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Cadillac at Fuji: Looking to continue progress

No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R aims for first victory at penultimate race of WEC season

DETROIT (Sept. 4, 2023) – The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R team’s goals for the sixth round of the FIA World Endurance Championship at Fuji International Speedway carry over from the last outing: minimize mistakes, remain focused and finish on the podium again — or better.

Cadillac Racing’s Hypercar will make its initial visit to the racetrack nestled in the foothills of iconic Mount Fuji and compete against 11 others in the classification over the six-hour duration.

Fuji International Superspeedway, which opened in 1965, has been a staple on the WEC calendar since 2012. No race was contested in 2020 and 2021 because of the pandemic.

The 16-turn, 2.84-mile road course in Sizouka Prefecture has a blend of technical and high-speed sections, including one of the longest straights in motorsports (0.92 of a mile).

The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R will aim for its second podium finish of the season. The reliability of the racecar with the distinctive sound of its 5.5-liter V8 naturally aspirated engine has led to four top-five finishes in the five races. It is one of only five Hypercars to be running at the finish of each race.

Race and qualifying pace – the No. 2 Cadillac entry was only 0.231 of a second off the pole-winning lap time at Spa and 0.362 of a second arrears at Monza – have also been positives. Continued improvements for the first-year WEC program will be realized through experience on the various racing circuits and learning the nuances of the hybrid car that made its testing debut in July 2022.

“Our previous race, at Monza, we made another good step forward from Le Mans but we didn’t get the results to show for it,” said Earl Bamber, who co-drives the No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R with Alex Lynn and Richard Westbrook. “We’re looking for a bit of redemption and to be back in the top five where we know where we can be. Toyota and Ferrari are super quick, but we are close on the edge to be in front of them.”

Cadillac Racing is third in the Hypercar Manufacturer Championship standings.

The Six Hours of Fuji for the FIA World Endurance Championship is scheduled for 11 a.m. JST Sunday /10 p.m. ET Saturday. The race will air live in the U.S. on MotorTrend with live streaming coverage of the race and qualifying on the MotorTrend Plus app. Radio Le Mans will broadcast qualifying and the race.

Cadillac Racing Six Hours of Fuji notes

  • Alex Lynn made his FIA WEC debut in 2016 at Fuji in an LMP2 entry. He also co-dove an LMP2 entry in 2022 and contested LMGTE Pro entries in 2018 and ’19 at the circuit.
  • Alex Lynn celebrates his 30th birthday Sept. 17.
  • Earl Bamber co-drove an LMP1 entry in the FIA WEC race at Fuji in 2017 and co-drove an LMGTE Am entry in 2015.
  • Stephen Mitas, FIA WEC team manager and strategist, was Earl Bamber’s race engineer for the 2015 and ’17 24 Hours of Le Mans overall victories.
  • The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R has qualified in the top five in three of the five races, with a best starting position of fourth at Spa-Francorchamps.
  • The Cadillac Hypercar was only 0.231 of a second off the pole-winning lap time at Spa and 0.362 of a second arrears at Monza.
  • The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R has finished in the top five in four of the five races.
  • The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R is one of only five Hypercars to be running at the finish in all five races.
  • In the four races leading into Monza, the Cadillac Racing Hypercar advanced a total of seven positions.
  • The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R has a best finish of third in the centenary 24 Hours of Le Mans.
  • Like most of the other circuits on the WEC calendar, Cadillac Racing is making its first visit to Fuji.
  • Cadillac Racing, which is third in the Manufacturer Championship, is contesting its first full season of FIA WEC competition.

No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R crew principals

Team manager-Stephen Mitas Strategy engineer-Jonathan Moury

Race engineer-Carlo Vermeulen Performance engineer-Carlo Miano

Crew chief-Dane Beamsley

2023 FIA WEC results

Sebring (8 hours): Qualified fifth; finished fourth

Portugal (6 hours): Qualified eighth; finished fourth

Spa (6 hours): Qualified fourth; finished fifth

Le Mans (24 hours): Qualified sixth; finished third

Monza (6 hours): Qualified fifth; finished 10th

Championships: Cadillac is third in the Manufacturer Championship

                         The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R is fifth in the Drivers Championship

What they’re saying

Earl Bamber: “Looking forward to Fuji. Our previous race, at Monza, we made another good step forward from Le Mans but we didn’t get the results to show for it. We’re looking for a bit of redemption and to be back in the top five where we know where we can be. Fuji is one of the bright tracks on the calendar and I think it will also be interesting for us as it’s a circuit where none of our competitors regularly test, which is something we’ve gone up against through the regular season. So we’re curious to see how that plays out against our competitors. It’s going to be hot and humid as well, which is going to be a big challenge as the race is normally run later in the year. It will be a lot of new things for everyone. I think everyone at Cadillac Racing is up for the challenge.”

Alex Lynn: “I always look forward to racing at Fuji, which holds a special place in my memory. It’s a great race circuit with a beautiful backdrop. On the competition side, I think we have at least another podium in us this season. The car deserves that and this team deserves another result this year and we’ll be going to Fuji with a lot of motivation to achieve that.”

Richard Westbrook: “Really looking forward to my first time in Japan. We’ll look to keep progressing like we have done. It has been a little frustrating with some of the results, which really haven’t reflected where we are. The highlight is obviously the podium at Le Mans, but we feel like there’s more than that in our performance. We’ve done a lot of prep for Fuji, particularly in the simulator. We feel like it could be a good track for our car, but again it is going into a bit of the unknown. We want to collect as many points as we can and finish in the top three in the championship, which is where we deserve to be.”

Toni Bou Wins 17th Consecutive FIM Trial World Championship Title

Vertolaye, France, Sept 4, 2023 – (JCN Newswire) – Repsol Honda Team rider Toni Bou (Spain, 36 years old) has won the 2023 FIM* Trial World Championship. He has clinched his 17th consecutive title by winning the first day of the final round in France, held on September 2.

This year’s Trial World Championship is contested over seven rounds (14 trials). In the first three rounds from the season-opener in Spain to the Japan round in Mobility Resort Motegi, Bou fought a close battle for the lead, but a double-win in Round 4, San Marino gave him a clear advantage, which he capitalized on by consecutive double-wins in Round 5, Andorra and Round 6, Italy to all but seal the championship. A convincing victory of the first day of the final round in France gave Bou his 17th consecutive championship title.

Since clinching his first world championship title in 2007 on HRC’s Montesa COTA 4RT factory bike, Bou has increased his unparalleled consecutive championship titles to 17. He has also won his 16th consecutive X Trial World Championship, an indoor competition raced on artificially prepared sections, and currently leads the 2023 indoor championship which resumes in October.

Toni Bou | Repsol Honda Team
“I am very happy to win the title with a victory. It has been a very difficult year, with a difficult start in which the rival made it very tough for us. But we have achieved another title in the best way, with a victory, so I want to thank the team. As I always say, it would be impossible to maintain this level without all their support and effort.”

Koji Watanabe, President of Honda Racing Corporation
“I would like to extend my heartfelt congratulations to Toni Bou on his unprecedented 17th consecutive win in the Trial World Championship. Despite the rise of younger riders this season, he has shown overwhelming strength, consistently winning in the second half of the season. I am confident that his stronghold will continue and that he will continue to break records in the future. His teammate, Gabriel Marcelli, has also made a great leap to 3rd place in the ranking in his second premier class season. As for the team, I would like to share the joy with the team manager Takahisa Fujinami and all the staff for achieving a better result than last year. Last but not least, I would like to thank all of our sponsors and trial fans for supporting our racing activities.”

*FIM: Federation Internationale de Motocyclisme

For more information, visit https://global.honda/newsroom/news/2023/c230904eng.html.

Japan awaits home heroes TOYOTA GAZOO Racing

TOKYO, Sept 4, 2023 – (JCN Newswire) – TOYOTA GAZOO Racing defends its remarkable home record in the 6 Hours of Fuji this weekend in the penultimate race of the 2023 the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) season.

The reigning World Champions have won eight of the nine WEC races in Japan since returning to top-level endurance racing in 2012, including a run of five consecutive victories since 2016, making Fuji Speedway the team’s most successful circuit.

The historic racetrack, located 100km west of Tokyo, is very much a home race for TOYOTA GAZOO Racing and the GR010 HYBRID, whose hybrid powertrain is designed, developed and built at the nearby Higashi-Fuji Technical Center,

TOYOTA GAZOO Racing aims for a fifth victory in 2023, which could secure the manufacturers’ World Championship for a fifth consecutive season. The team leads Hypercar rivals Ferrari by 26 points and will secure the crown if it outscores the Italian marque by 13 points in Fuji.

An exciting four-way battle for the drivers’ World Championship between both TOYOTA GAZOO Racing and Ferrari crews will go down to the wire in Bahrain on 4 November, regardless of the result in Japan.

Victory last time out at Monza for Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Jose Maria Lopez in the #7 GR010 HYBRID put them back in a three-way World Championship battle. They are second in the standings heading to Fuji, 23 points behind Sebastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley and Ryo Hirakawa in the #8 GR010 HYBRID.

Another enthusiastic Japanese crowd is expected to cheer on a 12-car Hypercar field, featuring competitors from Cadillac, Ferrari, Peugeot and Porsche as part of the biggest grid of top-class prototypes at the 6 Hours of Fuji in the modern WEC era.

Fans will get the first chance to see the Hypercars in action around the 4.563km track, which is the shortest on the WEC calendar despite its 1.5km start-finish straight, on Friday when free practice begins with two 90-minute sessions. A final one-hour practice on Saturday morning sets the scene for the grid-defining qualifying, before the 6 Hours of Fuji begins at 11am local time, 4am CEST, on Sunday 10 September.

Kamui Kobayashi (Team Principal and driver, car #7):

“Everyone in the team is looking forward to our home race and the chance to compete in front of our Japanese fans, as well as our Toyota colleagues and partners who contribute so much. After Le Mans, winning at Fuji is our next priority and we have a very strong record there. So our target is to extend our run of victories, despite the very close competition amongst the Hypercar. It will be a big fight between a lot of manufacturers which is what all the fans want to see. We won on Ferrari’s home ground in Monza in the last race, so I am sure they will want to get their revenge this weekend. We need to get everything right, avoid any mistakes, and keep pushing to stay in front. With only two races to go in the season, this is a critical race for the World Championship so we will be giving everything.”

Mike Conway (Driver, car #7):

“Our home race is always special and a real highlight of the season. We have a lot of experience of Fuji, unlike some of our competitors, so we should hit the ground running on Friday. In the past the weather has been a big factor at Fuji but we’re there a little earlier than normal this year, so hopefully that means we’ll have a dry weekend. After the win in Monza, our car is back in the World Championship fight so we’re looking to keep that momentum going in Fuji.”

Jose Maria Lopez (Driver, car #7):

“It’s great to race in Japan. Everyone knows how passionate the Japanese fans are; they make it an incredible experience for all the drivers, and particularly for us as TOYOTA GAZOO Racing drivers. Over the years, the team has had great success at Fuji Speedway and it’s obviously a big priority for us to win our home race, so we will be giving everything this weekend. Our car should suit Fuji pretty well but we know the fight is incredibly close in Hypercar so it should be another exciting battle.”

Sebastien Buemi (Driver, car #8):

“The 6 Hours of Fuji is a race we look forward to every year, and one that I personally enjoy a lot. I’ve won four times at Fuji Speedway so I have some great memories there. It’s a special place for us because we get to meet our Japanese fans, and also the powertrain engineers and Toyota executives who support our project from a distance. For many of them, it’s the only chance to see the GR010 HYBRID in action so the everyone in the team is motivated to give them a good performance.”

Brendon Hartley (Driver, car #8):

“It’s great to go to Fuji Speedway for our home race at the top of both World Championships, and we are focused on tightening our grip with a strong result this weekend. We saw in Monza how close the competition is, and how a small mistake here or there can have a big impact on the result, so we need to be on the top of our game. I’m sure it will be another great battle, particularly with Ferrari who have looked very quick all year, but that’s what we all want and we’re ready for the challenge.”

Ryo Hirakawa (Driver, car #8):

“Fuji Speedway is the home race for the team, and for me personally, so I am extra motivated to fight for the victory on Sunday. It will be my third race of 2023 at Fuji, and I hope it will be third time lucky because in the other two races, in Super Formula, I did not stand on top of the podium. Last year it was a great feeling to win in front of my home crowd on one of my favourite circuits, and I hope to experience that again. It’s always great to show our GR010 HYBRID to our Japanese fans and I am looking forward to a lot of support as usual this weekend. I am sure we will give everyone a race to remember.”

For more information, visit https://toyotagazooracing.com/wec/release/2023/rd06-preview/.

CHEVROLET NCS AT DARLINGTON 2: Kyle Larson Race Win Recap

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DARLINGTON RACEWAY
COOK OUT SOUTHERN 500
TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT
SEPTEMBER 3, 2023

Larson Wins Playoff Opener at Darlington, Punches Ticket to Round of 12

  • For the first time in his NASCAR Cup Series career, Kyle Larson recorded the win in the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway – becoming the first driver to claim a berth into the Playoffs Round of 12.
  • The win is Larson’s third points-paying NASCAR Cup Series win of the 2023 season; and the Hendrick Motorsports driver’s 22nd career victory in NASCAR’s premier series.
  • Larson delivered Chevrolet its 44th all-time NASCAR Cup Series win at Darlington Raceway, and the manufacturer’s 14th points-paying NCS win this season – both of which are manufacturer-leading feats.
  • The winningest manufacturer in NASCAR Cup Series history, Chevrolet now sits at 847 all-time wins in NASCAR’s premier series.
  • Larson’s win in NASCAR’s crown jewel event marked the Hendrick Motorsports engine shop’s 500th all-time NASCAR national series win.
  • Heading into race two of three in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 16 at Kansas Speedway, Team Chevy’s William Byron tops the driver points standings with a one-point lead over his Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson.
  • Five drivers from three different Chevrolet teams posted top-10 finishes at Darlington Raceway.

DARLINGTON, S.C. (September, 3, 2023) – Team Chevy’s Kyle Larson became the first driver to punch his ticket into the NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) Playoffs Round of 12 after picking up the victory in the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway. Larson’s first trip to victory lane in NASCAR’s premier series at the South Carolina oval came in his 12th career start at the track – a venue that saw the Team Chevy driver collect three runner-up finishes prior to the breakthrough victory. The 2021 NCS Champion now sits at 22 career wins in NASCAR’s premier series – tying Terry Labonte for 37th on the series’ all-time wins list. The crown jewel victory also marked a milestone feat for the Chevrolet organization – delivering the Hendrick Motorsports engine shop its 500th all-time NASCAR national series win, as well as team owner Rick Hendrick his 299th NCS win.

“Just proud of the team,” said Larson. “Proud of Rick Hendrick, Jeff Gordon, Jeff Andrews, Chad Knaus, everybody at Hendrick Engine shop. 500 wins.. that’s incredible, so congratulations to each and every one of you at the shop for all your hard work. What a great way to start the playoffs and hopefully we can keep it going.”

Chevrolet’s series-leading 14th NCS win of the season was celebrated by a strong showing at the top of the leaderboard with five drivers from three different Chevrolet teams earning top-10 finishes. Of those drivers included Larson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate William Byron, who drove his No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1 to a fourth-place finish. Entering the playoffs as the top-seeded driver for the first time in his young career, the 25-year-old driver was able to maintain the top position in the driver’s points standings with a one-point lead over Larson in second.

“Once we got the car tightened up in Stage One, we had really good pace in our No. 24 Liberty University Chevy,” said Byron. “I think this is a good stepping stone for Kansas (Speedway). It was good to get a solid finish in the first race of the playoffs.”

Also joining Larson and Byron in the top-10 included fellow Team Chevy playoff contender Ross Chastain (No. 1 Unishippers Camaro ZL1) in fifth, Chase Elliott (No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1) in eighth and Erik Jones (No. 43 Allegiant Camaro ZL1) rounding out the top-10.

The NCS Playoffs Round of 16 continues at Kansas Speedway with the Hollywood Casino 400 on Sunday, September 10, at 3 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on the USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1, and CLIFF DANIELS, CREW CHIEF, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 – Press Conference Transcript

THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by our winning crew chief, Cliff Daniels. Cliff, 5 car tonight, historic win for Hendrick Motorsports, the 500th win with the engine program. How important was it for you to bring home that honor for Hendrick Motorsports?

CLIFF DANIELS: Yeah, that’s a big honor for our whole company, and for us to bring it home at such a special race is really cool. Big thanks to everybody back at the shop, certainly engine shop. That is a huge milestone, a huge accomplishment for them, so yeah, many congrats.

Q. What was it that you told Kyle after he got stuck in neutral and hit the wall, because he made a point to mention how good you are for his mind.

CLIFF DANIELS: I don’t remember exactly what I would have told him then, other than at that point of the race, there was really going to be no — I don’t know, there was going to be no retreating from what that was going to do to our car and the balance of our car being a little bit off from there, so it was one of those things you just had to accept it and move forward and keep making adjustments around that. He did a good job to refocus his mind and not get discouraged, and obviously did a great job the last 30 or 40 laps.

Q. Can you talk a little bit about the role that you play just kind of as that calm presence.

CLIFF DANIELS: Yeah, he and I, our relationship has grown a lot over the last handful of years, as it should. The way our year has gone, it’s been easy to get discouraged at times, and I’ve tried to be there to help — kind of twofold, keep him accountable when we need to, and be his biggest supporter and biggest cheerleader because we all know he has the talent, and when he gets out front and he executes a good restart and does all the things that we know he can do, he’s dynamite, so he was awesome.

Q. Cliff, you and Kyle had a really emotional win at Martinsville earlier this year, another racetrack where you have kind of been beating your head against the wall and you finally come up and win. How does tonight compare to that one?

CLIFF DANIELS: Tonight was huge for both of us. I’ve been with Jimmie and Chad here before where we’ve had great cars and been close to getting it done. I wasn’t on the 2012 winning Jimmie and Chad team. I came on shortly after that.

We’ve had a lot of heartbreak here in my times past. Had some heartbreak here when I was Jimmie’s crew chief; Kyle when he was in the 42 had a lot of heartbreak here. Plus really the way the last two or three years have gone for Kyle and I together on the 5 team, this track, this race has been circled on our calendar for a long time.

It’s a very special race for the sport. Obviously it’s a crown jewel. It’s a milestone race if you can get it done.

It made it very, very special for us tonight. I don’t really know how to rank it, but knowing the emotion that’s kind of led us to this moment, definitely special.

Q. This isn’t a “gotcha” question, so don’t take it that way, but Kyle said during media day that when they first paired you two together, he didn’t think he wanted a crew chief like you, and now he said he wouldn’t want anybody else. What did you have to do to get him to buy into what you were selling?

CLIFF DANIELS: Yeah, he and I have had conversations about that, and I would say — I don’t know, I think at the time he probably didn’t think I had a ton of experience, and by the time he and I were paired together, I think I had been a crew chief for a year or two and he had been in the sport for seven or eight years.

I think he probably thought it was probably an unlikely pairing, which is totally fair to say, and we had to build our relationship and build our trust, and trust is obviously the foundation for any relationship.

There’s nobody else that I would trust more than him behind the wheel of our car, and he’s learned to trust me and the way that our team operates, the way we communicate and work together.

That’s definitely a special relationship that we have and really that our whole team has.

Q. Are you surprised at the problems that other of the top drivers had tonight, and how does that help you guys in your planning for races now that you’re kind of into the next round?

CLIFF DANIELS: I don’t know that any one really watching tonight would be surprised by the issues, and we certainly could have fallen victim to that at any point. You’re really playing on the ragged edge on pit stops of a tire being on right and not, and we know how critical the time on pit road is, especially when it’s so hard to pass on the racetrack.

So proud of our pit crew tonight for the way they executed. We didn’t start the race super strong on pit road and knew the guys had it in them, and they were really strong at the end.

Then as far as what you’re asking for planning moving forward, the way we see it as a team is we’re still behind on playoff points. We got five tonight, but when they reset to the next round, we’re still going to be a little bit behind in the reset, so we’ve got some catching up to do. We’re certainly grateful to have this win and going to take this momentum and build on it, but we’ve still got a bit of a deficit that we created with our season that we’ve got to overcome, and that’s the way we see it. There’s more points and wins out there to go get, and that’s on us to go do it.

Q. You’ve now had the good fortune of winning the Coke 600, Cup championship race, now a Southern 500. We often talk about drivers winning these marquee races. Do you categorize your own success on top of the pit box in that way and winning these marquee events?

CLIFF DANIELS: I don’t have a good answer because I don’t know that I have time to think about it that way, and I think it’s a totally fair question.

I think the way that I operate with our team and the way he and I operate together, we always want to win the next one. Knowing how long it took us both to get this win, it makes this win very special, and obviously all the other points that you just made there, so I don’t want to understate it at all.

But while we’re in the position that we’re in, we can go compete and compete at a high level. We’ve just got to go keep knocking them down.

I certainly hope to be able to look back and rank them and enjoy them one day.

Again, I would just say how tough it is to get a race like this one or the Coke 600 or whatever. That certainly does make them special, to your point.

Q. You mentioned the points deficit that you guys had created. How did you guys either lose momentum, gain it back? Is it the inherent randomness of this car? Can you take this win, and does it mean anything moving forward?

CLIFF DANIELS: It’s hilarious, if you plot the finishing — just the five-car finish from all the races this year, it’s a perfect heartbeat.

We had zero momentum all throughout the year. At any point we would win, finish 30th, run second, finish 30th, wreck from the lead, finish 30th. It was just like that all year long.

I guess what I’m getting at is from a team-building perspective, we had to really focus in on ourselves and learning the lessons in the moment that we needed to learn from some adversity that we created or just overcoming some of the challenges that were thrown our way, and really set ourselves up to just have that resilience within the team and kind of have that steady mind within the team so that if we ever had the good fortune to have a top-5 day going in and we could close it out that we’re ready to do that.

We’ve been knocked around a bit this season, but we’re battle tested, and we’re going to keep marching forward.

THE MODERATOR: We are now joined by the winning driver of the 74th Cook Out Southern 500, Kyle Larson.

Q. Cliff, there’s two ways to look at your regular season. You say you had all the DNFs and the inconsistencies, et cetera, or you led the series in top 5 finishes. I’m curious what do you pull from that? Do you try to look at the glass half full, glass half empty? What does that mean for the playoffs and how you plan going forward?

CLIFF DANIELS: I think we had to look at it very realistically, and here’s what I mean by that. Even when we had the DNFs or the 30th place finishes, typically that came from running in the top 5. So it gets very discouraging by the time you’re on your second or your third wave or cycle of the up and the down, and so we’ve had to very much call it like it is.

I certainly made a few mistakes calling races this year; he’s made mistakes behind the wheel; our pit crew has made mistakes on pit road, on and on and on. We’ve had to find the right ownership in that of how to hold each other accountable and still build and learn from that and kind of group ourselves together tighter through that.

Again, now, going into the playoffs, there’s still so many different things that can happen, especially with the Next-Gen car, so many different variables, the way these races play out than what it was a few years ago.

Our mission is to take all the lessons that we learned from the good and the bad, and every week we’ve just got to put our best foot forward.

Q. Kyle, you’ve led over 700 laps at this track without a win going into it. Does this feel sweeter than other wins, given how close you guys were, especially starting from 18th, the lowest at Darlington since 2011?

KYLE LARSON: I don’t know. I mean, it feels really good, honestly, just to get a win and finally win at this track. Like you said, we’ve led lots of laps here, so to lead lots of laps here, you have to be good at a number of different races through the different years.

Yeah, this is just a track that I really enjoy, suits my style, and just haven’t won yet here.

It was good to do it today. I knew we were going to have a good car. We just didn’t qualify as good as we had hoped.

Honestly drove through the field way better than I thought that I would, and today did a really good job on the pit sequences to cycle us in front of people, and from then on you try and manage a race. Denny was really good, too. He was going to be hard to beat without his mishap, but once whatever happened to them happened, it kind of opened the door for a few more guys to possibly win, and we kept ourselves in the game enough to get it done.

I got in the wall at some point in the third stage and then kind of had to nurse it to the next pit stop and then things just worked out. The team executed when we needed to.

Q. This is now win No. 299 for Hendrick; 300 is up next. How important would it be for you guys to be the ones to get that milestone?

KYLE LARSON: Honestly, sure, I think all four of us would want to be the one to do it, but really, I think 300 is just a super big number. For me, I’m going to be just as happy to see William, Chase or Alex win No. 300 for Rick as I would be for myself to win.

I think when you — which Rick has already stamped himself in this support as the greatest car owner of all time, to reach another milestone like 300, that takes a whole time throughout decades and decades.

No. 300 as a whole means more than me winning it or any individual person.

I hope one of us four can do it next week, and I guess that means Rick will be at the track every week now until we win. We’ll look forward to having him there.

CLIFF DANIELS: Well said by him. I would just add that when you think about the Hendrick 300 wins, you think about the 90 however many from Jeff and the 80 something from Jimmie and all the people that with Rick built our company and the history that it is. I agree with him. Yes, we would love to have it just for the little bit of bragging rights in the moment, but next there will be 350 and 400 and all those things for Mr. H.

It’s just amazing to be a part of a company like this and the leadership that Mr. Hendrick has to all of us and to the company is really special, so to get that for him would be pretty awesome.

Q. For both of you, another company question. It could have been a little disappointing around the shop when Chase and Alex don’t get into the playoffs, but yet you guys come out here, you win, William finishes fourth, it’s a strong start for wherever you guys are going to wind up in this Chase. That’s got to say something about the resiliency and the direction of this program.

CLIFF DANIELS: Yeah, no doubt, and all four teams are working really well together right now. The one thing I would add, because we were in this position last year, the 9 team is still very well in the playoffs for the owner’s championship, which is a huge deal to Mr. H. I know Chase and Alan are going to fight tooth and nail to make that happen, and I know they had a good day today.

There’s a bit of excitement around that, having three cars in, and Alex was well on his way to a top 10 or maybe even a top-5 finish tonight. Alex had a great race going, and he and Blake have been working really hard this year.

The way we’re all working together and the way Mr. H just keeps it on the rails and keeps us going, it’s a lot of fun.

Q. Kind of going off what you said about working well together with everybody, you mentioned coming back from deep in the field to win this race, and William Byron also had a deep starting position and was able to come through the field and for great position, as well. How much information is actually shared between you guys as a team with this being the playoffs and you guys also wanting to win it for yourselves but you still have teammates doing it, as well?

CLIFF DANIELS: Yeah, we have so many meetings every week where the crew chiefs are together and we talk through setups and strategy. The drivers are together, they talk through car sensations and what expectations are for the next race of how to execute the race or whatever it may be.

It’s really the culture that Mr. H wanted to create. He wanted to create a culture where we were very open and honest with each other, and we have some pretty private conversations as far as that goes, but it’s the four teams together, the four drivers, four crew chiefs, everybody working together, and I truly believe without that strength of all of us being together and working together, we wouldn’t be as competitive as what we are. It takes all of us to keep it going.

Yeah, it’s cool to be a part of.

Q. Question for both of you on that. The situation with the last pit stop, and I want to ask Kyle, your perspective. What did you see with Reddick and then with Harvick going down pit road? And Cliff, how much was that a game changer, in essence eliminating Harvick, and then it’s just between you and the 45 and who can win off pit road?

KYLE LARSON: For me — was Harvick leading right then?

Q. Reddick was first and Harvick was second and Harvick was called to pit road and then Reddick was told to come down, and he said he missed it because of the late call because they were trying to react to Harvick.

KYLE LARSON: From my vantage point, I was fourth. Yeah, Harvick was really good that run and was close to Reddick, and then I saw — we got the call. They called me in to pit, and I seen Harvick and William both pull down, so I was going to follow them. It looked like Reddick was just going to have to pit the next lap, got caught late.

Then as I was pulling down, I saw, I think, Newman spinning, so I was like, I think I need to stay out, so I stayed out. Thankfully it worked out. I guess William was able to get back out before committing to pit road, but I’m guessing Harvick being so close, he probably didn’t have any time to react to it, and yeah, took him out. He would know more about what happened.

For me, yes, it was pivotal because I went from now fourth to second in line, and you have a good pit stop, come out in the lead, there’s 40 something laps left, hopefully you can lead the rest of the race, and that’s what happened, so it worked out for us.

CLIFF DANIELS: Yeah, pivotal, like he said. If we’re being honest with ourselves, I think there was four or five cars that had they gotten the lead, it was going to be hard to pass. I think if we had gotten in front of Denny, it would have been really hard for him to pass us. Harvick gets the lead, I don’t think anybody passes him. I think the top four or five were very, very equal together just in the way the track position was kind of staging itself.

So to your point, to have one less of those cars was nice. Obviously hate the misfortune for those guys. Always enjoy racing with the Rodney and Kevin, but that was a big deal because it set us up to be second coming down pit road, have a good pit stop, come out with the lead, and then there’s still a couple of good cars behind us, just not quite as many.

Q. For either of you, is there anything that — should the rule be tweaked, or is there anything that should — it seemed like Harvick has the option to just drive down pit road without pitting, but I’m curious if there’s anything else that should be done in that situation or you’ve got to have a line and there’s got to be a rule and sometimes you’re just going to get bit?

CLIFF DANIELS: I mean, I think we’ve seen it play out so many times in just these really intense moments over time in Cup racing. I feel like I remember a couple of years ago, a handful of years ago Kyle Busch had something like that happen. I feel like it’s happened to Carl Edwards before.

It’s really, really tough, and we talked about it before the race. Talked about it a lot with my engineers, and it’s one of those things that if you’re committed, you’re committed, and we know what the rule is, and unfortunately if you elect to pit, then it is a penalty. I don’t have a great opinion other than we just know what it is.

Q. Kyle, what stands out more to you in this moment, the fact that you’ve knocked another kind of crown jewel off the Southern 500 or the fact that you know that you advance in the playoffs and you’ve got another chance to win a championship again?

KYLE LARSON: Well, had I not won anyways, I feel like we would have a chance to win the championship. But really, honestly, I’m happy to win a crown jewel, a place that we’ve been close to winning at, a place that we both have wanted to win at for a very long time.

Then just to start the playoffs off good, I would have been happy just to get a good solid race in, so to win, it feels obviously better, and I hope that we can just put multiple weeks together like we did today. Not necessarily win; I know we’ll be capable of winning every race in the playoffs. But really I just want to put together solid races from start to finish, get stage points, get some stage wins would be great, and then get some good finishes at the end of it.

Yeah, we were able to do that today, and it’s been a long time since we put a full, full race together.

Yeah, just want to build on that.

Q. On the crown jewel front, is this one that you’re kind of aware of that has kind of eluded you that you circle and say, hey, I don’t have Darlington or the 500 yet and I want that one?

KYLE LARSON: Definitely. This race — all these crown jewels only come around once a year. There’s been lots of times where I’ve left here bummed out and sad that I had a good shot to win and it just didn’t work out, so I felt like I was going to have that feeling again today, but things were able to work out, and yeah, get a really big win. This is in the top three or four for the races — crown jewel, prestigious races of our season.

I think the only two I don’t have would be the 500 and maybe the Brickyard 400 if it comes back to the oval.

Yeah, you always want to win the big ones, but really just winning a race, it feels good.

Q. Cliff says you guys feel like y’all are behind a little bit on points, but we were talking on Thursday, and you wanted to focus on each race. Does this give you a little bit of a relief, though, to have the couple weeks to focus completely on points and not have to worry about advancing, so to speak?

KYLE LARSON: No. I mean, I don’t really feel any differently as far as that goes, after winning.

In 2021 we were winning — we won a race in each round, maybe not the first race of every round, but still, when you put together good races you know the points are going to take care of themselves and you’re going to advance.

It doesn’t take any pressure off, it doesn’t take any focus away. To me anyway. It doesn’t give me a different goal. I still just want to go and run a good race from start to finish for nine more weeks.

My mindset doesn’t change at all. Sure, it’s great to be locked in if you do have a mishap, but I don’t plan on having a mishap.

Q. Also tonight, you got into the wall, a lot of people got into the wall. How hard was it to control the car? This track is known for that, but you bounced off of it pretty hard a couple of times.

KYLE LARSON: Yeah, the good thing with this car is that you can graze it some. Obviously when you slap the wall, that’s when things bend. I probably grazed the wall at least 20 times tonight or more, all in 3 and 4. I got it a little bit into 1 once.

But really there was only two times where I thought that, ooh, maybe it did some damage there. The first time was there late in the — middle of the third stage. I just didn’t get a clean enough downshift, and it kind of hung into neutral between fourth and fifth and stayed there for quite a while, and then it finally dropped into fifth as I was closest there to the corner and went to fourth and then I was just lower off of the wall, and when you’re lower — I watch broadcasts all the time, and people are like, just give it some room, you don’t have to run right next to — well, you have a lot less grip when you don’t run right next to the wall. So I was a little bit off the wall because I had made the mistake on entry, and by the time I got to fourth I was already sliding and then I slapped the wall, and that’s when I lost a bunch of time.

I’m sure it’s bent a little bit, but thankfully not broke, and we were able to finish and still get a win.

THE MODERATOR: Gentlemen, congratulations on winning the 74th Cook Out Southern 500, and we’ll see you next week in Kansas.



About Chevrolet

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Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Darlington

#2: Austin Cindric, Team Penske, Discount Tire Ford Mustang

DARLINGTON RACEWAY

RACE: COOK OUT SOUTHERN 500 DATE: SEPTEMBER 3, 2023

AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 DISCOUNT TIRE FORD MUSTANG

START: 14TH STAGE ONE: 13TH STAGE TWO: 31ST FINISH: 31ST POINTS: 22ND

RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric was seemingly destined for a strong result in Sunday’s Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway until being involved in an incident that ultimately caused the Discount Tire Ford Mustang to go down multiple laps, leaving the driver with a 31st-place finish. Showing solid pace during Saturday’s on-track activities, Cindric fired off from the 14th position for his second appearance in the South Carolina track’s crown jewel event, the Southern 500. The Team Penske driver sailed into the top 10 early on prior to his first visit to pit road on Lap 34. Shortly after, Cindric reported that the car had loosened up significantly. Crew Chief Brian Wilson called the 25-year-old racer down pit road for his second stop on Lap 69 for four sticker tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment. On his way to a 13th-place result in Stage 1, Cindric alerted the Discount Tire team of a bad vibration he experienced during the run and returned to pit road for another service stop. The driver of the No. 2 jetted off from the 13th position for the restart to kick off Stage 2. On Lap 178, a caution slowed the field for lighting issues in Turns 3 and 4 before NASCAR officials stopped the field under the red flag on Lap 189 for just under seven minutes. On Lap 226, Cindric and the No. 54 of Ty Gibbs got together, sending Cindric’s Ford Mustang into the wall, collecting considerable damage. On pit road, the Discount Tire crew assessed the damage and made repairs, cutting away at the right-front fender and replacing all four tires. Cindric returned to the track in the 33rd position, one lap down. Over the remainder of the race, the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year made multiple visits down pit road for additional repairs and service. When the checkered flag flew after 500 miles, Cindric was scored 31st in the running order.

CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “Yeah, I think we learned a lot through the first half of the race. We started to go the right way on adjustments on our Discount Tire Ford Mustang and got a good bit better toward the end of Stage 2. I just got a little ahead of myself and made a mistake, damaging the car quite a bit. Definitely not the execution I wanted, especially with that much left in the race. I feel bad about that, but it was a promising weekend overall from a speed standpoint — we’ve just got to put it all together.”

RYAN BLANEY No. 12 MENARDS/RICHMOND FORD MUSTANG

START: 4TH STAGE ONE: 5TH STAGE TWO: 7TH FINISH: 9TH POINTS: 9TH

RACE RUNDOWN: Ryan Blaney and the Menards/Richmond Ford Mustang started from the outside of row two to begin the NASCAR Playoffs Sunday night at Darlington Raceway and maintained top-five speed on the opening run of the 500-mile event. Following a pair of scheduled green flag pit stops during the first 115-lap segment, Blaney battled his way to a fifth-place finish in Stage 1 as the No. 12 team continued to make adjustments to alleviate a loose-handling condition that set in over the long run. During the opening run of Stage 2, Blaney began to struggle with the handling on corner entry and exit but maintained his spot in the top-10 before green flag pit stops cycled when he brought his Ford Mustang to pit road on lap 149 for four tires, fuel, and another round of adjustments. He was called to pit road following the caution on lap 178 before the red flag brought the field to a halt on the backstretch due to track lighting issues and lined up to restart seventh with 39 laps to go in the second stage. While Blaney continued to hold on to the seventh spot in the running order, a pair of cautions within ten laps of each other stacked up the field to set up a one-lap shootout to the end of Stage 2. Blaney was able to fend off the top lane on the restart to cross the line seventh at the conclusion of the stage to add on to his point total. The No. 12 team opted to bring Blaney to pit road during the stage break for four tires and fuel while a majority of the leaders stayed out, miring him back in 24th-place to take the green flag for the final segment. The Menards/Richmond Ford began to work its way tight over the course of the next green flag run, but a flurry of cautions over the final 60 laps allowed the No. 12 team to continue to work on the handling and regain track position as the laps ticked off. After staying out following the final caution of the night on lap 330, Blaney lined up ninth with 30 laps to go and maintained his pace the rest of the way to secure a ninth-place finish in the opening race of the Round of 16, marking his 13th top-10 finish of the season.

BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “This race is such a weird race. It just goes through so many swings throughout the day and night. You start off the race in the full sun and it’s hot and by the end of the second stage it’s all night time and the track temperature changes. This place is really tricky with how the track changes and it went the complete opposite way of what we thought it was going to go, so that kind of threw us for a little bit of a loop. It was just a weird pit strategy race, too. You usually don’t get that here, but just the way the cautions fell. There was a group of people with two laps on their tires and then split and it was kind of a wacky race. Luckily, we were able to get back to ninth. It was a hard-fought battle, for sure. I’m proud of the effort and it was a decent day on points.”

JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

START: 6TH STAGE ONE: 11TH STAGE TWO: 27TH FINISH: 12TH POINTS: 11TH

RACE RUNDOWN: Joey Logano and the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil team battled their way to a hard-fought, 12th-place finish Sunday night at Darlington Raceway in the NASCAR Playoffs opener. After starting from the outside of row three, Logano fought handling issues in the entry and exit of the corners on the opening run before bringing his Ford Mustang to pit road for a scheduled green flag stop on lap 32 for four tires, fuel, and adjustments. Following another green flag stop on lap 66, Logano made contact with the outside wall in turn four which resulted in a loose-handling condition throughout the run to the end of the stage, compounded by contact with the No. 23 who got loose underneath him on the final lap of Stage 1. Logano was credited with an 11th-place finish in the stage, but the No. 22 team had to make an extended stop on pit road during the stage break to check the right front toe link for damage. After restarting 23rd to begin Stage 2, the handling issues continued to persist resulting in Logano going a lap down on lap 173. The caution flag flew shortly after on lap 178, making Logano the beneficiary of the free pass to rejoin the lead lap cars as the No. 22 team diagnosed the toe link issues under caution with a pair of trips to pit road under yellow. Logano was scored 27th at the end of Stage 2, but crew chief Paul Wolfe’s ongoing adjustments began to take shape in the final stage as Logano drove his way up to 18th by the time the caution flag flew on lap 309 while he was on pit road for scheduled service. A pair of cautions on laps 318 and 330 allowed Wolfe to bring Logano to pit road prior to the final restart of the night with 30 laps to go and Logano made the most of the opportunity, making up nine spots in the first seven laps of the run before breaking into the top-10 on lap 345. With the late charge through the field, Logano was able to come away with an 11th-place finish despite the early setbacks.

LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “I got ran in the wall a third time and bent the toe link. The guys did a great job changing that and staying pretty much on the lead lap and then started to grind our way back through the field. I probably could have done a little better. I probably gave up, overall, 15 points on the day. I think we’re only a few points to the good right now, so those 15 would be nice.”

WHAT’S NEXT: The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Kansas Speedway for the second race in the Round of 16 on Sunday, September 10. Coverage begins at 3:00 pm E.T. on USA, MRN Radio and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

Stewart-Haas Racing: Cook Out Southern 500 from Darlington

STEWART-HAAS RACING
Cook Out Southern 500

Date: Sept. 3, 2023
Event: Cook Out Southern 500 (Round 27 of 36)
Series: NASCAR Cup Series
Location: Darlington (S.C.) Raceway (1.366-mile oval)
Format: 367 laps, broken into three stages (115 laps/115 laps/137 laps)
Race Winner: Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports (Chevrolet)
Stage 1 Winner: Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 2 Winner: Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)

SHR Race Finish:

● Aric Almirola (Started 10th, Finished 14th / Running, completed 367 of 367 laps)

● Chase Briscoe (Started 12th, Finished 15th / Running, completed 367 of 367 laps)

● Kevin Harvick (Started 7th, Finished 19th / Running, completed 367 of 367 laps)

● Ryan Preece (Started 34th, Finished 28th / Running, completed 364 of 367 laps)

SHR Points:

● Kevin Harvick (14th with 2,029 points, two points below top-12 cutoff)

● Aric Almirola (23rd with 471 points)

● Ryan Preece (26th with 438 points)

● Chase Briscoe (30th with 355 points)

Playoff Standings (with two races to go before Round of 12):

  1. Kyle Larson (2,074 points) 1 win
  2. William Byron (2,075 points) +45 points
  3. Tyler Reddick (2,060 points) +30 points
  4. Chris Buescher (2,057 points) +27 points
  5. Denny Hamlin (2,057 points) +27 points
  6. Martin Truex Jr. (2,055 points) +25 points
  7. Kyle Busch (2,050 points) +20 points
  8. Brad Keselowski (2,048 points) +18 points
  9. Ryan Blaney (2,046 points) +16 points
  10. Ross Chastain (2,043 points) +13 points
  11. Joey Logano (2,033 points) +3 points
  12. Christopher Bell (2,031 points) +1 point
  13. Bubba Wallace (2,030 points) -1 point
  14. Kevin Harvick (2,029 points) -2 points
  15. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (2,027 points) -4 points
  16. Michael McDowell (2,012 points) -19 points

SHR Notes:

● Almirola finished 10th in Stage 1 to earn one bonus point.

● This was Almirola’s eighth top-15 this season and his second straight. He finished third last week at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway.

● This was Briscoe’s 10th top-15 this season.

● Harvick finished fourth in Stage 1 to earn seven bonus points.

● Harvick led one lap to increase his laps-led total at Darlington to 819.

● Harvick has now led 11,609 laps since joining SHR in 2014. He has led 16,024 laps in his entire NASCAR Cup Series career and is one of just 11 drivers who have surpassed 16,000 laps led.

● This was Harvick’s milestone 775th consecutive NASCAR Cup Series start. He ranks third behind only Jeff Gordon (797 consecutive starts) and Ricky Rudd (788 consecutive starts).

Race Notes:

● Kyle Larson won the Cook Out Southern 500 to score his 22nd career NASCAR Cup Series victory, his third of the season and his first at Darlington. His margin over second-place Tyler Reddick was .447 of a second.

● There were eight caution periods for a total of 51 laps.

● Only 22 of the 36 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.

Sound Bites:

“All things considered, that turned out to be a decent day for our race team. We had a top-10 car all day and the guys executed on pit road. We got damage to the nose and splitter on that restart in stage two when everyone stacked up, which wasn’t repairable and completely changed the balance of our car. It was like a totally different car after that and I was just way too tight to be as competitive as we were. We fought all day and stayed out of trouble and found our way from 28th back up into the top-10. I’m proud of this team and these guys for working so hard. It’s a testament to what this team can do for the rest of the year.” – Aric Almirola, driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang

“The caution came out and the light was on, and I didn’t think I could turn right. We’ll just go and put the gas pedal down and do the exact same thing we’ve done for 23 years.” – Kevin Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Mobil 1/Take 5 Ford Mustang

Next Up:

The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Hollywood Casino 400 on Sunday, Sept. 10 at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City The second race in the 10-race NASCAR Playoffs starts at 3 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Race Recap: Darlington Raceway II

Carson Hocevar, No. 42 Sunseeker Resort Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

START: 15TH

FINISH: 17TH

OWNERS POINTS: 32ND

Carson Hocevar’s Post-Race Thoughts: “Physically, I feel really good. I wish I could have got a spot or two more. The weak part of my game, for sure, was pit road. I felt like I lost four or five spots on each cycle, just trying to maximize lights. These guys nail it every time. But I felt like I was OK on the race track. I felt pretty good and just kept working at it. I passed a few of my heroes that win races on Sunday. I wasn’t expecting that and I think I exceeded my own expectations.”

Erik Jones, No. 43 Allegiant Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

START: 20TH

FINISH: 10TH

POINTS: 27TH

Erik Jones Post-Race Thoughts: “It was an up-and-down day, but a top-10 finish is obviously solid for us. It’s been awhile since we’ve done that. I feel like we had a better car at points there running in the top-three, top-five, and I was hoping we could hit it right on the adjustment to make it work there to challenge upfront. We just got a little off and couldn’t really get it reigned back in there for the end. Our No. 43 Allegiant Chevy was good, we just needed a little bit more.”

ABOUT LEGACY MOTOR CLUB:

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB is a professional auto racing club owned by businessman and entrepreneur Maurice J. Gallagher and seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion (NCS) Jimmie Johnson. The club competes full-time in the NCS fielding the Nos. 42 and 43 Chevrolet Camaro entries, respectively, along with the No. 84 part-time entry for Johnson in 2023. Richard Petty “The King” serves as team ambassador.

In 2021, Gallagher acquired Richard Petty Motorsports and renamed the team to Petty GMS. With the addition of Johnson to the ownership structure in 2023, the organization rebranded to LEGACY MOTOR CLUB (LEGACY M.C.). With a unique title signifying a nod to car clubs of past eras, LEGACY M.C. is an inclusive club for all motorsport enthusiasts to celebrate the past and future legacies of its members, while competing for wins and championships at NASCAR’s elite level.

Based in Statesville, N.C., LEGACY M.C. operates alongside GMS Racing (GMS), which currently fields three full-time entries in the NASCAR Truck Series. Since the formation of GMS in 2012, Gallagher and Mike Beam, team president, have shared incredible success. GMS Racing captured the 2015 ARCA Racing Series championship, the 2016 and 2020 NASCAR Truck Series championships and the 2019 and 2020 ARCA East championships, accumulating over 65 wins across six national racing circuits.

SOCIAL MEDIA:

To keep up-to-date with the latest news, information and exclusive content, follow LEGACY MOTOR CLUB on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Toyota Racing – NCS Darlington Post-Race Report – 09.03.23

REDDICK FINISHES RUNNER-UP IN PLAYOFF OPENER
Two Top-10 Finishes for 23XI Drivers at Darlington

DARLINGTON, S.C. (September 3, 2023) – Tyler Reddick was the top-finishing Toyota driver with a second-place result in Sunday’s Southern 500 NASCAR Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway. Reddick and 23XI Racing teammate Bubba Wallace (seventh) both finished in the top-10 in the opening race of the 10-race NCS Playoffs.

Hamlin won the first two stages and led a race-high 199 laps however a loose wheel resulted in Hamlin falling a lap down and he was later involved in an on-track incident. Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Christopher Bell, who won the pole, and Martin Truex Jr. also experienced issues during the 500-mile race.

With the runner-up result, Reddick sits third in the Playoffs with Hamlin in fifth, Truex in sixth, Bell in 12th and Wallace in 13th.

Toyota Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Darlington Raceway
Race 27 of 36 – 501.3 miles, 367 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Kyle Larson*

2nd, TYLER REDDICK

3rd, Chris Buescher*

4th, William Byron*

5th, Ross Chastain*

7th, BUBBA WALLACE

18th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.

21st, TY GIBBS

23rd, CHRISTOPHER BELL

25th, DENNY HAMLIN

*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Jordan Brand Toyota Camry TRD, 23XI Racing

Finishing Position: 2nd

What more did you need at the end of the race to catch Kyle Larson?

“Man, I don’t know maybe just a little bit longer run. It had just gotten short enough to where you didn’t save a whole lot I don’t think. Kyle (Larson) and I were pretty close the majority of the day, honestly. He just got ahead of us there unfortunately on pit road, but all in all this is the day that we needed to have. I’m really just thankful for the hard work from the pit crew, the team, everyone at the shop. Days like this with a car like this we haven’t been able to get a second place finish out of it so I’m really glad we’re able to do that. We’re sitting pretty good. It was a pretty good points day on top of that as well.”

What was it like looking in your rear view trying to hold off Chris Buescher?

“It was a tough balance. I wanted to keep pushing to try and get Kyle (Larson), but I was just getting so loose. I about wrecked in the middle of (turns) one and two a few times. I don’t know. I was either going to catch Kyle or I was going to wreck in the middle of one and two and finish the last car out — 28th. It just didn’t make sense in my head, so we’ll take the second place. Hopefully one day in the future we come back and have another shot at the Southern 500.”

BUBBA WALLACE, No. 23 McDonald’s Toyota Camry TRD, 23XI Racing

Finishing Position: 7th

How was your race today?

“I’m not happy with myself. Apologies to Joey (Logano), apologies to AJ (Allmendinger). I think the important thing to learn here is to not make enemies race one when you’re in the Playoffs because they make it hell, so I deserve everything I got throughout the night. Just did not execute. I’ve got to be better. I appreciate the team for sticking behind me through all of the mistakes that I caused them. They didn’t let us down and got us back to a top-10 finish. I was trying to hang on for a top-five, but you’re a double-edged sword. You go really hard at the beginning to try to get a gap or save and you’ve got Ross (Chastain) behind you, and you know he’s not going to let you have any breathing room. All in all, a decent day – a really good day for our team, but the driver’s got to go back to the drawing board and just take a step back, take a breath and regroup and go to Kansas and have a little one-year anniversary tour.”

CHRISTOPHER BELL, No. 20 Yahoo! Toyota Camry TRD, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 23rd

What happened in the incident on track?

“Just got in the marbles in turn two and damaged the car really. That was pretty much the story of our night.”

What is your outlook for the upcoming Playoff races?

“We have speed. We’ve had speed a lot and I know that in Kansas we’re going to be fast again. That’s been a really good track for Toyota. I know that we have the speed to do it, we’ve just got to put it all together.”

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota Camry TRD, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 25th

What happened to cause you to pit?

“It’s really tough to tell. It looked like the left rear was still tightening as we were gone. It’s close enough to where it didn’t matter. What I felt, I was in a crash. I had to bring it in and just turned the day upside down.”

Is this why getting Playoff points in the regular season matters so much?

“Yeah. It all matters for sure. All the work you put in, the stages, the regular season, it all matters. I don’t know what the points are, I really don’t care. Just I hate losing a race that we definitely should have won.”

Did your car have a lot of damage during the on-track incident?

“I didn’t think the damage was that bad, but the car drove significantly worse after that incident. Once you damage the splitter on these cars, they’re no good.”

Does the amount of speed you had today give you confidence for the rest of this round?

“We think we’re going to win every week. There’s not one week where I show up and I don’t think I’m going to win. But you’ve got to play the game and sometimes when you play the game it doesn’t work out the way you planned. I am happy about the speed the car had and the restarts that I had. The things I had to work on I felt like I really did well today. It’s part of the process. We move on and if we advance, all we really lost out on is points for the next round so we’ll see.”

About Toyota

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

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Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – NCS Southern 500 Post-Race Quotes (9.3.23)

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Cook Out Southern 500 | Sunday, September 3, 2023

Ford Finishing Results:

3rd – Chris Buescher

6th – Brad Keselowski

9th – Ryan Blaney

12th – Joey Logano

14th – Aric Almirola

15th – Chase Briscoe

19th – Kevin Harvick

26th – Todd Gilliland

27th – Ryan Newman

28th – Ryan Preece

30th – JJ Yeley

31st – Austin Cindric

32nd – Michael McDowell

35th – Harrison Burton

CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang – “It was really good. This BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang was strong. I’m really proud of everybody on this team. This is the first time we’ve had Build Subs on board. I know Brad has had it several times, but I’m proud to have a bunch of them out here with us and to get a good, solid day. It just goes to show that what we’ve been doing at RFK the last several months is doing a good job, working hard and getting the results. It hurts a little bit to be that close to a win. We had a little bit more speed a couple times there and then Byron was really fast and we had to start defending that and that actually checked us up a little bit i the process, but it was a really strong day for us. I’m really proud of that and a heck of a start.”

YOU WERE UP THERE ALL NIGHT AND WERE IN IT. “It feels good and it hurts a little bit at the same time. To be this close and watch it right there in front of us and to watch the 45 go up there and slap the fence over and over I’m like, ‘Man, surely we can get by.’ And the 5 car didn’t make any mistakes. It ended up being a hard day to pass, for sure. We definitely had big aero issues as we tried to get by cars. We worked hard on that and our team did a great job. The pit crew really stepped up in the final half of this race and got us a bunch of spots that put us up front and put us in a great spot to fight for it at least. It hurts just a little bit to be that close and not be able to get it.”

LARSON AND REDDICK WERE RIGHT UP AGAINST THE WALL. “Him and Reddick both are usually the first ones up there, so I had to just try to follow suit and got up there. We made a lot of really good time up there, but I felt like we were in a good spot. Even though we made speed up there, you really needed to go somewhere else to be able to pass and there at the end there just wasn’t any other options.”

A NUMBER OF PLAYOFF CONTENDERS HAD ISSUES TODAY, BUT NOT YOU. “Absolutely. I don’t know who you’re talking about yet because I had my blinders on, but our team did a fantastic job. Our pit crew guys all stepped up. Our team brought a really fast BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang and I feel like we were in the hunt. I was really happy after practice. At the start of the race and in the daylight we were super tight and it took us a while to get this thing underneath us, but even with that being the case, we had good speed and kind of hung right around the top 10 and once we got this thing dialed in a little bit and the sun went down, it cooled off and certainly picked up a good amount of pace.”

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Solomon Plumbing Ford Mustang – “It was one of those days where it was just up and down. We got up to I think fourth there with 30 to go when that yellow came out and we pitted and we thought a whole bunch of cars would pit and they didn’t. That dropped us back to 17th or 18th and we were able to get back up to sixth but not all the way back up to where we were running. We just needed a few more cars to pit.”

ARE YOU SURPRISED BY THE UP-DOWN SWING TONIGHT? “Everybody is just so close and this car is just really finicky with small adjustments.

YOU DIDN’T DO ANYTHING TO HURT YOUR CHANCES OF ADVANCING IN THIS ROUND. “We were just solid. It was a solid day for us. We scored a lot of points and showed some strength from third to sixth with our two cars. We were just very solid.”

KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 GEARWRENCH Ford Mustang – “The caution came out and the light was on, and I didn’t think I could turn right.”

FRUSTRATING NIGHT AFTER A GOOD STRONG EFFORT. “It was great.”

IS THIS A STEP FORWARD FOR YOU GUYS? “It’s the same stuff we’ve been doing.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL MOVING FORWARD? “We’ll just go and put the gas pedal down and do the exact same thing we’ve done for 23 years.”

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Advance Auto Parts Ford Mustang – “This race is such a weird race. It just goes through so many swings throughout the day and night. You start off the race in the full sun and it’s hot and by the end of the second stage it’s all night time and the track temp changes. This place is really tricky with how the track changes and it went the complete opposite way of what we thought it was gonna go, so that kind of threw us for a little bit of a loop. It was just a weird pit strategy race, too. You usually don’t get that here, but just the way the cautions fell. There was a group of people with two laps on their tires and then split and it was kind of a wacky race. Luckily, we were able to get back to ninth. It was a hard-fought battle, for sure. I’m proud of the effort and it was a decent day on points.”

YOU HAVEN’T SEEN IT SWING THAT MUCH BEFORE? “It kind of happened really quickly at the end of stage two. We adjusted for it a little bit, but didn’t think it was gonna be that drastic. It was just doing massive swings. It was such a big swing that I thought something was wrong. I’ll be curious to look at it because I’ve never had one like that where one run and, boom, you’re like a 10 tight, so that was kind of odd. It was good to overcome that. You throw the kitchen sink at it to try to get it to work somewhat reasonable and get an OK finish.”

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – “I got ran in the wall a third time and bent the toe link. The guys did a great job changing that and staying pretty much on the lead lap and then started to grind our way back through the field. I probably could have done a little better. I probably gave up overall 15 points on the day. I think we’re one point to the good right now, so those 15 would be nice.”

WHAT WERE YOUR MISTAKES? “I hit the wall. That was a mistake and then I hit the wall again just enough. It doesn’t take much to bend stuff and I just bent the toe link and that hurt us for a few laps.”

MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 StageFront VIP Ford Mustang – “We just didn’t execute tonight. We had one set of tires that just got us really far off. I’m not sure what happened. The car just went really loose and lost a lap there. It kind of spiraled from there. We hit pit road when the caution came out. That’s never good. I sped on pit road. That’s never good. It all came apart. It’s not how we wanted to start, but we still have two more and we’ll race hard, so we’ll see what we get.”

WHAT HAPPENED IN THAT LAST ACCIDENT? “I didn’t see what happened to Todd. I just saw the 11 start spinning in front of me. He checked up and then I ran into the back of him.”

HARRISON BURTON, No. 21 Motorcraft Ford Mustang – “I couldn’t tell. I saw all of that, I guess it was the 99 and somebody else got into each other and by the time I saw him coming down, he was in my lap. Darlington, the way in one and two is when you commit to entry, that’s all the speed you’ve got and that’s all the left turn you can get. I saw him coming down and tried to slow down, but at that point I was in trouble. It’s really unfortunate. I felt like we had a pretty good day going. We qualified poorly, but we were digging ourselves out of that hole all day. We finally got into the top 15 and felt like we were probably gonna be able to race there the rest of the race and just got caught up. I want to give a shout out to our guys. It was a really long, hard-fought race for us and to get up to where we were, I’m proud of that effort. This is stuff you can’t control and that’s part of racing, but we’ll just move on and be better next time.”

Kaulig Racing Post-Race Report | Darlington Raceway

Cook Out Southern 500

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Action Industries Camaro ZL1

  • AJ Allmendinger qualified 16th for the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway.
  • Allmendinger reported early his No. 16 Action Industry Chevy was plowing tight. Running 16th on lap 18, spotter, Frank Deiny, relayed to Allmendinger he was running top-five lap times. On lap 33, the No. 16 came down pit road for this first scheduled green-flag stop of the race. The team made an air pressure adjustment to help with the handling of the car, and Allmendinger cycled out to 17th place. Allmendinger told crew chief, Matt Swiderski, on lap 56 the rear tires faded quicker this run, and that was his biggest struggle. The No. 16 Chevy came back down pit road on lap 67 for a scheduled green-flag stop. Once the pit-stop sequence cycled through, Allmendinger took over 14th on lap 74, and went on to finish the opening stage 13th.
  • Allmendinger came down pit road under the stage break for tires, fuel and an adjustment. The No. 16 team picked up two spots on pit road and restarted 11th on lap 122. Allmendinger took over 10th on lap 141 and maintained position until coming down pit road under green on lap 152. By lap 171, Allmendinger made it back up to 11th before the caution came out for a track lighting issue in turns three and four. The No. 16 team came down pit road for four tires and fuel before the red flag was displayed on lap 188 to fix the lighting issue. When the field took the green flag on lap 191, Allmendinger restarted 17th and took over 15th on lap 193. Allmendinger told his team track position was critical, and he was stuck in traffic sitting 16th. The caution flag came out on lap 216, and the team came down pit road for tires and fuel. After a slow stop, Allmendinger restarted 20th on lap 221 and made his way up to 17th before the caution came back out on lap 226. The No. 16 came back down pit road, and restarted 18th on lap 229, where he finished the second stage.
  • Allmendinger stayed out under the stage break and restarted 13th on lap 236 before reporting he was tight in traffic on lap 242. The team came back down pit road on lap 266 for four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment to help with the handling of the car. Allmendinger cycled out to 11th where he ran until lap 289 when he fell to 12th place, reporting he needed more rear grip on the next stop. When the next caution came out on lap 310, the No. 16 was running 11th. The team came down pit road under caution for four tires, fuel and an air pressure to help the rear of the car. On the restart on lap 316, Allmendinger was 11th and had taken over 10th by lap 319 when maneuvered around wrecking cars in front of him that brought out another caution. The No. 16 stayed out under this caution to restart eighth on lap 327. Two laps later, the caution came out again while Allmendinger was running ninth, and the team came down pit road for fresh tires and fuel. Restarting in 17th with 31 to go, Allmendinger quickly made up ground, taking over 14th on lap 343 before going on to finish 13th in the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway.

“I’m really happy with the whole weekend our No. 16 team had in Darlington. We made significant improvement from the spring race. Our car had a good amount of speed, and we tried to fine tune the balance all night. This was the best I’ve ever felt in a Cup car and a career-best finish for me at this track. I’m satisfied with our end result.” – AJ Allmendinger

Justin Haley, No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Camaro ZL1

  • Justin Haley qualified 29th for the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway.
  • Haley struggled early with lack of grip but relayed that the No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevy handled well otherwise. By lap 26, Haley sat 27th and radioed that the No. 31 Chevy began handling a little free. He made his first green-flag pit stop eight laps later for four tires and fuel. Once the green flag stops cycled through, Haley maintained position and radioed that the No. 31 was getting very loose. He made his second green-flag stop on lap 70 for fresh tires and fuel. As the stops cycled through again, Haley moved up one position but fell back to 27th, radioing that his brake pedal was going to the floor. He finished the stage in 27th.
  • Haley made his third pit stop of the day under caution for fresh tires and multiple adjustments to tighten up the No. 31 Chevy. Crew chief, Trent Owens, remarked that the tire falloff on the No. 31 was not where it needed to be. He restarted 29th on lap 123. By lap 146, Haley reported more brake issues and made his fourth pit stop on lap 153 for more tires and fuel. The first caution came out on lap 179, as the lights in turns three and four would not turn on. Haley sat 27th two laps down. The team decided to gamble and take the wave around to gain back one lap in the hopes of a quick caution as the race resumed. Unfortunately, the caution did not fall, forcing Haley to pit under green on lap 196 for tires and fuel. The next caution came out on lap 217, and Haley took the wave around to gain one lap back before restarting with nine laps remaining in the stage. The next caution came out for a spin on lap 225, as Haley missed the lucky dog spot by one position. He pitted under caution for fresh tires to try and race for the lucky dog spot. Taking the green for a one-lap shootout, Haley finished the second stage in 30th, and was able to earn the lucky dog spot to put him back on the lead lap to start the final stage.
  • During the second stage break, Haley pitted for fresh tires and fuel and started the final stage in 30th on the lead lap. By lap 251, Haley radioed that his No. 31 Chevy was now tight handling. Haley made his next green-flag pit stop from 19th place, radioing he needed front grip. Cycling out to 29th, Haley’s No. 31 Chevy began trending free once again. The next caution came out on lap 311, and Haley pitted for four tires and fuel. The race went back to green only three laps before the next caution, allowing Haley to pit again under caution for tires and fuel. Haley restarted 27th on lap 327. The field went green for only two laps, as Haley avoided the spinning cars ahead of him. He stayed out under caution and restarted as the first car one lap down in 24th on lap 336. The race remained green until the end, and Haley finished 24th.

“Darlington was tough for us this time by. We lacked grip and fought really free from tire falloff during the first part of the race. We were kind of stuck sitting two laps down and in need of clean air and got really tight before we got free again. At the very end we were able to get the car close and find what we needed for the long runs, but unfortunately it was too late for us to make any gains. We will regroup for Kansas next week.” – Justin Haley  

Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200

Kyle Busch, No. 10 LA Golf Chevrolet Camaro

  • Kyle Busch qualified 14th for the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 at Darlington Raceway.
  • Although Busch’s No. 10 LAGolf Chevy fired off loose, he gained three spots before the first caution came out on lap 13. He stayed out under caution and restarted 11th on lap 17. After the first restart, Busch worked his way to eighth, but reported his No. 10 Chevy had begun handling extremely tight. Busch finished the opening stage in eighth place, after a debris caution ended the stage early on lap 44.
  • Busch pitted during the first stage break for tires, fuel, and multiple adjustments to free up the No. 10 Chevy. When the first caution of the second stage came out on lap 56, Busch reported his tires were much better, but by lap 70, he reported his No. 10 Chevy was plowing tight. Busch dropped back to 12th place where he finished the second stage, as he battled an ill-handling race car.
  • During the second stage break, Busch pitted for more of the same adjustments to free him up and give him some front turn. He restarted the final stage in 11th place, but reported he was still battling a tight-handling racecar when the next caution came out on lap 104. Crew chief, Alex Yontz, made the call to pit again for fresh tires and more adjustments, as the team had two sets of tires remaining. Busch restarted 19th with 39 laps remaining. The next caution came out with 14 laps to go, and Busch pitted once again for his last set of sticker tires and an adjustment to continue freeing up the No. 10 Chevy. He restarted 12th with 10 laps remaining before the final caution came out on lap 142, sending the race into overtime. Busch restarted 12th and was able to work his way to ninth in the closing laps, earning a top 10 in his final race with Kaulig Racing.

“Not where we wanted to finish in our last race together. We were super-loose in practice and qualifying and tried to get ahead of it, thinking that’s how our No. 10 LA Golf Chevy would be during the race, but we ended up plowing tight. Alex [Yontz] and the guys had some good stops and kept trying to free us up as much as they could without losing the rear, but unfortunately, we still fought super-tight. I wish we could have had a better outcome today.” – Kyle Busch

Daniel Hemric, No. 11 Cirkul Chevrolet Camaro

  • Daniel Hemric qualified sixth for the Sports Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 at Darlington Raceway.
  • Hemric’s No. 11 No.11 Cirkul Chevrolet fired off free, and made contact with the No. 8 car on lap eight before recovering. The first caution came out on lap 13, and Hemric stayed out, restarting seventh. Still fighting a loose-handling No. 11 Chevy, Hemric fell a few positions, but worked his way back to seventh, where he finished the opening stage.
  • At the stage break, Hemric pitted for four tires, fuel, and an air pressure adjustment to help tighten the car. On the restart, Hemric restarted 10th where he maintained position until the next caution came out on lap 55. He restarted 10th where he went on to finish the second stage.
  • Hemric came down pit road at the stage break for four tires, fuel and another air pressure adjustment. On the restart with 51 to go, Hemric restarted seventh after gaining three spots off pit road. The caution flag flew again on lap 103, and Hemric pitted again for four tires and fuel, gaining two more spots on pit road. On the restart with 39 to go, Hemric restarted 15th and worked his way back into the top 10 before the next caution came out with 14 to go. Under caution, Hemric came down pit road for four tires and fuel. On the restart with 10 to go, Hemric restarted ninth before the next caution came out on lap 143, sending the race into overtime. Hemric restarted 10th, where he went on to finish the race.

“Darlington has always been a place that has been tough on me over the years, especially with my time here at Kaulig Racing. We’re not satisfied with 10th, but we are content with the day we had. It was just a solid day, and we ran between seventh and 10th all day. I’m proud of the grind and of the way we were able to bounce back. It was a good day for us, and I look forward going to Kansas.” – Daniel Hemric

Chandler Smith, No. 16 Quick Tie Products Chevrolet Camaro

  • Chandler Smith qualified 10th for the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 at Darlington Raceway.
  • The No. 16 fired off tight, but maintained position as the first caution came out on lap 12. Bruce Schlicker, the No. 16’s crew chief, radioed to Smith that he was losing time exiting each corner and to be more patient on the throttle. The race restarted on lap 17 with Smith still in 10th. He gained one spot just before the final caution of stage one came out on lap 43 and finished in ninth.
  • Smith came in for an air pressure adjustment, fresh tires and fuel during the stage break. The No. 16 gained two positions on pit road and restarted in seventh on lap 51. Smith fired off decently but suffered lack of lateral grip, losing two spots before debris brought out a caution on lap 55. Smith restarted ninth on lap 60 and gained two positions over the next 31 laps. He finished stage two in seventh.
  • Another fast full-service stop by the pit crew helped the No. 16 restart in fifth on lap 97 for the final stage. Smith was running in sixth when the next caution came out on lap 103, and he came back down into the pits for fresh tires and to top off on fuel. He restarted in 16th due to pit strategy on lap 109 and took advantage of cars on older tires over the next 24 laps to move into seventh. After another caution came out on lap 132, Smith came back down for another air pressure adjustment, more tires and fuel. The No. 16 restarted seventh on lap 138 and moved back to eighth by the time the final yellow came out to force overtime on lap 142. Smith lost four spots during the final two laps and finished the race in 12th.

“It was a solid day for the No. 16 team and the Quick Tie Products Chevy. We had great pit stops all day long and continued to make handling gains throughout.” – Chandler Smith  

About Kaulig Racing™

Kaulig Racing™ is a full-time multi-car NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) team, owned by award winning entrepreneur, Matt Kaulig. Established in 2016, Kaulig Racing™ has made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started and has won back-to-back regular-season championships. Before becoming a full-time NCS team, Kaulig Racing made multiple starts in the 2021 NCS season and won in its seventh-ever start with AJ Allmendinger’s victory at “The Brickyard” for the Verizon 200 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The team expanded to a two-car, full-time NCS team in 2022 with Justin Haley piloting the No. 31 Camaro ZL1, and an all-star lineup featured in the No. 16 Camaro ZL1. Haley will continue to drive the No. 31 full-time in 2023, alongside AJ Allmendinger, who will drive the No. 16 Camaro ZL1. The team will continue to field three, full-time NXS entries; the No. 10 Chevrolet driven by an all-star lineup, the No. 11 Chevrolet driven by Daniel Hemric, and the No. 16 Chevrolet driven by Chandler Smith. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.