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​​CrowdStrike Racing by APR Takes Victory at Watkins Glen

  • George Kurtz, Ben Hanley, Nolan Siegel drive No. 04 CrowdStrike ORECA-Gibson to LMP2 victory
  • Win comes two weeks after class victory for Kurtz, Algarve Pro Racing at 24 Hours of Le Mans
  • CrowdStrike Racing heads into CrowdStrike 24 Hours of Spa with strong momentum

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (June 28, 2023) – CrowdStrike Racing by Algarve Pro Racing (APR) and drivers George Kurtz, Ben Hanley and Nolan Siegel earned their first victory in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship on Sunday in the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen.

The trio teamed for a landmark Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) victory in the No. 04 CrowdStrike ORECA 07-Gibson. Sunday’s win unofficially moved the Kurtz and Hanley team into first place in the LMP2 Drivers Championship – a remarkable accomplishment for a program that made its debut in January for the Rolex 24 At Daytona.

The weekend’s win and a runner-up finish were made doubly sweet as the CrowdStrike Racing by APR team also claimed the round of the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup – made up of the WeatherTech Championship’s four long-distance races. The Watkins Glen victory came two weeks after Kurtz, Colin Braun and James Allen drove an APR ORECA to an LMP2 Pro/Am win at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

The CrowdStrike-sponsored prototype led seven times in the Watkins Glen race for a class-high 109 laps. Kurtz started off the day by driving from fourth at the start to first place during his 90-minute stint. Siegel and Hanley also led significant portions of the race out front with Hanley moving ahead for good with 23 laps to go.

In addition to the wins at Le Mans and Watkins Glen, Kurtz and CrowdStrike Racing are on a roll with consecutive victories in the Fanatec GT World Challenge America Powered by AWS, including the competition last weekend at Virginia International Raceway.

Next up for the program is this weekend’s CrowdStrike 24 Hours of Spa – one of the premier GT3 races in the world. CrowdStrike by Riley will field the No. 04 CrowdStrike Mercedes-AMG GT3 in the crown jewel of SRO’s Intercontinental GT Challenge.

For more information, visit CrowdStrikeRacing.com. Follow #CrowdStrikeRacing on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for updates.

Driver quotes after the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen

George Kurtz, No. 04 CrowdStrike ORECA 07-Gibson: “We knew we had a great car, a great team in CrowdStrike Racing by APR and a great driver line-up. We also had a good race strategy and the crew did some amazing work in the pits, and I’m delighted I was able to do the job and pass the car over to Nolan (Siegel) and Ben (Hanley) so they could do their thing. Overall, being smart, staying out of trouble and just doing what we needed to do helped us take the win.”

Ben Hanley, No. 04 CrowdStrike ORECA 07-Gibson: “We can’t forget that this CrowdStrike Racing by APR program came together quite late and we haven’t managed to get out and do any collective test days yet, and that makes this win in the IMSA Six Hours of The Glen even sweeter. CrowdStrike Racing by APR has done a great job to put us in the window straight away, even though we had mixed conditions in free practice and a very limited opportunity to see how things would play out across a race stint. We managed to nail it pretty well, and it’s positive that there are still things we can improve going forward to Road America because we’re still learning about the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, the Michelin tires and the opposition.”

Nolan Siegel, No. 04 CrowdStrike ORECA 07-Gibson: “It has been an incredible journey since first stepping into an LMP2 car in February and I’ve loved every minute of it. It has been great to adapt this quickly to Le Mans Prototypes, and to win what is only my second LMP2 race in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship with a great team like CrowdStrike Racing by APR and great co-drivers in George (Kurtz) and Ben (Hanley) is amazing.”

About CrowdStrike

CrowdStrike (Nasdaq: CRWD), a global cybersecurity leader, has redefined modern security with the world’s most advanced cloud-native platform for protecting critical areas of enterprise risk — endpoints and cloud workloads, identity and data.

Powered by the CrowdStrike Security Cloud and world-class AI, the CrowdStrike Falcon® platform leverages real-time indicators of attack, threat intelligence, evolving adversary tradecraft and enriched telemetry from across the enterprise to deliver hyper-accurate detections, automated protection and remediation, elite threat hunting and prioritized observability of vulnerabilities. Purpose-built in the cloud with a single lightweight-agent architecture, the Falcon platform delivers rapid and scalable deployment, superior protection and performance, reduced complexity and immediate time-to-value.

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Interstate Batteries Racing: Ty Gibbs Chicago Street Race Advance

Ty Gibbs
Chicago Street Race Advance
No. 54 Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry TRD for Joe Gibbs Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Grant Park 220 (Round 18 of 36)

● Time/Date: 5:30 p.m. EDT on Sunday, July 2

● Location: Chicago Street Course

● Layout: 2.2-mile, 12-turn street course

● Laps/Miles: 100 laps/220 miles

● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 20 laps / Stage 2: 25 laps / Final Stage: 55 laps

● TV/Radio: NBC / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Outrageously Dependable: Interstate Batteries – one of the most tenured team sponsors in NASCAR history – began its 32nd season as the founding sponsor of Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) with an expanded presence that features the brand’s iconic green livery across all four of JGR’s NASCAR Cup Series entries. So far this season, Interstate has adorned the No. 20 of Christopher Bell at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum, and served as co-primary with Gibbs in the season-opening Daytona 500 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway and on Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota at Circuit of Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, in March. Interstate returned to Gibbs’ No. 54 Toyota this past weekend at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway, where he brought home a 14th-place finish. Including this weekend at the inaugural Chicago Street Race, Interstate will adorn his car three more times this season, which also includes Sept. 24 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, and Oct. 8 on the Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway Roval.

● The inaugural Grant Park 220 on the streets of downtown Chicago will mark the first street-course race in the NASCAR Cup Series’ 75-year history. Drivers will speed past some of the city’s most renowned landmarks, from Michigan Avenue to South Lake Shore Drive, with the start/finish line near Buckingham Fountain.

● “Saturday in the Park:” Qualifying for the Grant Park 220 takes place on Saturday, and it’s where Sunday’s 100-lap race around the 2.2-mile, 12-turn temporary street circuit could very well be won. Track position will be paramount, as those starting up front are far more likely to stay up front.

● Gibbs heads to Nashville sitting 18th in the driver standings with 343 points. Gibbs is leading the Rookie of the Year standings by an impressive 189 points over second-place Noah Gragson.

● Rookie Stripe: Gibbs has experienced a season not atypical of a rookie driver in NASCAR’s top series. He has four top-10 finishes so far, but many other strong runs that didn’t yield the results he might have deserved during the most recent stretch of races, including last weekend at Nashville. Gibbs’ four top-10 finishes came in consecutive races during the spring. He brought home ninth-place finishes at Atlanta Motor Speedway, COTA, and Richmond (Va.) Raceway, and added a 10th-place finish in the Food City Dirt Race at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway.

● At the age of 19 years, 9 months and 20 days, Gibbs made his first career NASCAR Cup Series start last July 24 at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway for 23XI Racing. He became the 37th driver younger than 20 years of age to make a Cup Series start. He started at the rear of the field but completed all 160 laps on his way to an impressive 16th-place finish. Best of his 15 Cup Series starts last year was his 10th-place result Aug. 7 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn.

● Dazzling Debut: Gibbs was victorious in his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut in the February 2021 race on the Daytona road course. He led 14 of the 56 laps and became the youngest driver to win an Xfinity road-course race at 18 years, 4 months and 16 days. The native of Charlotte, North Carolina, also became the second-youngest winner in Xfinity Series history behind Joey Logano, who won in June 2008 at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta at the age of 18 years, 21 days.

Ty Gibbs, Driver of the No. 54 Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry TRD

What are your thoughts about racing in Chicago in the NASCAR Cup Series’ first-ever street race?

“Chicago will be interesting. No one has been on the track since they are just building it now and nobody has raced a street circuit in a Cup Series car. Lot of unknowns, for sure. We’ll see what we can do with our Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry TRD. Hopefully we can run well. Just going to have to be patient and learn as much as we can in the small bit of track time that we’ll have.”

You have had some time to get used to each track during your rookie season, but how does it change now as you are close to being in the playoffs on points? How will you approach trying to get in the field of 16 nine races from now?

“It’s been good. The whole season has been special and I learn each and every week. Just got to get my Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry in a good position and try to limit our mistakes as much as possible and get the most points we can each and every week. First off all, you just need to enjoy it. Not a lot of guys get to do what we get to do each week and you have to remind yourself of the bigger picture. You just take it week after week and keep working. I’m looking forward to Chicago, which will be the next challenge. I’m really looking forward to the next couple of races and we’ll keep working at it and try to work as hard as we can.”

Has it been fun to have Interstate Batteries along with you several times this year, including back-to-back weeks at Nashville and Chicago?

“It’s really an honor to be able to run an Interstate Batteries car every time we’ve been able to do it. We had a fun weekend in Nashville last weekend. We had Lain (Hancock, President/CEO) with us at the track, and I always enjoy talking with him and their guests. We were able to get a top-10 for them at Bristol Dirt, which was really cool. I thought we had a good shot at another top-10 for them at Nashville last weekend, but that didn’t end up how we had hoped there on the last pit stop and run of the race. Chicago will be interesting, and you never know what’s going to happen, but I would love to get another good run for those guys.”

No. 54 Interstate Batteries Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Ty Gibbs

Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Crew Chief: Chris Gayle

Hometown: Little Rock, Arkansas

Car Chief: Nate Bellows

Hometown: Fairfax, Vermont

Spotter: Tony Hirschman

Hometown: Northampton, Pennsylvania

Race Engineer: Seth Chavka

Hometown: Soldotna, Alaska

Race Engineer: Kyle Abrahims

Hometown: Spring Grove, Pennsylvania

Road Crew Members

Truck Driver: Chris Miko

Hometown: Bronx, New York

Mechanic: Ryan Towles Hometown: Salem, Virginia

Mechanic: Scott Eldridge

Hometown: Warsaw, Indiana

Truck Driver: Eloy Trevino

Hometown: Adrian, Michigan

Mechanic/Tire Specialist: Justin Peiffer

Hometown: Lebanon, Pennsylvania

Over-The-Wall Crew Members

Gas Man: Peyton Moore

Hometown: Buford, Georgia

Jackman: Derrell Edwards

Hometown: Baltimore, Maryland

Tire Carrier: Jake Holmes

Hometown: Westborough, Massachusetts

Front Tire Changer: Blake Houston

Hometown: Enochville, North Carolina

Rear Tire Changer: Mike Hicks

Hometown: China Grove, North Carolina

No. 10 Smithfield Ford Racing: Aric Almirola Chicago Advance

ARIC ALMIROLA
Chicago Advance
No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Grant Park 220 (Round 18 of 36)

● Time/Date: 5:30 p.m. EDT on Sunday, July 2

● Location: Chicago Street Course

● Layout: 2.2-mile, 12-turn street course

● Laps/Miles: 100 laps/220 miles

● Stage Lengths: Stages 1: 20 laps / Stage 2: 25 laps / Final Stage: 55 laps

● TV/Radio: NBC / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● This weekend marks the inaugural NASCAR Cup Series race on the streets of Chicago – the first street-course race in NASCAR’s 75-year history. In an effort to continue the growth and excitement of NASCAR among fans, this 2.2-mile 12-turn temporary circuit has come full circle from a virtual idea to one of the most anticipated races the series has ever hosted. In March of 2021, the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series announced a track layout on the street of downtown Chicago. After a detailed laser scan of the physical streets, the downtown Chicago Street Course was created. On June 2, 37 drivers competed virtually during a live FOX broadcast, which piqued the interest of both fans and the league to recreate the event in real life.

● In Almirola’s 12-year fulltime NASCAR career, he never considered himself to be a road-course racer – until three weeks ago. While a Cup Series win remains the ultimate goal for Almirola, the 39-year-old veteran on June 10 made his way to victory lane in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway, driving the No. 28 RSS Racing Ford Mustang. It was the first road-course victory of his career. Almirola’s best road-course outing in the Cup Series also came at Sonoma in 2018, when he finished eighth. He made it back-to-back top-10 finishes at the track when he returned for a ninth-place result in 2019.

● Driver Points: Almirola arrives at Chicago 27th in the driver standings, 304 points out of first.

● Almirola’s career: In 441 career NASCAR Cup Series starts, Almirola has three wins, 28 top-five finishes, 92 top-10s, four poles, and has led 1,018 laps.

● Smithfield has been a sponsor of Almirola’s for the entirety of his fulltime NASCAR Cup Series career – making it one of the longest-lasting partnerships in NASCAR. Smithfield is an American food company with agricultural roots and a global reach. Its 63,000 team members are dedicated to producing “Good food. Responsibly.®” Smithfield is one of the world’s leading vertically integrated protein companies. The company has pioneered sustainability standards for more than two decades, including its industry-leading commitments to become carbon negative in U.S. company-owned operations and reduce GHG emissions 30 percent across its entire U.S. value chain by 2030. Smithfield believes in the power of protein to end food insecurity and has donated hundreds of millions of food servings to local communities.

● Beyond the 10 YouTube Series: In 2023, Almirola is continuing to share his life beyond the No. 10 Ford with season five of his award-winning YouTube series. Fans and media can subscribe on YouTube to see Almirola’s personality on and off the track. Episodes have already featured life as a dad, a husband and an athlete, and the show gives fans a unique perspective on what goes on in the life of a professional NASCAR driver. Fans can also follow Almirola’s social media channels: @Aric_Almirola on Twitter and Instagram, and @AricAlmirola on Facebook.

Aric Almirola, Driver of the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

What are some challenges teams will face heading to a street course for the first time?

“The way the car handles and drives across the crown in the road and the bumps and uneven surfaces are all going to play a role in making this a challenging race for all of us. It’s something we have never had to deal with. We race on tracks that are purposefully built for racecars and they have a continuous grade of banking. We’re going to have to attack the track, and the condition of the car is so much different than we’re used to.”

Are you excited to race on the streets of downtown Chicago?

“I’m excited, nervous, anxious all of the above. I’m excited to do something we have never done, but there is always anxiousness about the unknown and not knowing what to expect. It’s going to be such a fantastic event for the fans. There is so much to do around the course and it’s going to be a lot of fun for them not only during the race but before and after. As a driver, I’m looking forward to saying that I got to race on the streets of Chicago.”

How do you think the racing is going to be compared to other road courses?

“I think Chicago is certainly a racetrack where you’re going to have to be very aggressive. The surface is going to be very interesting where they’ve repaved or where they’ve not repaved. What we’ve learned so far in the simulator is that we think it’s pretty low grip and it’s pretty rough with a lot of tight, blind corners. You have to be really aggressive in the braking zones and get in the corners deep but still make the corner. And there’s a huge penalty at Chicago compared to all the true road courses that we go to if you don’t make the corner, so I think you’re not only going to have to be aggressive, but you’re going to have to be conscious of how aggressive you are because the penalty for missing the corner at Chicago is going to be far greater than missing the corner at most road courses. At most road courses, if you overshoot the corner, you run off into the grass or the gravel a little bit. At Chicago, you’re going to crash. You’re going to hit a wall.”

No. 10 Smithfield Ford Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Aric Almirola

Hometown: Tampa, Florida

Crew Chief: Drew Blickensderfer

Hometown: Decatur, Illinois

Car Chief: Jerry Cook

Hometown: Toledo, Ohio

Lead Engineer: Lee Deese

Hometown: Rockingham, North Carolina

Engineer: James Kimbrough

Hometown: Pensacola, Florida

Spotter: Joel Edmonds

Hometown: Dobson, North Carolina

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Ryan Mulder

Hometown: Sioux Center, Iowa

Rear Tire Changer: Trevor White

Hometown: Arlington, Texas

Tire Carrier: Tyler Bullard

Hometown: King, North Carolina

Jack Man: Sean Cotton

Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Fuel Man: James “Ace” Keener

Hometown: Fortuna, California

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Chris Trickett

Hometown: Grafton, West Virginia

Mechanic: Jacob Cooksey

Hometown: Westbrookville, New York

Engine Tuner: Matt Moeller

Hometown: Monroe, New York

Tire Specialist: Russel Simpson

Hometown: Medford, New York

Transporter Co-Driver: Steven Casper

Hometown: Salisbury, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Matt Murphy

Hometown: Augusta, Georgia

Legacy Motor Club withdraws Jimmie Johnson entry from Chicago race amid family tragedy

Photo by Chris Graythen for Getty Images

Legacy Motor Club announced Tuesday afternoon that the No. 84 Chevrolet piloted by Jimmie Johnson would not compete as scheduled in this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Chicago.

“Legacy Motor Club has elected to withdraw the No. 84 Carvana Chevrolet from this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series event in Chicago,” the team revealed in a statement. “The Johnson family has asked for privacy at this time and no further statements will be made.”

The announcement came after reports from various news sources, including FOX 23 of Tulsa, Oklahoma, that Johnson’s father and mother-in-law, Jack and Terry Janway, along with their 11-year-old grandson, Dalton, were found dead at their home in Muskogee, Oklahoma. Police are currently investigating the incident as a murder-suicide.

NASCAR released a statement, saying, “We are saddened by the tragic deaths of members of Chandra Johnson’s family,” NASCAR said in a statement. “The entire NASCAR family extends its deepest support and condolences during this difficult time to Chandra, Jimmie and the entire Johnson & Janway families.”

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Statement

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB has elected to withdraw the No. 84 Carvana Chevrolet from this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series event in Chicago.

The Johnson family has asked for privacy at this time and no further statements will be made.

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Michael McDowell Chicago Media Availability

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Chicago Street Race Media Availability | Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Michael McDowell, driver of the No. 34 Chicago Pneumatic Compressors Ford Mustang, was joined by media ahead of the inaugural Grant Park 220 Chicago Street Race. McDowell is one of the few NASCAR Cup Series drivers with street course experience, having competed in IndyCar at Surfer’s Paradise in 2005; the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series at Long Beach in 2006, and the Grand American Road Racing Series in 2006 in Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada.

MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 Chicago Pneumatic Compressors Ford Mustang – IT IS ONLY APPROPRIATE THAT YOU HAVE THE HOMETOWN SPONSOR. WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO THIS WEEKEND? “Yeah, it’s pretty cool. We’re excited about this weekend, having Chicago Pneumatic Compressors on-board in the ‘Windy City’ for the street course in Chicago. Looking forward to it. It’s a big weekend for us. There has been a lot of hype going into this weekend, and we definitely feel that this is a great opportunity for us. So, it’s a big weekend.”

HOW MUCH SIM HAVE YOU DONE AND EXPECT TO DO AHEAD OF THE RACE WEEKEND, AND HOW BENEFICIAL DO YOU THINK IT IS, ESPECIALLY WITH SOME REPAVING THE LAST FEW WEEKS? “I’ve been able to do a fair amount of sim work, and I have some more this week as well. As far as how realistic it’ll be, I’ll let you know on Friday and Saturday after we see it and walk it. There’s been some repaving, some transitions moved out, and some surface areas that have been added and redone. So, I think it’s probably exaggerating a little bit of the worst, but we’ll see.”

HOW DO YOU APPROACH THIS TYPE OF RACE? “Yeah, I think that you’re going to be aggressive. All of our races are still going to be track position, so you’re going to want to make sure that you’re staying up-front and keeping track position, which is generally what you need to do. But at the same time, you’re very narrow, surrounded by concrete barriers, and you can’t make any mistakes. So, that’s what the challenge is of a street race. You have to go for it, but when you take those risks it takes time, so you have to balance when you do that.”

DO YOU EQUATE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO OTHERS YOU’VE HAD ON ROAD COURSES? “I think this one is a little bit higher for us. Our road course program is solid – we’ve seen that over the last year and a half with this Next Gen car. But I think going to a new course that nobody has any experience on – tricky and challenging – it’s going to play into the hands of guys that have done races like this, and that adapt quickly. We are talking about the best drivers in the world, so they’re going to figure it out really fast. I don’t think I have an ‘advantage.’ I just feel like my comfort level is a bit higher than the majority of the guys that haven’t seen a street course before. We think about this race as a race we need to go and win to get into the playoffs. So, that’s what we’re focused on.”

LOOKING AHEAD TO ATLANTA, HAVE YOU AND THE TEAM MADE THE NECESSARY TECHNICAL CHANGES FOR THAT RACE? “Yeah, we’re up to speed with what we have to have for Atlanta. I think a lot of that rolled out a couple of weeks ago, as we’re preparing. So, right now they’re working on the Atlanta car, and I’d say it’s about 70 percent from complete. I think everything is rolling fine.”

THIS WILL BE THE FOURTH TIME THAT YOU WILL RACE ON THIS “NEW ATLANTA.” DO YOU THINK THE FIELD HAS GOT A HANDLE ON WHAT THIS NEW STYLE OF RACING IS, OR IS IT CONTINUING TO CHANGE? “No, I think it’s changing. I think that the track probably threw us all for a little bit of a loop – of just how much it aged in a year and how the grip level changed. The first two races, you really didn’t know exactly what to expect. I feel like now, we have a pretty good understanding of what we need to bring back and things we need to do better. It has that element of drafting, pushing and all that. It’s not like that’s not there. But I think handling is more of a legitimate factor that you need to take in for this race, especially for how hot it’s going to be.”

WHAT ABOUT NEW HAMPSHIRE HAS BEEN CHALLENGING FOR YOU? “I think that’s an understatement. Yeah, New Hampshire by far has been a struggle for us. I’m not sure what to pin-point it as. I feel it’s a flat, short track, but different from Martinsville, where in Martinsville we’ve had speed, but it hasn’t correlated to New Hampshire all the time. I will say this though: Our short track program this year is a lot better than what it was last year. Richmond and Phoenix: Those racetracks, I definitely feel like we closed the gap quite a bit. So, I’m optimistic about New Hampshire. I go there optimistic every year, but it’s no doubt that it’s been a struggle for us in years passed. Hopefully, we hit it right.”

IF YOU WERE ABLE TO GET INTO THE PLAYOFFS, WOULD YOU BE MORE CONFIDENT IN MAKING A RUN THAN YOU WERE A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO WHEN YOU WON THE DAYTONA 500? “Yeah, definitely. I feel like we have the speed, and the tracks on the schedule in the playoffs lay out pretty well for us. I haven’t done the statistics exactly, but I think last year we would have advanced had we made it into the second round. I think that we’re in the position where we have a bunch of road courses coming up, and we have some good tracks coming up. We have one or two in there that aren’t so good, so we have to manage those weekends well, and we need to maximize the weekends where we know that we can get a lot of points. I think we’ll be right there. I really do. I think we’ll be close to be able to point our way in, but currently, we’re just thinking about Chicago and ‘How do we go win that race?’”

WHAT WAS YOUR FIRST REACTION TO NASCAR ADDING THIS EVENT TO THE SCHEDULE, AND DO YOU HAVE ANY ADDITIONAL CONCERNS HEADING INTO THIS WEEKEND? “I was excited. I think street courses are so much fun, and just great events and opportunities to bring the race to the people. Doing some in the past and seeing how cool of events street course racing is and how fast the cars look – the sights, the sounds and all those things – I was really excited about it. Yes, there are some challenges – no doubt there are some challenges. I think for all of us: Logistically just figuring out the flow and routine of all the things that you probably think we wouldn’t think about… pit-lane, making changes, just panning out where you’re going to go, what happens if this happens and having a plan for those different scenarios. The on-track stuff, I’m not terribly concerned about. It’s very straightforward. It’s a street course with concrete barriers, 90-degree turns, bumpy, not a lot of run-off, and you can’t make any mistakes. I think all that is pretty straightforward. It’s more of all the other logistics of making sure that you’re at the right place at the right time, have all the right stuff, and can do the things that you need to do.”

WHEN WAS YOUR LAST STREET COURSE RACE? “Yeah, I don’t even know. Probably 2006 or 2007, I would say that was the last time. If you count Montreal, I think I did all the Xfinity races there, or all but one. I was thinking more like Long Beach – places like that. But, it’s been awhile, for sure. I think the biggest thing is the visualization of when you’re sitting in the car, referencing it, and being able to adapt quickly to not knowing where you’re going, finding the bumps, finding the markers, and doing all those things. Each track is unique for that, so it’s just being able to do that quickly.”

WHAT DO YOU EXPECT THE AGGRESSION LEVEL TO BE ON A COURSE LIKE THIS, ESPECIALLY WITH A FULL-BODIED CAR AS OPPOSED TO AN OPEN-WHEELED CAR? “I think I’m fairly unique in this response. I feel like street courses are so tough by yourself, that your level of aggression is turned down, sort of automatically, because you’re just trying to not make a mistake on your own – let alone when you’re trying to set up a pass and things like that. If you look at our style of road racing, for sure, it’s super aggressive wheel-to-wheel. But, we always have a lot of run-off and areas that have a lot of forgiveness. So, Turn 1 at Indy: You bury it down in there, because there’s an oval, grass, access routes. But, when there’s a 90-degree with a concrete barrier, you’re going to think twice about burying it down in there. It’s just the reality of it. Calculated aggression is going to be what wins this race, and I don’t think we’re going to see a lot of what we typically see on our road courses – in particular, on the starts and restarts.”

HOW DO YOU SET UP A PASS ON A STREET COURSE, PARTICULARLY IN THOSE 90-DEGREE CORNERS THAT WE WILL SEE AT CHICAGO? “I think it’s pretty similar (to a road course), that you have to keep yourself in position and figure out where you’re strong. But, I think a lot of the passing is going to start off the corners. You need a good drive off the corners in order to be close enough to challenge somebody to the brake zone. Everybody is so good in the brake zones now. It’s not like you can be five or six car lengths back and just bomb it in there. So, I feel like the passes are going to start by acceleration off the corner and getting close. The tricky thing about street courses is when you’re following closely to the car in front of you, you can’t see. You don’t know where the apex is, you can’t see the concrete barriers. It’s a process. I think that’s what I’m most excited about, is knowing that process, knowing how to set those things up and not being caught off-guard or surprised by when you get close, you have to know where you are. There are a lot of tricks to it, that’s for sure.”

THIS WILL BE THE FIRST TIME THIS YEAR WHERE YOU WILL ENTER PIT-ROAD FROM THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION. DOES THAT CHANGE YOUR APPROACH, EVEN FOR SOMETHING AS SMALL AS SIGN PLACEMENT? “There are definitely some challenges, like Watkins Glen when you do it there, because everyone is so used to their routine – how you line up the sign, how the guys jump off and how far away you are from the wall. So, you definitely have to be intentional in thinking about what you’re doing and where you are. For me, as far as preparing: What I’ll do is get through practice this week, run through it with the guys for both myself and for them, just making sure of timing, choreography, and that we’re doing the things we need to do. The guy that’s holding the sign, he’s making sure that he’s putting it where you want it for that style of pit-stop. Everything has to be buttoned up. Any time there is anything that can take you off your routine, muscle memory and what you’re used to, it creates opportunities for mistakes. These races are all about minimizing mistakes.”

SO, HOW DO YOU LIKE THE SIGN POSITIONED TO GET INTO THE STALL? “I don’t like changing anything. So, I have them change to me rather than me change to them. So, I’m lining up and doing exactly what I do every single weekend, and I don’t change that routine. So: Have them shift and adjust to that.”

MONTREAL WAS MENTIONED, AND A RETURN TO THE FACILITY COULD BE IN THE WORKS. WOULD YOU BE IN FAVOR OF THE CUP SERIES RACING AT MONTREAL? “Yeah, it’s awesome. It was a great race, great crowd, awesome town – everything about that race was a lot of fun. I don’t know if you call it a street race, but it’s kind of on its island there in a park, but it’s a proper racetrack with a decent amount of run-off and some tricky areas. I always enjoyed it, and I think our Next Gen cars would put on a great race there, especially with the long straightaways and really aggressive brake zones. It would be a lot of fun. As far as whether or not that’s happening, I haven’t been in any of those conversations. I hear the same rumors that you all hear. But, I hope so. It would be a cool event, for sure.”

IN THE NEXT GEN ERA, YOU CAN TAKE A CAR ANYWHERE. WITH HOW WELL YOU PERFORMED AT SONOMA, IS THAT THE CAR YOU’RE GOING TO RACE AT CHICAGO? “No, it’s not our Sonoma car. It’s too fast of a turnaround for us. We’re a three or four week turnaround just to get everything right. Yeah, it’s very interesting. We talked about having a road course specific car in our fleet. It’s hard to do that with the limited amount of parts and pieces, and what you’re allowed to have in your allotment. So, this is not the Sonoma car, but we will use the Sonoma car again on a road course. But, it won’t be this one. This car raced at the Coliseum and it raced at Phoenix. Those are the last two I believe. There may have been one more in there, maybe Martinsville? This is not our Sonoma car. I will say that as a driver, you want it. You want that Sonoma car, right? But last year, we didn’t have a road course car, and every one we went to was pretty good. Not that I got completely over it, but these cars have been pretty similar in feel, build and all that where I haven’t seen a real outlier. But yeah, the racer in you is like, ‘We need to turn that thing around and get it ready.’ But, the process we’ve been using has been working. So, we’ll stick to it.”

Mike Marsal Fights to 7th Place finish at the Baja 500

Baja California, Mexico (27 June 2023) – Mike Marsal earned his best BFGoodrich 55th SCORE Baja 500 finish earlier this month with a seventh place finish in Trophy Truck Spec.

Marsal and navigator Hudson Hall took the first stint of the race in the No. 236 Spy Optic trophy truck spec driving to mile marker 330, with Troy Grabowski taking the controls alongside Matthew Martinez as his navigator to finish out the 487.52-mile race.

Marsal rolled off the start finish from fourth place, a starting spot that the Spy Optic entry earned in April’s San Felipe 250. The team ran into some logistical issues during Marsal’s stint, costing the effort about 15 minutes to the lead pace. The challenges continued through the race, once Grabowski took the wheel he had two flat tires in his stint before recovering to cross the finish line seventh in the order.

The team finished the second event on the SCORE International calendar in just ten hours and thirty minutes, earning themselves a seventh-place finishing position. Once the results and penalties were applied, Marsal and team were one of just three teams inside the top 10 to not be penalized.

Marsal took on all that the desert had to offer, totaling an elevation gain of 26,753 feet and maintained an average moving speed of 44.4 mph.

“What a crazy week leading up to the 500,” said Marsal. We were not able to complete our typical pre-run due to some mechanical issues with the pre-runner. Unfortunately we lost some critical practice time. Evan Weller Prep and the entire team did an incredible job getting the equipment back up and running but we ultimately lost 2 days of driving. Finishing every mile is key to our season long goal and we’ve got the 400 up next in September. We have a nice break in the series to get some testing accomplished. I am looking forward to a strong showing in the 400.”

Marsal currently sits fourth in Trophy Truck Spec championship points, just 26 points behind the leader. The next SCORE International event will take place September 12-17th for the 4th SCORE Baja 400 weekend.

Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 gener8tor SKILLS Ford Mustang Chicago Street Race Competition Notes

TEAM AND RACE NOTES

Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 Ford Mustang take to the streets of Chicago for the inaugural Grant Park 220. Gilliland and the 38 team will again partner with gener8tor Skills Accelerator for the unprecedented race. gener8tor SKILLS Acceler8tor last road with Gilliland at the Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway where he wheeled his way to a 10th-place finish.

gener8tor Skills Accelerator is a free, virtual skilling program for people looking for jobs in high-demand roles in their communities or working remotely for companies across the country. They have supported over 1,400 job seekers in the last two years. Fans

Fans can go to www.gener8tor.com skills to learn more.

Track activity will begin Saturday with practice and qualifying at 1:30 p.m. ET. Sunday’s race is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. ET on NBC.

COMPETITION NOTES

After finishing 35th at the Nashville Superspeedway, Gilliland looks to bring out his road course skills in preparation for the long-awaited Chicago Street Race. The 100-lap race will stretch 2.2- miles through Chicago’s Grant Park. The course will feature 12 turns, passing Chicago’s most renowned downtown landmarks such as Maggie Daley Park and the Buckingham Fountain.

The 38 team looks to best their 10th-place finish from the first road-course race of the year at the Circuit of the Americas.

CREW CHIEF RYAN BERGENTY

“We are going into this weekend expecting the unexpected. A race like this has never happened in NASCAR before so anything can happen. With no data to look back on, we are going to have to make the most of practice to get a feel of the track so we can qualify up front.”

DRIVER TODD GILLILAND

“This race is going to be crazy. I don’t know what to expect but I can’t wait. I’m super excited to have gener8tor Skills be a part of this weekend, hopefully all of Chicago gets to learn about their program.

It all starts with practice. Myself and the 38 team are going to have to gather as much data as possible from practice. It may be the most important practice session of the season.”

About Front Row Motorsports

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

RFK Advance | Chicago

Chicago Street Race Event Info:
Track Info: Chicago Street Race, 12-turn, 2.2-mile road course
Date: Sunday, July 2
Time: 5:30 p.m. ET
Series: NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Format: 100 laps, 220 miles, Stages: 20-25-55
TV: NBC
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90)

Weekend Schedule:
Saturday: 1:30 p.m. ET, Practice (USA, NBC Sports App, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
Saturday: 2:30 p.m. ET, Qualifying (USA, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
Sunday: 5:30 p.m. ET, Race (NBC, Peacock, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Pace Laps:

  • For the first time in history, NASCAR heads to the streets of a major city as Chicago hosts the NASCAR Cup Series for the Chicago Street Race.
  • The course features 12 turns and spans 2.2 miles in length, and is settled along some of Chicago’s top tourist attractions.
  • Given the uniqueness of the event, teams will have a full, 50-minute practice session on Saturday, just prior to their qualifying session.

6 Team Info:
Crew Chief: Matt McCall
Partner: Elk Grove Village

17 Team Info:
Crew Chief: Scott Graves
Partner: Fastenal

Keselowski on Road Courses
Starts: 39
Wins: —
Top-10s: 11
Poles: 1

  • Keselowski makes his 40th Cup start on a road course this weekend, where he has 11 top-10s all-time on road courses.
  • Thus far on two road courses in 2023, Keselowski has finishes of 35th (COTA – mechanical issue) and 16th (Sonoma).

Buescher on Road Courses
Starts: 28
Wins: —
Top-10s: 9
Poles: —

  • Buescher is arguably one of the top storyline drivers entering the weekend at Chicago as he holds a streak of seven-straight top-10 finishes on road courses.
  • Dating back to the ROVAL last fall (2022) where he finished sixth, Buescher finished ninth at Watkins Glen last summer, 10th at the Indy Road Course, sixth at Road America and second at Sonoma. This season, Buescher finished eighth at COTA, and just a few weeks ago ran fourth at Sonoma. His streak of seven-straight is the longest of any active driver in the Cup Series.
  • Overall, Buescher will make his 29th road course Cup start. He has nine top-10s overall and four finishes inside the top five, with a 14.4 average finish.

RFK Historically on Road Courses
Cup Wins: 5 (Mark Martin, 1993-95, Watkins Glen; Mark Martin, 1997, Sonoma; Carl Edwards, 2014, Sonoma)

  • RFK on the Road: As an organization, RFK has made 248 starts on road courses in the Cup Series with five wins, 87 top-10s and 41 finishes inside the top five with a 17.5 average finish.

Last Time Out & Where They Stand
Nashville: Brad Keselowski battled to an 11th-place finish Sunday night at Nashville Superspeedway, while Chris Buescher settled for an 18th-place finish in a race that saw just two non-stage cautions.

Points Standings (6: 11th, 17: 12th): Keselowski and Buescher flipped points positions coming out of Nashville, with Keselowski now back in 11th, a point ahead of Buescher in 12th. A gap of 68 points separates Buescher from the next-closest driver without a win.

Connor Mosack’s Got Street Cred at Chicago

24-Year-Old Racer is the Rare Driver Entered in The Loop 121 NASCAR Xfinity Series Race With Previous Street-Course Experience;
Chicago-Based Porter Pipe & Supply Backing Mosack at NASCAR’s Inaugural Chicago Street Race Weekend

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (June 27, 2023) – Connor Mosack is not clairvoyant, but the 24-year-old racecar driver already knows what to expect when NASCAR hits the streets of downtown Chicago July 1-2 for the inaugural Chicago Street Race Weekend.

Mosack is the rare driver with previous street-course experience who is entered in The Loop 121 NASCAR Xfinity Series race on Saturday.

“The one thing about a first-time venue is that it’s new for everybody, so everyone is on a pretty level playing field, but I do think that for once this year, I actually have a little bit of an edge because I’ve got some real-world, street-race experience,” said Mosack, an Xfinity Series rookie who will race for powerhouse Joe Gibbs Racing in The Loop 121. “That’ll help me get up to speed a little faster, and maybe help me in qualifying, but I also expect everyone to adapt pretty quickly. It’s going to level out as the day goes on and everyone gets more laps.”

Mosack’s street-course experience came in two starts in the TA2 division of the Trans Am Series at the Music City Grand Prix in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. He started second and led nine laps before finishing third in the inaugural event in 2021. In his return to Nashville in 2022, Mosack qualified fourth and grabbed the lead on the opening lap. He proceeded to lead the 39-car field for 26 laps before finishing second.

“We put together two good weekends there in Nashville,” Mosack said. “We were fast in practice both years, we qualified well both years, and both years we led laps and I feel like I made good passes for the lead and didn’t really make any mistakes leading under green.

“The first year, I definitely cost myself the win on the last restart – I don’t think I had my brakes where they needed to be. And the following year, nothing really happened, I just feel like we kind of lost our speed toward the end and I might’ve been taking care of the brakes too much when we got out front.

“It’s just so hard to get everything perfect to where you need it, and it’s easy to make a mistake. That’s probably the biggest thing – staying out of trouble. If you can do that and keep your car clean, you’ll be in good shape to make some moves at the end of the race.”

That valuable, real-world knowledge is what Mosack brings to Chicago and the temporary 2.2-mile, 12-turn street circuit that will host NASCAR for the first time with Saturday’s Xfinity Series race.

“The biggest takeaway from those street-course races at Nashville was just getting comfortable running up close to the walls,” Mosack said. “Scott Lagasse, who I drove for in Trans Am, told me that if your car had sideview mirrors on it, you want to scrape it on the outside wall turning in, scrape the inside one at the apex, and then scrape the outside one on exit. It’s about getting comfortable with those last few inches against the wall.

“That’s where the track’s going to have the most grip late in the race, where there’s a little less rubber to slide on. It’s also going to give you the most radius at the corner and allow you to carry the most speed. But, obviously, the more risks you take, the more likely you are to catch the fence at some point. If you catch the outside here and there, it’s probably not going to hurt you too bad, but clipping the inside could definitely send you too hard into the outside wall.”

In addition to street cred, Mosack brings Chicago-based Porter Pipe & Supply to The Loop 121 where he will drive the No. 19 Porter Pipe & Supply Toyota GR Supra. Porter Pipe & Supply is a third-generation, family-owned and operated wholesale supplier of commercial and industrial pipe, valves, fittings, plumbing supplies, HVAC and refrigeration equipment and mechanical products.

“Ever since the Chicago Street Race was announced, we’ve been more than curious, and now that it’s here, there’s a palpable sense of anticipation and excitement with our customers and within our company,” said Nick Porter, CEO, Porter Pipe & Supply. “We’re proud Chicagoans and this event brings a tremendous amount of pride. It’s an incredibly unique way for us to take care of our customers in our hometown. Seeing the Porter Pipe & Supply car in a NASCAR race will be another milestone moment for our family-owned company.”

Mosack brokered the partnership with Porter Pipe & Supply, putting his degree in business entrepreneurship from High Point (N.C.) University to good use.

“I’m incredibly honored to partner with Porter Pipe & Supply for the Chicago Street Race. Our Toyota GR Supra looks great,” Mosack said. “I’ve gotten to know Nick Porter fairly well through this process and I’m looking forward to meeting all their people. We visit their headquarters on Thursday and they’ve got a lot of people coming to the track on Saturday and Sunday. They’re all pumped, just as we are. It’s going to be a great event and we aim to give ‘em something they can really cheer about.”

If it feels like Mosack works as fast as he drives, it’s because he does. The Charlotte, North Carolina-native is on a condensed schedule.

Mosack didn’t start racing until he was 18, bucking the trend of drivers who begin their careers at age four or five in go-karts. Instead, he enjoyed a well-rounded and worldly childhood. He played football and lacrosse in middle school and high school, and volunteered with the charitable organization Open Eyes on a mission trip to Rwanda and Uganda in 2017. It wasn’t until his senior year in high school that Mosack was introduced to Legend Cars. As soon as he sat behind the wheel, Mosack knew it was where he belonged. After winning five Legend Car championships, Mosack transitioned to Late Model stock cars in 2019.

Mosack ran the full CARS Late Model Stock Tour in 2020 and promptly won its rookie-of-the-year title. He then augmented his Late Model schedule that year with four Trans Am races before committing to the full TA2 schedule in 2021 and 2022. In those two seasons driving for TeamSLR, Mosack never finished outside of the top-four in the championship standings, scoring two wins and earning five poles.

“I learned a ton racing in Trans Am with TeamSLR, especially in terms of racecraft – when you can take advantage of opportunities and when you need to save yourself, and also just how to make better lap times,” Mosack said. “The learning curve was steep, but that made our success all the more rewarding.”

That success is ready to be rewarded again at Chicago, with a layout that includes Michigan Avenue and South Lake Shore Drive.

“NASCAR did a really good job with the layout, especially when you’re running by yourself. It’s a fun track to run laps on,” Mosack said. “The straightaways are wide, or at least not narrow, but some of the corners definitely narrow up and we’ll probably only be able to run single-file through there in the race. So, I think a couple of those corners will be tough.

“Turn four, that’s probably the fastest section of the track. It’s like a medium-speed corner, but it’s also pretty rough, so if you carry a little too much speed, you definitely can get to bouncing over the bumps and lose control of the front end and hit the wall on the outside pretty easily, and if that happens, it might block the track for the cars behind. I see that as probably the biggest trouble spot for somebody.

“And if someone’s making a pass on you in a few corners, I think you almost have to let them go. It’s going to be tough to race them through the corner with how narrow some of them are. Those are the places where people will probably get themselves in trouble.”

Even when there isn’t a NASCAR race, defensive driving in Chicago is a necessity. However, unlike regular city driving, Mosack and his Xfinity Series counterparts will also be on offense.

“I think the best passing opportunity is turn six, coming off the back straightaway,” Mosack said. “That’s probably your best chance just because it’s a longer straightaway. You get a good run out of the corner onto the straightaway, and then it’s a heavy braking zone. So if you’re able to outbrake somebody, that’ll be a good place to do it.

“It’s a really tight corner that you’re coming to, so if you get to someone’s inside, you’re almost forcing them to give you the spot. I don’t think they’re going to be able to race you and clear you on exit, unless they really trust you or you’re very careful.

“I think there, and maybe into turn one, that’s probably the next widest and longest true straightaway, but there are a lot of corners where if you’re right on someone’s bumper, you can just poke out, even if you get your nose only to their rear tire, they’re kind of forced to let you in.”

When to force the issue and when to just ride is perhaps the biggest balancing act in navigating Saturday’s 55-lap race.

“Patience will be very important. It’s important everywhere, especially on road courses in these cars, because if you miss one braking zone, all it takes is one corner where you drive in too deep, or get it wheel-hopping, and you end up in the wall. You’re either out of the race or you’ve lost all your track position,” Mosack said. “Anybody who can just be patient and maybe drive a little bit under the limit the whole race but still be fast, they’re the ones who are going to be in the best position at the end of the race.”

Sage advice from someone who knows.

Mosack hits the track for the first time on Saturday with practice at 10 a.m. CDT/11 a.m. EDT followed by qualifying at 11 a.m. CDT/12 p.m. EDT. The Loop 121 gets underway at 4 p.m. CDT/5 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.