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Fans Can Drive Their Own Cars Around Auto Club Speedway During Track Laps for Charity Event on Saturday, July 23

FONTANA, Calif. (July 13, 2022) – Motorists in Southern California can cruise for a cause on Saturday, July 23, on the 2-mile oval at Auto Club Speedway.

For a donation of $20, the public can drive on the famed NASCAR track during its annual Track Laps for Charity event, which benefits the Auto Club Speedway Foundation. The Auto Club Speedway Foundation, which was established in 2008 is a 501(c)(3) donor advised fund of The NASCAR Foundation.

“This is a tremendous opportunity to experience the unmatched thrill of driving around speedway in. your personal vehicle,” said Auto Club Speedway President Dave Allen. “Even better, I can’t think of a more enjoyable way for fans to help make a difference in our community.”

To secure this unique opportunity, motorists are encouraged to register in advance at autoclubspeedway.com/tracklaps. To participate in Track Laps for Charity:

  • Drivers must be 18 years or older and a valid driver’s license & insurance are required upon arrival.
  • Vehicle MUST be street legal. Motorcycles, rental cars, ATVs, golf carts, and/or large capacity vehicles (15 passenger vans & buses) will not be permitted to drive the track.
  • Minors in the vehicle must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian.
  • All occupants must remain inside the vehicle at all times with seatbelts on.
  • Passengers are not permitted in truck beds.
  • Track waivers must be signed in person at the event in the presence of track personnel with your writing utensil upon arrival.
  • All participants are required to remain in their vehicles.
  • No public restrooms are available.

NASCAR Cup Series racing will return to the 2-mile oval at Auto Club Speedway next year. Dates and details will be released in the weeks ahead. For the latest updates, visit www.autoclubspeedway.com.

About Auto Club Speedway

Located 50 miles east of Los Angeles in Fontana, Auto Club Speedway is California’s premier motorsports facility, hosting over 320 days of track activity each year including a NASCAR Cup Series weekend. The two-mile D-shaped oval is one of the fastest tracks on the NASCAR circuit. The Speedway is also home to numerous movie, television and commercial productions, photo shoots, new car testing, club racing and a variety of racing schools. For more information on events at Auto Club Speedway, call 1-800-944-RACE (7223), visit www.AutoClubSpeedway.com or download the new NASCAR Tracks App at www.autoclubspeedway.com/nascar-tracks-app/

About NASCAR

The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR consists of three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour), one local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series) and three international series (NASCAR Pinty’s Series, NASCAR Peak Mexico Series, NASCAR Whelen Euro Series). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).

Ford Performance NASCAR: Rodney Childers Hoping For Another New Hampshire Win

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
New Hampshire Advance | Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Rodney Childers, crew chief of the No. 4 Busch Light Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing, helped produce back-to-back NASCAR Cup Series wins for driver Kevin Harvick at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2018-19. As the circuit prepares to head to NHMS for the only time this weekend, Childers spoke about his success there and hopes for making the postseason with members of the media.

RODNEY CHILDERS, Crew Chief, No. 4 Busch Light Ford Mustang – WHY DO YOU THINK KEVIN IS SO GOOD AT NHMS? “Yeah, New Hampshire was always one of those places for me that I enjoyed and, honestly, I always had fast cars there before coming to Stewart-Haas. To go there with him, we’ve missed it a little bit in the spring race in 2014 and we decided to use one of our tests in ‘14 to go back there for the fall race and we spent two days up there and I don’t think a test could have gone any better. We learned a ton those two days and ended up leaving that test feeling like we were pretty much lights out, and everybody that was there with us we were a half-second a lap faster than all those guys. We went back and we pretty much, with the old car, had the same four springs in it since that test in 2014. We haven’t changed any shocks. We haven’t changed any springs or hardly anything and we’ve been able to go through a lot of different rule changes and different aero packages and be able to adapt and make it work over these last eight years. We just found something that worked for us and we’ve stuck to it and kind of made it better. The key this year will be switching over to the Next Gen car and hopefully figure out what makes it go fast and hopefully some of those things that we’ve learned in the past will adapt to the new car and we’ll go up there and have some speed.”

WHAT IS THE LOBSTER STORY ABOUT THE ONE YOU HAD AT THE START? “Kevin had the first one and I think that was when Keelan was still pretty small and he ended up breaking the arms off of it one day, and then mine – one of the dogs accidentally chewed on it a little bit one day. The other one is actually sitting right here behind me. One of them is still sitting in my office, so that way nobody messes it up.”

DO YOU FEEL LIKE WITH THE NEXT GEN CAR THAT IT WILL BE THE SAME AT NEW HAMPSHIRE? “It won’t be the same, but if you look at the places like that – at Phoenix in the spring we had a really good car and ran right up front all day and had a shot of winning. We lined up on the front row with the 14 on the last restart and Richmond we ran good all day and was fastest in the first round of qualifying and then ran up front and finished second to the 11. So, if you look at those types of tracks, those are the ones we’ve actually been the best at. Those are the ones he’s felt the most comfortable at with this car and even going to the simulator with him today, he hit the ground running. You can just tell the places he’s comfortable with. He’s made thousands and thousands of laps without the track being changed or things being different and he knows where every crack and every little seam and all that stuff is and how to manipulate the car and all that. Those are big keys for us right now is that kind of stuff – going back to these places that he’s got a ton of confidence at and hopefully we can capitalize on that.”

FROM WHAT YOU CAN TELL IS THIS GOING TO RACE MORE LIKE GATEWAY OR PHOENIX? WHAT TRACKS THAT YOU’VE BEEN TO ARE YOU USING TO PREPARE? “I think both of those are key tracks. I think Gateway, Phoenix, Richmond and even a little bit of Martinsville I would throw in there, just with the shifting and all that. The paper clip shape of the track and how tight the corners are and how much shifting is gonna be going on. To me, it’s gonna be extremely hard to pass. It’s gonna be a lot like Martinsville in a way and you’re gonna be shifting a good bit. It just depends what the pace ends up being and what the grip level is like when we get there, whether you’re gonna be shifting once in each corner or twice in each corner. That will be key to figure out during practice and going forward, but all of those places are tools that we can use and notes that we can use throughout the year and hopefully all that will play a big key for us and go there and unload good.”

DO YOU FEEL GOOD ABOUT THIS WEEKEND THEN? “We were fast and ran up front all day at Phoenix and we were fast and ran up front all day at Richmond. Gateway, we had a pretty good car. I think our car was better than what it showed. We qualified bad and had a hard time passing cars, but our teammate with the 14 was really fast all weekend and led some laps before blowing the left-rear tire, so we feel good about what we’ve got and what we’re taking and probably the most confident we’ve been in a good while.”

HOW HAS THE NEW PIT CREW DONE SINCE THE CHANGES WERE MADE? “That part has gone great. I think when you do things like that you really don’t know how it’s gonna turn out and those guys had one practice before we went to Nashville and they ended up P1 for the day at Nashville with only one practice together. Every single race since then they’ve done a great job and have kept things clean and smooth and some of that is key right now. You just have to not have the disasters. You don’t necessarily have to be perfect every time. You don’t have to be the fastest every time, but you don’t want to have those disasters during the race. They’ve done a really good job of that and they’re all getting along really well, and with the road crew that’s key also. Everything has been smooth with those guys so far and hopefully we can keep it that way.”

DO YOU GUYS HAVE A NEXT GEN CAR FOR PIT CREW PRACTICE TO WORK ON MAKING SURE WHEELS DON’T FALL OFF DURING THE RACES? “Yeah, I think all of the big teams do at this point. We all have Next Gen cars with the right suspension, the right parts and all the right stuff on there to be able to mimic exactly what we do every week. For us, we have one person that is in charge of that car. The setup gets changed every week to exactly what’s going to the racetrack – the heights, the cambers, everything about it is changed to exactly what’s going to the track, so it jacks the same, it pits the same and all that stuff. I think if you’re gonna do things right, that’s the only way you can do it, but I think all the big teams are to that point of trying to mimic exactly what they’re doing at the racetrack.”

HOW WOULD YOU GRADE YOUR TEAM’S PERFORMANCE THIS YEAR? “It’s definitely not been what we want, for sure. For our team, we’re expected to go out there and win eight or nine races a year and when you don’t do that it’s a huge disappointment. To come off of last year and not be able to capitalize there, you want to go into this new car and come out with a bang and I think we’ve all see that we obviously haven’t been able to do that and it’s taken a lot of adjustment from a memory standpoint, whether it’s driver, crew chief, road crew – everybody involved – it’s just trying to get our hands and arms wrapped around it and figure it out and go out there and compete, but, overall, I think you’ve also seen a wide variety of people winning. Maybe last year we would have never thought there could be 16 winners going into the playoffs, but this year it could happen. The guys that think they’re safe right now might not be safe, so it could definitely change a lot. There’s a lot of racing left. I keep looking at the calendar and I’m like, ‘Man,’ I know the races are kind of counting down, but you look at those races and for a crew chief you look at how those races play out – what happens in those races, whether it comes down to restarts or pit stops, tire strategy or these road courses anything can happen. You just have to keep focused and keep plugging away and hopefully get better and we do feel like we’ve gotten better and better. The road course stuff and going to Road America is a little bit of a struggle for us, but I think we finished about 30th there last year so to finish 10th was a huge improvement for us. To be able to qualify bad and move up the whole day was important, but I think the key was Nashville and being able to run with the good cars all night and having a really good race. I hope that was a turning point for us and we can keep moving forward from there.”

WHAT HAS SURPRISED YOU THE MOST ABOUT THE NEXT GEN CAR THIS YEAR? “I don’t know that I’ve honestly been that surprised about many things. I feel like most of it has gone exactly how I thought it was gonna go, even down to specific racetracks and how it was gonna race. I can’t say that I’ve been too surprised about any of it. Even the wheels coming off and all that. That was something we talked about last November and December of how all that was gonna go and how many times it’s gonna happen, so I think all of it has kind of gone to plan for me and what I had in my head. The only thing that hasn’t gone to plan is us going to victory lane, so we’ve got to get our hands around that and get focused on that and hopefully do that soon.”

THE LOBSTER IS THE TROPHY THIS WEEKEND. DO YOU ENJOY LOBSTER? “I don’t eat a lot of lobster. I love it, but most of the time I look at the menu and see how expensive it is and I just go for something cheap, but I’m probably a once a year lobster guy. I like it all different ways, but most of those lobsters are about 20 percent of what we get handed in victory lane. Those are a little bit massive and was that Denny a few years ago that was scared to death to even hold it? But, overall, I love lobster.”

WHAT ARE YOUR EXPECTATIONS FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR? “For us, our expectation is to win a race in these next five races and put ourselves in the playoffs and kind of get our stuff together and be ready for the playoffs. Maybe we haven’t been the strongest all year, but you’ve seen that year after year that people have been able to get it together at the end of the year and come on strong and I know the guys here at the shop are working hard. All of the people at Ford and the engine shop have really made some good gains and I feel like we’re definitely headed in the right direction. I think, for us, it’s just hitting on it every week. You don’t have those notebooks of 20 years of those things I was talking about at Loudon that have worked for us for eight years straight. You have to come up with what’s gonna work that particular weekend and hopefully that stuff just keeps playing out week by week. We have learned a lot and hopefully we can start contending every week and have some more shots at winning some races.”

WHAT TRACK ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO THE MOST IN THE REST OF THE REGULAR SEASON? “Honestly, I think this weekend is probably my favorite. We’ve worked really hard and to have four races there as a crew chief and he’s got four as a driver and we’ve got three together, so hopefully we can go and do the things that we’re used to doing up there and qualify well and have a good pit stall and be there all day long. I think some of it is gonna come down to pit stops and track position and hopefully we can do those things the best that we can and be right there with them at the end.”

CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE GOOD MEMORIES YOU HAVE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE? “It’s always been a great place for us and just a lot of confidence every time you go there and sometimes confidence is key. You’ve seen that with us going to Bristol every year. That Bristol Night Race has always meant a lot to me and Kevin will tell you a million times that it seems like Rodney works harder when it comes Bristol Night Race time. Maybe I do. Maybe I don’t, but it really just comes down to confidence more than anything. Every time we’ve gone there we’ve been fast. We have four wins, but you look at the ones that we didn’t win. We completely dominated one race in ‘14 and one race in ‘15 and ran out of gas on the white flag lap of both of them. And then there were other ones in there too that we probably could have won also. I mean, it could be seven or eight as much as it could be four, so just a lot of confidence and like I was talking about I think the places like this are key for Kevin. I think going there and it’s the same racing surface. It’s not something that has changed recently. It’s not a new road course. It’s not something he has to learn all over again, and I think it fits his driving style too in a way that he wants to get around the racetrack. I think that will be good for us. I think just that place in general is a lot of fun. The weather is always pretty good. I know some years it wants to rain, but, overall, it’s nice and cool and it’s a good change from burning up down here for sure.”

WHAT HAS THE DYNAMIC BEEN LIKE AS THE CREW CHIEF WITH AN OLD-SCHOOL RACING BACKGROUND TACKLING THIS NEW CAR WITH A BUNCH OF SPECIFICALLY CHANGED ENGINEERS? WHERE DO YOU GUYS MEET WORKING ON THIS CAR AND HOW HAS IT CHANGED FROM LAST YEAR? “You’ve kind of hit it on the head there. Maybe a guy that’s fresh out of school comes in and thinks that this car is perfectly normal and the same stuff that he studied in college and is just gung-ho about working on it and all those things. For somebody that’s been in the Cup Series for 20 years and has built their own cars and sit there and cut quarter panels off and replace them, and fenders off and replaced them, and changed this and changed that – just detail cars to death every single week it’s tough. Mentally, it’s tough and you’re just trying to figure out what do I work on and your whole pace of things each week has changed this year. Your whole layout of everything that you’ve done for 20 years is different, so I’m not gonna say that I can’t do it. I definitely can do it, it’s just different and your mind has to kind of get trained to that. For me, I have great engineers that I’ve kind of been around for a long time and we all believe in each other and we went through good things and bad things this year, but we’ve made all those decisions together. None of us have pointed fingers and said that you screwed this up or I screwed that up. We’ve tried to do the best that we can do every week and it’s not been from a lack of effort. Everybody has worked extremely hard and all of us are trying to get it sorted out and put Kevin back in victory lane where he deserves to be.”

WHAT HAS BEEN THE BIGGEST HURDLE FOR YOU ABOUT WHAT THIS CAR CAN AND CAN’T DO? “For me, it’s really the simple things. For somebody that’s fresh out of college they would think that the independent suspension in the back was simple, moving this mount to this position or this spacer to this position is gonna do this to the geometry in the rear of different things, whether it’s anti-dive or whether it’s anti-squat or jacking or all those different things you can do. For me, all that stuff was truck arms and a track bar. I knew exactly what to do and when to do it. I knew what each track needed from that standpoint and those things are consistent with the old car too, but you had that long history and you had that confidence of what to change and what to do. With this new car, I would have to go ask my engineer, ‘Can you put a little bit more anti-dive in the right-front or can you put some more anti-squat in the right-rear?’ And then he’s got to make that change of where this spacer needs to go and where this mount needs to go and all those kinds of things to where before it was kind of all on me and I would tell them exactly where to move things and how to do it. So, some of that has been probably the biggest thing for me in learning about the shocks. The shocks are just so much different. For somebody like me I built shocks back in the day and I went through that and knew every little detail about them and the new stuff is all built the same pretty much and you just turn the screws where you want every week and the same goes with the notes with shocks. These shocks always worked at this track and these shocks always worked at that track, and it doesn’t matter anymore. You just need to forget about that stuff and worry about the new car, so I think just those simple things with the race car, those are the things that I’ve had to get my arms around the most and understand the most and I feel like we’re finally getting to that point where we’ve got our arms around it and we can keep moving forward.”

WHAT’S YOUR GRADE WITH THE NEXT GEN CAR SO FAR? “I think you all know me good enough that if you’re not winning, you suck. My grade right now is a D. We need to be doing a lot better and our guys, like I said earlier, have worked really hard and it’s not been from a lack of effort, but we need to be winning races and doing the things that we’re supposed to be.”

WE OFTEN SEE SPLIT PIT STRATEGIES AT THIS RACE. CAN YOU TAKE ME THROUGH THE DECISION-MAKING OF THAT ASPECT AND WEIGHING TRACK POSITION VERSUS TIRES OR GETTING OFF A CERTAIN GROUP OF CARS? “Even with the old car it was a little bit that way. You look at the race that we won with Brian (Vickers), it was on a different pit strategy, which split things up there. I pitted before everybody else and kind of rode around saving tires until the next caution came out and everybody else pitted and we stayed out and pretty much led the rest of the race. You look at the one with Kevin a few years ago, where we stayed out and was able to hold them off and that really comes down to somebody that has had a really good car all day, but has never gotten to show it. They’ve either been stuck in traffic and haven’t been able to pass and they haven’t been able to pass and they’ve never gotten track position or they’ve had bad pit stops – those types of things. Those situations are still gonna happen and it all depends on whether those cautions fly at the right time or not. And then you have other guys that unload off the truck that are dominant in practice. They qualify well. They have a good pit stall and they stay in the top two or three the entire race and have dominant cars, and sometimes, like the last one we won, we didn’t have the dominant won and the guy that finished second had run up front all day long. So, no matter what you’re gonna have that at Loudon and I think the shifting part of it is kind of gonna exaggerate some of that. I think you can kind of park it in the middle of the corner and still get off the corner because you’re able to shift like that. Before, you had one guy. We’ve always been able to kind of free roll off of both pedals better than everybody else and if you can free roll two miles an hour faster through the center it just ends up being a better race car and more lap time, and now you can be two miles an hour slower through the middle of the corner and still beat the guy off the corner behind you and he doesn’t have a prayer. That’s where I think it’s gonna change is how much does that affect the racing. Is there multiple lanes? From what we’ve seen the car doesn’t really work very good down on that very bottom lane. It gets kind of messed up with the rear geometry the way it is, so I think you’re gonna see everybody in that second and third lane and pushing it up as high as you can in the center. You’ll just have to see. I could be completely wrong. It could be two-wide racing all day and it could be the best short track race we’ve had all year, so we’ll just have to go from there and see what happens.”

DO THE CAUTIONS HELP OR HURT A CREW CHIEF’S STRATEGY? “I’ve enjoyed that side of it. It gives you a lot of opportunity. You look at this last week at Atlanta and we were able to do things to just place him up front three different times. We didn’t have a car that could run up there, but we were able to place him up there and have a shot. If you can do that at Loudon, it’s gonna be that much better. It gives you a lot of opportunity. There have been other tracks that I’ve died for a caution to come out and we come in and put tires on and we can’t pass anybody back, so we’ll just have to see how the tire wear is and how long the runs are. It seems like we’ve kind of got longer runs there over the years than we have at maybe some of these other places. If it turns into a race like Richmond or has got really long runs, you’ve got to have a car that can hang in there and be good on the long run. You can’t have tire issues, so this one could go either way. It could have caution after caution or it could go long and get spread out and really just come out to rolling and turning the corner good. Hopefully, it might turn into that. I think that might be our best case, but we’ll see when we get there.”

WHAT ONE TRACK WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE MAYBE COME OFF THE SCHEDULE? “It’s hard to say. The one that hurts my heart the most is putting dirt on Bristol, just because I love it so much. Bristol is a completely incredible racetrack and I’m perfectly fine with running dirt somewhere, I just don’t want to do it at Bristol. I want to have those two shots at Bristol every year. On the other side of it, I completely understand. It’s been a good show every time we’ve done it and been a great race and the fans have loved it, so I’m good with that too. There’s not many that I just despise. I think all of them are OK. I’ve kind of been on that bandwagon of maybe some of them don’t need two show every year, but it seems like all of them have done really well this year. The fans have showed up and supported us and done all the things that we want to do as a sport. It’s hard for me to pick out one that I would just completely throw out at this point.”

WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST PET PEEVE? “Just details. I can’t stand somebody that wants to halfway do anything. Anybody that knows me, it doesn’t matter if I’m on vacation or where I’m at, I’m cleaning or doing something or making something better as much as possible. To me, it’s unacceptable to do anything halfway. I’ve been so fortunate to be here with people that believe in me and the guys on the 4 team have that same expectation and I don’t have to preach it. They’ve known for nine years and they all have the same outlook and same desire to be good and you can normally come look at our pit box at Phoenix at the end of the year and it looks exactly like it did in February when it got to Daytona and that’s the way it’s supposed to be. It’s not supposed to look ratted out or like it’s been used up. You’ve got to keep your stuff nice and take nice cars to the racetrack. You can’t be perfect, but you can certainly try to.”

Tony Stewart Racing: Denver Advance for the Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals

Leah Pruett & Matt Hagan
Dodge Power Brokers Top Fuel & Funny Car Drivers
Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals
July 15-17 | Morrison, Colorado

Event Overview

Friday, July 15 (Nitro Qualifying, streamed live on NHRA.TV)

● Nitro qualifying session (Q1): 4:30 p.m. MDT/6:30 p.m. EDT

● Nitro qualifying session (Q2): 8 p.m. MDT/10 p.m. EDT

Saturday, July 16 (Nitro Qualifying, streamed live on NHRA.TV)

● Nitro qualifying session (Q3): 3:30 p.m. MDT/5:30 p.m. EDT

● Nitro qualifying session (Q4): 7 p.m. MDT/9 p.m. EDT

Sunday, July 17 (Nitro Eliminations, streamed live on NHRA.TV)

● Round 1: 11 a.m. MDT/1 p.m. EDT

● Round 2: 1:15 p.m. MDT/3:15 p.m. EDT

● Semi-Finals: 2:50 p.m. MDT/4:50 p.m. EDT

● Finals: 4:10 p.m. MDT/6:10 p.m. EDT

TV coverage

● Friday, July 15: Qualifying show (8 p.m. MDT/10 p.m. EDT on FS1)

● Sunday, July 17: Qualifying show recapping Saturday’s action (9 a.m. MDT/11 a.m. EDT on FS1)

● Sunday, July 17: Finals show (2 p.m. MDT/4 p.m. EDT on FOX)

Notes of Interest

● The Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals at Bandimere Speedway in Morrison, Colorado, marks the 11th event on the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series’ 22-race calendar. It’s the halfway point of the season and it kicks off the Western Swing – three consecutive races where after the Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals, the series heads to Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway July 22-24 for the DENSO NHRA Sonoma Nationals and then to Pacific Raceways in Kent, Washington, July 29-31 for the Flav-R-Pac NHRA Northwest Nationals. Tony Stewart Racing (TSR) will be represented in Top Fuel by nine-time event winner Leah Pruett and in Funny Car by three-time champion Matt Hagan.

Dodge Power Brokers and Direct Connection return to Pruett’s Top Fuel dragster and Hagan’s Charger SRT Hellcat Funny Car this weekend at Bandimere. The Dodge Power Brokers program serves as the exclusive source for Direct Connection, Dodge’s factory-backed performance parts program, which is equipped with staff trained to deliver a performance-focused customer service experience.

● The Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals will be Pruett’s 182nd career Top Fuel start and her sixth at Bandimere. For Hagan, this will be his 304th career Funny Car start and his 13th at Bandimere.

● Pruett won at Bandimere in 2018 (3.831 at 316.45 mph) when she defeated Doug Kalitta (3.852 ET at 319.82 mph). Pruett also has two No. 1 qualifiers at the event, which came in 2017 (3.733 ET at 326.24 mph) and 2018 (3.799 ET at 327.19 mph).

● In addition to Pruett’s 2018 Top Fuel win and 2017 runner-up finish to Antron Brown, she reached the final round last year in the NHRA Factory Stock Showdown division. In a Dodge Challenger, Pruett ran an 8.265 ET at 166.48 mph, narrowly losing to Stephen Bell’s run of 8.259 ET at 164.77 mph. Of all the tracks that comprise the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series, Pruett’s winning percentage is best at Bandimere. She has won 69.2 percent of her Top Fuel heats (9-4) and 75 percent of her rounds in Factory Stock (3-1).

● Hagan enters the Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals as the event’s defending Funny Car winner. In 2021, Hagan’s 4.105 ET at 305.70 mph defeated Alexis DeJoria (4.227 ET at 297.68 mph). Hagan has two No. 1 qualifiers at the event, which came in 2010 (4.161 ET at 301.33 mph) and 2021 (3.966 ET at 319.22 mph).

● Hagan is a three-time winner already this season, collecting Wallys March 13 at Gainesville, Florida; April 24 at Baytown, Texas; and June 5 at Epping, New Hampshire. Hagan has also earned three No. 1 qualifiers and advanced to the finals six times in 2022.

● On Wednesday at 6:40 p.m. MDT at Coors Field in Denver, Hagan will throw out the first pitch before the Colorado Rockies take on the San Diego Padres

● Pruett and Hagan will participate in a Dodge autograph session on Friday from 3-3:30 p.m. MDT and again on Saturday from 2-2:30 p.m. MDT. Both sessions will take place in the pits at the Dodge display.

Leah Pruett, Driver of the Dodge Power Brokers Top Fuel Dragster

Describe the significance of the Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals and the uniqueness of the event given the track’s altitude of 5,800 feet.

“Our minds are on Mile-High and the necessary changes the car needs from different pistons, the uniqueness of the event, how the car has cooperated in the last couple races, to fuel adjustments are all just precursors for the Dodge Power Brokers event. It’s going to be one to win, I’ve always said it – some people think the U.S. Nationals are a big one. Winning the Dodge Power Brokers Mile-High Nationals would be the pinnacle of the year, in my opinion. That is where our backbone is, on top of that mountain. We performed well in Norwalk with our Detroit executives at the track and we intend to do the same and build on that for Denver. We needed a bit of this rejuvenation. We have a healthy program and that’s also very important. There are teams out here running on the edge and hurting a lot of parts. Our healthy program will allow us to push, which will allow us to qualify better and get on top of that mountain.”

Bandimere Speedway is home to your highest win percentage of all NHRA tracks. What makes the track so successful for you?

“Over the years, it’s been a combination of my love for Bandimere Speedway and the talented and dedicated teams I’ve been a part of. Rising to the occasion has always been my motto for Bandimere, and not in an intimidating way, but more of a prolonged excitement and preparation for the race on the mountain since I was nine years old. And this year I know our Dodge Power Brokers team is just as excited and prepared to continue our momentum, upward and onward.”

Denver kicks off the NHRA’s Western Swing and it marks the halfway point of the season. Even though Bandimere is unique in regard to car setup, what advantages do three events in a row have on continuing good routines?

“For a driver, being in the seat as much as possible, specifically back-to-back, is key. Repetition is our friend. It might seem unnatural to feel ‘comfortable’ in an 11,000 horsepower machine, but when I get to have back-to-back races with the highest of horse-powered Dodge HEMI behind me, the comfortability turns into confidence, and that is where I’m at. Therefore, going into the Western Swing and kicking it off with thousands of Mopar enthusiasts is the exact type of scene I want to be in. The car and team is prepared for the longest and most brutal swing of the season.”

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

Describe the significance of the Dodge Power Brokers NHRA Mile-High Nationals and the uniqueness of the event given the track’s altitude of 5,800 feet.

“I’m looking forward to getting to Denver for the Dodge Power Brokers Mile-High Nationals. We’ve been able to build upon our data and Dickie Venables (crew chief) has been putting a great car underneath me. We’ll be taking a different car combination to Bandimere in regard to the motor, clutch and blower. You can wick your blowers up and the compression is crazy with the elevation. We have a great car setup we won there with last year, so we put that on the shelf, didn’t touch it, and we’re going to bring it back out and put it on the racecar. I look forward to having a successful weekend in Denver, which is what we need to do. With it being a Dodge Power Brokers race, we want to give them a strong showing.”

Last year marked your first win at the Mile-High Nationals. What kind of confidence does that give you entering this year’s event?

“When we won the Mile-High Nationals in 2021, it was really cool. Since we only race in Denver once a year, the car is a one-time setup. Dickie (Venables) had a good handle on the car last year, since we were No. 1 qualifier and won. Hopefully we’ll have continued success for this year’s race. It’s challenging up there on the mountain. Do I think it’ll be easy? No way. There are a lot of crazy variables with altitude and tuning. When the parachutes hit, there is no air. The Bandimeres do a great job promoting the track and it’ll be a packed house. We’ll be in town early for the Dodge Drive Event and it’ll be a busy week, so I’m looking forward to getting up there, seeing all the fans and having some fun.”

Denver kicks off the NHRA’s Western Swing and it marks the halfway point of the season. Even though Bandimere is unique in regard to car setup, what advantages do three events in a row have on continuing good routines?

“Having three races in a row is always good because it keeps the momentum going. I’ve never swept the Western Swing, so that would be great to do. It’s really challenging in Funny Car because there are so many competitive drivers every weekend. It’s a little tough because we go from one-mile high in elevation to sea level at Sonoma, so it changes the dynamics of the car. But the racing is good and the tracks are good and we need to sweep the Swing, so let’s do it this year.”

Chevrolet Racing in NTT INDYCAR SERIES : Will Power transcript

CHEVROLET RACING ZOOM TRANSCRIPT: Power previews Toronto

Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, met with the media via Zoom conference to preview the NTT INDYCAR SERIES race July 17 in Toronto. Power, who advanced 18 spots from his starting position to finish third July 3 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, is a three-time winner and two-time pole sitter on the 1.78-mile, 11-turn Toronto street circuit.

Full transcript:

HOW MUCH ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO GOING BACK TO TORONTO?

“Yeah, very much so. I love the city there, and the track is very unique. Really isn’t a track that we go to that’s like that. It’s near impossible to get a good balance in the car, so it’s a lot of compromise. Feel like it’s a real driver’s track. It’s pretty hard.”

LOOKING BACK AT YOUR MID-OHIO DRIVE – A CHAMPIOSHIP-SAVING DRIVE MAYBE. HOW BIG WAS THAT WEEKEND FOR YOU?

“It was a very good recovery. I would say we had a car that, I feel like, could definitely challenge for pole. It was unfortunate what happened. Our fault. We weren’t on top of that. We should have been. Obviously, the strategy and the car was great in the race. Yep, did not expect to make it all the way back to third, but I knew our car was strong. With yellows and restarts, good pit stop sequence, we were able to make our way all the way up to a podium. I was hoping at the beginning of that day for a top 10. I said that a few times this year, like at Detroit, like at Barber, but we’ve made it much further. Definitely showing my race craft ability with all these bad qualifyings, which I haven’t been able to do for most of my career because I’ve always qualified right up at the front. Plus, you learn when you’re back there, as well, when you’re in the mix of stuff.”

YOUR TEAMMATES HAVE WON MULTIPLE RACES. WHAT DO YOU SEE THE REASON FOR WHY THE ENTIRE TEAM IS BETTER?

“The tire changed a little bit. Basically, the Firestone tires that we were running last year had sat around a lot, so the tire was obviously hardening over time. I think the tire’s simply better this year, which brought our cars into a better place for where we live. We also did a lot of development in the off-season. I actually feel like last year we had bad luck. I wouldn’t call it luck, but just strange things happened when we had cars in position to win and such. Yeah, last year wasn’t as bad as it looked on performance. It was just one of those years that was just a little bit messy and things didn’t flow our way. Newgarden should have won Road America. I should have won in Detroit. We should have challenging for the win in Laguna. It’s just races like that that kind of made it look worse. Yes, we’re certainly firing on all cylinders this year.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE ALEX PALOU, MCLAREN, CHIP GANASSI SITUATION?

“I’ve heard rumors around the paddock of exactly what’s transpiring right now. Yeah, it’s kind of good for the series really to have a bit of action in the paddock. Yeah, obviously I don’t know the details of everything that has gone on there. Yeah, it’s going to be interesting to see how that whole things plays out.”

DOESN’T IT ALSO CREATE A HUGE DISTRACTION ON THAT TEAM AS THEY’RE TRYING TO BATTLE FOR A CHAMPIONSHIP?

“Well, I think that’s been a distraction all year for those guys because this whole thing has been going on behind the scenes. Yeah, not ideal if you’re fighting for a championship within a team. Definitely not ideal.”

HAVE YOU EVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS BEFORE IN YOUR CAREER IN INDYCAR?

“I have not seen this in INDYCAR. I mean, this sort of thing goes on obviously all the time, various businesses. It’s just one of those things where it’s going to come down to the wording in the contract simply.”

HOW DISTRACTING CAN CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS BE FOR A DRIVER MID-SEASON?

“It can make some drivers perform better and some perform worse. Yeah, some need that sort of pressure to bring the best out of them, and some don’t do well under those situations. Ideally, I think you want everything settled and you want pretty good vibes in the team. But it totally depends on the individual.”

THERE’S BEEN NINE DIFFERENT POLE SITTERS SO FAR. WHY DO YOU THINK QUALIFYING HAS BEEN SO UP IN THE AIR THIS SEASON?

“Simply because it’s so competitive. There is no one that is dominating, no one stands out. You can try to pick the polesitter for this weekend. You simply couldn’t. Even the drivers, you couldn’t pick who might be on pole, which to me is a great thing.”

WHICH DRIVE WAS MORE IMPRESSIVE FOR YOU – MID-OHIO OR DETROIT?

“I think Mid-Ohio, coming from the very back, having spun, to get to the podium was definitely, yep. Tires weren’t a big deal there. Like reds and blacks were pretty similar over a stint. Yeah, that’s a great job from the team overall with strategy and staying in the game, and also for me to keep my head, slowly chip away at it.”

YOUR TEAM HAS WON SIX OF THE NINE RACES. CAN YOU DESCRIBE THE CONFIDENCE YOU GUYS ARE WALKING IN WITH EVERY WEEK?

“I’ve always had that confidence being in that team, that you will turn up to a weekend with a chance to win. That’s always kind of been my feeling. Like, I never walked into a weekend thinking, Man, we’ve got no chance. When you start having good runs on the board, you’re right there in the points, it does give you confidence. You’re obviously feeling good about the situation. You’re not feeling like you have to do anything desperate, you’re just having to execute. You’re sitting in that sweet spot of performance.”

YOU SAID AFTER MID-OHIO THAT YOUR PARENTS HAVE NEVER BEEN HERE FOR A WIN. IS THAT LEGITIMATE OTHER THAN THE TIME YOU WON THE CHAMPIONSHIP IN ’14?

“Yeah, my mother was at the championship when I won in ’14. But, yes, my parents haven’t been to a race for years. I can’t remember the last time my dad came. Might be 2009 or something. No? ’11 was the last time my dad came to a race. Yeah, they haven’t really seen much of on-track action. My brother has come twice. ’18 when I won the 500, then on to Detroit when I won Detroit. I have two other brothers as well that have never been to a race.”

YOU’RE IN THE TITLE FIGHT WITH EIGHT RACES LEFT. ANY DISCUSSIONS OF THEM COMING OVER HERE, BEING HERE BY MONTERREY?

“No, they won’t come. I don’t know that for sure. My wife might surprise me. I doubt it. I doubt I’ll see my parents. I doubt it, yeah. I don’t think they’ll come.”

A LOT OF ROOKIES AT TORONTO THIS WEEKEND. THIS WILL BE YOUR 14TH START. IS THAT AN ADVANTAGE OR DOES THE AEROSCREEN KIND OF NEGATE EVERYTHING?

“I think it will be different. The tire’s probably a little different. It’s so tight these years. The little tiny things do make a big difference. Yeah, the field is so good now, there’s so many good drivers, it really doesn’t matter if someone has been there or not because they seem to get up to speed so quickly. Yeah, you can’t feel like you ever have an advantage in this game.”

THERE’S A GOOD SHOT WE COULD BE COMING TO INDY IN A COUPLE WEEKS AND YOU THREE PENSKE GUYS ARE FIGHTHING FOR A TITLE. IS IT A TOUGH ACT TO BALANCE WORKING WITH A TEAMMATE, FIGHTING THAT SAME TEAMMATE FOR A CHAMPIONSHIP?

“It is a very tough balance. To me, the most awkward thing about motorsport is that you have a teammate, and you’re absolutely compared off your teammates, you have the same equipment. Very tough balance. But Penske, I don’t think Penske would ever allow it to get to the point where we’re having big issues with each other on track. We understand that. We understand that it’s about the team and not about the drivers. You never put yourself first. You work hard, you work together off the track. Obviously we’re kind of separate teams on the track. I have to say with both Scott and Josef, it’s been very good as far as the information that we share. Like, they are both super quick. It has helped me a lot. That’s to me an advantage.”

IT SEEMS LIKE STREET COURSES COULD GO EITHER WAY AS FAR AS QUALIFYING POSITION. TORONTO SEEMS TO FAVOR STARTING POSITION MORE. IS STARTING POSITION GOING TO MEAN A LOT THIS WEEKEND?

“It looks like that way just reviewing the race. I’ve thought that a few times this year. Obviously tracks I feel like are tough to pass. We’ve actually made some hay. Like who knows, it could be a straightforward race, it can be pretty green, not much chance to make passes. But INDYCAR at the moment is so competitive that who knows. Like, at the end of the day you can never give up. Don’t be too down in the mouth if you don’t qualify well. But it matters, though. Qualifying up front, if you execute well, you’re certainly going to finish up front.”

WHAT MAKES TORONTO SO DIFFICULT, AND WHY IS THAT THAT THE GUYS THAT ARE CHAMPIONS OF THE SPORT ALWAYS SEEM TO PERFORM WELL THERE?

“The track is just difficult because there’s so many different levels of grip. Like, you never feel in the track, on top of the track, it’s sliding. The car never handles well. It’s kind of difficult to tell your engineer what to do because there’s so much compromise. Maybe it’s a track that it’s easy to make a mistake on. That’s why maybe veterans or people being around a bit longer don’t end up making mistakes. That might be the reason that you’ve seen champions win.”

YOU TALKED ABOUT HOW YOUNG GUYS CAN SHOW UP AT TRACKS AND BE ON THEIR A GAME. IS PART OF THAT BECAUSE OF SIM WORK – THEY’RE MORE PREPARED?

“Definitely simulator work. You know the braking points, you know the gears, you know the track. You don’t know the track condition. But, yeah, that’s a pretty big chunk of time you cut off trying to understand where a track goes by being on a sim the week before. That is a big, big help. Obviously video these days, so much on-board footage, there’s so much information to take in before you get there. You turn up, you’re going out first session knowing the track.”

A LOT OF DRIVERS PERFORM WORSE AFTER A MISTAKE, BUT YOU SHOWED THE OPPOSITE AT MID-OHIO. DO YOU THINK MISTAKES CAN MAKE YOU MORE POWERFUL ON TRACK?

“Yeah, honestly after I spun, I just gathered it up and didn’t really reflect on it, and just started passing people. Obviously it’s not even on your mind when you get to that point. Then you just start progressing, doing your job. I think that’s the only mentality you can have. I think the mistake people might make, I’ve made in the past, you get desperate. Oh, my God, I’m at the back, I made a mistake. That is right there, the mindset, that will make you have a worse race. I wasn’t even upset or mad. It’s like, OK, how do I keep going? Don’t stall the car. Got right back into it. Didn’t even think about it. The sooner you can get over that stuff, the better. You can’t be thinking about it three laps later. You have to keep chipping away. Still at that point in your mind every single point matters, so every position does matter. Maybe that’s your bad day that you spun. It’s your bad day. But every point matters here. That’s kind of the mentality I had at Indy when I went back to pretty much last in the first stint. I was like, This is double points, every position I get matters at the end of the year. That was the mentality. You’re not going to win every race, so it’s just getting the most out of every situation. That’s really what I have been doing this year.”

WERE YOU SATISFIED ABOUT THAT PERFORMANCE? YOU WERE FRUSTRATED ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED?

“I was extremely happy about the finish. I was very, very happy with third. I couldn’t honestly believe that I made it to third. I was really, really happy. Just felt great for the team. It was a weekend that we had a lot of potential to win. But, like I said, you can’t win them all. You do have bad races. If you can come back from a mistake, that’s even better. Yeah, I was very, very happy with that day. Very happy.”

DO YOU SEE AUSTRALIA FOSTERING NEW TALENT TOWARD SINGLE-SEATER RACING, PARTICULARLY IN NORTH AMERICA?

“Yeah, I was really happy to see Hunter McElrea doing so good. I think he’s a super fast driver. Has definitely, definitely the potential to get to INDYCAR and do well. But, yeah, I don’t know what’s going on down in Australia so much these days. I haven’t been back there for a long time. I have to say, though, I’m sure Drive to Survive is helping just open-wheel motorsports in general. Like, I think go-karting is more popular now. I think all those series. I think it’s great. It’s giving open-wheel racing relevance. People understand the cars now. When they see an INDYCAR, they can identify, Oh, yeah, that’s just like a Formula 1 car. I think having Scott (McLaughlin) come over and do really well from Supercars, I think kids would see that and go, Maybe I want to go that route. If you do some Supercar driving, doesn’t mean you can’t come and race open-wheels. You’ve seen how well Scott adapted pretty quickly. Yeah, I would love to see more Australians over here. I think now Roger has taken the series over, the ladder system will get stronger. You already see there’s more Indy Lights cars. Hopefully more again next year. That’s what it needs, is a very good ladder system with three categories before INDYCAR. If you start doing more than that, it starts watering the three down. I hope that we can get three strong series together, massive fields. Yeah, it helps that ladder system.”

THERE’S A LOT OF NEW ZEALANDERS AND AUSTRALIANS THAT GO ON TO DEVELOPMENT SERIES WITH SUPERCARS. WHAT MCLAUGHLIN HAS DONE HELPS.

“What you have to look at, too, look at the past champions of Indy Lights. Not even champions, but guys that have competed first and second. Look at Pato O’Ward and Colton Herta. Those guys are testing Formula 1 right now. Who was last year’s champion? Kirkwood. I mean, if you go through that ladder system, you win on each rung of those ladders, you get money to go to the next series. There’s nothing like that anywhere else in the world. It’s a good place to go, it really is. It’s not as expensive as Europe. You are guaranteed to continue if you win. I think that’s a pretty good deal.”

THE CANADIAN FAN BASE LOKING FORWARD TO A RACE THERE. I’M SURE THAT WILLMAKE THE RAE THAT MUCH MORE EXCITING FOR YOU AS A DRIVER.

“Yeah, I think speaking to Kevin Savoree, he said ticket sales are really good. I think we’ll get a massive crowd. Always do. I think the Canadian fans are some of the best in the world. They love their sport. A real party atmosphere. Nothing better than racing in front of a big crowd. I expect it to be a pretty good event.”

HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT ABOUT TEAMING UP WITH YOUR BROTHER AND HAVING HIM GIVE HIS SHOWS SURROUNDING INDYCAR VENUES?

“No, obviously really enjoy him coming over because we share a similar sense of humor. Obviously enjoy his company massively. No, I’ve often thought about what we could do together after INDYCAR, on the comedy side of stuff because obviously he has a lot of contacts in Australia. Maybe we can do some sort of TV show or something. Yeah, haven’t ever really thought about him. He has talked about coming to the U.S. and doing gigs. I think he’d just have to follow what his management puts in place for him. Yeah, no, I would love him to live over here. That would be cool. I think he’s going to at some point pretty soon.”

TORONTO HAS VARYING GRIPS AND IT’S HARD TO PASS. IS THAT TROUBLE IF YOU DON’T START IN THE FIRST THIRD OF THE FIELD?

“Yeah, these days if you get in the top six, you’re pretty happy. You know you can do a lot from there. God, man, it’s so hard to predict the races. Like, it could go green. It could be a very straightforward race. I don’t think Toronto is all that difficult to pass. There are places to pass. You can pass. What’s happened is the field is so tough now, everyone is about the same speed in the race. That’s what makes it hard to pass. It’s not necessarily the track. I think Firestone has done a good job of making a big difference between blacks and reds. There’s another way that you can just switch up strategy and just be on a different tire than everyone else, different to the conventional strategies. Yeah, based on the three races I’ve had this year where I’ve come from way back, you would stress less about qualifying badly, just knowing if you keep your head you can definitely make hay. The points situation also changes the way you race a bit. You’re not in this ‘I have nothing to lose’ sort of mentality, so you do race a little differently because of that, as well.”

SEEING YOU ON TRACK THIS YEAR – VERY MATURE, A LOT OF FUN. YOURE’ JUST MAKING IT ROUGHER FOR EVERYONE ELSE.

“Everyone makes it tougher on each other. It’s a great group, great series. There’s nothing like it in the world, honestly. The disciplines you have to do, the competition, the different nationalities, it’s a pretty unique series.”

ANY CONCERN ON YOUR PART OR THE TEAM’S PART ON CHEVY RELIABILITY GOING FORWARD?

“Yeah, obviously always concerned when you see that. I will say that all the Chevys are switching out engines because they’re all up on mileage for this race. They are all on new engines. (Indiscernible) Indy 500 race engines. Chevy obviously does a big investigation into what happened. Usually a failure creates — it doesn’t happen twice, put it that way. I don’t know the findings of their investigation. I know one of them was not a Chevy issue.”

THE TEAM COMFORTABLE WITH THE SWAP-PUT, JUST FEELING NO ISSUES?

“No. No. I think we’re all pretty comfortable. We’ve had this engine for a long time. It’s been pretty reliable. Sometimes oddball things happen. They take care of it.”

HOW MUCH DO YOU SEE THE AEROSCREEN AFFECTING THE RACING IN TORONTO?

“Yeah, it definitely changed the car a lot because it moves the weight further forward. But I’ve actually found at Toronto, as the weight has gone forward, it’s really helped. On those really slippery cement patches, the actual weight downforce matters, so you get more weight force on the front tires, and it actually helps turn the car. That was a big problem when the car had really rearward weight, that the front tires would not work over that cement. Obviously at some point, when you have high grip, that weight matters laterally. But the grip is so low that the lateral — the actual weight downforce is more than the actual lateral force. So, yeah, it’s interesting. To me it actually helped at that specific track, at Toronto.”

YOU’VE BEEN STRONG THIS YEAR. WHAT DO YOU FEEL YOU AND TEAM PENSKE NEED TO DO TO BE EVEN STRONGER?

“For me personally is to qualify better. It’s not always been about pace. Last week it was just strategy and the lack of communication that got us. I actually feel like we would have definitely made it through to the Fast Six and potentially had a pole. Yeah, the last couple, Road America being P2 in practice, then not converting that in qualifying, that’s the sort of thing we’ve got to be on top of. I’ve just had a messy year of qualifying as far as being in the wrong place on track or not getting a big enough gap to the car in front, or simply not performing, not being fast enough. I’ve had all those situations. That’s the area I need to improve on for the next half of this season. I think that will put me in a really good position, if I do.”

DO YOU FEEL THE COMPETITION LEVEL IS AT AN ALL-TIME HIGH?

“Yeah, definitely the all-time high as far as driver talent, the quality of teams. Yeah, it hasn’t been this tough ever. Yeah, three big teams now, four big teams: Penske, McLaren, Andretti, Ganassi. You add Shank into that. I don’t think there’s a series more competitive around the world than this.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE WHOLE TEST SITUATION WITH COLTON HERTA AND FORMULA 1?

“Yeah, man, I wish there was Zak Brown around when I was that age, when I first got to INDYCAR, because I know I would have got a chance in Formula 1. It’s cool to see that because I know how that feels. I know how awesome that would be for Colton. I really hope, if he goes there, he does really well. But, yeah, I mean, a great opportunity. I think it’s just so fantastic to have a team like McLaren and Zak Brown in INDYCAR. I think it’s great for the series. It’s good for the young guys here obviously. I think it’s great what Zak Brown is doing, I do. Cool to see.”

DO YOU THINK MCLAREN, ARROW MCLAREN SP HAS AN ADVANTAGE CORNERING YOUNG TALENT BECUASE HE CAN DANGLE THIS F1 RIDE TO JOINING THE TEAM?

“Yes, absolutely. That would be 100% why Palou would want to go there. I don’t blame him honestly. I mean, I would be the same. If you had a chance to go and race in F1, as big as F1 is now, yeah, you would want to go there. It’s pretty cool. You think about the reach that McLaren has, Formula E, Formula 1, sports car. Man, it’s a pretty good place, pretty good organization to be involved with.”

HOW FAR OFF DO YOU THINK ARROW MCLAREN SP IS TO JOINING THE PENSKES AND GANASSIS AT THE VERY ELITE LEVEL OF INDYCAR?

“They’re right there. They’re right there. It will be interesting. Obviously they’ve had young drivers, so it takes a while for the young guys to understand exactly what you need as far as development goes. But adding Rossi to the team, there’s a guy with a lot of experience. I think that’s kind of what it needed. Yeah, they’re there, man. They’re very, very strong. They’re a very good team.”

WITH HALF THE FIELD NEVER BEING IN TORONTO, DOES THAT GIVE YOU A CONFIDENCE BOOST BECAUSE YOU HAVE BEEN THERE BEFORE AND DONE WELL?

“No, no. Basically with simulators and video and everything, it doesn’t really give you an advantage any more. I think people turn up, they pretty much know the track. Yeah, it’s anyone’s guess who will be the quickest there and what the top 10 would be, honestly.”

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Kaulig Racing Weekly Advance | New Hampshire Motor Speedway

 Ambetter 301
New Hampshire Motor Speedway
NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Sunday July 17 at 3 p.m. ET on USA

In the 2022 NCS season, Kaulig Racing has earned one top five, five top-10 finishes and has led 22 laps

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

  • Allmendinger has made 19 starts, earned one top-10 finish and has led 13 laps at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in the NCS
  • Allmendinger has earned two top-10 finishes led two laps, and has an average finish of 21.6 in the 2022 NCS season across nine starts

“New Hampshire can be a challenging track. When you hit your setup just right, it’s an extremely fun track, but if you miss it, it can be one of the most difficult tracks we go to. Hopefully this gives us a chance to work on our short track program on both the Xfinity side and the Cup side.” – AJ Allmendinger on New Hampshire Motor Speedway

Justin Haley, No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Camaro ZL1

  • Justin Haley has made one start at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in the NCS
  • He has earned one top five, two top 10 and and nine top-15 finishes in 2022
  • Haley’s third-place finish at Darlington was Kaulig Racing’ first top-five not at a superspeedway or road course
  • Haley has led 20 laps in the 2022 season

“We had a solid weekend in Atlanta, so we are looking to continue building on that momentum this weekend in New Hampshire. We’ve struggled at the flat, short tracks this year, but I feel like we have improved each week in so many different areas, so hopefully we can use what we’ve learned to excel this weekend.” – Justin Haley on New Hampshire Motor Speedway  

Crayon 200

New Hampshire Motor Speedway
NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS)
Saturday, July 16 at 2:30 p.m. ET on USA

  • Kaulig Racing has earned two wins, 12 top five and 30 top-10 finishes in the 2022 NXS season
  • The team has led 270 laps in the 2022 NXS season so far
  • Allmendinger: 222 laps
  • Hemric: 48 laps

Landon Cassill, No. 10 Carnomaly Chevrolet

Landon Cassill earned his first-ever pole award in the NXS at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2008
He has made six starts at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Cassill has earned three top five and eight top-10 finishes in the 2022 NXS season and has an average finish of 15.0

“I’m definitely looking forward to New Hampshire in our No. 10 Carnomaly Chevrolet. I have run well there in the past and earned my first-career pole award at Loudon. It’s fun track, and I always feel like the Northeast has some of the best race fans on our schedule.” – Landon Cassill on New Hampshire Motor Speedway

Daniel Hemric, No. 11 AG1 Chevrolet

Hemric has made three starts at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and has recorded one top 10 and led three laps
Daniel Hemric has an average finish of 15.2 in 2022 and has led 48 laps in the NXS

“I’m excited to go to this beautiful part of the country. This track is a challenge, and obviously, we know we need to take a step forward in our short-track program this year. Everyone back at the shop has been putting in the work to help prepare us, so hopefully we can get the results to show it.” – Daniel Hemric on New Hampshire Motor Speedway

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Action Industries Chevrolet

  • Allmendinger has made one start at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in the NXS and has led 29 laps
  • He has earned a win for Kaulig Racing in four-straight NXS seasons
  • In 2022, Allmendinger has led 222 laps, recorded two wins, seven top five and 15 top-10 finishes
  • Allmendinger has an average finish of 6.7, the best of any full-time NXS driver in 2022
  • Allmendinger has 15 top-10 finishes, the most of any full-time NXS driver in the 2022 season

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.

GEARWRENCH Racing: Kevin Harvick New Hampshire Advance

KEVIN HARVICK
New Hampshire Advance
No. 4 GEARWRENCH® Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Ambetter 301 (Round 20 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, July 17
● Location: New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon
● Layout: 1.058-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 301 laps / 318.46 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 70 laps / Stage 2: 115 laps / Final Stage: 116 laps
● TV/Radio: USA / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● As a 22-year veteran of the NASCAR Cup Series with 58 career wins, Kevin Harvick has a lot of good racetracks. New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon is one of them. The driver of the No. 4 GEARWRENCH Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) has made 38 starts at the 1.058-mile oval and won four times – tied with retired driver Jeff Burton for the most all-time. And when he hasn’t ended his race in victory lane, Harvick has been well within the vicinity. He has 13 top-five and 22 top-10 finishes, both of which lead the series among active Cup Series drivers.

● Harvick has won two of the last four races at New Hampshire (2018 and 2019), and in his last eight starts at “The Magic Mile”, he only has one finish outside the top-six. Harvick finished sixth last year at New Hampshire, and he comes into this year’s Ambetter 301 looking to score his fifth straight top-10.

● Who is even close to Harvick at New Hampshire? There are three active NASCAR Cup Series drivers with three wins – Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin – but only Harvick has four victories. When it comes to top-fives, Harvick is in a class of his own with 13. Next best are Kyle Busch and Hamlin with 11 top-fives apiece. And it’s the same with top-10s. The only driver close to Harvick in this category is Hamlin, who has 17 top-10s.

● While Harvick has always been good at New Hampshire, his performance at the track took a dramatic turn upward when he joined SHR in 2014. In the 12 races contested at New Hampshire since wheeling the No. 4 car for SHR, Harvick has scored three wins and has only four finishes outside of the top-five. And of his 831 career laps led at New Hampshire, 512 have come in the last 11 races (46.5 percent).

● Harvick has proven quick at New Hampshire outside of the NASCAR Cup Series. In 12 career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at the track, he has a win (June 2007) to go with nine top-fives and 11 top-10s with 677 laps led. And in six NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts, Harvick has three top-three finishes and five top-10s. His worst result was merely a 15th-place drive back in August 1999.

● The “Stewart” in Stewart-Haas Racing is Tony Stewart, and he has a pretty good track record at New Hampshire, too. The 2020 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee won three races in 35 starts and logged 15 top-fives and 19 top-10s with 1,302 laps led. The only driver with more laps led at New Hampshire is fellow NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon with 1,373 laps led.

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● Featured on the decklid of Harvick’s No. 4 GEARWRENCH Ford Mustang during the Ambetter 301 is its FORGE AHEAD tagline. FORGE AHEAD reinforces the drive to innovate and push the boundaries of what is possible. FORGE AHEAD also communicates the power, strength and reliability of GEARWRENCH’s premier line of hand tools. GEARWRENCH strives to deliver innovative solutions that accommodates speed, strength and access while delivering quality, durable products for people who use tools to make their living. GEARWRENCH. FORGE AHEAD.

● VIP me ASAP! GEARWRENCH is ready to make it happen. Enter the GEARWRENCH VIP Racing Sweepstakes for the chance to win a VIP racing experience with either the NASCAR Cup Series, Formula DRIFT or the NHRA. The winner and three of their best friends will go inside the ropes and behind the scenes at one of three events of their choice – the South Point 400 NASCAR race weekend Oct. 15-16 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the Formula DRIFT season finale Oct. 14-15 at Irwindale (Calif.) Speedway, or the NHRA season finale Nov. 12-13 at Auto Club Raceway at Pomona (Calif.). The grand prize includes hotel accommodations for up to three nights, transportation, a private meet-and-greet with GEARWRENCH drivers, VIP seating for the race, and $2,500 in GEARWRENCH products. In addition to the grand-prize winner, two first-prize winners will be randomly selected to receive $1,500 in tools, and four second-prize winners will be randomly selected to receive $500 in tools.

Kevin Harvick, Driver of the No. 4 GEARWRENCH Ford Mustang

Phoenix Raceway is your best track, statistically, but New Hampshire isn’t far off from your results at Phoenix. Four career wins and eight top-fives in the last 11 races is proof of that. Are there similarities between Phoenix and New Hampshire?

“Flat tracks have always been really good for me in my career. When you look at SHR and the things we’ve been able to accomplish at Loudon and Phoenix, they’ve kind of followed that same trend. A lot of that goes back to that open test time we had at Milwaukee and Nashville. Those are the places where we would practice and practice and practice. Our guys have done a great job of having a good short-track, flat-track program, and Loudon is a place that has followed along with Phoenix and the success that we’ve had there and to be able to capitalize on that success and continue it at another track.”

New Hampshire always seems to be a race that is circled on your calendar. Is it even more so this year because of how you’ve run at Phoenix (sixth) and Richmond (second) – tracks that have some similar characteristics to New Hampshire?

“The flat-track stuff definitely has been good for us, and we’re going there knowing we’re going to have some options to move around the racetrack and be able to kind of hunt for a line that works for our GEARWRENCH Ford Mustang.”

What is it about this style of track when combined with the NextGen car that seems to really suit your driving style?

“The trend is that we’ve been good there in pretty much all the stuff that we’ve ever raced there, so hopefully we can keep that trend going as we go back.”

Is horsepower less of an issue at New Hampshire because it’s relatively flat and only a mile in length, or do you need to really be able to pull off the corner and down the straightaway to make a fast lap? Or is a fast lap more about getting through each corner well?

“For us, a lot of that depends on the tire falloff and where things go from the handling of the car and what the pace is. You definitely still have to have good power, it just comes in a different range, and a lot of places we’ve gone this year, we’ve shifted, so New Hampshire will probably be the same way. You’ll probably be shifting in every corner.”

New Hampshire has been treated with PJ1 and with resin. Have you lobbied NASCAR for one over the other – PJ1 versus resin – at New Hampshire?

“I would prefer nothing. With this particular car, it seems like they naturally move around the racetrack and slide and do things that the other car didn’t do, and I think they put so much PJ1 on all these racetracks that it’s going to be there forever. The last time we raced there, they didn’t spray it at all and we were still able to move around the track because the PJ1 was still there.”

You get a giant lobster for winning at New Hampshire. Other than scaring your kids with it in victory lane, what do you do with it?

“My lobster, they mounted on a board. It sat in a closet and his claws fell off and some of his arms and legs fell off, so we took the lobster off the board and we used the board for a skateboard ramp. That was what happened to my first lobster because he just fell apart and we used the board for Keelan’s skateboard ramp.”

You’re a big proponent of grassroots racing, and grassroots racing is big in New England. What’s your take on the racing scene in New England?

“I learned that back in 2009 when we ran the Oxford 250. We spent a week up there practicing and racing, and I think 110 cars showed up for the Oxford 250 and we were fortunate to win that race. You open up every newspaper in the region the next morning and it was about the Oxford 250. From that very day forward, the same guys that I raced with will come to the garage and say, ‘Hi,’ and talk about that particular weekend, and you hear fans talk about being at that particular race. Really, the Oxford 250 had kind of given me a little bit of a leg up on everybody because I was able to interact with those fans on a regional basis and be able to have that stick with me for a long time. I haven’t been able to go back and do that event again, but having that experience up there allowed me to connect and realize how big racing was in the Northeast.”

No. 4 GEARWRENCH Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Kevin Harvick
Hometown: Bakersfield, California

Crew Chief: Rodney Childers
Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Car Chief: Robert “Cheddar” Smith
Hometown: Whitewater, Wisconsin

Engineer: Dax Gerringer
Hometown: Gibsonville, North Carolina

Engineer: Stephen Doran
Hometown: Butler, Pennsylvania

Spotter: Tim Fedewa
Hometown: Holt, Michigan

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Daniel Coffey
Hometown: Granite Falls, North Carolina

Rear Tire Changer: Daniel Smith
Hometown: Concord, North Carolina

Tire Carrier: Jeremy Howard
Hometown: Delhart, Texas

Jack Man: Brandon Banks
Hometown: High Point, North Carolina

Fuel Man: Evan Marchal
Hometown: Westfield, Indiana

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Richie Bean
Hometown: Bradford, Vermont

Mechanic: Nick DeFazio
Hometown: Orange, California

Tire Specialist: Jamie Turski
Hometown: Trumbull, Connecticut

Engine Tuner: Robert Brandt
Hometown: Mobile, Alabama

Transporter Co-Driver: Rick Hodges
Hometown: Raleigh, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Stephen Mitchell
Hometown: Woodville, Ohio

JR Motorsports — NXS New Hampshire Preview

JR MOTORSPORTS TEAM PREVIEW:
TRACK: New Hampshire Motor Speedway
RACE: Crayon 200 (200 laps / 211.6 miles)
DATE: Saturday, July 16, 2022

Broadcast Information – TV: 2:30 p.m. ET on USA / Radio: 2 p.m. ET on PRN and Sirius XM Ch. 90

Sam Mayer
No. 1 Accelerate Professional Talent Solutions Chevrolet
• Sam Mayer’s eight top-five finishes in 2022 are tied for the second-most in the NXS, just one behind teammate Noah Gragson with nine.
• Mayer has one start at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. He started ninth and was running ninth before being involved in a multi-car incident.
• In 16 NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at tracks measuring 1-2 miles in length, Mayer has earned five top fives and seven top 10s while pacing the field for 45 laps.

Josh Berry
No. 8 Tire Pros Chevrolet
• Josh Berry will make his second start at the 1-mile oval of New Hampshire this weekend. In a fill-in role last season, Berry started 21st and finished eighth.
• In five starts at tracks measuring 1-mile in length, Berry has one win (Dover 2022), three top fives and four top 10s. The Hendersonville, Tenn. native has only one finish outside of the top-10 at such tracks.
• By virtue of last week’s Stage One win at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Berry now has earned five stage wins, the second-most in the NXS this season.

Noah Gragson
No. 9 Bass Pro Shops / TrueTimber / Black Rifle Coffee Chevrolet
• Noah Gragson has two starts at New Hampshire with a best finish of 10th in 2019.
• The 23-year-old Las Vegas native has 16 starts on 1-mile ovals in his NXS career, earning four top-five and 10 top-10 results. His best finish came earlier this season at Phoenix, when he led 114 laps and earned the victory.
• On 1-mile ovals, Gragson has led a total of 184 laps but has yet to lead a lap on the Magic Mile at NHMS. His average finish there in two starts is 12.0.

Justin Allgaier
No. 7 BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
• Justin Allgaier enters this weekend looking to improve upon a runner-up result in this event last year at “The Magic Mile.”
• In 10 career NXS starts at Loudon, Allgaier has earned two top fives and seven top 10s, with last season’s second-place finish being his best.
• Overall, Allgaier has recorded four wins on tracks 1-mile in length in the NXS, with two victories at both Phoenix Raceway and Dover Motor Speedway.

William Byron
No. 88 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet
• 2017 NXS champion William Byron returns to JR Motorsports this week in the team’s No. 88 Chevrolet with HendrickCars.com. It will be his second NXS start of the season with JRM.
• Byron led seven laps and finished second in his first JRM start this season at Texas Motor Speedway.
• In 2016, the Charlotte, N.C. native led 161 of the 175 laps en route to his only NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory on the 1.058-mile oval.
• In his lone NXS start at New Hampshire in 2017, Byron started seventh and finished third.

Driver Quotes

“Last year New Hampshire didn’t go as planned for this team but I know when we unload on Friday that we will have a fast Accelerate Professional Talent Solutions Chevrolet. Taylor (Moyer, crew chief) and this team have been working extremely hard to make sure we are ready. Hopefully we can turn things around and fight for the win.” – Sam Mayer

“We had a great run last year at New Hampshire, and I feel extremely confident that we will back that up again this weekend with our BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet. New Hampshire has always been a challenging race track but everyone back at JR Motorsports has been working hard to give us another strong car this weekend.” – Justin Allgaier

“I’m ready to get to New Hampshire this weekend with our Tire Pros team. We had a pretty good run last year and we’ve been in the sim making sure we are ready when we get there on Friday. It’s a place that races like a short track with the tight turns so it’ll be nice to get back to this style of track.” – Josh Berry

“New Hampshire is like a really fast Martinsville, and we’re good at Martinsville, so this No. 9 Bass Pro/TrueTimber/Black Rifle Coffee team is looking forward to it. We just have to reset a little bit after the past couple of races and get back to what we were doing. We’re in good shape playoff-wise, and we need to ramp up for the run to the playoffs.”– Noah Gragson

“New Hampshire is a track that I ran really well at early on in my career but have struggled a bit recently. This was a track that I decided from the start of the season that I wanted to focus on and really improve at this year. Being able to be back with JRM this weekend in the Xfinity car gives me a good opportunity to do exactly that. I’m optimistic for what this weekend holds.” – William Byron

JRM Team Updates:

• JR Motorsports at New Hampshire: JR Motorsports has competed at “The Magic Mile” a combined 38 times in the NXS. Over the course of those starts at the 1.058-mile facility, the organization has tallied six top fives and 21 top 10s. The best finish for the organization came with Justin Allgaier’s runner-up finish at this race last season.
• Benefitting the Gary Sinise Foundation: During the Summer for Heroes Giving Campaign from June 1 – August 31, Tire Pros customers can donate an amount of their choice on the designated Gary Sinise Foundation donation page. Their goal is to raise $1.5 million to support our nation’s heroes. Donate now.
• Spicy Mayo: Hellmann’s Spicy Mayonnaise Dressing is proudly made with real, simple ingredients like real chili peppers, cage-free eggs, oil and vinegar. This spicy mayo is the ideal condiment for spicing up wraps, adding flavor to sandwiches, grilling juicy burgers, mixing creamy dips, and preparing fresh salads. Deliciously Spicy, 100% Hellmann’s. Try a new recipe today.
• Souvenir Rig: All four JRM drivers will be signing autographs at the JR Motorsports/Hendrick Motorsports souvenir rig on Saturday, July 16 from 12 p.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Toyota Racing – Weekly Preview – 07.13.22

This Week in Motorsports: July 11-17, 2022

· NCS/NXS: New Hampshire Motor Speedway – July 16-17
· NHRA: Bandimere Speedway (Colorado) – July 17

PLANO, Texas (July 13, 2022) – The NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series move to the lone stop this season at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, while the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series start their annual Western swing at Colorado’s Bandimere Speedway.

NASCAR National Series – NCS | NXS

Kyle Busch with impressive Loudon stats… Kyle Busch has incredible numbers at nearly every track on circuit and New Hampshire Motor Speedway is no exception. Busch has three Cup Series victories, six Xfinity Series wins and three Truck Series triumphs – which he delivered in consecutive fashion in 2009-2011.

Bell wants to be one spot better… Christopher Bell has an incredible track record at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and nearly added another victory to his resume last fall as he was chasing down the leader before the event was called early due to darkness. Bell has also won all three Xfinity Series starts at Loudon – including a victory at the track one season ago. Bell and Busch have combined to win the last five Xfinity Series races at New Hampshire for Joe Gibbs Racing.

Gibbs makes his track debut… Ty Gibbs still is making some firsts in his young Xfinity Series career as he is set for his Loudon track debut this weekend. Gibbs goes in with confidence as his crew chief Chris Gayle was on the pit box for Bell’s victory one season ago.

Bayne looks to get the elusive victory… Trevor Bayne has been impressive in his limited starts this season with Joe Gibbs Racing – scoring three top-five finishes in five starts, including a runner-up finish in his last outing at Nashville Superspeedway. The Tennessee-native scored his first top-five finish in the Xfinity Series at Loudon in 2010, driving a Toyota for Michael Waltrip Racing.

Griffith plans for a great home track race… Derek Griffith is back behind the wheel of the No. 26 Toyota GR Supra for Sam Hunt Racing in his first Xfinity Series start at his home track. Griffith is from Hudson, New Hampshire, which is about an hour from New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

NHRA – Top Fuel | Funny Car

Special track for Todd… Denver has some fond memories for former Funny Car champion J.R. Todd. Todd became the first African American driver to win in the Top Fuel class when he drove to the win in 2006, during his Rookie of the Year season. He also scored his first win for Kalitta Motorsports at the track in 2014.

Most recent to sweep the swing… Bandimere Speedway is the beginning of a three-week long Western swing for NHRA teams. Antron Brown was the most recent driver to sweep all three races on the West Coast in 2009.

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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.

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Heads to NHMS for Summer Showdown

NASCAR driver Ryan Preece landed in victory lane at last year's NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, earning his first hometrack points win in the series on July 17, 2021. Photo Courtesy: NHMS/Harold Hinson Photography

Ron Silk may lead the championship standings heading for the second half of 2022, but will NASCAR Cup Series drivers Ryan Preece or Corey LaJoie steal the show this Saturday?

By Kyle Souza, Owner of Souza Media
Special for New Hampshire Motor Speedway

LOUDON, N.H. – The second half of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour (NWMT) season begins this Saturday, July 16 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway (NHMS), and if past years are any indication, fans aren’t going to want to miss the Whelen Manufactured in America 100 around “The Magic Mile” this weekend.

Fans can expect drafting, two- and even three-wide racing and some of the most exciting open-wheel action seen anywhere in New England.

After eight events, Ron Silk and new NWMT team Haydt-Yannone Racing are showing the way in the championship standings. The Connecticut native is the only driver to finish top-10 in every single race, which gives him a 26-point lead heading into New Hampshire.

One of Silk’s previous three New Hampshire wins came in 2011 en route to the series championship. He is hoping to use Saturday as another springboard toward the championship trophy, this time in 2022.

“The points are the year-end goal for sure,” Silk said. “But we haven’t been able to win a race yet; we want to get our car into victory lane. I’ve always run well at New Hampshire, won some races and been in position to win a lot more.”

As a track know for tight racing, drafting and possibly even the big wreck, Silk knows he will need to stay in the mix up front to hit the ultimate goal of winning this weekend, but also be smart while doing it to keep his car clean.

“We put pressure on ourselves, but we’re happy with the way things are going this year,” Silk said. “We haven’t had any mechanical problems, no mistakes. We want to keep it that way. Phil Moran (crew chief) is a great guy, easy to get along with. The cars are prepared wonderfully. Phil and Bob Tulipani work really hard to make sure we have what we need and our car owners give us everything we need to be successful.”

Outside of Silk, top contenders are expected to include three-time and defending series champion Justin Bonsignore and six-time champ Doug Coby. Bonsignore is a former New Hampshire winner who led 63 laps last year and finished second while Coby will return to the seat of the No. 7NY for Tommy Baldwin Racing. Baldwin has four wins as a car owner with three different drivers in 2022, including the last race at Wall Stadium, where Jimmy Blewett drove to victory lane. Jon McKennedy, Tommy Catalano and Eric Goodale are also inside the top-five in the current standings, with quiet, but successful, starts to their season. Will one of them capture victory for the first time Saturday?

Along with the series regulars, NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) star Corey LaJoie and former NWMT champion Ryan Preece are planning to try and steal the show. Preece, who only runs a part-time schedule due to commitments in NASCAR’s top divisions, will return driving his own ride. LaJoie, a full-time NCS driver with Spire Motorsports, will also make his fourth career NWMT start, driving with TFR Chassis in a new car. LaJoie ran a few races between 2012 and 2015 with a best finish of 14th, but did have one Whelen Southern Modified Tour win back in 2012. LaJoie will be competing in the Whelen Manufactured in America 100 as part of double duty, also running the Ambetter 301 NCS race on Sunday.

New England’s NASCAR weekend gets underway Friday, July 15 with Friday Night Dirt Duels Presented by New England Racing Fuel at The Flat Track and continues with Doubleheader Saturday on July 16, featuring the Crayon 200 NXS race and Whelen Manufactured in America 100 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race. The grand finale of New England’s biggest race weekend is headlined by the Ambetter 301 NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday, July 17.

Tickets:

Fans can log on to NHMS.com for tickets and more information on the weekend’s lineup of action-packed racing. Tickets for Friday Night Dirt Duels Presented by New England Racing Fuel are just $20 for adults and $10 for kids 12 and under. Doubleheader Saturday tickets start at just $45 for adults while kids 12 and under are free. Sunday’s Ambetter 301 tickets start at just $59 for adults and $10 for kids 12 and under.

Follow Us:

Keep track of all of New Hampshire Motor Speedway’s events by following on Facebook (@NHMotorSpeedway), Twitter (@NHMS) and Instagram (@NHMS). Keep up with all the latest information on the speedway website (NHMS.com) and mobile app.

Coltman Farms Racing all set for Southern Nationals

Coltman Farms Racing and Kenny Collins will be participating in the Schaeffer's Oil Southern Nationals Series starting with Friday's Black Gold 53 at Beckley Motor Speedway. (Photo: Kevin Ritchie)

Columbia, S.C. (Jul. 13, 2022) – The next two weeks are about to be extremely busy for Coltman Farms Racing and driver Kenny Collins.

Friday’s Black Gold 53 at Beckley Motor Speedway in West Virginia marks the beginning of the 18th Annual Schaeffer’s Oil Southern National Series, which will see Coltman and Collins compete in 12 races across 16 days for a shot at a championship that will pay $10,053 to the winner.

Coltman expects plenty of physical and mental challenges for him and Collins during the Southern Nationals, but he said the consistency his program has shown against several talented fields so far in 2022 has given him every reason to believe that a championship in the series is feasible.

“I’m very excited to run the [Southern Nationals],” Coltman said. “We’ve got very solid equipment and a ton of momentum from so many strong runs earlier this year. We also have a great driver in Kenny [Collins], so I’m looking forward to getting started on Friday.”

With accomplishments that include a Schaeffer’s Oil Bonus Series title back in 2014, Collins is confident that he can add another title to his resume once the Southern Nationals concludes on July 31.

Everything has gone according plan for Collins while competing for Coltman Farms Racing. He successfully qualified for the Colossal 100 Thursday Preliminary at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Dirt Track, which featured a field that consisted of Scott Bloomquist, Jonathan Davenport, Brandon Overton and Kyle Larson, who went on to win the event.

Several weeks later, Coltman and Collins tested their luck in the return of the Eldora Million. Although he was not among the drivers who made the 24-car main event, Collins showed speed throughout the event and managed to set the fastest time in his group.

The chemistry between Coltman and Collins continues to build with every passing week, and both are confident they can excel in the Southern Nationals despite the grueling nature of running so many races in a short amount of time.

Along with the grueling schedule, Collins will have to contest with several strong Dirt Late Model competitors, with some of the more notable names including Carson Ferguson, Jensen Ford, Dale McDowell and Cody Overton.

Having finished fifth overall in the Southern Nationals standings during the 2021 and 2017 seasons, Collins knows he will have to be prepared for every race, but he believes the two-week series presents the chance he and Coltman need to finally break through and score a victory together.

“We should have already won a couple of races,” Collins said. “The opportunities have been there, but we still need to learn and build up our notebook a little bit more. We haven’t been slow yet, so I feel that if we continue to put ourselves in a position to win races, we’ll be able to start knocking them off.”

Following the Black Gold 53, Coltman and Collins will stay on the road for the rest of the weekend. The duo will travel south from West Virginia to Virginia to race at Wythe Speedway on Saturday before heading to Tennessee for a Sunday race at Volunteer Speedway.

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