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CHEVROLET NCS: Three Camaro ZL1s to Lineup in the Top-10 at Phoenix

NASCAR CUP SERIES
PHOENIX RACEWAY
NASCAR CUP SERIES CHAMPIONSHIP
TEAM CHEVY POST-QUALIFYING
NOVEMBER 5, 2022

THREE CAMARO ZL1s TO LINEUP IN THE TOP-10 AT PHOENIX
Championship 4 Driver Elliott Qualifies Fifth

· Three Chevrolet drivers powered their Camaro ZL1s to a top-10 qualifying effort at Phoenix Raceway, led by 2021 NASCAR Cup Series Champion Kyle Larson and the No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1 team in fourth.

· Chase Elliott was second-fastest of the NASCAR Cup Series Championship 4 drivers, qualifying fifth in his No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1.

· NBC will broadcast the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, November 6. Live coverage can also be found on the NBCSports Gold App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-20 STARTING LINEUP:
POS. DRIVER
4th Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Camaro ZL1
5th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1
8th William Byron, No. 24 Axalta Camaro ZL1
11th Tyler Reddick, No. 8 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Camaro ZL1
15th Austin Dillon, No. 3 Get Bioethanol Camaro ZL1
16th AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Celsius Camaro ZL1

TOP-FIVE UNOFFICIAL STARTING LINEUP:
POS. DRIVER
1st Joey Logano (Ford)
2nd Ryan Blaney (Ford)
3rd Chase Briscoe (Ford)
4th Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
5th Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – Post-Qualifying Press Conference Transcript:

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by Chase Elliott. We’ll get right to questions.

Q. Chase, through practice now, through qualifying, where do you feel like you guys are set for tomorrow’s race?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I mean, honestly just kind of ready to go from the standpoint of a lot of times I think it’s kind of hard to tell where you’re at, what you have, how the race is going to unfold until the race unfolds.

Yeah, just ready to get tomorrow rolling and try to execute a perfect day. That’s all we can do now.

I was pretty pleased with our qualifying effort. I thought we went faster than we did yesterday for a one-lap pace. I was pleasantly surprised with that. Hopefully it holds on tomorrow and we can have a good day.

Q. Chase, you won the championship here in 2020 obviously with the neon yellow 9 for Jimmie’s retirement. I notice the neon 9 is on the car again. Who made the decision?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I have no idea. I don’t know. I just saw it when I got here.

Q. Is there anything that you view this race that could be more unique than the other championship races you’ve been in here?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I don’t think so. I mean, for me personally, it’s still a great opportunity. Really all of the things that I feel like I have applied to me personally, and how I viewed the week, gone about it the past two years, I feel the same.

I don’t really feel like there’s anything that stands out a ton to me personally, or at least that’s going to change my view on it right now.

Q. What are your expectations of this race? We talked to you guys about a million other things because it’s the last race of the season. Actually in the car itself, what are your expectations of how it will go down?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I don’t know. I mean, I think at this point in the year, with all the crazy things that we’ve seen, I don’t think anything should really surprise us anymore, regardless of what it is.

Yeah, I don’t know. We’ll just have to wait and see. Like I said, I have a really hard time sitting here and trying to dissect what’s going to happen in the future. I don’t know. We’ll do our homework tonight and give it our best shot tomorrow. We hope we can get the job done. That’s all I can do.

I feel like we’ve done a good job as a team throughout the week controlling the things that we have directly in front of us in our hands. Frankly, that’s all I can really do.

So we’re about as ready as we’re going to get for tomorrow. I’m looking forward to it.

Q. Once you get done debriefing, what do you do? Do you watch the Xfinity race? Go for a hike?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Well, the Dawgs have a big game going on right now. I was going to check up on them in a minute.

I’m going to watch the race, see if anything super surprising happens from a track perspective, maybe guys picking up on something today you might apply tomorrow.

Yeah, for the most part normal Saturday for me. Going to enjoy that.

Q. It seems like you’re ready to go, get racing. If the race were right now, you’d be almost happier. How hard is the waiting period this week leading up to the last race and the off-season?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I mean, that’s every week, though, right? You got six or seven days in between all these things. It’s not like we can race on Sunday, then we have a midweek race typically or anything like that.

Sometimes I wish we did. I feel like it would be kind of cool. That’s pretty normal. Honestly, the week went by pretty quick. It was a pretty short week because we had media and stuff on Tuesday, we still had our regular meetings from a competition standpoint, then had to be out here for media again early on Thursday.

Yeah, no, it’s been fun. I think from a driver standpoint, obviously still being in the Playoffs at this point in the season is a great accomplishment, something that as a team I’m super proud of all of us for achieving that.

It’s not the end goal. You got to balance that a little bit. I feel like we’re very hungry. We want to go give it our best effort tomorrow. That’s what we intend to do.

Q. I feel like you seem to be in a lighter mood than other championship weekends or other weeks throughout the course of the season. On paper it looks like you guys have had the least momentum that you’ve had all season. What is your mindset? Can you explain what the last week leading into what this weekend has been like?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I mean, I touched on what the week has been like leading in, so… That’s really what the week has been for me.

Yeah, I mean, I think my response to the first part of your question is the story’s not over, right? We’re still writing the last chapter. The last nine weeks, in my view, are extremely irrelevant as it pertains to what happens tomorrow.

The narrative is there for the writing. It’s our opportunity and our job to make sure it goes our way.

Q. Talking with your dad the other day, he referenced how time seems to go by so quickly. He thinks back to Indianapolis and says, look, that was 20 years ago, and he was next to me in Victory Lane, and we’re kissing the bricks. He’s like, What are you doing that for? Just about how time passes. When you think about 20 years from that moment, how do you view from that moment to where you are now?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I think he touched on it, right? Time just goes by so fast. I’m approaching my seventh year, the end of my seventh season, in Cup. For me, that always puts it in perspective as to just how fast time has gone by, especially since I’ve been doing the NASCAR thing full-time since 2014.

I mean, I assume that’s the case, as you get older, regardless of what you do. I know since I got out of high school, things have just gone by faster and faster every year. It becomes very difficult to enjoy a lot of things, right?

I want to do well. I want to do my job. I think you have to mentally be where you need to be to do that. I think sometimes that can take away from being able to enjoy certain moments or certain instances.

But I try really hard to because I know you’re not going to get this time back, you’re not going to get these years back. I certainly respect that aspect of life and how fragile it can be, frankly.

I’m super proud of where we’re at as a team. I’ve enjoyed being able to have the opportunity to go to these races with my family. We’ve been able to live this for many years. That’s not something I take for granted. We’ve experienced some incredible moments as a family that I would never dreamed could ever happen. I’m sure they didn’t either.

I admire those things. I respect those things. I try to enjoy them the best I can while also trying to make sure I’m doing my part for my team and living here and right now.

That can be a tough balance for anybody I think, regardless of what you do, what your job is. I don’t think that’s any different for me or what we do here.

Q. He talked about one of the more special moments, when you guys were in Colorado, go-kart racing. No pressure, all about fun. What does that period mean for you?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I was probably, yeah, 10, maybe 9, 10, 11, somewhere in there.

Q. Are there particular memories of that?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah.

Q. What kind of stands out?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I mean, it was a unique point I guess in his life, too, because he had decided he wanted to quit racing full-time. That was when he decided, he and Mom decided they wanted to move to Colorado.

Obviously that’s a big transition for any family, going from the East Coast, going out there, living out west.

It was a transition I think we are all willing to do. I didn’t have much say, I was a child. I was along for the ride. I enjoyed my time. I’m glad we did it.

Racing was not as popular, I guess, out there as what it was back east, closer to Georgia. So, yeah, racing go-karts was kind of the only thing. There was a track out in Grand Junction, there were two or three tracks out in Denver. Basically they would have a state championship-type thing. You would go and you would run all those tracks inside the state. We did that for a couple summers, had a blast doing it.

Yeah, we did a couple really fun years of being out there. Dad was, I guess, thinking he was retired at the time. Just enjoyed being dad, enjoyed going to the racetrack and us racing together, working on the go-karts, cleaning trailers, all the things that come along with it.

Yeah, they were special years. Certainly glad I have them to look back on.

ROSS CHASTAIN, NO. 1 WORLDWIDE EXPRESS/ADVENT CAMARO ZL1 – Post-Qualifying Press Conference Transcript:

THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by Ross Chastain.

We’ll go straight to questions for Ross.

Q. You’re starting 25th, so how concerned are you?

ROSS CHASTAIN: That’s why I was late. I was trying to finish my qualifying lap (laughter). Still finishing turn four.

I mean, yeah, look, I’d much rather be up front. If anything we’ve shown all year and continue to show is our Trackhouse cars can pass. I can’t wait to pass these guys. It’s going to make for a great story.

Q. Obviously looks like you’re getting quite the reception around here wherever you go. How is that not a distraction to what you’re trying to accomplish?

ROSS CHASTAIN: It’s normal to me. Video, caught me out there (laughter).

No, yeah, there’s more people, but I always pop out in the stands and watch the races. It’s nothing new. I’m not changing me, right? Yeah, if I can’t get there or something, then we’ll set up a different way to get in and out.

Right now it takes me a couple extra minutes. Big deal. I got nothing else going on but watching the Truck race and cheering for my buddy Zane.

Q. Are you surprised by that reaction?

ROSS CHASTAIN: I am. Especially as bad as my peers make me feel for doing it, they’re all upset about it. Everybody else in the whole dang world seems like it’s good, right? Definitely the fans, they love it.

So I’m surprised on both sides, though. I’m surprised it was that positive, and I’m also surprised by the negativity. It’s kind of one or the other. You’re either one way or the other.

Q. Have you heard from your peers directly? Do you hear what they say to us?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Not that much directly. It’s funny how that works. See ’em during the week, everything is fine. See them around the track, everything is fine. Spend the whole day with ’em Media Day, get somewhere else, they got a lot of thoughts.

Q. One more on the fan reaction, the positivity. Given this is such an important week for you, can you even appreciate it? Are you going to have to reflect on this reception that you’re getting, this warm welcome?

ROSS CHASTAIN: I feel like I can because I just live in the moment of, like, one box open at a time. Right now it’s this weekend. When I’m not actively with my crew or in the car, yeah, I think about stuff. But I’m totally immersed in whatever I’m doing.

Yeah, talking out both sides of my mouth. Yes, I will be able to appreciate this more in 10 years. But right now it’s everything that I thought it would be. It’s scary as heck. It’s awesome. And I’m living through it. My group is letting me experience it in my own way. They’re giving me space to let me do it. Coaching me along the way, for sure. I got everybody here.

Yes and no. Like yes and yes. Now and later.

Q. Why is it scary?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Driving a Cup car in the Cup Series, it’s always scary. It has been since the first race with Jay Robinson, hasn’t changed since. It’s been scary every race day. So I don’t expect that to change.

Q. Roughly 24 hours before the green flag, do you feel nervous? Excited? What are you feeling?

ROSS CHASTAIN: I mean, look, there is some dejection about qualifying, right? We put a lot into it, and I couldn’t put a lap together. Was too loose.

But it’s going to be so cool when we start passing people, just one after the other, the next and the next. Like, I get to feel all this about driving a race car. I get to feel happy, I get to feel sad, I get to feel scared, I get to feel nervous. It’s so cool. It doesn’t feel cool in the moment, but it is so cool.

Q. What are you doing tonight?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Seeing everybody that came out here. Trackhouse is going to have a little get-together. Everyone involved with the Trackhouse brand, see them, hang out with them for a while. That way tomorrow is a little bit more all business.

Q. You mentioned having everybody out here. Among those is your brother who has been helping out on the Trackhouse side, also been doing day to day at the farm. What is it like to have him on this whole journey?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Look, he’s my best friend. It’s me and him against the world. No matter what, we’ll always have each other’s backs.

As I go through things in life, as he goes through things in life, we include each other. We’re incredibly fortunate that our family dynamic has — sometimes it doesn’t seem perfect that it’s us as our family against the world. That was taught to us from my granddad, and my dad says it was from his granddad, and it keep going back.

It’s just the most natural thing, to have family around us. For me and Chad, we’re similar enough in age. We’re six years apart, but I’m probably a little young-acting for my age, he’s a little wise for his age, and it puts us in a spot where business and in life we can do a lot of stuff together.

I want him involved and helping me. I feel like having him close to me makes me better.

Q. Listening to you, has it been more difficult now that people have expectations and attention on you? When you started, you didn’t have that. Anywhere you were going was up. Now there are a lot of expectations. You got more fans, people who think they want you to win a championship. Is it harder because all of that is on you now than before you had it?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Not this week because it’s been a week of firsts, right? First time we’re coming out here in the Final 4, first time there’s this many fans looking at us, even, even acknowledging the 1 car and our group.

Yeah, I don’t think it’s sunk in on the competition side yet other than just the fact that we’re in the Final 4 is wild and it’s awesome.

Q. Your debrief that you just had, I know you can’t give details of it, but what was that like? Your crew chief is pretty calm, too. What was that like?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Just looking through information, learning everything we can. We’re going to be back here in the spring to race again, so we want to qualify better, we want to see what we can execute practice better with.

It was just the same thing we always do. We just went through step by step what all happened, what we can do better, so…

Q. With having so many people around this weekend, I’m sure you’ve been swapping stories, are there any that hit a little different now that you made it to the Championship 4?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Well, not any one. It’s seeing faces of people, Xfinity, Truck Series garage. Seeing crew members, team owners, people I’ve worked with over the years, seeing their smile when they see me, how they’re excited for me, right?

Yeah, I’d say at track that’s been the coolest part. All the techs from people back home that can’t make it out have been really cool, too. But those in-person moments have been really, like, just made me smile and make me feel good.

I keep going back to, how cool that I can feel this way about racing. How cool is it that someone else feels so strongly and so happy for somebody else that they might have worked with seven years ago or 10 years ago or seven months ago?

It’s cool to see just human interaction. To have that connection with somebody, they can just walk up and smile, we can hug, we don’t even have to say anything. We know how happy they are. They’re happy for me.

Q. I was talking with Johnny Davis earlier this week. He was telling me the story about how you got your first start at Dover. He helped put you in Jay’s car. The way he was telling the story was he said when he was telling you about it, you’re like, I don’t know if I’m ready to be in a Cup car.

He’s like, Boy, you’re ready to get in a Cup car.

What do you recall about that experience?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Yeah, absolutely. The sponsorship was on our car, and they got approached by TriStar, Mark Smith’s group, to do the 72 car as well. They just added on to my program. They asked us what we thought because we’d been partners with them for a little while.

Tony and Johnny said, We can put Ross in an equal car to that. Put that money, we’ll put that straight into his car. So they did.

I told them no. Like, they didn’t even blink. We’re not asking you if you want to, we’re telling you you’re going to do it.

I just never thought I was ready for Cup. I’m glad that they were stern with it. Because if they would have given me my choice, I wouldn’t have done it. Wouldn’t have gone to Dover for my first Cup race. No way.

Q. Coming up the way you did, to have that opportunity, anybody would jump at it regardless. Looking back, are you even kind of confused why you’d say no? It seems like it would be the natural reaction. Here is a Cup ride, your opportunity to make your Cup debut, not at the best track for you, but most guys would jump into it. For you to say no immediately…

ROSS CHASTAIN: It’s scary. It is. It’s Cup racing. It’s hard. You see the guys that do it. Put them on the highest pedestal that I have in my wheel barrel to put them on.

I just and don’t view myself as ready for that. That’s me. I don’t know. I don’t really know how to answer your question other than that was my thoughts and I still don’t believe that I was ready until I actually got in the race. Practice and qualifying, I wasn’t ready. I got in the race, it all clicked, and we’re fine.

Q. So much of this presser today has been about the fear and the scary part of being in this Championship 4. The fear that you’ve had, you said racing Cup is scary, how do you balance that against the moments that you need to have the aggression, to make the move that nobody else will make?

ROSS CHASTAIN: Yeah, I’ve been sitting here as I’ve said all this, and I thought about what all of y’all are going to write about, how it’s going to be about Ross is scared. I’m like, Oh, man, that’s probably the opposite of what these other guys are saying (laughter).

I just want to speak the truth. I do have those feelings, and they ebb and flow, they go up and down.

I’m willing to do whatever it takes. Once I get in the car, that’s gone. All that fear is gone. Once I got in that first Cup race, the only thing that was different in that race and this race, in that race I was looking around at track, that’s Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie lapping me, but still I was amazed I was racing against those guys.

Yeah, once I get out there… When I’m preparing, when we’re prepping for these races and these weekends, there’s no fear. There’s a way we’re going to prepare. We’re going to learn what we can, and we’re going to put that into action when we get to the track.

I can only control what I can control. I’ll do whatever it takes to be prepared and put that into action in the car. The old saying about, like, we change when we put our helmets on, I know that I do. I can block all of this out. It’s not even that I can, it’s just that it happens. Everything’s gone. There’s no thoughts. Then the conversation I had right before the race, that’s not racing related, if someone asks me with my group on the business side, if we talk about something 30 minutes before the race, they come back to me 30 minutes after, they pick up the conversation like nothing’s changed. I’m like, Start over, what did we talk about? I’ve blocked it all out, it’s gone. It was all about the competition.

As long as I never lose that, I think that’s what makes me stronger in the car. Doesn’t always help me out of the car. Doesn’t help me up here talking about how scared I am. Once I get in the car, it’s all good.

Q. Have you allowed yourself through all of that to enjoy this process and enjoy the weekend? I know Thursday you were talking about how cool it was to be on the stage talking to the media. Have you allowed yourself to enjoy the moment?

ROSS CHASTAIN: I have. Not right after qualifying. It’s not even been long enough right now to enjoy it. I didn’t enjoy anything from the time I was coming to the green to now, there’s not enjoyment in the last hour.

Yeah, just in the hauler this morning, seeing some of the guys, one of the guys was noticeably nervous. We started cutting up. Everything loosened up. Everything was fine.

I think he probably just had too much coffee. That’s the problem. Little jitters.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports


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About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Joey Logano Wins the Pole for Championship Race at Phoenix

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Cup Series Championship Race | Saturday, November 5, 2022

Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang, won the pole for tomorrow’s Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway. Logano met with the media afterwards:

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – HOW MUCH OF A BIG DEAL IS IT TO QUALIFY ON THE POLE FOR THIS RACE? “It keeps the pressure on them. That’s the goal. When you get here it’s keep the pressure on the competition. This team does amazing under the pressure and that’s why we thrive in playoffs and Championship 4 type moments. I love it. It makes me better and I think it makes my whole race team better as well. I’ve been saying and we’ve been preparing and had a lot of time to go over a lot of things here and went over a lot last night and this morning with Paul and the team and seems like we made some good adjustments, at least for qualifying it showed up, and hopefully that continues into the race. It’s a good place to start, better place to finish. The first pit stall will be helpful. We’ve got a good pit crew, but I think also when you can add that with the best pit stall – the camera line is right there in front of it and not too far ahead of it, so that’s a big advantage.”

DOES THIS MAKE YOU THE FAVORITE TOMORROW AND ARE YOU THE GUY WHO FEELS THE LEAST PRESSURE AND HAS THE BEST CAR? “We’ve been the favorite to win since the beginning of the year if you ask me. That’s my mindset. That’s the way I go to a racetrack. If I don’t go to a racetrack like that, I shouldn’t show up, so I’ve always said it doesn’t matter what everyone says about favorites and odds all that garbage that everyone posts. I don’t care. I know what my odds should be and I know what I feel like they are, so I feel great about our position. Like I said, I’ve got a great team and we’ve proven today we’ve got a good horse, so we’re ready to rock and roll.”

WHAT WAS THE EMPHASIS ON GETTING THAT FIRST PIT STALL THROUGHOUT THE WEEKEND? “It’s definitely part of it and the facts are it’s great. Qualifying means a lot, don’t get me wrong. It means a little bit less when you’re in the Championship 4 because at worst you’re gonna have the fourth-best stall, which is still a pretty good stall here. One is the best one, for sure, but there’s also the effect of the clean air and tuning your car to clean air and staying up front and kind of working the race in that way it’s helpful. It’s a good place to be.”

DO YOU HAVE MORE MIND GAMES THAN THE OTHER THREE DRIVERS? “I don’t need to play mind games – just do my job. I don’t need to go out there and do that. You control yourself and your own mindset. I’ve been saying all week long that it’s not just another race. This is way more than that. I say that because it is and saying that makes me better, so that’s why I go that way. When everyone else is saying it’s just another race and we try to take the pressure off, I just don’t believe that’s the correct way of doing it.”

DID YOU FEEL LIKE THAT WAS A POLE LAP? “No (laughing), because it went slower than the run before. It seemed like tire fall off was a real thing. I kind of got done with my lap and was like, ‘Eh.’ I thought it was gonna be like third or fourth probably, just not as good as what it was the first run. I overcompensated some of the adjustments I wanted to make as a driver and probably didn’t adjust the car enough as much as we needed to for some other things, but I guess everybody’s tires fell off and that was a better lap than I thought it was.”

WHAT DOES TONIGHT LOOK LIKE FOR YOU? “Once I’m done with you guys, we’ve got a strategy meeting. We want to go over what we want the race to look like for the 22 team and what we’re gonna do in certain scenarios and try to put all of that stuff together, which we already have. I don’t really know why we’re doing it, but we’re doing it just to go over it again. And then my family comes in tonight, so I’ll be able to spend a little bit of time. Once we’re done with that, we’re ready. We’re prepared. We’ve had plenty of time to go over everything, so at that point it’s just probably take a little break. The last couple of days have been pretty intense for everyone. You think of preparing for practice, practice last night, early this morning going over things and all that prep, and then to qualifying. A good night’s rest and maybe a little walk with the family tonight and we’ll call it good.”

WILL THE KIDS SLEEP WELL? “We’ve just got Hudson. The trip is really far. The other ones are really young and we debated about doing this. Jameson is great, but he wakes up at 5 a.m. no matter what. We tried putting him on west coast time because we knew we were coming out here, so we tried putting him to sleep later and later, but it turns out the kid can go to sleep at 10 or 6:30 and he wakes up at 5. It just doesn’t matter, so we said, ‘We’ll see you when we get home, bud. Love you. (Laughing).”

GMS Racing NCWTS Race Recap: Phoenix Raceway

Grant Enfinger, No. 23 Champion Power Equipment Chevrolet Silverado RST

START: 13TH
FINISH: 6TH
POINTS: 7TH

Quote: “We had a lot of speed in our Champion Power Equipment Chevy last night in Phoenix. The restarts are always chaotic there, and unfortunately we sustained some damage trying to run up front. Our crew was able to go and fix everything to let us go back out and compete, and we were able to come away with another top-10 finish to end the season. Proud of everyone for their work ethic throughout the entire season, and I’m excited to see the progress that we’ll be able to make over the off season to contend even more next year.”

Jack Wood, No. 24 Quick Quack Car Wash Chevrolet Silverado RST

START: 16TH
FINISH: 29TH
POINTS: 24TH

Quote: “We didn’t have the run that we were hoping for with our Quick Quack Car Wash Chevy last night in Phoenix, but all in all I would say that the tenacity of our No. 24 team really shined throughout the entire season. I’ve had the opportunity to learn so much while driving for GMS Racing over the past two seasons, so hopping in their truck for the last time was definitely a bittersweet moment for me personally. I’m looking forward to what’s ahead in my career, but I can’t understate the appreciation I’ve had for everyone that’s worked with us all year. Thankful for the opportunities that we’ve had together!”

ABOUT GMS RACING:

GMS Racing competes full-time in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series operating the No. 23 and the No. 24 Chevrolet Silverado RSTs, as well as the ARCA Menards Series with the No. 43 Chevrolet SS. Since the team was formed in 2012, GMS Racing has won five titles across multiple series, including the 2016 and 2020 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship, the 2015 ARCA Menards Series championship, as well as the 2019 & 2020 ARCA Menards Series East championships. GMS has grown to occupy several buildings located in Statesville, N.C. including operations for GMS Fabrication. The GMS Racing campus also houses operations for Petty GMS, a two car full-time NASCAR Cup Series team formed in 2021.

SOCIAL MEDIA:

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

Rev Racing to Field Full-Time Truck Entry in 2023

Concord, NC — Rev Racing announced today they will be expanding into the National Series in 2023, fielding a full-time ride in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with its technical alliance partner, Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM). Nick Sanchez, recent 2022 ARCA Menards Series Champion, will pilot the No. 2 Gainbridge Chevrolet for Rev Racing and owners Max and Jennifer Siegel.

Over the last 20 years, Siegel has made tremendous strides to increase diversity in racing by offering opportunities to women and minorities, including over 125 drivers, over 100 pit crew members, and more than 20 interns and young professionals.

This expansion into the National Series offers yet another platform and pipeline for young drivers to advance to the highest levels of the sport.

Rev Racing has had a collective 26 wins, 119 top 5s, and 232 top 10 finishes in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series/ARCA Menards Series, with drivers finishing in the top 10 in points in every season. Rev Racing holds two Championship titles in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East/ARCA Menards Series, with Kyle Larson in 2012 and most recently with Nick Sanchez in 2022.

“This is a pivotal moment for our organization, “ said Rev Racing owner Max Siegel. “With our unwavering focus on a commitment to diversify the sport while putting a model in place to train and prepare drivers for the next level of competition, and because of our strategic partnership with Gainbridge announced earlier this year, we have never been more prepared for this next stage of advancement. Working with our technical partners at KBM and Chevrolet, we know Rev Racing and Nick are positioned for competitive excellence.”

With Rev Racing capturing the 2022 AMS Drivers Championship and KBM standing as one of the most-winningest teams in the Truck Series, the partnership was an optimal choice for continued success as collaborators. Both teams are exploring opportunities to expand competitive alliances with Rev Racing’s ARCA program as well.

“Unofficially we’ve been a part of helping former Rev Racing drivers take the next step in their NASCAR careers in the Truck Series, with Bubba Wallace and Daniel Suárez both getting victories in a KBM truck, so we’re looking forward to aligning with Max, Jennifer and everyone at Rev Racing to now officially be a part of the pipeline for young drivers in their diversity program to continue to advance into the National Series of NASCAR,” said Kyle Busch. “Nick is an impressive young driver, winning the ARCA title this year and has had some solid runs in the Xfinity Series as well, so we’re looking forward to having him be the trendsetter of what we’re confident will be a successful program for many years to come.”

Sanchez has spent five years competing with Rev Racing as a participant of the NASCAR Drive for Diversity Driver Development Program. He has earned an impressive 31 top 10s, 18 top 5s and 4 wins in his collective AMS career. He ended his rookie 2021 AMS season with a win at Kansas Speedway and 3rd in point standings and finished the 2022 AMS season with victories at Kansas, Talladega and Michigan and the Championship title. Sanchez has seen success in every level of competition he has participated in, which made him the optimal choice for the dedicated seat.

“I’m very excited to continue driving for Max and Rev Racing in the Truck Series in 2023,” said Nick Sanchez.” To be able to join forces with our technical partner, KBM, is a great opportunity for me to learn how to win on a regular basis. Continuing my relationship with Chevrolet and Gainbridge is something that I value greatly and this is seemingly another step in our long-term plan/goal.”

Gainbridge became a partner of Rev Racing this season, and is fully committed to the Rev Racing/Diversity Program and supporting the next-generation drivers, like Nick Sanchez, to drive more diversity into the field of motorsports. Both groups saw immediate alignment in their shared mission and focused-initiatives within the sport and beyond.

“We’re proud to support Nick Sanchez and watch him compete in the more advanced racing series. His tremendous progress is a prime example of how Rev Racing’s Drive for Diversity Program has elevated talented race car drivers,’’ said Dan Towriss, CEO and President of Group 1001, the parent company of Gainbridge. “We are committed to providing ongoing support for the next generation of drivers and driving more diversity into the field of motorsports.’’

The Rev Racing No. 2 Gainbridge Chevrolet will make its National Series debut in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with Nick Sanchez at Daytona International Speedway on February 17, 2023.

ABOUT Rev Racing: Rev Racing seeks to obtain the highest quality applicants representing diverse backgrounds and develop them into successful NASCAR drivers. Started by Max Siegel in 2009, Rev Racing manages the NASCAR Drive for Diversity Driver Development Program. Rev Racing currently operates and manages drivers in the Craftsman Truck Series, ARCA Menards Series, NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, and a youth racing initiative

ABOUT Kyle Busch Motorsports: Since debuting in 2010, Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM) has quickly established itself as one of the most successful teams in all of NASCAR. Owned by two-time Cup Series champion Kyle Busch and fueled by his passion for winning, the organization holds the Camping World Truck Series records for most career wins (98) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). In addition to collecting a series-record seven Owner’s Championships, the organization has produced two championship-winning drivers: Erik Jones (2015) and Christopher Bell (2017).

KBM prepares a fleet of race-winning vehicles out of its state-of-the art 77,000-square-foot facility in Mooresville, N.C. Fans can stay up-to-date with all the latest KBM news online at www.KyleBuschMotorsports.com, by liking the team on Facebook (KBMteam) and by following the team on Instagram (KBMteam), and Twitter (@KBMteam).

ABOUT Gainbridge: Gainbridge Insurance Agency, LLC (“Gainbridge”) a Group 1001 company, is an insurtech which strives to offer products that are simple, intuitive, and backed by smart technology with no complexity or hidden fees. Gainbridge empowers consumers to take control of their financial future with solutions that are accessible to everyone no matter their budget or financial knowledge.  Gainbridge’s digital-first distribution model underpins its mission to reach all communities, including those that have been historically underserved by the national financial system.  

Ford Performance NASCAR: Zane Smith Wins NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Title

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Lucas Oil 150 | Friday, November 4, 2022

FORD’S ZANE SMITH DRIVES F-150 TO NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES CHAMPIONSHIP

  • Zane Smith won his first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship behind the wheel of his No. 38 Front Row Motorsports F-150.
  • The championship is the first for Front Row Motorsports in any NASCAR series.
  • Smith has now finished 2nd, 2nd and 1st in the last three seasons.
  • Smith is the 3rd driver to win the NCWTS title with Ford, joining Greg Biffle (2000) and Matt Crafton (2019).
  • Smith swept the weekend as he won the pole and all three stages in the race.
  • Smith led a race-high five times for 77 laps in winning for the fourth time in 2022.
  • Ford ends the season with six wins and its third series title.

ZANE SMITH, No. 38 Michael Roberts Construction Ford F-150 – VICTORY LANE INTERVIEW – “I wasn’t gonna let it go down like that. I knew when I came out 11th, I’ve been in way uglier times before and I was either wrecked or I was coming home with the championship trophy and we got the big one.”

WHAT ABOUT THE MOVE ON THE BACKSTRETCH FOR THE FINAL RESTART. WHAT WERE YOU THINKING? “I’m gonna win this. There was no other option. I was either backing it in the fence wrecking, or I was leaving tonight with a championship trophy. There were no other options and when I saw the 18 get underneath me I was worried that I got him too loose underneath me. Fortunately, he stayed off of me. I have a lot of respect for all three of them. It’s pretty impressive for some of the racing we’ve seen lately for us three to go at it that hard and that clean.”

YOU HAVE BEEN RUNNER-UP THE LAST TWO YEARS. IS THIS EVERYTHING YOU THOUGHT IT WOULD BE? “I didn’t think it was gonna be that dramatic, but the third time is the charm.”

WHAT WAS DIFFERENT ABOUT THIS YEAR AND THIS TEAM TO ALLOW YOU TO GET IT DONE? “Last year and the year before we showed so much speed and should have won a lot more races than we did, but Bob Jenkins is the only reason why I’m here right now. Without him, none of this would be possible. When I came here all I cared about were the guys that were on this team. I had seen their work ethic and I knew the effort they put in and I know they want it as bad as I do. I didn’t care what the trucks or anything looked like all I knew is the work ethic was there and we could make a championship out of this team.”

MARK RUSHBROOK, Global Director, Ford Performance

WHAT A FINISH. WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS AFTER SEEING THAT? “What an incredible race tonight, an incredible season. I just have to give a big thank you to Front Row Motorsports, Bob Jenkins, Jerry Freeze and what they’ve done putting together this truck team. It’s just a great group of people. They gave Zane a great truck tonight, a fast truck and Zane took advantage of it. He drove that thing so well, especially on the final two restarts and went and got the win. He’s such a talent and I’m so happy he’s driving a Ford.”

Toyota Racing NCWTS Post-Race Recap — Phoenix 11.4.22

RHODES AND MAJESKI TAKE TOP-THREE FINISHES AT SEASON FINALE
Tundra Drivers Claim Six of Top-10 at Phoenix

PHOENIX, Ariz. (November 4, 2022) – Three Toyota Tundras battled within the Championship 4 for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship in Friday night’s race at Phoenix Raceway. Ben Rhodes (second) and Chandler Smith (third) battled to the checkered flag, but would come up just short of the championship to Zane Smith. Ty Majeski also battled for the championship, but a late-race accident put him to the 20th position at the conclusion of the race. Corey Heim (seventh) clinched the Truck Series Rookie of the Year honors.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Phoenix Raceway
Race 23 of 23 – 150 Laps, 150 Miles

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITION
1st, Zane Smith*
2nd, BEN RHODES
3rd, CHANDLER SMITH
4th, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
5th, STEWART FRIESEN
7th, COREY HEIM
9th, KADEN HONEYCUTT
12th, MATT CRAFTON
13th, LAYNE RIGGS
14th, TYLER ANKRUM
19th, CHASE PURDY
20th, TY MAJESKI
23rd, TYLER HILL
26th, CHRIS HACKER
27th, TIMMY HILL
30th, CHRISTIAN ECKES
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

BEN RHODES, No. 99 Kubota Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, ThorSport Racing

Finishing Position: 2nd

Could you have done anything differently in the final restart to hold off Zane Smith?

“I don’t know, two tires versus four, that was the name of the game. We didn’t have the pace all night that we needed to be up there and repeat so it was a great heads-up call by my crew chief. Ultimately, we just didn’t need that last caution. I think we could have held them off for the final few laps. I was giving him (Zane Smith) all the dirty air he could handle. I think we were going to be fine until that caution got us. On that last restart, I tried to get a jump, but two tires versus four, I just didn’t have the grip I needed. I did the best I could and threw a move on him, but didn’t have enough grip to make it stick. All in all, I’m proud of my Kubota Toyota Tundra team and everyone at ThorSport Racing. We just need to go back and do our homework and second is not fun. I’m going to mope my way back to Kentucky.”

What do you need to do to improve rolling into 2023?

“We just fight, fight, fight no matter what and I’ve got that down. We just have to find some more speed and get the consistency when it matters throughout the regular season. That will help make our Playoffs a little bit easier and maybe spend more time focusing on some more R&D or sim stuff. But for the most part, again, I’m proud of the fight that we had, the tenacity, the grit to be able to come in clutch when we need to, but I’d like to not have to come in clutch all the time.”

CHANDLER SMITH, No. 18 Safelite AutoGlass Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, Kyle Busch Motorsports

Finishing Position: 3rd

What is your thoughts after finishing third tonight?

“It just wasn’t meant to be. We gave it our best shot. I got into (turn) three, and it wasn’t met to be. It is as simple as that. I can’t thank everybody enough at KBM (Kyle Busch Motorsports), Safelite, all of the partners that helped along the way this year. TRD, Jack Irving (TRD) – everything those guys have done for me for the past six plus years. I really wanted to get that one, but it wasn’t met to be. I’ve said all week if it was met to be, it would be and it wasn’t. It’s all good.”

TY MAJESKI, No. 66 Road Ranger Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, ThorSport Racing

Finishing Position: 20th

Can you take me through what you would have done different?

“Yeah, I don’t know. I was being aggressive there. We wanted to bring a championship home for Duke and Rhonda (Thorson) and everybody at ThorSport. I thought the best opportunity there for us was to try to wiggle the 38 (Zane Smith) a little bit and try to get underneath him and try to set up the race between Ben (Rhodes) and I. I was just trying to be aggressive underneath him and lost it off of (turn) two. All you can ask for is the chance to win the championship with five to go and we had that tonight, and it just didn’t pan out. I’m proud of our season and proud of what we accomplished as a 66 bunch. Joe (Shear, Jr., crew chief) and the team have been great to work with. It just stings to be that close and see it in front of you and just come up a little bit short. We will come back next year and come back stronger.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 60 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 43 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 the more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, more than a quarter of the company’s 2021 North American sales were electrified.

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.

Schatz Serves Up Another ​​​World Of Outlaws World Finals Victory

  • World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars driver Donny Schatz scored his 13th career victory at The Dirt Track at Charlotte in Friday’s third night of the World of Outlaws World Finals, Mathieu Desjardins collected his first Super DIRTcar Series Big-Block Modifieds feature win in his second series start on American soil
  • Saturday’s finale will feature the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars, the Super DIRTcar Big-Block Modifieds and the World of Outlaws CASE Construction Equipment Late Models competing on the four-tenths-mile dirt oval
  • Fans can buy tickets to see Saturday’s World Finals action by visiting online at www.charlottemotorspeedway.com

CONCORD, N.C. (Nov. 4, 2022) – Two days before the rest of America turns back the clock, Donny Schatz did so on Friday night at The Dirt Track at Charlotte.

The 10-time World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars champion pulled off a throwback performance at one of his best tracks on the Outlaw circuit. Schatz won his heat race, won the Dash and led every lap of the feature en route to a convincing triumph at the World of Outlaws World Finals.

The Tony Stewart Racing driver expertly navigated traffic and held series points leader and defending champion Brad Sweet at bay in the early going, then sped away from Sweet and Cory Eliason after a caution and restart with two laps to go.

The win marked Schatz’s 13th at The Dirt Track, continuing a legacy of success the veteran driver developed over years of driving at a level few of his peers could aspire to match.

While Sweet and fellow title contender David Gravel have taken more than the lion’s share of wins this year – 12 victories between them – Schatz wasn’t challenged on his way to Victory No. 4 on the season and No. 306 in his illustrious career.

“We had a great car all night,” Schatz said. “It didn’t hurt drawing that No. 1 (position for the Dash). We wanted to salvage a decent points night. We’re not in the points championship, but Brad and David are fighting for it and we didn’t want to get in their way.

“What a night. I just can’t thank my team enough. … We’ve been pretty blessed here with the races we’ve won. I’m not too superstitious, so I’m happy with a Lucky No. 13 win.”

Eliason moved by Sweet on the penultimate lap for second, while Sweet held on for third ahead of Cole Macedo and Tyler Courtney. Gravel finished 10th. Logan Schuchart, Wednesday’s feature winner, finished 27th after suffering a mechanical failure early in Friday’s race.

Spencer Bayston, Anthony Macri, Eliason and Schatz won heats. Bayston was quickest in time trials.

Seeking his fourth Outlaw title, Sweet will enter Saturday’s season finale with a 36-point lead over Gravel.

Night No. 2 of Super DIRTcar Series Big-Block Modifieds action at World Finals saw another Canadian reign triumphant, while series champion Matt Sheppard encountered a rare night of bad luck.

Sheppard pulled off the track – from the lead – during a caution period on Lap 19 of the 30-lap feature.

Mathieu Desjardins benefited most from Sheppard’s misfortune, as the pole-winning Canadian inherited the lead again with 11 laps to go. Desjardins had his hands full with a hard-charging Tim Fuller over the final laps, but two slide-job attempts at stealing the lead from Desjardins were unsuccessful.

Desjardins’ win was the first of his Super DIRTcar Big-Block Modified career, in only his second series start on American soil.

“It’s incredible. I was a kid, and my dream was to drive a race car,” Desjardins said. “Today, I win the World Finals at Charlotte. I just don’t understand it, it’s crazy. I didn’t know (Sheppard’s) car was broken. When I took over first, I knew I had a good car. I just had to keep it flat-footed all the way.

“I could see Tim Fuller behind me, but I stayed focused. The lapped cars helped me along the way.”

Fuller finished second – after starting the feature from the outside of Row 6. Demetrios Drellos was third, with Peter Britten fourth and Max McLaughlin fifth.

Billy Decker, Mat Williamson, Ryan Godown and Sheppard won heats. Decker posted the fastest time in qualifying.

Unofficial World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars Results (30 Laps):

  1. Donny Schatz; 2. Cory Eliason; 3. Brad Sweet; 4. Cole Macedo; 5. Tyler Courtney; 6. Giovanni Scelzi; 7. Justin Peck; 8. Spencer Bayston; 9. Carson Macedo; 10. David Gravel; 11. Brent Marks; 12. Sheldon Haudenschild; 13. James McFadden; 14. Lance Dewease; 15. Sye Lynch; 16. Brock Zearfoss; 17. Zeb Wise; 18. Buddy Kofoid; 19. Garet Williamson; 20. Kraig Kinser; 21. Cale Thomas; 22. Rico Abreu; 23. Jacob Allen; 24. Noah Gass; 25. Robbie Price; 26. Anthony Macri; 27. Logan Schuchart.

Unofficial Super DIRTcar Series Big-Block Modifieds Results (30 Laps):

  1. Mathieu Desjardins; 2. Tim Fuller; 3. Demetrios Drellos; 4. Peter Britten; 5. Max McLaughlin; 6. Alex Payne; 7. Erick Rudolph; 8. Billy Decker; 9. Alex Yankowski; 10. Adam Pierson; 11. Darren Smith; 12. Mat Williamson; 13. Jimmy Phelps; 14. Kevin Root; 15. Rocky Warner; 16. Justin Haers; 17. Marc Johnson; 18. Jack Lehner; 19. Larry Wight; 20. Anthony Perrego; 21. Louden Reimert; 22. Ryan Macartney; 23. Tim Sears Jr.; 24. Rich Scagliotta; 25. Bob Macgannon; 26. C.G. Morey; 27. Paul St. Sauveur; 28. Matt Sheppard; 29. Marcus Dinkins; 30. Ryan Godown.

MORE INFO:
Fans can connect with Charlotte Motor Speedway and get the latest news by following on Twitter and Instagram, becoming a Facebook fan or downloading the Charlotte Motor Speedway mobile app.

2022 F4 U.S. Champion Lochie Hughes Caps Season with Win at COTA

Photo by Gavin Baker Photography

AUSTIN, Texas (November 4, 2022) – Lochie Hughes, the 2022 Formula 4 United States Championship Powered by Honda (F4 U.S.) Drivers Point’s Champion, finished the championship weekend at Circuit of The Americas with a win in Race 3 of the Mission Foods Austin SpeedTour. With his championship confirmed late Saturday evening as the results of Races 1 and 2 went official, Hughes’ Jay Howard Driver Development (JHDD) team changed his car number this morning, and the Australian native pulled into victory lane on Hankook tires, driving the No. 1 JHDD / CSU One Cure / Lucas Oil / Pelican Ligier JS F4.

“That was awesome,” said Hughes after climbing from his car. “We already wrapped up the championship, so I wasn’t worried about that; I was just focused on getting the win. It was tricky conditions. It had been raining all morning, but the track was a lot drier than I thought. We all went out on wets, but the track was dry. I did the best I could, and we pulled away from everyone. All thanks to the team for the great car, and what a great season. I can’t ask for more. [Winning the championship] means a lot. I didn’t race the last two years. I was stuck at home during COVID and didn’t have the budget to go racing. To win the championship is unbelievable.”

With rain showers throughout the morning, the race director declared Sunday’s Race 3 a “wet weather race,” so rain tires were mandated for the entire field. Starting from the pole, Hughes immediately took control of the race as soon as the lights went out, but an incident on the backstretch led to an early full-course yellow. A quick cleanup and clean restart allowed the race to remain green once it got restarted. After the restart, Hughes continued to pace the field, keeping Jacob Loomis (No. 24 Velocity Racing Development Ligier JS F4) in his rearview mirror. Meanwhile, Andre Castro (No. 8 Future Star Racing Ligier JS F4) had to fight back from the fifth position after falling back from his second-place starting spot.

As the checkered flag waved, Hughes led Loomis, with Castro finishing third.

Crosslink Kiwi Motorsport teammates Gabriel Fonseca (No. 76 Crosslink Kiwi Motorsport Ligier JS F4) and Ryan Shehan (No. 66 Crosslink Kiwi Motorsport Ligier JS F4) rounded out the top five, and helped Crosslink Kiwi Motorsport secure the 2022 Team Championship.

After the race, Artie Flores (No. 22 Gonella Racing / Flexi Ligier JS F4) was awarded a bespoke Omologato timepiece as the winner of the Omologato Perfectly Timed Move of the Race for a great weekend and a successful end to the season.

F4 U.S. will kick off its 2023 season March 9-12 at NOLA Motorsports Park in Avondale, La. For updates over the off-season, follow F4 U.S. on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Drivers wanting to learn more about F4 U.S. and how to get involved for the 2023 season should visit F4USChampionship.com.

About Formula Regional Americas Championship & Formula 4 United States Championship, Powered by Honda:

The FIA-certified Formula 4 United States Championship & Formula Regional Americas Championship are designed as entry-level open-wheel racing series offering young talent the opportunity to demonstrate their skills on an international platform while keeping affordability and safety as key elements. The Championships align with the global FIA development ladder philosophy of using common components to provide a cost-efficient, reliable and powerful racing structure as drivers ascend through the levels on their way to U.S. or global racing success.

Zane Smith earns first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship at Phoenix

Photo by David Myers for SpeedwayMedia.com.

After finishing in the runner-up spot in the final standings during the previous two seasons, the third time was the lucky charm for Zane Smith as he prevailed in a late battle against his title rivals to win the 2022 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship along with the season-finale Lucas Oil 150 at Phoenix Raceway on Friday, November 4.

In total, the 23-year-old Smith from Huntington Beach, California, led five times for a race-high 77 of 154 over-scheduled laps during the finale from pole position. Despite losing a combined five spots on pit road during the conclusion of both stages, which he won both, he remained within striking distance of the title fight and against his title rivals throughout the final stage. From executing a bold three-wide pass for the lead during a restart with 39 laps remaining to pitting for four fresh tires and restarting towards the top 10 with 10 laps remaining, Smith carved his way back to the runner-up spot and received another opportunity to reassume the lead after title rival Ty Majeski spun with four laps remaining, an incident that nearly collected Smith. Then during an overtime attempt, Smith prevailed in a late battle against Rhodes and Chandler Smith, including a final lap “bump-and-run” attempt from Rhodes, to assume the lead for good and proceed to win both the finale and claim his first elusive NASCAR national touring series championship.  

The 2022 Truck Series championship comes in Smith’s third full-time season in the series and his first with Front Row Motorsports, where he commenced the season by winning at Daytona International Speedway in February and notching two additional victories throughout the regular-season stretch before clinching the 2022 Truck Series regular-season title, entering the Playoffs with momentum and utilizing consistency to transfer all the way to the Championship 4 round.

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring on Friday, Zane Smith, a Championship 4 finalist, claimed the final pole position of the 2022 season and the first of his career after posting a pole-winning lap at 138.032 mph in 26.081 seconds. Joining him on the front row was Layne Riggs, who posted the second-best qualifying lap at 137.825 mph in 26.120 seconds. Zane Smith’s other three championship rivals that included Ben Rhodes, Ty Majeski and Chandler Smith qualified sixth, eighth and 12th, respectively.

Prior to the event, Derek Kraus dropped to the rear of the field in a backup truck along with rookie Dean Thompson, who dropped back due to an engine change to his truck.

When the green flag waved and the race started, Zane Smith fended off an early charge from rookie Corey Heim to retain the lead through the first two turns and through the backstretch as he went on to lead the first lap. During the following lap, however, Layne Riggs mounted a charge through Turns 1 and 2 as he overtook Smith for the lead. Despite being challenged by Smith, Riggs retained the top spot as the field behind jostled for positions.

Through the first five scheduled laps, Riggs was leading by two-tenths of a second over Zane followed by Heim, Stewart Friesen and Ben Rhodes while Ty Majeski, Matt Crafton, John Hunter Nemechek, Tanner Gray and Christian Eckes were running in the top 10. Meanwhile, Chandler Smith, the fourth and final title contender, was in 12th while trying to march his way to the front.

Two laps later, the first caution flew when Keith McGee and Armani Williams, both of whom were battling at the rear of the field, wrecked in Turn 3. The two-truck wreck occurred a lap early after Zane Smith had reassumed the lead over Riggs.

When the race restarted under green on Lap 13, Zane Smith rocketed with a strong start to retain the lead as the field fanned out through the dogleg and entering Turn 2. Meanwhile, Heim moved up to second followed by Riggs, who soon after lost third place to teammate Friesen, while Rhodes retained fifth.

By Lap 20, Zane Smith’s No. 38 Michael Roberts Construction Ford F-150 was leading by more than a second over Heim’s No. 51 Crescent Tools Toyota Tundra TRD Pro followed by Friesen, Riggs and Rhodes while Grant Enfinger, Nemechek, Crafton, Eckes and Chandler Smith occupied the top 10. Meanwhile, Majeski, who was running within the top 10, was back in 11th ahead of brothers Tanner and Taylor Gray while Rajah Caruth and Matt DiBenedetto were running in the top 15.

Five laps later, Zane Smith stabilized his advantage to more than a second over Heim while Friesen, Riggs and Rhodes remained in the top five. By then, Nemchek moved up to sixth following a fierce battle against Enfinger, who fell back to seventh and was being pressured by Matt Crafton for more. Chandler Smith and Majeski were back in ninth and 11th, respectively.

Another 10 laps later, Zane Smith extended his advantage to more than two seconds over Heim followed by Friesen and a side-by-side battle for fourth place between Riggs and Nemechek. While Zane Smith remained as the top-running title contender with the race lead, his title rivals that included Rhodes, Chandler Smith and Majeski were back in seventh, ninth and 10th, respectively.

When the first stage concluded on Lap 45, Zane Smith struck first early in his championship bid by capturing his ninth stage victory of the 2022 season. Heim settled in second followed by Friesen, Nemechek and Crafton while Rhodes, Enfinger, Chandler Smith, Eckes and Riggs were scored in the top 10. By then, Majeski was scored in 11th after getting edged by Riggs at the start/finish line.

Under the stage break, the field led by Zane Smith pitted for fresh tires, fuel and adjustments. Following the pit stops, Heim exited first followed by teammate Nemechek, Zane Smith, teammate Chandler Smith, Enfinger, Majeski and Crafton. Following the pit stops, trouble struck for Eckes, who initially exited ninth but limped back to his pit stall with the left-front tire on his No. 98 CMR Toyota Tundra TRD Pro locked up and igniting sparks around the circuit.

The second stage started on Lap 53 as teammates Heim and Nemechek occupied the front row. At the start and as the field fanned out through the dogleg, Heim retained the lead ahead of teammates Nemechek and Chandler Smith followed by Zane Smith. During the following lap, however, Nemechek assumed the lead in his No. 4 Pye-Barker Fire & Safety Toyota Tundra TRD Pro followed by Heim, Chandler Smith and Zane Smith as the field behind continued to jostle for positions. By then, Carson Hocevar was assessed a pass-through penalty for a restart violation.

By Lap 60, Nemechek was leading by a second over title contender Zane Smith followed by Chandler Smith, Heim and Majeski while Friesen, Enfinger, Crafton, Taylor Gray and Rhodes were in the top 10.

At the halfway mark on Lap 75, Nemechek retained the lead by six-tenths of a second over Zane Smith followed by Chandler Smith, Heim and Friesen while Majeski, Crafton, Enfinger, Taylor Gray and Rhodes were scored in the top 10 ahead of Caruth, Tyler Ankrum, Riggs, DiBenedetto, Tanner Gray and Eckes. By then, 22 of 35 competitors were scored on the lead lap.

Nearly five laps later, the battle for the lead ignited between Nemechek and Zane Smith as Smith tried to overtake Nemechek through the backstretch. Nemechek, however, retained the top spot through Turns 3 and 4 and continued to lead ahead of a hard-charging Smith.

Then with four laps remaining in the second stage and following his late battle against Nemechek, Zane Smith emerged out in front with the lead despite Nemechek fighting back through every turn and straightaway. Despite being drawn against Nemechek during the following three laps, Zane Smith was able to fend off Nemechek as he went on to capture his series-leading 10th stage victory of the 2022 season and second of the night on Lap 90 as he struck yet again in his bid to claim his first NASCAR championship. Nemechek settled in second while Chandler Smith, Heim, Majeski, Crafton, Enfinger, Friesen, Taylor Gray and Rhodes were scored in the top 10. 

Under the stage break, the field led by Zane Smith returned to pit road for service. Following the pit stops, Nemechek exited with the top spot followed by Chandler Smith, Heim, Zane Smith, Majeski and Rhodes. In the midst of the pit stops, DiBenedetto was penalized for speeding on pit road.

With 52 laps remaining, the final stage started as teammates Nemechek and Chandler Smith occupied the front row. At the start and as the field fanned out through the dogleg again, Chandler Smith retained the lead ahead of teammate Nemechek, Zane Smith and Heim. Then the caution quickly returned when Eckes spun and backed his truck against the Turn 1 outside wall after getting hit by Tyler Ankrum entering the turn and in the midst of the field fanning out to multiple lanes.

When the race restarted with 45 laps remaining, Chandler Smith briefly retained the lead ahead of the field through the dogleg and the first two turns until teammate Nemechek challenged and overtook Smith on the outside lane for the top spot. The caution, however, quickly returned once again due to a multi-truck wreck in Turn 1 that involved Taylor Gray, Rajah Caruth, Riggs and Kraus.

During the following restart with 39 laps remaining, Zane Smith, who restarted on the inside lane behind Nemechek, used the dogleg to his advantage as he launched a three-wide challenge and drew himself in a bid for the lead alongside Chandler Smith. He then managed to overtake and clear Chandler Smith for the lead exiting the backstretch and entering Turn 3 while Nemechek settled in third. 

With 30 laps remaining, Zane Smith was leading both the race and the championship by seven-tenths of a second over Chandler Smith’s No. 18 Safelite AutoGlass Toyota Tundra TRD Pro while Nemechek, Enfinger and Majeski and Rhodes were in the top six ahead of Heim, Crafton, Kaden Honeycutt and Ankrum.

Ten laps later, Zane Smith continued to lead by nine-tenths of a second over Chandler Smith while Nemechek, Enfinger and Majeski remained in the top five on the track. Meanwhile, the fourth and final Playoff competitor, Rhodes, was back in seventh behind Heim.

Then another four laps later, the caution flew when Hailie Deegan cut a left-tire tire and went dead straight into the outside wall in Turn 3 as her final race with David Gilliland Racing came to a late end. During the caution period, Friesen and Hocevar remained on the track while the rest led by Zane Smith pitted. Following the pit stops, Rhodes exited pit road first after opting for a two-tire pit strategy followed by DiBenedetto, Honeycutt and the Gray brothers, all of whom opted for just two fresh tires. Meanwhile, Chandler Smith was the first competitor to exit pit road with four fresh tires in sixth place followed by Majeski, Nemechek and Zane Smith.

With the race restarting with 10 laps remaining, the field fanned out as Friesen retained the lead ahead of Rhodes and Hocevar. As both Zane and Chandler Smith were trying to carve their way back towards the front, teammates Rhodes and Majeski battled for second and for the title, with the former trying to overtake Friesen for the race lead. 

With seven laps remaining, Rhodes overtook Friesen for the lead on two fresh tires entering the backstretch as he commenced his late charge to defend his series title. By then, however, Zane Smith carved his way back into the runner-up spot while both Majeski and Chandler Smith were were trying to overtake Friesen to maintain their title hopes.

Down to the final five laps of the event, the final four title contenders were first through fourth on the track, with Rhodes leading ahead of Zane Smith, Majeksi and Chandler Smith. 

Then during the following lap, Majeski’s championship hopes evaporated after the Wisconsin native made contact with Zane Smith entering the backstretch while battling for the runner-up spot, which caused Majeski’s No. 66 Road Ranger Toyota Tundra TRD Pro to get loose as he spun and made light contact against the inside wall. Majeski’s incident was also enough to send the event into overtime as the event exceeded past its scheduled distance.

During the first overtime attempt, Zane Smith, who opted to restart behind Rhodes on the inside lane, used the dogleg to his advantage as he managed to overtake both Chandler Smith and Rhodes through the first two turns to reassume the lead. Chandler Smith then crossed over to Zane’s Ford on the inside lane as he tried to stall Zane’s run while drawing even with Zane through the backstretch. Chandler, however, slightly slid up the track through Turn 3, which allowed Zane Smith to pull ahead while Rhodes rejoined the battle for the lead and the championship.

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Zane Smith was out in front by a mere margin over Chandler Smith and Rhodes. Through the first two turns, Zane Smith pulled ahead followed by a hard-charging Rhodes while Chandler Smith fell back to third. With Rhodes setting up a final attempt on Zane Smith for the victory and the title, he then got to Zane’s rear bumper in an attempt to bump and move him up the track to overtake him. The bump, however, was not enough to stall Smith’s momentum as the Californian managed to remain ahead of Rhodes and beat him to the finish line by two-tenths of a second to win the finale and clinch his first series championship.

With his accomplishment, Zane Smith, who ended up as the championship runner-up during the previous two seasons while competing for GMS Racing, became the 20th different competitor to win the Truck Series championship along with becoming the first Ford competitor to win a Truck title since Matt Crafton made the last accomplishment in 2019. He also recorded the first NASCAR drivers’ and owners’ championships to Front Row Motorsports in the team’s third season in the series with crew chief Chris Lawson also achieving his first NASCAR Truck title. With the champion Zane Smith winning the finale, this marks the third time since the series’ Playoff elimination-style format was incepted in 2016 where the championship-winning competitor won the finale.

“Oh my god,” Smith, who will be remaining in the Truck Series with Front Row Motorsports for 2023, said on FS1. “Third time’s a charm. I wanted this [championship] more than anyone in the world. I don’t care what anyone says. Thank you, all you race fans. My whole team, man. I was crying that whole lap. My fiancé, McCall, stuck to me with all the brutal times. I’ve wanted this championship for so long. I’ve wanted this moment all my whole life. Thank you, everyone. That’s all I got. I wasn’t gonna let it go down like that. I was either wrecked or I was winning this [championship]. There was no other option. Last year and the year before, we showed so much speed and should’ve won a lot more races than we did, but [team owner] Bob Jenkins is the only reason why I’m here right now. Without him, none of this would be possible. When I came [to Front Row Motorsports], all I cared about was the guys that were on this team and I had seen their work ethics. I’d seen the effort they put in and I know they wanted it as bad as I do. I didn’t care what the trucks looked like. All I knew was their work ethic was there and we could make a championship out of this team.”

While Smith celebrated a championship on the championship stage, Rhodes was left disappointed with his runner-up result both in the event and in the final standings as he came one position shy of defending his series crown.

“Two tires versus four. That was the name of the game,” Rhodes said. “We didn’t have the pace all night that we needed to be up there and compete, so it was a great heads-up call by my crew chief. Ultimately, we just didn’t need that last caution. I think we could’ve held [the field] off for the final few laps. I was giving [Zane Smith] all the dirty air he could handle. I think we were gonna be fine until that caution just got us. I did what I could on the restart to try to get a jump, but with two tires versus four, I just didn’t have the grip I needed. I tried to hold him off the best I could. [I] Threw a move on him at the very end and just didn’t have enough grip to make it stick. All in all, I am proud of my Kubota Toyota Tundra team, ThorSport Racing. We didn’t have the pace, but we got up there. That’s what matters at the end. We just got to go back, do our homework. Second is not fun. I’m gonna mope my way all the way back to Kentucky…I’d like to not be coming to clutch all the time.”

With Zane Smith and Rhodes finishing first and second both on the track and in the final standings, Chandler Smith ended up in third place while Majeski, who settled in 20th place during the finale, ended up in fourth place in the final standings. Despite ending up in third place in his final event with Kyle Busch Motorsports, Chandler Smith remained optimistic approaching next season as he will be moving up to the Xfinity Series to drive for Kaulig Racing.

“It just wasn’t meant to be,” Smith said. “We were mistake free. The pit crew was on top of it. [We] Gained positions every time on pit road. Had a shot at the end. I’m at peace with that because at the end of the day, it’s all part of the bigger plan. It was fun racing with [Zane Smith]. I appreciate the opportunity [from] Safelite,[Kyle Busch Motorsports], Toyota Racing Development’s given me for the past six-plus years. It sucks that it’s ending, but onwards to bigger and better things over at Kaulig Racing. Really looking forward to starting next year already.”

Like Smith, Ty Majeski, who clinched his spot for the Championship 4 on the strength of Playoff victories at Bristol Motor Speedway and at Talladega Superspeedway, remained positive over his attempted run for the title as he looks ahead to next season.

“I was being aggressive there,” Majeski said. “We wanted to bring a championship home for Duke and Rhonda [Thorson] and everybody at ThorSport [Racing]. I thought the best opportunity there for us was to try to wiggle [Smith] a little bit and try to get underneath him and try to set up the race between Ben [Rhodes] and I. I was just trying to be aggressive underneath him and lost it off of [Turn] 2. All you can ask for is the chance to win the championship with five to go and we had that tonight, and it just didn’t pan out. I’m proud of our season and proud of what we accomplished as a 66 bunch. [Crew chief] Joe [Shear Jr.] and the team have been great to work with. It just stings to be that close and see it in front of you and just come up a little bit short. We will come back next year and come back stronger.”

John Hunter Nemechek finished fourth in the finale and fifth in the final standings in his second and final campaign with Kyle Busch Motorsports while Friesen wrapped up the season in fifth place on the track and in sixth place in the standings. Enfinger, Heim, Tanner Gray, Kaden Honeycutt and Carson Hocevar completed the top 10 on the track.

With his seventh-place result, Heim clinched the 2022 Truck Series Rookie-of-the-Year title. With 12 victories to this season, Toyota was awarded their 13th manufacturer’s title in the Truck circuit.

The 2022 NASCAR Truck Series season marks the 14th and final season under title sponsorship from Camping World as Craftsman Tools will be filling in the role and returning as a title sponsor for the series since 2008.

There were 15 lead changes for seven different leaders. The finale featured five cautions for 42 laps.

Results.

1. Zane Smith, 77 laps led, Stage 1 & 2 winner

2. Ben Rhodes, eight laps led

3. Chandler Smith, nine laps led

4. John Hunter Nemechek, 44 laps led

5. Stewart Friesen, six laps led

6. Grant Enfinger

7. Corey Heim, five laps led

8. Tanner Gray

9. Kaden Honeycutt

10. Carson Hocevar 

11. Derek Kraus

12. Matt Crafton

13. Layne Riggs, five laps led

14. Tyler Ankrum

15. Colby Howard

16. Jake Garcia

17. Taylor Gray

18. Lawlesss Alan

19. Chase Purdy

20. Ty Majeski 

21. Dean Thompson

22. Matt DiBenedetto, one lap down

23. Tyler Hill, two laps down

24. Austin Wayne Self, two laps down

25. Blaine Perkins, two laps down

26. Chris Hacker, two laps down

27. Timmy Hill, two laps down

28. Johnny Sauter, two laps down

29. Jack Wood, three laps down

30. Christian Eckes, three laps down

31. Hailie Deegan – OUT, Accident

32. Rajah Caruth – OUT, Accident

33. Spencer Boyd – OUT, Too slow

34. Keith McGee – OUT, Dvp

35. Armami Williams – OUT, Accident

*Bold indicates Championship finalists

Final standings

1. Zane Smith 

2. Ben Rhodes

3. Chandler Smith

4. Ty Majeski

5. John Hunter Nemechek

6. Stewart Friesen

7. Grant Enfinger

8. Christian Eckess

9. Matt Crafton

10. Carson Hocevar

The NASCAR Truck Series competitors and teams enter an off-season period before returning to action at Daytona International Speedway on February 17, 2023, to commence a new season of racing.

 

Corey Heim named 2022 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year

Photo by Christian Gardner for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Corey Heim has been named the 2022 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year following the season-finale Lucas Oil 150 at Phoenix Raceway on Friday, November 4.

The news comes as the 20-year-old Heim from Marietta, Georgia, has completed a successful part-time campaign in this year’s Truck circuit, where he competed in 16 of 23-scheduled events in the No. 51 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro for Kyle Busch Motorsports.

Sharing the ride with team owner Kyle Busch and dirt racer Buddy Kofoid, Heim commenced his rookie campaign with a 32nd-place result at Daytona International Speedway. He rallied during his next scheduled start at Atlanta Motor Speedway in March by achieving his first career win after overtaking teammate Chandler Smith on the final lap. The victory made Heim as the 13th different competitor to achieve a first Truck career victory while driving for KBM and the 18th overall to win with KBM with the victory occurring at his home track. 

Despite finishing no higher than seventh during his next three scheduled starts, Heim achieved his second career victory in the Truck circuit at the World Wide Technology Raceway in June after fending off the field during an overtime shootout. Heim’s pair of victories served as pivotal moments that enabled the No. 51 KBM team to secure a postseason spot in the owners’ standings as the Georgian competed for the 2022 Truck owners’ title. Despite recording five top-10 results in six starts throughout the 2022 Truck Series Playoffs, the No. 51 KBM team was eliminated from competing for the owners’ title at the conclusion of the Round of 8. Nonethless, Heim proceeded to finish seventh during the finale at Phoenix, which marked his 10th top-10 result overall this season.

By claiming this year’s rookie title, Heim became the fourth different competitor competing under the KBM banner to be named Rookie of the Year. Ultimately, he capped off the season with two victories, two poles, six top-five results, 10 top-10 results, 71 laps led and an average-finishing result of 14.1 through 16-scheduled starts as he also ended up in 14th place in the final drivers’ standings.

Heim’s rivals for this year’s Truck rookie title included Lawless Alan, Jack Wood, Dean Thompson and Blaine Perkins.

The 2023 season is set to mark a new beginning for Heim, who is set to compete on a full-time basis in the Truck Series for TRICON Garage, rebranded from David Gilliland Racing, and in the No. 11 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro in pursuit of his first drivers’ championship.

The Truck Series competitors and teams enter an off-season period before returning to action at Daytona International Speedway on February 17, 2023, to commence a new season of competition.