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Hendrick Motorsports Media Advance: Phoenix

Phoenix Raceway

Sunday, March 10, 2024
1-Mile Oval
3:30 PM ET
Location: Avondale, Arizona
TV: Fox
Event: NASCAR Cup Series race (4 of 36)
Radio: SiriusXM, PRN

5 KYLE LARSON

Age: 31 (July 31, 1992)

Hometown: Elk Grove, California

Resides: Mooresville, North Carolina

Crew Chief: Cliff Daniels

Standings: 1st

No. 5 Valvoline Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Valvoline Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, will be available to members of the media in the Phoenix Raceway media center on Friday, March 8, at 2 p.m. local time.

JACKPOT IN VEGAS: Last Sunday during the 267-lap race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Kyle Larson led a race-high 181 laps en route to his first NASCAR Cup Series victory of the 2024 season and his 24th career Cup Series win. He won both stages and captured the maximum available points at Las Vegas to move into the points standings lead.

ONE OF TWO: Last October, Larson led a race-high 133 laps and won both stages before capturing the victory at Las Vegas. He is one of only two drivers to win both stages and triumph in consecutive races at one circuit.

DOMINANT PERFORMANCE(S): At Las Vegas last week, it marked the fifth time the Elk Grove, California, native won a race for Hendrick Motorsports when leading more than 65 percent of the laps in a race. Based on percentage of laps led, Larson has five of the eight most dominating wins in the Cup Series since the start of 2021.

WEST COAST WINNER: Larson’s seven wins on the West Coast place him third among active drivers in that statistical category and tie him for eighth on the all-time list. Six of those victories have come at Hendrick Motorsports, with one occurring at Phoenix Raceway. In the 2021 championship race, Larson led a race-high 107 laps, including the final 28 circuits, following a clutch pit stop to secure the Cup Series title.

DOUBLE: Larson completed 172 laps in an IndyCar test at Phoenix earlier this year. In May, Larson will compete in the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. HENDRICKCARS.COM will be the primary sponsor on both entries as the 31-year-old attempts to complete all 1100 miles (#Hendrick1100). See the livery for the two races here and learn more about his attempt here.

DOUBLE DOUBLE: Larson’s eight top-five finishes and 12 top-10s at the 1-mile track are tied with Las Vegas for his most at a track. In addition, he has started in the top 10 in his last eight Phoenix starts, tied for his longest top-10 starting streak at all tracks. Over the past six races there, the 31-year-old driver ranks third in laps led (311) and points scored (209) among those entered in Sunday’s race.

TOP OF THE BOARD: Larson’s 205 laps led through three races in 2024 are his most ever led through the first three races of a season – the sixth time a Hendrick Motorsports driver has more than 200 laps led through this point. In fact, Larson leads all drivers in 2024 in laps led (205), stage wins (two), stage points (47), race points (118) and laps raced (407) in the top five.

CLIFF’S NOTES: No. 5 crew chief Cliff Daniels and Larson have teamed up for 17 wins since Larson joined Hendrick Motorsports in 2021 – the third-best total among active driver and crew chief pairings. Daniels and Larson have accomplished those wins in 103 races, while the best active combination has posted 19 victories in 176 starts.

MEET & GREET: Race fans can stop by JINYA Ramen Bar’s central Phoenix location (5120 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ, 85012) on Saturday from 5-6 p.m. local time for a meet & greet with the 2021 Cup Series champion. JINYA, a contemporary Japanese dining establishment with over 60 restaurants in North America, is the Official Restaurant partner for Larson and the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports team.

VALVOLINE ON BOARD: Valvoline will make its first of three appearances this year as a primary sponsor of the No. 5 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 this weekend at Phoenix. Its other primary races will be Sonoma Raceway (June 9) and the Chicago Street Race (July 7). Valvoline Global is a worldwide leader in automotive and industrial solutions, with sales in more than 140 countries. Established in 1866, the company’s heritage spans over 150 years and includes the world’s first branded motor oil. To learn more, visit www.valvoline.com. See every angle of the No. 5 Valvoline Chevy here.

9 CHASE ELLIOTT

Age: 28 (Nov. 28, 1995)

Hometown: Dawsonville, Georgia

Resides: Dawsonville, Georgia

Crew Chief: Alan Gustafson

Standings: T-6th

No. 9 Kelley Blue Book Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

LAS VEGAS LOOK BACK: Chase Elliott and No. 9 team qualified 11th for last Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The 28-year-old driver finished 15th in stage one and advanced to sixth to end the second segment, earning valuable stage points. The Hendrick Motorsports driver continued to log laps inside the top 10 in the final stage before ultimately taking the checkered flag in the 12th position. Following Las Vegas, Elliott and the No. 9 team are tied for sixth in the Cup Series points standings.

WINNING MOMENT: Elliott has one win at Phoenix Raceway, which he captured in the 2020 season finale to secure his first Cup Series championship. The six-time National Motorsports Press Association Most Popular Driver started the race at the rear of the field and maneuvered his way to the front, leading a race-high 153 laps en route to the victory.

PHOENIX 411: The driver of the No. 9 Kelley Blue Book Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 will make his 16th Phoenix Cup Series start on Sunday. In his previous 15 races at the track, he’s amassed one win (November 2020), five top-five finishes and eight top-10s. Elliott has paced the field for 546 laps at the 1-mile oval, which is his second-most on active tracks. Since the start of 2020, he has led 390 laps at Phoenix, the second-most among active Cup drivers in that span. Additionally, the 2020 Cup champion’s average start of 6.53 at the track is his second-best on active tracks, only trailing Sonoma Raceway (6.43).

EVERY MILE A MEMORY: In 56 Cup starts on tracks measuring 1 to 1.37 miles in length (Darlington Raceway, Dover Motor Speedway, Nashville Superspeedway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Phoenix and WWT Raceway), Elliott has earned four wins. His first came at Dover in 2018, followed by his championship-winning performance at Phoenix in 2020. His two most recent victories came in 2022 at Dover and Nashville. Accompanying his wins are 22 top-five finishes, 29 top-10s and 1,246 laps led across those starts.

THE GREAT GUSTAFSON: On Sunday, Alan Gustafson will call his 39th Phoenix race as a Cup Series crew chief. In his previous 38 starts there, the veteran team leader has collected four wins, 12 top-five results, 24 top-10s and 977 laps led. Gustafson’s four wins are tied with NASCAR Hall of Famer and Hendrick Motorsports vice president of competition Chad Knaus for the second-most by a crew chief at Phoenix and came via four different drivers: Kyle Busch in 2005, Mark Martin in 2009, Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman Jeff Gordon in 2011 and Elliott in 2020. Coincidentally, Gustafson has visited victory lane at the track with both the youngest driver (Busch at 20 years, six months and 11 days of age) and the oldest driver (Martin at 50 years, three months and nine days of age).

DYNAMIC DUO: Elliott and Gustafson are in their ninth season together and are currently the longest active driver and crew chief combo in the Cup Series garage. The duo is ranked second among active pairings with 18 points-paying victories. Gustafson and Elliott earned their first Cup Series title in 2020 and the team captured the regular-season championship in 2022.

COMING HOME: No. 9 team fueler John Gianninoto, who grew up in Tucson, Arizona, will compete in front of his home crowd this weekend. Gianninoto graduated with honors from Catalina Foothills High School and was an offensive lineman for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas football team – earning his first letter in 2007 and becoming a team captain in 2010. In 2012, he participated in the NFL’s Carolina Panthers training camp before signing with Hendrick Motorsports that September. Gianninoto set a Guinness World Record in 2018, teaming with Sunoco for the most vehicles refueled by an individual in one hour (148).

KELLEY BLUE BOOK IS BACK: This weekend is the first of two primary races for No. 9 team partner Kelley Blue Book. In addition to this Sunday’s race, the Cox Automotive brand will be the primary partner on the No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 in the Cup Series playoff race at Talladega Superspeedway on October 6. Get a look at all the angles of the 2024 scheme here.

24 WILLIAM BYRON

Age: 26 (Nov. 29, 1997)

Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Resides: Charlotte, North Carolina

Crew Chief: Rudy Fugle

Standings: 4th

No. 24 RAPTOR Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

WINNING WAYS: William Byron’s 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season is off to a career-best start thanks to his win in the prestigious DAYTONA 500. Last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Byron’s car suffered an overheating issue due to a trash bag on track that derailed his run, but he was able to persevere and secure a top-10 result. Even with the bad luck, Byron is one of six drivers to finish in the top 10 in two of the three events this year. He now sits fourth in the 2024 Cup Series points standings – the highest he has ever been at this point in the season (his previous best was 13th after three races in 2021). He has 11 Cup Series wins, with 10 coming since the start of 2021 – second to Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson (18).

NEXT GEN DUO: Since the Next Gen Cup Series car was introduced in 2022, Byron and crew chief Rudy Fugle have a series-leading nine wins. The duo leads Hendrick Motorsports teammates driver Kyle Larson (eight wins) and crew chief Cliff Daniels (seven wins).

SIMILAR IN SIZE: This Sunday’s race at Phoenix Raceway will mark Byron’s 44th start on tracks 1 to 1.37 miles in length (Dover Motor Speedway, Darlington Raceway, Nashville Superspeedway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Phoenix and WWT Raceway). In his previous 43 starts, the 26-year-old driver has collected two pole awards, two wins (one each at Phoenix and Darlington in 2023), 10 top-five finishes, 19 top-10s and 535 laps led.

VENTURING TO THE VALLEY OF THE SUN: Heading to a track where he has found success in multiple NASCAR national series, Byron will return to Phoenix for the 13th time in his Cup career. This time, he is the defending spring race winner. Across his 12 Cup Series starts at the 1-mile oval, he has two top-five finishes, seven top-10s (tied for his most at a track with Kansas Speedway), 186 total laps led (his fifth-most at a track) and three stage wins (his most at a track). Making eight appearances at the desert track since the start of 2020, Byron has led 171 laps (the fifth-most by a driver) and has six top-10 finishes (tied for the third-most with Larson). In fact, in the four Next Gen races at Phoenix, Byron leads all drivers in points earned (184) and laps run in the top five (917) while running the third-most laps (1,150) in the top 10.

RUDY’S PHOENIX PERFORMANCE: Going to Phoenix for the seventh time in his Cup Series crew chief career, Rudy Fugle has one win (March of 2023), two top-five finishes, four top-10s with 171 laps led in those previous six races. Aside from his Cup Series starts, Fugle has 11 national series starts under his belt at the Avondale, Arizona, facility, with eight coming in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. Fugle has four pole awards in those Truck Series races and has led his drivers to pace the field for 471 laps. While Fugle has only one Truck Series win at Phoenix, he also has two runner-up results, four top-five finishes and six top-10s. In 2016, Byron and Fugle dominated the truck race, leading 112 laps before an engine failure resulted in a 27th-place finish.

DOUBLE DUTY: Byron is pulling double duty at Phoenix this weekend. In addition to Sunday’s Cup Series race, he’ll drive the No. 17 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet Camaro for Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Xfinity Series on Saturday afternoon. This will be the first race for the No. 17 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevy in 2024 and the first of four Xfinity Series races for Byron this season.

MCSWAIN MANIA: For Byron’s four Xfinity Series races, No. 24 lead engineer Brandon McSwain will climb on top of the pit box and the Phoenix race will mark his debut as a crew chief. The duo worked together in the Xfinity Series when McSwain was a race engineer at Hendrick Motorsports affiliate JR Motorsports, collecting four wins in Byron’s 2017 championship campaign. They also have two Xfinity Series starts at Phoenix together, where Byron started on the front row and finished in the top four in both races, including a victory ahead of the title race in November. Since 2019, McSwain has been an engineer on Byron’s Cup Series team.

RAPTOR® TOUGH: For the first time in 2024, Byron will sport his new RAPTOR® paint scheme that will run the majority of the season on the No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1. RAPTOR® is a durable protective coating designed to tolerate the toughest climatic conditions and can be applied to a wide range of items, including truck beds, lawnmowers, outdoor furniture and more. With 16 pre-mixed colors available, it’s easy to personalize anything you want to protect. RAPTOR® is available at local paint distributors, auto parts stores and online retailers. For a better look at Byron’s new No. 24 RAPTOR Chevy, click here.

48 ALEX BOWMAN

Age: 30 (April 25, 1993)

Hometown: Tucson, Arizona

Resides: Concord, North Carolina

Crew Chief: Blake Harris

Standings: 13th

No. 48 Ally Best Friends Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

LEADING LAPS: Last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Alex Bowman and Hendrick Motorsports teammates Kyle Larson and William Byron led multiple laps each at the 1.5-mile intermediate Nevada track. Bowman led from the front of the field for three laps, accruing 26 laps led at the venue to date. The 30-year-old driver heads to Phoenix Raceway this weekend, where he holds his personal record for most laps led in a single race. In November of 2016, he led 194 circuits at the 1-mile venue.

AT HOME IN ARIZONA: The Tucson, Arizona, native has made 17 NASCAR Cup Series starts at his home track. Bowman earned his first Cup Series pole position at Phoenix in November of 2016, subbing for Dale Earnhardt Jr. and finishing in the sixth position. Last spring, he finished ninth as Hendrick Motorsports placed all four of its cars in the top 10. In total, Bowman has two top-10 finishes and has completed 95.2% of his laps attempted. On West Coast tracks, Bowman has two wins (Auto Club Speedway in March of 2020 and Las Vegas in March of 2022), tied for seventh among active drivers with teammate Byron.

“PAW-SOME” PAINT SCHEME: On Tuesday, Ally Racing and Hendrick Motorsports released a new “paw-some” paint scheme. This weekend, Ally will boast co-primary sponsor Best Friends Animal Society, sporting a pet-themed scheme for a fourth straight year for the spring race at Phoenix. This colorful scheme will also be on track at Pocono Raceway on July 14. View all angles of the No. 48 Ally Best Friends Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 here.

FAST CREW: Speed and consistency on pit road is crucial in the sport’s premier series. Last weekend in Las Vegas, the No. 48 Ally Racing pit crew tied with one other competitor for the fastest median pit stop time (9.39 seconds) out of all 37 entries. The five-man crew is composed of Andrew Bridgeforth (rear-tire changer), Jacob Conley (fueler), Brandon Grier (tire carrier), Allen Holman (jackman) and Donnie Tasser (front-tire changer).

SHOWING SUPPORT AT SHELTERS: Since 2021, Bowman and Ally have supported Best Friends. For this season (and since the beginning of the 2022 campaign), the pair are committed to a combined weekly donation of $4,800 to a Best Friends network partner local to each weekend’s race. Phoenix’s beneficiary is Heidi’s Village, which fosters a community where animals are treated with respect, dignity and compassion. You can see the shelter’s animals available for adoption here.

ALLY AT THE TRACK: Ally will have a special set-up for NASCAR fans in the fan zone at Phoenix. Guests will be able to spin the “Victory Wheel” for a chance to win “Bowman Bucks” to exchange for cool prizes. For the first time since the 2024 DAYTONA 500, visitors can also enter in person to win a Hendrick Motorsports 40th Anniversary Edition Chevrolet Camaro street car through Ally’s “Win Your Wheels fueled by HendrickCars.com” sweepstakes. Not at the track? Enter at Ally.com/sweepstakes/nascar. The sweepstakes will end on Sept. 20, 2024.

BEHIND THE WHEEL WITH BOWMAN: This Sunday, Bowman fans can ride along and #Rally48 from the driver’s seat by tuning into NASCAR’s in-car camera on the No. 48 Ally Best Friends Chevrolet Camaro ZL1. Visit nascar.com/drive to experience a driver’s perspective during the race.

HENDRICK
MOTORSPORTS /

2024All-TimePhoenix
Races31,34855
Wins2*303*13*
Poles0246*15*
Top 53**1,235*56*
Top 1042,116*102*
Laps Led240*79,997*3,530*
Stage Wins3*1017

*Most **Most (tie)

FABULOUS 40: In 2024, Hendrick Motorsports is celebrating its 40th anniversary. Among the categories that the Rick Hendrick-owned organization holds the NASCAR Cup Series record for are all-time wins (303), poles (246) and championships (14). With William Byron’s win in the 2024 DAYTONA 500, the organization has now won at least one race in each of the last 39 seasons. Kyle Larson’s win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway marks the record 31st consecutive season that the team has won at least two times.

LEADERS IN THE FIELD: Entering Sunday’s race at Phoenix Raceway, Hendrick Motorsports is three laps led away from 80,000 circuits out front in the sport’s top series. To date, the organization’s 79,997 laps led is a distance of 105,321 miles. The team’s first laps led came by Geoff Bodine in the same race he went on to win at Martinsville Speedway on April 29, 1984. Across 35 different tracks, 29 drivers have led laps in team history with vice chairman Jeff Gordon atop the board at 24,936 laps led. Click here for a look at laps led and wins by track, year and driver.

XFINITY RIDES AGAIN: This weekend marks the first of 10 NASCAR Xfinity Series races for Hendrick Motorsports in the No. 17 Chevrolet Camaro with primary sponsorship from HENDRICKCARS.COM. Byron will be behind the wheel for the first of his four races in the ride, while No. 24 Cup Series lead engineer Brandon McSwain will be the crew chief for those races. Chase Elliott (two races), Larson (two races), Alex Bowman (one race) and Boris Said (one race) will also compete in the entry and 2014 Xfinity Series champion crew chief Greg Ives will be the pit boss for those races.

EDGE OF SEVENTEEN: Since its return to the Xfinity Series in 2022, Hendrick Motorsports has made 10 starts across the last two years. In those races, it has accumulated three pole positions, three runner-up results, six top-five finishes and seven top-10s. The No. 17 carries special significance to the Hendrick Motorsports family as it is the same number Ricky Hendrick drove and won with in the Truck Series. In its history, Hendrick Motorsports has earned one Xfinity Series championship (2003) and 26 race wins in the series.

RULES PACKAGE DEBUTS: The Cup Series race at Phoenix marks the first time that the 2024 short-track package will be on track. The package includes 2023 short track/road course splitter stuffers, no engine panel strakes, a three-inch spoiler (was previously two inches), a simplified diffuser and simplified diffuser strakes. This will be used at all upcoming tracks 1 mile or shorter as well as road courses, with the exception of Bristol Motor Speedway and Dover Motor Speedway. Teams will have an extended practice of 50 minutes on Friday, March 8, to shake down the new package.

BAKER’S DOZEN IN THE DESERT: The Rick Hendrick-owned organization has a series-best 13 wins among nine drivers at Phoenix. Jimmie Johnson tops the board with four, followed by Gordon with two victories. Kyle Busch, Byron, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Elliott, Terry Labonte, Larson and Mark Martin have each tallied one triumph at the 1-mile track for the team. Elliott and Larson’s wins came in the 2020 and 2021 championship races. The organization also leads the way in poles (15), top-five finishes (56), top-10s (102) and laps led (3,530) at the Arizona venue. The team’s six straight wins at Phoenix from 2007 to 2009 are the longest such streak for the organization and the third-longest streak (of one team winning at one track) in Cup Series history.

SPRING REWIND: In last year’s spring race at Phoenix, Hendrick Motorsports dominated the event as the team earned the win and led 265 of the 317 laps run. Byron notched the victory as he got the better of Larson in an overtime finish. Larson scored the pole position and led a race-high 201 laps. In addition, Bowman and Josh Berry (filling in for an injured Elliott) notched top-10 finishes as all four cars placed in the top 10. This was the 28th and most recent time that the team had all four drivers finish in the top 10 of a race.

PARK IT ON THE POLE: In the last six races at Phoenix with qualifying, the Concord, North Carolina-based team has taken the pole position on four occasions. Last year, the squad swept the top starting spot in races at the 1-mile track with Larson starting first in the spring and Byron lining up from the front in the title race. Entering this weekend, Hendrick Motorsports is four poles away from 250 in the Cup Series.

SETTING THE STAGE: Larson’s two stage wins at Las Vegas put Hendrick Motorsports at 101 stage wins, which is tied for second among all Cup Series teams. Elliott leads the team with 37, followed by Larson (34), Byron (21), Bowman (six) and Johnson (three).

WEST SUCCESS: Of the last 23 races on the West Coast, 11 have resulted in victories for Hendrick Motorsports. Larson has six wins, while Byron and Bowman have each scored two victories and Elliott has one. The team’s 45 wins on the West Coast are the most in the series by 22 over the next highest team. In the past four full seasons, the organization has won at least two races out west.

QUOTABLE /

Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on what improvements he is looking for at Phoenix Raceway: “There are some things we have talked about (as a team) to make us better this weekend. We weren’t as fast as we needed to be last November to win the title. We’ll work on getting more speed out of the car so we can hopefully battle for the win on Sunday.”

Cliff Daniels, crew chief of the No. 5 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on what he hopes to see this weekend at Phoenix: “We’re looking forward to getting back there. We had a good test in December with a few things about this new aero package, so a lot to learn this weekend. We need to execute a good practice and hopefully learn some things to do — maybe a few things not to do — to get the car dialed in. Last fall, obviously, we weren’t where we wanted to be — we just didn’t have the longer pace that we needed as compared to some other guys. So just trying to find the right balance of the short and the longer pace. If we execute a good practice, get a few good adjustments and keep learning on the car through the weekend, we should be in a good place Sunday.”

Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on goals and expectations in 2024: “I kind of just look at things internally, I guess, more than anything and we have high expectations of ourselves. I have high expectations of myself, personally. I want to perform better than I’ve been before. I want to meet my own expectations on the job that I think I’m capable of doing. I think we have a really strong team and I want to make sure we’re capitalizing on having a good group of people. So, for me it’s really about that.”

Alan Gustafson, crew chief of the No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on racing at Phoenix: “We have a new aero package. I don’t think any of us really know what to expect from how the car’s going to drive. I’m sure it’s going to be, you know, regular old Phoenix (Raceway) and you’re going to want to have security on entry through the corner, turn the center good and have a good drive off. But you just don’t know with the new aero package what’s going to be the premium and what’s going to be the biggest struggle. So, we’re just trying to prepare the best we can. The tire is different, too. I’m looking forward to the extended practice.”

William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on the importance of Friday’s practice session at Phoenix: “Phoenix (Raceway) is a track that I feel like we have really improved at. It was a track that we struggled at until the Next Gen car was introduced. Since then, we have really tried to work hard on our short-track package and improve it. I know this weekend will be a new aero package that was tested in the offseason, so practice will be crucial on Friday. Our teammate (Kyle Larson) was a part of that test. We’ll use those notes as a good starting point for when we unload”

Rudy Fugle, crew chief of the No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on the new short-track package: “It’s looking like there will be more side force, which will let the car run a little bit more yawed out. The drivers should be able to drive a little bit more aggressively and not spin out. That’s what it seems like even though it’s still low downforce despite a three-inch spoiler. There should be more over-the-top air force but less under-the-car air force. Overall, though, it will still be pretty similar to the last race.”

Alex Bowman, driver of the No. 48 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on racing at Phoenix: “We are super excited to have Best Friends back at Phoenix (Raceway). It’s always exciting to run the pet-themed schemes and it will definitely be a busy weekend with Ally and their activation in the fan zone. I look forward to trying to go for a good run there. It’s been a while since we had a great day at Phoenix. Hopefully, we can change that this weekend.”

Blake Harris, crew chief of the No. 48 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, on preparing for the new short-track package: “I think most teams and manufacturers have a lot of questions heading into this weekend at Phoenix (Raceway) with the new aerodynamics package. The (Hendrick Motorsports) No. 5 team tested there late last year, so we have some decent data to look at. Having that 50-minute practice will be key for us to have a shot to tune the car in relative to our normal short practice weekend. We look forward to that and Alex (Bowman) has had some good runs there earlier in his career. For us, any change in the package is a new opportunity to help exploit that.”

Greg Van Alst Focused on Keeping ARCA Menards Series Points Lead with Strong Phoenix Finish

AVONDALE, Ariz: By all accounts, Greg Van Alst is your current ARCA Menards Series points leader.

ARCA drivers Gus Dean and Thomas Annunziata are not scheduled to participate in Friday night’s General Tire 150 at Phoenix (Ariz.) Raceway, third-place Daytona finisher Van Alst will assume that role when the garage opens on Friday morning.

The Anderson, Ind. native knows, however, that he’ll need to leave the 1.0-mile with a solid finish to keep the series’ lead intact ahead of their next scheduled premier race at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in April.

Van Alst returns to the desert looking to build on his impressive performance at the Avondale, Ariz. facility last year.

Entering the 2023 race as the series points lead after his dramatic last-lap pass in the season-opening race at Daytona, Van Alst contended for his second straight ARCA win, but a botched late-race restart left Van Alst with a 10th-place result at the checkered flag.

A year later, Van Alst is confident ahead of his Phoenix return and looks forward to a strong finish.

“I’m looking forward to Phoenix this weekend,” said Van Alst. “We are bringing a competitive piece, and we have the opportunity to keep the points lead close to our chest. We had a good car last year, but we got shuffled on that late restart and ran out of laps to recover.

“This year, I am looking forward to applying what I have learned and will continue to learn throughout practice and qualifying, which will put our team in a good place when the green flag drops.”

Van Alst’s No. 35 Ford Mustang has a sweet new look ahead for the season’s second race.

Prescott Tire Pros & Automotive Service will serve as the primary marketing partner for the 150-lap race.

Prescott Tire Pros & Automotive Service is your number-one source for all local Prescott, Ariz. auto repair and tire services. We are dedicated to giving you the very best auto repair service, with a focus on upfront and honest quotes, timely response to issues, and quality products and parts.

Prescott Tire Pros & Automotive Service has come a long way from its beginnings to being the top auto repair and service shop in Prescott, Ariz.

When we first started out, it was a passion for a better tire buying and auto repair experience, which drove us to develop the model of Prescott Tire Pros & Automotive Service and gave us the conviction to turn hard work and inspiration into to a booming tire and auto repair provider. We now serve customers all over Prescott, Ariz and are thrilled to be a part of your family’s trusted brands for all auto repair and tire needs.

Additionally, CB Fabricating, Zaki Ali (Injury & Criminal Trial Attorney; 1-888-649-1-ALI), Tile Dynamics LLC., Heartstrings Foundation, The Sandwich Spot (Phoenix, Ariz.), Lifeline Fire & Safety Systems USA, RJ Norton Jr. and Top Choice Fence have all contributed to making the Phoenix race possible.

“I am honored to represent several Phoenix-based companies this weekend,” added Van Alst. Our car looks excellent; without everyone’s support, we probably wouldn’t be making the trip. But, we will be there on Friday, ready to deliver and showcase our thanks.”

Greg Van Alst Motorsports will field two entries in the ARCA Menards Series for the second consecutive race. Midwest racing standout and fellow Martinsville, Ind. native Isaac Johnson will drive the No. 34 entry for his Phoenix debut on Friday night.

Johnson qualified his No. 34 Ford Mustang ninth at Daytona and maintained pace for a top-10 finish but was swept in a last-lap crash and finished a frustrating 18th.

Phoenix is a shot at redemption for Johnson.

“Isaac did a good job at Daytona,” explained Van Alst. “He learned a lot and kept himself in the hunt, but he was just at the wrong place at the wrong time and was collected in that last-lap melee. He’s headed to Phoenix this weekend to get more seat time and be an asset to the Greg Van Alst Motorsports program.”

For more on Greg Van Alst and Greg Van Alst Motorsports, please visit GregVanAlst.com, like them on Facebook (Van Alst Motorsports) and follow him on X | Twitter (@GregVanAlst35).

For more on Isaac Johnson, please like him on Facebook (Isaac Johnson Racing), or follow him on Instagram (@isaacjohnsonracing), TikTok (@isaacjohnsonracing) and X | Twitter (@isaac72johnson).

The General Tire 150 (150 laps | 150 miles) is the second of 20 races on the 2024 ARCA Menards Series schedule. Practice begins Fri., March 8, with a forty-five-minute session from 1:30 p.m. – 2:15 p.m. Group qualifying will begin a short time later at 2:30 p.m. The field will take the green flag shortly after 6:00 p.m. The event will be televised live on FOX Sports 1 (FS1) with the Motor Racing Network (MRN) and SiriusXM Satellite Radio (XM channel 391 | online channel 981) handling the radio waves. ARCARacing.com will also stream live timing and scoring throughout the entire weekend festivities. All times are local (MT).

Teen Driver Safety Tips To Take Note of This Year As A Parent

Photo by William Bout on Unsplash

Navigating the road as a teenage driver is both exciting and challenging. As the new year unfolds, it’s crucial for young drivers to prioritize safety behind the wheel. 

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), motor vehicle crashes lead to around 48% of teen deaths every year in the United States. With this alarming statistic in mind, it becomes imperative to reinforce and adopt responsible driving habits. In this article, we will explore essential teen driver safety tips to take note of in the coming year.

Limit Distractions

One of the primary causes of accidents among teens is distracted driving. With the prevalence of smartphones and in-car entertainment systems, it’s easy to get distracted while driving. 

Encourage your teens to keep their phones out of reach, use hands-free devices, and avoid engaging in distracting activities like eating or grooming while behind the wheel. 

According to Philadelphia car accident attorney Jeff Rosenbaum, distracted driving is one of the leading causes of car accidents in America. 

By telling your teenagers about the importance of focusing solely on the road can significantly reduce the risk of accidents in any area you’re in. 

Enforce Seat Belt Usage

Wearing seat belts is a fundamental safety measure that cannot be overstated. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), seat belts saved approximately 15,000 lives each year alone. Make it a non-negotiable rule for teens to buckle up before starting the car. 

Additionally, remind them to ensure all passengers are also wearing their seat belts. This simple habit can greatly enhance the overall safety of the driving experience.

Practice Defensive Driving

Teaching teens defensive driving techniques can be a game-changer. Defensive driving involves anticipating potential hazards, maintaining a safe following distance, and being aware of the actions of other drivers. Encourage teens to take defensive driving courses, where they can acquire valuable skills to respond effectively to unexpected situations on the road. This proactive approach significantly reduces the likelihood of accidents.

Set and Enforce Curfews 

Nighttime driving poses additional challenges for new drivers. Fatigue, reduced visibility, and the presence of impaired drivers contribute to an increased risk of accidents after dark. Establish a reasonable curfew for teen drivers, and emphasize the importance of avoiding late-night driving whenever possible. If driving is necessary during the evening, ensure they are extra vigilant and focused on the road.

Focus On Regular Vehicle Maintenance

A well-maintained vehicle is crucial for safe driving. Teach teens basic vehicle maintenance skills such as checking tire pressure, changing oil, and monitoring fluid levels. Regular inspections can prevent unexpected breakdowns and ensure that the car operates smoothly. 

Emphasize the importance of scheduling routine maintenance with a qualified mechanic to address any potential issues before they escalate. 

Limit Passengers In The Car

The presence of peers in the car can be a significant distraction for teen drivers. Many states have implemented graduated driver licensing (GDL) systems, which often include restrictions on the number of passengers allowed in the car during the initial months of driving. Even if not mandated by law, encourage teens to limit the number of passengers to reduce distractions and increase focus on the road.

Focusing On Teen Safety Is Essential For Preventing Injury or Death

Prioritizing teen driver safety is essential for reducing the alarming statistics associated with motor vehicle accidents involving young drivers. 

By instilling responsible habits, emphasizing the importance of focus and awareness, and implementing practical measures, we can contribute to creating a safer driving environment for the next generation.

Let us embark on this new year with a commitment to fostering responsible and safe driving habits among our teenage drivers.

How To Gamble With Bitcoin: Online Bitcoin Gambling Guide

Photo by André François McKenzie on Unsplash

Bitcoin is a digital currency that operates in a decentralized, peer-to-peer network. It allows users to transfer funds quickly, anonymously, and with low fees, making it an attractive banking option for online gamblers. 

However, using Bitcoin for online gambling can be intimidating, especially for those new to it or hesitant to embrace its price volatility. 

Despite this, the benefits of Bitcoin casinos make it worthwhile to set up a crypto exchange account and wallet. 

This guide will explain how to find the best wallet for your needs, make deposits and withdrawals at online casinos, and everything you need to know to use Bitcoin for online gambling. 

Whether you are a seasoned gambler or new to online betting, this guide will provide a one-stop-shop guide to using Bitcoin for online gambling.

Understanding The Bitcoin Gambling

Before getting into Bitcoin gambling, it’s essential to understand what it entails. 

So, bitcoin gambling is a form of online gambling that involves betting using bitcoins instead of traditional currencies like the US dollar or Euro. 

Players can place bets on various games, including US-based online casinos, sports betting, poker, and more. The main advantage of using a Bitcoin gambling platform is that it offers anonymity, security, and faster transactions compared to traditional online gambling sites that require personal and financial information. 

The transactions are processed and verified by a decentralized network of computers, making it impossible for any single entity to control or manipulate the system. This ensures that players can enjoy a fair and safe gambling experience.

How To Gamble Online With Bitcoin?

In recent years, the best crypto casinos have become more than just a digital currency; they have evolved into a popular means of entertainment through online gambling platforms. 

With its decentralized nature and cryptographic security, Bitcoin offers a unique opportunity for individuals to participate in various forms of gambling without the need for traditional banking methods.

However, navigating the landscape can be daunting for those new to Bitcoin gambling. This section walks you through everything you need to know to gamble with Bitcoin safely and effectively.

Getting Started With Bitcoin Gambling

The first step to gambling with Bitcoin is acquiring some bitcoins. There are several ways to obtain bitcoins, including purchasing them from cryptocurrency exchanges, mining them through computational processes, or receiving them as payment for goods and services. 

Once you have acquired bitcoins, you must choose a reputable Bitcoin gambling platform to start playing. Conduct thorough research to ensure the platform is legitimate, licensed, and offers various games and betting options.

Securing Your Bitcoin Wallet

Security is paramount when it comes to gambling with Bitcoin. Since Bitcoin transactions are irreversible and pseudo-anonymous, protecting your wallet is crucial to safeguarding your funds. 

Choose a secure wallet with robust encryption features and enable two-factor authentication for an extra layer of security. Additionally, consider using a hardware wallet to store large amounts of bitcoins offline, away from potential cyber threats.

Choosing The Right Bitcoin Gambling Platform

With numerous Bitcoin gambling platforms available, selecting the right one can be overwhelming. Look for platforms that prioritize transparency, fairness, and user privacy. Check for reviews, ratings, and feedback from other users to gauge the platform’s reputation and reliability. 

Ensure the platform employs provably fair algorithms to verify the integrity of its games and offers responsive customer support to address any concerns or issues you may encounter.

Exploring Different Bitcoin Gambling Games

Bitcoin gambling platforms offer various games to cater to multiple preferences and skill levels. From classic casino games like blackjack, roulette, and slots to sports betting and poker tournaments, there’s something for everyone. Take the time to explore different games and familiarize yourself with their rules, strategies, and payout structures. Start with low-stakes bets to mitigate risks and gradually increase your wager as you gain experience and confidence.

Managing Your Bankroll Wisely

Effective bankroll management is essential for long-term success in Bitcoin gambling. Set a budget and stick to it to avoid overspending or chasing losses. Divide your bankroll into smaller units and only wager a fraction on each bet to minimize the impact of losing streaks. 

Avoid chasing losses by making impulsive bets or increasing your wager size beyond your predetermined limits. Remember that any gambling activity should be viewed as fun and entertainment, not a source of income.

Practicing Responsible Gambling

While Bitcoin gambling offers the allure of quick profits and excitement, it’s essential to gamble responsibly and avoid falling into the trap of addiction. Set limits on the amount of time and money you spend gambling each day or week. 

Take regular breaks and engage in other activities to maintain a healthy balance in your life. Seek support from family, friends, or even professional counselors if you find yourself struggling to control your gambling habits.

Staying Safe And Secure

In addition to securing your Bitcoin wallet, there are several other measures you can take to stay safe and secure while gambling with Bitcoin. 

Avoid sharing sensitive information, such as your private keys or personal details, with anyone online. Beware of phishing scams, fraudulent schemes, and malicious websites posing as legitimate Bitcoin gambling platforms. 

Always verify the authenticity of a website before making any transactions or providing any sensitive information.

Final Thoughts: How Does Bitcoin Work?

If you’re interested in gambling with Bitcoin, it can be a fun and rewarding experience, but it’s important to approach it with caution and responsibility. In order to do this, it’s crucial to have a good grasp of the fundamentals of Bitcoin gambling, such as how to secure your Bitcoin wallet and choose reputable gambling platforms. 

Additionally, exploring different games and managing your bankroll wisely can maximize your chances of success while minimizing the associated risks. It’s also important to practice responsible gambling by only wagering what you can afford to lose and staying safe and secure.

By following these guidelines, you can enjoy the thrill of Bitcoin gambling while minimizing the potential downsides.

Weekend schedule for Phoenix Raceway

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com

The NASCAR Cup Series and the Xfinity Series head to Phoenix Raceway this weekend while the Craftsman Truck Series enjoys a week off.

Hendrick Motorsports driver, William Byron, is the defending Cup Series winner at the 1-mile track. Sammy Smith captured his first Xfinity Series win at Phoenix in 2023 for Joe Gibbs racing and is looking to repeat after his move to the No. 8 for JR Motorsports this year.

NASCAR Press Pass will be available throughout the weekend.

All times are Eastern.

Friday, March 8
3:30 p.m.: ARCA Practice – No TV
4:30 p.m.: ARCA Qualifying – No TV
5:05 p.m.: Cup Series Practice – FS1/MRN/ SiriusXM
8 p.m.: ARCA General Tire – 150 – FS1/MRN

Saturday, March 9
12:30 p.m.: Xfinity Series Practice – FS2/SiriusXM
1 p.m.: Xfinity Series Qualifying – FS2/SiriusXM
2:10 p.m.: Cup Series Qualifying – FS1/MRN/SiriusXM
4:30 p.m.: Xfinity Series Call 811.com Every Dig. Every Time. 200 – FS1/MRN/SiriusXM
Distance: 200 miles (200 Laps)
Stage 1 ends on Lap 45, Stage 2 ends on Lap 90, Final Stage ends on Lap 200
Purse: $1,448,204

Sunday, March 10
3:30 p.m.: Cup Series Shriners /Children’s 500 – FOX/MRN/SiriusXM
Distance: 312 miles (312 laps)
Stage 1 ends on Lap 60, Stage 2 ends on Lap 185, Final Stage ends on Lap 312
Purse: $7,806,252

Rick Ware Racing: Justin Haley/Kaz Grala Phoenix Race Advance

JUSTIN HALEY | KAZ GRALA
Phoenix Advance
Event Overview

● Event: Shriners Children’s 500k (Round 4 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3:30 p.m. EDT on Sunday, March 10
● Location: Phoenix Raceway
● Layout: 1-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 312 laps/312 miles (502 kilometers)
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 60 laps / Stage 2: 125 laps / Final Stage: 127 laps
● TV/Radio: FOX / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Justin Haley, Driver of the No. 51 Fraternal Order of Eagles Ford Mustang

● Justin Haley, driver of the No. 51 Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Rick Ware Racing (RWR), returns to Phoenix for his seventh NASCAR Cup Series start at the track with long-time partner Fraternal Order of Eagles (F.O.E.). Haley and F.O.E. have a long history of success in NASCAR. His first Cup Series victory, at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway in July 2019, was in the black-and-yellow F.O.E-branded No. 77. In all three of his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series wins, Haley was behind the wheel of an F.O.E. entry for GMS Racing.

● In six Cup Series starts at the Phoenix mile oval, Haley has a best finish of 17th earned in March 2022. He also owns two top-five and four top-10 finishes in six NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Phoenix.

● Nearly half of Haley’s 13 Cup Series top-10 finishes have come on intermediate tracks. In 44 starts on tracks more than a mile in length and less than 2 miles, Haley has two top-fives and six top-10s.

● The Fraternal Order of Eagles is an international non-profit organization uniting fraternally in the spirit of liberty, truth, justice and equality, to make human life more desirable by lessening its ills and promoting peace, prosperity, gladness and hope. The F.O.E. donates more than $10 million a year to local communities, fundraisers, charities and more. As part of its philosophy, the F.O.E. gives back 100 percent of monies raised in the form of grants. Fundraisers are conducted for eight major charities, including kidney, heart, diabetes, cancer and spinal cord injury funds, a children’s fund, memorial foundation and the Golden Eagle Fund.

Kaz Grala, Driver of the No. 15 N29 Capital Partners Ford Mustang

● Kaz Grala, driver of the No. 15 N29 Capital Partners Ford Mustang Dark Horse, will make his 11th NASCAR Cup Series start and first at Phoenix when he takes the green flag Sunday in the Shriners Children’s 500k.

● Grala’s most recent start at Phoenix was the November 2023 NASCAR Xfinity Series race, when he started 24th and powered to a 10th-place finish for Sam Hunt Racing. He has five Xfinity Series starts at the track with two top-15 finishes, as well as two NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts with a best finish of fifth in 2017.

● Last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Grala drove his N29 Capital Partners Ford Mustang Dark Horse to a 31st-place finish after running inside the top-20 in Stage 2. The RWR Ford Mustang Dark Horse showed plenty of speed, running top-10 lap times late in the final 102-lap stage, but a brush with the wall in the last 10 laps ultimately dropped Grala outside the top-25.

Rick Ware Racing Notes

● This week sees RWR competing across four different motorsports disciplines – NASCAR, NHRA, AFT and IMSA – in two different time zones.

● Of course, RWR has its two NASCAR Cup Series entries – the No. 15 with Kaz Grala and the No. 51 with Justin Haley – in the Shriners Children’s 500k on Sunday at Phoenix Raceway.

● NHRA Top Fuel driver Clay Millican begins the 2024 Mission Foods NHRA Drag Racing Series season in Gainesville, Florida, at the Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals Thursday through Sunday. A three-time event winner for RWR in 2023, Millican competed in the PRO Superstar Shootout Feb. 8-10 exhibition event in Bradenton, Florida, where he set fast time in the first round of qualifying with an elapsed time of 3.688 seconds and a speed of 336.49 mph. He then remained atop the leaderboard and secured the No. 1 qualifying position before advancing all the way to the final round of eliminations.

● The Progressive American Flat Track (AFT) season kicks off Thursday and Friday with a doubleheader at Daytona. RWR looks to add to its AFT win total with Briar Bauman in Mission SuperTwins, and Kody Kopp and Shayna Texter-Bauman in AFT Singles. Bauman and RWR took home two wins in 2023.

● After a podium finish in the season-opening race of the IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge LMP3 class Jan. 20 at Daytona, RWR’s Cody Ware is back in his Ligier JS P320 for two races this weekend in the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. Ware will have a shot at two more podiums as he will race twice on Saturday with two 45-minute races around the 1.8-mile, 14-turn layout on the streets of downtown St. Petersburg, Florida.

● Rick Ware has been a motorsports mainstay for more than 40 years. It began at age six when the third-generation racer began his driving career and has since spanned four wheels and two wheels on both asphalt and dirt. Competing in the SCCA Trans Am Series and other road-racing divisions led Ware to NASCAR in the early 1980s, where he finished third in his NASCAR debut – the 1983 Warner W. Hodgdon 300 NASCAR Grand American race at Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway. More than a decade later, injuries would force Ware out of the driver seat and into fulltime team ownership. In 1995, Rick Ware Racing was formed, and with wife Lisa by his side, Ware has since built his eponymous organization into an entity that fields two fulltime entries in the NASCAR Cup Series while simultaneously campaigning successful teams in the Top Fuel class of the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series, the LMP3 class of the IMSA VP Racing SportsCar Challenge, Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup, Progressive American Flat Track and FIM World Supercross Championship (WSX), where RWR won the 2022 SX2 championship with rider Shane McElrath.

Justin Haley, Driver Q&A

There’s a new short-track package that will debut at Phoenix. How are you feeling about it now that you’ve had a couple of races under your belt in the Ford Mustang Dark Horse?
“Luckily, I tested the new short-track package last year at Richmond and I’m excited for it. I feel like Phoenix is the track it’s meant for, so we’ll see how it goes. We’ll have a long practice there, so it’ll be good to have that time to work with the team a little bit more and try out more than we’d be able to in the shorter sessions. I think what I’m most looking forward to is kind of being on the same page as other teams when we unload. Typically, we’re going up against those bigger teams that have all the data they could need but, in this case, we’re all starting with the same thing, so it might give us a fighting chance to start.”

You ran well on the short track at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum in February. Does that have you looking forward to more of the short-track races that are coming up?
“I’m not quite sure. The track we raced on in L.A. is so unique. It’s tough to know what is going to happen at some of these places before we get there. In years past, I really favored the intermediate tracks because that’s where the last team I was with was strongest, and I feel like knowing what works best for a team is really the deciding factor as far as where I’m excited to go. Last year, RWR did really well at New Hampshire, so they’ve had good results on short tracks and I think we’ll be able to use some of that. Things are still coming together, so I don’t know that we can focus too much on the type of track we feel is best for us. We’ll get there eventually, but right now it’s all still about the little things that we can improve on each week.”

There are still a lot of things being worked through with a new team, new manufacturer and new car. How do you manage your expectations from week to week?
“The Cup Series is ultracompetitive, and obviously we’re all racing the exact same car nowadays. Week to week I feel like you do have to manage your expectations, which I think I’m pretty good at. Going to a smaller team, you have to realize the tasks that you’re taking on – you’re not signing with a mega team. But it’s been a lot of fun and I feel like I thrive in this environment. It’s the environment I’ve been in my entire career. I enjoy the process of going to the racetrack and running well, especially this year with RWR. Every time we’ve gone to the racetrack and been competitive, when I go back to the shop and all the crew guys are really amped up and excited and thankful that you’re driving that racecar to the front. It’s been cool to see and to show these guys that have been at RWR for a long time that their hard work and passion and effort can pay off. That we can run up front and be competitive has been pretty cool to see.”

Kaz Grala, Driver Q&A

A twist to the usual weekend schedule is a 55-minute practice session on Friday at Phoenix. How does that extra time on track benefit you and the No. 51 N29 Capital Partners team?

“Additional practice definitely helps close the gap for teams like ours, so I’m looking forward to having some time to work on our Ford Mustang Dark Horse at Phoenix. Limited practice puts an emphasis on simulation and your notebook from prior races, so for a smaller team like ours that’s new to a lot of these resources, it’s hard to unload and be exactly where we want to be. The longer session will give us some time to dial in our car for the race, but also to build our notebook with adjustments we can use at future events.”

While Phoenix is technically an intermediate track, it races similar to some of the short tracks you’ll visit later in the year, and you’ve had some decent runs on short tracks in the Xfinity and the Truck Series. Does that experience give you a little bit of confidence going to some of these tracks for the first time in the Cup Series?

“I grew up racing at short tracks and road courses, so I always feel a little more confident coming to tracks with more tools in the driver’s hands. The last time I raced a Truck at Phoenix was a top-five finish, and the last Xfinity race I did there was a top-10, so I feel good about my preparation for this weekend. Hopefully we can make the most of it and grab another great finish for RWR.”

It’s hard to judge progress early in the season, but now that you’ve been on a track other than a superspeedway, how do you feel things are progressing with RWR?

“I’ve been pleased with our speed so far at RWR. We have the pace to move forward through the field and contend for top-15 finishes, so it all comes down to details and execution. There is a lot of ‘new,’ still, at the team and certainly for myself, but when we hit our stride and reach our full potential, I believe we can run in the front half of the field.”

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR RACE ADVANCE: Phoenix Raceway

TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
Phoenix Raceway
Avondale, Arizona
March 9-10, 2024

CHEVROLET REMAINS UNDEFEATED IN NASCAR CUP SERIES, TRUCK SERIES

With three consecutive tripleheader weekends complete, Chevrolet’s drivers and teams have made a strong and early statement across NASCAR’s three national series. The Bowtie brand has earned victories in eight of the nine points-paying events in the NASCAR national ranks this season – remaining undefeated in both the NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series (NCTS).

In the Cup Series:

Kyle Larson became the third Team Chevy driver to reach victory lane this season – posting a near dominate performance in his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Camaro ZL1 en route to the win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The 31-year-old California native swept the stage wins and led an impressive 181 laps in the 267-lap event to extend Chevrolet’s win streak to three-straight in NASCAR’s premier series. Larson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate William Byron and fellow Team Chevy driver Daniel Suarez have also each earned a victory and a playoff berth this season.

A victory in Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500 would not only extend Chevrolet’s win streak to four-straight this season, but also match its season-opening win record from 2023. In NASCAR’s Modern Era (1972-2024), a manufacturer has swept a season’s first four races on five different occasions with Chevrolet owning four of those feats (1995, 2001, 2010, 2023).

In the Truck Series:

Rev Racing and Spire Motorsports have proved to be a force to be reckoned with this season – driving Chevrolet to three-straight trips to victory lane in the NCTS. Most recently, Team Chevy’s Rajah Caruth earned his first career NCTS victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – just two days after landing full-season support from HENDRICKCARS.COM. Team Chevy’s Nick Sanchez and Kyle Busch have also each earned a NCTS win this season to keep Chevrolet undefeated as the series heads into its first off-weekend of the season.

This year marks the second time in Chevrolet’s history in the NCTS to win the first three races of a season – last accomplishing the feat in the series’ inaugural season (1995) when the manufacturer claimed eight consecutive victories.


BOWTIE BRIGADE BOOSTING IN EARLY-SEASON SUCCESS

While three-for-three in NASCAR’s top division, Chevrolet’s undefeated win record is also accompanied by strong results across the Chevrolet camp this season. In just three points-paying races, Chevrolet’s six full-time organizations have already earned at least one top-10 finish – further proving the continued growth and strength within each organization under the Chevrolet banner.

“It’s been a solid start to the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season with three consecutive wins,” said Jim Campbell, General Motors U.S. Vice President of Performance and Motorsports. “In addition, each Chevrolet team has already earned a top-10 finish in the first three Cup Series races. The early on-track performance is a result of the preparation and execution by our drivers and teams, while working closely with Chevrolet’s NASCAR Competition Engineering group.”

Two Chevrolet teams have claimed victories in the series’ first three events, including Hendrick Motorsports with two (William Byron and Kyle Larson) and Trackhouse Racing with one (Daniel Suarez). Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch has been a stout contender each weekend – highlighted by a third-place result in the photo-finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway. JTG Daugherty Racing’s Ricky Stenhouse Jr. recorded his season-best finish of sixth at Atlanta Motor Speedway, while also scoring valuable stage points in two of the series’ three races this season. In similar fashion, AJ Allmendinger put Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 Camaro ZL1 in prime track position in Stage Two of the Daytona 500 – scoring top-10 stage points en route to a sixth-place finish in the ‘Great American Race’. Spire Motorsports also recorded its season-best finish at Daytona International Speedway courtesy of Corey LaJoie’s fourth-place result. The No. 7 Camaro ZL1 driver has also collected stage points in two events, including Daytona and Las Vegas.


DEFENDING IN THE DESERT

Chevrolet returns to Phoenix Racing with a series-leading 27 NASCAR Cup Series victories – two of which came after a Team Chevy sweep last season courtesy of wins by William Byron (March) and Ross Chastain (November).

The series’ first stop at the one-mile Arizona oval in 2023 saw Byron drive his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Camaro ZL1 to the victory – the second of his series-leading, and career-best, six wins on the season. The 26-year-old Charlotte, North Carolina, native returned to Phoenix Raceway for his first-career appearance in the series’ Championship Four – ultimately ending the season with a fourth-place finish in the race and a third-place finish in the final points standings.

Despite narrowly missing a spot in the NCS Championship Four, Chastain still left Phoenix Raceway with a trophy after taking the win in the series’ season-finale. The victory – his second of the season and fourth all-time in NASCAR’s premier series – made Chastain the first non-championship contender to win the season-finale race since the inception of the current playoff format in 2014.


CAREER WEEKEND FOR CARUTH

Rajah Caruth had a weekend to remember at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – driving his No. 71 Spire Motorsports Silverado RST to his first career pole win before ultimately claiming the victory to become a first-time winner in the NASCAR national ranks. Caruth – a former graduate of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity Driver Development Program – has been behind the wheel of a Chevrolet-powered machine throughout the entirety of his racing career. The 21-year-old Atlanta, Georgia, native previously competed with Rev Racing in the ARCA Menards Series (2022) before making the jump to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series in 2023 – completing his rookie season with GMS Racing.

Since joining forces with Spire Motorsports this season, Caruth has finished in the top-eight of each race – including a third-place finish at Daytona International Speedway. The victory also delivered Caruth a guaranteed spot in the series’ 10-driver playoff field for the first time in his career.

Drive for Diversity Graduates Finding Success with Team Chevy in NASCAR National Ranks:

The 2024 season marks the 20th anniversary of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity Driver Development Program. With just three races complete for NASCAR’s three national series, four graduates of the program have already earned victories in their respective series this season – all of which come from the Chevrolet camp. 

Nick Sanchez claimed the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series win in the series’ season-opener at Daytona International Speedway – marking his first career victory in the NASCAR national ranks. The 22-year-old Miami, Florida, native participated in the Drive for Diversity Program from 2017 to 2022 – winning the 2022 ARCA Menards Series Championship with Rev Racing before making the jump to the NCTS with the Chevrolet organization. Sanchez’s rookie campaign in the series concluded with an impressive sixth-place finish in the final points standings and the title as the 2023 NCTS Rookie of the Year.

One week later, Daniel Suarez came out victorious in the iconic three-wide finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Suarez, who was a part of the Drive for Diversity’s Class of 2013, is now a two-time NASCAR Cup Series winner – both of which were recorded under the Chevrolet banner. His history-making first NCS victory came at Sonoma Raceway in 2022 – a win that made Suarez the first Mexican-born driver to win in NASCAR’s premier series.

Rajah Caruth added his name to the list at Las Vegas Motor Speedway last weekend after driving his No. 71 Spire Motorsports Silverado RST to his first-career NCTS victory. Caruth joined the Drive for Diversity Program in 2018 – competing full-time in the ARCA Menards Series in 2022 before joining GMS Racing to complete his rookie campaign in the NCTS last season. The victory made Caruth the third Black driver to win at the NASCAR national level, joining Wendell Scott and Bubba Wallace.

Kyle Larson became the fourth Drive for Diversity Program graduate to tally a win this season with his victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. A member of the Class of 2012, Larson made history as the first graduate of the Drive for Diversity Program to win a NCS Championship title. The 31-year-old Elk Grove, California, native has only competed with Chevrolet throughout his career in the NASCAR national ranks – building a resume of 24 NCS victories, 14 NXS victories and three NCTS victories.


TEAM CHEVY TOPS IN ALL STANDINGS

Heading into the Phoenix race weekend, Chevrolet holds the top position in both the driver and manufacturer points standings in all three NASCAR national series. Earning wins in eight of the nine races thus far, the Bowtie brand leads its manufacturer competitors by 19-points in the NASCAR Cup Series, three-points in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and 17-points in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.

In each series’ driver points standings, six Team Chevy drivers hold a spot in the top-10. Former champion Kyle Larson took over the top position of the NCS points standings following his Las Vegas victory – leading fellow Team Chevy drivers William Byron, Ross Chastain, Kyle Busch, Chase Elliott and Daniel Suarez in the fourth through eighth positions, respectively.

Austin Hill’s phenomenal start to the season – including two wins and a fourth-place finish – has put the Team Chevy driver at the top of the NXS standings with a 22-point lead. Drivers from three different Chevrolet organizations sit in the top-10, with Kaulig Racing’s AJ Allmendinger in fourth; Hill’s Richard Childress Racing teammate Jesse Love in seventh; and JR Motorsports’ Justin Allgaier, Sammy Smith and Brandon Jones in the eighth through 10th positions, respectively.

Making his return to the Chevrolet camp this season, McAnally-Hilgemann Racing’s Tyler Ankrum has shown early speed this season, earning two top-10 finishes – including a runner-up finish at Las Vegas – to take the top position in the NCTS points standings. Ankrum leads 2024 race winners Rajah Caruth (fourth) and Nick Sanchez (fifth); and fellow Team Chevy drivers Bret Holmes, Christian Eckes and Grant Enfinger in the eighth through 10th positions, respectively – giving five different Chevrolet organizations representation in the top-10 of the standings heading into the series’ off-weekend.


BOWTIE BULLETS:

· Chevrolet will pace the field in the doubleheader race weekend at Phoenix Raceway. The Camaro SS will lead the NASCAR Xfinity Series in Saturday’s ‘Call 811.com Every Dig. Every Time. 200’; and the Camaro ZL1 will lead the NASCAR Cup Series in Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500.

· Chevrolet has recorded wins in eight of the nine points-paying races in NASCAR’s three national series this season – remaining undefeated in both the NASCAR Cup Series and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.

· Active Chevrolet drivers with a NASCAR Cup Series win at Phoenix Raceway:

Kyle Busch – three wins (2019, 2018, 2005)

Ross Chastain – one win (2023)

William Byron – one win (2023)

Kyle Larson – one win (2021)

Chase Elliott – one win (2020)

· In 55 NASCAR Cup Series races held at Phoenix Raceway, Chevrolet has recorded a series-leading 27 victories – including a sweep of last season’s races with William Byron (March) and Ross Chastain (November).

· Hendrick Motorsports leads the series with 13 NASCAR Cup Series wins at Phoenix Raceway – all of which have been recorded with Chevrolet. Nine different drivers have contributed wins to the record including: Terry Labonte (1994), Kyle Busch (2005), Jeff Gordon (2007, 2011), Jimmie Johnson (2007, 2008 sweep, 2009), Mark Martin (2009), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (2015), Chase Elliott (2020), Kyle Larson (2021) and William Byron (2023).

· With just three NASCAR Cup Series races complete, each Chevrolet organization has recorded at least one top-10 finish.

· With its victories at Las Vegas Motor Speedway last weekend, Chevrolet continues the streak of earning at least one win in the NASCAR national ranks each race weekend since the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course events in October 2023.

· With its 42 NASCAR Cup Series Manufacturer Championships, 33 NASCAR Cup Series Driver Championships, and 854 all-time NASCAR Cup Series wins, Chevrolet continues to hold the title as the winningest brand in NASCAR Cup Series history.

Manufacturer Points Standings

Chevrolet: 120
Toyota: 101 (-19)
Ford: 97 (-23)

Manufacturer Points Standings

Chevrolet: 113
Toyota: 110 (-3)
Ford: 88 (-25)

Manufacturer Points Standings

Chevrolet: 120
Toyota: 103 (-17)
Ford: 95 (-25)

TUNE-IN:

NASCAR Cup Series

Shriners Children’s 500

Sunday, March 10, at 3:30 p.m. ET

(FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90)

NASCAR Xfinity Series

Call 811.com Every Dig. Every Time. 200

Saturday, March 9, at 4:30 p.m. ET

(FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90)


QUOTABLE QUOTES:

ROSS CHASTAIN, NO. 1 KUBOTA CAMARO ZL1

How did the Phoenix win at the end of the season carry you through the off season?

“It made a lot of things in the off season a lot easier than they have ever been. I’ve spent so many off seasons just trying to set my ride up, set my team up, sponsorships up, it’s a total 180 from that. It’s almost indescribable.”

What kind of flipped the switch for you at Phoenix last year?

“I don’t think it was a switch, it felt like it was a progression of what we had been working on and we were getting better at the end of the year. We had a few chances to win earlier than that and to finally put it all together there was big.”

You were one of the first people to Rajah Caruth in victory lane, what made you want to congratulate him?

“I’ve seen the work he’s put into it and it was cool to see him get a win. From his entry into the Chevy program and seeing him showing up – he’s one of the early ones there – he hasn’t wavered through all of the losing, and we lose way more at this stuff than we win. I was happy for him and went to see him in person in victory lane because a text wouldn’t have been enough.”

AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 MORGAN & MORGAN CAMARO ZL1

What are your thoughts on Phoenix Raceway?

“Phoenix Raceway is a tough short track and one of those places where you hit it, or you don’t. This track is challenging. I’m looking forward to it though because it’s such a fun track for drivers. It could be a good place for the No. 3 Morgan & Morgan team.”

COREY LAJOIE, NO. 7 GROUP 1001 CAMARO ZL1

“We’ve had a pretty good run to start out the season. We’ve been competitive everywhere, so that definitely says a lot about all of our off-season preparation. Our Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro has been fast every time we unload. Ryan Sparks and all my guys are working hard and they’ve hit on the right things early in the year. Confidence is high.

I’m looking forward to getting to Phoenix this weekend and seeing what we have. We tested there in December and learned a lot so we expect to put that effort to good use this weekend. I’m proud to have Group 1001 on board this weekend, to recognize Women’s History Month and carry the names of all the women they’re honoring.”

KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 ZONE CAMARO ZL1

Is there a fine line at Phoenix between hitting the setup and running well versus being really off the mark?

“Phoenix has always been a tricky track to hit the proper setup and making sure that you are fast. Kevin Harvick has had a really good time of being able to hit that ever since the repave at this track where I feel as though I might have been better at the old surface but have still seen success in Trucks, Xfinity and Cup winning races.”

How does having the practice session on Friday change your strategy for the weekend?

“Anytime you’re able to get a little bit more practice should allow you time to dissect the car and make the necessary changes that you think you need as a driver to be able to have a good race car. I felt like we had a pretty decent race car there last fall when we had the added practice and if it weren’t for getting set behind on pit road, we would have had a pretty good race.”

ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 48 ALLY BEST FRIENDS CAMARO ZL1

Bowman on racing at Phoenix Raceway:

“We are super excited to have Best Friends back at Phoenix (Raceway). It’s always exciting to run the pet themed schemes and it will definitely be a busy weekend with Ally and their activation in the fan zone. I look forward to trying to go for a good run there (Phoenix Raceway), it’s been awhile since we had a great day at Phoenix (Raceway). Hopefully we can change that this weekend.”

BLAKE HARRIS, CREW CHIEF, NO. 48 ALLY BEST FRIENDS CAMARO ZL1

Harris on racing at Phoenix Raceway:

“I think most teams and manufacturers have a lot of questions heading into this weekend at Phoenix (Raceway) with the new aerodynamics package. The (Hendrick Motorsports) No. 5 team tested there (Phoenix Raceway) late last year so we have some decent data to look at. Really, having that 50-minuite practice will be key for us to have a shot to tune the car in relative to our normal short practice weekend. We look forward to that and Alex (Bowman) has had some good runs there (Phoenix Raceway) earlier in his career. For us, any change in package is a new opportunity to help exploit that.”

DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 FREEWAY INSURANCE CAMARO ZL1

You and (Friday’s Craftsman Truck Series race winner) Rajah Caruth both have unconventional paths to get into NASCAR. You can share in the difficulties it takes just to get to this level. Can you speak on his victory?

“You have no idea how happy I was for him. He’s a great young man. Not just a very talented race car driver, but also very dedicated. We get to see each other almost every week, training or doing different things, and I like him a lot. I consider him a friend. He knows this, and will know this, but the first win is always the most difficult one to get. I’m sure he’s going to win at least a few times this year. He’s very disciplined and he works hard. He’s been strong the last few weeks. I’m very happy for him. Obviously he made history being the third African American driver to win in the NASCAR national series, and he’s very special. He’s also a graduate of the Drive for Diversity program, just like myself, Bubba Wallace and many others. So very happy that we’re seeing good talent from the Drive for Diversity program coming to a national series and being successful.”

Back-to-back examples of the Drive for Diversity program working?

“Of course. I mentioned this a week or two ago, that the Drive for Diversity program has changed quite a bit since Bubba Wallace and myself were there 10 years ago. 10 years ago it was very good, we had a good opportunity. It was a good program. But today, it’s a great program, and I’m very happy to see that. 10 years ago, it was a great program to give you an opportunity for the K&N Series and the ARCA series. But to make the jump to a national series, it was very difficult. You had to be lucky and you have to be very, very good to get an opportunity. Today, the Drive for Diversity program is so involved in the Truck Series and that’s very special, very special because giving an opportunity to these young guys like Rajah (Caruth) and Nick Sanchez to get an opportunity in the Truck Series and perform at a very competitive level. We didn’t have that 10 years ago, so I’m very happy for them. I’m very happy that the Drive for Diversity program continues to grow and continues to get better.”

At Phoenix Raceway, they’re going to have the “Viva La Fiesta”. Just curious to hear your overall excitement for that event and the importance of that cultural presence and impact over there.

“Yeah, of course. I think that every time that I come to the west coast to Las Vegas, Sonoma, Auto Club Speedway was very, very big.. Phoenix and Los Angeles – it’s amazing to feel an incredible amount of support from the Latino community, and I feel very, very proud to be the face of this community in the Cup Series. We embrace it and I’m very happy that the race tracks embrace it with us, as well. The “Viva La Fiesta” in Phoenix is just a small example of that. We’re going to be having a great time in Phoenix.”


Chevrolet NASCAR Cup Series Statistics

Manufacturers Championships:

Total (1949-2023): 42

First title for Chevrolet: 1958

Highest number of consecutive titles: 13 (2003-15)

Years Won: 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2021, 2022, 2023

Drivers Championships:

Total (1949-2021): 33

First Chevrolet champion: Buck Baker (1957)

Highest number of consecutive titles: 7 (2005-11)

Most Recent: Kyle Larson (2021)

Years Won: 1957, 1960, 1961, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2020, 2021

Event Victories:

Record for total race wins in single season: 26 (2007)

2024 STATISTICS:

Wins: 3

Poles: 0

Laps Led: 354

Top-five finishes: 7

Top-10 finishes: 11

Stage wins: 3

· Chase Elliott: 1

· Kyle Larson: 2

CHEVROLET IN NASCAR CUMULATIVE STATISTICS:

Total Chevrolet race wins: 854 (1949 to date)

Poles won to date: 743

Laps led to date: 249,529

Top-five finishes to date: 4,305

Top-10 finishes to date: 8,872

Total NASCAR Cup Wins by Corporation, 1949 to Date:

       General Motors: 1,188

       Chevrolet: 854

       Pontiac: 154

       Oldsmobile: 115

       Buick: 65



       Ford: 828                                                           

       Ford: 728

       Mercury: 96

       Lincoln: 4



       Fiat Chrysler Automobiles: 467

       Dodge: 217

       Plymouth: 191

       Chrysler: 59



       Toyota: 180


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.

Spire Motorsports Shriners Children’s 500 Race Advance

In 16 NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) races at Phoenix Raceway, Spire Motorsports has logged one top-20 and two top-25 finishes with seven different drivers. Corey LaJoie, driver of Spire Motorsports’ No. 7 Group 1001 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 earned the organization’s lone top 20 after finishing 18th on November 6, 2022 in NCS season finale. The Mooresville, N.C., team fields the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1s in the NCS with LaJoie, and fellow drivers Zane Smith and Carson Hocevar, respectively.
The Shriners Children’s 500 from Phoenix Raceway will be televised live on FOX Sunday, March 10, beginning at 3:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. The fourth of 36 races on the 2024 NCS schedule will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90. NASCAR RaceDay’s pre-race coverage on FOX will take the green flag at 2:30 p.m. EST.

Corey LaJoie – Driver, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Corey LaJoie will make his 14th NCS start at Phoenix Raceway behind the wheel of the Group 1001 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 in Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500.
  • In honor of Women’s History Month, Lajoie’s Group 1001 Chevrolet will feature more than 450 names of women who are employed by Group 1001. Colton Herta’s No. 26 Gainbridge entry will also showcase the same initiative this weekend at the season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (Fla.) NTT IndyCar Series race.
  • With a commitment to service and community transformation, Group 1001 supports education and sports initiatives that improve lives. With a commitment to service and community transformation, Group 1001 supports education and sports initiatives that improve lives. In 2022, Group 1001 became a majority stakeholder in Parity, a brand sponsorship platform committed to closing the gender income and opportunity gap in professional sports. Currently, 48 percent of Group 1001’s sponsorship dollars support women’s sports.
  • Group 1001 is a collective that empowers companies to create positive growth. Our insurance and annuities are easy to understand and accessible to all. Our online investing platform gives individuals control over their savings. Our technology and innovation help companies succeed. And our strategic partnerships bring people together through education and sports.
  • In 13 previous starts at the one-mile, Avondale, Ariz., oval, LaJoie has an average start of 29.2, an average finish of 30.9, led 12 laps and has completed 3,149 of the 4,067 (77.4 percent) laps contested.
  • LaJoie earned a venue-best 18th-place finish in the 2022 NCS season finale.
  • Last March, LaJoie started 28th and finished 26th in the United Rentals Work United 500.
  • Last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, LaJoie started 17th but ultimately finished 32nd. The third-generation racer was a fixture in the top 10 throughout the first two stages of the Pennzoil 400 until a late-race, on-track incident left him one lap off the pace when the checkered flag flew.
  • LaJoie is currently 17th in the NCS championship point standings, five points outside 15th, while just 21 markers separate him from the top 10.

Corey LaJoie Quotes
It’s been a good start to the year. You’ve been competitive every week. Now, you’re headed to Phoenix and that will be the fourth different style track for the fourth week in a row. What are your thoughts as the NASCAR Cup Series heads into Round 4?
“We’ve had a pretty good run to start out the season. We’ve been competitive everywhere, so that definitely says a lot about all of our off-season preparation. Our Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro has been fast every time we unload. Ryan Sparks and all my guys are working hard and they’ve hit on the right things early in the year. Confidence is high.”

“I’m looking forward to getting to Phoenix this weekend and seeing what we have. We tested out there in December and learned a lot so we expect to put all that effort to good use this weekend. I’m really proud to have Group 1001 on board this weekend, to recognize Women’s History Month and carry the names of all the women they’re honoring. It’s incredible what Group 1001 is doing to elevate all the women who play key roles within the company. Pretty cool to be part of that.”

Zane Smith – Driver, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Zane Smith is no stranger to Phoenix Raceway where he logged a victory and three top-five finishes in four NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series (NCTS) starts, and a fifth-place finish in his only NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) start at the one-mile oval. Smith clinched the 2022 NCTS title with a win at Phoenix.
  • Smith finished 31st in his lone NCS start at Phoenix Raceway.
  • Smith will carry the No. 71 primary sponsor, Focused Health, Sunday at Phoenix Raceway. Focused Health is a National Health Insurance agency founded by industry veterans with over 60 years combined industry experience. Primarily focused on the government programs space, Focused Health partners with payors and employers to deliver health insurance solutions for individuals and families. For more information visit AtFocusedHealth.com.
  • Last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Smith started 24th before an early brush with the wall left him with a 36th-place finish. Smith finished eighth in the NCTS race Friday night in Las Vegas.
  • Sunday marks his fourth NCS start for Spire Motorsports and 13th career start in NASCAR’s premier division.
  • Fans can pre-order Focused Health No. 71 Zane Smith merchandise at shopzanesmith.com.

Zane Smith Quotes
What are your thoughts on Phoenix this weekend?
“I’m ready to go. The last two race weekends haven’t gone our way and I’m ready to learn from that and show what the No. 71 team has to offer. Phoenix is a track I know very well, I know how to win there. So, I’m looking forward to being back at that track and competing.”
Stats show you have done super well at Phoenix Raceway in the past, does that boost your confidence going into this weekend?
“It doesn’t boost my confidence because the Cup Series is so different from the Truck Series. I know the Phoenix track well and it is a track I like to race at, so I’m excited to get there and race again, especially with this No. 71 Spire Motorsports team. My team works hard everyday to bring a fast Focused Health Chevy Camaro to the track.”

Carson Hocevar – Driver, No.77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Carson Hocevar will pilot Spire Motorsports’ No. 77 Delaware Life Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 in Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500 at Phoenix Raceway.
  • Hocevar secured his first top 15 of the year in last Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The 21-year-old racer started 14th, was consistently fast throughout the event, and came away with a respectable 15th-place finish.
  • Delaware Life Insurance Company (“Delaware Life”) has made its mission to deliver pure value to its network of financial professionals with a set of tools and products that help them empower their clients to plan for retirement with confidence. Delaware Life’s focus is delivering a seamless experience that gives clients exactly what they’re looking for: the comfort of understanding, the confidence of transparency, and streamlined products without needless features. Learn more at www.delawarelife.com
  • Hocevar is currently 25h in the NCS championship point standings, highest amongst the three Sunoco Rookie-of-the-Year candidates.
  • In five previous NCTS starts at Phoenix Raceway, the Portage, Mich., native has logged two top-10 finishes.
  • Sunday’s Shriners Children’s 500 will mark Hocevar’s second career NCS start at the one-mile desert oval. He qualified 22nd and finished 19th in last fall’s NCS season finale.
  • Hocevar’s crew chief Luke Lambert earned his first NCS race win with driver Ryan Newman in the March 19, 2017 Camping World 500 at Phoenix Raceway. In 371 races a top the pit box, Lambert has called 26 top-five and 86 top-10 finishes in NASCAR’s premier division. Lambert also called Noah Gragson’s 2022 NXS win at the Avondale, Ariz., race course.

Carson Hocevar Quotes
Last week was your first top-15 of the season. What’s your outlook heading into this week’s race at Phoenix?
“Outlook is to do just what we did last week. Control what we can control and that is bringing the best race car we can, running the best race and adapting to what’s thrown at us. I feel really confident going to Phoenix and I’m excited to get to the track.”
First short track of the season – how are you feeling coming off two super speedways and a 1.5-mile?
“Phoenix is kind of mile and a half and a short track mixed so I feel comfortable and especially with Spire being a part of the test in the winter. I think we will have another strong showing.”
As the season progresses, are there any upcoming tracks that you’re particularly excited about or anticipate will be especially challenging?
“No, not really. I feel like we really don’t have a weak part in our game yet as a driver and as a team with Luke (Lambert) and I feel comfortable going anywhere on the schedule. Excited to keep building week to week.”
From the Top of the Box

Ryan Sparks – Crew Chief, No. 7 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Ryan Sparks serves in a dual role as both Spire Motorsports competition director and crew chief for driver Corey LaJoie and the No. 7 Chevrolet Camaro in the NCS.
  • Sparks, a Winston-Salem, N.C., native, has been paired with LaJoie since 2020.
  • Combined, Sparks and LaJoie have earned four top-five and seven top-10 finishes, including a pair of top four in the 2024 Daytona 500.

Stephen Doran – Crew Chief, No. 71 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Stephen Doran begins his first full season as a Cup Series crew chief leading Zane Smith and the No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet team during the 2024 season.
  • In 2006, Doran got his start in NASCAR at Petty Enterprises.
  • Prior to his arrival at Spire Motorsports, Doran worked at Stewart-Haas Racing as an engineer, most recently on the No. 4 car driven by Kevin Harvick.

Luke Lambert – Crew Chief, No. 77 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Luke Lambert is the crew chief for Spire Motorsports’ No. 77 team with 2024 NCS Rookie of the Year candidate Carson Hocevar
  • The 2005 North Carolina State graduate has led the competition efforts for some of the sport’s most notable names including Jeff Burton, Ryan Newman, Elliott Sadler and Chris Buescher.
  • In 2014, Lambert led Newman to a berth in the Championship 4, and ultimately a runner-up finish in the NCS championship point standings.

About Spire Motorsports …
Spire Motorsports is a NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race team co-owned by long-time NASCAR industry executives Jeff Dickerson and Thaddeus “T.J.” Puchyr. In 2024, Spire Motorsports will campaign the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1s in the NASCAR Cup Series with drivers Corey LaJoie, Zane Smith and Carson Hocevar, respectively. The team will also field the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Silverados full time in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. An all-star driver lineup will rotate throughout the 2024 season in the No. 7 Chevy. Rajah Caruth will drive the No. 71 entry and Chase Purdy rounds out the team’s fleet of Chevrolets in the No. 77.

Spire Motorsports earned its inaugural NASCAR Cup Series victory in its first full season of competition when Justin Haley took the checkered flag in the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway on July 7, 2019. Less than three years later, William Byron drove Spire Motorsports’ No. 7 Chevrolet Silverado to its inaugural NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series win on April 7, 2022, at Martinsville Speedway. The team’s most recent win came on May 20, 2023, when Kyle Larson took the checkered flag in the Tyson 250 at North Wilkesboro Speedway.

Noah Gragson Phoenix 1 Media Availability

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Shriners Children’s 500 Advance | Wednesday, March 6, 2024

Noah Gragson, driver of the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse, is coming off a sixth-place finish in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Gragson participated in a media call earlier today to talk about that event as well as what lies ahead this weekend at Phoenix Raceway.

NOAH GRAGSON, No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse – HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT YOUR START? “They’ve been alright. They’ve been good, but what satisfies me probably the most is how we’ve been able to deal with the challenges and adversity that come our way. Obviously, Atlanta was a tough weekend overall with wrecking on lap one and then going into Vegas negative in points, so seeing how we rebounded was really big for me and stood out in my mind, so I’m really proud of our team and being able to show an effort of coming back after a tough weekend and tough week leading into Vegas, so the rebound was big and then to be able to hopefully roll on with this momentum is good as well, coming off a sixth-place finish at Vegas.”

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS RACING WITH FORD SO FAR AND WHAT ARE THE KEYS TO DOING WELL AT PHOENIX RACEWAY? “It’s been a lot of fun to work with Ford so far. A lot of the OEM’s are all the same, but they’re different. From the simulators, they’re all pretty close, and the motors I feel like are all pretty close. I’ve never been able to really feel too big of a difference, but they’ve been strong so it’s been fun getting to know the Ford camp and not only the group of drivers, but just seeing how they go about the superspeedway stuff. It’s always been tough to race against the Fords on the superspeedway and now being a part of it and seeing how they go about things, I felt like we’ve had speed, so that’s a good thing. I like the way the car drove in Vegas and it’s been good so far. No complaints. Phoenix is a fun racetrack, but challenging with both ends being different. That makes it a challenge for a driver and a team to get the car balanced right. You might be good on one side or the other and vice versa, you might struggle on the opposite side of the racetrack. With that being said, it’s important to get the car dialed in during practice as good as you can on both side and get the corners connected, so I like Phoenix. It’s always a fun race. It’s one of the closest hometown races for me, a lot of fans that I’ve been able to make memories with and relationships over the past handful of years. I see them a lot and Phoenix as well. That’s always a lot of fun. The fan support is awesome there and then it sets us up for the championship race, which is really important, so I think you might see a lot of guys trying stuff this first race every year and then in order to learn something for the championship race that’s where everybody wants to get to and have a good showing to end the year off, so it’s a fun racetrack, challenging and it’s a fun city as well.”

HAVE YOU FELT THE PRESSURE OF PEOPLE SAYING THE SHR TURNAROUND IS ON YOUR SHOULDERS? “No. I don’t really feel any pressure. I think it’s because I feel like I have a lot of trust in the organization as a whole and I feel like they have a lot of trust in me. I know it’s still early, but I’m just making relationships and developing those in the shop over the past two or three months has been good. To be able to have that support in the shop takes pressure off myself. They’ve been saying on matter what the department is they’re like, ‘Hey, we’ll rebuild the race cars. We just want you to be out there hauling ass and going to the front.’ So, that gives me confidence that I have the trust and the support from every department inside the shop, and that’s big as a driver to have – not only the trust and support, but the respect of every individual at the race team and vice versa. I have the respect and trust in those guys as well and we’re gonna continue to grow as an organization.”

WHAT ABOUT THE MOTIVATION COMING OFF THAT SIXTH-PLACE FINISH? “I think we had good speed, but I also want to see where we’re at at Phoenix and I won’t really know, so it does feel good. There is a little extra confidence in the tank leading into Phoenix, but, at the same time, you’re only as good as your last run, so once we get on track at Phoenix the Vegas run doesn’t really matter. We can talk about it all week, but once the tires hit the racetrack it’s a new opportunity, so we’ve been working hard this week to get in position to run good at Phoenix hopefully, but we just want to become better and learn throughout practice. It’s still very early in the season and I think our expectations are pretty realistic. We want to finish better than we start and we want to improve all day. If we can do that, no matter if it’s a sixth-place finish or if it’s we ran 18th all day and finished 14th that’s still good in my mind because we made improvement and we finished better than we ran all day. Everybody is really pumped up and excited to get to Phoenix and to have that support and everybody’s motivation and confidence, they’re excited to go to work and that makes me feel good as a driver.”

WHAT ARE YOUR FEELINGS ABOUT TAKING ON THE BRISTOL CONCRETE IN A CUP CAR FOR THE FIRST TIME? “I’m excited. I’ve never been on the concrete in Bristol in a Cup car, so I’m excited for it. It’s not one of my best tracks. I know we have two wins there in Xfinity and it’s always a lot of fun, but my confidence level going to Bristol is probably lower than most tracks for whatever reason. Even though we’ve had success, it just always seems like it’s a little different, especially with the spray being laid down and with how it rubbers up. I’ve been doing a lot of hard work to learn that track and, really, Kyle Larson was probably the turning point around there when we were in Xfinity in 2022. I spent all week talking to him leading up to the fall race there and just picking his brain on how to run the top lane and just figure out how to get around there. I also listened to Kyle Busch when we were in the trucks. He’s very good around that place, so I feel like I probably should have more confidence on that track. I love going there always, especially now that it’s concrete. I was probably a participant when it was the dirt race, so I have a little bit more confidence going for the concrete race.”

DO YOU FEEL THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE HISTORY AT BRISTOL WHEN YOU’RE BEHIND THE WHEEL? “Yeah, always. It’s just a special place no matter if it was my first time there in the K&N Series or walking in the last time I was there for the dirt race . It just has a different atmosphere. It has a different feel. It is a special place. There’s no place really like it. When people ask me where they should go if they’ve never watched a race, I always tell the Talladega if they like to have a lot of fun or Bristol if they really like a cool atmosphere and a cool race, a cool racetrack that’s really unique. I always love going there and enjoying it.”

DO YOU FEEL QUALIFYING COULD BE AN ISSUE GOING FORWARD OR WAS IT A ONE TIME THING AT LAS VEGAS WHEN YOU SAID YOU UNDER DROVE THE CAR? “No, I think the preparation has been good, but also at the same time I don’t really know how the cars are gonna drive and we don’t have a notebook built up yet. I’m sure when we go back to Vegas I’m gonna know, but these handful of race to start the year it’s still gonna be a lot of learning and learning how these cars drive and handle and how our practice balance ends and how big of a swing we need to make and how far we just think a qualifying adjustment needs to be. WIth that being said, it is gonna take a little bit to knock the rust off at a lot of these tracks qualifying, but I felt really confident going into practice, but after Preece went to a backup car I knew I just had to manage a lap and didn’t carry as much throttle as I needed to, which ultimately hurt us and put us in a back qualifying spot. If I could have redone it five minutes later, I would have definitely run a much faster lap, I think, but that was the position you’re in. You only get one time. It’s gonna take a few weeks to keep learning and figure out how much balance we need to make and how much throttle I need to carry.”

WHEN A TEAMMATE IS GOING TO A BACKUP DOES THAT IMPACT THE REST OF THE TEAM WHEN THEY GO TO QUALIFY? “Yeah, I think just trying to be smart for the company overall. I’ve already gone to one backup car in the Duel, which sucks. I think I’ve only been in three backup cars in my career, I think two at the Roval – maybe four – two at the Roval and one at Portland and one at Daytona, so I don’t like doing that at all just because it’s not the car you’ve been massaging all week going down to that racetrack. The backup car, it’s pretty close but it’s not as massaged I guess you could say, and then at the same time it’s just a lot of money and resources that you don’t want to crash. You don’t want to wreck at all. It definitely is in the back of my mind. ‘Hey, let’s just get through here unscathed and we’ll go race tomorrow.’”

HOW MUCH WERE YOU THINKING ABOUT FOCUSING ON WHAT YOU HAD AND TAKING YOUR TIME AS OPPOSED TO MAYBE TRYING TO GET TOO MUCH OR OVERDRIVE THE CAR? “The amount of pace we had in practice allowed me to be patient. The amount of pace we had in the race allowed me to patient because I knew, ‘Hey, if I’m in a position to make a pass and if I don’t get that pass complete, I know there’s gonna be another opportunity, where last year we might not have had that pace and I felt like I had to attack that one time – like I only had one opportunity and most of the time I’d mess it up and I was driving over my head. When you have a fast car, it allows you to be more patient. I feel the most comfortable I’ve felt and the most patient I’ve felt this year just because they do have speed and I know there’s plenty of opportunities to make those passes. ‘Hey, if I don’t get them this corner, let me re-try and mount a run and I’ll have an opportunity the next lap. That definitely gives me a lot of confidence as a driver and I feel like I have that this year.”

DO YOU FEEL COMFORTABLE OVERALL WITH THE NEXT GEN CAR? “Yeah, I think if you would have asked me that before this season started, I would have said no I don’t feel comfortable in a Next Gen car at all, but all this year and this past weekend especially, because that was our true first real race other than a superspeedway, I feel really comfortable. It’s the most comfortable I’ve ever felt by a long shot inside the race car, and I told our crew that after the race. It’s like, ‘Man, I feel like I can feel every corner of this race car.’ I could feel how the tires were loading, where I couldn’t feel it last year. It was evil to drive. That allows me to be a lot calmer and a lot more patient and allows me to give better feedback, too, because you’re only worrying about one or two things. We were pretty close the way we unloaded this past weekend. ‘Hey, I’m a little loose here. I’m a little tight here,’ and there’s two or three things that you’re trying to fix in practice, where last year I would get out of the car and I’m like, ‘Man, I don’t even know where to start because there’s like 10 different things going on,’ and it was hard to pick the priority to fix because there were nine or 10 different issues throughout a lap where you’re like, ‘Man, it’s hitting the left-rear too hard, but then I’m getting loose. I’m tight here.’ This year, you only have like two or three things – at least we saw at Vegas – that it allows you to really pick the priority and focus on, ‘Hey, we’re either too loose on entry or we’re a little tight on exit.’ What do we want to fix, instead of 10 different issues, which was really challenging last year because I didn’t know what to prioritize. I don’t want to say it’s easier, but it’s simpler if anything so far this year.”

WHAT DO FANS NOT UNDERSTAND WHAT GOES ON AND WHAT A DRIVER EXPERIENCES IN A CRASH, AND WHAT YOU WENT THROUGH LAST YEAR AT TIMES? “I just think how hard these hits are and how different each hit is. I’ve had some really big hits in Xfinity cars, but I would take those over probably even just pancaking this car, like if you get up out of th3 groove and you right side the thing into the wall off the corner, which wouldn’t normally be a hard hit, it’s a really hard hit in the Cup car – the Next Gen car. The stack ups on restarts, you don’t even feel it in Xfinity, but in the Cup car you’re like, ‘That hurts.’ I think the car is a lot more rigid, and I will say that NASCAR has made some big improvements to the car from where it was when it first started, but, at the same time, I feel like they’re not, I want to say this respectfully, we still probably could make more improvements because it is tough as a driver. When you see those big crashes like in the old car and the Xfinity cars, you think of Michael McDowell’s big flip, a lot of things come off that car and that all is taking energy away from the driver. When it’s stiff, the hits feel so much harder in the Cup car because it’s going directly to your body, where when things fly off the car and the car crumbles, that’s absorbing a lot of that energy and the driver is not feeling it, it dissipates that, so the stiffer and the less bent up the car looks after a wreck, the more the driver is gonna feel it. It might not look hard from the grandstands, but I’m telling you they’re really hard. I know last year when I had that brake rotor explode into turn one at Gateway, I was like, ‘Man, that’s a hard hit.’ I felt alright. I was a little foggy after the race, but I felt alright, and then as the days progressed I felt worse and worse and worse. I got to Wednesday feeling worse than I did on Tuesday, and Tuesday feeling worse than I did on Monday, and then I was like, ‘Man, something might be wrong.’ And that ultimately led me to the decision to sit out a week because I had never felt that before. Normally, I got better. I appreciate NASCAR’s effort to make it safer, which they have over the past two years from when this car was introduced, but they still hurt way worse than any wreck I ever had before the Next Gen car.”

SO WHAT IS IT LIKE WHEN YOU HAVE ACCIDENT AFTER ACCIDENT? IT SEEMED LIKE LAST YEAR YOU WERE THE UNFORTUNATE MAGNET A NUMBER OF TIMES. “You’re physically in pain, which makes you the week after week you’re just digging yourself in a hole and you’re trying to do everything right and you land Sunday night after and you’re like, ‘OK, let’s regroup. Let’s go back to the racetrack and rebuild our confidence.’ And if you wreck again it’s like it just wears on you week in and week out, and then mentally you start just getting down about yourself. I wasn’t me last year at all for a number of different circumstances, but at the same time wrecking is never fun and it really hurts in these cars, so I think we put a lot of work into our safety over this offseason. I feel good inside the race car. I even wrecked at Daytona this year in the Duel and I felt good. I wrecked at Atlanta on lap one and I felt fine after that wreck. The only one that’s been where I’m like, ‘That kind of hurt,’ was the stack up on the restarts at the Clash. They kind of hurt my head a little bit, but it’s better than it was. I don’t think anybody will truly understand what it feels like to hit in one of these cars unless you do it.”

WHAT GOES INTO GETTING BETTER THROUGH AN ENTIRE RACE? “I think it’s clear communication with your team and it’s ultimately minimizing the mistakes. Everyone is so close that if you can minimize the mistakes, we probably passed a lot of cars just on speed and being able to outwrap them on the racetrack, but also just not making mistakes on pit road, just having a clean, solid day and I think that’s what we had this past weekend, and, really, Greg Zipadelli came up to me before the race and he said it best. He said, ‘We just need to minimize the mistakes as much as possible.’ And that’s all this has turned into these days and it made me think, ‘Man, you’re right.’ You see guys sliding through their pit boxes or speeding on pit road, just worrying about those fine little details and those small victories of not overdoing it. There’s definitely a line where you’d be under doing it if your pace on pit road, too slow in the box, too slow leaving the box where it could cost you, but also being too aggressive it’s a really fine line on what’s enough and what’s too much, but, at the same time, it’s just about having smooth, solid days and putting yourself in position to capitalize on it and just being around there. I was listening to some podcast and they were saying that if you put yourself and you can run in the top five, eventually you’re gonna have an opportunity to be up front. I think they were talking to Rajah about that on some podcast and they were right. If you minimize the mistakes and you put yourself in position, eventually you’re gonna have opportunities and I think that’s what we had this past weekend.”

Meyer Shank Racing Gears Up For 2024 INDYCAR Season Opener with a New Look

Pataskala, Ohio (6 March 2024) – Spring is a season of rebirth and rejuvenation and Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) is building its 2024 racing team around that philosophy as it brings an entirely new driver lineup to the 2024 NTT INDYCAR SERIES campaign.

Entering its third season of fielding two full-time INDYCAR programs, MSR heads into the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg race weekend with an all-new driver lineup that will take the green flag this Sunday (12:00pm ET, NBC, SiriusXM Ch. 218).

2019 INDYCAR SERIES Rookie of the Year Felix Rosenqvist will make his debut with MSR and will drive the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda. Rosenqvist’s car will be running a special livery this weekend which will feature Rock Icon Bon Jovi’s SiriusXM Radio station (SiriusXM Ch. 312). In addition to being on the No. 60 for both St. Pete and Thermal’s $1 Million Challenge, Jon Bon Jovi will be attendance on race day in St. Petersburg as a guest of MSR and SiriusXM. Jon Bon Jovi will get the thrill of a lifetime as he will ride in INDYCAR’s Fastest Seat in Sports and lead the field to the green flag on Sunday.

The Swedish driver has made 79 starts since his rookie campaign and he earned his first series victory at Road America in 2020 and raced to four top-five finishes in 2023.

Rosenqvist earned 18 top-10 finishes over the last two seasons and qualified on the front row for the 2023 Indianapolis 500 to set a career-best in the Memorial Day classic. He has also won five poles in his career, including leading qualifying at the season-ending event at Laguna Seca a year ago.

Rosenqvist will be joined by a driver with just three INDYCAR SERIES starts to his credit, but a look at Tom Blomqvist’s racing resume shows him to be more than qualified for his first campaign. Blomqvist will take the reins of the No. 66 AutoNation / Arctic Wolf Honda for the full-season after making starts at Toronto, Portland and Laguna Seca in 2023.

The English-born Blomqvist – who put on nine pounds of muscle this off-season to handle the rigors of the year – comes to INDYCAR after running most of the last six years in sportscars. Blomqvist raced with MSR in IMSA for the 2022 and 2023 seasons where he clinched the 2022 DPi Championship and brought home back-to-back Rolex 24 victories in both years.

Despite his relative lack of seat time in the INDYCAR SERIES, Blomqvist is an accomplished open-wheel racer, winning the 2010 Formula Renault UK crown and placing second in the 2014 European F3 championship where he finished ahead of current Formula 1 world champion Max Verstappen.

And while Castroneves is stepping away from full-time driving chores, the popular Brazilian will continue to have a strong involvement, attending all the races as engineering support as well as working closely with the team’s sponsors and partners. Castroneves will get back in the car for this year’s Indianapolis 500 in his recently announced Meyer Shank Racing w/ Curb Agajanian No. 06 Clevelend-Cliffs machine, as he looks to become the first driver to win five Indianapolis crowns.

MSR will open the 2024 campaign on the streets of St. Petersburg, a 1.8-mile, 14-turn course where the team was dealt some early-season bad luck as both team entries were involved in a multi-car crash on the very first lap.

The 100-lap Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg will air on NBC on Sunday starting at Noon ET. Saturday’s qualifying will be shown live on Peacock beginning at 2:00 p.m. ET. SiriusXM will also host live IndyCar Radio coverage of both sessions on XM Ch. 218.

Meyer Shank Racing Driver Quotes:

Felix Rosenqvist:

“I’m super pumped to get the season started! There are a lot of new things going on, but it’s all exciting. We’ve been strong in testing and we’re all ready to see what we can do when it matters. I think we all have been itching to get to the track and get the season started, and now it’s finally here. Let’s go!”

Tom Blomqvist:

“The wait is finally over! It’s finally time to get my first proper INDYCAR weekend started. It’s been nice to have the time to reflect on a couple of INDYCAR outings I did at the end of last season and to figure out what I can do better heading into my first full-season campaign. I haven’t had the track time I would have liked, but that’s all part of the challenge in INDYCAR. I feel as prepared as I can be and I’m just excited to get this season underway. St. Pete looks like such a cool event and I’m just ready to soak up the energy and get after it.”