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RCR NXS Race Recap: Richmond Raceway

Jesse Love and the No. 2 Whelen Chevrolet Team Qualify for Dash 4 Cash by Earning Top-Five Finish at Richmond Raceway

Finish: 5th
Start: 8th
Points: 4th

“Our No. 2 Whelen team had a good day. We struggled mid-race, but all the guys on my Richard Childress Racing team kept digging to find a way to end with a decent day. We certainly did that. We tried some things, and it didn’t quite work out for us. Danny (Stockman) made a phenomenal pit call at the end to take tires which propelled us to fifth. It’s a pleasure to drive this Whelen Chevrolet and I’m grateful for everyone who supports our team. We will give it our best shot in the Dash 4 Cash next weekend at Martinsville Speedway.” -Jesse Love

Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet Team Secure Eighth-Place Result at Richmond Raceway

Finish: 8th
Start: 16th
Points: 2nd

“Overall, I’m happy that our No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet was able to finish inside the top-10 once again. Racing at Richmond Raceway hasn’t been our strong suit, and we still have work to do before coming back here next season. It’s a tricky track. As the rubber laid down, I gained front turn running the bottom which allowed me to catch the car in front. Once I got to his bumper though, the car got tight across the middle and I struggled overall with drive off unless I was completely out of the grey. It’s a shame to miss the Dash 4 Cash by one spot, but our Richard Childress Racing team will keep pushing to be better each week.” -Austin Hill

Stewart-Haas Racing: Richmond 250 from Richmond Raceway

STEWART-HAAS RACING
Richmond 250
Date: March 30, 2024
Event: Richmond 250 (Round 6 of 33)
Series: NASCAR Xfinity Series
Location: Richmond (Va.) Raceway (.75-mile oval)
Format: 250 laps, broken into three stages (75 laps/75 laps/100 laps)

Race Winner: Chandler Smith of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 1 Winner: Aric Almirola of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 2 Winner: Aric Almirola of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)

SHR Race Finish:

● Cole Custer (Started 3rd / Finished 10th, Running, completed 249 of 250 laps)
● Riley Herbst (Started 14th / Finished 13th, Running, completed 249 of 250 laps)

SHR Points:

● Cole Custer (3rd with 224 points, 41 out of first)
● Riley Herbst (5th with 194 points, 71 out of first)

SHR Notes:

● Custer earned his fourth top-10 of the season and his sixth top-10 in nine career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Richmond.
● Custer has never finished outside of the top-15 at Richmond.
● This was Custer’s fourth straight top-10 at Richmond.
● Custer finished eighth in Stage 1 to earn three bonus points and ninth in Stage 2 to earn two more bonus points.
● Custer led once for seven laps to increase his laps-led total at Richmond to 172.
● Herbst earned his fourth top-15 of the season and his fifth top-15 in seven career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Richmond.
● Herbst has only finished outside the top-15 once at Richmond since joining SHR in 2021.
● Herbst finished sixth in Stage 1 to earn five bonus points.

Race Notes:

● Chandler Smith won the Richmond 250 to score his third career NASCAR Xfinity Series victory, his second of the season, and his second at Richmond. His margin over second-place Aric Almirola was 4.495 seconds.
● There were six caution periods for a total of 51 laps.
● Only nine of the 38 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.
● Smith leaves Richmond as the championship leader with a 10-point advantage over second-place Austin Hill.

Sound Bites:

“I felt like we definitely chased the car a little bit at the start. We were solid, and I thought we got the car pretty good that last stage. The tires just got killed somehow. Something was very strange with the tires with how you could hurt them. I didn’t even feel like I was going hard, and it just went really bad, so we were able to salvage pitting there. JT (Jonathan Toney, crew chief) used some good strategy to get us a good finish, but it was definitely a strange day overall. We’ll just have to move on to the next one. I think we had something there.” –Cole Custer, driver of the No. 00 Haas Automation Ford Mustang

“Man, it’s tough having such a strong car all day and then just fading at the end. Cautions didn’t really play out how we would’ve liked and our tires got so bad as the green flag run went on in the final stage. I wish we could’ve gotten up front with our Monster Energy Ford Mustang Dark Horse, but we just struggled to get the balance right. We started off too loose, but then got too tight. We’ll move on to Martinsville.” –Riley Herbst, driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang

Next Up:

The next event on the NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule is the DUDE Wipes 250 on Saturday, April 6 at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. The race begins at 7:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by FS1 and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Kaulig Racing Race Recap | Richmond – ToyotaCare 250

JOSH WILLIAMS
No. 11 Alloy Employer Services Chevrolet Camaro

  • Josh Williams qualified 27th for the ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway.
  • Williams gained four spots before the race’s first caution came out on lap 21. The No. 11 Alloy Employer Services Chevy continued rolling forward following the lap-27 restart, reaching 15th by lap 43 when the second yellow flag waved. Williams fired off from 13th with 19 to go in the stage, gaining one spot before the green-white-checkered to finish stage one in 12th.
  • Williams restarted in 16th after coming down pit road for tires and fuel during the stage break. After falling to 20th, the fourth yellow flag of the race flew, 20 laps into the second stage. The green waved again on lap 102, and the No. 11 Chevy Camaro began passing cars in the middle lane. Williams jumped past the No. 98 to move into 10th place, but the No. 14, on fresher tires, passed Williams on final lap of stage two, resulting in an 11th-place second-stage finish.
  • Williams pitted for tires and fuel under yellow and restarted in 14th with 91 laps to go. Gearing up for the long run, he dropped back to 17th, but the caution waved with 77 laps remaining. Williams stayed out under yellow and restarted in 13th on lap 184. The remaining 67 laps went caution free, and Williams took the checkered flag in 12th as the second-highest-running driver that last pitted on lap 154.

“I’m really happy we had a calm, fast race today. There was a ton of traffic to deal with, and if the cards fell right, we might’ve had a top-five day. We needed this to get moving back in the right direction.” – Josh Williams

AJ ALLMENDINGER
No. 16 Action Industries Chevrolet Camaro

  • AJ Allmendinger qualified seventh for the ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway.
  • Allmendinger reported early his Action Industries Chevy was lacking grip. When the caution came out on lap 21, the No. 16 had fallen back to 10th place. After the restart, Allmendinger fell back to 13th before the caution came back out on lap 44. Under caution, the team came down pit road for fuel and adjustments to help Allmendinger get off the splitter. The No. 16 restarted in 34th place and went on to finish the opening stage in 22nd.
  • Under the stage break, Allmendinger pit for tires, fuel and adjustments to help with drive off. The No. 16 restarted the second stage in 18th place and took over 16th on the first lap green. On lap 105, Allmendinger took over 14th place from his teammate in the No. 97. Allmendinger began falling back on lap 125 and ended the second stage in 20th place. The team took a big swing during the stage break making multiple adjustments to set Allmendinger up for the final stage.
  • Allmendinger restarted the third stage in 16th place. The caution came out on lap 175 and Allmendinger reported the No. 16 was more competitive after the last adjustments. The team stayed out under caution and restarted in seventh on lap 183. As the cars with fresher tires came through the field, Allmendinger fell back to 14th place by lap 229 where he went on to finish in the ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway.

“Proud of everyone on our No. 16 Action Industries Chevy for never giving up during the race today. We’re disappointed that the direction we went didn’t work, but we’re on to Martinsville.” – AJ Allmendinger  

SHANE van GISBERGEN
No. 97 WeatherTech Chevrolet Camaro

  • Shane van Gisbergen qualified 12th for the ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond Raceway.
  • By lap 10, Van Gisbergen settled into 17th and maintained his position until the first caution flag waved on lap 21. Staying out under the caution, the WeatherTech team restarted 17th on lap 28. The second caution flag waved on lap 44 with Van Gisbergen scored in 16th. Under the caution, the WeatherTech team hit pit road for adjustments to the No. 97 Chevrolet. Following the stop, Van Gisbergen restarted 28th on lap 56. With the latest adjustments working, Van Gisbergen worked his way through the field and ended stage one in 20th on lap 75.
  • Following a pit stop under the stage one break for four tires, fuel and adjustments, Van Gisbergen restarted stage two in 13th on lap 85. The caution flag waved once again on lap 97 with Van Gisbergen scored in 16th. Staying out, the WeatherTech team maintained their position on the lap 102 restart. Stage two remained under green flag for the duration with Van Gisbergen working his way as high as 15th during the run and ending the stage in 16th on lap 150. Under the stage two break, the WeatherTech team hit pit road for four tires, fuel and another round of adjustments. Following the stop, Van Gisbergen rejoined the field in 13th.
  • Van Gisbergen restarted the final stage in 13th on lap 160. The caution flag waved once again on lap 174 with Van Gisbergen scored in 14th. Staying out, the WeatherTech team restarted in sixth on lap 184 following various pit strategies along pit road. The rest of the stage would stay green following the restart with Van Gisbergen coming home 15th on lap 250.

“Qualifying was good today which lead into the race with us starting 12th. We were just unlucky during that last stage with the caution not falling our way. Bruce made some good adjustments through out the race and I started getting more comfortable as the race went on. I appreciate all the guys working hard on this WeatherTech team. We will go again next weekend!” – Shane van Gisbergen  

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 has won back-to-back regular-season championships. Before becoming a full-time NCS team, Kaulig Racing made multiple starts in the 2021 NCS season and won in its seventh-ever start with AJ Allmendinger’s victory at “The Brickyard” for the Verizon 200 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The team expanded to a two-car, full-time NCS team in 2022 and added a third, part-time entry during the 2023 season. In 2024, the team will once again field two, full-time entries in the NCS and continue to field three, full-time NXS entries. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Custer Posts Top-10 Run in Richmond Xfinity Race

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Xfinity Series
ToyotaCare 250 | Saturday, March 30, 2024

Ford Performance Finishing Results:
10th – Cole Custer
13th – Riley Herbst
18th – Matt DiBenedetto
23rd – Kyle Sieg
31st – Hailie Deegan
32nd – Ryan Sieg
33rd – Blaine Perkins

COLE CUSTER, No. 00 Haas Automation Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I felt like we definitely chased the car a little bit at the start. We were solid and I thought we got the car pretty good that last stage and tires just got killed somehow. Something was very strange with the tires with how you could hurt them. I didn’t even feel like I was going hard and it just went really bad, so we were able to salvage pitting there. JG did some good strategy to get us a good finish, but it was definitely a strange day with the tires and we’ll just have to move on to the next one. I think we had something, but I’m just a little bit confused on the tires.”

A TOUGH DECISION ON WHETHER TO PIT OR NOT. WHAT WENT INTO THE DECISION TO STAY OUT? “If we could do it again, we would have pitted. We talked about it for five days coming here. It just seemed like that was not enough laps on your tires to really take that chance to not have a set at the end. The field was split on it, so that just shows how hard of a decision it was. It obviously worked out for those guys, but it can go either way on that.”

DID YOU FEEL LIKE SUPERMAN COMING THROUGH THE FIELD WHEN YOU HAD TO PIT UNDER GREEN? “That was fun. It was a lot of fun trying to go back through the field when we took tires, so that was definitely the highlight of the day, I’ll say that because I was able to just blow by everybody.”

Kyle Larson collects pole, Elliott second, for Hendrick front row at Richmond

Photo by Chad Wells for S[eedwayMedia.com

Kyle Larson prevailed over teammate Chase Elliott to clinch the Busch Light Pole Award at Richmond Raceway. It’s his first Cup Series pole of the season and his 17th career pole in 338 career starts.

“Definitely helps for sure,” Larson said after qualifying. “I think the No. 1 pit stall here means a lot, yeah, happy to do that.

“Chase got real close there,” he continued, “so I was a bit nervous. But yeah, it’s an awesome day for Hendrick Motorsports.

He concluded by saying, “Good to get another pole. We’ll see if it translates into tomorrow’s race.”

Chevrolet captured the top four spots with Ross Chastain (120.059 mph) third-fastest, followed by Alex Bowman (119.861 mph). Bubba Wallace (119.819 mph) completed the top five in the No. 23 Toyota.

Todd Gilliland (119.760 mph), starting sixth, was the highest-qualifying Ford.

“It was a solid day,” Gilliland said, “but we still need to keep working on a bunch of stuff, especially kind of longer runs because everyone gets to a point where they’re not comfortable. We made good adjustments,” he said, “improved our starting spot, into the second round, I thought all of that stuff – definitely multiple positives to take from today.”

Martin Truex Jr. (119.585 mph), Ty Gibbs (119.517 mph), Austin Cindric (119.111 mph) and Joey Logano (119.069 mph) rounded out the top 10.

You can tune into the Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 at 7 p.m. ET Sunday on FOX with radio coverage provided by MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Starting Lineup:

Toyota Racing – NXS Richmond Post-Race Report – 03.30.24

SMITH MOVES TO POINTS LEAD WITH TOYOTACARE 250 VICTORY
Second Toyota 1-4 finish in Xfinity Series history

RICHMOND, Va. (March 30, 2024) – Chandler Smith took the lead on lap 191 and led the rest of the way to win his second race of the season and second consecutive Toyota Care 250. Smith led 76 of 250 laps on his way to victory.

It was a special day for Team Toyota as GR Supra drivers finished in the top-four spots for just the second time in NASCAR Xfinity Series history (Dover 2012).

Aric Almirola finished second after leading the most laps (95 of 250) and winning both stages. In his debut, Taylor Gray finished third, while Corey Heim finished a career-best fourth for Sam Hunt Racing, after leading 15 laps – the most in a single race for the team at their home track.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Richmond Raceway
Race 6 of 33 – 187.5 miles, 250 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, CHANDLER SMITH
2nd, ARIC ALMIROLA
3rd, TAYLOR GRAY
4th, COREY HEIM
5th, Jesse Love*
35th, SHELDON CREED
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

CHANDLER SMITH, No. 81 Mobil 1 Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 1st

What about that pit call?

“It was a great call. First of all, all glory to God – without him, I wouldn’t be where I’m at right now, with this amazing group of guys and gals back at Joe Gibbs Racing with amazing partners like Mobil 1, Toyota Racing. We wouldn’t be able to contend for wins like we are. I won my first Xfinity race here last year – in the ToyotaCare 250 and here we again, with Mobil 1 Toyota GR Supra in Mobil 1 Victory Lane. I’m really excited about that – ready to get home and celebrate one of the biggest days in history tomorrow.”

How much were you conserving those tires?

“I was riding pretty hard honestly. I went right off the rip pretty hard just to get control of the lead and set my own pace. Once I could set my own pace, I was riding pretty decently there. If a caution came out – it is what it is – it probably wouldn’t have been my time, but it was our time today and I’m going to cherish the moment.”

ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 20 He Gets Us Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 2nd

What did you lack there at the end of the race?

“We just got a little bit too loose. The run before that was stage two and my car took off and my car was really, really good. At the end, just built a little bit too tight and that last run – for whatever reason – I don’t know if it was the set of tires or what. I let Chandler (Smith) go and then when I started to just creep back to him. I didn’t have anything to go with – I was too loose in, and I couldn’t get the throttle down on exit. Hate that – to win both stage and feel like I had the dominate car and then to let it slip away there in the end is disappointing, but it was a fun weekend this weekend in Richmond, coming back 18 years from my first start with Coach (Joe Gibbs), with He Gets Us on the car on Easter weekend – it’s amazing to see what God has done in my life over the last 20 years since I got that call from Coach and J.D. Gibbs to come drive for them. I really wanted to put this thing in victory lane for them, but I’m going to have to wait.”

TAYLOR GRAY, No. 19 Place of Hope Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 3rd

How did you manage that last run of the race?

“Just being patient all day. I can’t thank all of the Joe Gibbs Racing guys enough for bring me a great A Place of Hope Toyota GR Supra. It was definitely as fast as Xfinity internet today. I made too many mistakes there throughout the race to be able to capitalize on such a fast car. I can’t thank all of my guys enough back at the shop.”

COREY HEIM, No. 26 GEARWRENCH Toyota GR Supra, Sam Hunt Racing

Finishing Position: 4th

How did you accomplish a fourth-place finish?

“A bit of a roller coaster today. I can’t say enough about this GEARWRENCH GR Supra. We had so much speed in it today. By far the best car I’ve had at Sam Hunt Racing. Props to them for bringing me a great piece. Track position was the name of the game there. We just didn’t have it there in the end. I ran the right rear off of it a bit trying to get back to the front on that last run, and I just didn’t have it. Partially falls on me. I should have been more disciplined with 70 laps left in that run, but that is part of it.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 65 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs more than 63,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 45 million cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 26 electrified options.

For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Gilliland Tops Ford in Richmond Cup Qualifying

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Toyota Owners 400 Qualifying | Saturday, March 30, 2024

Ford Performance Qualifying Results:
6th – Todd Gilliland
9th – Austin Cindric
10th – Joey Logano
12th – Ryan Blaney
14th – Chris Buescher
16th – Ryan Preece
17th – Noah Gragson
23rd – Brad Keselowski
26th – Harrison Burton
30th – Josh Berry
31st – Michael McDowell
32nd – Chase Briscoe
35th – Kaz Grala
36th – Justin Haley

TODD GILLILAND, No. 38 FARXIGA(dapagliflozin) Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It was a solid day, but we still need to keep working on a bunch of stuff, especially kind of longer runs because everyone gets to a point where they’re not comfortable. We made good adjustments, improved our starting spot, into the second round, I thought all of that stuff – definitely multiple positives to take from today.”

CAN YOU TELL ANY DIFFERENCE WITH THIS PACKAGE? “I can’t, really. To me, the biggest thing, and I’ve said this before but it blows my mind, because even here last year with the whole diffuser if you raised the back of the car one or two rounds, I was crying. It was not good. The back of the car felt so out of the racetrack and it’s crazy to me that we took almost the whole diffuser off and you can’t really feel a difference. The tire feels really good. I think starting off it has tons of grip, so I think, overall, it seems like it’s in a good spot right now.”

HOW ARE THINGS GOING WITH THE PENSKE ALLIANCE? “As far as drivers go, we’re not in the meetings or anything but our crew chiefs go over there once or twice a week. They have lots of meetings and those are the more important meetings for sure. As far as everything goes, it’s been an awesome relationship for us and I’m super excited. To me, we’re still at the tip of the iceberg as far as all the information and stuff like that. We’re just getting to a better spot where we’re gonna continually use it better and better throughout the season.”

IS THERE SOMETHING YOU CAN POINT TO WHERE THAT RELATIONSHIP HAS REALLY HELPED? “I don’t know. This is a tough series. It takes everything. To me, I think we definitely have just had really fast cars and that comes from having aero information, unloading with good setup information that we have so many more data points now to go off of. Even if it’s hitting our balance right. You go to the racetrack with whatever setup you have, but being able to hit your balance right for whatever amount of grip you have is still super important. I think our race cars are super fast coming from the shop and with all the extra information I think we’re able to narrow it in into a smaller window with more data once we get to the racetrack.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT DOES A DAY LIKE THIS DO FOR THE OVERALL GROUP? “We had a really solid day and really solid practice session and a really solid qualifying session, so those things all add up. Those are two smaller parts to the weekend to add together, but very critical ones to execute a very successful Sunday. I’m excited about the opportunity. We’ve put ourselves in this position this far, you’ve just got to keep going. We’ll study for the race now and see what we’ve got to do to keep that 2 car up front.”

HOW BIG OF A DEAL IS IT THAT THIS RACE IS GOING TO BE A NIGHT AFTER QUALIFYING IN THE DAY? “I think that plays a pretty large role just because of the difference in track temp to ambient temp is gonna be different than races past. It’s a bit of an unknown. There’s not much of a notebook and I would say that this is a pretty significant notebook racetrack, so it’s kind of new for everybody, but I think we all like racing at night.”

WHAT HAS THE NEW RELATIONSHIP WITH FRONT ROW BROUGHT TO YOUR ORGANIZATION? “It’s more data points and more experienced people. Obviously, there were a lot of races where those guys had really good speed last year and obviously the database and the information that we have at Team Penske clearly poses some value. So far, it’s been good. I think it’s kind of early days as far as the payoff for both parties as far as that relationship goes, but I think just having more data points is great and it’s what do you do with them afterwards to make the relationship stronger.”

WHAT IS RYAN AND THAT TEAM DOING THAT THEY ARE FINISHING THE WAY THEY ARE COMPARED TO OTHERS? “I think Ryan and his team, you guys all saw it at the end of last year, execution, confidence in the packages that they bring. Execution, I say it twice – it is so critically important and I would say, quite frankly, that used to be one of Ryan’s weaknesses. He’s always been extremely fast and now I think it’s one of his strengths and he’s probably better than most in the field at doing it. Between him and that team – that pit crew has gotten a lot of criticism over the years and those guys are executing probably better than most on pit road. I don’t want to jinx anybody, but they set a great example for us within the team as far as what it takes to be the best and consistently do that each week.”

IT SEEMS YOU HAVE MAYBE TAKEN EXCEPTION WITH WHAT PEOPLE HAVE SAID ABOUT HOW YOUR SEASON IS GOING. IS THAT THE CASE? “That’s what your job is, not mine. You get to write the story. I just get to give you something to write about, I guess. It quickly changes. A great start to the year turns into a not-so-great start to the year. It’s like, ‘OK, there’s been a difference of two or three weeks here.’ I’m the same person. We’re the same team. Stuff happens in racing and that’s it. You just have to keep pushing forward. We have the great opportunity of racing every single week and I guess rewriting that narrative, but it’s not necessarily something I’m overly concerned with because if you get lost in results it’s a long year. It’s more about performance and extracting the most out of yourself and your team. I feel like we have a ways to go to be where I want to be, but I also feel really strong about a lot of the pieces of the puzzle we have on this car.”

ARE THE RESULTS DECEIVING ABOUT HOW YOUR TEAM HAS PERFORMED? “The cream rises, so I guess we’ll find out in however many weeks we have left. We’ll see, I guess.”

CHEVROLET NCS AT RICHMOND 1: Larson Leads Chevrolet to Top Four Sweep in Qualifying

NASCAR CUP SERIES
RICHMOND RACEWAY
TOYOTA OWNERS 400
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING REPORT
MARCH 31, 2024

 Larson Leads Chevrolet to Top Four Sweep in Qualifying at Richmond Raceway

  • Kyle Larson claimed his first NASCAR Cup Series pole win of the season at Richmond Raceway – posting a best-lap of 22.438 seconds, at 120.332 mph, in his No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1.
  • Chevrolet drivers posted the four fastest times in the final round of qualifying to sweep the first two rows of the starting lineup for tomorrow’s Toyota Owners 400, with Larson leading Chase Elliott in second, Ross Chastain in third and Alex Bowman in fourth.
  • This marks Larson’s 17th pole in 338 career starts in NASCAR’s top division, two of which have come at the .75-mile Virginia short-track.
  • Larson extend Chevrolet’s series-leading pole win record at Richmond Raceway, with the feat marking the Bowtie brand’s 48th all-time NASCAR Cup Series pole at the “Action Track”.
  • The feat marks Chevrolet’s second NASCAR Cup Series pole win of the 2024 season, and the manufacturer’s 745th all-time pole win in NASCAR’s top division.
  • FOX will broadcast the NASCAR Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway on Sunday, March 31, at 7 p.m. ET. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 STARTING LINEUP:
POS. DRIVER
1st Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCar.com Camaro ZL1
2nd Chase Elliott, No. 9 UniFirst Camaro ZL1
3rd Ross Chastain, No. 1 Busch Light Camaro ZL1
4th Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 – Pole Win Media Availability Quotes

When you were in here earlier, you said you don’t come in here with the highest of expectations. How about now?

“Well it helps the confidence, for sure. So yeah, I mean practice went well and qualifying went good. I’m not expecting to win, but I think we have a No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevy capable of contending. We have a pit stall to go along with it now, which helps. Just need to execute a good race and see where the results end up.”

Brad Keselowski said he felt like he could tell more of a difference here with the package than at Phoenix Raceway – maybe following a trailing car, it was a little bit easier to get up and try and make a pass. I know it was a limited sample size, but were you able to tell a difference and did you think it was any better?

“Honestly, I’ve kind of forgotten that we had a different package. I’d have to think about it a little bit more. I don’t know.. nothing really stood out to me. I passed (Joey) Logano.. I think that was about it. I just kind of moved up and got out of his wake, so I never really followed anybody, necessarily, in the same tracks. So I don’t know.. I don’t know. I’m sure I’ll learn more when we get to racing.”

How about the tire falloff – are you feeling that? Does it matter if you feel it because now you’re going to be racing at night?

“No, I mean you always feel it here. I was surprised to start practice – which I was in Group A, but the grip was really high for 10 to 12 laps. And then it kind of got to a normal state, where yeah – you could spin your tires really easy. Your entry got really loose. So it turned into normal Richmond. But yeah, I think the pace – I don’t know what the pace will do. It’s been awhile since we’ve raced here at night. I would assume it would be a little bit quicker on the short run, but then fall off to a similar spot. We’ll see.”


About Chevrolet

Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands. 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.

CHEVROLET NCS AT RICHMOND 1: William Byron Media Availability Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
RICHMOND RACEWAY
TOYOTA OWNERS 400
TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
MARCH 30, 2024

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series practice and qualifying session at Richmond Raceway.

Media Availability Quotes:

In the Hendrick Motorsports Museum, there’s a big sign that says ‘Race to 300’, and now it says ‘304’ above it. I’m curious.. what would be the next big thing for Hendrick Motorsports or do you have any sense of what the next big sentimental moment would be?

“I think the race at Martinsville Speedway for the 40th season is a pretty big deal. That’s been a big deal over the offseason, with all the paint schemes and everything. I think trying to win a championship in the 40th year is probably a huge deal. So yeah, I think just some of the milestones this year, in general. I don’t now about race win numbers, but obviously getting to 400. Hopefully I’m here for that and can contribute more. But I think those are the big ones.”

What did you learn about yourself at Martinsville Speedway last year? For some of us, seeing what you did – be almost delirious and pull out the finish the way you did. When the season was ended and it got quite, what did you take from that because it was a victory for you, personally, to come through that?

“Yeah, I mean just the wear and tear of the playoffs and the season. Just tried to reflect on that race and what we could do better to not be in that position again; not to be kind of limping across the finish line as a collective group, whether it be the car, myself, the heat and all those things. We’ve done a lot of work to be better in those areas. With the heat – we’re actually trying a new helmet fan this week, so I feel like we’re on the right track with all that stuff. And then we’ve done a lot of work on the car to be better on short-tracks, so hopefully all of those things apply this weekend. That’s the goal – try to show up here with speed; have some pace on our side, have some handling to maneuver and just have a good, solid race. That’s the goal and Martinsville is obviously the big test.”

I’m more looking at the challenge, you know from you to come from on the other side of that. Some guys would have just thrown up their hands. The drive it took you to get through that moment just spoke so much about your character.

“Yeah, I’ve always been really resilient. I think it’s easy to look at me and say that I’m a pretty quiet guy and pretty reserved. But I played football since I was in fifth grade and every time I put the helmet on, I had resilience and wanted to hit people.. I played defense. I feel like my coaches knew that about me, and Rudy (Fugle) knows that about me. Once I put the helmet on, it’s pretty tough to get to me and affect me. So I feel like I’m resilient and that is throughout the whole race team. I feel like our whole race team is just gritty and hard-nosed.”

Last weekend, Rudy Fugle was very blunt about the struggles you guys have had at Richmond and Martinsville. Can you give me a better sense of why that may be.. whether it’s the setup of the car, or any other potential issues?

“Yeah, I mean it’s just one of those places we go to that we just don’t have an idea of how it’s going to go. So anytime you go to a track and you don’t really have a notebook that you feel confident on – we’ve had some good races here, but we’ve never shown up here knowing that we can run an easy top-10 or compete for a win. And not that we go anywhere thinking it’s going to be a cake walk, but you go to certain tracks and know that you have a great notebook, like going to COTA or going to Watkins Glen. I feel like this is one of those places where we’re still trying to build that solid notebook, but I feel really good going into this race because we had a great test a couple of weeks ago. We’ve done some different things with our preparation, so I feel good. But until we get on track, we really don’t know and it’s probably one of the few places that is like that for us.”

Following up on that notebook, does it throw a wrench into the works with the new short-track package and not knowing for sure how that will race?

“I don’t really know… like no, we don’t really focus on the package that much, in terms of how it changes our preparation. I think we maybe overestimated the difference there at first, so honestly we’re just trying to do the same things and just adapt to whatever the handling issues are. A lot of people have asked me – is it easier to pass.. is it harder. I don’t really care; I just want my race car to go fast. So that’s all I care about. I just want us to be faster than everybody else. The fast guys can usually pass people.”

As the most recent road course winner, this is especially good for you. The fact that Long Beach has even been rumored to maybe being a venue.. do you like the idea of adding street races or road races to the schedule, or do you like the balance that we have now between oval and road courses?

“Yeah, I like the balance of what it is right now. I think we can’t really oversaturate it. I like that we have four or five road courses. When we started to go to five or six, I knew that I had to become a better road course racer. I always had speed on road courses, but then it became a big priority.

I don’t know.. I like the traditional tracks that we go to, and I think our schedule is fine the way that it is. I think this year is probably the most traditional it’s been with having so many short-tracks in a row and we’re kind of back to the roots there.

I don’t know.. I’m going to go race wherever they tell me to go. But I think it’s a good balance right now.”

With you being such a popular driver within the simulation world, how do you feel about that.. how innovative it is and how we have so many new drivers going from sim straight up to the ranks? With you driving the No. 24 car, which is legendary within itself, how do you feel about the 40th anniversary and just continuing that legacy?

“Yeah, as far as the sim racing part – I think that’s just continuing to grow and evolve.

The 40th anniversary – I’m really excited for it. I’m excited for our Martinsville scheme that we have. I think it looks amazing. I saw it in the shop this week and feel really excited for that race, in general. We’ll have a lot of Hendrick Motorsports employees and family members out there, so I know it’ll be a huge deal.”

We’ve talked a lot this week about tire conservation. Being one of the younger guys but also coming up racing some late models on some really worn out race tracks – how do you feel your skill set is positioned, in terms of tire wear and conserving tires over the course of long green-flag runs like we usually see here?

“Well you can only manage your tires when your car is balanced and fast, so I think the whole debate a couple weeks ago about who’s saving tires the most – it’s the guys who have pace and reserve to use. But yeah, I mean when I got to late model races – we’ve had success at a lot of late model races and it just typically comes down to how good my car is driving; how can I manage my tires to be good at the end and if my car is driving good.

Yeah, it’s fun. When you have a fast, good-handling car, you can kind of ride third or fourth and push it at the end and really pour it on. I don’t know.. I kind of like going all-out, all the time, but I do like fall-off. I think that we need to have some advantage to the first four or five laps – putting damage on your tires and putting a half-second of lap time together against the field. Like there needs to be a difference in if you go super hard at the beginning and paying for it. But like I said, you have to have pace and reserve, and you have to have a good-handling car. That’s just racing. And the guys that have that are going to have an advantage on tires at the end of a run.”

You mentioned your notebook for this particular track. Does it change at all, given the fact that Sunday’s race is going to be at night, as opposed to recent years when it’s been in the daytime?

“Yeah, I mean we really don’t know what it’s going to be like. We have a notebook from 2018 and 2019, to just look back on what the track did. But it’s really hard to know with this car. It has very different traits. I feel like it’s going to be a learning curve throughout the race. The race is going to start at 7:00 p.m., so you’re going to be in some daylight for the beginning stage and then it’ll kind of transition. So it’s just going to be about trying to keep up with the track. But I’m excited it’s a night race. I think short-tracks belong under the lights. It’s exciting to see the rotors glow. If there’s contact and things, it’s a little more exciting, I think.”

Winning at Daytona and COTA, just talk about the momentum heading into tomorrow night’s race.

“Yeah, I mean we’ve got momentum, for sure. But just trying to stack the weeks together is the big thing. We don’t want to have one good week, one bad week and one good. So we just want to kind of be boring; be mellow and have really solid runs when we don’t win. If we’re in a position to win, we want to obviously capitalize. But I think the big thing is try to stack some thirds, fourths, fifths; some laps led. A 10th-place finish isn’t a bad thing, so just have those solid days, and when you look at the results sheet, it looks like nothing happened.”

When did the history of Hendrick Motorsports at Martinsville Speedway really become engrained into you?

“Yeah, I mean just growing up as a fan of the sport, I think it was easy to tell that Martinsville Speedway was their place. It was a track that they dominated. And really then learning about the history of Geoff Bodine winning there, and then learning about the tragedy; just tying it all together and understanding the real history there. It’s deep, right? It’s been a really important place for decades. Every time we go there, I think there’s an emphasis to run well, but especially this year.”


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Toyota Racing – NCS Richmond Quotes – Denny Hamlin – 03.30.24

Toyota Racing – Denny Hamlin
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

RICHMOND, Va. (March 30, 2024) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin was made available to the media prior to practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Richmond Raceway on Saturday.

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 Mavis Tires & Brakes Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

What are your thoughts on the potential add of Long Beach to the NASCAR schedule? Are you happy with the current balance on the NASCAR schedule?

“I personally like the balance now. I don’t know what the infrastructure costs of us building a Chicago, surely it was a lot. It almost seems like you could build a short track about anywhere as well – just temporary asphalt and walls, things like we have at the Clash. I would like for us to stick to what we are versus going to too many road courses.”

What are the differences between day racing and night racing at Richmond Raceway?

“There hasn’t been from what understand. For as long as I’ve been doing it, it is still Richmond. It still wears out tires quite a bit. Maybe the tire wear is slightly less, but if anything, this new tire has more wear than our previous Richmond tires have had. I do still think it is going to be a best handling car and driver type of thing that will matter.”

Are you intentionally fostering the relationship with Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace with their social media posts together?

“It’s not intentional, no. I would say we let those guys be themselves and the sponsors are comfortable with them. That is why they’ve signed up with them. No, nothing intentional. It’s just kind of who they are.”

Did putting the entire organization on the Netflix show help the continued growth?

“We had those discussions early and when Netflix asked, how much access would be given to 23XI, I considered it very much the same of what I gave them – to bring all of the personnel around and say hey, this is what I expect you to do, as far as giving access, and they did that. It was a good for the narrative of the show.”

How important is it to win the pole at Martinsville?

“It’s big at Martinsville for sure. It’s not as big as Phoenix, but it is close – in that vicinity. I don’t know how many pole winners have finished in first, I don’t know the numbers exactly, but it is certainly an advantage, especially if you have a good pit crew that is very solid and is not going to make mistakes, you are probably going to gain a spot or two each time you go in the pit area. It is certainly an advantage.”

What does it mean to compete at your home track this weekend?

“I’m excited for this race. All week I’ve been excited to get here and kind of see where we stack up. Certainly, with the history we have here over the last three or four races here at Richmond, being in contention. I feel pretty strongly about it. I would say that this is one that historically that I’ve always been good at, JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) has always been really good at, and then with the momentum it seems like our cars have, and our manufacturer – hopefully, we can tack on that little extra speed that we’ve shown here lately.”

Have you put any thoughts or pitfalls of sports betting in NASCAR?

“There are certainly positives for the sport on it. If you look at most sports fans that watch any given game – it is usually because they have some sort of action on it. You only have only one home team, or favorite team that you root for. There is dozens other of games going on – and this is talking about other leagues – so when you are sitting at home and you are seeing what other game is on, it is most likely not your favorite team, so how are you going to have an invested interest in those other teams that you are watching? It is through sports betting. I think it contributed to the rise of other sports and could do the same thing for NASCAR as well.”

What would you like to see in the potential second season of the Netflix show cover?

“I think just really getting into the technical side of it – what you saw was the drivers and their personalities and whatnot, but you didn’t see is what makes those cars go around in circles and what makes this driver better than the other and what makes this car better than the other. I think those are important stories to tell, because at a basic level, I think they hit all of the marks really well, but it is getting maybe more technical into why this team or why this driver might be better than others. I would like to see that.”

Have you given NASCAR any suggestions on the next year’s schedule?

“They don’t ask us any of that stuff. They just come out with the schedule.”

Is there a place you would like to go?

“Not off hand. I haven’t really thought of it first hand, but certainly, more ovals.”

Does Martinsville victories mean anymore to you knowing the emphasis Hendrick Motorsports puts into it?

“It doesn’t. It obviously means a lot to them for important reasons, but if you are able to beat them – which doesn’t happen often at that track – you’ve got everything going. You’ve got to have the pit crew because you have to qualify well. All of those things really matter. The short track at Martinsville is just a beast on its own. I can’t corollate it to any other short track. We don’t heavily brake at any other short track that I can think of. Tight corners. It is just very different than the flowy Richmond type short track. They’ve just been good there forever, even before I was in the Cup Series. Jeff Gordon – those guys were dominating it, then Jimmie Johnson, he took over and started dominating it. It’s just a track they’ve got figured out. Maybe it was a track they tested at, way back in the day, because you used to be able to test just anytime you wanted to, and maybe it was a track they spent a lot of emphasis on, but certainly – emotions are probably always high going into a Martinsville weekend and that just adds a little of pressure to the drivers to know that they’ve got to step up.”

You are racing in your hometown this weekend. What does that mean to you?

“I love it. This is a track always where we are starting to get into the swing of the tracks where we are going to be contenders every week. This kind of kicks off that part of the schedule. I think we all kind of know where we are at now. We are six races in. We know what our strengths are. We know what our weaknesses are, and now we just have to capitalize when we go to tracks like this that we are always contenders. It is going to be an execution game. It is not going to be a speed game. We will have that. It is making sure we execute. With the pit crew I have this year, they’ve been on it. I feel like our speed has been as good as it’s ever been. We are running inside the top-five more than we ever have, even though we have not finished there quite yet. I feel pretty good about it. I’m anxiously waiting for the next hour.”

How does having a win already change your approach?

“It doesn’t really change my approach. I think if I were kind of a notorious bubble guy, that is always on the bubble, then it would certainly give me some relief, but with team like this should never be on the bubble any year. I don’t treat it any different other than we certain bonus point goals throughout the season. For us, we would like to at 14 points in the next three races. We’ve got six right now, so we’ve got to get on it.”

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