also serves as PT Autosport’s Head of Driver Development. “It was a less than optimal scenario, going in with such limited time in the car – and needing to fully learn the car in race conditions, learn the track, and get the car in qualifying mode, all in just 30 minutes. He dealt with that very maturely, putting his head down, making the most of the available time, and progressing throughout the weekend. I’m very proud of him. His pace continues to develop, and more seat time will only improve that. We’ve gone through his videos and feedback, and we went through the post-event report – which every PT junior driver completes after each test or race weekend. Hopefully all that adds up to a good weekend.”

The Toyota GR Cup series will contest two 45-minute races at Sebring. Race one will take the green flag Saturday at 2:50 p.m. ET, with race two Sunday at 2:45 p.m. Both races will be broadcast live at www.grcup.com.

The Porsche Carrera Cup North America series will contest two races at the Miami Grand Prix. Race one takes the green flag Saturday at 5:50 p.m. ET, with race two Sunday at 10:30 a.m. ET. The races will be broadcast live in the U.S., on IMSA.tv, the NBC Peacock streaming app and PorscheCarreraCup.us.

PT Autosport would like to thank partners STEAM Sports Foundation, Classic Car Club of Manhattan, and New Jersey Motorsports Park, as well as JDX Racing partners Byers/Porsche Columbus and Renier Construction.

About PT Autosport — Discover Unique Talent. Develop Champions.

PT Autosport, based at New Jersey Motorsports Park in Millville, NJ, campaigns rising star Alex Sedgwick (UK) in the 2024 Porsche Carrera Cup North America series with JDX Racing, 2022 Aspiring Driver Shootout winner Henry Drury (UK) in the Toyota GR Cup North America series with Precision Racing LA, and 2023 Aspiring Driver Shootout winner Brenna Schubert (USA) in a soon-to-be-announced series for the 2024 season.

PT Autosport is dedicated to providing merit-based motorsport industry opportunities for diverse individuals with high integrity, grit, and coach-ability, achieved through a development program for young aspiring drivers, engineers, mechanics, and other professionals. The first step of this process is applying for the annual Aspiring Driver Shootout, in which aspiring drivers aged 18-23 can compete for a team racing partnership with the team.

A rigorous evaluation process of applicants determines the final competitors for the driver shootout. The winner earns financial support of up to $250,000 ($50,000 guaranteed) to pursue their racing career. The review process also provides the team the chance to identify unique talent for other roles in motorsport, including race engineers, mechanics, and professionals.

PT Autosport is building a community that fosters the development of young talent to find a place where they can make an impact in the motorsport community as a career.

PT Autosport social media

Instagram: @pt_autosport
TikTok: @ptautosport
Twitter: @PtAutosport
Facebook: PT Autosport

How Workshop Manuals Keep Your Car Running Smoothly and Your Wallet Happy

Photo by Mateusz Delegacz on Unsplash

Many of us rely on skilled mechanics to diagnose and fix issues when it comes to car maintenance. Although complex repairs may require this, car owners can independently perform many routine maintenance procedures and minor modifications. Car owners can save money on maintenance, maintain their vehicle’s functionality, and take control of its maintenance by using the workshop handbook. So, download workshop manuals and see how they keep your car running smoothly and your wallet happy.

What Does a Workshop Repair Manual Cover?

Workshop repair guides provide comprehensive guidance on identifying, maintaining, and repairing automobiles. These manuals help users do various automobile tasks by including detailed instructions, illustrations, and photos. They include several different makes and models. These workshop manuals are available for cars, trucks, motorcycles, and heavy machinery. They are a vital resource for anybody performing vehicle maintenance.

Why Is It Important to Download Workshop Repair Manuals?

Here, we tell you why it is essential to download workshop manuals,

Accurate Information: 

Professionals write Workshop Repair Manuals, which contain information that the manufacturer has verified. This guarantees that your methods, equipment, and specs are appropriate for your car.

Cost Savings: 

Using a workshop repair manual to fix your car can save high labour costs. Whether you’re an amateur fixer-upper or a skilled mechanic, the handbook can help you do repairs quickly. Car owners can save on labour costs by handling minor repairs and routine maintenance instead of hiring a professional technician.

Safety: 

When working on cars, safety should always come first. Essential safety advice is provided by workshop repair manual downloads, which can help you prevent mishaps and injuries when performing repairs.

Longevity: 

Workshop manuals can help you maintain and repair your car correctly, extending its life and guaranteeing smooth operation for years.

The Use of Workshop Repair Guides

A workshop repair manual is the most incredible resource for a wide range of tasks and contains the following:

Regular fluid checks

Maintaining clean and appropriate fluid levels is essential because they are vital to your car. Check and replace your engine’s transmission fluid, brake fluid, power steering fluid, engine oil, and coolant. 

Keep an eye on engine warning indicators.

While certain warning lights, such as the brake light, engine temperature gauge, and oil light, can be neglected when driving short distances, three should always be considered. An overheated engine or low oil pressure may render your car in minutes, and the items you haul around in the back could gain value. The Cadillac Escalade in front of you may be in a bumper car situation if you leave the brake light on for a few minutes.

Parts Identification: 

Workshop manuals contain a detailed list of parts that make it possible to identify and acquire the appropriate replacement parts.

Wiring Diagrams: 

The manuals usually include detailed wiring diagrams to aid in diagnosing and repairing electrical issues.

Torque Specifications: 

Appropriate torque is required for operating and safety, and workshop manuals for every significant fastener contain torque standards.

Download Workshop Manuals to Ensure Maintenance, from oil changes to Brake Repairs.

Regular auto maintenance helps maintain a vehicle’s functionality and avoid costly breakdowns. Workshop manuals provide car owners with complete maintenance schedules and instructions tailored to vehicle models. This helps them remember to carry out routine maintenance such as oil changes, tyre rotations, and filter replacements. When the car owner follows this maintenance guideline, they can extend the life of their vehicles and reduce the chance of any damage in the future. 

Check your brakes

Maintaining the quality of your car’s brakes is a must because they are one of its most significant safety elements. Ensure you periodically have your brakes inspected and the brake pads replaced.

Replace Worn Parts

Over time, parts of your car will wear out and must be replaced. This includes everything from the battery, spark plugs, and timing belt. Keep track of your car’s maintenance schedule and replace worn parts as recommended.

Look for an intuitive mechanic that you can trust!

Consider car maintenance as a collaboration between you and your mechanic. Or, more accurately, between the bank that owns the boat loan from your mechanic and your bank account. Money only travels in one direction, and you receive a dependable car.

When the time comes, you’ll be able to make informed decisions since you and your technician will get along well, and you won’t be distracted by questions about the validity of what you’re being told. Because of this importance, we prepared a whole feature on building a solid rapport with your mechanic. 

Conclusion

This is how workshop manuals keep your car running smoothly and your wallet happy. Maintaining the best possible performance of your vehicle for financial and safety reasons is essential. These suggestions can help you extend the life of your car and save money on future repairs. So, download workshop manuals to keep your vehicle in great shape, utilize quality parts, drive carefully, and do routine maintenance.  

ARCA Menards Series / ARCA Menards Series East at Dover Motor Speedway – General Tire 150 Post-Race Notes

  • Connor Zilisch won Friday’s General Tire 150 at Dover Motor Speedway. He is now credited with a victory in both the ARCA Menards Series and ARCA Menards Series East. He’s the 359th driver to win at least one ARCA Menards Series race and the 130th driver to win at least one ARCA Menards Series East race.
  • Combined with Jake Finch’s victory at Talladega Superspeedway last week, it’s the first time there have been back-to-back first-time winners in the ARCA Menards Series since Tyler Ankrum and Luke Fenhaus won at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course and Iowa Speedway in consecutive races in 2023.
  • Finch won the ARCA Menards Series East race at Dover in 2023 at 17 years, 10 months, and 13 days of age. Zilisch won in 2024 at 17 years, 10 months, and 4 days of age.
  • Gio Ruggiero finished second at Dover, his second runner-up finish in two career ARCA Menards Series starts. He also finished second at Phoenix Raceway in March. Ruggiero, who won the series opener at Five Flags Speedway, now unofficially leads the ARCA Menards Series East championship standings by three points over Zilisch.
  • Carson Kvapil finished third in his second career ARCA Menards Series start; he finished second in his series debut at Kansas Speedway last September. He finished second in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Dover.
  • Lavar Scott, from nearby Carney’s Point, New Jersey, finished fourth in front of dozens of friends and family members. It was Scott’s first top-five finish of the season and ties his best career ARCA Menards Series finish.
  • Andres Perez unofficially assumed the ARCA Menards Series championship points lead with his fifth-place finish. Perez’s unofficial lead is just one point over eighth-place finisher Greg Van Alst.
  • Kris Wright persevered for a sixth-place finish despite getting together with Venturini Motorsports teammate Toni Breidinger on lap 136. Breidinger’s day was cut short, relegating her to 15th at the finish.
  • Andy Jankowiak scored his best finish of the season in seventh, his first lead-lap finish of the season.
  • Caleb Costner earned his first career ARCA Menards Series top-ten finish in ninth. His teammate D.L. Wilson finished eleventh.
  • Zachary Tinkle, who was awarded with the 2023 General Tire Spirit Award at the pre-race driver’s meeting, finished tenth; it was his first top-ten finish in the ARCA Menards Series since he finished ninth at Berlin Raceway in 2023.
  • Christian Rose led the ARCA Menards Series championship standings entering the General Tire 150, but he made hard contact with the turn 4 wall completing lap 74 and finished 21st. Rose has finished in the top five in four of his last six ARCA Menards Series starts.
  • William Sawalich set a track record in General Tire Pole Qualifying at 161.812 miles per hour and led 67 of the race’s first 108 laps. He and Zilisch made contact while racing for the lead after the second of the two scheduled race breaks and his Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota made significant contact with the turn 4 wall, ending his day in 17th position. It’s the first time in 10 career ARCA Menards Series East starts that Sawalich finished outside the top five.
  • Alex Clubb made his 50th career ARCA Menards Series start. He completed 96 laps before electrical issues sidelined him, leaving him 18th at the finish.
  • The next race for the ARCA Menards Series is the Tide 150 at Kansas Speedway on Saturday, May 4. The race will be televised live on FS1 at 2 pm ET and will be broadcast on select affiliates of the MRN Radio network nationwide.

About ARCA

The Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA), founded in 1953 by John and Mildred Marcum in Toledo, Ohio, and acquired by NASCAR in April 2018, is the leading grassroots stock car sanctioning body in the United States. Bridging the gap between NASCAR’s top three national touring series and weekly and regional tour racing all across the country, the organization sanctions over 100 races per year in the ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East, ARCA Menards Series West, ASA STARS National Tour, ASA CRA Super Series, ASA Midwest Tour, ASA Southern Super Series plus weekly racing at Toledo and Flat Rock Speedways. For more information about ARCA visit www.arcaracing.com, or follow ARCA on Facebook (@ARCARacing) and Twitter (@ARCA_Racing).

About Menards

A family-owned and run company started in 1958, Menards is recognized as the retail home center leader of the Midwest with 236 stores in 15 states. Menards is truly a one-stop shop for all of your home improvement needs featuring a full-service lumberyard and everything you need to plan a renovation or build a home, garage, cabin, shed, deck, fence or post frame building. You’ll find a large selection of lumber, roofing, siding, construction blocks, trusses, doors and windows, plus cabinets, appliances, countertops, flooring, lighting, paint, plumbing supplies and more. To complete the job, Menards has quality hand tools, power tools, fasteners, electrical tools plus storage options and supplies for everyone from the weekend warrior to the pro!

Menards has what you need to complete your outdoor projects and keep your yard in tip-top shape including mowers, trimmers, blowers, pressure washers and more, plus a beautiful garden center stocked with plants, shrubs, trees, landscaping tools, grass seed, fertilizer options, outdoor décor and patio furniture. Menards also has everyday essentials like health & beauty products, housewares, pet and wildlife supplies, automotive items and even groceries. And at Christmas, an Enchanted Forest display area with impressive trees, lighting, decorations, ornaments, inflatables and more.

Menards is known for friendly Customer Service and as the place to “Save Big Money” with low prices every day, and sales too! For more information, please visit Menards.com to learn about our store locations, offerings and services.

McLaughlin saves season with dominant drive in Alabama

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - APRIL 28: Scott McLaughlin, driver of the #3 Dallara Chevrolet, sprays champagne during the NTT IndyCar Series Children's of Alabama Indy Grand Prix at Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham, Alabama. Photo: Joe Skibinski/IMS Photo

On Wednesday, Scott McLaughlin learned he lost his second-place finish in the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, for push-to-pass violations by Team Penske. As a result, he fell to last in NTT INDYCAR SERIES points.

“We took the penalty, as we said at the start of the week,” he said. “It was black and white. You move on.”

Fast-forward to Sunday, McLaughlin dominated the field to win in Alabama.

He led a race high of 59 laps to win the Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix for the second year in a row, and the fifth time in his career. He built up a large enough gap to pit on Lap 75 and exit pit road ahead of Alex Palou. A caution with five laps to go gave Palou and the field another chance, but nobody had the goods to overtake McLaughlin on the final restart with two laps to go.

“We did what we thought we could do,” he said. “It was execution. Like, probably one of the most I guess you could say so proud of the execution, the way that the team, particularly on the three cars, stuck together. We just kind of kept executing. That’s our word for the rest of the year. Keep knocking ’em out. Points are points. Points are imaginary things. You just, like, get them. It’s a reward at the end of the race.

“It’s about executing. The higher you finish, the more points you get. Ultimately it’s a bonus at the end of the season. We’re here to just take it race by race and see what happens towards the end.”

Teammate, Will Power, who lost 10 points in Wednesday’s penalty announcement, brought his No. 12 Team Penske Chevrolet home to a runner-up finish. INDYCAR rookie, Linus Lundqvist, passed Palou for third on Lap 79. For a moment, he thought he could pass Power in Turn 5. To no avail.

“I think these guys were obviously the pace of the field today,” he said. “I was able to hold off fairly easily from Palou. I think he still had some fuel saving or old tires.”

Felix Rosenqvist and Palou rounded out the top-five.

Christian Lundgaard, Santino Ferrucci, Colton Herta, Marcus Armstrong and Kyle Kirkwood rounded out the top-10.

Race summary

McLaughlin led the field to green at 1:40 p.m. ET. A three-car incident in Turn 1 set the tone for the day. For which Rinus VeeKay served a pass-through penalty, for avoidable contact. I counted at least six times one car touched another, over the course of 90 laps.

McLaughlin pitted from the lead on Lap 28. Palou followed suite, two laps later. Followed by Rosenqvist on Lap 31 and Ferrucci on Lap 36. McLaughlin cycled back to the lead on Lap 37.

Alexander Rossi lost a wheel exiting pit road on Lap 44. Which brought out a caution. Running on a three-stop strategy, Palou stayed out during the caution to retake the lead. When Sting Ray Robb plowed into the Turn 1 tire barrier on Lap 55, Ferrucci stayed out to inherit the lead. It was a lucky break for McLaughlin, who was “probably on the backfoot” when the caution flew.

“That was a way of us getting back to the point where these other guys had to take the fuel and hope they made the fuel,” he said.

After Ferrucci pitted on Lap 66 and Lundqvist on Lap 70, McLaughlin built a roughly 30-second gap to Palou. When he pitted on Lap 75, he exited ahead of Palou.

Aside from Christian Rasmussen’s stall in Turn 14 with five laps to go, it was McLaughlin’s race to lose.

What else happened

File under “Well that happened.”

On Lap 53, a mannequin named Georgina fell off the bridge before the entry to Turn 7 and partially onto the track. Which Luca Ghiotto clipped. In a sports league where fans tape up beer cans to make a beer tower on Carb Day at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, nothing compares to this. Hell, I once saw a bat fly around the media center at Bristol Motor Speedway, and that was less bizarre than any of this.

Nuts and bolts

The race lasted one hour, 56 minutes and 45 seconds, at an average speed of 106.369 mph. There were 10 lead changes among six different drivers and four cautions for 15 laps.

Herta leaves Barber Motorsports Park as the points leader.

Black’s Tire Celebrates 95th Anniversary with Kaulig Racing at Darlington Raceway

Daniel Hemric to Drive No. 31 Black’s Tire Camaro ZL1 for Goodyear 400

LEXINGTON, N.C. (April 29, 2024) – Black’s Tire (BTS) will celebrate its 95th anniversary with the help of Kaulig Racing at Darlington Raceway.

BTS, a longtime partner in NASCAR’s top series, will be the primary partner onboard Daniel Hemric’s No. 31 Camaro ZL1 for the Goodyear 400.

As one of Goodyear’s leading tire partners in the Darlington area, BTS is excited to showcase its throwback colors and logo in the Goodyear 400 for the second year-in-a-row with Kaulig Racing, previously acting as the primary partner of the team’s No. 16 Camaro ZL1 with AJ Allmendinger in the 2023 Goodyear 400.

“We’re excited to team up with our friends at Kaulig Racing for the second time at Darlington!” said Ricky Benton, president at Black’s Tire. “With this year being our 95th anniversary, we thought what better way to celebrate than to use our ‘throwback’ colors for NASCAR’s annual throwback weekend?“

With many of its 70 locations in The Lady in Black’s backyard, BTS will once again give back to its customers and team members by offering them a chance to bring their moms to the track for an afternoon of action-packed racing as part of its Mother’s Day promotion. Coining the phrase “Let’s Go Together”, BTS ensures all who walk through its doors feel like family.

“Not only are we excited to team up with Black’s Tire for its 95th anniversary, but we have the chance to help thank moms of BTS employees and customers on Mother’s Day,” said Chris Rice, president of Kaulig Racing. We’re proud to partner with an organization that values family as much as we do at Kaulig Racing. We can’t wait to take on ‘Too Tough To Tame’ together.”

The Goodyear 400 will kick off on Sunday, May 12 at 3 PM ET with coverage on FS1.

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 earned 23 NXS wins, made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started, and won two regular-season championships. In 2021, the team competed in select NCS events, before expanding to a two-car, full-time NCS team in 2022 and adding a third, part-time entry during the 2023 season. Since its first NCS start in 2021, the team has earned two wins. Kaulig Racing is currently fielding two full-time entries in the NCS and continues to field three full-time NXS entries, with a part-time fourth entry at select events. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Racing: Noah Gragson Kansas Advance

NOAH GRAGSON
Kansas Advance
No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Event Overview

● Event: AdventHealth 400 (Round 12 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, May 5
● Location: Kansas Speedway in Kansas City
● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 267 laps/400.5 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 85 laps / Final Stage: 102 laps
● TV/Radio: FS1 / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Two months ago, in just the third race of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series campaign at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Noah Gragson finished an impressive sixth. It was his third career top-10 and it came in his 42nd career Cup Series start, but only his third points-paying start with Stewart-Haas Racing. Since then, the driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse has scored four finishes of 12th or better, including a career-best third-place drive two weeks at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway and another sixth-place run last Sunday at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway. Las Vegas’ 1.5-mile oval is similarly structured to the 1.5-mile oval Gragson will visit this weekend – Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, host to Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 – and he’s eyeing the intermediate-style track for a Las Vegas-esque performance.

● After the second race of the season at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Gragson was mired a dismal 42nd in the championship standings. In the nine races that have followed, Gragson has clawed his way to 21st in points, a gain of 21 positions.

● Last Sunday at Dover, Gragson made his milestone 50th career NASCAR Cup Series start. Three of those starts have come at Kansas, making the D-shaped oval in America’s Heartland one of the rare venues where Gragson has run multiple Cup Series races. In his first two Kansas races in 2022, Gragson earned a pair of 18th-place finishes. In his return to Kansas last May for the AdventHealth 400, Gragson finished 29th.

● Gragson has five NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Kansas and, collectively, they are emblematic of his growth as a racecar driver. The Las Vegas native finished 13th in his first Xfinity Series start at Kansas in October 2019 and then scored a 15th-place finish in his return to the track in July 2020. Two strong runs at Kansas followed in October 2020 and October 2021 when Gragson led a total of 22 laps, but crashes left him with finishes of 36th and 35th, respectively. But in Gragson’s fifth and final Xfinity Series start at Kansas, he put a whole race together and punctuated it with an exclamation point. In September 2022, Gragson qualified fifth and then led three times for 20 laps, including the final 18, to take the victory. It was the 10th of his 13 career Xfinity Series wins.

● Before that NASCAR Xfinity Series triumph at Kansas, Gragson had already put his name on the track’s list of winners. In May 2018, in his second and final NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series start at Kansas, Gragson dominated. He won the pole with a lap of 30.564 seconds at 176.678 mph and proceeded to lead five times for a race-high 128 laps, pacing the field for all but 39 of race’s 167 laps.

● Gragson’s Kansas debut came in the ARCA Menards Series. On Oct. 14, 2016, an 18-year-old Gragson started eighth and finished fifth in the Kansas 150.

Noah Gragson, Driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

You finished sixth earlier this year at Las Vegas – a 1.5-mile oval that has similar characteristics to Kansas. While that race was back in March, can what you learned in Las Vegas translate to Kansas?

“I think the mile-and-a-halves are the bread and butter for our program. Specifically, it seems like we’ve had good speed at the two we’ve been at, we’ve had good pace. So with that being said, it definitely is one that interests me, going back to a mile-and-a-half. I’m looking forward to Kansas, Darlington, Charlotte and the rest of the mile-and-a-halves this year just because I feel like that’s probably where I excel at, now, as a driver. I used to love the short tracks and felt like I was really good and only got wins on short tracks. Now, I feel like I’m terrible at the short tracks and better at the intermediate-style tracks.”

How much of a factor is the wind at Kansas?

“I haven’t really noticed the wind too much at any racetrack. I know it gets pretty bad at Vegas and some other tracks, but I don’t really feel it too much in the car. A lot of guys are pretty sensitive to it but, I don’t know why, I haven’t been able to notice it in huge amounts.”

Kansas is a track where you have a decent amount of NASCAR Cup Series experience with three starts at the 1.5-mile oval. You’ve got two 18th-place finishes and one run of 29th. What has that place been like for you in a Cup car?

“I’ve always run pretty strong at Kansas. I don’t know if it’s necessarily my favorite track, but it’s definitely been a good track and I’ve figured it out, gotten an Xfinity win there, a Truck win, and have run well during the Cup races. Haven’t finished great, but ran great.”

You have five starts in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Kansas. Those first four starts were a bit of a struggle, but that fifth start was impressive. You qualified fifth and led three times for 20 laps, including the final 18, to take the win. How’d you do it, and how satisfying was it to take the checkered flag?

“It was either hit or miss there. We always ran well there but never finished well. But once I finally figured out how to put a whole race together, we ended up getting a win. The same thing happened in Trucks, too. The first year I went there, had decent speed but just didn’t capitalize on the entirety of the day. That’s kind of how the Cup races have been, too. Nonetheless, it’s a fun track and, to be able to put it all together, it’s good.”

That Xfinity Series win at Kansas was not your first win there. You won a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Kansas in 2018, and pretty handily, too. You won the pole and led five times for a race-high 128 laps, and the race only went 167 laps. It was only your second-ever start at the track and you beat your boss at the time, Kyle Busch. How’d you do it?

“It was probably bigger just to win the race, in general. It was definitely a little sweeter because Kyle was in it, but we had a lot of speed that year and, once again, didn’t capitalize on the races where we had that speed and had shots to win. I got the pole, we won the first stage, the second stage, and ultimately won the race, so it was kind of a perfect day, a perfect weekend. That was a pretty cool moment.”

You ran an ARCA race at Kansas in 2016 and finished fifth. At that time, it was one of the bigger tracks you had raced on. What were you experiencing as an 18-year-old competing at Kansas?

“It was crazy. I never dealt with aero too much and having to move myself around, so learning on the fly and trying to figure that out and how to position your car just so you could have the best aero positioning was big, and that place was fast, learning how to drive around that place. I wish I could go back to that day knowing what I know now, I probably would’ve won that race. But with that being said, I was doing all I could to try and figure it out on the fly, and as I’ve gained experience, I’ve definitely learned a lot since that day.”

No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Noah Gragson

Hometown: Las Vegas

Crew Chief: Drew Blickensderfer

Hometown: Decatur, Illinois

Car Chief: Jerry Cook

Hometown: Toledo, Ohio

Engineer: James Kimbrough

Hometown: Pensacola, Florida

Spotter: Andy Houston

Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Ryan Mulder

Hometown: Sioux Center, Iowa

Rear Tire Changer: Trevor White

Hometown: Arlington, Texas

Tire Carrier: Tyler Bullard

Hometown: King, North Carolina

Jack Man: Sean Cotten

Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Fuel Man: James “Ace” Keener

Hometown: Fortuna, California

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Chris Trickett

Hometown: Grafton, West Virginia

Mechanic: Beau Whitley

Hometown: Carmel, Indiana

Tire Specialist: Jacob Cooksey

Hometown: Westbrookville, New York

Engine Tuner: Matt Moeller

Hometown: Monroe, New York

Transporter Co-Driver: Steve Casper

Hometown: Salisbury, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Matt Murphy

Hometown: Augusta, Georgia