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NASCAR postpones 2024 Daytona 500 to Monday due to rain

Photo by Patrick Sue-Chan for SpeedwayMedia.com.

The 2024 Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway has been postponed until Monday, February 19, at 4 p.m. ET on FOX due to inclement weather that prevented the season-opening event from occurring on Sunday, Feb. 18.

The announcement comes as the amount of rainfall within the Daytona International Speedway circuit that has increased since the start of this weekend, particularly on Saturday, continues to precipitate with no sight of relief until Monday. The weather had already impacted this year’s Daytona Speedweeks events as the 2024 ARCA Menards Series’ opener at Daytona occurred on Friday night instead of Saturday while the Cup Series’ final practice session scheduled for Saturday was canceled, both due to rain.

With the announcement, this will mark the first time since the 2012 season that the Daytona 500 event will commence on a Monday. Previously, the 2020 and 2021 Daytona 500s started on a Sunday but finished on Monday due to rain.

In addition, the Cup Series’ Daytona 500 will be part of a historic doubleheader feature on Monday that will include the Xfinity Series’ season-opening event at Daytona for the United Rentals 300 which was also postponed to Monday, both coinciding on the same day for the first time. The Xfinity opener will occur first at 11 a.m. ET on FS1 before the Daytona 500.

When the event commences on Monday, Joey Logano, a two-time Cup Series champion and the 2015 Daytona 500 champion, will lead the field to the green flag from pole position after he posted a pole-winning lap at 171.947 mph in 49.465 seconds during Wednesday night’s single-car qualifying session. Joining him on the front row will be Michael McDowell, the 2021 Daytona 500 champion who posted the second-best qualifying lap at 181.686 mph in 49.536 seconds.

The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series’ season-opening event at Daytona International Speedway for the 66th annual running of the Daytona 500 is scheduled for Monday, February 19. It will air at 4 p.m. ET on FOX.

RXR top nail-biting Round 2 Qualifying at the Extreme E Desert X Prix

FEBRUARY 18: Mikaela Ahlin-Kottulinsky (SWE) / Johan Kristoffersson (SWE), Rosberg X Racing Gray Leadbetter, (USA) / Travis Pastrana (USA), LEGACY MOTOR CLUB (LEGACY M.C.) Molly Taylor (AUS) / Kevin Hansen (SWE), Veloce Racing during the Saudi Arabia on February 18, 2024. (Photo by Sam Bagnall / LAT Images)

18 February 2024, London: Defending champions and Round 1 winners Rosberg X Racing (RXR) continue their dominant run, coming out on top in Qualifying in the second round Season 4 the Desert X Prix in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

Nico Rosberg’s outfit continued where they left off yesterday, with Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinksy and Johan Kristoffersson winning both of their Qualifying Heats to top the standings as they did in the opening round, securing a spot in the Round 2 Grand Final.

ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team (ASXE), who ended Round 1 with a DNF in the Grand Final, enter the top four once more. The Spanish outfit took honours in Qualifying 1 Heat 2, and third place in their next qualifying Heat was enough to see the team through.

While Andretti Altawkilat just missed out on the Heat win in the first qualifying session behind ASXE, Catie Munnings and Timmy Hansen executed the perfect comeback in Qualifying 2 to win their first Qualfiying Heat of Season 4. This sees the team through to the Grand Final following a Redemption Race win in Round 1.

After a nail-biting Qualifying 2, E.ON Veloce Racing and NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team finished level on points, but a quicker time in the Continental Traction Challenge sees Kevin Hansen and Molly Taylor through to Grand Final where they’ll look to top third-place in Round 1 for E.ON Veloce Racing.

Round 1 runners-up NEOM McLaren XE, along with the three remaining teams, will fight it out in the Redemption Race for valuable championship points.

Qualifying 1 – Heat 1

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON’s (LEGACY M.C.) Travis Pastrana snatched the lead at the start of Heat 1, ahead of yesterday’s top-three teams – RXR, E.ON Veloce Racing, and NEOM McLaren.

The off-road racing legend continued to extend his advantage, taking a lead of seven seconds into the Switch Zone. Disaster struck for the all-new American outfit, though, as the team was awarded a 17-second penalty for a Switch Zone infringement.

LEGACY M.C.’s Gray Leadbetter still maintained track position as the teams exited the Switch Zone. After a valiant defensive effort, the 19-year-old was passed by RXR’s Kristoffersson heading into the final lap, and dropped back to third on track as Hansen moved E.ON Veloce Racing up to second.

Leadbetter managed to keep ahead of NEOM McLaren XE’s Mattias Ekström as the teams crossed the finish line at the end of the Heat, but the Round 1 runners-up moved ahead of LEGACY M.C. following the latter’s time-penalty.

Qualifying 1 – Heat 2

ASXE’s Fraser McConnell made the best start in Heat 2, leading the pack after the first turn as SUN Minimeal Team’s Timo Scheider and Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E’s Hansen battled for second, with JBXE’s Dania Akeel close behind.

The pair fought hard throughout the opening two laps, making contact as they jockeyed for position, but it was Hansen who eventually came out on top to move Andretti Altawkilat into second place. Following the driver change, Catie Munnings was right on Laia Sanz’s tail throughout the last two laps, but the Briton could not get past and the Spaniard claimed the all-important Heat 2 victory for ASXE.

Klara Andersson brought home the SUN Minimeal Team ODYSSEY 21 in third place, with Andreas Bakkerud rounding out the order for JBXE in fourth.

Qualifying 2 – Heat 1

Another strong start from Ekström saw the NEOM McLaren XE car undercut the rest of the pack, and a quick deployment of the ENOWA Hyperdrive after Turn 1 saw the Swede leading the pack into Turn 2. Close behind E.ON Veloce Racing’s Hansen kept Andretti Altawkilat’s Munnings and JBXE’s Bakkerud in his mirrors as he set off in pursuit of Ekström.

Munnings kept the leading pair within reach throughout her stint, giving her teammate Hansen just two seconds to overcome as he chased down NEOM McLaren XE’s Gutierréz and E.ON Veloce Racing’s Taylor further upfield, as the Australian jumped ahead of Gutiérrez with a slick driver change in the Switch Zone.

Hansen had to fight hard to make it past Gutierréz, as the Spaniard shut the door on the Andretti Altawkilat driver multiple times throughout the opening lap. Some clever manoeuvering from Hansen soon secured the overtake, though, and the Swede carried that pace in pursuit of Taylor, soon executing the undercut to take first from E.ON Veloce Racing.

NEOM McLaren XE’s Gutierréz, determined to see her team through to another Desert X Prix Grand Final, managed to get ahead of E.ON Veloce Racing’s Taylor with a late move before the finish line. Gutierréz may have stolen second-place in the Heat by 0.4 seconds, but they were unable to steal E.ON Veloce Racing’s spot in the Grand Final. Fourth in the Heat for JBXE means they join NEOM McLaren XE in the Redemption Race.

Qualifying 2 – Heat 2

SUN Minimeal Team’s Andersson was quickest off the line, but it was RXR’s Kristoffersson who took the early lead, using the favoured inside line through the opening corner. The Swede was followed by ASXE’s Sanz, who used the same tactics to get ahead of Andersson and Leadbetter in the LEGACY M.C. car.

Andersson and Leadbetter were side-by-side over the first set of jumps, but it was the young American who secured third place for the opening lap. Up ahead, ASXE’s Sanz kept Kristoffersson in her sights, giving RXR’s Åhlin-Kottulinksy only a five-second advantage ahead of ASXE’s McConnell.

Following the driver change, LEGACY M.C.’s Pastrana entered attack mode, pushing his ODYSSEY 21 to its limit. The car bucked onto two wheels repeatedly as Pastrana hunted down ASXE’s McConnell, and the American was the first of the group to use his ENOWA Hypderdrive to close the gap enough to soon take second-place.

Åhlin-Kottulinsky crossed the line first, completing another dominant Qualifying for Nico Rosberg’s outift. Third place for McConnell proved enough for ASXE to complete the Round 2 Grand Final line-up, while LEGACY M.C. and the SUN Minimeal Team will be battling for a Redemption Race win and the coveted 12 championship points that come with it.

Q1 Heat 1:

  1. Rosberg X Racing 10:48.380mins
  2. E.ON Veloce Racing +1.613s
  3. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team +10.032s
  4. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB IN ASSOCIATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON +22.467s (PENALISED)

Q1 Heat 2:

  1. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team 10:59.956mins
  2. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E +1.012s
  3. SUN Minimeal Team +7.805s
  4. JBXE +29.955s

Q2 Heat 1:

  1. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E 10:49.433mins
  2. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team +1.206s
  3. E.ON Veloce Racing +1.652s
  4. JBXE +29.498s

Q2 Heat 2:

  1. Rosberg X Racing 10:59.082mins
  2. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB IN ASSOCATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON +4.552s
  3. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team +5.689s
  4. SUN Minimeal Team +9.787s

Qualifying Standings

  1. Rosberg X Racing: 20 points
  2. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E: 18 points
  3. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team: 16 points
  4. E.ON Veloce Racing: 14 points
  5. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team: 14 points
  6. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB IN ASSOCIATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON: 12 points
  7. SUN Minimeal Team: 10 points
  8. JBXE: 8 points

To learn more about Extreme E, visit – www.Extreme-E.com

NASCAR postpones 2024 Xfinity Series season-opening event at Daytona to Monday

Photo by Patrick Sue-Chan for SpeedwayMedia.com.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series United Rentals 300 at Daytona International Speedway has been postponed to Monday, February 19, at 11 a.m. ET on FS1 due to inclement weather that prevented the 2024 season-opening event from occurring on Saturday, February 17.

The announcement comes as the amount of rainfall within the state of Florida and the Daytona International Speedway circuit, which continues to play a critical factor for the remainder of this year’s Daytona Speedweeks, including Sunday’s 66th annual running of the Daytona 500 for the Cup Series, continues to precipitate with no sight of relief for the remainder of Saturday, but provides some relief throughout Monday.

The Xfinity Series teams and competitors were able to conduct an on-track qualifying session earlier in the day and host driver introductions before the increase in precipitation halted all on-track activities and delayed the event’s start before the decision being made to postpone the event two days later.

This season will mark the first time the Xfinity Series’ season-opening event at Daytona has been postponed to a Monday since the 2004 season, where Dale Earnhardt Jr. would win during the same season where he notched his first Daytona 500 victory. Further announcements regarding plans for Sunday’s 66th running of the Daytona 500 amid weather concerns remain to be determined.

When the Xfinity Series event at Daytona occurs to commence the 2024 season, Jesse Love, a newcomer to the Xfinity Series, will lead the field to the green flag from pole position after he posted a pole-winning lap at 181.079 mph in 49.702 seconds while piloting the No. 2 Chevrolet Camaro for Richard Childress Racing. Joining him on the front row will be teammate Austin Hill, a two-time series’ Daytona season-opener winner who clocked in the second-best qualifying lap at 181.068 mph in 49.705 seconds.

Stanton Barrett, Dawson Cram, Kyle Sieg, CJ McLaughlin, Caesar Bacarella and Joey Gase were the competitors who did not qualify for the event.

The 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series’ season-opening event at Daytona International Speedway for the United Rentals 300 is scheduled to occur this Monday, February 19, and will begin to air at 11 a.m. ET on FS1.

Wayne Auton: NASCAR’s school principal

ROCKINGHAM, N.C. - SEPTEMBER 7: Wayne Auton, series director for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, speaks to the media as Rockingham Speedway announces the addition of 2012 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at Rockingham Speedway on Sept. 7, 2011, in Rockingham, North Carolina. Photo: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images for NASCAR

Wayne Auton called Brad Keselowski to the hauler at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 17, 2006. The night before, Keselowski “just piledrove” Jack Sprague on the cooldown lap of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Ford 200.

“Wayne calls me in the hauler and he says, ‘What happened on the cool down last night?’ ‘Oh, a little disagreement,'” Keselowski said. “I don’t remember his exact words, but I don’t think they were something I’m supposed to say.”

Auton played a tape of Keselowski plowing into Sprague, and the VCR ate the tape. Not being a tech-savvy guy, he tried to stop it, but pressed fast-forward and tape shot out.

“He was just so mad,” he said. “Like, smoke coming out of his ears mad. He just told me, get the hell out of here and don’t ever do that. Don’t do that.”

Keselowski exited the hauler trying not to laugh or snicker, but Auton made his point.

The 2024 NASCAR season marks Auton’s last as a series director. A title he’s held since 2012, as XFINITY Series director, and was the original director of the Truck Series. Much like Mike Helton, Auton is a “no-nonsense” official who’ll — to borrow a line from former Cup Series race director, David Hoots — “Put a stop to all that jimmy-jackin.'”

Of course, he didn’t always yell. After Noah Gragson and Harrison Burton fought in the garage at Kentucky Speedway in 2020, he called both of them to the hauler.

“I was expecting we were gonna get yelled at and be in trouble,” Burton said.

He said, “Just don’t do it again, boys,” and left.

Of course, he had a lighter side. He’s a “stand-up guy” who, much like NASCAR writer, Chris “Skippy” Knight, calls you every holiday and checks that you’re doing well. Plus, he’s a bit of a snarker. One night during Talladega weekend in 2018, Jim Utter, Knight and I ate dinner at a nearby Mellow Mushrooms. Skippy looked to see if any other NASCAR people were there. I pointed him towards Auton in the main dining room (also the MRN crew, but they don’t factor into this part).

Skippy tapped Auton’s shoulder, as we went to our table. A few minutes later, he came over and talked to us. At one point, Utter, tongue-in-cheek, said something to him. I don’t remember exactly what he said, but it was about a penalty Elliott Sadler received during the race*.

Auton laughed and gave Utter a close to the waist middle finger.

*After that, I asked Auton what Sadler did to receive the penalty. He said that a driver could use pit road to avoid a wreck (like he did), but can’t also stop in their box for service (like he did).

Auton’s “firm, but knows when to dial back” approach to officiating earned him the respect of the drivers in the XFINITY Series garage.

“Me and Austin Cindric joke all the time that Wayne is the ‘not in my series guy.’  He’s awesome,” Burton said. “We all love Wayne, but for those few moments I was really scared of Wayne, that’s for sure.”

Layne Riggs Makes Truck Series Debut at Daytona

Early racing incident takes him out of contention

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (February 17, 2024) – Layne Riggs shook out his first race jitters last night at the Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway.

Qualifying 21st in the No. 38 Love’s RV Stops Ford F-150, Layne Riggs was ready to put his skills to the test and kick off his rookie campaign at the 2.5 mile track. Riggs took no time getting to the top-15, showing his competitors that he can be trusted as a drafting partner. While running 15th on Lap six, Riggs was caught in a racing incident will fellow competitor Matt Crafton, causing damage to the right side of his Ford F-150. Riggs brought his truck to pit road and the crew got to work on damage repair. Unfortunately, the right front fender of the Love’s RV Stops Ford was to much and the team called it a night resulting in a 33rd place finish.

No. 38 Love’s RV Stops Ford F-150:

DRIVER LAYNE RIGGS:

“Pretty bad way to start the season, but it’s “race 1”, we’re not going to let that defy us. It’s not who we are. There’s going to be some growing pains but I have full confidence in this Love’s RV Stops team. We’ll bounce back at Atlanta..

CREW CHIEF DYLAN CAPPELLO:

“It’s disappointing for sure, but there are still some positives we can take away from it. Layne (Riggs) did a great job with how he saved the truck from further damage and kept his composure. There’s going to be some tough races, but it’s all about the journey and learning from each race. Like Layne said, we’ll bounce back.”

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. The team is the 2021 Daytona 500 and 2022 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series team from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski Media Availabilities

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Daytona 500 Media Availabilities | Saturday, February 17, 2024

Ford Performance drivers Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski both stopped by the Daytona International Speedway infield media center after the final NASCAR Cup Series practice was canceled due to rain. Both drivers are seeking their first career Daytona 500 victory.

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Peak Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHERE DO THINGS STAND AFTER THURSDAY? HAVE YOU TALKED TO ANY GUYS? “No, I haven’t talked to anybody. I saw the replays and saw all I needed to see. I’m not gonna call out anybody, but I was just frustrated at getting hooked in the right-rear here multiple times. That’s frustrating when you take a 70g hit last year and I take a 55g hit this year. It’s just frustrating, so it was just aggressive pushes in Duels that I thought were a little bit over the top for the timing of it and for the moment that it was in the Duels, but I haven’t talked to anybody. Hopefully, I just don’t get hooked in the right-rear again because it’s no fun. It sucks.”

HOW WAS THE BACKUP CAR AND WERE YOU PLANNING ON GOING OUT TODAY? “No, we weren’t planning on it regardless of rain or not. I thought the backup car yesterday was good. I kind of learned all I needed to learn in the small pack that we had, kind of getting pushed, I wanted to feel that. How can I take a push? How can I push somebody? How did it handle in a couple of funky situations off of four? And I was very happy with it. I couldn’t tell a difference and that’s what you want – not being able to tell a difference between backup car and primary, so they did a good job of getting that thing ready. All of our group, you don’t normally get backup cars ready. This is not really a thing anymore. I think you have that mindset coming down here that you can – that you might need to use a backup car – and they did a good job of working super hard Thursday night. NASCAR let them in a few hours early yesterday morning, which really helped those guys out of getting ready before practice, so I think our piece is just as good as it was Thursday night and hopefully it shows come Sunday again.”

DOES THE FUEL MILEAGE CHANGE AT ALL ON A GREEN TRACK? IS IT HARDER TO CALCULATE? “No, I don’t think so. I think everyone on our group really understands your fuel mileage number and what you do before your stop. It’s changed. It’s weird. It’s a lot of saving before your stop, especially if you get a green flag. Really, it helps you on a green flag stop, just taking less gas, burning less when you’re out there running, just trying to speed up the stop, especially if you’re just doing fuel only. And it feels like everybody has got that game down now. I feel like last year even the end of ‘22, I feel like our group was pretty good at being early with that, of understanding, ‘Hey, if we just save a bunch of gas,’ and I’ve just had that mindset it’s like, ‘Hey, I’m gonna save gas and if I enter pit road in row 10 or 12, I’m gonna make up a second on the stop and I’m probably gonna jump these guys.’ So, it’s like who can save the most gas efficiently. You even see leaders saving now and it kind of slows the pace down. You’ll see the outside lane, the top lane, the third lane kind of come for a while. Someone decides not to save gas for a while and get their track position, so it’s an odd cat-and-mouse game right now who wants to be aggressive on fuel saving, so everyone has that mindset now. I don’t think it changes much on a green track or not.”

ARE YOU FEELING OK AND HOW LONG DOES IT STAY WITH YOU PHYSICALLY? “I’m sore, that’s for sure. I’m probably more sore today than yesterday. I feel like the second day is always the day of more soreness – the neck area, all down the back, just muscles getting strained. That’s kind of the biggest thing. Everything else felt fine, just all of your muscles down your shoulders and stuff gets pulled in weird areas that you’re not used to, so that’s the most sore today. I’ve been trying to be ginger with it. Everything else I felt fine with mentally and stuff like that, so that was good. But, yeah, I’ll be fine to go hopefully if we were to run tomorrow I’d be good to go then. If I get another buffer day, if we run Monday, I’ll be even better. Just a little sore, but that stuff will pass.”

IS IT SIMILAR TO WHAT YOU FELT IN AUGUST? “I would say more of my body felt sore in August for longer, and I was able to be home in August to try and get worked on by people at home. Here, I haven’t been able to get worked on as much as I did last year just with the people not being here. They went home after the Duels. We have a great physical therapist in our camp that she is amazing, so she’ll be able to help me out tomorrow a little bit if I’m still feeling sore. It wasn’t as bad as last year’s, but still pretty brutal. I was happy with how the car crushed. I haven’t seen a right-front in the fire wall before, so I think everything that they’ve done NASCAR-wise to get these things to crush more is good, and there’s some stuff that I’ve talked to them about to try to get better and better, but I think she’ll help me out tomorrow if I still need it.”

THE PUSHING GAME HAS CHANGED THROUGH THE YEARS, SO WHAT IS APPROPRIATE NOW? “Pushing is a huge part of the speedways now. You see it more than ever. You see more pushing now. The only time you pushed more was the tandem racing, but that was solid connection being on somebody and now the bumpers kind of being round you kind of see the cars get out of control more. But, I think you have to push hard and I fully understand that. I’ve pushed people hard, but I try to take care of people. As the pusher, you are responsible for the guy in front of you. You have just as much responsibility to make sure that you don’t shove the guy in front of you through somebody and you have to understand where you have to let him go. If you are the third car in line, you have to let the second place car in line go. You can’t just shove him through the guy leading the top lane because then it gets to be bumper cars and that’s when people get turned. It seemed the other night where the 6 shoved the 8 into the 24. He didn’t really let him go early enough to where he was just coming too fast and then you hit him in the tri-oval to where there’s kind of a lateral load and that’s just gonna turn that guy. Pushing is a huge game and I’m fine, you can push the hell out of me, but you’ve just got to be smart where you do it and how you get on somebody, and you have to be knowledgeable of what spots are good to do it and what spots are bad to do it. I’m not upset with hard pushes because that’s what it takes to go forward in this game. You just have to be smart about where you do it and the timing of it and letting someone go. Something me and my spotter talk about a lot is if I’m the third car in line, he’s letting me know all the gaps to the car that is in front of the car in front of me. Like, ‘All right, you have one car length, half car length, OK, he’s there.’ And you have to let him go. You have to get off that guy’s bumper so you just don’t shove him through the lead car, so it’s just where you push. You have to be smart about that. Push hard. That’s fine, but it’s like last year in August the 20 shoving the 54 through the corner and kind of moving on his bumper, you just can’t do that and then the tri-oval thing, he just shoved the 8 so hard into the 24 that the 24 had no chance. You have zero shot of saving your car if you’re running 10 miles an hour faster than the leader and you run through his bumper. You just can’t save that, so it’s just smart about where you do it and how hard you get on somebody and when you know you have to let that person go. You want to develop runs and you’re trying to go forward, but sometimes timing gets off and you have to be like, ‘OK, that didn’t time out good. Let’s re-rack and let’s try it again the next lap. Maybe we can time this out better.’ If you get on somebody before you get in the tri-oval, you can push him all through the tri-oval, but if you kind of hit him right at the start-finish line like that, it just gets them all out of shape.”

ARE THOSE THE TWO HARDEST HITS YOU’VE HAD OR WAS NASHVILLE HARDER? “I feel like the Nashville hit was by far the hardest hit I’ve ever taken. I did not have a mouthpiece in for that. I had one in for the other two. The mouthpiece data has been really good for us to see because you have the black box data from the car, but that’s just showing the car g-load and impact. The important one is what does the driver feel and take? It’s a huge part of the equation and that’s how you separate, ‘OK, the car took this impact. The driver takes this impact.’ So, I didn’t have a mouthpiece in in Nashville. I’ve been wearing it every week since then just to make sure because you never know when it can happen and it’s good to have that data. Wake Forest has done a good job of really working hard at that and those folks are great, so I don’t know what Nashville would have been. It felt way worse and I look at the mental side of it. Mentally, I was way more messed up after Nashville than I was at these two hits at this racetrack, but Nashville was by far the hardest one. The best data I have to go off of is these two.”

DO YOU CHANGE ANYTHING AFTER GETTING THE INFORMATION FROM THE MOUTHPIECE? “No. Internally, like in the car, I feel like we’ve done the best job that we possibly can on making sure I’m as safe as I can. I had zero problem with how I reacted in the car, like how my body was. We do a good job of always trying to find ways to be better and protect us and Penske has done a good job of always making that a number one priority – the driver safety side. So, everything from this hit last year here to this one the other night we tweaked some stuff after Nashville of stuff that I was like, ‘Hey, I think we can do this a little better,’ like belts and HANS strap length. I run pretty short HANS straps just because I don’t want my head to move forward a lot, but I think everything worked the way it should, the best that it can. You’re only gonna do so much. There’s only so much you can do, but that’s all you can do is make sure everything is the best it can be.”

DO YOU FEEL THESE WRECKS ARE STARTING TO TAKE TOLL OR DO YOU FEEL COMFORTABLE THAT YOU’RE WORN OUT AND YOU HAVE THE RESOURCES TO HELP YOU FEEL BETTER? “It’s more than I’d like to take, but that’s part of our sport. You understand that you do this for a reason and you understand the risks of it and it’s just what we do. I don’t ever think about the bad side of this. If a driver or if you’re ever worried about strapping in the car of like, ‘I hope I don’t take a big hit again,’ that’s just not a mentality of anybody. All you try to do is find out how to win the race and you understand when you sign up, I understood when I signed up for this thing watching dad race that there’s dangers of it and things are gonna happen. I don’t really see that it’s taken a toll on me personally. Yeah, it stinks sitting around being sore and having a hard time moving around the next morning, but you just get over it and take Advil and figure it out. That’s all you can do, but that’s why we love it and why we do it. You never think of the negative side of it. You just try to figure out when those things do happen, ‘Hey, did we do all we can to make sure I was as safe as possible?’ And if the answer is yes, awesome. We checked that box. We did a great job and if not, you try to work on things to get it better and that’s all you can do. There’s only so much you can do.”

WHAT IS THE REST OF SATURDAY LIKE NOW FOR YOU? “My schedule doesn’t really change. Your schedule is pretty set as far as things you have to do off the track a week ahead. I don’t really think about it. Gianna and I will go to dinner tonight and just rest up and get ready for tomorrow and all the stuff you have to do pre-race and figure out. We’ve already pretty much made our car, our car is locked in. They’re doing final tech right now. Our changes are locked in. Jonathan and I figured out what we were gonna do after practice yesterday. ‘Hey, this is how we’re gonna have the car,’ and then it just sits. It just waits. And we already understand the strategy of the race. We talk about that weeks in advance and kind of have an idea of what we’re gonna do. Some things might change on the fly like when you pit and who you pit with, just depending on situation stuff, but everyone knows. I don’t wake up anymore race day morning of the 500 and like overwhelmed anymore. You understand it’s a big race and what it means, so you mentally prepare yourself for it for the whole off-season, for the whole winter and know how big it is and you just wait to get going. The worst part is the sitting around side of it, sitting around to do this huge race and this big event. You just want to get going. You want to do what you’re most comfortable with and what people are most comfortable with is driving and racing and that’s all I look forward to is just getting it going and then seeing how it all plays out and develops. The waiting around and twiddling your thumbs stinks, but that’s part of our sport sometimes and you get pretty good at it.”

DOES THE FRUSTRATION JUST ACCUMULATE AND KEEP BUILDING AS THESE WRECKS HAPPEN? “No, I try to forget things pretty quickly and get over them. I was frustrated Thursday night, but Friday morning I woke up and I was over the frustration part of it. You get over these things pretty quick, so it’s just when those things happen you get frustrated about it. Like, ‘Gosh, I can’t believe I got right-reared for the third time at this place in a row.’ That’s the frustrating part about it and it’s like, ‘When is this gonna end?’ It’s like the tale of two racetrack for me. Talladega, for some reason, we have really good fortune and don’t really get caught up in many incidents and run up towards the front, and here at this place the last few times I’ve been here I just can’t do no right and just feel like I get caught up in a product of someone else’s mess and that’s just a product of it. I’ve put in my head a while ago going to these speedways of, ‘Hey, things can happen and it’s out of my control, so I’m not really gonna let it get to me too much.’ Yeah, I’ll be frustrated with it for a few hours, but I wake up the next day and I’m over it and just try to figure out the next deal and that was figuring out how to get our backup car to where it needs to be and strategizing for the race. It’s just frustrating when those things happen, but I try to get over things very, very quickly.”

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Castrol Edge Ford Mustang Dark Horse – IS THERE ANY OTHER THING THAT WE DON’T RECOGNIZE WHAT DIFFERENTIATES DAYTONA AND TALLADEGA? “It’s funny how just some small things about a track can completely change the racing. I think probably the biggest difference to me is that Daytona is just narrower. I think the Next Gen cars generally handle pretty well both here and Talladega, but the difference in the width of the tracks it changes the techniques that work or don’t work. That plays out with significant impact on the results to where it’s really hard to carry over things from one track to the other, so I think probably the biggest thing that stands out to me at Daytona is that because the track is narrower you just see more aggressive blocking because the thought is I can contain somebody when there’s only three lanes, where Talladega for a good part of the track there are four or five lanes. I think you just see different kinds of blocks here – generally more aggressive for sure because, like I said you feel like you can cover three lanes, where you know you can’t cover four or five.”

DOES FUEL MILEAGE CHANGE AT ALL HERE ON A GREEN TRACK? “I don’t think it makes a big difference. The racing just always evolves and now it’s evolved into just that, where the last few Daytona and Talladega races have been really heavy fuel mileage based racing, and those are some of the ebbs and flows of the sport. I don’t necessarily know it you’ll see that this time. Obviously, once everybody gets their pit stop done, it’s not fuel mileage racing, so generally I think you see that up until your pit stop in each one of the stages there’s a lot of people focused on that, but after that not so much. The last 10-20 laps of the three stages I think you really see the intensity pick up. I don’t think that’ll be any different.”

ARE THERE OTHER THINGS YOU CAN DO TO HELP PREVENT SOME OF THESE WRECKS OUTSIDE OF COMMUNICATION BETWEEN THE DRIVER AND SPOTTER? “Not necessarily. There’s only so much that you can do. I mean, things happen so fast. We do rely very heavily on spotters, but there’s a lag there that’s always gonna exist from the moment something happens to the moment a spotter sees it to the moment he can communicate it and the moment the driver can understand it. There’s a significant lag that happens there and you try to do what you can to condense those things, but at the end of the day these are cars moving at 200 miles an hour and they cover a lot of ground really fast, so as you go through that lag it’s hard to always manage all the different situations. I can tell you that when I rewatch a race on TV how much different it looks than it does in the car with the limited visibility that you have in the car moves that seem so obvious watching from TV in the car you don’t ever even see them, or if you do, you see them a half-a-second or a second later when it’s too late. I find myself watching race film and playing Monday morning quarterback like, ‘You should have made this move or this move,’ when I evaluate myself, but it’s just way different in the car.”

HOW DO YOU AS A DRIVER BALANCE WHEN TO GO AND WHEN NOT TO GO, ESPECIALLY IN THE TRI-OVAL? “There are a lot of factors. Certainly, the track. How the tires are and where you’re at in a run. The handling of the car in front of you, and then you only have some certainty you have to that. When you’re driving the car you don’t know how somebody else’s car is driving. I thought it was interesting. This past time we were at Daytona in August one of the keys to us winning the race and finishing 1-2 with RFK cars is Chris Buescher and I pushed all the way through the tri-oval here with I think one lap to go on the white flag lap and cleared the bottom lane from the second lane to win the race. His car was driving pretty good. My car was driving pretty good. And then I went to Talladega a month or two later and I was pushing another car and Talladega should be easier to push through the tri-oval than Daytona and the second I started pushing him he spun out and got in a big wreck. Unfortunately, I got in it too. So you’re like, ‘How does that make any sense?’ This track should be easier. The tires are better and one car spun out and the other car didn’t, but there’s now way I can know how everybody’s car drives and what level of control they’re gonna be able to have over it. You try to build up experience and this own kind of database to make decisions, but then there are just unknowns that I can only really drive my car and know what it’s doing and maybe my teammate’s because I’ve talked to them, but I can’t know what everybody in the field has to work with and I know the alternative of not pushing is to run in the back, and to not have a shot to win, so those are difficult decisions to make in real time, but that’s what makes it special when you have success at these tracks is you’ve made all the right decisions generally more often than not.”

YOU WERE BEHIND THE 8 WHEN THE ACCIDENT HAPPENED IN THE DUEL. WHAT WAS YOUR VIEW ON HOW THAT UNFOLDED? “Yeah, something happened with the 24 and the 12 car and it really spit the 24 car out, kind of in front of the freight train that was myself and the 8 car. By the time we could all recognize what was happening it was too late.”

HOW THANKFUL AFTERWARD WERE YOU THAT YOU DIDN’T HAVE TO GO TO A BACKUP? “Yes and no. There’s the team owner side it’s like, ‘Oh, we were able to put a fender and a nose on this thing, and some duct work and a bumper. That’s better than bringing out another car.’ But then there’s the other side, from the driver’s side and mechanic side that you look at it and it doesn’t make a difference. The cars are identically prepared. I really wasn’t super concerned about it.”

YOU’VE BEEN OPEN ABOUT HOW MUCH THIS IS A FOCUS OF WINNING THIS RACE. AS YOU GET CLOSER TO THIS EVENT WHAT IS THE FEELING? “Honestly, I’m more concerned that we’re not gonna get to run it tomorrow. I just hate that for everybody that works hard and spends a lot of money to come here, the teams included, but mostly our fans and you guys. We want to be able to go. We’re as hungry to go as everybody else is and it’s frustrating to not have the weather on your side, but outside of that, I don’t know. I don’t feel like I have a ton of anxiety over it. I feel really well prepared. I know my car drives great and we’ll have the speed to go with that. I just want to make sure I do my part to execute what I can execute. I’m kind of somewhat reserved to the fact that the end of the race kind of is what it is and there’s gonna be 15 maybe 20 cars that will have a shot of winning in the last two dozen laps or so, and you just hope you’re around to be one of those cars and you hope that when the moment comes, if you are one of those cars that has a shot, that you do everything you can right and then the rest is kind of out of your control. I guess there’s some kind of peace in that, but outside of that, I just want to go lead a bunch of laps. The last few races here we’ve led the most laps and I always feel good about that, leading the most laps or leading a lot of laps or being up front the whole race because if the lottery ticket at the end doesn’t go your way at least you have something to hang your hat on, so I would say that’s probably where my focus is at is leading a bundle of laps early, leading through the middle of the race, hopefully getting a lot stage points and maybe even a stage win, and then just kind of like, ‘Hey, whatever happens at the end we’re just gonna be in the right position’ and try not to do anything to mess that up execution-wise and we’ll see how the cards fall.”

IN YOUR MIND BECAUSE SO MUCH IS OUT OF A DRIVER’S CONTROL HERE, WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO WIN THIS RACE OR HOW DO YOU SEE THE VALUE OF WHAT TYPE OF DRIVER WINS THIS RACE? “It’ll always be a crown jewel, so you can never take that away from Daytona. But, if I was putting on my team scouting hat and I was thinking about that this morning after watching the Truck and ARCA races, this wouldn’t be the place where I would scout a driver to pick. If I was like, ‘Let’s go watch the ARCA, Truck, Xfinity races and we’re gonna pick the next NASCAR Cup Series phenomenon,’ I’m not like, ‘Well, let’s look who won Daytona last night. That’s the guy I’m gonna pick.’ The reality is that’s not what you’re gonna do. I think in some ways that’s telling. You’re gonna look for the guy that made good moves and was calm in situations of duress. You’re gonna look for the guy that didn’t speed down pit road or make a dumb mistake. That stuff carries over, the execution stuff, but probably not so much the pure race winner, where I think you look at most other races, fast forward a couple weeks to Vegas or Phoenix and you’re gonna look at the guy who win the race like that’s probably a guy I would need to scout a little more. That’s kind of the same thing carries over to the Cup Series. You’re gonna look for the guy, like I went through a bunch of review yesterday with the team and Joey Logano in the last three green flag pit cycles here has been a second faster than everyone else. You say, ‘Oh, that’s really good. That’s him. That’s not circumstance. That’s not happenstance or any of those things.’ That’s really him. That’s impressive. If I was scouting, that’s what I’d look at and say, ‘He’s one of the threats to win the Daytona 500 because he can execute a green flag cycle better than anyone else in the garage area right now,’ and there’s probably gonna be a green flag cycle. Those are the things I would look at and say that’s the talent, that’s the thing or the special sauce that makes a driver really good – not necessarily the winner, but that said you still want to win it. It’s still the Daytona 500 and still the biggest race of the year with respect to purse and fanfare and so forth. There’s still a really big trophy and a ring and you can never take that away from this race.”

DAVID RAGAN GOT IN THE 17 YESTERDAY. DID HE BRING ANY INSIGHT TO THAT TEAM THEY MAY NOT HAVE ALREADY HAD AND CAN YOU SPEAK TO WHY RAGAN WAS YOUR CHOICE TO DRIVE THE 60 CAR? “I’ll start with the end question about bringing in David. David ran this race in 2022 and I think he ended up in the top 10 somewhere. I can’t remember his exact finishing position, but he just ran a really smart race. He didn’t get caught up in the chaos. It’s kind of like what I was saying a minute ago. He had good patience and the moment wasn’t too big for him, and I have a lot of trust and respect for him accordingly. He’s been driving the Ford wheelforce test vehicle and doing a lot of simulator work for us at Ford, so we felt really confident in his skills and ability and feel like he was the number one free agent to bring in for this race. That’s kind of where the decision came from. He’s someone that we also knew could represent our partners really well. It was really a no-brainer move when we looked at the free agent list and he was clearly at the top and there wasn’t really anyone close to him, so we felt lucky to be able to bring him in. Outside of that and him driving the 17 car, it’s always good just to get another opinion even if that opinion is the same opinion and from everything I’ve heard he has the same opinion of his car that Chris had.”

Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment Sponsors NASCAR Driver B.J. McLeod At Daytona

MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (February 17th, 2024) – Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment is excited to officially announce a partnership with NASCAR Driver B.J. McLeod, to sponsor the No. 78 Chevrolet Camaro in the NASCAR Xfinity Series United Rentals 300 at Daytona International Superspeedway on February 17th. The partnership was developed in conjunction with The Magnifyde Agency.

“We couldn’t be more excited to get back in NASCAR and partner with B.J. at Daytona. From our small beginnings, to now being on the biggest stage in motorsports, it is a testament to the hard work of our awesome staff. We’re grateful for this opportunity and are so excited to root on B.J. and the team,” said Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment Owners Phillip and Sam Kale.

For B.J. McLeod, Saturday’s race represents the opportunity for him to capture his first-career NASCAR Xfinity Series win and he couldn’t be more excited to have Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment on board. McLeod said, “We’re excited to partner with Kales Truck and Heavy Equipment for the first race of the 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.”

The race marks the second-straight season of sponsorship in NASCAR for Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment. The company began as a small grass roots heavy-duty repair business and has grown to become a national fleet maintenance specialist.

Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment has revolutionized the way companies manage maintenance with fixed R&M cost onsite models. Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment offers consulting, managing, and staffing, in an effort to become your maintenance partners.

Through the success of the company, they have also been able to give back to their local community, by donating and volunteering with many local charities in their home state of South Carolina.

Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment has grown to 36 locations across the U.S. and includes a team of 180 technicians, as well as 100 fleet service vehicles.

The United Rentals 300 will take place in Daytona Beach, FL. The No. 78 Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment Chevy Camaro hits the track this Saturday at 5p ET on FS1.

For more information on Kales Truck & Heavy Equipment, visit kalestruckheavyequipment.com.

ABOUT KALES TRUCK & HEAVY EQUIPMENT

Kale’s Truck and Heavy Equipment service was founded in 1999 in Dillon, S.C., with over 20 years in business. They have grown from a local heavy-duty maintenance specialist facility, to a national full-service on-site repair professional that specializes in consulting, managing and staffing as well as providing a fixed budget repair solution that has been proven to increase truck availability while working off of a fixed r&m budget. The company has grown from 15 technicians and one location, to over 200+ technicians servicing twelve states, utilizing our fixed fleet maintenance program, as well as continuing to provide maintenance solutions to the heavy-duty industry.

ABOUT B.J. MCLEOD MOTORSPORTS

B. J. McLeod Motorsports is an American professional stock car racing team that competes part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The team is based out of Mooresville, NC. and owned by B.J. McLeod and his wife, Jessica. The team currently fields the No. 78.

ABOUT THE MAGNIFYDE AGENCY

The Magnifyde Agency connects brands to exceptional marketing opportunities. After years of professional and personal experience, The Magnifyde Agency has not only found rapid success in growing brands through NASCAR’s demographics, but across a wide variety of marketing ventures.

Rosberg X Racing top Qualifying in opening round of Season 4

Mikaela Ahlin-Kottulinsky (SWE) / Johan Kristoffersson (SWE), Rosberg X Racing Catie Munnings (GBR) / Timmy Hansen (SWE), Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E Laia Sanz (ESP) / Fraser McConnell (JAM), Acciona | Sainz XE Team Gray Leadbetter, (USA) / Travis Pastrana (USA), LEGACY MOTOR CLUB (LEGACY M.C.)

17 February 2024, London: Defending champions Rosberg X Racing (RXR) have carried their title-winning pace into 2024, coming out on top in Qualifying for Round 1 of the Desert X Prix in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Johan Kristoffersson and Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky have continued their successful partnership, this time taking the win in both of their Qualifying Heats to top the timesheets and make it into the first Grand Final of the season.

E.ON Veloce Racing and the ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team (ASXE), who made up the championship top three with RXR last year, carried that momentum with them into Round 1 of 2024, each taking a Heat win to secure a spot in the Grand Final.

Rounding out the first Grand Final line-up of Season 4 are NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team. New teammates Cristina Gutiérrez and Mattias Ekström showed consistency on their debuts for the British squad, taking second place in both of their Qualifying Heats.

The remaining four teams will fight it out in the Redemption Race with even more at stake, as a change to the points system for Season 4 will see the winner awarded the same championship points as last place in the Grand Final.

Qualifying 1 – Heat 1

E.ON Veloce Racing’s Kevin Hansen got the best launch, taking the lead at the first turn. NEOM McLaren’s Mattias Ekström slotted into second, with JBXE’s Andreas Bakkerud and SUN Minimeal Team’s Klara Andersson in fourth.

While Hansen pulled seven seconds ahead of the pack, Andersson began to pressure Bakkerud for third as the teams headed into the Switch Zone. Taylor continued out in front throughout her two-lap run, with NEOM McLaren’s Cristina Gutiérrez maintaining second place.

An issue in the Switch Zone dropped JBXE down to fourth, with Timo Scheider taking third place on his debut as driver and Team Principal for SUN Minimeal Team. JBXE’s Dania Akeel, in her maiden Extreme E Qualifying Heat at her home event, rounded out the order.

Qualifying 1 – Heat 2

A great overtake from RXR’s Kristoffersson around the outside of Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E’s Catie Munnings, who got the better launch, ensured the Season 3 champions took the lead after the opening turn.

Munnings held second ahead of Gray Leadbetter for LEGACY MOTOR CLUB IN ASSOCIATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON’S (LEGACY M.C.), with ASXE’s Laia Sanz in fourth after a near-roll at the first corner. Sanz quickly got ahead of Leadbetter to begin ASXE’s recovery up the order, and a battle ensued between the Spaniard and Briton Munnings ahead.

Kristoffersson maintained a comfortable gap as the teams entered the Switch Zone for the driver change, with Åhlin-Kottulinsky preserving that advantage to win the Heat.

Andretti Altawkilat took second as Timmy Hansen stayed ahead of ASXE debutant Fraser McConnell, with LEGACY M.C.’s Travis Pastrana fourth in his first-ever racing run in the ODYSSEY 21.

Qualifying 2 – Heat 1

ASXE’s McConnell surged round the outside of the group to take the lead through the first corner. Behind the Jamaican, LEGACY M.C.’s Pastrana took second as E.ON Veloce Racing’s Taylor ran wide, with JBXE’s Akeel slotting into fourth.

The teams entered the Switch Zone in this order but, following the driver change, E.ON Veloce Racing’s Hansen set off to hunt down Leadbetter, in what was the American’s third-ever racing lap in the LEGACY M.C. ODYSSEY 21.

Hansen was quicker over a crest towards the end of their first lap, carrying his pace through the next two corners to secure second place, putting E.ON Veloce Racing alongside rivals RXR in the Grand Final.

First place in the Heat for ASXE proved enough for the 2023 runners-up to make it into the first Grand Final of Season 4 after a third place finish in their first Qualifying Heat. Third and fourth for LEGACY M.C. and JBXE, respectively, puts both teams into the Redemption Race.

Qualifying 2 – Heat 2

SUN Minimeal Team’s Scheider led at the start, while Andretti Altawkilat’s Hansen took second by passing RXR’s Åhlin-Kottulinsky at Turn 2. NEOM McLaren’s Gutiérrez ran in fourth as the group remained close through the opening lap.

Hansen’s charge continued, as the Swede eventually got the better of Scheider to take the lead, but the pack bunched up once more as the chasing drivers hit the brakes late into the Switch Zone. A smooth driver change saw RXR climb to second place. Kristoffersson, reading the situation well, used his ENOWA Hyperdrive at the Switch Zone exit to get ahead of Andretti Altawkilat’s Munnings and get in front.

This jump up the order into top spot saw RXR take the Heat win and first place in the Qualifying standings. Slightly further back, NEOM McLaren’s Ekström was also on the charge, and soon secured second place and a spot in the Grand Final for his new team.

Andretti Altawkilat and SUN Minimeal Team, having both had a share of the lead, only secured enough points for a spot in the Redemption Race despite showing good pace.

The Extreme E Season 4 opener in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, gets underway this weekend (17-18 February). The racing action will be live across ITV and STV in the UK, while outside of the UK please visit here for broadcaster details.

Q1 Heat 1:

  1. E.ON Veloce Racing 10:53.341 mins
  2. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team +4.706s
  3. SUN Minimeal Team +9.686s
  4. JBXE +34.089s

Q1 Heat 2:

  1. Rosberg X Racing 11:04.679 mins
  2. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E +4.261s
  3. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team +8.230s
  4. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB IN ASSOCIATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON +24.286s

Q2 Heat 1:

  1. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team 10:56.533 mins
  2. E.ON Veloce Racing +3.287s
  3. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB IN ASSOCIATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON +11.496s
  4. JBXE +43.833s

Q2 Heat 2:

  1. Rosberg X Racing 11:11.797 mins
  2. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team +1.211s
  3. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E +6.615s
  4. SUN Minimeal Team +15.382s

Qualifying Standings:

  1. Rosberg X Racing: 20
  2. E.ON Veloce Racing: 18
  3. NEOM McLaren Extreme E Team: 16
  4. ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team: 16
  5. Andretti Altawkilat Extreme E: 14
  6. SUN Minimeal Team: 10
  7. LEGACY MOTOR CLUB™ IN ASSOCIATION WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON: 10
  8. JBXE: 8

To learn more about Extreme E, visit – www.Extreme-E.com

Gus Dean Wins Wild Daytona ARCA 200

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 17, 2024) – Gus Dean won a wild Daytona ARCA 200 on Saturday morning, outlasting a stout field of cars that was thinned by several multi-car incidents.

Dean, 29, from Bluffton, South Carolina, took the lead from Venturini Motorsports teammate Jake Finch on an overtime restart, and cruised to the victory when the race was slowed for a crash entering turn three which froze the field at the time of caution.

The first multi-car crash erupted on lap 4 after contact in the pack sent Dean out of control into his teammate Toni Breidinger. Breidinger lost control in front of the pack, sweeping up nearly a dozen cars in the aftermath including Chicago Street Race winner Shane Van Gisbergen. As the field slowed for the mid-race scheduled caution, Marco Andretti was spun out of the pack down the backstretch, sending several cars sliding into the infield grass. General Tire Pole Award winner Willie Mullins was also involved in a hard crash with Scott Melton just past the race’s midway point, and the final incident on the last lap involved Finch, 2023 series runner-up Andres Perez, Lavar Scott, Ryan Huff, and Andy Jankowiak, all of whom were battling inside the top five at the time.

“I came here with a purpose this week,” Dean said after the race. “I started racing when I was four years old at a tiny dirt track in Georgia, and my granddad came to every single race I ever ran. At every race, even right up to the very end, he told me at every race to get what I can. Tonight, we got what we could.”

Thomas Annunziata finished second in his ARCA Menards Series debut, followed by defending race winner Greg Van Alst, Christian Rose,
and front row starter Tim Richmond. Jason Kitzmiller finished sixth, followed by Luxembourg native Gil Linster, Alex Clubb, Amber Balcaen, and Andy Jankowiak.

The race was moved up to Friday due to an unfavorable forecast on Saturday, eventually going green just before midnight on Friday evening. The numerous cautions, nine total, pushed the race to a conclusion just shy of 2 am ET on Saturday morning, holding the average speed to just 98.949 miles per hour. Dean’s margin of victory, under caution, was officially 0.441 seconds.

The next race for the ARCA Menards Series is the General Tire 150 at Phoenix Raceway, scheduled for Friday, March 6. The race will be televised live on FS1 starting at 8:30 pm ET; it will also be broadcast live nationwide on select affiliates of the MRN Radio network. ARCARacing.com will have live timing & scoring data throughout all on-track sessions; please follow @ARCA_Racing on X (formerly Twitter) for up-to-the-minute updates.

About ARCA 

The Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA), founded in 1953 by John and Mildred Marcum in Toledo, Ohio, and acquired by NASCAR in April 2018, is the leading grassroots stock car sanctioning body in the United States. Bridging the gap between NASCAR’s top three national touring series and weekly racing all across the country, the organization administers more than 100 events annually, including the ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East, ARCA Menards Series West, plus weekly racing at Toledo and Flat Rock Speedways.  For more information about ARCA visit www.arcaracing.com, or follow ARCA on Facebook (@ARCARacing) and Twitter (@ARCA_Racing). 

Nick Sanchez scores first victory in wild NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck race

Photo by Patrick Sue-Chan for Speedwaymedia.com

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — With cars wrecking and flipping behind him in overtime, Nick Sanchez claimed the first NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series victory of his young NASCAR Cup Series career in Friday night’s Fresh From Florida 250 at Daytona International Speedway.

The race ended under caution on the second lap of the overtime after Rajah Caruth, running fourth, moved up the track and turned the No. 91 Chevrolet of Jack Wood in front of the field.

Sanchez and runner-up Corey Heim were clear of the chaos, and Caruth escaped with minimal damage to run third. But behind them, the Chevy of Daniel Dye launched the Toyota of Taylor Gray, which flipped in mid-air and landed upright on its tires in a gaggle of mangled cars.

All told 12 trucks were involved in the wreck, which caused the record 12th caution of the evening.

Coincidentally, Sanchez rallied from a 13-truck crash on Lap 6 to score the victory for his No. 2 Rev Racing Chevrolet team in his sophomore season.

“It’s huge,” Sanchez said. “We spent all of last year trying to get a win. I knew coming into this year I knew that I had to, right? What better race than to do it than Daytona? Honestly, out of every race, if I was going to do it, this would have been the last one (I expected), but happy to do it. It’s awesome.

“I just knew I had to lead at the white flag, because they were probably going to wreck. I’m glad they wrecked — if everyone is OK. I’m just happy.

“It’s huge. Obviously, we have a new technical partner in Spire (Motorsports)—our first race with them. What a better way to start a partnership. (Sponsor) Gainbridge has stuck with me. They were winless last year. They all deserve it, and they’re going to celebrate with me.”

Caruth was thankful for his third-place finish, but he rued the wreck that ended the race.

“I’m trying to play it back differently in the last laps, but thank you to everybody at Spire Motorsports, HendrickCars.com, the Hendrick Automotive Group, and Mr. H (Hendrick) for what they’ve done for me along with everybody at Spire and Chevy,” Carruth said.

“Man, I felt like I got a bad push there, and you’re already getting tight off of the corner, and everybody is going for all they have on the last lap. I feel terrible to see trucks like that torn up. I hope Taylor (Gray) is all right. But a good night to start the year.”

Fifty-one of the 101 laps were run under caution, and it didn’t take long for the action to start. The first major incident KO’d a handful of drivers.

On the backstretch on Lap 6 of a scheduled 100 circuits, a shove from Christian Eckes’ Chevrolet turned the Ford of three-time series champion Matt Crafton into the Ford of Layne Riggs, igniting a 13-truck accident that eliminated Ty Dillon, Thad Moffitt and Jake Garcia.

With his team unable to effect repairs on his No. 38 Ford F-150, Riggs took his Truck to the garage under caution on Lap 17.

“Chaos, a lot of craziness — everybody was just kind of all over the place,” Dillon said after a mandatory trip to the infield care center. “I’ve never seen anything look like that from behind the wheel four laps into a race.

“With my experience, I knew something like that was going to happen. That’s why I got myself to the bottom to hopefully have a spot to bail. And sure enough, it happened. I thought I got through… I hit the grass and it knocked the tires out of my hand, and I was trying to catch it with the throttle…

“Just hate to be taken out so early and not have a chance.”

The Lap 6 incident was a harbinger of the chaos to come.

Defending series champion Ben Rhodes saw a good night turn bad when Tyler Ankrum door-slammed his Ford on Lap 68. Rhodes pitted with a flat tire a lap later, but after leaving the pits, he spun and crashed as the lead packed tried to dodge the No. 99 Ford in the center of the track.

Rhodes exited the race, and soon after, Johhny Sauter was an innocent victim of a four-truck wreck off Turn 4—after leading 24 laps, second only to Sanchez’s 26.

Bret Holmes finished fourth, followed by Spencer Boyd. Stefan Parsons, Crafton, Timmy Hill, Bryan Dauzat and Eckes completed the top 10.

NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race – Fresh From Florida 250
Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach, Florida
Friday, February 16, 2024

(6) Nick Sanchez, Chevrolet, 101.
(26) Corey Heim, Toyota, 101.
(20) Rajah Caruth, Chevrolet, 101.
(19) Bret Holmes, Chevrolet, 101.
(31) Spencer Boyd, Chevrolet, 101.
(27) Stefan Parsons, Chevrolet, 101.
(11) Matt Crafton, Ford, 101.
(33) Timmy Hill, Toyota, 101.
(29) Bryan Dauzat, Chevrolet, 101.
(25) Christian Eckes, Chevrolet, 101.
(5) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, 101.
(34) Jason White, Ford, 101.
(9) Bayley Currey, Chevrolet, 101.
(17) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, 101.
(8) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 101.
(1) Ty Majeski, Ford, 101.
(8) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 101.
(22) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, 101.
(23) Jack Wood, Chevrolet, 101.
(12) Taylor Gray, Toyota, Accident, 100.
(3) Corey LaJoie(i), Chevrolet, Accident, 100.
(7) Daniel Dye, Chevrolet, Accident, 100.
(30) Cory Roper, Chevrolet, Accident, 100.
(14) Codie Rohrbaugh, Chevrolet, Accident, 100.
(15) Dean Thompson, Toyota, Accident, 100.
(32) Mason Massey, Chevrolet, 100.
(4) Matt Mills, Chevrolet, 99.
(13) Toni Breidinger, Toyota, 97.
(18) Chase Purdy, Chevrolet, Accident, 93.
(2) Johnny Sauter, Chevrolet, Accident, 79.
(24) Ben Rhodes, Ford, Accident, 71.
(36) Keith McGee, Ford, Accident, 44.
(35) Lawless Alan, Ford, Overheating, 27.
(21) Layne Riggs #, Ford, DVP, 13.
(16) Jake Garcia, Ford, Accident, 6.
(28) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, Accident, 5.
(10) Thad Moffitt #, Chevrolet, Accident, 5.

Average Speed of Race Winner: 98.933 mph.

Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 33 Mins, 8 Secs. Margin of Victory: Under Caution Seconds.

Caution Flags: 12 for 52 laps.

Lead Changes: 24 among 12 drivers.

Lap Leaders: J. Sauter 1;T. Majeski 2;J. Sauter 3-13;T. Majeski 14;J. Sauter 15-22;T. Majeski 23-26;T. Ankrum 27-41;B. Holmes 42-44;T. Gray 45;B. Holmes 46-51;J. Sauter 52;B. Holmes 53-56;J. Sauter 57-58;G. Enfinger 59-60;N. Sanchez 61-63;B. Rhodes 64-68;J. Sauter 69;T. Ankrum 70;C. Purdy 71;C. Eckes 72;C. LaJoie(i) 73-77;N. Sanchez 78-90;R. Caruth 91;N. Sanchez 92-101.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Nick Sanchez 3 times for 26 laps; Johnny Sauter 6 times for 24 laps; Tyler Ankrum 2 times for 16 laps; Bret Holmes 3 times for 13 laps; Ty Majeski 3 times for 6 laps; Ben Rhodes 1 time for 5 laps; Corey LaJoie(i) 1 time for 5 laps; Grant Enfinger 1 time for 2 laps; Tanner Gray 1 time for 1 lap; Rajah Caruth 1 time for 1 lap; Chase Purdy 1 time for 1 lap; Christian Eckes 1 time for 1 lap.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 45,98,41,18,17,32,91,19,5,11

Stage #2 Top Ten: 18,19,88,43,99,98,7,9,2,11