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3DX and Jessco Racing Targeting Land Speed Record at Bonneville Salt Flats

Seattle WA, Aug. 01, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — via NewMediaWire –3DX Industries Inc. (DDDX) (the “Company” or “3DX”), a state of the art advanced manufacturer specializing in additive 3D Metal Printing and subtractive manufacturing technologies, announced today it will be attending Bonneville Speedweek at the Salt Flats in Wendover, Utah from August 10 -16, 2022.

The Bonneville Salt Flats is home to all kinds of speed-shattering records that are usually set at a myriad of racing events held here including: the Bonneville Motorcycle Speed Trials and Bonneville Speed Week—the largest meet of the year, attracting hundreds of drivers in all racing classes who compete to set new land speed records in all kinds of racing categories.

3DX Industries, Inc. has been involved in the design and printing of custom racing parts for years and is sponsoring Jessco Racing in their quest to set a new land speed record in the 3000CC, partial Streamliner, pushrod class.

“The team at 3DX has built custom racing parts for over 10 years, including 3D metal printed intake manifolds, billet machined brake calipers, blower bearing end caps, an intake for a Toyota Supra Race Team, custom control switch for KTM off road Motorcycles and other racing components,” said Vice President Nicholas Coriano. “We’re honored to be a part of this world class event,” he added.

“We manufacture custom and production parts with complexity and precision more efficiently through our additive manufacturing capabilities,” added Roger Janssen, 3DX President and CEO.

3DX personnel invite all shareholders and race fans to come by and meet with us and the Jessco Race Team at the “race pits” during the week.

About the Company: 3DX Industries, Inc. is an advanced manufacturing company focused on the additive metal manufacturing segment within the manufacturing industry. 3DX has the capability of manufacturing a wide variety of products using its 3D metal printing system, 3D plastic printing as well as more traditional methods of subtractive precision manufacturing. 3DX offers additive and traditional manufacturing services as well as product design, engineering and assembly services to its customers.

Safe Harbor: 3DX encourages those interested in our Company to rely only on information included in our filings. Statements released by 3DX Industries, Inc. that are not purely historical are forward-looking within the meaning of the “Safe Harbor” provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements regarding the company’s expectations, hopes, intentions, and strategies for the future. Investors are cautioned that forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainties that may affect the company’s business prospects and performance. The company’s actual results could differ materially from those in such forward-looking statements. Risk factors include but are not limited to general economic, competitive, governmental, and technological factors as discussed in the company’s filings. The company does not undertake any responsibility to update the forward-looking statements contained in this release.

Kaulig Racing Chases Another Checkered Flag in Cook Out Summer Shootout Season Finale

  • The season finale for the Cook Out Summer Shootout takes place on Tuesday night; Champions Night will feature a school bus race among Kaulig Racing NASCAR drivers as well as Legend Car and Bandolero action, an autograph session and fireworks
  • Gates open at 5 p.m. , Tickets cost just $10 for adults, kids 12 and under get in FREE

CONCORD, N.C. (Aug. 1, 2022) – A star-studded school bus slobberknocker, a driver autograph session and a spectacular fireworks show are set to headline Tuesday’s hotly anticipated Cook Out Summer Shootout season finale. Eight weeks of high-intensity, wheel-to-wheel Legend Car and Bandolero action on Charlotte Motor Speedway’s frontstretch quarter-mile comes to a close with championships yet to be decided among racing’s future stars.

Race fans will be in for a 10-ton treat when members of Kaulig Racing’s NASCAR Xfinity Series team engage in a no-holds-barred school bus race to determine, once and for all, the hottest shoe at Kaulig. The “school bus showdown of the century” pits 2009 Summer Shootout Legend Car Pro champion and 2010 Legends Million champion Daniel Hemric against fellow Kaulig drivers Landon Cassill and Justin Haley, as well as Kaulig Racing President Chris Rice.

In addition to seeing the king of Kaulig being crowned, fans can enjoy a thrilling night of Legend Car and Bandolero racing, with champions collecting their hard-earned hardware in six divisions: Masters, Boston Reid & Company Pro, VP Racing Semi-Pro, Young Lions, Bandolero Outlaws and Bandolero Bandits.

TICKETS:

Adult tickets cost $10 and kids 12 and under get in FREE. Tickets can be purchased at the gate, by calling 800-455-FANS or online at www.charlottemotorspeedway.com/tickets.

KEEP TRACK:

Follow all the thrilling Cook Out Summer Shootout action using the hashtag #WeCreateLegends. Connect with Charlotte Motor Speedway on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram .

Jr III Racing Targets IMSA Championship Lead at Road America

Elkhart Lake, Wisc. (1 August 2022) – Jr III (“Junior Three”) Racing heads to Road America with eyes on the IMSA LMP3 championship lead for the IMSA Fastlane SportsCar Weekend on August 7 (11:40am ET, USA).

Continuing its first full-season IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship (IWSC) campaign at the track where the team made its series debut last year, Jr III Racing has its sights set on the final two rounds of competition. Ari Balogh and Garett Grist will drive the No. 30 Airbnb Ligier JS P320 and head into the weekend with three podiums under their belt this season. The team has scored a pair of second place finishes at Sebring and Mid-Ohio in addition to a third place finish at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.

The Charlotte-based team made its IWSC debut at Road America in 2021 before starting its full-season IMSA WeatherTech campaign in 2022. The Wisconsin weekend didn’t go as planned for the team’s debut race with an early retirement for the No. 3 Jr III Racing Ligier JS, but the young team with a highly experienced crew rebounded to score a podium finish in their Petit Le Mans debut to close out the 2021 season.

With a third place finish at the Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, Grist and Balogh brought home solid championship points and are keeping their focus on gaining ground to the LMP3 class lead, with the No. 30 Airbnb Ligier 98 points back from the lead.

Jr III Racing tested at the National Park of Speed in July with a handful of other IMSA competitors to prepare for the 4.048-mile road course. Team owner Billy Glavin III feels that testing continues to show the dedication for preparation from his team and drivers to make their way to the top of the championship.

“We’re looking forward to Road America,” said Glavin. “I think we have a good lineup for that track and a good car. At the test, we used our chassis that we had our fire at Watkins Glen, and we got that running and shaken out before the race, so that car is back together. We ran a lot of miles and got a lot of data on our test car and learned a lot, so it was a good test. Obviously, we’re in a position right now where we have to win and finish well over the next two races. We have to control our destiny by winning the last two races, so that’s what we’re working towards.”

Grist, who has previously ran Road America during his time in Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires, enjoyed his time at the scenic road course in preparation for the fifth round of LMP3 competition this season.

“It was one of our longer tests of the season for sure, but we got a lot done and tried different things as a team,” said Grist. “Overall, it was fun, and Elkhart Lake is beautiful. It’s always a great place to test. It’s a lot different than Mosport, almost close to double lap time. With a longer lap, that does a lot for our strategy and fuel mileage with each stint. Overall, going into next week we’ll be considering those things on the strategy side.”

The IMSA Fastlane SportsCar Weekend commences on August 5 with the main two-hour and 40-minute race on Sunday August 7 at 11:40am ET on USA Network with streaming on Peacock.

Semifinal Appearance for Pruett and Dodge//SRT at Northwest Nationals to Close Out NHRA Western Swing

Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals
  • Tony Stewart Racing (TSR) Top Fuel pilot Leah Pruett drove her Sparkling Ice +Caffeine Dodge//SRT dragster to a semifinal appearance after qualifying No. 12 at the National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) Northwest Nationals near Seattle 
  • Pruett closes out the NHRA three-event Western Swing sixth in the Top Fuel standings after her win at the Dodge Power Brokers Mile-High Nationals near Denver, a No. 1 qualifier position and quarterfinal appearance at the Sonoma Nationals, and this weekend’s semifinal appearance at the Northwest Nationals
  • TSR Funny Car driver Matt Hagan remains second in the championship standings after a trio of challenging race weekends wrapped up at Pacific Raceways with a No. 10 qualifier position and a third consecutive early exit
  • Cruz Pedregon qualified his Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat Funny Car No. 4 for eliminations at the Northwest Nationals but bows out early and leaves the Seattle-area event seventh in points

July 31, Kent, Washington — Tony Stewart Racing (TSR) pilot Leah Pruett closed out the National Hot Rod Association’s (NHRA) three-event Western Swing by taking her Sparkling Ice +Caffeine Dodge//SRT Top Fuel dragster from the No. 12 seeded position to a semifinal appearance at the Northwest Nationals near Seattle, Washington.

Pruett drove to a 3.897-second elapsed time pass in the final qualifying session to secure the spot on the eliminations ladder that paired her with No. 5 qualifier Antron Brown for the opening round. She kicked off eliminations by beating Brown on the tree by 0.003 seconds, then battling it out the entire length of the track before the Dodge//SRT dragster turned on the win lights with Pruett’s quickest run of the weekend, a 3.781-second pass at 325.69 mph to defeat her opponent’s 3.796 sec./320.81 mph effort.

In the quarterfinals, Pruett had another close battle with No. 4 qualifier Doug Kalitta whom she chased down with a (0.080-second reaction time) 3.818 sec./322.42 mph run to better his (0.075-second RT) 3.827 sec./316.67 mph pass and take the round win with a 0.0041-second margin of victory. That set up a semifinal match-up with Brittany Force against whom a loss of traction at the start of the lap sent Pruett’s chances to challenge the current Top Fuel points leader up in smoke and ended what has been a solid three week campaign for her TSR team.

Pruett’s performance over the three-event Western Swing included a big win at the Dodge Power Brokers Mile-High Nationals near Denver, a No. 1 qualifier position and quarterfinal appearance at the Sonoma Nationals, and with the addition of Sunday’s semifinal appearance at the Northwest Nationals she sits solidly sixth in the Top Fuel championship standings with three events remaining in the regular season.

TSR teammate Matt Hagan came into the Western Swing second in the Funny Car championship standings after a strong start to the year that included three wins aboard his Dodge Power Brokers Charger SRT Hellcat. After initially kicking off the series of three consecutive events with a No. 1 qualifier position at the Dodge Power Brokers Mile-High Nationals, the team has since encountered a few challenges. 

Following a pair of uncharacteristic first round exits at Denver and Sonoma, Hagan had hoped to drive from his 12th place qualifying position at Pacific Raceways to four quality elimination runs on Sunday beginning with a showdown against No. 3 qualifier John Force. The Dodge Power Brokers Charger SRT Hellcat launched first and took the early lead but started to lose power just as Force began to lose traction. By then it was too late for Hagan as his opponent pedaled it enough to make it to the finish ahead of him. Despite the third consecutive opening round loss, Hagan remains solidly in second place behind category points leader and eventual event winner Robert Hight.

Fellow Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat driver Cruz Pedregon put in another solid qualifying effort to put himself No. 4 on the eliminations ladder and set up for a first round pairing with No. 9 seed Tim Wilkerson. While his opponent had a quicker start, Pedregon’s Snap-on Tools HEMI®-powered Funny Car took over the lead in the first few feet until it began to haze the tires and drop cylinders. While Wilkerson also had traction issues, he was able to make his way to the finish first and brought Pedregon’s race day to a premature end. Despite the setback, Pedregon is seventh in Funny Car points and firmly among the top ten positions with expectations of making the “Countdown to the Championship” playoffs.

The NHRA will take a one week break before returning to competition for the 14th of 22 events on the 2022 schedule at the Menards NHRA Nationals Presented By PetArmor at Heartland Motorsports Park in Topeka, Kansas.

ADDITIONAL NOTES and QUOTES:

Leah Pruett, Sparkling Ice +Caffeine Dodge//SRT Top Fuel Dragster  

(No. 12 Qualifier – 3.897  seconds at 314.39 mph)  

Round 1: (0.090-second reaction time, 3.781 seconds at 325.69 mph) defeats No. 5 Antron Brown (0.093/3.796/320.81)

Round 2: (0.080/3.818/322.42) defeats No. 4 Doug Kalitta (0.075/3.827/316.67)

Round 3: (0.141/6.295/107.05) loss to No.1 Brittany Force (0.087/3.823/325.61)

“This was one of the largest learning curves that we’ve had in a long time. We came out on the good side of things. Qualifying No. 12 wasn’t ideal, but a problem kept arising that would happen every two or three races. Saturday night before eliminations, this Sparkling Ice team spent about four hours dedicated to finding our out of control shaft issue, with an outlier we couldn’t put our finger on. By 11 p.m., we found a very large issue, so we addressed it going into race day with things unknown. We were able to put down a solid .78 run with lane choice for the second round. We have a better performing race car than we’ve had all year even though we didn’t make it to the finals. There was a huge piece of the puzzle that was missing and we found it here in Seattle. 

“It’s very difficult to do something like that one the Western Swing, but we did, so we have more confidence than ever going into finalizing our spot in the top 10 and keeping the points going. I did not do my best job in the semifinal. We put on a different blower and the car ended up being better than we thought it was, so we were overpowered. We didn’t finish the best way we wanted to, but everyone on the team has a great mindset. We had a great Western Swing and we only missed running in three rounds. Our parts attrition has been fantastic and attitudes are great. I personally learned a lot of dynamics of doing a great job on the tree. I didn’t get to fully use some of the apparatuses I have in the toolbox to practice on the road, so I’ll be spending these next two weeks dialing myself back in. We have a race car that’s performing better than ever now and will be more consistent. It makes the drive home for the team even better when you’ve had a successful Swing like this.” 

Matt Hagan, Dodge Power Brokers Charger SRT Hellcat Funny Car  

(No. 10 Qualifier – 4.031 seconds at 311.20 mph)

Round 1: (0.062-second reaction time, 4.633 seconds at 186.00 mph) loss to No. 3 John Force (0.073/4.277/277.66)

“The Western Swing wasn’t very kind to us. It was tough having three first-round losses in a row. I think we have some problems with our fuel management system, where we are dropping cylinders. That’s something that is uncommon for us, so we have to use this next week off to take a look at some things. We’ll look at what we’ve changed from the beginning of the season to now and go back to where the car is running on all eight cylinders again. We have to get back on top of where we were and how we were doing it. Our Dodge Power Brokers crew wants to perform well in qualifying to set us up for a great day on Sunday. The car had a cylinder out at the step and it was one of those rounds that could have gone either way and today, things didn’t go our way. I always love racing John (Force). He’s a character and I like getting up on the wheel for him because I get excited to race him. He’s one of those guys you just want to beat because he’s John Force. I’m looking forward to the week off to see my family and get back to the farm. The week off will allow us to hit the reset button and get focused to race in Topeka.”

Cruz Pedregon, Pedregon Racing Snap-on® Tools Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat

(No. 4  Qualifier – 4.002 seconds at 315.56 mph)

Round 1: (0113-second reaction time, 4.622 seconds at 181.64 mph) loss to No. 9 Tim Wilkerson (0.087/4.459/214.83)      

“We qualified in the No. 4 spot with a four flat and we felt good going into race day against Tim Wilkerson. We had some solid qualifying runs at 4.07 [seconds], 4.05 and a 4.0, so heading into race day in the early morning we felt like the track was going to be good. Unfortunately, we went out there, spun the tires, and it really ended our weekend prematurely. We’re disappointed that that was our end result, but we’ll go back and regroup. We’re going to debut a new car this coming weekend at the ‘Night under Fire’ special match race in Norwalk (Ohio) next Saturday. It’s a completely new car so we look forward to getting that dialed in with some test runs to get it ready for Topeka. We’re optimistic with a lot of big races coming up. We’re looking forward to continuing our qualifying efforts and carrying that through the next few race days.”

NHRA CHAMPIONSHIP POINTS STANDINGS:

Following the Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals at Pacific Raceways 

FUNNY CAR (season wins in parentheses)

1.   Robert Hight 1250 (6)

2.  Matt Hagan (Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat): 1022 (3)

3.  Ron Capps: 956 (2)

4.  John Force: 904

5.  Bob Tasca III: 797 (1)

6.  J.R. Todd: 708

7. Cruz Pedregon (Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat): 686

8.  Alexis DeJoria: 659

9.  Tim Wilkerson: 574

10. Jim Campbell: 457

TOP FUEL (season wins in parentheses)

1.  Brittany Force: 1083 (5)

2.  Mike Salinas: 1008 (3) 

3.  Justin Ashley: 910 (2) 

4.  Steve Torrence: 862

5.  Josh Hart: 689

6.  Leah Pruett (Dodge Power Brokers): 673 (1)

7.  Shawn Langdon: 657

8.  Doug Kalitta: 624

9.  Austin Prock: 602

10. Clay Millican: 583

DodgeGarage: Digital Hub for Drag Racing News

Fans can follow all the NHRA action this season at DodgeGarage, the one-stop portal for Dodge//SRT and Mopar drag-racing news. The site includes daily updates and access to an online racing HQ, news, events, galleries, available downloads and merchandise. For more information, visit www.dodgegarage.com.

@DodgeMoparMotorsports on Instagram

The @DodgeMoparMotorsports Instagram channel continues to share content capturing Dodge//SRT Mopar drivers on the track. Fans can see action from the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series and NHRA Sportsman grassroots racers, competing in classes such as Factory Stock Showdown, Stock and Super Stock, as well as additional motorsports series.

Dodge//SRT

For more than 100 years, the Dodge brand has carried on the spirit of brothers John and Horace Dodge. Their influence continues today as Dodge shifts into high gear with muscle cars and SUVs that deliver unrivaled performance in each of the segments where they compete.

Dodge drives forward as a pure performance brand, offering SRT versions of every model across the lineup. For the 2022 model year, Dodge delivers the drag-strip dominating 807-horsepower Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock, the 797-horsepower Dodge Charger SRT Redeye, the most powerful and fastest mass-produced sedan in the world, and the Dodge Durango SRT 392, America’s fastest, most powerful and most capable three-row SUV. Combined, these three muscle cars make Dodge the industry’s most powerful brand, offering more horsepower than any other American brand across its entire lineup.

In 2020, Dodge was named the “#1 Brand in Initial Quality,” making it the first domestic brand ever to rank No. 1 in the J.D. Power Initial Quality Study (IQS). In 2021, Dodge brand ranked No. 1 in the J.D. Power APEAL Study (mass market) — making it the only domestic brand ever to do so two years in a row.

Dodge is part of the portfolio of brands offered by leading global automaker and mobility provider Stellantis. For more information regarding Stellantis (NYSE: STLA), please visit www.stellantis.com.

Mopar

This year marks the 85th anniversary of Mopar.

A simple combination of the words MOtor and PARts, Mopar offers exceptional service, parts and customer-care. Born in 1937 as the name of a line of antifreeze products, Mopar has evolved over nearly 85 years to represent both complete vehicle care and authentic performance for owners and enthusiasts worldwide.

Mopar made its mark in the 1960s during the muscle-car era with performance parts to enhance speed and handling for both on-road and racing use. Later, Mopar expanded to include technical service and customer support, and today integrates service, parts and customer-care operations in order to enhance customer and dealer support worldwide.

Complete information on Mopar is available at www.mopar.com. For more information regarding Stellantis (NYSE: STLA), please visit www.stellantis.com.

Follow Dodge, Mopar and Stellantis news and video on:

Company blog: blog.stellantisnorthamerica.com

Media website: media.stellantisnorthamerica.com

Dodge brand: www.dodge.com

Mopar brand: www.mopar.com/

DodgeGarage: www.dodgegarage.com

Mopar blog: blog.mopar.com/

Facebook: www.facebook.com/dodge and www.facebook.com/mopar

Instagram: @Dodgemoparmotorsports, @dodgeofficial and @officialmopar

Twitter: @Dodge, @OfficialMopar and @StellantisNA

YouTube: www.youtube.com/dodge, https://www.youtube.com/c/mopar and www.youtube.com/StellantisNA

Burton Finishes Third at Indy

Harrison Burton, aboard the No. 21 DEX Imaging Mustang, struggled in the middle stages of Sunday’s Verizon 200 on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, then steered his way through two chaotic late-race restarts to score a Cup-career-best third-place finish.

“We tried to stay out for Stage points and more people stayed out than we thought and got buried there,” Burton told reporters after the race. “Then I made a mistake and got into [Cole] Custer.

“I was spun out at one point. I was all over the place.”

Then he got a break when the team’s pit strategy put him in position to make a late-race charge.

“It was a tough day for me and then got some new tires there before the last caution and started picking guys off and just got in a good place for those restarts…” he said. “The big thing was being on the inside for those restarts and kind of plugging the middle and missing the chaos.”

Burton started the race from 13th place and was in the top 10 after one circuit around the 2.439-mile, 14-turn track.

He ran around the top 10 for the remainder of the opening 15-lap Stage and ended that segment in ninth place, earning two bonus points.

He steered his DEX Imaging Mustang to pit road for service during the ensuing caution period and rejoined the race in 25th place. He made his next pit stop with three laps remaining in the second Stage and that put him 30th for the next restart.

The third segment of the race saw crew chief Brian Wilson and the DEX Imaging crew employ the pit strategy that put Burton in position to move forward in the race’s final laps.

The final stop came with 19 laps left to run.

As others ahead of him pitted he moved up to 19th place and was running there when the caution flag flew for debris on the track with five of the scheduled 82 laps left to run.

On the restart, as drivers ahead of him began bouncing off each other, he worked his way to ninth place when another incident sent the race into Overtime.

The final restart saw him once again steer through spinning cars to take third place, which he maintained over the final two laps to get the first top-five finish of his Cup career.

Burton and the No. 21 team now head to Michigan International Speedway for the FireKeepers Casino 400.

About DEX Imaging
DEX Imaging is the digital document imaging division of Staples, the world’s largest business solutions provider. DEX sells and services the broadest selection of copiers, printers and data management solutions, such as HP, Konica Minolta, Canon, Kyocera and numerous others.

COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES:
Reducing Operating Costs
Reducing Paper Consumption
Increasing Productivity

DEX Imaging has been the recipient of virtually every industry award since the company’s inception, including the JD Power & Associates Award for Best Customer Experience, the prestigious ProTech Service award by Konica Minolta, the Diamond Premier Dealer Award by Kyocera, and the Elite DEALER Award by ‘ENX’ magazine. Other accolades include being named ‘Best Place to Work’ by numerous business journals in the markets DEX serves.

Wood Brothers Racing
Wood Brothers Racing was formed in 1950 in Stuart, Va., by Hall of Famer Glenn Wood. Wood Brothers Racing is the oldest active team and one of the winningest teams in NASCAR history. Since its founding, the team won 99 races (including at least one race in every decade for the last seven decades) and 120 poles in NASCAR’s top-tier series. Fielding only Ford products for its entire history, the Wood Brothers own the longest association of any motorsports team with a single manufacturer. Glenn’s brother, Leonard, is known for inventing the modern pit stop. The team currently runs the Ford Mustang driven by Harrison Burton in the famous No. 21 racer.

Tony Stewart Racing: Event Recap for the Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals

Leah Pruett & Matt Hagan
Top Fuel | Funny Car
Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals
July 29-31 | Kent, Washington

Event Recap

Leah Pruett, driver of the Sparkling Ice +Caffeine Top Fuel Dragster:

● Earned No. 13 provisional qualifying position in Q1 on Friday (5.956 ET at 114.25 mph).

● Smoked the tires in Q2 on Saturday and dropped to the No. 15 qualifying position (6.465 ET at 104.78 mph).

● Secured No. 12 qualifying position in Q3 on Saturday (3.897 ET at 314.39 mph).

● Advanced to Semifinals on Sunday:

●  Round 1: 3.781 ET at 325.69 mph, defeated Antron Brown (3.796 ET at 320.81 mph).

●  Round 2: 3.818 ET at 322.42 mph, defeated Doug Kalitta (3.827 ET at 316.67 mph).

● Semifinal: 6.295 ET at 107.05 mph, lost to Brittany Force (3.823 ET at 325.61 mph).

● Currently sixth in the Top Fuel championship standings, 410 points behind leader Brittany Force.

Matt Hagan, driver of the Dodge Power Brokers Charger SRT Hellcat Funny Car:

● Earned No. 10 provisional qualifying position in Q1 on Friday (4.200 ET at 251.49 mph).

● Maintained No. 10 qualifying position in Q2 on Saturday (4.085 ET at 303.03 mph).

● Secured No. 10 qualifying position in Q3 on Saturday (4.03 ET at 311.20 mph).

● Eliminated following Round 1 on Sunday:

●  Round 1: 4.633 ET at 186.00 mph, lost to John Force (4.277 ET at 277.66 mph).

● Currently second in the Funny Car championship standings, 228 points behind leader Robert Hight.

Notes of Interest

● Pruett’s semifinal appearance maintained her sixth-place standing in the championship.

● Pruett and Brittany Force faced each other for the first time in eliminations this season. Despite losing to Force in the semifinal, Pruett holds a 9-6 overall record against Force.

● Hagan faced John Force in Round 1 of eliminations for the 17th time in his career. Hagan is 7-10 against Force in first-round meetings and 20-28 overall.

● At 138 degrees Fahrenheit, Pacific Raceways in Kent, Washington, was home to the hottest track conditions the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series has endured this season.

● The Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals marked a home race for Preston, Washington-based Sparkling Ice. Pruett attended two meet-and-greets with Sparkling Ice employees at the track in addition to a fan meet-and-greet on Thursday at the Fred Meyer in nearby Maple Valley.

Leah Pruett, Driver of the Sparkling Ice +Caffeine Top Fuel Dragster

“This was one of the largest learning curves that we’ve had in a long time. We came out on the good side of things. Qualifying No. 12 wasn’t ideal, but a problem kept arising that would happen every two or three races. Saturday night before eliminations, this Sparkling Ice team spent about four hours dedicated to finding our out-of-control shaft issue, with an outlier we couldn’t put our finger on. By 11 p.m., we found a very large issue, so we addressed it going into raceday with things unknown. We were able to put down a solid .78 run with lane choice for the second round. We have a better performing racecar than we we’ve had all year even though we didn’t make it to the finals. There was a huge piece of the puzzle that was missing and we found it here in Seattle. It’s very difficult to do something like that on the Western Swing, but we did, so we have more confidence than ever going into finalizing our spot in the top-10 and keeping the points going. I did not do my best job in the semifinal. We put on a different blower and the car ended up being better than we thought it was, so we were overpowered. We didn’t finish the best way we wanted to, but everyone on the team has a great mindset. We had a great Western Swing and we only missed running in three rounds. Our parts attrition has been fantastic and attitudes are great. I personally learned a lot of dynamics of doing a great job on the tree. I didn’t get to fully use some of the apparatuses I have in the toolbox to practice on the road, so I’ll be spending these next two weeks dialing myself back in. We have a racecar that’s performing better than ever now and will be more consistent. It makes the drive home for the team even better when you’ve had a successful Swing like this.”

Matt Hagan, Driver of the Dodge Power Brokers Charger SRT Hellcat Funny Car

“The Western Swing wasn’t very kind to us. It was tough having three first-round losses in a row. I think we have some problems with our fuel management system, where we are dropping cylinders. That’s something that’s uncommon for us, so we have to use this next week off to take a look at some things. We’ll look at what we’ve changed from the beginning of the season to now and go back to where the car is running on all eight cylinders again. We have to get back on top of where we were and how we were doing it. Our Dodge Power Brokers crew wants to perform well in qualifying to set us up for a great day on Sunday. The car had a cylinder out at the step and it was one of those rounds that could’ve gone either way and today, things didn’t go our way. I always love racing John (Force). He’s a character and I like getting up on the wheel for him because I get excited to race him. He’s one of those guys you just want to beat because he’s John Force. I’m looking forward to the week off to see my family and get back to the farm. The week off will allow us to hit the reset button and get focused to race in Topeka.”

Next Up

The next event on the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series schedule is the Menards NHRA Nationals Presented by PetArmor Aug. 12-14 at Heartland Motorsports Park in Topeka, Kansas.

Kaulig Racing Post-Race Report | Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Allmendinger Wins Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard

Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Nutrien Ag Solutions Chevrolet

Start: 1st

Stage 1 Finish: 9th

Stage 2 Finish: 14th

Finish: 1st

“We have struggled this year, but we have worked hard to get better. This Nutrien Ag Solutions Chevy was really good. I knew (Alex) Bowman was really good on the long runs, so I tried to get as much of a gap on him as I could. I knew the way our car was set up in traffic that it was not very good, and we were having some brake issues as well. The guys recovered very well. I was just frustrated because I knew we gave up stage points there as well. At the end of the day, stage points don’t mean a damn thing — We are kissing the bricks!” – AJ Allmendinger

Landon Cassill, No. 10 StormX Chevrolet

Start: 10th

Stage 1 Finish: 15th

Stage 2 Finish: 26th

Finish: 11th

“Kind of all-over-the-place day for me. I felt like I had a really fast StormX Chevy and could have executed better. After looking at it all, we will take 11th place, and we can move on to Michigan.” – Landon Cassill

Daniel Hemric, No. 11 AG1 Chevrolet

Start: 16th

Stage 1 Finish: 11th

Stage 2 Finish: 23rd

Finish: 22nd

“We had to overcome a lot today as a team. We fought our way back from a pit road penalty and eventually made our way back up the field. I definitely did not execute on my end, but I am so proud of the effort from everyone at Kaulig Racing. The rebuild process begins, and we will continue to grow from it.” – Daniel Hemric  

Verizon 200 at the Brickyard

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Gold Fish Casino Slots Camaro ZL1

Start: 20th

Stage 1 Finish: 23rd

Stage 2 Finish: 24th

Finish: 7th

“We had a really long, hard-fought day in this No. 16 Gold Fish Casino Slots Camaro ZL1. It was hot from the start of the race, and my cool shirt was faulty, which made for an even hotter day. Knowing that you have a shot to win it at the end, you suck it up. The way turn one is here, when you are on the outside front row on one of those late race restarts, you are just going to get run into. I figured I was going to get shoved off the racetrack into (turn) one, but I tried to make the best of it, and I felt like we did. At the end of the day, we gave ourselves a shot to win two in-a-row, and that is pretty awesome.” – AJ Allmendinger

Justin Haley, No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Camaro ZL1

Start: 17th

Stage 1 Finish: 37th

Stage 2 Finish: 33rd

Finish: 19th

“Not the best day for us at Indy. We had some damage after an incident in turn one and ultimately couldn’t get the speed back in our No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevy. Just too much damage to be able to compete for anything other than where we finished. We will move on to Michigan.” – Justin Haley


About Kaulig Racing™

Kaulig Racing™ is a full-time multi-car NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) team, owned by award winning entrepreneur, Matt Kaulig. Established in 2016, Kaulig Racing™ has made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started and made the Championship 4 round in both the 2020 and 2021 seasons. They will continue fielding three, full-time NXS entries; the No. 10 Chevrolet driven by Landon Cassill, the No. 11 Chevrolet driven by Daniel Hemric, and the No. 16 Chevrolet driven by AJ Allmendinger. With multiple wins, Kaulig Racing has come to be one of the top competitors on track each weekend. The team made multiple starts in the NCS in 2021 and won in its seventh-ever start with AJ Allmendinger’s victory at “The Brickyard” for the Verizon 200 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The young team has acquired two charters for the 2022 NCS season, with Justin Haley competing as its first, full-time driver in the series. The team’s second entry will be shared by part-time teammates AJ Allmendinger, Daniel Hemric and Noah Gragson. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Recap – Indianapolis

Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Recap
Track: Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Race: Verizon 200
Date: July 31, 2022


No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – Austin Cindric

Start: 2nd

Race Finish: 2nd

Stage 1 Finish: 17th

Stage 2 Finish: 18th

Laps Led: 0

Points Standings: 14th (-291)

Race Rundown: Austin Cindric and the No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang team waded through a chaotic finish to the end of the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard to score a second-place finish, his second-consecutive top-10 finish in this event. Cindric – who has strong family ties to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway – qualified second for the 82-lap event on Saturday morning. When the race began, he was struggling slightly with the rear of the No. 2 Mustang. Air pressure adjustments to the rear tires were successful in helping with the condition as Cindric did his best to maintain his position in the top 10, but throughout pit cycles he would find himself at the back end of the top 20. Late in the race, however, Cindric began to move back through the field, culminating with a strong move on the final restart of the day when he powered to the third position before crossing the finish line. After the race, the second-place finisher was penalized 30 seconds and Cindric was placed second in the final running order.

Cindric’s Thoughts: “It’s easy on paper, right? Oh, my gosh, I feel like we probably deserved 10th at best today. There were a few things I was good at, but I needed the whole track to do it and I kind of struggled a bit, probably a little lower than my expectations were today, but those restarts, survival, holy crap. All I can say is “wow.” There’s no other sport, no other form of racing other than NASCAR that you’re going to get that.”


No. 12 Menards/Moen Ford Mustang – Ryan Blaney

Start: 6th

Race Finish: 26th

Stage 1 Finish: 2nd

Stage 2 Finish: 15th

Laps Led: 17

Point Standings: 2nd (-125)

Race Rundown: Ryan Blaney and the No. 12 Menards/Moen Ford Mustang had a stellar day ruined by a late-race spin in NASCAR overtime, relegating the veteran driver to a 26th-place finish in the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard. Blaney slipped back to eighth in the opening laps as cars beat and banged all around him on the tight infield road course. Early on, the Menards Mustang lacked rear grip, but there wasn’t much tire falloff during the first stage. With others pitting, Blaney stayed on the track and finished the first stage in second. Blaney stayed on the track once again during the stage break and took the lead when the race resumed and led nearly the entire second stage until coming to pit road for the first time with two laps to go in the stage. At the start of the final stage, Blaney wasted little time driving his Menards/Moen Mustang to the front, taking the lead on lap 51 before coming into pit on lap 54 for fuel only. Once all cars cycled through their final stops, Blaney found himself running second for the latter part of the race on tires much older than those around him. Several late cautions forced NASCAR overtime, and Blaney found himself on the bad end of a spin going into turn one. By the time he got the Menards Ford righted, he ended up 26th at the checkered flag.

Blaney’s Thoughts: “That’s all people do at the end of these things, just dive in there and wreck you. I don’t know who shoved who and I don’t care, but tires didn’t matter at the end. We restarted top three both times and tires don’t really matter. It’s just a matter of getting through on the restart, but, apparently, that’s a hard thing to ask. People just run over each other.”


No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang – Joey Logano

Start: 5th

Race Finish: 6th

Stage 1 Finish: 4th

Stage 2 Finish: 25th

Laps Led: 0

Points Standings: 7th (-184)

Race Rundown: Joey Logano persevered through a wild Verizon 200 at the Brickyard to score a sixth-place finish in the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang. After qualifying in the fifth position for the race on Saturday morning, Logano struggled with rear grip throughout the first stage of the race before finishing in fourth to gain valuable points toward the playoffs. Crew chief Paul Wolfe attempted to help his driver with air pressure adjustments to help give the No. 22 Mustang more grip, particularly in the low-speed corners. Unfortunately, the condition continued as Logano lost positions throughout the second stage where he finished 25th. During a wild final stage, where plenty of contact was made among most of the competitors, Logano was able to navigate through the contact to finish in the sixth position.

Logano’s Thoughts: “It might not have been a pretty day, but we got a solid sixth-place finish for the Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang. The restarts were wild, and you had to take driving down into turn one. If you weren’t aggressive, someone was going to be aggressive to you. On that last restart, everyone was just banging off each other, but things parted in front of me, and we were able to make it to the end. Then the car caught fire at the end, but luckily, we were all done by then.”

NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Tyler Reddick Gives Chevrolet its 10th Consecutive NCS Road Course Win

NASCAR CUP SERIES
IMS ROAD COURSE
VERIZON 200 AT THE BRICKYARD

TYLER REDDICK GETS SECOND WIN OF 2022 IN INDIANAPOLIS
Chevrolet’s 13th NCS Win of 2022; 10th Consecutive NCS Road Course Win

· Tyler Reddick goes back-to-back in NASCAR Cup Series road course wins, capturing his second NCS win of 2022 in the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course.

· The win is Reddick’s second career victory in 96 NASCAR Cup Series starts.

· Reddick is now the sixth repeat winner of 2022.

· Reddick’s victory marks Chevrolet’s 10th-consecutive NASCAR Cup Series road course win since the manufacturer’s milestone 800th NCS win at Circuit of The Americas in May 2021.

· With 22 NASCAR Cup Series races complete, the Camaro ZL1 now sits at a manufacturer-leading 13 wins this season.

· The winningest brand in NASCAR, Chevrolet now has 827 all-time NASCAR Cup Series victories.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (July 31, 2022) – The last time the NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) competed on a road course circuit, Tyler Reddick put his name in the record books as a first-time winner in NASCAR’s premier series (Road America; July 2022). Reddick backed up that performance this weekend at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, powering his No. 8 3CHI Camaro ZL1 across the bricks first, taking the checkered flag for the second time in his NCS career. The 26-year-old Richard Childress Racing driver is not only a back-to-back road course winner, but now just the sixth driver to become a repeat winner in the series this season.

“We just know what we’re (No. 8 RCR Chevrolet team) capable of and we did that at Road America,” said Reddick. “Just really glad to be able to do it here in Indianapolis. This is one really special place to race and I’m really excited to kiss the bricks.”

Reddick’s victory took Chevrolet’s NASCAR Cup Series road course win streak to double digits, with the bowtie brand now sitting at 10 consecutive wins on road course circuits. Dating back to Chevrolet’s milestone 800th win in NASCAR’s premier series at Circuit of The Americas in May 2021, six drivers from four different Chevrolet teams have contributed to that feat. Leaving Chevrolet’s home away from home of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the bowtie brand also extended its manufacturer-leading NCS win count to 13 in the 22 races this season.

“Tyler, Crew Chief Randall Burnett and the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Camaro ZL1 team put together a strong weekend, clinching the pole on Saturday and racing hard and smart to bring home the win at the Brickyard today,” said Jim Campbell, Chevrolet U.S. Vice President, Performance and Motorsports. “Tyler has been putting in a lot of work preparing for these road courses, and it has paid off.”

With all three NASCAR national series in competition in Indianapolis this weekend, one thing remained consistent in the final results: a bowtie on top. In addition to Reddick’s win on the 2.436-mile, 14-turn Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, Chevrolet drivers Grant Enfinger and AJ Allmendinger gave the manufacturer a weekend sweep.

“And congratulations to all the Chevrolet drivers and teams who delivered big wins in all three NASCAR series this weekend in Indianapolis,” said Campbell. “Grant Enfinger, in the No. 23 Silverado, had an exciting win at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park on Friday; AJ Allmendinger, in the No. 16 Camaro SS, racing from the pole to the NASCAR Xfinity Series win at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Saturday; and Tyler bringing home the Cup win here at the Brickyard today.”

The NASCAR Cup Series season continues next Sunday, August 7, at the Michigan International Speedway with the FireKeepers Casino 400 at 3 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on the USA Network, the NBCSports Gold App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 3CHI CAMARO ZL1 – Press Conference Transcript:

THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by Tyler Reddick, driver of the No. 8 3Chi Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing. You got your second victory of the 2022 season, second win on a road course, too. How good does it feel, and at Indy?

TYLER REDDICK: It feels pretty dang special, I’m not going to lie. The last guy that was up here was about as short as me. That’s good. It’s pretty special. Yeah, it was very special. I’m not going to lie.

I’ve watched a lot of racing at this venue as a kid growing up. A lot of really incredible drivers have won at this racetrack, and it’s really, really cool to be a part of the group of drivers that have won here, and yeah, I’m really happy about it, and hopefully I’ll be racing here again next year — well, I should be, I guess. I should be racing here next year. But hopefully winning again next year, and I’m excited to race here in some other things, too. I’d love to do that.

Q. You got a great restart at the end. Was that just a matter of your timing, or was it — AJ was starting to fade a little bit physically and needed some help afterwards from the heat. His cool suit quit working. If you could just describe the restart and the key that that was to your victory.

TYLER REDDICK: Every restart once we had some cautions, they were very important. I’m not going to lie, I saw drivers like Austin Cindric and a few others at the end of practice do some mock restarts.

As the race progressed, I thought I had found the limit on the restart braking zone. It’s much different than what the normal braking zone is on a green flag lap.

Thankfully I never overexerted and went past that mark. But we had pretty good brakes on our car all day long, could be pretty aggressive on that front, and was able to defend because of the good brakes that we had on our car and then also kind of be aggressive with the car that we were racing on the front row beside me.

Q. Were you getting a little bit of a push from behind by Blaney?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I got a good push on that restart by Blaney. I don’t blame him. He was really trying to do a good job of timing the restart to get a good run on me and maybe being able to defend what was behind him, as well. Because of that, the second-to-last restart Chase and AJ got a really good launch because they were committed to pushing, and it got Chase kind of in front of me going into Turn 1, so I had to really nail it on that braking zone.

Unfortunately he got turned around and the rest was history from there.

Thankfully on that last restart he gave me a good push. I was able to fade to the inside. He was getting put in an interesting position by Daniel Suárez, and I saw that in my rear view, and I kind of faded to the bottom with him, so we kind of stayed together and pushed. It worked out really well.

Q. What was your reaction when all of a sudden Chastain goes blowing through Turn 1, and the next thing you know, he’s right next to you?

TYLER REDDICK: It didn’t seem like real life. I was like, what? I was waiting to see what was going to happen with that situation because I think I had Jim Pohlman say, hey, he’s probably going to get penalized. Well, dammit, Jim, like — Star Trek reference right there. He’s going to get penalized isn’t good enough. I need to know if — I didn’t know for sure if he was or wasn’t.

Yeah, I was trying to race him as hard as I could, but I saw Austin Cindric was right there, and if you get battling side by side in certain sections of this racetrack, you can really hurt lap time on both drivers and allow third place to catch up. It was kind of a complex situation for a couple seconds there, but thankfully I was able to get momentum on Ross in a pretty convenient spot and make the pass for the lead and then check out from there.

Q. Surviving two restarts as you did is pretty darned impressive. Just your thoughts on being able to accomplish that.

TYLER REDDICK: You know, when I was at Road America, it was a pretty straightforward kind of old-school race. Well, we never used to have stages, but if it wasn’t for the stages, we wouldn’t have had a lot of cautions at Road America, and those were the only two cautions we had, so the race kind of played out naturally.

Because of that it kind of became a race just between me and Chase. As the race was unfolding there, Chase got back to second place and I was kind of curious the pace he was going to run. Right before that caution came out he was running about a tenth or two faster so I was like, this is like Road America again, I’m going to have to push really hard and hope I don’t make a mistake.

We didn’t; we ran a really fast lap. I think we were about five tenths faster than he was, and it was like, okay, we’re in good shape, and then the caution came out. I was like, well, I wasn’t prepared for that. I guess I was prepared for it, but I didn’t anticipate it.

I had to be perfect on my restart. I kind of had to make sure that I was a little bit aggressive at blocking drivers to the far right going into Turn 1 because it seemed like that would work out in the first couple of rows for those drivers making that move, but thankfully I did and was pretty good in the braking zone to hold them off, too.

Q. This was the first race where the Next-Gen car raced at this racetrack. Comparatively to the other road course races, they all have decent elevation changes. This place is completely flat. I don’t know if you knew, but there was a lot of cars just spinning off going all over the place. There were only full course cautions on the last stage, but throughout the first two there was a lot of cars going all over the place. Having driven last year’s car and then this year’s car at this racetrack, what are some of the big differences? Is this car more difficult to drive, or is it harder on parts? What do you think about this car?

TYLER REDDICK: Well, certainly with this car, the edge is much sharper. It’s like a cliff. With the old car it was a bit more rounded. You could get up to that edge and slide past it and bring it back. I think with this car, if you can harness the — if you can focus enough, you can get to that edge and not crash past it, but it certainly is happening much quicker than it was with the old car for a number of reasons, whether it’s the physical body on the car, how it’s shaped, there’s less quarterpanel, how the diffuser works, and then the sidewall of the tires being different, too, really plays a role in that.

I just think with a flat track like this and how this car gets — I wasn’t in dirty air for many laps today, but certainly there was a pretty big difference whether in clean air or dirty air, so I’m kind of glad we were a little bit on the loose side out front and by ourselves because it allowed us to work dirty air pretty well. These cars are really edgy, and it’s very easy once you get past that limit that you just end up blowing past it and spinning out.

Q. (No microphone.)

TYLER REDDICK: I mean, I was pretty loose by myself and I was pretty tight in dirty air. It was a little bit surprising.

Q. This is the first race since the announcement that you’re going to Toyota in 2024. Did you feel more compelled — we know — that you won.

TYLER REDDICK: Oh, that I won. I guess it would be the third.

Q. Yeah, that you won, I’m sorry I left out a word. Did you feel extra compelled to show Richard you’re not laying down, because there was two races before here, but does that give you some, hey, I’m here for you guys to bring home checkered flags?

TYLER REDDICK: I mean, nothing had really changed from the announcement other than knowing where I’m going to be in the next year and a half. My commitment level, if anything, probably is a little bit higher, but I mean, we’re not talking like it’s a significant amount higher.

I just know that we’ve had time to continue to work on our cars and make them better and grow as a team and go the right direction, and now it’s like, all right, we have a hard stop. This is the end of the road that we have together. For me that puts, I think, a good amount of pressure on me to just keep finding more, because we’re always trying to bring the best that we can to the racetrack, but when we know that the end is — it’s not really close, but we know when it’s going to be, we’ve got to take advantage of every single moment possible, and I hope, I feel like at least for me, it’s a good thing. I think it really makes me push hard, and I think it’s making the team push hard. We’re all working really hard together to give it every last ounce that we have out there and win as many races as we can.

Q. He said when I asked a similar question to him, he said he went and talked to the crew of the team and said, he’s committed, and then he followed up by saying that you’re there next year and obviously y’all are chasing championships.

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, that’s what we’re going to try and do. It’s really nice we won two races this year. We got some good playoff points in our back pocket. We would like to win at other tracks other than road courses, but we’ll win where we can for now.

We’ve certainly had potential to win at a number of places, at a number of different places. We’ll just keep working really hard, and hopefully in the coming weeks we can win some more races, get some more playoff points and put our team, points speaking and mentally, confidence-wise, in a really good place going into the Playoffs.

Q. What did it feel like to see Beau run across the Yard of Bricks to see his daddy?

TYLER REDDICK: I’m really glad he was awake. I knew he was going to be awake this time around because we hung out with some 3Chi folks until a little late. Not like crazy late. We called it quits at like 10:30, we had some fun hanging out eating tacos. This is their home track, if you will, their headquarters are pretty close to here. A lot of people that work here are really close to this area, so it was fun hanging out with them last night and getting to spend time with everybody.

I knew we kind of had a late night so I knew he was going to wake up a little bit late, so I knew he wasn’t going to get tired around this time, so I knew he was going to be awake this time around. Thankfully he was awake and he was running across the track and into my arms. I was really pumped about that.

Q. How much confidence do you think the Road America win gave you, because to get two wins in a month, let alone get your first win but then to have the second one come within a month, that’s pretty sporty. It’s almost like the floodgates have kind of opened and things are clicking.

TYLER REDDICK: They definitely are looking. If I’m honest, though, when you look back at the Charlotte Roval last year, we had a great opportunity there, we missed out on it. COTA we were like, all right, here we go, and then it just poured all day on Sunday and we were like — we didn’t know what to do about that, right, so that really threw us for a curve ball. These road courses have been our strong suit for a while now and we’ve just continued to harness and make our cars better.

Oh, my gosh, we’ve really been good at a lot of places. I just — even Loudon, that’s probably the worst run we’ve had in a while, and Loudon we were — we had a great car but we were just making little mistakes on pit road, and on pit road I was like sledding through a box, trying too hard, and we kept losing like five, six, seven spots because of my mistakes.

We really are really doing a good job right now; we’re clicking. I think even on tough days we can finish eighth or ninth, in the top 10. That tells me that we’re doing a lot of the right things, and we’re in a good place.

Q. I’m curious, I know you guys have talked about getting through the announcement in the last few weeks, and I’m curious, do you feel like you have to prove anything to anybody beyond just proving being a good race car driver, so forth? Have the last three weeks changed anything from that perception or feelings on your behalf because certainly it’s kind of been a seismic thing that’s happened within the team and the organization?

TYLER REDDICK: I wouldn’t say it’s necessarily a matter of proving things, it’s a matter of this is the time we have left. Like I kind of said earlier, we’ve been working hard to built to being a race-winning team. Whether that’s at short tracks, mile-and-a-halfs, road courses, whatever it may be, it seems like road courses have come our way faster than other places.

For me, I just look at the time we have left, and I know I always give it my all, but certainly knowing that this is when — this is when the end of the road is going to be, I need to do everything I can to win as many races as possible for this group because I wouldn’t be the road course racer I am today if it wasn’t for RCR, if it wasn’t for the people on my team, if it wasn’t for Chevrolet.

I owe it to them. I owe it to my team. I owe it to the people that really have helped me to get that done and go out there and deliver for them.

Certainly if anything it’s helped. Just like when Alexa told me, hey, if you win the championship you can name our son, there’s not always times when I think I need an extra motivator because I don’t know if it’s possible or if it’s out there, but when I get them, I take it and run with it. For this situation, knowing when my last day will be with RCR, if anything it’s probably motivated me more than I thought was possible before all this went in motion.

Q. This is the second year in a row that at the end of the race a car has cut a corner. This situation was different than last year’s, but again, could have been a potential for a situation where the presumptive winner gets knocked out and somebody else wins the race. How do you address this situation? Is it something like if you blow the corner it maybe should be just an automatic stop and go? How do you look at it as a competitor? Are you more comfortable with officials having to some degree maybe a little bit of discretion to examine the situation? Does it need to be a hard-and-fast, or are you more comfortable with maybe a little bit more discretion on officials examining something like that? You could have been wiped out and we could be talking to somebody else after you got wiped out by somebody who was penalized.

TYLER REDDICK: Well, I’d certainly like to have this conversation first with NASCAR, then with the media. But I think looking at how today went and how some of our racetracks that we’ve had the potential trade-offs for cut-offs or blowing through a chicane or whatever it is like Charlotte Roval and what the penalty is or what you have to do is, hopefully we can learn from this situation and try to make the cut-through a little bit slower so the driver doesn’t have as much of a time gained.

I don’t know, I haven’t looked at Ross’ SMT but it looked like he pretty much decided that was the route he was going to go, but the ruling by NASCAR is they don’t gain a huge advantage or whatever the term might be it’s acceptable, and he obviously gained too much of an advantage and it cost him a really solid finish inside the top 10.

It’s kind of open for discussion, open for interpretation, right, so hopefully going forward, especially when we come back to here with this track and how that chicane or the cut-through is designed, we can make it to where it’s a little bit slower to where no matter if he hit it absolutely perfect, it’s costing you at least two, three, four seconds to where this situation doesn’t happen again.

I don’t blame Ross for making that move because as a competitor, looking at how the rules were set forth, if I’m in a situation I want to do everything I can to win the race. I don’t blame him for trying to take advantage of it. It’s a shame it went the way that it did.

Q. One team had mentioned to me that they felt like you really wouldn’t lose a whole lot if you kind of went through there. They kind of examined it. As part of the pre-race studying that you’ve done, is that what you guys have noticed, like look, if we have to go through this, we’re in not as bad a shape and we can come out —

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I mean, certainly the amount of cars that were getting wrecked in 1 and 2, the risk is way higher to go through 1 and 2 normally than taking the cut-through. Again, I don’t blame him for doing it, but again, it’s the rules that were set forth before the race, and somebody was able to somewhat take advantage of it. Hopefully we can all learn from it, make it better. Certainly NASCAR doesn’t want it to be the way it was where they had to make a decision and penalize him for what he did.

Q. When did Ross enter your field of vision?

TYLER REDDICK: Right in the middle of turn — I think it’s the apex of Turn 3. I was like kind of cornering, and I heard Derek come on the radio in my ears, like, Don’t mind the 1, he’s doing whatever he is. Probably said some other not-so-nice words, but heat of the moment, right?

I look over, I’m like, oh, no — I could say other words, but oh, no, there’s Ross, what do I do. He got to my right rear really nice, and as much as I wanted to go through chicane side-by-side with him, I’m like, if I screw up and fly my right-side tires over the inside curb, I could get a penalty. I don’t know if I’m racing him, I don’t know if I’m not, so it put me in an interesting spot. I wanted to pass him, but I also didn’t want to penalize myself trying to get around him. It was just kind of a weird situation.

The way he was behaving in the car driving it, I didn’t know if he was trying to motion me by and then I thought he was, and then we get in the corner, I realized, oh, no, he’s not. It was just a very weird situation, and then with Austin Cindric as close as he was, it just made the whole situation that much more dynamic. I was trying to figure out how hard do I race Ross, and do I race him so hard that I allow the 2 to get close to us, and just trying to weigh all those things, because if I wasn’t racing Ross, he could run in front of me all day long as long as I kept Austin behind me. But if I was racing Ross, I had to get around him, and I just needed to weigh those things in my head, how hard do I race him.

Q. How soon (indiscernible)?

TYLER REDDICK: Well, we got to talk before the announcement was made, but we haven’t really spoke much until today since the announcement was made. Thankfully to win smooths some things over, I think.

I’ve told him that as long as I’m racing here, I’m going to do everything I can to win races for this team, and I would love to win a championship or two with this team. I’m going to be more committed — I feel like the older I get, you smarter you get, the more you find ways to work really hard, and I’m just going to work as hard as I can for this team because there’s a lot of great people on this team, a lot of great people at ECR and a lot of great people not just on my car but at the shop at RCR that work really, really hard on these cars, and they’ve helped me come so far as a driver. I’m just going to give them everything I’ve got.

Q. Randall and Richard both said (indiscernible)?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, no, I got to talk to the team before the announcement was made. Certainly it was tough. I don’t think everyone was expecting it or many were expecting it, but again, it was the situation we were dealt. I just wanted them to know that I was going to continue to be committed to them and that I was going to work harder than ever before or work as hard as I have been, because the things that Brian Bottlemate (phonetic), who’s on my pit crew, he does a lot of the brake stuff on my car. There’s a lot of people that do a lot of different things, not just pitting the car, and all the different people that sometimes come on the road or sometimes don’t, stay at home, like they’ve done a lot to help me get better as a driver, and I just wanted to let them know that I’m going to do everything I can to win as many races as I can with you guys.

I’m looking at this as I don’t have all the time in the world to figure out how to be a better driver. I need to be better now so we can go out and win as many races as possible together.

Q. You said you and Richard really haven’t spoken much, and winning hopefully kind of is a cure-all. I wonder if you had an opportunity to speak in Victory Lane or anything since then?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, we got to shoot the whatever they call it and kiss some bricks, drink some champagne, sip some champagne, drink some beers.

Q. Did you say anything to him?

TYLER REDDICK: Oh, yeah. I’m glad to add to his Brickyard collection of rings and wins. He’s already had a couple of them before me and I’m glad to help add to that. I want to add to everything I can possible with him before my time is up.

Q. Did it feel normal, like there’s no —

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah. Winning helps.

Q. You mentioned at the start of the press conference that you’ve grown up watching a lot of great drivers win here at this track. Curious to know if winning on the road course today felt any different than you might expect it might have been growing up assuming that if you were going to win here during your Cup career until a couple of years ago that that would have been on the oval?

TYLER REDDICK: I mean, I had a great opportunity in front of me to potentially win here in an Xfinity car. Just didn’t work out. I ran second to my teammate Justin Allgaier.

Then the following year, me and Randall brought up a bullet of a race car. I remember perfectly, it was Anderson’s Maple Syrup, No. 2, it was fast. It was a rocketship. My and Christopher Bell, like we did most weekends, we were racing really, really hard, but unfortunately this on, we collected each other and we just destroyed our race cars.

It was actually my Homestead car, and I totaled it. That was a tough one to swallow because we had a good car to win there, and totaled my Homestead car.

Side story, we went to Texas later on, and me and Chase Briscoe kind of were battling on a restart and I wrecked. I totaled my second Homestead car the second time, and we had to rush the Homestead car through the doors for the championship weekend, a brand-new third car. I had three brand-new cars all year in that championship season with RCR, and the first one I totaled here, second one I totaled at Texas and the third one thank God survived and won a championship.

Q. You had a lot of restarts today where you were at the front and then you had a lot where you were kind of middle of the pack and we saw those got really crazy. Can you describe what your thoughts are and just the general goal and what you’re trying to do to navigate around that big pack?

TYLER REDDICK: I’m not going to lie, I wish I had a switch to turn my camera off on the back of that dang car because I can’t tell you how many times when AJ flew up into the sand in Turn 3 and 4, when Chase spun out or I think it was Blaney that spun out on the final restart, I was just like caught looking in the camera like I was a kid watching the best of the best race in front of me, like I’ve got to drive my dang car. I’ve got to stop looking at this camera. I wish I could turn that thing off sometimes. It captures way too much.

I would hit a really good corner, but I would get so caught up with what was happening behind me that I would lose track of what I was looking at. I don’t know, the camera is great, but sometimes I wish I could turn that thing off because I get too caught up in what’s going on behind me sometimes.

Q. When you were leading and on those restarts, did you find yourself looking at that camera a lot, too?

TYLER REDDICK: I mean, yeah, after I’ve apexed the corner and I’m kind of accelerating and I don’t have to — maybe if I didn’t look at that thing at all, I’d run faster laps. But I don’t know, I kind of would look in the camera from time to time and kind of gauge my gaps and see every lap, lap after lap, like in Turn 1 or in Turn 13, kind of looking at my gaps, kind of gauging if I’ve made gains or not. But I have Derek and I have Randall and I have a lot of other great people to tell me what the gaps are, but I still seemingly look in the camera to kind of see myself.

Q. How does that champagne compare to your boss’s vineyard products?

TYLER REDDICK: No, his is way better by far.

Q. Even with the late restarts, you basically had in race in check. Did you ever feel like you really didn’t have this race in check —

TYLER REDDICK: Every single restart I was — I don’t take anything for granted. I knew I was going to have to work really, really hard on every single restart to win this race, and then when I saw Ross come flying back on the track until that decision was made to penalize him, I didn’t feel like I had won it at all, so I just had to go out there and work hard.

Q. With getting the pole yesterday, track position so pivotal, for as good as you are on road courses, I know you don’t take things for granted, but did you feel like this was an opportunity to be in control —

TYLER REDDICK: Yes, absolutely.

Q. Explain that mindset going into this event as opposed to if you’d been starting 25th or something like that.

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I mean, how you approach pit road, how you approach pit road entry. You’ve got a really great opportunity. Even if you — the last thing you want to do at a place like this when you have the pole, when you have that great pit stall is go 105 percent on pit road or pit road entry and have a penalty.

Because of the hard work we put in on Saturday, I knew as long as we just played it 95, 90 percent on pit road and pit road entry into the box that — honestly how with the strategy worked out with the guys I was rating, they were having to stay plugged in longer to get fuel than I was, it kind of worked in our favor to kind of be just on the safe side.

But as I’ve kind of discovered with this car, I’ve really pursued getting in the box as hard as I can and then I slide through, but then I’m still a whole pit stop down, and with this car, getting in the box is important, but more than anything, being consistent and stopping a little bit short, that consistency there allows your pit crew to really jump on top of it and really execute a good pit stop.

Q. I know you said you kind of didn’t feel like you were in control when you’re in the middle of the pack on all those restarts. Throughout the race did you feel like you were only having to worry about maybe a couple different drivers?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah.

Q. How concerned were you whether it was Blaney with that strategy or was it more about Bell or was there anybody else? You clearly had the best car and it was just a matter of if something didn’t happen to you, this was going to be your race.

TYLER REDDICK: I mean, I was a bit alarmed by the amount of people that were able to make the two-stop strategy work. Certainly restarting I think we were in eighth or ninth, I think it was eighth because then the outside row. I was a bit concerned because the first time around when it was just three or four cars that did that, it was pretty difficult to get back to the lead. I in fact never did before the pit stop cycle occurred.

I knew I had to really push hard on that final Stage 3 restart — the Stage 3 restart we had, not the final restart. I knew I had to be aggressive. I knew I had better tires, and I really had to maximize braking zones to really put the other guys in bad spots, and it worked, but I didn’t know which car I was going to be racing, but I just knew whoever got the good restart and got out in front that was on the older tires was the car I was going to have to run down and race, and thankfully I was able to be a little bit better than Christopher was in the braking zones to really not allow the dirty air effect to really hurt my car.

Q. I saw one side of your car, but I didn’t see the other. Did you get hit at all? There wasn’t any marks or damage that we could see.

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I made some pretty significant contact with Cole Custer, and for a couple of laps I was like, oh, no, the car is not driving the same. But I just turned that switch off in my head and just went back to attacking the track. Who knows, maybe we bent something a little bit, but it didn’t kill the race car.

The last thing that a driver should do is after contact just jump on the bandwagon of oh, no, the car is ruined, making mistakes, so I just — made a little bit of contact? Whatever. Just gotta keep attacking and making the most of whatever the car will give you.

Q. Since you brought up the camera, have you thought about some tape and cardboard to cover up —

TYLER REDDICK: Well, there’s a dim switch on the camera. I think I could have a dim switch setting to where it’s either full brightness or zero percent brightness where it’s basically off. I might do that.

THE MODERATOR: Tyler, thanks for coming in, and good luck in Michigan.

RANDALL BURNETT, CREW CHIEF, NO. 8 3CHI CAMARO ZL1; AND RICHARD CHILDRESS, OWNER OF RICHARD CHILDRESS RACING – Press Conference Transcript:

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by the team owner of the winning No. 8 car, Richard Childress. Richard, why don’t you start us off and talk about how exciting it is to win here at Indianapolis for you guys.

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Anytime you win at Indy, it’s always great. This will be the fourth win on the Brickyard. We won one with Ty Dillon with the Xfinity, so we’ve won five times. Anytime you can get a win at Indy, it’s very special.

Q. Did you ever think with Tyler going away, would he lay down, because he’s fought for you every week? How does it make you feel to know you’ve got a racer out there?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Well, after they made their announcement, I met — I thought about it a lot that night, gave it a lot of thought, and it’s more than just about one person. It’s about a team. Stayed up most of the night thinking about what I should do, how I wanted to handle it.

I went in the next day and told the whole team it wasn’t a perfect circumstance the way it went down, but we’re going to give it everything we’ve got this year, and we’ll see where we go next year.

Q. You’ve won here on the oval numerous times, now you’ve won here on the road course. There’s talk about whether this race should be on the oval or the road course. There’s a lot of history with the Brickyard 400 on the oval. What does Richard Childress think?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Well, we came here the first time in I think it was ’93. Bill France Jr. brought Earnhardt and myself and wanted to know what we thought about it. We ran it, Dale drove the car then, and I guess it was going into ’94 we came back up here with Rusty Wallace and two or three other drivers and we ran the oval.

When you drive through the gates, go through the tunnel and you drive through here, just the history, tradition of Indianapolis gives you cold chills the first time I came — well, the first time I jumped the fence but we won’t talk about that.

It gives you cold chills when you think about Indianapolis and the history. So yes, I love it. I wish we were back on the oval for sure.

THE MODERATOR: We are also joined by the race-winning crew chief Randall Burnett.

Q. For either or both, Tyler has a three-second lead, caution comes out. What goes through your mind at that point?

RANDALL BURNETT: Oh, no. No, I was talking about it on the way up here. We had like a three-, three-and-a-half-second lead there. Obviously Chase was pretty fast. All those guys were pretty fast right behind us. I feel like Tyler was saving his stuff pretty good there.

We kind of expected it. We were expecting it at Road America the other week. We were just kind of waiting on it to happen and it never did there, so to see it happen here wasn’t a huge surprise. With the tire falloff there was no real strategy to play like you didn’t have to worry about having to pit or not. Tires weren’t falling off.

Just hoped for the best. Hopefully not get drove down in there and wrecked, and fortunately we weren’t part of that. It worked out great.

Q. What were you thinking when you saw Chastain go up the access road?

RANDALL BURNETT: Yeah, I was trying to watch on TV and then flashed away and was showing the cars wrecking and they flashed back to Tyler and the 1 is right there, I’m like, Where did that guy come from? I saw one car go blowing through the whole thing. I didn’t realize that’s where he came out. I was trying to get caught up. Where did he come from? That was pretty entertaining. I don’t know if he got a penalty or what for that, but yeah, glad him and Tyler didn’t get together and ruin our race. That was more what I was worried about than anything at that point.

Q. Randall, can you discuss how instrumental the brake package is that you’re using on these cars to do what you do, because a lot of your competitors targeted that. They said you guys had an excellent brake package. I’m not taking anything away from your driver, but they said that it looks like you guys have really gone to work on the brakes.

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, I credit a lot of that to Tyler. He’s worked really hard on understanding how to brake better. We’ve worked hard as a group to figure out a package that works for him.

Everybody has got the same stuff on these cars. Everybody has got the same rotors and calipers. It’s basically a choice of master cylinders and brake pads and stuff like that, and fortunately for us we found something that worked for him pretty early in the season, and we’ve been able to work with that. He does a phenomenal job at knowing how hard to push, making sure he hits his marks right. Took really good care of his stuff and still had phenomenal speed today.

That’s an “atta boy” to him for sure because he used to hate these places, so he’s done a great job pushing himself to get better for sure.

Q. How much does the technical alliance with GM help because Hendrick had been so stout on the road courses? I think Larson won three out of ten and we don’t have to say anything about Chase, but to kind of take over the mantle, that’s got to be a feather in your cap.

RANDALL BURNETT: Yeah, Chevy has put a lot into this deal this year, and it’s been certainly helpful to be able to more freely bounce ideas off one another. We don’t fully know what they’re doing and they don’t fully know what we’re doing, but there is a lot more dialogue between the teams.

It’s been helpful for sure.

Q. Randall, what was the conversations like in the aftermath of Tyler’s announcement, and what did you tell the team?

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, you know, it’s one of those things. It’s a business deal. We’ve still got a lot of racing left to do with Tyler, and that’s what I told our guys. We’re all professionals. A lot of us, everybody in our team is veterans of the sport. We’ve all been around for a long time. We’ve seen drivers come and go and things move around, and that’s just part of our sport.

We’ve talked about it as a group, and Richard sat in on some of them and talked with all of us about it. The biggest thing we can do is go out and do what we did today and that’s put fast cars underneath Tyler and try to win races and show everybody what this team is made of so we can try to figure out what we need to do to fill that void.

That’s what we’re going to continue to do. We feel like we’ve got a great shot at the championship this year, to win two races now after just not even a month apart.

We’re really looking forward to getting to the Chase, and got a lot of good races in there, so hopefully we can pull that off, too.

Q. Amid a season that’s been very successful for you guys, was there ever a doubt at any point of hey, our season can go sideways here, and the promise we have is not going to be fulfilled?

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, after we got spun out at Bristol coming to the checkered I was a little upset about that. I was hoping that wasn’t going to knock us out of the playoffs. But this team is very resilient. We’ve had fast race cars all year. We’ve taken ourselves out of races by making mistakes. We’ve had others take us out of races. We’ve had tires — you name it, we’ve learned how to lose them all year this year and give them away, and what we’ve been preaching lately as a group and everybody pushing each other to minimize the mistakes and make the most opportunities, and I feel like that’s what we’ve done this month.

Q. Richard, going back to your first answer, if I’ve got this right, I think you said we’re going to give it everything we’ve got this year and we’ll see what we get next year. Are you guys still figuring out 2024 with the 8 and Tyler?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Yeah, Tyler will be in the car at RCR next year.

Q. After you figured out what the situation was with the 1, how were you communicating to Tyler? You’re not actually racing the 1 for the lead. What was the communication between you two.

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, Derek spoke up pretty quick and he’s like, that’s going to be a penalty on them. He informed him pretty quick to not put himself in a bad spot, but we also had the 2 right there and Ross was still racing us hard. It was important for us to get by the 1 to gap to the 2 because if we messed around with him and let the 2 by us — it was quite a mess right there for a minute, and pretty stressful situation. Fortunately we were able to get by the 1 and just get away from it clean and not have to worry about it.

Q. Richard, this is your team’s first season with multiple wins by one driver since 2013 and your first season with multiple wins, period, since 2017. Is it safe to say that RCR is back, or do you still have a ways to go?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Well, it’s great to be back competitive again. The doors have been open, the lights have been on, but we haven’t been competitive. But it feels great to come to a racetrack and know you’re going to be one of the teams that’s going to be racing for the win.

Q. For either or both of you, with Tyler’s wins kind of sandwiching his announcement at the start and end of this month, did today’s win feel any different? Was it more special given everything that the team has gone through over these last couple weeks? Can you describe the dichotomy between these two wins?

RANDALL BURNETT: I mean, obviously any win feels special. I think it’s just a hats off to our guys. To be able to be big enough and put that behind them and go out there and do the job at hand, and that’s what we can do best. That’s what we’ve got to do going forward.

I think it shows the resilience of this team, the dedication by everybody on this team to be able to step up at a big place like here and not have any mistakes today and everybody pull together and get to the common goal, I think that speaks a lot for this 8 team.

Q. Randall, I don’t know who came over the radio and said it, but you guys were obviously very pumped up and somebody said to Tyler that he didn’t take any s— from anybody and he’d earned that one. Was there doubt that he was going to be pushed around or something? I was curious that reaction.

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, I think there’s been a few times we’ve been in that position before with Tyler, and it didn’t go our way. I think he’s learned a lot from those situations. Heck, one of the times was our first year in the Cup Series with him, and he was racing Austin at Texas, and Austin got the best of him on two or three restarts when we restarted up front against one another.

He takes that on his shoulders and he tries to study and learn from it. I was just really proud. He was laser focused today and didn’t miss a beat.

Those restarts can get crazy. You never know what’s going to happen, if somebody is going blow through you down there, or who knows what’s going to happen. He did a great job not missing his marks, not overdriving it, hit it precise, and was able to do what he needed to do.

Q. Was it you or Derek?

RANDALL BURNETT: That was Derek. I told him that he just won at Indy, in case he didn’t know. Derek was the one who told him he didn’t take no s—

Q. Earlier this year when we spoke you said you were really hoping that this team would get in Victory Lane because Tyler has worked so hard and you guys have come so close. What has that been like to see how he’s matured as a Cup driver and how this team has come together to smooth out races and put everything together?

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, I think it’s not only Tyler, I think it’s our whole group. A lot of us have been together for a long time. We’ve got a veteran pit crew that’s been through a lot together. Just this whole team, it’s pretty impressive the talent we’ve got and the depth we’ve got on this team and how we pull together. It’s pretty phenomenal and great to see that we’re getting the fruits out of our labor and winning some races now, because like I said before, we’ve blown plenty of them and had plenty of them taken away, and just whatever happened and come up second however many times.

It’s nice to finally be finishing them off the way we should.

Q. Richard, which is better, Victory Cuvee or Victory Lane champagne from here?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: No doubt, Victory Cuvee, for all the winning moments in your life. It’s pretty good. (Laughter.)

THE MODERATOR: Richard and Randall, congratulations. Thanks for joining us today.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

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About Chevrolet
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Stewart-Haas Racing: Verizon 200 at the Brickyard

STEWART-HAAS RACING
Verizon 200 at the Brickyard

Date: July 31, 2022
Event: Verizon 200 at the Brickyard (Round 22 of 36)
Series: NASCAR Cup Series
Location: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (2.439-mile, 14-turn road course)
Format: 82 laps, broken into three stages (15 laps/20 laps/47 laps)
Note: Race extended four laps past its scheduled 82-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.
Race Winner: Tyler Reddick of Richard Childress Racing (Chevrolet)
Stage 1 Winner: Chase Briscoe of Stewart-Haas Racing (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: Christopher Bell of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)

SHR Race Finish:

● Cole Custer (Started 24th, Finished 9th / Running, completed 86 of 86 laps)

● Chase Briscoe (Started 3rd, Finished 23rd / Running, completed 86 of 86 laps)

● Kevin Harvick (Started 18th, Finished 33rd / Accident, completed 64 of 86 laps)

● Aric Almirola (Started 14th, Finished 38th / Accident, completed 24 of 86 laps)

SHR Points:

● Kevin Harvick (10th with 575 points, 246 out of first)

● Chase Briscoe (15th with 515 points, 306 out of first)

● Aric Almirola (16th with 515 points, 306 out of first)

● Cole Custer (25th with 384 points, 437 out of first)

SHR Notes:

● Custer earned his second top-10 of the season and his first top-10 in two career NASCAR Cup Series starts on the road course at Indianapolis.

● Custer’s ninth-place result equaled his previous best finish this season. He also finished ninth July 10 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

● Custer finished eighth in Stage 2 to earn three bonus points.

● Briscoe won Stage 1 to earn 10 bonus points and one playoff point. He finished seventh in Stage 2 to earn four more bonus points.

● Briscoe led once for five laps, increasing his laps led total on the road course at Indianapolis to 17.

Race Notes:

● Tyler Reddick won the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard to score his second career NASCAR Cup Series victory, his second of the season and his first on the road course at Indianapolis. His margin over second-place Austin Cindric was 1.065 seconds.

● There were five caution periods for a total of 15 laps.

● Twenty-eight of the 38 drivers in the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard finished on the lead lap.

● Chase Elliott remains the championship leader after Indianapolis with a 125-point advantage over second-place Ryan Blaney.

Sound Bites:

“You just hope for the best pretty much every time on a restart going through turn one. We were able to have it worked out pretty good the last couple times, but we just had a long-run car. Honestly, we were one of the best cars on the track when it was a long run, but we just couldn’t fire off good. It’s good to come up with a solid run and hopefully get ourselves a little bit better points-wise and keep chipping away at it, but move on to the next one.” – Cole Custer, driver of the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang

“It was a situation where we had to try to get that first stage win and it just kind of buried us after that. We got back there and struggled to get back up there. A couple of times we thought we were going to be OK, and then I just made a mistake. There at the end, that restart was just chaos and tore us up. Obviously, I wish we would’ve finished a lot better than where we ended up. I don’t think we had anything for the 8 car (Reddick), but us and the 2 (Cindric) were pretty close and he ended up second. That was kind of the strategy we had, to kind of play today for our points and playoff situation. Obviously, the playoffs are more important than trying to win here. It’s unfortunate we had to be in that situation but, overall, we were able to get a playoff point, which will be big come playoff time.” – Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 14 HighPoint.com Ford Mustang

“We broke the left-front suspension. I got into turn one and locked up the rear tires and it just kind of took off on me and I got into the 5 (Kyle Larson). I hate it for those guys. I hate it for our guys. Man, this was just a frustrating weekend. I felt like the guys did a great job of bringing me a car that was pretty good and thought we were going to have a good day. Just not the day we were hoping for. I made a mistake or I’m not sure what happened, but I locked up the tires getting into one and killed our day and tore up the 5 car at the same time.” – Aric Almirola, driver of the No. 10 Mobil 1 / GEARWRENCH Ford Mustang

Next Up:

The next event on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the FireKeepers Casino 400 on Sunday, Aug. 7 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn. The race begins at 3 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by USA and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.