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Jacob Construction Racing: Cole Custer Richmond Advance

COLE CUSTER
Richmond Advance
No. 41 Jacob Construction Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Federated Auto Parts 400 (Round 24 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Aug. 14
● Location: Richmond (Va.) Raceway
● Layout: .75-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 400 laps/300 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 70 laps / Stage 2: 160 laps / Final Stage: 170 laps
● TV/Radio: USA / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● It’s back to short-track racing for the first time since a three-pack of races in April for Cole Custer and the No. 41 Jacob Construction Ford Mustang team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR). They’ll take to the .75-mile oval at Richmond (Va.) Raceway for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Federated Auto Parts 400.

● Sunday’s 400-lap race will be Custer’s 99th career Cup Series start and his sixth at Richmond. His 14th-place finish in the September 2020 race there is the best of his previous five outings and it helped him earn that year’s Cup Series Rookie of the Year honors. He qualified 12th and finished 22nd in this season’s first Richmond race April 3.

● In NASCAR Xfinity Series competition, Custer’s seven career starts at Richmond is more than he’s had at any other track. Best among those starts was the April 2019 race, when he qualified fourth in the No. 00 SHR Ford, led a race-high 122 of 250 laps and took the checkered flag 2.639 seconds ahead of runner-up and fellow Ford driver Austin Cindric. He followed that up with a third-place finish in that year’s September race for his fourth Xfinity Series top-six in seven Richmond starts. Custer also started on the pole and led 43 laps en route to a sixth-place finish in the April 2018 race in his SHR Ford, and scored a sixth-place finish in his Richmond debut in the Xfinity Series, driving the No. 5 JR Motorsports entry in the April 2016 race.

● Custer’s first two Richmond outings came in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East in 2013 and 2014. The first year, he started and finished third after leading 24 of 100 laps, then came back the following year to qualify second and lead a race-high 52 of 100 laps en route to his fourth of four career victories in K&N Pro Series competition.

● Riding along with Custer and his SHR Mustang is Jacob Construction, a multifaceted construction firm with a focus on construction, development, design and technology services. Jacob provides clients with a wide range of services in the design build and construction management sectors of the construction industry. In conjunction with these services, Jacob self performs structural concrete, architectural and structural precast erection.

Cole Custer, Driver of the No. 41 Jacob Construction Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

You’ve logged more laps at Richmond than perhaps any other track where NASCAR races. Sunday’s race marks your 14th career start there between the Cup Series, Xfinity Series and K&N East Series. What’s been your favorite Richmond memory?

“Definitely winning there in the Xfinity Series a few years ago. It was my first short-track win in the Xfinity Series and it meant a lot because we worked pretty hard to try and get our short-track stuff better, and it’s not an easy track to get around. So, it meant a lot to win that one.”

You’ve run at Richmond so much during your career, are you immersed in footage and data from your previous runs there to figure out how you’re going to get around there Sunday?

“Yeah, that’s every weekend for me. I look at old races and try and talk to (SHR teammate) Kevin (Harvick) every weekend to find out what he’s looking for. He’s been a huge help the last few years. All of my teammates have been. It was tough going straight to racing with no practice or qualifying the last two years. You can look at as much film and data as you want, but you’re still missing the experience of actually being out there. You know what you need to work on, but you really don’t learn as much until you’re actually out there on the track. In the spring race this year, it was huge to have the chance to practice and qualify before the race. Hopefully that experience will help put us over the top on Sunday.”

No. 41 Jacob Construction Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Cole Custer
Hometown: Ladera Ranch, California

Crew Chief: Mike Shiplett
Hometown: Amherst, Ohio

Car Chief: Tony Cardamone
Hometown: Bristol, Virginia

Engineer: Lee Deese
Hometown: Rockingham, North Carolina

Engineer: Scott Bingham
Hometown: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Spotter: Andy Houston
Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Josh Leslie
Hometown: Mount Clemens, Michigan

Rear Tire Changer: Chris Jackson
Hometown: Rock Hill, South Carolina

Tire Carrier: Chad Emmons
Hometown: Tyler, Texas

Jack Man: Kapil Fletcher
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Fuel Man: Dewayne Moore
Hometown: Griffin, Georgia

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Joe Zanolini
Hometown: Sybertsville, Pennsylvania

Shock Specialist: Aaron Kuehn
Hometown: Kensington, Connecticut

Engine Tuner: Jimmy Fife
Hometown: Orange County, California

Tire Specialist: Austin Greco
Hometown: Harrisburg, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: David Rodrigues
Hometown: Santa Clarita, California

Transporter Co-Driver: Charlie Schleyer
Hometown: Youngsville, Pennsylvania

Toyota Racing – Weekly Preview – 08.10.22

NEWS RELEASE

This Week in Motorsports: August 8-14, 2022

· NCS/NCWTS: Richmond Raceway – August 13-14
· NHRA: Heartland Motorsports Park (Kansas) – August 14

PLANO, Texas (August 10, 2022) – The NASCAR Cup Series returns to Richmond Raceway for their second stop this season, with the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series competing the night before. The NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series is also back on track for the first of two straight events as they make their return to Heartland Motorsports Park in Kansas.

NASCAR National Series – NCS | NCWTS

Wallace continues to climb the standings… Bubba Wallace was just one spot away from his second career victory in Michigan as the Alabama-native came home in second. It was a stellar weekend for Wallace as he also drove to his first career pole position on Saturday. Wallace has now scored four consecutive top-10 finishes for the first time in his career. With 13 races still to go this season, Wallace has already achieved career-highs in Cup Series top-five and top-10 finishes. With the recent success, he has moved back inside the top-20 in the point standings as he sits 19th overall.

Truex plans to score another Richmond victory… Martin Truex Jr. was impressive once again at Richmond Raceway in the spring as he led 80 laps and finished in fourth. Truex has won three of the last six races at Richmond Raceway – sweeping the 2019 events – and leading a Toyota podium sweep in this event one season ago. When Truex isn’t winning at Richmond, he’s finishing in the top-five, as the New Jersey-native has seven straight top-five finishes at the track.

Last time we were in Richmond… Denny Hamlin and crew chief Chris Gabehart proved to have the right strategy at Richmond Raceway in the spring as their fresh tires allowed Hamlin to drive through the field to the lead with five laps to go. Hamlin has been very successful at his home track – with four NASCAR Cup Series wins and three NASCAR Xfinity Series victories.

Nemechek looks to go back-to-back… John Hunter Nemechek has been stellar at Richmond Raceway since joining forces with Toyota last season. In NASCAR Xfinity Series action, he earned Sam Hunt Racing their first top-five finish last fall with a third place run and followed that with a runner-up finish in Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 18 Toyota GR Supra in the spring. In NASCAR Truck Series action, Nemechek was dominant in last season’s event at Richmond Raceway, which was run in April. Nemechek led nearly half of the race (114 of 250 laps) to win the ToyotaCare 250.

Majeski desires to continue strong performance… Ty Majeski had a disappointing end to the last event for the Truck Series as he led a career-high 71 (of 207) laps at Indianapolis Raceway Park before a late-race caution produced many strategies and an eighth-place finish for him. The Wisconsin-native is making his first career Truck Series start at Richmond Raceway.

Rhodes leads Toyota… After a runner-up finish in Indianapolis, reigning Truck Series champion Ben Rhodes leads Toyota in the point standings in second overall. Currently five Toyota drivers are in position to advance to the next round – Rhodes, Stewart Friesen, Nemechek, Chandler Smith and Majeski – with both Christian Eckes and Matt Crafton just seven points out of the final spot.

NHRA – Top Fuel | Funny Car

600 for Capps… The reigning Funny Car champion Ron Capps adds another stat to his incredible resume as he competes in his 600th career NHRA event this season. The two-time champion has won 70 times, which is the second-most in NHRA Funny Car history and he has won 826 rounds of racing in his previous 599 events.

Best for Todd… J.R. Todd comes to Topeka off his best weekend of the season as the 2018 Funny Car Champion advanced to his first final round of the season. Todd also came close to a Wally one season ago at Heartland Motorsports Park as the Indiana-native was the No. 1 qualifier before coming up short to John Force in the final round.

Stay Connected

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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.

Onwards and upwards for Veloce Racing after a challenging double-header

Following an extended break after the first X Prix of Extreme E Season 2, the on-track action resumed with two rounds in one week at the NEOM Island X Prix, co-organised by Automobile Club d’Italia and Regione Sardegna.

The action-packed Sardinian double-header saw Christine GZ back in action for her Veloce Racing alongside Lance Woolridge, with both drivers looking to build on the promise shown in NEOM, Saudi Arabia.

Veloce Racing looked set for one of the quickest Qualifying times at the Desert X Prix in February. However, with the finish line fast approaching, GZ carried too much speed into one of the final corners and the car flipped into a dramatic barrel roll.

The result was a fractured ankle for GZ and a spot in the Crazy Race for the team, where Hedda Hosås made her Extreme E debut in GZ’s stead, but the team just missed out on the Final.

Sardinia offered the British outfit a chance at redemption. Double the racing meant double the points, and the British team managed to move off the bottom of the standings. ABT CUPRA XE sit in Veloce’s wake, but the team will need to push hard if they are to catch JBXE, who currently sit 11 points ahead.

Veloce Racing was playing catch-up from the outset in Sardinia when Woolridge missed Free Practice due to illness, which was then followed by broken suspension in Qualifying 1, but the team managed to bounce back in the second round of Qualifying.

A confident run in the five-car Q2 Heat saw GZ make a blistering start, where she got the better of the JBXE car off-the-line in her first race back from injury.

As the lead female in the race, GZ handed over to Woolridge in third position and the South African took second place from McLaren XE immediately. Veloce received a post-race penalty for speeding in the Switch Zone, but their participation in the Crazy Race was already confirmed having finished second behind ACCIONA | SAINZ XE Team in the Heat.

Veloce Racing bowed out of the NEOM Island X Prix I in spirited fashion following a nail-biting Crazy Race.

Running in third position on the first lap, Woolridge was faced with a reversing Sara Price, as the No.99 GMC Hummer EV Chip Ganassi Racing car pulled back on to the track.

Woolridge took impressive evasive action to avoid contact, but the brakes of his ODYSSEY 21 were damaged when he was forced through the track-side signage in the heart-stopping incident. Veloce Racing eventually finished second in the four-car race.

The first-ever Extreme E double-header concluded with Veloce Racing missing out on a place in the Island X Prix II Final in another winner-takes-all Crazy Race.

There was drama from the outset as Woolridge went side-by-side with Genesys Andretti United Extreme E on the run down to the first turn. Both cars made contact as Woolridge slotted into second during the early running, but all was still to play for as the race progressed.

Woolridge kept Catie Munnings under pressure throughout his lap and was left with little alternative but to make a lunge for the lead as they neared the Switch Zone. The South African tried to squeeze the car down the inside of his rival over a jump, but further contact tipped the Veloce car into an unfortunate half spin.

GZ took over the car in second place and made a valiant effort against Kevin Hansen in the JBXE car, but finished the race in third-place after a hard fought week for the team.

Christine GZ, Veloce Racing, said: “It just wasn’t our week in Sardinia. Of course, I have had a challenging few months recovering from my accident in Saudi earlier in the year, and the pace just hasn’t quite been there for us as a team this week. We showed flashes of speed and we really felt that we had a chance to make the final. We gave it everything, but it just wasn’t to be this time.”

Lance Woolridge, Veloce Racing, said: “The car has been much improved as the week has developed and we were fighting for victory in the Crazy Race, which could have put us into the final. I gave it my best shot and had to try to get past the Andretti car, but contact unfortunately sent us out of contention. That’s probably been the story of our week, as we have not had the fortune with us at the right moments, but we will come back stronger in Chile in September.”

The 2022 Extreme E campaign now moves on to Chile on 24-25 September, before concluding with the season finale in Uruguay on 26-27 November.

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

About Extreme E:

Extreme E is a radical new racing series, which will see electric SUVs competing in extreme environments around the world which have already been damaged or affected by climate and environmental issues. The five-race global voyage highlights the impact of climate change and human interference in some of the world’s most remote locations and promotes the adoption of electric vehicles in the quest for a lower carbon future for the planet.

To minimise local impact, Extreme E races will not be open to spectators, with fans instead invited to follow the action through live TV broadcast, and on social media.

The St. Helena, a former passenger cargo ship, has undergone a multi-million Euro refit to minimise emissions and transform her into Extreme E’s operations hub. The ship will be used to transport the championship’s freight and infrastructure, including vehicles, to the nearest port, minimising Extreme E’s footprint, as well as being used to facilitate scientific research through its on-board laboratory.

Extreme E is also pioneering hydrogen fuel cell technology which will enable its race fleet to be charged using zero emission energy. This innovative solution from AFC Energy uses water and sun to generate hydrogen power. Not only will this process emit no greenhouse emissions, its only by-product will be water, which will be utilised elsewhere on-site.

M&M’S Racing: Kyle Busch Richmond Advance

KYLE BUSCH
Playing Favorites

HUNTERSVILLE, North Carolina (Aug. 10, 2022) – With nine wins at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in NASCAR’s top series, including a win there this past spring on the dirt surface, Kyle Busch and many of his fans consider Bristol to be his best track.

While Busch’s stats are quite strong at Bristol, there’s one other track where his stats are even more impressive, the .75-mile oval at Richmond (Va.) Raceway, the site of Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Federated Auto Parts 400.

Busch, driver of the No. 18 M&M’S Toyota Camry for Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR), has six career Cup Series victories at Richmond, most among active drivers. In addition to those six career wins, Busch’s Richmond stat sheet shows 18 top-five finishes and 26 top-10s in 33 career starts, making him the most consistent active driver at the track.

The Las Vegas native also leads all active drivers with his Richmond average finishing position of 6.9. Next best is Kevin Harvick at 9.9. Busch has completed all but one of the 13,229 laps available to him in his 33 Richmond starts.

The first four of Busch’s six career Richmond wins came in consecutive spring races from 2009 to 2012, besting Richard Petty’s previous record of three Richmond spring-race wins in a row from 1971 to 1973. Busch’s other two Richmond wins came in a sweep of the 2018 races there. With his impressive statistics and records to back him up, it’s little wonder that a visit to Richmond is one of Busch’s favorite stops on the NASCAR tour.

More recently, Busch has an active streak of nine consecutive top-10 finishes at Richmond, a streak which started in September 2017 and includes two of his six victories there. That streak is the longest current top-10 streak at the short track. Busch has finished outside the top-10 just twice at Richmond since the 2013 season.

So, as the series heads to the “Capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia,” one of Busch’s favorite two destinations on the schedule, he and the M&M’S team would like to add to his six victories there and get him closer to matching his incredible record at Bristol.

KYLE BUSCH, Driver of the No. 18 M&M’S Toyota Camry for Joe Gibbs Racing:

You had a strong run at Richmond in the spring, but you didn’t get the result you seemed to deserve because of a penalty for tape on the grille. What do you expect this weekend in the second race there with the NextGen car?

“Richmond has been great place for me over the years. I’m not sure exactly why, but it started off rough for me, not running well there in the Truck Series in 2001, but I got back there in an Xfinity car in 2003 and 2004 and everything went really well ever since then. We’ve had a lot of top-fives, a lot of top-two finishes and wins there, so excited about our prospects of going back there this weekend and running well again. I thought we had a legitimate shot of a top-three finish there in the spring and maybe a chance at a win, but would love to be able to better our result from the spring with our M&M’S Camry.”

What are your thoughts on the “win-and-you’re-in” format for the playoffs, especially with so many winners this year?

“I think it gives you a sense of urgency. Especially for the guys who don’t have one, they know they need a win to get in and to feel safely in the playoffs. There is that reward, but if there are 16 or 17 winners, should we open it up to anyone who won? I don’t think so, there still should be some sense of urgency with the race within the race. We already have that with stages, too, where there are actually three races within a race with stages. It’s just a matter of being in that top-16, we all know what the rules are and the results will speak for themselves.”

What does it take to get around Richmond?

“Richmond is getting a little trickier, it seems like, just with the asphalt kind of getting older and the way the cars are. The consensus at Richmond is, of course, just trying to get your car to turn, but also having really good forward bite. You have to be able to get off the corners at Richmond. All of it correlates. Everything you want as a racecar driver, you’ve got to have most all of it and, if you don’t, then you better hope you have more forward bite than the rest of them. That’s sort of the equation of Richmond. It’s a fun place to race. It’s really cool. As a driver, you wish it could widen out and give you more options of being able to run around in different grooves, but it hasn’t shown us that the last couple of years. We’re hoping to get our M&M’S Camry another win there.”

What is it about Richmond that suits your driving style?

“I don’t know, I started out really bad there. That first Truck Series race there was horrible. I think I ran into everything but the hot dog stand. The next time I went there was with Hendrick (Motorsports) in the Busch Series in 2004 when they first repaved the track, and I ran really well. We were able to win that race, and I led the most laps. From that point forward, I feel like I kind of learned or had a sense of what it takes to be fast there and what you need to be able to do to win there. As the years have gone on, the racetrack has definitely aged, it’s definitely gone through some transition, it has lost a lot of grip. There have been some changes in that respect, as well, just trying to figure out, ‘OK, what’s next? What’s the next thing that’s going to keep you on top of your game at Richmond?’ The new car is another challenge that we took there this year. It’s always been a good track for me, I enjoy going there. It’s a fun short track. It’s a very challenging short track that doesn’t lend itself to typical short tracks around the country.”

Event Overview:

● Event: Federated Auto Parts 400 (Round 24 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Aug. 14
● Location: Richmond (Va.) Raceway
● Layout: .75-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 400 laps/300 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 70 laps / Stage 2: 160 laps / Final Stage: 170 laps
● TV/Radio: USA / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Meet the No. 18 M&M’S / Joe Gibbs Racing Team

Primary Team Members:

Driver: Kyle Busch
Hometown: Las Vegas

Crew Chief: Ben Beshore
Hometown: York, Pennsylvania

Car Chief: Nate Bellows
Hometown: Fairfax, Vermont

Spotter: Tony Hirschman
Hometown: Northampton, Pennsylvania

Race Engineer: Seth Chavka
Hometown: Soldotna, Alaska

Race Engineer: Jaik Halpainy
Hometown: Blockville, New York

Over-The-Wall Crew Members:

Gas Man: Matt Tyrrell
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Front Tire Changer: Thomas Hatcher
Hometown: Middleburg, Florida

Jackman: Kellen Mills
Hometown: Mesa, Arizona

Tire Carrier: CJ Bailey
Hometown: Outer Banks, North Carolina

Rear Tire Changer: Lee Cunningham
Hometown: Leaf River, Illinois

Road Crew Members:

Engine Tuner: Dan Bajek
Hometown: Camden, New York

Truck Driver: Chris Miko
Hometown: Bronx, New York

Truck Driver: Eloy Trevino
Hometown: Adrian, Michigan

Mechanic/Tire Specialist: Justin Peiffer
Hometown: Lebanon, Pennsylvania

Mechanic: Scott Eldridge
Hometown: Warsaw, Indiana

Mechanic: Tony Hamm
Hometown: Walla, Walla, Washington

Notes of Interest:

● All in the Stats: Busch has six wins, 18 top-five finishes, 26 top-10s and has led a total of 1,529 laps in 33 career Cup Series starts at Richmond. Busch’s average Richmond finish is 6.9, and he’s completed all but one of the 13,229 laps run in his 33 starts there.

● Top-10 Streak: Busch currently has a streak of nine consecutive top-10 finishes at Richmond, a streak which started in September 2017. The streak is the longest current top-10 streak at the .75-mile short track.

● Get Out the Broom:Busch swept both races at Richmond in 2018 – his fifth career spring-race win there and his first in the fall race. Both 2018 wins came from a starting position outside the top-10.

● Short-Track Ace: Busch has shown quite the propensity to win at NASCAR’s core short tracks. In addition to his six wins at Richmond, Busch has nine wins in NASCAR’s top series at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway and two at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway for his 17 total wins on those three short tracks alone.

● Alone in Ninth: The two-time Cup Series champion’s 60th career win at Bristol in April put him one win ahead of 10th-place Kevin Harvick, who has 59 wins. Ahead of Busch at eighth on the all-time wins list is Dale Earnhardt, the seven-time Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer who won 76 races during his storied career.

● 224 and Counting: Busch will be aiming to add to his record 224 overall wins among NASCAR’s top three series this weekend at Richmond. In addition to his 60 Cup Series wins and 102 in the Xfinity Series, Busch has 62 wins in the Camping World Truck Series.

Sargento Foods Inc. Teams Up with NASCAR Driver Josh Bilicki After He Collided with Sargento Signage During a Recent Race in Wisconsin

PLYMOUTH, Wis. – August 9, 2022 – Sargento Foods Inc. is pleased to announce an official partnership with NASCAR® driver Josh Bilicki. Sargento will sponsor Bilicki during the NASCAR Xfinity Series races at Watkins Glen Raceway in Watkins Glen, New York on August 20, 2022.

During a NASCAR race on July 2 at Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin – where Sargento is the Official Cheese partner – an incident occurred that resulted in Bilicki’s car carrying Sargento branding through the race. This unexpected collision – without injury – prompted this exciting partnership, bringing the Wisconsin-based company and racecar driver together. Bilicki and Sargento will be joining forces and surely making their home state of Wisconsin proud at the upcoming race.

“I am excited for this opportunity to partner with Sargento at Watkins Glen Raceway this August,” said Bilicki. “As a native Wisconsinite, I have enjoyed Sargento products for many years. I am a true believer that everything happens for a reason, including my recent run in with the Sargento sign. I am thankful to be welcomed into the Sargento family and to represent a Wisconsin-based company in my upcoming race.”

“Sargento has been a long-time partner of Road America and we are proud to have this iconic landmark in our own backyard,” said Louie Gentine, CEO of Sargento. “When we saw our sign on the front of Josh’s car, we had the same reaction as many others. We like to have fun so, we’re excited to partner with the Wisconsin native for this upcoming race.”

Sargento will be Bilicki’s primary sponsor at the NASCAR Xfinity Series races in Watkins Glen, New York on August 20, where Sargento branding will be prominently featured on Bilicki’s Chevrolet Camaro racecar. Fans can follow Sargento on Instagram @sargentocheese and on Twitter @SargentoCheese for behind-the-scenes content leading up to the race and for the opportunity to win an autographed photo of Bilicki.

About Sargento Foods Inc.
With over 2,000 employees and net sales of $1.5 billion, Sargento Foods is a family-owned company that has been a leader in cheese for more than 65 years. Founded in 1953 in Plymouth, Wisconsin, Sargento is proud to be the company that successfully introduced America to pre-packaged sliced and shredded natural cheeses and cheese blends. Today, Sargento Foods is still based in Wisconsin, where they manufacture and market amazing shredded, sliced and snack natural cheese products, as well as ingredients and sauces. Company leadership lives to serve local communities and employees, whom they refer to as the Sargento Family. www.sargento.com

About Josh Bilicki
Josh Bilicki began his racing career at the early age of four when he got behind the wheel of a go-kart for the first time at Badger Kart Club in Wisconsin. After over ten years of success across multiple different karting categories, including shifter karts, Bilicki transitioned to full-size cars at age 14. After multiple years racing sportscars at an amateur rank, Bilicki made his professional racing debut in IMSA in 2015. After spending a year racing in IMSA and the Trans-Am Series, Bilicki made his NASCAR debut at his home track of Road America in 2016.

Bilicki made his first NASCAR Cup Series start at Sonoma Raceway in 2017. 2021 marked Bilicki’s first season in the Cup Series. For the 2022 season, Bilicki makes the move to Spire Motorsports in the NASCAR Cup Series and has also added multiple NASCAR Xfinity Series races to his schedule with Alpha Prime Racing.

MIXED RESULTS FOR WIGHT MOTORSPORTS GP3R

Photo Credit: Matthew Manor

-Rinomato scores Move of the Race award

(August 10, 2022) The Wight Motorsports Inc (WMI) group of drivers arrived at the Grand Prix of Trois-Rivieres with sights set on continuing the successes of the team during round number nine of the 2022 NASCAR Pinty’s Series in Trois-Rivieres, Quebec this past Sunday. While some of the final finishing results were a bit disappointing, there were also a great number of triumphs for the WMI racers.

As expected, Andrew Ranger in the #27 car was among the quickest in practice and qualifying, however contact during the race would hamper his finishing result. Rookie of the year title leader Brandon Watson showed significant improvement throughout the weekend and finished just outside the top-ten.

The WMI racer grabbing the most attention was TJ Rinomato who scored his best ever road course finish. Qualifying near the back of field didn’t hamper Rinomato and his race plan. With plenty of driver aggression on display by some competitors, Rinomato stealthily moved forward gaining 15 positions during the race and claimed a tenth-place finish. For his outstanding efforts he claimed the “Move of the Race” award for the event.

The race however wasn’t as kind for drivers Mark Dilley and Glenn Styres. Dilley suffered a mechanical failure and was forced to retire early, while Styres was hit by another competitor causing enough damage to also end his race prematurely.

QUOTES:
“First off, super proud of TJ Rinomato, what a job he did. There was a lot of aggressive driving going on and he ran a fantastic race avoiding the incidents and taking a top-ten finish”.
“Andrew would have been in contention for the win if he hadn’t suffered so much damage during one of the restarts, it’s how it goes sometimes on these street courses”.
“Brandon really learned a lot through the weekend, he worked hard and it showed in the results”
“Tough day for Mark and Glenn, with Mark having a mechanical issue. I feel bad for Glenn, he was hit in corner nine I believe and there was just so much damage he couldn’t continue. Both had gained positions on track before the bad luck”.
-David Wight, WMI Principal

WMI TEAM RESULTS:
TJ Rinomato 10th, Brandon Watson, 12th, Andrew Ranger 15th, Mark Dilley 17th, Glenn Styres 22nd.

TV & LIVE STREAMING
Les Tours 60 Rousseau Metals will be broadcast on TSN at a date and time to be determined. All races are streamed live on TSN.ca and the TSN app in Canada and through FloRacing in the United States.

NEXT EVENT:
WMI teams will next compete in round ten of the 2022 NASCAR Pinty’s Series at Oshweken Speedway near Hamilton, Ontario on Tuesday August 16th. This event will be the first ever series race run on a dirt oval.

The 2022 NASCAR Pinty’s Series will consist of 13 total races in five provinces with a mixture of oval tracks, road and street courses.

Race fans can get the latest information regarding WMI and the drivers on these social media channels:

Wight Motorsports Inc Twitter @Wightmotorsport Instagram @wightmotorsport

Brandon Watson: Instagram @brandonwatson_9

Mark Dilley: Twitter @MarkDilley9 Instagram @markdilley

TJ Rinomato: Twitter TJ_Rinomato Instagram @tjrinomato

Andrew Ranger: Twitter @AndrewRanger51 Instagram @andrew_ranger27

Glenn Styres: Twitter @GlennStyres Instagram @glennstyres

NTE Sport Relishes in Super Trofeo Victory in Elkhart Lake

ELKHART LAKE, Wis., (August 8, 2022) — Just like the weather, NTE Sport had a hot and wet weekend at the famed Road America road course for another action-packed race weekend. Both the NTE/SSR WeatherTech and NTE Sport Super Trofeo programs had some disappointing moments that dampened the mood over the course of the weekend, but the team finished the weekend on a high note, with a double-podium finish on Sunday. The NTE/SSR GTD Lamborghini charged from the back through the field not once, but twice – finishing fifth in class in the headlining IMSA Fastlane SportsCar Weekend. The No. 89 and the No. 42 Super Trofeo Lamborghinis kicked up the heat in the Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America doubleheader, collectively bringing the team one win, two podium finishes, and one top five in class finish.

“It’s an emotional tug of war when our weekends are so mixed with highs and lows,” said team owner Paul Mata. “Jaden Conwright and Marco Holzer have been great paired up together in our WeatherTech GTD entry. They keep showing their strengths and we know we are confident we will continue to improve from here. It was great to have Ashley Freiberg with us again, and I’m proud of the hard work Lucas Petersson and Keawn Tandon put in this weekend in Super Trofeo.”

WeatherTech SportsCar Championship

The No. 42 NTE/SSR Lamborghini Huracan GT3 Evo started the week off right with Jaden Conwright setting down a searing lap time at the end of the first practice session, showing the GTD field they had the speed to be a front runner in the highly competitive field. Set for qualifying on Saturday, Conwright finished with a sixth in class position, but the times were disqualified due to a mishap at the pit box before the session ended.

Starting at the back of the field on Sunday’s race, Conwright chipped through the pack from the get-go. Rain began and track conditions were slick though not yet technically wet enough for rain tires. Every team in pit lane closely watched the weather radar, each forced to make a strategy call to stay on Michelin slicks for dry race conditions or opt for rain tires. Even under a full course caution, cars were spinning as the surface worsened for the dry tires. Safely handing the car off to Marco Holzer, who chose rain tires, Holzer returned to the race under double yellow. Track conditions dried and the No. 42 Lamborghini had fallen back down to 11th in class. With just under one hour remaining, Holzer conducted a pit stop for tires and went back to slicks. Charging for the front, Holzer climbed to sixth in class with 30 minutes remaining. Completing another position take over before a full course caution, he rode out the remainder of the race fifth in class, taking the checkered flag under the yellow.

The IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship next heads to VIRginia International raceway August 26-28 for the Michelin GT Challenge at VIR. NTE/SSR’s IMSA WeatherTech program plans will be announced at a later date. For event information, visit imsa.com.

DRIVER QUOTES

Jaden Conwright

We had good potential throughout the weekend. We showed good pace during practice one. We were trying to understand the car a bit better during practice two and then qualifying was tight. Heading to the race, I think we show the pace that Marco and I have. Little mistakes here and there kept putting us farther back than we would like. Every time we always rebounded and drove our way back through the field. We were driving one of the few cars that made up quite a few positions just on pure pace. We need more time, testing, and preparation so we can work out some of the little kinks that have been hindering us this season. Working on the little details will help us take more of a fight to the pro cars at the front. Overall, I’m pretty happy with the performance this weekend. We just need to keep our heads down. Make sure that we don’t make the same mistakes twice and keep moving forward.

In a repeat scenario from Watkins Glen last month, a red flag in qualifying session one led to a frustrating start to the NTE Super Trofeo program. Very quickly into Saturday’s race, Ashley Freiberg incurred another setback from her fifth place starting position in the No. 42 as she was spun by Slade Stewart in the No. 14. A full course caution allowed for Freiberg to catch the pack and for all four NTE Lamborghinis to push for positions with the restart. With twenty minutes remaining, the race went back to green, and the delayed pit window opened. Todd Archer and Tiger Tari completed their driver change in the No. 18 and Tiger entered the field in his first professional race. Shortly after his stint started, an incident with Stewart in the No. 14 rendered the NTE No. 18 unable to continue. Starting in seventh in Am, Jeff Courtney in the No. 66 had a clean race and finished eighth in class. Keawn Tandon in the No. 89 started the race fifth in LB Cup. Avoiding incidents that plagued the race, Tandon picked up two positions, putting him on the podium for his debut professional sportscar race.

Race two was a stronger start for the four NTE cars due to more green time for hot laps in the second qualifying session on Saturday. Tari started seventh in LB Cup in the No. 89 and reached fifth in class when he experienced a mechanical issue causing him to return the pit box. After diagnostics were run on the Lamborghini, it was determined to be a fuel pump failure and the car was unable to continue. Starting third in Am, Courtney in the No. 66 was maintaining a position within the top five in class when it started to rain. Still on slicks, Courtney went off track and the car was damaged and unable to continue. The No. 89, driven by Keawn Tandon, lined up second in LB Cup for the race start. During the formation lap, contact between the polesitter No. 14 and the No. 9 knocked the No. 14 out from starting the race. Tandon took the green flag first in LB Cup and was able to maintain a top-two position for most of the race. After a red flag and allotted tire change due to inclement weather, he restarted the race in second in LB Cup with a significant gap of out-of-class cars between himself and the class polesitter. He chipped through the field, not only taking position one in class, but reaching teammate Ashley Freiberg of the No. 42 in the ProAm class. Advised by the team to hold position and keep the race clean in the wet, Tandon took the finish line first in class, claiming his first sports car win. Starting fourth in ProAm, Lucas Petersson drove the first stint in the No. 42. A position was lost, but he maintained a solid performance as the weather shifted and the track surface became slick while the cars were still on dry tires. He handed the car over the Freiberg, who spent a deal of time under a full course caution that became a red flag, ceasing the racing as well as the race clock. While waiting to restart the race, the officials allotted a tire change on account of the weather. Restarting the race on rain tires and from fifth in class, Freiberg charged from behind with 17 minutes remaining and was able to take third in class and claim the podium step for the duo.

The team will make an announcement regarding their Super Trofeo plans at a later date. For event information, visit the Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America website.

DRIVER QUOTES

Tiger Tari (LB Cup) ][ No. 18 Lamborghini Super Trofeo

As we always say in racing, there’s highs and lows, and I would like to think about the highs. It was a great pleasure to be racing with my friend Todd Archer, who took me under his wing and showed me how and what needs to be done. Everybody who is a part of NTE with is professional. They really take care of you and take a lot of weight off you so that you focus just on driving. The racing gods were definitely not on our side. On my first lap in race one, I was taken out by another competitor. Our guys did a phenomenal job taking care of everything on the car overnight and we were able to drive again. I started well in race two and started passing people and then the fuel pump took me out before I could finish the race. All I can do is move forward and learn, which I have learned a lot, and appreciate everything all these people are doing for us. All the people who work with IMSA, the Lamborghini people, the medical people, the whole nine yards. This was certainly a pleasant experience and will not be the last. I want to wish our crew member Gonzo a great birthday Saturday, we couldn’t do it without him. Also, Todd’s daughter’s birthday was on Saturday.

Todd Archer (LB Cup) ][ No. 18 Lamborghini Super Trofeo

First of all, I can’t be thankful enough for the invite to be able to race in the Super Trofeo series. Being able to race with a teammate like Tiger, especially in his debut for his pro race, I’m honored. I can’t thank NTE enough for the cars, the team, and the professionalism of the team. We tried our best and, you know, it gave us a platform to build upon. We look forward to the next time that we can try to come out and conquer again. You learn something new every time you race, and we’ll use that to our advantage for the next time that we can come out and be competitive. I can’t thank the team enough.

Lucas Petersson (Am) ][ No. 43 Lamborghini Super Trofeo

It went well this weekend. We got a third place in race two. It was rough in the beginning, but more time on the track meant that we got more comfortable. Ashley and I, and the rest of the team have good chemistry, so it was bound to happen eventually. I’m happy it was the first time I was in the car.

Ashley Freiberg (Am) ][ No. 43 Lamborghini Super Trofeo

I am so in love with this car and I’m super grateful for NTE Sport. We really deserve to be on the podium after the weekend we had. We had a lot of bad luck, one thing after another, so I just feel like we deserved what we got today. Lucas did a great job behind the wheel as well. When he handed me the car off and it was strong. I feel good!

Jeff Courtney (Am) ][ No. 66 Lamborghini Super Trofeo

Saturday was bad for everybody, I think it was just a tough race. Sunday started off really good and then bad timing as we just came into the rain with a couple of other cars. We were fast. I saved a lot of car for after the pitstop and we would have charged, so I’m happy with that. I was happy with the way the car was driving and my driving. I just didn’t get a chance to prove it.

Fred Roberts (LB Cup) ][ No. 89 Lamborghini Super Trofeo

This is unreal. I’m still processing it. I wouldn’t have done without the team, that’s for sure. It’s just unreal right now and I’m still comprehending what’s going on. In the moment I was so in the zone that I didn’t process that I was in first and in the last two laps they told me, so then I just backed off and held the in-class finish.

About NTE Sport
NTE Sport is based in Dallas, Texas, and first raced in 2020. Owner Paul Mata has been in the industry for over 20 years before starting his own team and has always focused on bringing together a diverse group of individuals to provide new opportunities and bring new people into the sport. Past female drivers include Sheena Monk and Ashley Freiberg, and drivers from diverse racial backgrounds include Ryan Nash, Jaden Conwright, and Kerong Li. Dedicated to bringing highly skilled individuals from various backgrounds, NTE Sport aims to continue to make North American sports car racing a fun, welcoming, supportive environment while participating in the most competitive series in North America.

About Star Spangled Racing
Based in Jacksonville, Florida, Star Spangled Racing is a newer sports car racing team, established in 2020 by first-generation immigrant Tiger Tari from Turkey. Tari is an accomplished businessman, race car driver, and philanthropist with big motorsport ambitions. Star Spangled Racing provides driving opportunities in the USA and Europe. Follow on Instagram here.

About Southwest Funding
Southwest Funding began operations in 1993 under the name Dallas Residential Mortgage. We enjoyed great success early on and before long we were serving the entire state of Texas. This growth caused us to change our name to Texas Residential Mortgage.

As we continued to grow and thrive in the industry, Texas Residential Mortgage was changed to Southwest Funding to better accommodate our growing business in other states.
Today we’re still thriving, thanks in part to happy customers who have spread the word about what our company is doing to help borrowers get a home loan that fits their situation in an enjoyable and timely way. www.southwestfunding.com

Lamborghini Dallas
Lamborghini Dallas has earned the Highest Rated Lamborghini Dealer in the United States award by DealerRater 10 years in a row. With a state-of-the-art showroom, factory-certified service facility, parts depot, and a team of master technicians, Lamborghini Dallas is dedicated to the legacy of the famed raging bull. As a member of Boardwalk Auto Group, we cultivate a focus on top-flight performance. It’s the driving force behind every nameplate we represent, every car we maintain, and every customer we have the privilege to serve. Performance. It’s what we do.

Group A Apparel

We are an action sports apparel brand for the adrenaline minded athlete. Focused on Functional Fitness, Motorsport, Surf, Snow, Skydiving, etc., we aim to support and grow the ever evolving ecosystem of global action/adventure sports.

Website: www.GroupAapparel.com

Instagram: @GroupAapparel

Best ADA Casinos & Gambling Sites for US Players in 2022

Cardano (ADA) is a decentralized platform that runs on the blockchain. It is a smart contract platform that allows developers to create and deploy decentralized applications. Cardano is also a cryptocurrency used to buy and sell goods and services.

As the value of ADA continues to rise, so does the interest of online casinos and gambling sites in offering ADA as a payment option. Currently, there are a handful of casinos and gambling sites that accept ADA, but the number is expected to grow exponentially in the coming years.

One of the most important aspects to recognize when you are choosing a casino is reliability. You can read more on this at veilige online casino so that you will know how to know what makes an online casino reliable.

In this article, we’ll discuss the best ADA casinos and gambling sites for USA players in 2022. Moreover, you must go for more information. They include:

1. Wild Casino

Wild Casino is one of the best ADA casinos in the USA. It is a licensed and regulated online casino that accepts ADA deposits and withdrawals. Wild Casino offers a wide range of games, including slots, table games, and live dealer games.

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How To Paint Your Car Like A Pro

Photo by Clarity Coat on Unsplash

Whether you’re a newbie painter or a seasoned pro, learning how to paint your car is an important skill. It’s not that hard, but it takes patience and practice. In this article, we’ll show you how to paint a car like a professional — including all the steps from start to finish.

Remove all sanding dust

The final step in the sanding process is to remove all dust and debris from your car. Use a tack cloth to do this, then vacuum up any remaining dust and blow it away with compressed air.

Prime the body

Though this sounds like a simple step, it’s actually one of the most important in your painting process. The purpose of priming is to seal the surface and prepare it for paint by filling any small holes or imperfections so that they don’t show up when you paint over them. Primer also provides an even base coat for your color coat and read the graco spray tips to help you get a smooth finish. You can prime with a spray primer or brush-on primer—whichever you have access to will work just fine.

If you’re going for a smooth finish—meaning no clearcoat/wax needed—then prime only after sanding down the existing finish with 320 grit sandpaper (or something similar). If you want some kind of protection against rust and weather damage, then prime both before and after sanding down your car body.

Mix the material

Mix the paint with the hardener. You’ll need to mix the paint and hardener together by hand, so make sure to use a wooden stir stick or clean hands. Make sure you have all of your materials ready before you start mixing:

  • Paint (both primer and color)
  • Hardener (for enamel paints)
  • Reducer (for acrylic paints)

Basecoat the car

This is the first layer of paint you will apply to your car. It should be as thin as possible but still thick enough to thoroughly cover every inch of surface area. The color of this coat will depend on what color you want your car to be in the end. Moreover, this will primarily cover over any undercoat or primer (if you have a light-colored car) and provide a smooth base for multiple coats of paint.

Color coat the car

Next, you’ll want to spray your paint. If you’re using a car spray gun, ensure it’s been properly cleaned and has fresh air filters. You must also wear a mask and protective clothing when working with paint.

Once you’ve got all your gear in place, it’s time for the fun part: painting! This is where you get creative with colors and designs. You want to be careful not to overdo it here, though—it can be easy when painting something so large.

Clear coat the car

As the last step of your paint job, you’ll want to clear coat your car. Clear coats are made specifically for cars, and they’re important because they protect the paint from oxidation over time. It’s also the most difficult step of painting a car: it requires precision and skill, but all that practice will pay off.

Conclusion

There you have it. These simple steps will help you ensure that your car paint job lasts longer, looks better, and feels great.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Virginia Native Harrison Burton Ready for Richmond Return

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Richmond 2 Advance | Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Harrison Burton, driver of the No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang, heads to Richmond Raceway this weekend for the second time in his NASCAR Cup Series rookie season. The Virginia native finished 18th in his first race last spring and had good success at the short track in the NASCAR Xfinity Series with three top-10 finishes in four starts. He spoke to members of the media today about Sunday’s scheduled race.

HARRISON BURTON, No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang – IF YOU CAN’T MAKE THE PLAYOFFS, WHAT IS A REALISTIC GOAL FOR THE REST OF THE SEASON? “The part of the year hasn’t gone how we wanted it to. There’s no denying that. There’s no rose-tinted glasses for that. There have been a lot of missed opportunities on our end. I think of cars that we had that were fast and I made mistakes or just missing opportunities throughout the weekend to get decent finishes. For us, the biggest goal is just to maximize our weekends and show up to the racetrack and unload with a lot of speed. There’s been a few weekends this year where we’ve unloaded and been super-fast off the truck and those are like when you look back over the year those are all of the favorite ones that we have to look back at. I think about Gateway, unloading off the truck and being fastest in practice for a little bit there and finishing well in practice, qualifying in the top 10 at kind of an intermediate, short track hybrid. Places like that and runs like that we need to have more and more often and even at the Indy road course getting our first top five, it was kind of a weekend full of missed opportunities throughout the first half and then all of a sudden the second half of the race comes and we take advantage of a lot of different things. We just need to get better and better every week and show progress at the end of the day. Show lap time. That’s the biggest goal for us. We’re working day and night. There’s no pointing fingers on our team, which is amazing. All of our team members at Wood Brothers Racing are all kind of pointing fingers at themselves at what we can all do better, and I’m in that same boat and working as hard as ever to do this. It’s an honor to drive the 21 car and get it out front. It’s a priority for us and at the end of the day we’ve got to put the work in to do that.”

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED THE MOST IN YOUR ROOKIE SEASON? “Just learning these cars in general has been a real big challenge. They’re a lot different to drive than the old generation car and they’re different setup and the priorities are different, the philosophy is different. For me, as a driver, I’ve learned a lot. I feel like I’m getting more comfortable in uncomfortable situations and I think that’s the key to being a great race car driver. At the end of the day I’m just trying to find a way to be comfortable being uncomfortable and getting better and better at that. These cars are gonna drive poorly. They’re gonna be on the edge of control and being on that edge and driving it hard through that edge had been a good lesson I think I learned the first third of the year and trying to apply that to these racetracks we go to a second time is gonna be super important to show some signs and get up front.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THESE NEXT THREE TRACKS? “It’s always tough to win at any level. It’s really tough to win in the Cup Series. I feel like we’ve been making good strides the last two weeks to have good speed and show up to the racetrack fast and I think Daytona is a good opportunity for almost everybody in the field to try and bust off a win there. We led laps there earlier in the year at the Daytona 500, so there are some things I can see, ‘Hey, that could be a track for us.’ I feel like Richmond was one of our better races earlier in the year when we compare to our alliance partners with Team Penske. The goal is to run as good as those guys do, so that was a race where I felt like we did that. We had a decent run there and had some speed and showed a lot of speed in the race, but we just didn’t execute properly on a few things and that bit us in the butt. Those are two good ones (Richmond and Daytona) and obviously anything can happen at a road course and coming off a top five, so there’s a case you can make for any of them, I guess. We’ve just got to go and show the speed in practice and in qualifying and the early parts of the race to get that, so really it’s one day at a time and one practice at a time to get to that level and we’ll get there eventually. I’m pretty sure of it.”

HOW WOULD YOU GRADE YOUR SEASON TO DATE? “I think it’s definitely been a let down for me personally. I wanted to come out and do a really good job and I feel like I made a lot of mistakes early. Some things I feel like I did well early, but I don’t know. I don’t know what the grade would be. I haven’t really thought a lot about that. I think the biggest thing is just trying to build off of every weekend. Last weekend at MIchigan was so tough because we just missed it in practice and qualifying and then you get into the race and get crashed early and don’t have a chance to really build off of anything. I’m just trying to get better and better each weekend. If I could give it a grade, I wouldn’t give it a good one. I think we’ve got to run better. There’s no secret about that and there’s no one on our team that believes what we’re doing is enough. We’ll get it done. It’s just a matter of how and I know we’re working hard enough to do it. That’s for sure.”

WHAT DOES THAT RUN AT THE INDY ROAD COURSE DO FOR YOU GOING INTO WATKINS GLEN? “It’s cool. I really worked hard in the offseason to be a better road racer. I feel like that’s something I struggled with in Xfinity, trying to run with guys like Austin Cindric. That guy is quick on a road course, so learning from him I feel like has been good. I’ve run a lot of races thanks to our friends at Ford. I ran a GT4 race earlier this year. All of the Cup road course races and doing a lot of time at home on the simulator and on the Ford simulator, and I feel like that has paid a dividend to getting faster on those and qualifying pretty decent at the Indy road course. We qualified 12th or 13th, so decent qualifying there and decent speed. If you have that, you can execute a race a lot easier and things come to you a lot easier, that’s for sure. My confidence on those is higher on those than it has been in the past, but I still know there’s work to be done there and I think that’s what is good. You know where and how and it’s just about doing it, so there’s no stone unturned.”

WHEN YOU GO BACK TO DAYTONA DOES ANY OF THE CRASH YOU HAD IN THE 500 SIT IN THE BACK OF YOUR MIND AT ALL? “Obviously, when you flip or anything like that it looks really dramatic and scary. I think the people outside of the race car were more worried than I was. I’ve got this video that NASCAR sends us where we can look at our safety equipment and see what we could have done better to be safer inside these race cars and you watch that and we learned some things. The coolest part was I felt like I was upside down still trying to drive and then once I landed the first thing I did was trying to start it up and drive off again. I didn’t really have any fear in that moment. I felt fine and that definitely hasn’t carried over either. Honestly, that’s one of my favorite races I’ve run all year. I showed up early. It’s the Daytona 500. My first one. I felt like I made the right moves. I felt like I was aggressive enough and at the end of the day it didn’t work out. I always try and see what I could do different and there was maybe a few things I could have done differently, but at the end of the day I was proud of that performance and proud of being aggressive.”

WHAT ARE YOUR EXPECTATIONS FOR THE NEXT THREE RACES? “I feel we to demand a high amount of expectation for ourselves to have that happen. We have to show up and qualify well, practice well. I really want to be in that top 10 in qualifying at Richmond. I feel like we can do that. I feel like I’m a driver that can do that. I’ve led a lot of laps in Xfinity at Richmond and had a win slip away there. I really love that racetrack and feel like that place suits me well, so I want to be a top 10 guy there in qualifying and build off of that for the race. Then we go to Watkins Glen and just want to show similar speed and get a good result like we did at the Indy road course. I’d like to try to build off of that result and see what we learned. I feel like we have some good directions from our post-race meetings there that we learned from what we could do to make our car better, and then Daytona my expectation is that my team shows up with the same level of aggression as we did in the 500 and try and go and lead laps in that thing and be aggressive and try to take advantage of that opportunity.”

DO YOU WANT TO CONTINUE WITH THE WOOD BROTHERS IN 2023? “I think it’s all up in the air at the moment. I feel like we’re at a good point right now and there’s a lot of faith in me within the group and in the Wood family. I’ve felt nothing but support from them. I get a lot of really cool texts from those guys and they seem to believe in me quite a bit, so I’m excited about that and hopefully something comes together where I can announce it soon. I don’t have anything to announce yet, but if I could run the rest of my career in the Wood Brothers 21 car, I would be pretty happy. It’s an amazing team to drive for and I hope we can continue for sure.”

WHAT IS A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A DRIVER LIKE FOR YOU? “It’s a pretty busy life, for sure. There’s a lot of travel and all that, but, normally, with Xfinity it was nice because I normally had Sunday off. Well, now pretty much every day of the week is booked. For example, today I was in the simulator starting at 7:00. I was there until 11 o’clock. Left there and started watching some Richmond SMTs and got to watch some Beta before I got on this call. I’m on this call and then I’m gonna leave here and go to the gym and work out, and then go home after that and take a shower and go talk to my dad about some other racing stuff. That’s just today, for example. Tomorrow, we’ve got a lot of meetings with our group. It’s really structured. We always have a pre-race film meeting. We always do a post-race meeting debrief and then after Monday we’re full steam ahead on the next week. Today, Tuesdays are usually not super busy for me as far as scheduled meetings go, but I tend to fill it up with simulator time every week from 7-11, and then from there to the gym and kind of bouncing all over. It’s a busy life, for sure, and you’ve got to love it to do it, that’s a guarantee.”

IS THE SIM TIME HELPING THE FORD TEAMS AS MUCH AS FOR YOURSELF FOR THE UPCOMING RACES? “A little bit of both. One of the hardest things about the simulator this year has been not having gone to the racetrack before the race in that race car, so our simulator is kind of a guess that we kind of have to make. A lot of my Tuesdays are post-race kind of tire to track adjustments for grip and trying to make that as accurate of a program as we can. It’s getting better and better as we go and the effort that we’re putting in there has been really cool to see. It’s a really hard project because all of the ways that this car makes grip is so different than the old car. The tires are different and we’re really starting from scratch on a program that has been running pretty well for a long time and so, yeah, I’d say it’s probably 50 percent last week and 50 percent this week when I’m in there and trying to move the ball forward and start the Ford program out as much as I can.”

ATHLETE FILM STUDY HAS BEEN A TOPIC THE LAST COUPLE OF WEEKS. CAN YOU GIVE A SENSE OF THE EXTRA WORK IN THAT AREA YOU DO AND WHAT DO YOU LOOK AT? “We’ve got a really cool process where the crew chief, the spotter and engineers all sit in and we have a film room that we can go and watch race film in, so we kind of start that meeting and go over some baseline things and setup ideas – normal race meeting kind of stuff – and then we just put on the race and talk about it as it goes on. We’ll watch the whole race and skip through to restarts and things and just talk about it and that’s kind of in the facility, where it’s just the whole team and it’s kind of not super structured. And then when I get home I like to watch a lot of the SMT data, where it’s all modeled cars in there and you can see steering, throttle, brake traces – see what guys are doing well, what guys aren’t doing well You can kind of zoom in on guys or zoom out and watch the whole race. What I tend to watch for in that is kind of trying to understand what guys are fighting and understand what they do better than others. You go to Martinsville and see, ‘Hey, why is this guy faster than other guys?’ And his car is a couple feet higher. At this point in the corner he’s leaving low, so whatever it might be. I look for small details by myself and I don’t really have a super structured way to do that. I kind of just go through and pick through the data, watch different guys that I know are really great at certain racetracks and try and take off of them. It’s gonna be really nice when I can go back and watch myself. This weekend at Richmond I’m just gonna watch the 21 car go around the racetrack and see everything I could have done better – every single moment, every single decision you make as far as restart selections – all of that you can watch back and understand what you did and didn’t do. Those are the main things that I kind of look for. It’s what works for guys and what doesn’t, and then I get to watch myself go around the racetrack for a whole race and see what I could have done better.”

WHAT HAS BEEN THE BIGGEST CHALLENGE FOR YOU IN REGARDS TO WORK ETHIC? “I think the biggest challenge is trying to find a way to be proactive to issues, instead of reactive to issues and it’s always hard to look in the mirror. As a race car driver, you want to be the fastest guy ever to step in a race car. You want to have the most natural talent that anyone has ever had. That’s what you want to be and so when you have to look at yourself in the mirror and say, ‘Hey, I’m not doing this right and I’m not doing that right,’ sometimes that can be a little hard because all race car drivers have an ego. I think everyone knows that who talks to us long enough, so it’s hard because you want to be confident going to the racetrack. You don’t want to pick yourself apart, but you also need to know what you could have done better. That’s a balance. I tend to be really hard on myself and want to be the best I can be, so every mistake I make I kind of wear it on my sleeve. My girlfriend, Jenna, has to deal with if I qualify bad, I’m probably gonna be mad for all of Saturday. If I qualify good, I’ll be in a good mood. For me, I try not to take it so harsh if it’s bad or take it so good if it’s good is a challenge. To try and stay in the middle of that roller coaster and not go up or down too much is really important for me, personally.”

IS IT JUST TIME AND HAVING A CAR AND THE OPPORTUNITIES THAT ALLOW YOU TO LEARN THE DIFFERENCE OF WHAT IT TAKES TO RUN UP FRONT COMPARED TO MIDPACK OR THE BACK? “It’s all of it. I mean, Kevin Harvick has been in this season forever and he just won last weekend. Obviously, he’s got a lot of talent. Obviously, he’s been around for a while and has all the experience and it’s cool to see him win, but all of those things come into play with a guy like that. This guy has won races at every level he’s been at. He’s been up front in Cup races for 20 years and he knows what’s gonna happen. He’s been there, done that. So there’s part of that and part of it that, really, the racing in 15th is a lot different than racing for the lead. That clean air component of kind of fighting for that clean air and being able to do things that maybe you wouldn’t be able to do in 15th that you can in first. There’s a lot of things that are different about that and I’ve gotten to be up front a few races and race for the lead and it’s definitely a different level of intensity because it’s so important to get that track position and maintain that track position as long as you can. Say you’re staying out on old tires or whatever it might be, that definitely picks up the intensity, so I don’t know if there’s like a one thing as a driver you have to do this different when you’re out front. It’s kind of just a tempo change. It’s a feeling change and it’s pretty apparent when you’re in the car and doing it. I think that’s why you hear guys like Dale Jr. or my dad in the booth kind of say that because they’ve been there and raced for wins and know what it’s like and know the kind of place you have to be in your head to do it. It’s a lot different. You really think differently when it’s for the lead, so I don’t know personally about Bubba in particular. I can just speak to myself and say that it’s gonna come with time and it’s gonna come with effort. You don’t get up front without putting effort in. You have to put the effort in to get from 15th to first, but once you get there – say you have six chances to win a race, I’d say you’re probably win one or two in this field. If you’re up front late with a chance to win, the odds are you’re not gonna win your first time having that opportunity, so being up there and having chances is kind of the key.”

AT MICHIGAN WHERE SOME GUYS AREN’T USED TO RUNNING UP FRONT, THERE IS AN ART TO IT. “Yeah, for sure. I think the situation there is a little different too with Bubba having a really fast race car. They were really good this weekend and he was doing a good job all weekend. You can kind of wear that on your heart harder, I would think, because whenever you have a great car and don’t win, that hurts more than say you have a not-so-great car and a mistake happens.”

WE’VE NOT SEEN YOU THROW A HELMET. YOU ALWAYS SEEM TO BE SMILING, SO HOW DO YOU DEAL WITH SITUATIONS WHEN THEY DON’T GO WELL? DO YOU GET UPSET? “They definitely know how much I care. I have meetings with them and show them that it matters to all of us the same. I never felt like that was a question. The biggest thing is I’m not miserable. I don’t leave the racetrack hating life. I just care so much. I want to do well in this car. It’s a great chance for me. It’s everything I’ve ever worked for in my whole life, so when a mistake happens and I have someone like my girlfriend, who I’ve dated for five years and been together with since we were freshman in high school, and someone like my dad who I can talk to, I tend to open up more. Personally, I don’t really throw stuff. I don’t show it a lot, but the people that know me know how much it matters and I think that’s kind of just how I am. I’ve never been super outspoken about much. I’ve never been the guy to jump up and down and scream and yell in the public eye, and sometimes when you get home and you have a chance to talk with someone you care about about it, sometimes you kind of let your emotions go and that’s kind of how I operate at times. As far as the team goes, I feel like they know who much it matters to me because I think you get to know these guys like your family and they become in the same light. You can have lunch with my crew chief Brian and my engineer, Matt. We have lunch every week. We all talk about how much this matters to us and what we need to do to be better, and then we show that commitment to being better. There’s a difference in talking about it and doing it and it’s not one or the other, it’s both. I don’t feel that way about my team and I don’t think they feel that way about me.”

WHAT DOES IT LOOK LIKE WHILE BEING SELF-CRITICAL? “I’ve done it all. I’ve sat in film meetings and said what I did in that scenario was dumb. I’ve thought about how I give feedback to my team – if I’m not aggressive enough or too aggressive with my comments and we end up over or under adjusting. I’ve thought about what does it take to be a great competitor and have that competitive spirit. I’ve talked to a lot of really interesting people about that. I’ve done almost every exercise in the book, for sure, and it’s a cool experience because you know a lot about yourself by the end of it. We were flying home somewhere and we fly with the Penske group. I was sitting next to Joey and talking about just racing in general and how hard it could be and he’s a guy that has turned into a Cup champion from a guy that had kind of a bad rookie season, I guess. I don’t really know the stats, but you talk to him and that’s how he talks about it is he’s gotten better through hard times and turned into one of the best to ever do it. He was talking to me about, ‘Hey, it’s pretty awesome when you think about what are other 21 year olds doing and how tough are you gonna be from this?’ It was pretty early in the year that we had that conversation and it’s definitely true. It’s a hard sport emotionally, physically and mentally. It takes everything you’ve got and that doesn’t guarantee success. I think in some other sports you can shoot free throws all day and you go to the game and you’re probably gonna be a better free throw shooter. A lot of the things you do in this sport don’t guarantee success and you can be wiped out at any moment. You think about this weekend for us. We were in a crash early and don’t have a chance. It’s hard to say you could have done anything different other than be in front of it, so it’s a hard sport. I’ve thought a lot about what it takes to be a great competitor and trying to implement some things that I do in my day-to-day life and I think it’s been working and showing signs of progress. It’s been cool.”

DO YOU FEEL YOU’VE MADE PROGRESS AS A DRIVER SINCE DAYTONA? “Yeah, most definitely. I feel a lot more confident now. Every time I get in the car I feel like I can push it. I feel like I know the limit of the tire. There was a time when I first started this Next Gen car experience where I really didn’t feel that way. I got in the race car and was uncomfortable with a lot about it. I never really knew where the limit was and through experience I’ve been able to find those limits — make mistakes but learn from them. Every time I get in the race car I’m more and more confident, so, yeah, as a driver I feel I’m a lot better in this car in particular. I feel like I’m a smarter driver now having raced against Cup competition for two-thirds of a year now. That’s only gonna bring the most out of you is when you’re around people like this. You see guys like Ty Gibbs that are lighting up the Xfinity Series and he just got a top 10, but it’s hard for everybody. You race these guys that in the outside looking in maybe they don’t get the credit they deserve at how good everyone in this series is and how much they deserve respect. It’s a hard series and that’s how it should be. That’s what makes it awesome. That’s what makes it fun to watch. That’s what makes it fun to do. I definitely feel like I’m a better driver from being around that and being around my alliance partners and talking to them about driving and racing. I feel like I’m a much better driver now than I was last year or the year before that. That’s just part of growing and learning every year. Even when you look at a guy like Harvick. I think he’s getting better every week. You hear Rodney Childers talking about that they haven’t changed much, but Harvick has gotten better with this car and he’s doing some things different. It’s kind of a testament to how challenging this is that a guy like that doesn’t just wake up and roll out of bed and do it. He’s got to put a lot of effort behind it and does that week in and week out.”

WHAT HAS THE RACE FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP PRODUCTION BEEN LIKE? WERE THEY WITH YOU AT INDY? “No, they weren’t there for those weeks. They were there at different times. They’ve been at my girlfriend’s parent’s house. They’ve been at races and they’ve seen me mad, happy, sad – all of the above. It’s been kind of a strange experience for me. I’m kind of a reserved guy and having a camera around is a weird thing for me. I never felt scared or shy around cameras, but I also never thought I’d be in a reality show. It’s been an interesting experience. I got to know the camera crew pretty well for that group, so that made it easy. It was a cool experience. I think the fans are gonna love it. I feel like it’s something that we’ve needed to show. I can sit in this interview and talk about how hard it is, what we do, what it’s like emotionally, physically what the drivers are going through, but you don’t see it so it’s kind of easy to say, ‘He’s just talking about it.’ I’m excited for the fans to see what the drivers do and what we go through. I think it will make some fans of the sport that maybe haven’t been in the past. If they tune into that and see what it’s like, they’ll probably get behind it, so it’s gonna be cool to see how it turns out. I haven’t seen any clips other than the trailers that have been released. I know what they filmed me doing and that’s about it, so it’s a cool deal.”