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Stewart-Haas Racing: NXS Race Report from Atlanta

STEWART-HAAS RACING
NASCAR Xfinity Series: Alsco Uniforms 250

Date: July 8, 2023
Event: Alsco Uniforms 250 (Round 17 of 33)
Series: NASCAR Xfinity Series
Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia (1.54-mile oval)
Format: 163 laps, broken into three stages (40 laps/40 laps/83 laps)
Note: Race extended six laps past its scheduled 163-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.
Race Winner: John Hunter Nemechek of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 1 Winner: Riley Herbst of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: Sheldon Creed of Richard Childress Racing (Chevrolet)

SHR Race Finish:

● Cole Custer (Started 7th / Finished 3rd, Running, completed 169 of 169 laps)

● Riley Herbst (Started 6th / Finished 36th, Accident, completed 88 of 169 laps)

SHR Points:

● Cole Custer (3rd with 633 points, 45 out of first)

● Riley Herbst (11th with 440 points, 238 out of first)

SHR Notes:

● Custer earned his eighth top-five of the season and his second top-five in five career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Atlanta.

● This was Custer’s 11th straight top-10. He finished fifth April 1 at Richmond (Va.) Raceway, third April 15 at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, fourth April 22 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway, seventh April 29 at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway, third May 13 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, third May 29 at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway, won June 3 at Portland (Ore.) International Raceway, sixth June 10 at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway, ninth June 24 at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway, and won last weekend at the inaugural Chicago Street Race.

● This was Custer’s third straight top-12 at Atlanta.

● Custer finished sixth in Stage 2 to earn five bonus points.

● Herbst won Stage 1 to earn 10 bonus points and one playoff point.

● Herbst led once for three laps to increase his laps-led total at Atlanta to 14.

Race Notes:

● John Hunter Nemechek won the Alsco Uniforms 250 to score his fifth career NASCAR Xfinity Series victory, his third of the season and his first at Atlanta. His margin over second-place Daniel Hemric was .245 of a second.

● There were eight caution periods for a total of 50 laps.

● Only 17 of the 38 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.

● Nemechek remains the championship leader after Atlanta with a 16-point advantage over second-place Austin Hill.

Sound Bites:

“Man, those final laps were chaos. We were all just wondering if we were close on fuel, so we were all running around the apron. You’re just praying that no one runs out of gas. Half the field did though. The No. 00 Haas Automation team did a great job on fuel mileage today. We just didn’t have a ton of help there at the end. You know how it is here, once you try to make a move, you get shuffled back. It was fun though, and we had a great Ford Mustang. Things just didn’t happen to play out right. I thought the seas might part there at the end when everyone was running out of gas. We got it up to third though. It was a good run, and we’ll try to keep it rolling.” – Cole Custer, driver of the No. 00 Haas Automation Ford Mustang

“We had a pretty good night going, obviously. The No. 98 Monster Energy team won the first stage, and I thought our Ford Mustang was good enough to run in the top-three. Then, I just rolled it into Turn 1 on the restart and I knew my tire was down. I tried to save it and probably got out of the gas too soon. It just lost it on me. I’m sorry to everyone else who got involved. I hate this for my Stewart-Haas Racing guys. I just wish we hadn’t blown a tire.” – Riley Herbst, driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang

Next Up:

The next event on the NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule is the Ambetter Health 200 on Saturday, July 15 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. The race begins at 3 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Nemechek scores Xfinity Series victory in thrilling Alsco Uniforms 250

July 08, 2023: The NASCAR Cup Series races at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Atlanta, Georgia. (HHP/Andrew Coppley)

HAMPTON, Ga. (July 9, 2023) – John Hunter Nemechek took advantage of an overtime restart and pulled away from a trio of Kaulig Racing challengers to score a thrilling victory Saturday night in the Alsco Uniforms 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

As the laps counted down, Kaulig Racing’s Justin Haley, Chandler Smith, and Daniel Hemric appeared to be in position for a 1-2-3 finish, but hard-charging Austin Hill spun on lap 162 while attempting to break up the Kaulig party, bringing out the caution flag and setting the stage for the overtime finish.

Hill’s No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevy had picked up a ton of momentum and was making a move on the leaders when he went into a single car slide after nearly making contact with Parker Kligerman in the No. 48 Chevy.

In the overtime restart, Nemechek started on the front row and was able to pull away from the pack in his No. 20 Toyota. Kaulig’s Hemric finished second in his No. 11 Chevy and Haley, who led 80 laps and appeared to have the car to beat before the overtime session, finished fourth after running out of fuel. Cole Custer moved into third in his No. 00 Ford. JR Motorsports driver Sam Mayer rounded out the top five in his No. 1 Chevy.

The win was the third victory of the season for Nemecheck, the fifth of his Xfinity Series career, and first at the Hampton, Ga., track. Nemecheck increases his series points lead to 16 over Hill with the win.

Nemecheck says he doesn’t know how things would’ve played out without the extra laps, but he was glad he didn’t have to find out.

“I got a huge push from the 11 there so thanks to Daniel (Hemric) for giving me that push,” Nemechek said. “Thanks to the fans who came out tonight, I appreciate you guys.”

Nemecheck started the race in second and the only laps he led in the race were the three overtime laps.

“I don’t know if the track changed a ton but we had to keep making our car better all night,” Nemecheck said. “The guys made the right adjustments and got us to where we needed to be. It came down to an overtime finish and we were able to execute on the restart and got the win.”

Full-time Cup Series star Haley, who was making an Xfinity start in the No. 10 Kaulig Racing machine, was obviously frustrated with how the race ended.

“You think you have it won till the caution came out and then things don’t pan out,” Haley said. “We were just a little short on fuel there.”

Hemric rallied to finish second in his No. 11 Chevy after Haley’s car fell sharply off the pace in the overtime laps.

“I thought we put ourselves in position there to put our No. 11 Chevrolet in Victory Lane after pushing the 20 there,” Hemric said. “Everybody was kind of short on fuel or iffy on fuel and me running third the majority of last run, I thought that maybe allowed me to save enough.

“I thought we were in good shape,” Hemric continued. “I drove back and was expecting a big shot in the back and tandem up to the 20, and thought we would have a big run, but whatever happened, I guess maybe (Haley) lost fuel pressure, and when that happened he pulled out of line or got out of line. It put him in my left rear and just killed all the momentum at that point that just put us in a scramble to stay second. It’s disappointing for us to be coming down to take the trophy and then fall short like that.”

A massive crash on the backstretch on lap 89 collected 10 cars and shifted the outcome of the race, ultimately ending the night for early-race frontrunners Sheldon Creed, Ryan Sieg and Riley Herbst. Anthony Alfredo and Brandon Jones also were involved in the spark-flying melee. Creed won Stage 2 in his No. 2 Chevy and Sieg led 15 laps of the race in his No. 39 Ford.

Racing action continues Sunday night with the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart NASCAR Cup Series race, which is scheduled to take the green flag at 7 p.m. ET (USA Network, PRN Radio and Sirius/XM NASCAR Radio). Tickets for Sunday night’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart are available online at www.AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com or by calling 877-9-AMS-TIX.

About the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart:

The Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart headlines the summer slate of NASCAR racing at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, July 9. Featuring the first weekend of night racing at AMS since 2014, Atlanta’s summer NASCAR weekend comes with increased stakes with the NASCAR playoffs looming large.

More information on the July 7-9, 2023, Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart weekend and ticket availability can be found online at AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com.

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Keep track of all of Atlanta Motor Speedway’s events by following on Twitter, Instagram, and become a Facebook fan. Keep up with all the latest news and information with the Atlanta Motor Speedway mobile app.

John Hunter Nemechek grabs third Xfinity victory of 2023 at Atlanta

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

An overtime shootout amid a late on-track incident provided an opportunity for John Hunter Nemechek to capitalize against Kaulig Racing’s trio squad, which he did so as he motored his way to a thrilling victory in the Alsco Uniforms 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Saturday, July 8.

The 26-year-old Nemechek from Mooresville, North Carolina, led the final three of 169 over-scheduled laps in an event where he started on the front row and was running up front with the front-runners before he slipped and lost the draft in the closing laps of the first stage. In spite of not finishing in the top 10 during both stage periods, a multi-car wreck at the start of the final stage drew Nemechek and his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota crew back into contention.

He was left to contend against Kaulig Racing’s triple squad and a host of Xfinity Series regulars for the victory. Then after a caution period for Austin Hill’s wreck with three laps remaining that sent the field into overtime, Nemechek received a push from Daniel Hemric to overtake Justin Haley for the lead and fend off Hemric for two laps to capture his third checkered flag of the 2023 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring on Saturday, rookie Chandler Smith scored his second Xfinity career pole after posting a pole-winning lap at 172.565 mph in 32.127 seconds. Joining him on the front row was John Hunter Nemechek, who posted the second-best qualifying lap at 171.971 mph in 32.238 seconds.

Prior to the event, the following names that included Sheldon Creed, Austin Hill, rookie Parker Retzlaff, Greg Van Alst and Mason Massey started at the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments made to their respective entries.

When the green flag waved and the race commenced, Chandler Smith and John Hunter Nemechek dueled for the lead through the first two turns until Smith launched ahead through the backstretch with drafting help from Josh Berry on the outside lane. Berry then veered left and drew himself alongside Smith through Turns 3 and 4. With both competitors remaining dead even entering the frontstretch, Smith managed to lead the first lap by a hair over Berry as rookie Sammy Smith, Nemechek and Riley Herbst pursued amid the draft.

During the second lap, Chandler Smith and Berry would continue to duel early for the lead in front of Sammy Smith and Nemechek as Smith managed to pull ahead and lead the proceeding laps while running on the outside lane.

Then on the fifth lap, Berry would manage to pull ahead on the inside lane in Turn 1 and emerge out in front of the stacked pack that fanned out through the backstretch. Berry would then lead by three-tenths of a second over a side-by-side duel between Chandler Smith and Nemechek as all 37 starters were separated within nine seconds. Berry would continue to lead as the event surpassed its Lap 10 mark. By then, Herbst moved up to third behind Chandler Smith while Nemechek was in fourth in front of teammate Ty Gibbs.

At the Lap 20 mark, Berry continued to lead by a tenth of a second over Chandler Smith, Herbst, Nemechek, Ty Gibbs, Justin Haley, Custer, Jeremy Clements, Daniel Hemric and Justin Allgaier. By then, Austin Hill, who started the event at the rear of the field, carved his way up to 11th ahead of Brandon Jones, Parker Kligerman, Sam Mayer and Anthony Alfredo while Jeffrey Earnhardt, Brett Moffitt, Sheldon Creed, Joe Graf Jr. and Sammy Smith occupied the top 20.

Seven laps later, the first caution of the event flew when Kligerman, who was running within the top 15, spun in Turn 2 after cutting a left-rear tire on his No. 48 Spiked Light Coolers Chevrolet Camaro. During the first caution period, some including Ty Gibbs, Custer, Moffitt, Mayer, Creed and Sammy Smith pitted while the rest led by Berry remained on the track. Amid the pit stops, Ty Gibbs was penalized for an uncontrolled tire violation.

When the race restarted on Lap 34, Berry, who restarted on the outside lane, muscled ahead with a push from Herbst as he retained the lead over Nemechek, who restarted on the inside lane before he pulled even through the backstretch. Berry and Nemechek would then duel for the lead amid a stacked pack trailing behind, with the former still emerging out in front. As the laps proceeded, Nemechek then slipped up the track in Turns 3 and 4, which allowed Herbst, Chandler Smith, Hill, Haley and Clements to move up while Berry retained the lead.

When the final lap of the first stage struck, Berry was still leading ahead of a side-by-side battle between Herbst and Chandler Smith. Then exiting the backstretch, Herbst gained a strong run to Berry’s outside amid a push from Haley. With Chandler Smith trying to draw against Berry entering the frontstretch, Herbst used the momentum from the outside lane to pull away with the lead and claim the first stage victory on Lap 40, which marked his first stage victory of the 2023 season. Berry, who led 34 of 40 laps, settled in second while Chandler Smith, Haley, Hill, Allgaier, Clements, Creed, Joe Graf Jr. and Retzlaff were scored in the top 10.

Under the stage break, a majority of the field led by Herbst pitted while others led by Creed, who was among those who pitted during the first caution period, remained on the track. During the pit stops, Jeb Burton exited first after only opting for fuel in his car while Herbst, the first competitor who pitted for fresh tires, followed pursuit.

The second stage started on Lap 46 as Creed and Custer occupied the front row. At the start, Creed gained a brief advantage on the outside lane until Custer drew himself into a side-by-side challenge with Creed from the inside lane. As both continued to duel, Creed would manage to lead at the start/finish line when the field returned to the frontstretch.

By Lap 50 and with the field fanning out, Ryan Sieg made his move to the front as he battled Creed for the lead. Not long after, the caution returned for an incident involving Nemechek and Retzlaff in Turn 4. During the caution period, some including Moffitt and Daniel Hemric pitted while the rest led by Sieg remained on the track.

During the following restart on Lap 56, Sieg and Creed dueled for the lead as Creed attempted to take the lead while restarting on the inside lane. Sieg, however, fought back on the outside lane and despite gaining a strong run through Turns 3 and 4, Creed would return to the top of the leaderboard during the following lap. Creed would continue to lead by a hair through the Lap 60 mark as Hill was lurking in the top five behind Sieg, Custer and Chandler Smith.

Then two laps later and just as Sieg overtook Creed amid a tight battle at the front, the caution flew when Greg Van Alst, a newcomer to the Xfinity Series and winner of this year’s ARCA Menards Series opener at Daytona International Speedway, wrecked along with Mason Massey in Turn 4 as Van Alst’s No. 44 car burst into flames, with the driver able to exit uninjured. Amid an extensive caution period, some including Chandler Smith, Haley, Herbst, Mayer, Nemechek, Jeb Burton, Brandon Jones, Parker Retzlaff, Joe Graf Jr., Brennan Poole, Blaine Perkins, Garrett Smithley and David Starr pitted while the rest led by Sieg remained on the track.

When the race restarted on Lap 71, Creed managed to overtake Sieg to reassume the lead. As Creed continued to lead during the proceeding laps, Hill then commenced his attempt to take the lead as he tried to overtake Sieg, who blocked and briefly stalled his momentum. By Lap 75, however, Hill carved his way into second as he then battled dead even against teammate Creed for the lead. While Hill would lead a lap for himself on Lap 77, he would remain stuck in a dead-even battle with teammate Creed as Sieg, Custer, Berry, Allgaier and the rest of the field pursued in close-quarters racing.

When the second stage concluded on Lap 80, Creed fended off a last-lap charge from teammate Hill to claim his fourth stage victory of the 2023 season. Hill settled in second while Sieg, Berry, Allgaier, Custer, Hemric, Chandler Smith, Kligerman and Sammy Smith were scored in the top 10. By then, the top-12 competitors were separated by nine-tenths of a second while 36 of 38 starters were scored on the lead lap.

During the stage break, nearly the entire field led by Creed pitted for service while Joe Graf Jr., Akinori Ogata and Mason Massey remained on the track. Following the pit stops, Allgaier was the first competitor to exit pit road first followed by Clements, Haley, Mayer, Hemric and Custer. Both Allgaier and Clements, however, would return to pit road after both missed their respective pit boxes amid the pit stops with the majority of the field. This cycled Haley into second behind Graf, who remained on the track with the lead, while Mayer, Hemric and Custer were scored in the top five.

With 77 laps remaining, the final stage started as Graf and Haley occupied the front row. At the start, Graf briefly took off with the lead through Turns 1 and 2 until Haley rocketed to the lead followed by teammates Hemric and Chandler Smith on the inside lane.

Two laps later, the caution quickly returned for a multi-car wreck that started when Herbst, who was running within the top 12, dropped off the pace through the backstretch after losing a left-rear tire on his No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang. Herbst’s tire issue ignited a stack-up and a chain-reaction wreck that involved Sieg, Mayer, Blaine Perkins, Poole, Weatherman, Alfredo, Josh Williams, Brandon Jones and Creed. The multi-car wreck on the backstretch occurred just as Ty Gibbs had also fallen off the pace and was running at the rear of the field due to a flat right-rear tire on his car.

During the caution period, names that included Mason Massey, Berry, Mayer, Garrett Smithley, Josh Bilicki, Clements, Allgaier, Poole, Jeffrey Earnhardt, Brandon Jones, Kyle Weatherman and Alfredo pitted for adjustments and repairs while the rest led by Kaulig Racing’s trio of Haley, Hemric and Chandler Smith remained on the track.

When the race restarted with 67 laps remaining, Haley, who restarted on the outside lane and in front of teammates Hemric and Chandler Smith, retained the lead ahead of Nemechek, who restarted on the inside lane. Haley would remain in front of teammates Hemric and Chandler Smith with the lead during the proceeding laps. The caution, however, would return with 63 laps remaining when Kyle Weatherman came to a stop at the entrance of pit road after he had made earlier contact with the wall.

During the proceeding restart with 55 laps remaining, Haley received the upper hand amid a side-by-side duel against Nemechek through the first two turns as Haley retained the lead through the backstretch. With Haley out in front, teammate Hemric settled in second while Nemechek, Hill and Graf were in the top five.

With 50 laps remaining, Haley was still leading by a tenth of a second over teammate Hemric as Hill motored past Nemechek for third place. By then, Graf retained fifth while Custer, Retzlaff, Sammy Smith, Kligerman and Chandler Smith were in the top 10. A few laps later, Hill navigated his way around Hemric for second place as he ignited his pursuit of Haley for the lead.

Down to the final 40 laps of the event, Haley continued to lead by a tenth of a second in his No. 10 Campers Inn RV Chevrolet Camaro over Hill while Chandler Smith made a bold, aggressive move from the inside to the outside lane to move up to third in front of teammate Hemric and Nemechek while Custer, Retzlaff, Kligerman, Moffitt and Graf were in the top 10. By then, the top-14 competitors were separated by two-and-a-half seconds with the top seven separated within a second.

Three laps later, Hill, who tried to make an early move on Haley for the lead, was unable to execute his move for the lead and lost the draft towards the front with no one electing to draft with him as Chandler Smith, Hemric, Nemechek and Custer all overtook him, which dropped Hill to sixth on the leaderboard.

Down to the final 25 laps of the event, Kaulig Racing’s trio led by Haley and followed by teammates Chandler Smith and Hemric were at the top of the leaderboard followed by Nemechek and Custer while Hill was still mired back in sixth. Meanwhile, Kligerman, who was a lap down following his early incident, was back up to seventh followed by Retzlaff, Moffitt and Allgaier while Sammy Smith, Ty Gibbs, Clements, Graf and Mayer were in the top 10.

With 15 laps remaining, Haley was still leading by a tenth of a second ahead of teammates Smith and Hemric while Hill carved his way back to fourth as he then tried to challenge Hemric for third. By then, the top-six competitors that included Hill, Nemechek and Allgaier were separated by seven-tenths of a second as the leaders were also starting to approach lapped traffic. With some of the lapped traffic that included Berry were lapped, Haley would retain the lead ahead of his Kaulig Racing teammates with 10 laps remaining.

Then with three laps remaining, Hill, who moved up to third as he along with Nemechek and Kligerman overtook Hemric, had his hopes of winning at his home track three consecutive times evaporate after the air off of Kligerman’s front nose of the car caused Hill’s No. 21 Bennett Transportation Chevrolet Camaro to get loose as he slipped sideways and made rear end contact with the outside wall in between Turns 3 and 4 with the caution flying and the event being sent into overtime.

With the field restarting in overtime, Chandler Smith and Kligerman both ran out of fuel, which caused the field to fan out and scatter as Nemechek rocketed his No. 20 Mobil 1 Toyota Supra to the lead over Haley with Hemric pushing Nemechek out in front. Through the backstretch and with the field still being scattered, Nemechek led a four-car breakaway that involved Hemric, Haley and Custer, all of whom were separated by three-tenths of a second.

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Nemechek remained the leader by a tenth of a second over Hemric as Haley tried to make a move beneath Hemric for second. With Nemechek retaining the lead in front of the field through Turns 1 and 2, Hemric retook the runner-up spot from teammate Haley entering the backstretch and tried to gain a run amid the draft on Nemechek with Custer following suit. Nemechek, however, blocked Hemric’s No. 11 Cirkul Chevrolet Camaro entering Turn 3, which stalled Hemric’s momentum and was the difference maker as Nemechek was able to muscle away entering the frontstretch and claim the checkered flag by two-tenths of a second.

With the victory, Nemechek, who last won at Martinsville Speedway in April, notched his third victory of the 2023 Xfinity season and the fifth of his career as he joined Austin Hill as three-time race winners of this season. He also achieved his second NASCAR national touring series victory at Atlanta after winning the Truck Series event at Atlanta in February 2016 and the fifth of the season for Joe Gibbs Racing.

“I got a huge push from [Hemric in overtime], so thanks to Daniel for giving me that huge push,” Nemechek said on USA Network. “Early on in the race, if you would’ve said that we would’ve won the race, I definitely would’ve told you that wasn’t going to be the case. We didn’t have the fastest car tonight. I’m really proud of this whole No. 20 team. We just had to keep making our Mobil 1 Toyota GR Supra better all night. [Crew chief] Ben [Beshore] and the guys did awesome. They made the right adjustments all night, got us to where we needed to be. It came down to an overtime finish and luckily, we were able to execute on that restart. Proud to be the one holding the wheel of this No. 20 car.”

Meanwhile, Hemric settled in second place for a second consecutive time at Atlanta after also finishing second at Atlanta earlier in March. In between his two runner-up results at Atlanta, he has finished in the top 10 six times in 11 events. Despite coming up one spot short of winning, he has moved up to 10th place in the Xfinity regular-season standings and is 41 points above the top-12 cutline to make the 2023 Xfinity Series Playoffs.

“I showed some super amount of frustration at the end when I got out of the car,” Hemric said. “I felt like I’d backed up to [Nemechek] there and thought I was gonna have the run down the front to at least give myself an opportunity to get [Nemechek] back. It’s frustrating. Obviously, we all want to bring back Kaulig [Racing] some trophies. For sure, [I] let one get away here tonight. I probably couldn’t be as aggressive as I wanted to there throughout the last 20 laps, even trying to hold [Hill] off there for our organization. When the dust started to settle, I thought we were gonna have an opportunity to do something special there. Hate it for [sponsor] Cirkul. I wanted to get them to Victory Lane, but fell short.”

Custer settled in third after edging Haley, who led a race-high 80 laps, in a photo finish while Sam Mayer came home in fifth.

“I think just leading all those laps, [I was] just short on fuel there,” Haley said. “I thought, obviously, we had [the race] won. Things just don’t work out sometimes.”

Ty Gibbs, Kyle Sieg, Kligerman, Josh Williams and Sammy Smith completed the top 10. Notably, pole-sitter Chandler Smith ended up 20th after running out of fuel during the overtime attempt and never recovering his pace.

There were 14 lead changes for nine different leaders. The race featured eight cautions for 50 laps. In total, 17 of 38 starters finished on the lead lap.

With nine Xfinity regular-season events remaining on the schedule, John Hunter Nemechek leads the regular-season standings by 16 points over Austin Hill, 45 over Cole Custer and 54 over Justin Allgaier.

Results.

1. John Hunter Nemechek, three laps led

2. Daniel Hemric

3. Cole Custer

4. Justin Haley, 80 laps led

5. Sam Mayer

6. Ty Gibbs

7. Kyle Sieg

8. Parker Kligerman

9. Josh Williams

10. Sammy Smith

11. Brett Moffitt

12. Austin Hill, one lap led

13. Jeb Burton

14. Kaz Grala

15. Jeremy Clements

16. Parker Retzlaff

17. Justin Allgaier

18. Josh Bilicki, one lap down

19. Josh Berry, one lap down, 34 laps led

20. Chandler Smith, one lap down, five laps led

21. Joe Graf Jr., two laps down, four laps led

22. David Starr, two laps down

23. Jeffrey Earnhardt, two laps down

24. Mason Massey, two laps down

25. Ryan Ellis, two laps down

26. Garrett Smithley, two laps down

27. Parker Chase, two laps down

28. Brennan Poole, four laps down

29. Akinori Ogata – OUT, Tranmission

30. Mason Maggio – OUT, Electrical

31. Kyle Weatherman – OUT, Accident

32. Blaine Perkins – OUT, Accident

33. Brandon Jones – OUT, Dvp

34. Anthony Alfredo – OUT, Dvp

35. Sheldon Creed – OUT, Accident, 24 laps led, Stage 2 winner

36. Riley Herbst – OUT, Accident, three laps led, Stage 1 winner

37. Ryan Sieg – OUT, Accident, 15 laps led

38. Greg Van Alst – OUT, Accident

Next on the 2023 NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule is the series’ lone visit of the season to New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire. The event is scheduled to occur next Saturday, July 15, at 3 p.m. ET on USA Network.

Toyota Racing – NXS Atlanta Post-Race Report – 07.08.23

NEMECHEK MASTERS FINAL RESTART, WINS IN ATLANTA
John Hunter Nemechek completes stellar day for Toyota, earns third victory of the season

ATLANTA (July 8, 2023) – John Hunter Nemechek earned his third victory of the season with a strong overtime restart on Sunday evening at Atlanta Motor Speedway. With the win, Nemechek added to his Playoff points total. It was a stellar night for Joe Gibbs Racing with all three of their Toyota GR Supras finishing inside the top-10 as Ty Gibbs was scored sixth and Sammy Smith ran 10th. Sam Hunt Racing’s Kaz Grala (14th) also continued his strong performance with back-to-back top-15 finishes, and seventh top-20 finish in the last eight races. Toyota has now won the Xfinity (Nemechek), Truck (Corey Heim) and ARCA (Tyler Ankrum) races this weekend in NASCAR-owned competition.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Atlanta Motor Speedway
Race 17 of 33 – 251.02 miles, 163 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK

2nd, Daniel Hemric*

3rd, Cole Custer*

4th, Justin Haley*

5th, Sam Mayer*

6th, TY GIBBS

10th, SAMMY SMITH

14th, KAZ GRALA

27th, PARKER CHASE

*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 20 Mobil 1 Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 1st

What a burnout and what a race. Can you take us through that last restart?

“I got a huge push from the 11 (Daniel Hemric), so thanks to Daniel for giving me that huge push. Hats off to this entire 20 team. Early on in the race, if you would have said that we were going to win the race, I would have told you that wasn’t going to be the case. We didn’t have the fastest car tonight. It wasn’t quite as fast as Xfinity 10G, but I’m really proud of this whole 20 team. First win for Mobil 1 with me at JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) – won with them in the Truck Series. This is special. Glad Aspen (daughter) and Taylor (wife) are here, we get to go celebrate. Thank you to all of the fans that came out tonight. I appreciate you guys.”

How much did the track change?

“I don’t know if the track changed a ton. We just had to keep making our car better all night. We just had to keep making our Mobil 1 Toyota GR Supra better all night. Ben (Beshore, crew chief) and the guys did awesome. They made the right adjustments all night and got us where we needed to be. It came down to an overtime finish and luckily we were able to execute on that restart. Thank you to all of the men and women at Joe Gibbs Racing – proud to be the one holding the wheel of this 20 car. Man, Truck win for Toyota, Xfinity win for Toyota – the Toyota boys have some work to do tomorrow.”

Can you take me through this final restart today?

“I got a huge push from the 11 (Daniel Hemric), so thank you to Daniel. We definitely didn’t have the best car tonight, but we had the most perseverance. This team never gives up. Even when we are down, we continue to fight from the back to get to the front to go and win races. I feel like we have given a few away this year, but to come home with a win without the fastest car here means a lot. We were almost as fast as Xfinity 10 G, but we just needed to be a little bit faster. Thank you to Mobil 1, Toyota, TRD – all of these guys and girls at Joe Gibbs Racing. I’m so proud of this team.”

How satisfying is it to pick up a win like this?

“It is super satisfying. The never give up attitude is with this team – we’ve been through a lot this year. We’ve had to overcome a lot, but we are a really strong race team. We are consistent each week and we will get more wins and hopefully go race for the championship come Phoenix.”

About Toyota

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

Toyota directly employs more than 48,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 45 million cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 22 electrified options.

Through the Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Ford Dominates Atlanta Cup Qualifying as Almirola Wins Pole (7.8.23)

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Atlanta 2 Qualifying | Saturday, July 8, 2023

FORD DOMINATES CUP QUALIFYING FOR SECOND TIME THIS SEASON AT ATLANTA

  • For the second time this season, Ford dominated NASCAR Cup Series qualifying at Atlanta Motor Speedway with 8 of the top 10 spots.
  • That matches what the Blue Oval did in the spring when the top eight qualifiers were all Ford drivers and Joey Logano sat on the pole.
  • Aric Almirola captured his first pole of the season and fifth of his career with today’s top run.
  • Ford swept the top six spots in qualifying, which included Harrison Burton’s career-best fifth-place effort.

Ford Qualifying Results:

1st – Aric Almirola

2nd – Ryan Blaney

3rd – Chase Briscoe

4th – Joey Logano

5th – Harrison Burton

6th – Kevin Harvick

9th – Todd Gilliland

10th – Austin Cindric

11th – Brad Keselowski

13th – Ryan Preece

15th – Chris Buescher

20th – Michael McDowell

21st – Cole Custer

24th – JJ Yeley

POLE-WINNING PRESS CONFERENCE

ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield/IHOP Ford Mustang – HOW DIFFERENT IS THIS POLE COMPARED TO THE OTHER ONE YOU WON HERE ON THE OLD SURFACE AND WITH THE OLD CAR? “Very different from the car standpoint and the way you drive it, but equally nerve racking, I can tell you that. We go to Daytona and Talladega, superspeedways, and typically as a driver it’s pretty relaxed. You’re not really concerned about making any mistakes. You try and just make sure you concentrate on doing all the things you need to do, get a good launch, hit your shift points, do all of those things. But here, with the track starting to degrade some over the winter and now we’re in the hot summer months of July in Atlanta, the cars a handful to try and run wide-open. It’s not easy to run wide-open, so a lot more nerve racking, much like it was back with the Gen 6 car when you’re absolutely flying around here and slipping and sliding on that old surface, so it was an exciting lap. I’m just really proud of Drew and all the guys on our team and everybody at Stewart-Haas Racing. We’ve been working really hard to bring more speed to the racetrack and it was great to get a pole.”

DO YOU FEEL WITH 8 RACES REMAINING AFTER THIS WEEKEND THAT YOU HAVE TO FIND A PLACE TO WIN? “it’s crunch time, absolutely. It’s go time. You’ve got to take advantage of every opportunity and you’ve got to maximize every opportunity. You’ve got to put yourself in position. You’ve got to make bold moves in the race car. You’ve got to make bold moves pit strategy-wise. You’ve got to do whatever it takes because you’re not going to get a lot of opportunities. If you were one of the cars that has a consistent chance to win, you’ve probably already locked yourselves in the playoffs or you feel pretty good about where you’re at in points, but for the guys like myself that is further down in points, we’ve got rare opportunities to win races because we just haven’t shown up with the consistent speed we need to put ourselves in position to win, so absolutely. When we show up to a place like this and we know we have fast race cars, I blew a right-rear tire leading here last year with 40-50 laps to go, so we know coming here that this is an opportunity race for us and it is absolutely go time. Bring the best race car we can. Bring as much speed as we can. Qualify as best we can. Maximize the entire race and try to put ourselves in position and go capitalize.”

DO YOU LOOK AT LOUDON AS AN OPPORTUNITY RACE AS WELL? “Yeah, I do. I look at the schedule going forward and I feel like, here is a great place for us. I look at Loudon as a great place for us. We went to Michigan and I felt like we learned a lot. We had a great tire test there a month ago, maybe two months ago. I felt really good about that. Look at Richmond, I’ve run really, really good at Richmond throughout my entire career. Our short track program is really good at Stewart-Haas Racing. No doubt, we have to continue to work on our mile-and-a-half program and our downforce type racetracks, but our short track package is really good. When I look at these few races ahead of us, here, Loudon, Michigan, Richmond and then Daytona the last race, I think those are five opportunities of the next eight races that I feel like we have a legitimate shot to go and win if we do everything right. So, yeah, to answer your question, I do feel good about where we’re at, the opportunities we have ahead of ourselves, and we can do exactly what we did in 2021, where we were scrounging back in 22nd, 24th in points – something like where we’re at now – and we went to Nashville and qualified on the pole. We ran top five all day and then a couple weeks later went to Loudon and shocked everybody and won and launched ourselves in the playoffs. I certainly feel like this year is a similar year, where we’ve had a lot of things not go our way. Even to start the year, Daytona, with such a fast race car and get crashed out, but that always happens. Go to Phoenix, running in the top 10 and have a right-front wheel come off. Leading here in the spring with 40 laps to go and blow a right-rear tire, so I think about the year we’ve had and so much bad luck, and it certainly tested our race team, tested the morale of everybody at Stewart-Haas Racing just because we’re not going to victory lane and we’re not getting the results that we want, but everybody is continuing to work hard and grind, just like in 2021 and hopefully we’ll see some of that reward and that payoff and we’ll go to victory lane.”

DO YOU LIKE THIS SURFACE BETTER OR THE OLD TRACK? “Funny you say that. I love the old track. That was one of my favorite racetracks to race at, but I was average at that racetrack if you look at my results. This racetrack has been better for me, and I guess you could say that I am a pretty decent superspeedway type racer and now that they’ve repaved this racetrack it races a lot more like a superspeedway, so I would say this new track configuration suits my style. The cars we have, the speed we have, the engines from Doug Yates and Roush Yates Engines, so I feel like all of that together as a package, this track and the new pavement certainly suits me better for having more opportunity to win. If you ask Kevin Harvick, he’ll certainly say the old one.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL ATLANTA HAS MATURED AND GROWN AS A SUPERSPEEDWAY RACE? “It’s certainly aged and the track is a lot more gray, and you can see some of the aggregate coming up through the asphalt to where it’s not perfectly smooth and shiny. It’s starting to get some character and some rock starting to show through the shininess of the racetrack, so I think that at some point in the near future this racetrack is going to race like the old Daytona when Daytona was kind of old and worn out, bumpy, had a lot of fall off and guys were slipping and sliding around. I think this racetrack will start to trend that direction to where you’ll have to start bringing more downforce in your race car and those things, but I don’t think it’s quite there yet. I think it still has a lot of grip – certainly, for a night race when the track temp cools off and all of that. If we raced at 1 o’clock in the afternoon I think it would be a different story, but I think coming real soon this racetrack is gonna be at a point to where handling is going to play a major factor and it’s gonna change the way that the racetrack races.”

DO YOU THINK IT WILL GO BACK TO THE WAY THE OLD TRACK WAS? “They hope that it will. Talking to Steve Swift and Marcus Smith, they paved this racetrack with basically the old style asphalt. The newer asphalt they take a lot of the aggregate and they crush it up almost into a powder and it makes it super smooth, like Michigan and Pocono. Here, they paved it and they kept a lot more coarse rock in it like they used to pave it, and so that coarse rock as the pavement starts to wear down and those rocks get exposed, that’s what chews the tires up. I mean, you go to Darlington and look at Darlington. You go drag your feet across the infield and it’s pretty coarse. You don’t want to fall because you’d skin your knee pretty easy, but you go to pit road at Michigan and you fall, you might get a little road rash and that’s it. You’re not gonna get tore up as bad because there’s not as much aggregate sticking out.”

Almirola Scores First Pole Of the Season For Sunday Night’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart

HAMPTON, Ga. (July 8, 2023) – Aric Almirola took his first pole position of the season Saturday for Sunday’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The NASCAR Cup Series race is scheduled to take the green flag at 7 p.m. ET (USA Network, PRN Radio and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

Almirola led a parade of Ford Mustangs to dominate qualifying at the 1.54-mile track that’s been tagged an “intermediate superspeedway” after its most recent reconfiguration.

Almirola powered his No. 10 Stewart-Haas Mustang to a best lap of 31.261 seconds at 177.346 mph to take the top spot in NASCAR’s two-round qualifying system. It’s the fifth pole of Almirola’s Cup Series career, his first since 2022 at Bristol Motor Speedway’s Night Race, and his second at AMS (also 2019). It will be the third time that Almirola will start from the front row at Atlanta since 2019.

“It feels good just to have something go our way,” Almirola said. “We’ve been bringing fast cars to the race track all year. To get the pole is a testament to Drew (Blickensderfer, crew chief) and everyone back at the Stewart-Haas shop.”

Almirola will lead the field to the green flag alongside Ryan Blaney of Team Penske, who posted a time of 31.275 seconds at 177.26 mph to take the second spot.

“We’ve been working so hard and I’m really proud of everybody,” Almirola said. “It also helps to have good horsepower thanks to Doug Yates and everyone at his shop. We are going to lead the field to the green and Joey Logano did that here in the spring and ended up winning the race. Hopefully we can do that tomorrow.”

Chase Briscoe qualified third and was followed by Logano in fourth and Harrison Burton was fifth in his No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford. Ty Gibbs had the fastest Toyota in seventh in his No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing machine and Kyle Larson qualified best in a Chevy in his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports machine at eighth.

Points leader Martin Truex Jr. qualified 16th in his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing machine, second place William Byron qualified 18th in his No. 24 Hendrick Chevy, and third-place in the season points standings Kyle Busch qualified 22nd in his No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevy.

Tickets for Sunday night’s Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart are available online at www.AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com or by calling 877-9-AMS-TIX.

About the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart:

The Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart headlines the summer slate of NASCAR racing at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, July 9. Featuring the first weekend of night racing at AMS since 2014, Atlanta’s summer NASCAR weekend comes with increased stakes with the NASCAR playoffs looming large.

Accompanying the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart is the Alsco Uniforms 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series race on Saturday, July 9. The summer race will challenge the rising stars of the sport to stand out and succeed on one of the circuit’s most challenging tracks.

More information on the July 7-9, 2023, Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart weekend and ticket availability can be found online at AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com.

Follow Atlanta Motor Speedway:

Keep track of all of Atlanta Motor Speedway’s events by following on Twitter, Instagram, and become a Facebook fan. Keep up with all the latest news and information with the Atlanta Motor Speedway mobile app.

Rhodes and Crafton trade tense words at Mid-Ohio

LEXINGTON, Ohio - JULY 8: Corey Heim, driver of the #11 Safelite Toyota, leads the field during the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series O'Reilly Auto Parts 150 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on July 8, 2023, in Lexington, Ohio. Photo: Meg Oliphant/Getty Images

LEXINGTON, Ohio — Casey Campbell, Taylor Kitchen, Michael Kristi and I stood on pit road, waiting to talk to the top-five finishers of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series’ second trip to the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. Suddenly, I hear Mike Bagley of MRN Radio say Matt Crafton and Ben Rhodes are fighting. I gazed at Rhodes’ truck and see a frustrated Crafton walk away, right past us.

When Rhodes joined us in the media bullpen, we all had one thing on our minds.

What happened?

“My conversation went like this: ‘Calm down, calm down, Matt. Please calm down! We’ll talk later,'” he said.

What was Crafton angry about?

Well with two laps to go in the O’Reilly Auto Parts 150, as Corey Heim pulled away to victory, Rhodes and Crafton made contact in the keyhole.

“He broke early,” he said. “I guess he was just riding. I broke late because I’m still on a charge from the rear and I got to about side by side with him in the braking zone and I don’t think he knew I was there.”

Crafton moved down to apex Turn 2 while Rhodes checked up and the latter’s nose hit the former’s tail. Crafton got loose and Rhodes overtook him to finish fifth. While Crafton came home sixth.

“I don’t know if he was just frustrated from other stuff in the race,” he said.

“Other stuff in the race” includes staying out on wet tires under the first stage break, while everyone else pitted for dry tires. Unsurprisingly, the slicks prevailed over the wets.

“I’m sure there was something else there in the race going on and I’m just a familiar face to vent to. So it is what it is.”

After the bullpen session, I walked to Crafton’s hauler to get his side of the story, but he declined my request for comment.

Regardless, Crafton leaves Mid-Ohio with a one point lead over Stewart Friesen for the final playoff spot. Meanwhile, Rhodes’ one win locked him into the playoffs, with two races left in the regular season.

Toyota Racing – NCTS Mid-Ohio Post-Race Report – 07.08.23

HEIM SCORES SECOND WIN OF THE SEASON
The Toyota development driver extends lead with fourth victory of his young career

LEXINGTON, Ohio (July 8, 2023) – Corey Heim continued to impress in his first full time season as he won his second race of the season – and fourth of his career – at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on Saturday afternoon. Heim, the pole sitter, battled through both wet and dry conditions to earn the victory. The 22-year-old Toyota development driver extended his points advantage to 26 points with two races to go in the regular season after leading a race-high 31 of 67 laps. Stewart Friesen (fourth) also had a strong run as he closed to within one point of the Playoff field heading into the series’ next race at Pocono Raceway.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series
Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
Race 14 of 23 – 67 Laps, 151.28 Miles

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, COREY HEIM

2nd, Zane Smith*

3rd, Christian Eckes*

4th, STEWART FRIESEN

5th, Ben Rhodes*

10th, TYLER ANKRUM

15th, TAYLOR GRAY

20th, TANNER GRAY

21st, TIMMY HILL

23rd, RYAN VARGAS

27th, WILLIAM SAWALICH

33rd, DEAN THOMPSON

35th, DALE QUARTERLEY

*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

COREY HEIM, No. 11 Safelite Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

Finishing Position: 1st

What a day, can you talk about this win?

“Yeah, just unbelievable. We came here with high expectations – I felt like I did a good job to stay up front last year, but I put in the work to go from a third-place truck to a winning truck. This Safelite Tundra TRD Pro was every bit of that today. Huge thank you to TRICON Garage, David Gilliland, Shane Gray and the Gray family – I appreicate everyone over there. Scott Zipadelli (crew chief) and everyone on the team for everything they do and everyone at Toyota Racing. Just unbelievable. This Tundra was really good ever since we unloaded – we were the fastest truck in practice, qualified on the pole and came here and won the race. Huge thanks to Zane (Smith) and Christian (Eckes) – I knew they would race me clean as usual – but a huge thanks to them again. Just unbelievable – awesome. Hats off to everybody.”

Can you walk us through your race from your perspective?

From my perspective, I knew that my Tundra TRD Pro was really good in the dry conditions and if I was ride around when it was wet and not overstep and lose the track position we had from the start, I knew we would be in a good position when we ended the race in the dry. That was the case. Thankfully, I made minimal mistakes – I made a couple that cost me a few spots but nothing that was chastrophic for our finish. We were able to keep that top-five track position and sure enough, when it dried out, we were the fastest track and we were able to drive to the front. I owe a big thanks to Toyota Racing, TRICON Garage and Safelite for everything they do – TRD for allowing me to get as much practice as I could before the start of this race. I certainly needed it and it paid off.”

Had this race stayed wet, do you feel as confident as you would have in the dry?

“I would definitely say I would have been a lot more confidence in the dry with how fast we were in practice and qualifying and getting the pole. I think I could have pushed it a little harder in the wet. The ThorSport trucks were just really, really good when it was really damp out. The more dry it got, the more they fell off. I don’t know if that is an experience thing on their part with racing in the rain – they have a lot of laps in the Trucks – but yeah, once it got dry out there, they faded a little. I was for sure a lot more confident in the dry.”

Can you walk me through that last restart?

“Zane (Smith) and Christian (Eckes) are good buddies of mine and they’ve always raced me with a lot of respect throughout my career, so I wasn’t worried about them driving through me – where there is some people in trucks that will do that – but those two are not in that category. I had a lot of confidence that I could run my line and hit my braking points with worrying about them going through me and costing me a good finish. It definitely gave me a little bit of confidence to trust them and what they do. We’ve raced clean during the 2023 season and hoepfully beyond – I feel like there is always a chance of that with all of the hard braking zones we have that someone could have slipped up but those two guys are some of those that I trust more than others.”

Can you talk about the work you’ve put in to move from a third-place truck to a winner today?

“Yeah, I think I was refering mostly to this race. Last year, we were able to qualify here on the pole in the wet, and the truck just wasn’t as good in the dry. I want to be a winning driver week-in and week-out. I feel like last year I was capable of that most places, but road courses wasn’t it. To be able to work with Toyota Racing, TRD and get some simulator time and personal studying in the long offseason we had and early breaks in the season, just preparing for COTA and having a decent race there and knowing Mid-Ohio, a place that I’ve been to before was a really good opportunity for us to get our second win, and sure enough we are here in victory lane.”

Can you describe the conditions at the beginning of the race/?

“For me, it was a lot more slick than last year. I don’t know if that was setup induced – I think that the ThorSport trucks were just able to carry a lot of center speed, us not so much. As I mentioned earlier, I think it may be an experience thing on their part – they were really disciplined and the 98 (Ty Majeski) was driving really hard, but I feel like he was never really overstepping the track. I’ve got work on wet racing a little bit, but I knew once it dried off if I stayed disciplined and stay in the top-five, that we were the best truck. Our Safelite Tundra TRD Pro was great and hats off to TRICON Garage and Toyota Racing.”

STEWART FRIESEN, No. 52 Halmar International Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, Halmar Friesen Racing

Finishing Position: 4th

Your team thought you could be the story of the day. Can you talk about your run to the top-five?

“I don’t know who said that – but they were pretty confident – more than I was for sure. I saw it start raining and I thought, oh man – we’ve just really struggled in the wet. But I think we have figured something out, it actually raced pretty good in the wet. Starting in the back, helped I think. I could just take my time and ease on through. Zane (Smith) and I were kind of just picking our way through – we got to race with (Marco) Andretti and Conor Daly – which was pretty dran cool in the rain. Two guys that made a living doing it. Just proud of our whole Halmar Toyota team, Ferris Commerical Mowers, all of our great sponsors. Chris Larsen, all of my guys. We fought hard yesterday. I made a mistake in practice and we got this thing cleaned up and fixed up and these guys stuck with me. Thanks to Halmar, thanks to Chris, my wife, Jess (Friesen), who is here. All of my spotters too. The spotter we actually had in the carosuel – I hadn’t worked with him in like 20 years – he spotted for me in the modified stuff back in ’04 and ’05. It was cool to have him and Junior in the keyhole. Proud of our effort and proud to have a top-five.”

About Toyota

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

Toyota directly employs more than 48,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 45 million cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 22 electrified options.

Through the Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Briscoe and Logano Atlanta 2 Transcripts

Chase Briscoe and Joey Logano paid a visit to the Atlanta Motor Speedway infield media center before today’s qualifying session. Both drivers talked about the challenges facing them this weekend and how tomorrow night’s race will differ from the spring.

CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Magical Vacation Planner Ford Mustang – BOBBY ALLISON COULD DRIVE ANYTHING, WHICH IS SORT OF WHAT YOU HAVE DONE IN YOUR CAREER. DID YOU EVER FOLLOW HIM OR READ ABOUT HIM? “I would definitely say that he was not racing when I was growing up, but I think anybody that’s in this sport knows who Bobby Allison was and what he meant to the sport, especially just the state of Alabama, which is right next door to us here. For me, I appreciate the comparison. I don’t think I necessarily even can be in the same sentence as Bobby Allison, but from a comparison to drive all kinds of different things, Bobby and so many of those guys back in the day for sure would just go literally drive anything and everything they could. I feel like there’s definitely not as many of those guys today, which is unfortunate, but I love going and racing as many things as I possibly can. I’m going to race the sprint car next week when we’re in New Hampshire, and trying to add more dirt races – just trying to race like I love to do. I love getting to do what I get to do on Sundays, but also want to try and go run other things. For one, it makes me better, but, two, that’s what I love to do. That’s kind of my first love. I appreciate the kind words, but I think Bobby Allison is a name that will be remembered forever, not only for being able to drive all kinds of different things, but being able to drive all kinds of different things really, really fast.”

HOW DO YOU HANDLE THE MENTAL GRIND OF RACING EVERY WEEK? “It’s hard. Truthfully, these past two to three months have probably been the hardest thing I’ve ever had to experience in my career just with the struggles on the racetrack, but I think that’s where you just have to stay grounded and have a support system behind you with me and my family and close friends and people that believe in me. But also your faith. I think you have to be really grounded in that and realize that your meaning is not where you finish on Sunday, so it’s definitely a challenge. When things are going good it’s not as big of a challenge, but when you’re running grind I feel like that grind is 10 times worse and 10 times harder to deal with. I feel like this sport is really hard. Your stock is always kind of based on the week before and a couple weeks before. You look at Jimmie Johnson, a guy that won seven championships, and at the end of his career he struggled and people questioned if it was him. Jimmie Johnson didn’t forget how to drive a race car. Even for me right now, knowing that I’ve been on this rough patch the last two or three months, I’ve just got to remember why I’m here and how I got here and just try to stay confident in that.”

THE FORDS IN THE SPRING WERE THE STRONGEST BY FAR. DO YOU COME HERE LOOKING AT THIS AS AN OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE SOMETHING GOOD HAPPEN? “Yeah, I would say all year long when we’ve gone to superspeedway type races the Fords have had really good speed for whatever reason. I think it’s no secret that we’ve kind of struggled, at least for the 14 team, but even Fords as a whole a little bit more on the mile-and-a-halves than we would probably like to, so I think me and my crew chief this weekend were sitting down talking about how ‘yeah, we need to go win a race,’ but truthfully we haven’t even had the speed to do that. We need to really focus everything we have on Daytona and Atlanta because that is the equalizer, so I’ll be extremely aggressive tomorrow just knowing that, but hopefully our car can be really fast. The biggest thing for us in the spring is we had a really fast car, we just didn’t have the handling to go with it, so with the hotter temperatures and things like that, hopefully we can have the handling underneath our car. It’s definitely gonna be a wild card race and we need to try and win the race, but, for us right now with all the change that’s happened the last two or three weeks, we’re just trying to reestablish what baseline is and build that foundation. Even if we can’t win, we need to learn as much as we can in this limited amount of time we’ve got, how many weeks we’ve got left in the season, but with how all the changes happened, we’re really trying to get focused and prepare for next year, so every week is kind of a building block for that. I would love to win the race tomorrow. That’s what I’m gonna try to do, but if not, then for sure we need to try and take something away from this weekend that we can apply next weekend and going forward.”

DOES IT FEEL LIKE ANYTHING HAS BEEN DIFFERENT LATELY, JUST TRYING TO LOOK FOR SOMETHING WITHIN THE TEAM? “Yeah, for sure. I think the dynamic of our team has changed quite a bit – the communication and things like that. I know that I’ve been held way more accountable over the last two or three weeks, for sure, and I do think that even last week, just from Nashville to going to Chicago, you know Chicago I thought we ran a really good race, the strategy just didn’t really work out for us and even from a speed standpoint. In practice, were truthfully probably a 25th to 30th place car. We were able to qualify 15th and then in the race I think our average lap speed was like the sixth or seventh fastest and with the strategy and things we just weren’t fast enough to drive farther forward than where we kind of restarted, so I do think that we’ve seen that light at the other end of the tunnel and it’s just a matter of getting there. It’s not gonna be a quick process. It’s gonna take a long time. That’s where you just have to keep believing and knowing what we’re working towards, and I do think that it’s gonna be really good on the other end of it, it’s just a matter of getting to the end point.”

HOW DO YOU THINK ATLANTA HAS MATURED AS A SUPERSPEEDWAY? “I feel like it’s kind of made a name for itself, like whenever it was the old track I think all of the drivers loved it. The fans probably not so much, but I think now it’s kind of the opposite. The drivers probably don’t love coming here as much just because of what the race is and knowing that when you wake up tomorrow you’re either gonna have a good day or you’re gonna be really sore on Monday, but from a fan standpoint I think it’s been a huge change. I mean, just look at the amount of people in the infield, the people in the stands that are gonna be here tomorrow and even that were here in the spring. When we had the old track we didn’t have this many people here, so obviously it was the right direction. I don’t think we need to switch all of the mile-and-a-halves over to this, but I do think Atlanta has come into its own as what it is now, and even from the driver side it’s a huge challenge coming here. Mentally, it’s the most draining place we go to all year. It’s a Daytona, Talladega, but everything is happening twice as quick just because it’s a mile shorter, the corners are tighter and you still have handling, where when you go to Daytona and Talladega you don’t necessarily have the balance issues. Here, it’s just a hybrid racetrack that’s kind of unlike anything else on the schedule, so it’s a huge challenge, but I definitely think it has matured into this new type of racing that we see with this Next Gen car and especially at a track like this.”

YOU’VE RUN WELL AT FLATTER ONE MILE TRACKS WITH THE WIN AT PHOENIX AND FINISHED 15TH AT LOUDON LAST YEAR. HOW DO YOU FEEL GOING BACK TO LOUDON? “Personally, I feel like that’s by far my wors racetrack, so I was surprised you said that. For us, the short tracks have definitely been really, really good, but I would say statistically and just even as a driver, Loudon is the one track that just really confuses me. For whatever reason I cannot figure out what I need there, but I did feel like last year we were able to lead laps. We ran top 15, but I still have a lot to learn when I go to Loudon, so I’m really gonna rely on my teammates there next weekend. Kevin is extremely good there. Aric has obviously won a Cup race there and Ryan, it’s like his home track, so I’ll use those guys quite a bit next week just trying to figure out what I can do. Even looking back at notes and video. I’ll probably study a lot of Christopher Bell stuff going into next week. I feel like he’s incredibly good there, so I just have to get better there, but as a short track that’s definitely one where it’s circled. These are the races that if we’re gonna win before the playoffs, these are ones that we can go and compete at, so hopefully we can have a good weekend this weekend but also next week.”

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – HOW INSTRUMENTAL WAS THE THURSDAY THUNDER PROGRAM HERE FOR YOU? “There are always so many memories that come back here and obviously being able to make some more memories here in the spring with a win and how special that was to celebrate in victory lane with the Cup car. My dad was here, so it was a pretty special thing, but this track I always remember the first time we were all in here we were just visiting and we met Ken Ragan. We got a Bandolero and raced two nights later with it and I spent so much time, I’ve lived here for years and knowing David and Reed and everyone is still in the sport. I think that’s one of the things I noticed so much with kids racing these days is that they stay in the sport. Even if they don’t drive, they’re still around one way or another, whether it’s in Legends cars, or I have a lot of friends that started in quarter midgets in Connecticut with me and they’re still in the sport. It’s just kind of cool to kind of see all of that come around and the passion that has grown from kids that want to be around race cars. It’s really cool. I still see that a lot with my son now. He’s only five, so we’re not really racing anything yet, but we go out to the track and play around and see the other kids there. We get to talk to them and all that, so it’s pretty cool. What I realized already is that my kid doesn’t listen to me and all of the other kids do listen to me with where to go on the racetrack, so go figure. I already know nothing (laughing).”

RACING AT NIGHT HERE IN JULY. HOW RELIEVED OR GLAD ARE DRIVERS THAT IT’S AT NIGHT? “I think the fans should be just as relieved as the drivers are. I mean, it’s hot. To ask somebody to be sitting up in those grandstands in the middle of the summer with the sun baking on them, that’s just hard to ask people to do. I’m not gonna do that, I can tell you that much. Forget bringing kids out to a race or something like that where you get out there and get sunburn, so this is much better to be able to do that at night. It’s a little bit cooler. The cars always look cool at night anyway. It’s always kind of a different feel with night races and things like that, so I think it’s a great play. I’m glad we’re doing it.”

ARE YOU EXPECTING THE SAME LEVEL OF GRIP AS PREVIOUS RACES HERE? “It should have less than what we raced in the spring, even though that was the daytime it was like 40 degrees outside. It’s still gonna be 80 degrees or so when the sun is down, so the track temp is still gonna be quite a bit warmer than what we raced last time, which means there should be less grip out there. Qualifying here in a few minutes it will probably be pretty slick out there I would assume, so it’s hard to say how much the track is changing because when we got here with the Next Gen car that was the first time we were out there with these things and it was like, ‘Ah,’ and then our cars got better. DId the track get better or the cars got better? Now, we’re still making our cars better every time we come here as the track is probably giving up some grip, but I think the track temperature is gonna be the biggest difference here.”

HOW BIG WAS YOUR WIN HERE IN THE SPRING AND WHAT THAT MEANS? “Absolutely. You assume the win is big and it gets you in the playoffs and all that, but you said it – you fast forward however many races it’s been since we’ve been here and it’s bigger than what we thought it would be. Unfortunately, you hope it’s not. You wish it was the other way around, but we’re 10th in points right now and we’d have been probably in a decent spot to make the playoffs I’m sure still, but it’s a lot more comfortable when you have a win and you know that you’re in the playoffs and you can focus in on some other things and trying to grow your team and get smarter and all those things. We’re not where we need to be. That’s for sure. There’s a lot of hard work going on right now to try to close the gap and we keep hustling and trying and swinging the bat and doing everything we possibly can do. There are only so many things you can do, but work in the areas we’re allowed to and keep trying to find something.”

THE LAST THREE TRACKS WE’VE BEEN AT WEREN’T ON THE SCHEDULE OR WEREN’T THE CONFIGURATION THEY ARE TODAY. HOW CHALLENGING HAVE THINGS GOTTEN FOR DRIVERS AS THE SCHEDULE HAS EVOLVED? “It’s definitely gotten harder because you have a car that we don’t have as well developed as the old car. We’re going to tracks that are brand new and you’re not giving us any practice. Even when you have 50 minutes of practice, it’s like, ‘OK, you’re not giving us practice in comparison to what it used to be.’ It’s not even close and really to be able to tune on your car and those type of things. At Nashville, we got to tune on our cars some, but last week you don’t. You kind of got what you got for the most part, so it’s definitely a lot harder to close the gap, whether you’re off from the driver or off on the car. Either way, it’s really hard to close the gap because you just don’t get the laps or you don’t get the adjustments you want to make to your car to try to make it better or to really A-B something to see if it was better or not. You’ve got to come back 15 weeks later and change something and compare it to something that was 40 degrees outside. ‘Tell me if that was better.’ ‘Yeah, right.’ There are way too many variables, so that’s the situation all of these teams are in.”

HOW DO YOU ASSESS WHAT TEAMS ARE RUNNING GOOD AND WHO WILL BE TOUGH IN THE PLAYOFFS? “It was similar to this last year. I’d say if anything it’s easier this year to tell who is gonna be the hitters right now, and a lot of it is the same guys it’s always been. You go back and look at it and the best teams, the best drivers are usually up front. Every now and again you may have something that kind of mixes it up or you may have a team that’s fallen off the bandwagon for a little bit, but they usually figure it out. I don’t see it being much different. Last year was almost harder to tell because there were so many winners and all that. This year, it seems like it’s starting to see more common guys up front, but the thing now is that the whole team matters. Before, if you had a fast car you can get away with a slow pit stop, you can get away with a bad restart every now and again because you’re car is fast enough to make it up and the top 10 looked almost the same every time. Now, boy, if you’re a fifth-place car, but you have 15th-place pit stops all day, you’re gonna finish 12th. It’s just what it is, so it’s a lot different than it used to be. It’s not as easy to make up the spots because the field is closer.”

ARE THERE ANY TRACKS OR MARKETS YOU’D LIKE TO SEE NASCAR GO TO NEXT? “I can’t say I’ve thought about it a whole bunch. I do like that we’re branching out and that weekend, really, when you think of all the stuff that as an industry we had to go through throughout preparing for it, the track itself, the weather that came on us at the last second, there was still a ton of people there and it was a pretty good race. I guess, to me, after seeing that, let’s go anywhere. It seems to be fine. We have a system that works pretty well. Yes, are there things we could adjust to the racetrack to make it a little better and a little safer? Yes, absolutely, but I do think overall for the first time out on a street course in the rain wasn’t that bad.”

COULD AN OVERSEAS RACE TAKE PLACE AND WOULD YOU BE IN FAVOR? “I think we can. Listen, you tell racers you’re going racing somewhere, they’ll figure out how to get stuff there. Racers are a different breed. I feel like you can put these people in any industry and they’re gonna figure out ways to succeed. The deadline is here. It’s not like you’re building a house and you say it’s gonna be a done at a certain time and three months later it can be done then and it’s OK. No, you have to be racing this weekend. You have to have the car ready. They figure out a way to make it happen. It’s gonna be like that. If that’s the situation, we’ll figure out how to do it. I think it would be great to go overseas. I’d be interested in it. I think it would be kind of fun. From the few times that I have gone to other places I do know a lot of people have interest in our sport because they never get to see it. If you never get the chance to see something, when it comes to your country it’s gonna be a big deal. It’s a big event. I believe it would be a huge event if we went somewhere to a different country that was far away from here somewhere.”

HOW IMPORTANT IS PHYSICAL FITNESS TO YOU? “I think it’s important for a few reasons. One, you want to try to compete or train in the same conditions you’re competing in, so you want to be where it’s hot. It’s really hot in our race cars right now. Your heart rate is elevated at a pretty high level the whole time. You mentally have to be there. I think the more physically fit you are and ready for those situations, the more mentally engaged you can be. Just like any other sport, it’s a mental game and if you can’t physically be there, you’re mentally off in some La-La Land and you’re gonna miss the details and you’re gonna lose. I believe physically being there, being focused in and being able to really accomplish the task the whole race is important because our most important moments are at the end of the race. That’s when the pay window opens up and you have to be the most ready at that moment.”

YOU’VE WON TWICE AT YOUR HOME TRACK. IS THERE ANY BETTER FEELING THAN THAT OTHER THAN WINNING THE CHAMPIONSHIP? “Outside of Daytona, I would assume Indy and championship race or getting yourself in the Championship 4 somehow in some big moment, that is the biggest win you can have outside of those, for sure. Winning at your home track is special for a lot of reasons. There are a lot of memories there, for one, but it’s the people that are there with you more times than not. It’s like your family is there, your friends are there, people that don’t get to go to every single race and you celebrate with them in victory lane. That is just the coolest moment and it’s probably different for others, I don’t know. For me, Loudon is always going to hold a special place in my heart for that reason. Like I always say, I watched my first Cup race there. I started my first Cup race there. We won our first Cup race there. It’s a special place for me and winning there is definitely fourth or fifth on the list of tracks you want to win at. It’s probably not like that for everyone at Loudon, but for me it definitely is.”

HAS IT BECOME INCREASINGLY DIFFICULT TO PASS WITH THIS CAR THERE? “I don’t know if it’s a whole bunch different than the old car was. It’s hard to pass. The bottom line is it’s hard to pass. It’s racing, though. That’s what racing is, it’s challenging and as our cars just run the same speed it’s gonna be hard to pass. We used to have cars that were more separated, but now everybody is within a couple tenths of a second and dirty air is gonna be more than that. It’s gonna slow you down more than two-tenths of a second so you’re gonna get stuck. That just means qualifying and execution of the race, the good thing is tires fall off a fair amount at Loudon, so there is opportunity for strategy there with some things. We’ve seen that track get fairly wide where some cars can run on the yellow line or even below it. Some run the third lane, that third seam way up there. It’s gotten pretty racy, but it’s still a challenging place to pass, but everywhere is.”

CHEVROLET NCS AT ATLANTA 2: Kyle Busch Media Availability Transcript

NASCAR CUP SERIES
ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY
QUAKER STATE 400
TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
JULY 8, 2023

KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 CHEDDAR’S SCRATCH KITCHEN CAMARO ZL1, met with the media prior to the NASCAR Cup Series qualifying session at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Press conference transcript:

HOW DO YOU FEEL ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY HAS MATURED NOW HAS A SUPERSPEEDWAY TRACK?

“I don’t think we’ve seen its full potential yet. It still probably has a lot of grip where you’re really not fighting getting out of the throttle yet a whole lot. Old Atlanta (Motor Speedway), being as slippery as it was – if that was a zero on the grip scale, I think we’re still up in the nine or 10 right now. So it’ll take a little bit before we get to the five or six range when racing typically starts to get pretty good.”

HOW DO YOU THINK GOING 90 MPH ON THE APRON UNDER GREEN ENTERING PIT ROAD CHANGE MUCH, AS FAR AS STRATEGY?

“I don’t think it changes much on strategy. When we were here in the spring, it seemed to be about equal for a lap and a half or something like that – where you would go down about a lap and a half. You know I think this time around might be a little bit less than that, obviously, but not by much. It’s just going to be a different rate of what you have to slow down to under green because under yellow, it’s still the same 45 mph all the way around. Everybody has probably looked ahead to that and planned – at least they should have – with their lights and everything else. So we’ll just see what that looks like getting out here and going.”

WHEN YOU LOOK AT THE SCHEDULE, THERE’S A LOT OF TALK ABOUT INTERNATIONAL RACES – WHETHER IN EUROPE, THE MIDDLE EAST, WHEREVER. DO YOU SEE THAT HAVING A PLACE IN NASCAR AT ALL IN THE FUTURE?

“I have a really funny answer, but I’m going to leave it alone (laughs).

Yeah, I do. I feel like there’s definitely the potential for that – whether it’s North America, South America, even a different continent. I think there’s some opportunities that are out there, so it will be interesting to see where we land with that. I think last week kind of showcased that you can do a street event. And we’ve also kind of proven the stadium aspect, as well, with the (Los Angeles) Coliseum. I think that opens up a huge playbook.”

NOW A WEEK REMOVED FROM CHICAGO – ANY ADDITIONAL THOUGHTS ON HOW THAT WEEKEND WENT WITH HAVING TIME TO PROCESS IT?

“Yeah, I thought it went well. Considering where the team hotels were, we were in walking distance and that was pretty close. There was just a lot of walking from the garage area to pit road for the teams. Where the haulers were parked was a little bit of a walk, as well. Especially with the rain because your notice that you get for ‘drivers to your cars’ is about four minutes, so it’s almost where you have to get into a trot to get out there on time. But probably the only negative was just the weather. I thought everything else about it was really good. Practice went off pretty well. There was definitely some areas of the track where you could use a tire barrier – I obviously was a tester of those, and they seemed to work really well and that our cars can continue on with little damage. But just a couple of spots that probably could use more or any to begin with.”

IT’S BEEN A YEAR NOW THAT KURT (BUSCH) HAS BEEN OUT OF THE CAR. WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THAT AND WHAT IT’S BEEN LIKE THE LAST YEAR WITH KURT AND HIM RECOVERING?

“Yeah, I got to work with him on the sidelines last year being with the Toyota camp for the last half of the year, but really haven’t seen a whole bunch of him and haven’t talked a whole bunch with him – just not working with that group anymore. Being with Team Chevy, we’ve kind of I guess re-distanced a little bit. But you know, it was not due to what he wanted as a timeline of stepping aside and being out of the car. But the way it all went down, the way he’s handled it, the way he’s still been a part of 23XII and working with Tyler (Reddick) and Bubba (Wallace) over there – I think he’s an instrumental part to some of the success they’ve had early on. We’ll see what his choices are going forward on if he continues that.”

(NO MIC.)

“Yeah, so I was born in 1985 – I think Bobby (Allison) was done in ’88, so I never watched him race, but obviously I’ve seen the highlights and stuff like that. He was an amazing competitor. I always remember him being fast in that No. 12 Miller car. Just being a historian of the sport for the little bit that I am, it’s always really neat to just kind of see some of that. I know with Davey coming in and being here – those two guys racing with each other, running well with each other, working together and all that, was really cool as a father-son duo. Hopefully one day I can do some of that with my son, as well. He was an instrumental part of the growth of the sport during that time – stayed around a lot and kept his face in the business to just continue to elevate everything that they all were doing.”

JUST WITH THE DIFFERENT TRACKS AND HOW THINGS HAVE CHANGED WITH THE SCHEDULE THE LAST FEW YEARS – HOW DOES THAT CHALLENGE YOU AS A DRIVER AND THE DIFFERENT SKILL SETS OR DEMANDS REQUIRED? AND TWO – WHEN YOU LOOK AT YOUR SON AND AS YOU PLOT A COURSE FOR HIM TO WORK HIS WAY UP, WITH NASCAR’S EVOLVING SCHEDULE, DOES THAT START TO CHANGE OR MAKE YOU THINK ABOUT HOW YOU WANT TO PLOT HIS DIRECTION OR THINGS YOU WANT TO INCLUDE IN HIS DEVELOPMENT?

“Yeah, obviously there’s a lot of change happening right now with different venues and things like that. Atlanta (Motor Speedway) turning into a speedway. You’ve got, I’d call it, six I guess superspeedway races, and then you’ve got seven road course races. You’ve got intermediates; you’ve got short-tracks. Now you have a street course. So there’s a lot going on with the different avenues that you can go and the training you can do with driver development.

Yeah, I’m a proponent of getting him in as much stuff that I possibly can. Some people tell me that they think that’s hurting his development or slowing his development down in particular cars. And I’m like – well, yeah, but he can go run against any kid in the country and run top-three everywhere we go in any vehicle that we run in. I feel like that’s a Kyle Larson-type thing – where we’re not just focused on quarter midgets or outlaw karts.. he only does that and he’s really good at that. But then we can’t even make an A-main in a quarter midget race at a national event. The one thing that we’re a little bit short on right now is just the road course kart stuff that Keelan has been really high on. We haven’t done as much of that and Brexton keeps asking me about doing it and why we haven’t done it. And I’m like – bro, there’s only so much time in the day (laughs).. we’re pretty slammed as it is. But hopefully being able to get out to Trackhouse Motorplex a little bit more, especially as the off-season gets there – that’s sort of the time where I always ran road course stuff was always winter races. So I’d love to take him out there and just kind of get his feet wet more in that.”

HOW MUCH IS IT CHALLENGING FOR YOU? YOU HAD THE DEVELOPMENT AND SKILL SET, AND OBVIOUSLY YOU’RE TALENTED IN A LOT OF THINGS, BUT A LOT OF THINGS ARE GETTING THROWN AT YOU. HOW IS THIS CHALLENING YOU?

“You know, the only thing that’s been challenging to me and I don’t know how to be get better at it besides just doing it more often – is the street course last week. I came out of the gate my first lap on the track and boom – I shot up to third quick on the board. And then everybody started getting braver, pushing the brake limits more and getting better and better, and I started falling back. But when you go to the Clash at The Coliseum, that reminds me of going to Star Speedway up in Epping, New Hampshire – we’re close to there next week. It’s a little, tight, three-eighths mile bullring with really tight corners. So places like that where I grew up racing late models at remind me of that. The superspeedway here is a little bit different, but it’s really close to Daytona (International Speedway). And then all the rest of the stuff that we obviously do. Traditional road courses are traditional road courses – it’s just about finding your way around those. So again, the street course stuff – not having much experience in that or racing in the rain for that matter, too – is probably my worst trait at the moment.”

WHAT’S YOUR RECOVERY PROCESS FOR ANY WRECK, IN GENERAL?

“It depends on the wreck. Last week, running into the tires at Chicago was great (laughs).. it was nice, it wasn’t really that bad. I was petrified going into that, that it was going to hurt a hell of a lot. But then the tire pack, you kind of just slowly accordion into it and it was fine. I think that was a good learning for us that we can do that at a lot more races maybe – not ovals, but road courses that don’t maybe have tire packs that have some gravel run-offs that don’t catch a car that you can still achieve the fence. I don’t think there’s a depth of tire pack that’s too thick, honestly. So I think that’s kind of a learning curve that I tested out last week.

Other than that, yeah wrecking at superspeedway races – hitting the wall, breaking my leg, foot and stuff at Daytona (International Speedway) was no fun. It’s all about the hit that you get. But being in decent shape I think allows you to come out of those a lot faster. Just talking with Scott Borchetta, who is a TA2 driver who I’ve been friends with for a long time – he was in a bad accident and hurt pretty bad. He’s healing a lot faster than the doctors expected because he was like – yeah, I was working out, I was training, I was trying to keep up with these young kids to go race with. I think it’s just all about your body composition and makeup.”

HALFWAY THROUGH YOUR FIRST SEASON AT RICHARD CHILDRESS RACING, IS THERE SOMETHING YOU CAN TELL US THAT YOU’VE LEARNED ABOUT RICHARD (CHILDRESS) AS YOUR CAR OWNER THAT MAYBE YOU DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT HIM IN PREVIOUS YEARS?

“To me, it’s just that he’s involved. He’s involved in a lot of different ways. He’s involved at the race shop – he’s there a lot, talking with upstairs people, downstairs people, into the competition meetings, talking with the pit crew coaches. He’s also doing some other outside business stuff with the spring company that he’s got, as well as the ECR engines and things that they’ve been doing. Not since I’ve been there, but the last couple of years they were the Cadillac engine supplier for the IMSA stuff for Cadillac. It’s just really cool to see all the different stuff that they have all up at their campus, and what all he’s involved in and how much he really pays attention to all of that. He’s an instrumental part to why we want to win races and why we’ve won races. And I feel like we’ve lived up to that to this point, which has been amazing and really, really good. It’s just a matter of carrying that forward and continuing to work together. He and I – we’ve exchanged a lot of text messages, phone calls and all that stuff on areas of things that we can do. I’m trying to push on him a little bit so he can go deliver those messages and push on it from his side because he’s always told me – just come to me.. bring me anything, whatever you’ve got, come to me.”

About Chevrolet
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