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Jr III Racing Finishes on WeatherTech Podium at CTMP

Chris Green | ChrisGreenPhoto.com

Bowmanville, Ontario (4 July 2022) – Jr III (“Junior-Three”) Racing finished third in LMP3 at its Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (CTMP) debut at the Chevrolet Grand Prix on Sunday. The result marks the team’s third podium finish of the 2022 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season with four rounds complete.

Starting from the front row in the No. 30 Airbnb Ligier JS P320, Ari Balogh and Garett Grist split the two-hour and 40-minute race which saw the pair manage intense batches of traffic on the high-speed road course.

The podium finish was a fitting reward after a big effort from Jr III racing, which prepared one of its IMSA Prototype Challenge LMP3s for WeatherTech competition following a minor fire during last weekend’s Watkins Glen Six Hour. With just a few days in between events as the team didn’t return to Jr III’s Mooresville, NC facility, the team successfully made the IPC to WeatherTech LMP3 swap.

Balogh took the green flag and set a podium-earning pace in the first segment of the race which included the race’s full course caution. Following the restart, Balogh held strong in third through his 33 lap stint before handing the car off to teammate Grist.

Native Canadian Grist took the No. 30 Ligier from fourth to third with one hour left on the race clock. Managing constant traffic around the 2.459-mile road course with four different race classes in action, Grist crossed the line third, giving Jr III Racing its third podium finish of the 2022 season. In addition to the podium finish, Grist set the fastest lap of the race in LMP3, posting a 1:12.523-second lap.

Although a rock solid finish, Grist had hoped for more opportunities to take advantage of the No. 30 Ligier’s pace to move further up the order.

“The car felt really good,” said Grist. “We had the quickest lap of the race, and I think we’re probably up there on average as well, especially in that first stint. But in my second stint, I was stuck behind the second-place car the whole time. It’s such a fast track, so once you get within a couple of car lengths, you lose all your aerodynamics. It’s probably the toughest place to pass that we go to all year and that showed today. I was five or six-tenths back the entire stint, just sitting there, which was a bit frustrating. But we’ll keep getting better – we’ll get there.”

Billy Glavin III, team owner, felt their day showed promise on how the team continues to carry speed despite the quick-turn around from Watkins Glen to CTMP transitioning an IPC car for WeatherTech competition.

“We got back on the horse and had a good race,” said Glavin. “I think we had a really good race car, just gave up a little too much in the pits on that first stop and that kind of put us on the back foot. We were playing catch up ever since. Then on that last yellow flag, we came in, we tried to jump them in the pits by short filling and it just didn’t work out. So we lost some track position and were not able to catch back up. But it was a great race and a great recovery for the team, it shows that we can do it. We got plenty to work on, but I think for the first time this year we had a car from the start to finish that we could race and push on. That is a good direction for us.”

A crew with years of NASCAR experience worked tirelessly this weekend as the racing team had a jam-packed schedule competing in both IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and the IMSA Prototype Challenge series.

The team entered the weekend with Courtney Crone and Ari Balogh pairing in the No. 3 Jr III Racing Ligier JS P320 for the third round of IMSA Prototype Challenge competition.

Starting from fifth, Balogh took on the first stint of the one hour 30-minute event. After completing a 40-minute run, Balogh handed the No. 3 Ligier off to Crone who completed the final 45 minutes of the race.

Making her race debut at CTMP Crone took each lap as a learning experience and improved throughout her stint. Similar to her WeatherTech teammates, once in clean air, Crone was able to settle into a rhythm which saw her bring the Ligier home sixth.

“For my first time here, I felt pretty good,” said Crone. “In practice, the car felt super good, but racing is a whole different animal. In the race, I think that my lack of experience here kind of showed. Overall, once we kind of got out of dirty air from the cars for position on that restart we had a very good individual pace. I just struggled with the car behind the traffic. Personally, I did all I knew what I could do. Hopefully, we get to do a test out at VIR and get more laps at future tracks. Overall, the car was really good especially when we’re in clean air, just kind of struggled with it behind any one, and it wasn’t enough for me to really do anything.”

Jr III Racing will return to IMSA WeatherTech competition at Road America on August 7.

Sean Creech Motorsport scores IMSA Prototype Challenge podium at CMTP

Separate incidents in the marquee Chevrolet Grand Prix end the day early for the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship squad

BOWMANVILLE, Ont. Canada (3 July 2022) – Sean Creech Motorsport (SCM) experienced a wide spectrum of racing highs and lows on Sunday at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park as the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship made its first appearance in front of a Canadian crowd in almost three years.

The SCM team came from behind to take a second-place finish in the IMSA Prototype Challenge race Sunday morning with Lance Willsey and Canadian Parker Thompson, but the marquee Chevrolet Grand Prix saw the team suffer two separate incidents that ended the day early – despite valiant efforts by the crew to get the car back on track after lap one contact that resulted in suspension damage.

Willsey and João Barbosa worked hard through the weekend to find the balance between speed and stability with their No. 33 SCM Exelixis/Focal One/Alta Equipment Ligier JS P320, given the significant bumps the drivers encountered on the 2.459-mile road course, despite a complete repaving in 2020. Willsey took the wheel for the 15-minute session and put the No. 33 in sixth on the starting grid. But going into turn one on lap one, the No. 36 LMP3 was checked up and got sideways, tagging Willsey and sending him into the wall. The No. 33 Ligier returned to the garage and the team completed repairs in a remarkable 15 minutes. Unfortunately, Willsey encountered difficulties in that same turn midway through the race and spun, catching the tires and putting the car out of the race in sixth position.

However, Willsey’s experience in the Prototype Challenge race earlier in the day came to a much happier ending. Putting down smooth and steady early laps in the No. 14 SCM Exelixis/Focal One/Alta Equipment Ligier JS P320, Willsey took advantage of others’ mistakes and made solid passes when the opportunity arose, moving up steadily from his eighth-place starting position before handing the wheel to Red Deer, Alberta’s Parker Thompson.

Unfortunately, as Thompson, 24, put it, “we were quick on track and we were a little (too) quick in the pits,” as the team left pit lane .5 seconds quicker than the mandated 94-second pit stop. Thompson came in for a stop-and-hold in pit lane and returned to the action in sixth position, but at the back of the field and behind lapped cars. On the restart after a yellow, Thompson began an impressive march to the front, picking off cars one by one – except for third and fourth, which he passed in one shot. Thompson took the checkered flag in second, earning redemption for the entire team.

“I had so much confidence in that drive, with all the Canadian flags around the track,” said Thompson. “It’s every Canadian’s dream, to stand on this podium. The team did an awesome job, the car was hooked up so I kept my head down and picked off cars the best I could. The racing gods here at CMTP were on our side, we got a caution, and I was able to really get after it. It was great to get Lance on the podium, he deserved it, he drove a great stint. Proud of the entire team!”

Naturally, it was not a happy scene for Barbosa, Willsey and team principal Sean Creech after the WeatherTech race, all three disappointed in the race’s outcome.

“It’s been a challenging day,” said Barbosa. “The crew did everything they could to get us back out but there was too much damage. The morning was such a positive, we were really looking forward to this afternoon. We will focus forward and look forward to Road America.”

“It was really unfortunate,” said Willsey. “It was a lot of hard work top to bottom to come up with a very competitive car, but first corner, first lap the Andretti car went wide in an accordion effect and he ran me into the wall. It was a pretty big hit, but the team came together and got us back out. I felt as though I hit fluid in turn one later in the race and couldn’t catch it. But I can’t say enough about the dedication of the team and the quality of the car they gave us. I ran my fastest laps of the weekend even with a wounded car, I think we could have put up a good fight.

“And all the credit goes to the team for the car they gave us this morning. Parker has quickly become an integral part of our team – extremely knowledgeable and helpful with feedback and setup. He almost took us to the front but P2 was great. It was fun, it was a clean, hard race.”

“Unfortunately, we were involved in an incident early,” said Creech. “We were able to get back out there, even with a damaged car, and put down some good laps before the second off. The team worked hard to get it back out there so it’s disappointing, but we’ll get ready for a test at Road America and the race weekend in a few weeks. Lance and Parker did a great job this weekend, as did Joao in the 33. Parker was awesome in the car – it was unfortunate we had the drive-through, it probably cost us the top spot, but we’ll take second.”

SCM would like to thank Alta Equipment Company and Focal One for their continued support.

Next up for Sean Creech Motorsport will be the IMSA SportsCar Weekend at Road America August 4 – 7. The race will be broadcast live in the U.S. on PeacockTV and tape-delayed to air later that evening on USA Network while international viewers can watch via IMSA.tv. IMSA Radio will also be available at IMSA.com.

About SCM
Team leader Sean Creech has competed in a multitude of sports car series from 1990 until the present day, including Group C, IMSA GTP, WSC, Grand-Am, SRO World Challenge, and IMSA. SCM will contest the full WeatherTech SportsCar Championship in 2022 with João Barbosa and Lance Willsey. http://seancreechmotorsport.com/

About Alta Equipment
An industry-leading material handling and construction equipment company, Alta Equipment is an innovator of solutions, delivering diverse products and unrivaled support centered on building lasting customer relationships. Alta Equipment began in 1984 with a single location in Detroit and has grown to 57 locations throughout the Midwest, Northeast, and Florida. https://www.altaequipment.com/

About Focal One
One in eight men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime in the United States. The Focal One® HIFU Prostate treatment offers patients a non-invasive outpatient procedure to target prostate tissue while avoiding the common side effects such as loss of urinary continence and sexual function. The Focal One treatment uses high performance, high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) to precisely target and ablate the prostate, allowing patients to quickly return to normal activities. http://www.focalone.com

McLaughlin Wins Mid-Ohio With Family Present

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LEXINGTON, Ohio (Sunday, July 3, 2022) — A wild and chaotic day at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course wasn’t enough to stop Scott McLaughlin, who scored his second NTT INDYCAR SERIES win of the season Sunday in The Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio Presented by the All-New 2023 Civic Type R.

Driving the No. 3 Odyssey Battery Team Penske Chevrolet, McLaughlin held off reigning NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Alex Palou in the No. 10 NTT DATA Chip Ganassi Racing Honda over the final 17 laps, beating him to the finish line by 0.5512 seconds.

CLICK IT: Race Results

It was the second time this season these two drivers have finished in that order – they also did so in the season-opening race in St. Petersburg, Florida when McLaughlin won his first series race.

“This is amazing,” McLaughlin said. “I’m really proud of the (Team Penske crew). The car they gave me was a little hard to drive toward the end. I would love to make it a little bit easier for myself, but I’m super proud of them.

“You’re thinking about fuel (at the end of the race), but thankfully Chevy gave us great fuel mileage and drivability off the restarts that allowed me to get a bit of a gap from Palou.”

2014 NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Will Power rallied from the 21st starting spot and a Lap 1 spin in Turn 9 to finish third for his fourth podium finish of the season in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet.

Ed Carpenter Racing’s Rinus VeeKay finished fourth in the No. 21 Bitcoin Racing Team with BitNile Chevrolet, and six-time Mid-Ohio race winner Scott Dixon rounded out the top five in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

The 80-lap race was treacherous compared to past NTT INDYCAR SERIES races at the track. There were six cautions for 17 laps, more than the previous five Mid-Ohio NTT INDYCAR SERIES races combined. The 2021 race and Race 2 of the 2020 doubleheader each featured two stoppages, while Race 1 of the 2020 doubleheader and the events in 2019 and 2018 did not have any.

The first caution came on Lap 1 for a waved-off start, and the second on Lap 10 was for a mechanical failure on the No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet of Felix Rosenqvist, who was running third when his car started hitting the rev limiter in Turn 2 and then billowed smoke.

It was an ominous sign for NTT P1 Award winner Pato O’Ward, who led the first 28 laps in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet. However, on Lap 30, O’Ward began reporting power issues on his car.

By Lap 54, O’Ward’s car had completely lost power as it stalled at the end of pit lane. His Arrow McLaren SP team pushed the car back to the pit box, where O’Ward exited and ended the streak of Mid-Ohio polesitters winning the race at three.

This allowed McLaughlin, who started second next to O’Ward, to inherit the lead during a round of green flag pit stop cycles on Lap 31. During the stops, rookie Kyle Kirkwood went off track in Turn 9 in the No. 14 Sexton Properties Chevrolet of AJ Foyt Racing.

The yellow flag flew just as green-flag pit stops cycled through, which put McLaughlin at the point. The second-year series driver was in full control of the race on the 13-turn, 2.258-mile permanent road course thereafter.

McLaughlin led 45 of the final 52 laps. Colton Herta led seven laps after not pitting under caution on Lap 53 while the rest of the leaders pitted. McLaughlin got the lead back on Lap 60 and never looked back, keeping Palou in his mirror through a series of cautions and restarts.

Palou, a Spaniard, was never more than second behind New Zealand native McLaughlin, and the final caution on Lap 59 for contact between Romain Grosjean’s No. 28 ForeverLawn/DHL Honda and Alexander Rossi’s No. 27 NAPA AUTO PARTS/AutoNation Honda gave him one last chance to try to capture his first win of 2022.

“Man, it was so close,” said Palou, who started seventh. “Our No. 10 NTT DATA car was fast. We just missed it by ‘this much’ again today, but I’m super proud. I don’t think I was good enough to pass (McLaughlin). I wish I would have gone for it, but I did not see that it was clear to do it.”

McLaughlin’s third podium of the season and Palou’s fourth allowed them to close in on the NTT INDYCAR SERIES championship. Marcus Ericsson held his points lead with a sixth-place finish in the No. 8 Ridgeline Lubricants Honda, but he is now just 20 points ahead of Power. Josef Newgarden is third, 34 points back.

Palou rose to fourth in the standings, just 35 points back. McLaughlin jumped two positions to seventh in the standings, 69 points back of Ericsson, the winner of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge.

While McLaughlin’s surge in the championship standings will be beneficial down the road, the three-time Australian V8 Supercars champion was basking in the glory of scoring his first NTT INDYCAR SERIES win with his parents, Wayne and Diane, in attendance. The couple came to the United States in May for the “500” and reunited with their son for the first time in two and a half years. This was the first race they’ve seen him win in this series.

“Oh, I really wanted to get a win here with mom and dad for the first time,” McLaughlin said. “To have mom and dad here on America’s weekend is awesome.”

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES takes a week off before heading to Toronto for the first time in three years due to restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Honda Indy Toronto will take place Sunday, July 17 at 3 p.m. (ET), live on Peacock Premium and the INDYCAR Radio Network.

Petty GMS Race Recap: Road America

Ty Dillon, No. 42 Allegiant Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

START: 30th

FINISH: 20th

POINTS: 26th

Ty Dillon Post-Race Thoughts: “We had a good Allegiant Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 this weekend. Right off the truck on Saturday, the car had speed and handled well during practice. We missed the mark a little during qualifying, but despite starting towards the back, we were able to work our way forward. Our Petty GMS team made strategy calls in order to finish the second stage in third and earn stage points. The race just didn’t have a lot of cautions, so it was tough to make up positions. We will take a top-20 finish and look to build off that next week. I really enjoy racing at Road America and the fans turned out for the entire weekend which was awesome to see.”

Erik Jones, No. 43 U.S. Air Force Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

START: 27th

FINISH: 26th

POINTS: 18th

Erik Jones Post-Race Thoughts: “Not the day we wanted for our U.S. Air Force Chevy, but we know what we need to work on when we come back. We just lacked the speed today. We stayed out and earned some points early, and I think we could have gotten a decent finish, but the penalty late set us back. With no cautions outside the stage breaks, it just made things harder. We’ll refocus this week and head to Atlanta next weekend and try to get a win for this 43 team.”

ABOUT PETTY GMS:

Petty GMS competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, operating the No. 42 Chevrolet for Ty Dillon and the No. 43 Chevrolet for Erik Jones. The newly formed team brought together two storied organizations in December 2021. Over the last decade, owner Maury Gallagher built a victorious team, capturing two NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championships, one ARCA Menards Series title, and two ARCA Menards Series East championships, as well as 65 wins and 235 top-five finishes across six series. Richard Petty, a member of the inaugural NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2010, serves as Chairman of Petty GMS. Petty, known as “The King,” accumulated 200 wins and was the first of three drivers to win seven championships in the Cup Series. For more information, visit www.pettygms.com.

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

Buescher Drives to P6 Finish at Road America

Fifth Top-10 Overall for Buescher in 2022

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (July 3, 2022) – Chris Buescher scored his fifth top-10 of the season and second-straight on a road course, driving to a sixth-place run in the Fastenal Ford Mustang Sunday afternoon at Road America.

“I am proud of the effort of everybody through this week,” Buescher said. “We had a lot of speed off the truck again. We are just looking for a little bit more. It is a good thing to be running up front and be that close and try and find a squeak more of speed. It’s so tight up here and that is a good thing. We are going to stay after it and we’ll be ready for the next one.”

The 62-lap race ran caution free – minus stage breaks – as Buescher had a solid view to start the day, rolling off seventh thanks to a qualifying effort on Saturday that saw him notch his fifth top-10 start of the season.

With the opening two stages set for 15 laps, and the final at 32, similar strategies were employed through the first half of the race. Crew chief Scott Graves called Buescher to pit road early at the end of both stages, short-pitting the break to set up track position for the ensuing stage restarts.

That strategy paid off to close the first stage as he finished the green-checkered 15 laps in 17th, then restarted sixth. He would pit again at lap 27, just prior to the stage two end, and went on to restart 17th.

From there, just one green-flag stop separated the field from the checkered flag, as Buescher’s came at lap 42. He went on to pick off multiple positions in the closing laps to secure the top-10.

The Cup Series returns to action next weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Race coverage Sunday afternoon is set for 3 p.m. ET on USA Network, and can also be heard on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Mid-Race Issues Relegate Keselowski to P33 Finish at Road America

Kohler Generators Ford Endures Heavy Damage in Long Road Course Race

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (July 3, 2022) – Brad Keselowski, in his No. 6 Kohler Generators Mustang, was on pace for a solid afternoon at Road America, but issues midway through the race set him off the pace as he ultimately finished 33rd.

Following a promising qualifying session Saturday of P11, Keselowski powered his Mustang through the first stage cleanly, short-pitting on lap 12 to earn track position for the following two stages. He would finish stage one P25.

The No. 6 Ford started stage two in 12th. Keselowski was able to hold steady at the front of the field, only losing one spot during green flag laps. On lap 27, both RFK cars would short-pit again for track position. After a solid stop, Keselowski was penalized for driving through too many boxes and would start stage three at the rear of the field.

The afternoon would not get easier for the 2012 NASCAR Cup series champion after an on-track incident left him with severe damage to the right front of his Kohler Generators Ford. The No. 6 team was forced to make an unscheduled pit stop on lap 39, and multiple stops in the laps following, for repairs. Keselowski went on to finish the race 33rd.

The Cup Series continues the road to the playoffs next Sunday for its return to Atlanta Motor Speedway. Race coverage is set for 3 p.m. ET on USA Network, and can also be heard on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

RCR NCS Post Race Report: Road America

Austin Dillon and the No. 3 Dow Salutes Veterans Chevrolet Team’s Strong Run Stalled by Late-Race Mechanical Issue at Road America

Finish: 31st
Start: 20th
Points: 19th

“We had a fast Dow Salutes Veterans Chevrolet today, and it was special to be able to use this Independence Day weekend to honor our military and veterans with Dow. We just ended up with some bad luck at the end of the race that prevented us from showing how good our Chevy was. We started the race 20th but moved up quickly. Our Dow Salutes Veterans Chevy handled really well today, both in the left and right turns. We raced our way as high as eighth and I really thought we had a chance at a top-10 finish. Unfortunately, with three laps to go we blew a left-front rotor getting into Turn 5. I saved it and was able to pull off the track without a caution but it ended our day. Congrats to my teammate, Tyler Reddick on his first Cup Series win. That guy is an animal and his win is much-deserved.” -Austin Dillon

Tyler Reddick and the No. 8 3CHI Chevrolet Team Earn Career-First NASCAR Cup Series Victory with Spectacular Performance at Road America

Finish: 1st
Start: 4th
Pooints: 13th

“What better place to get our first win in the NASCAR Cup Series than Road America? I love the fans, I love this racetrack, and being here on the 4th of July weekend is just so special, especially with 3Chi and the patriotic paint scheme we had this weekend. I love that they came on board this year and took a chance on a young guy like me and we got it done. We won a race. It was a long day but the balance of our Chevy was good all day. I definitely knew Chase Elliott was fast, but we could stay with him on the long run. That told me if we cycled through that last pit sequence, we’d be close or get around him, and we’d have a great shot. We didn’t quite get around him, but we were within reach. Thankfully, we just waited for the right opportunity and I was able to take advantage of it in Turn 6. I thought he was going to run me back down. I started to make some mistakes and started to take care of the brakes, but it all worked out. What a day.” -Tyler Reddick

Kaulig Racing Post-Race Report | Road America

Kwik Trip 250 presented by JOCKEY Made in America

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

Start: 21st

Stage 1 Finish: 34th

Stage 2 Finish: 26th

Finish: 9th

“Overall, it was a hard-fought day. We definitely didn’t have the speed we wanted all weekend. We had some pit road trouble, but we fought hard to maximize everything we could. We just needed to be better overall. Despite everything, we had a solid day and finished in the top 10, which is about as good as I could ask for for the way the weekend was going.” – AJ Allmendinger

Justin Haley, No. 31 LeafFilter Gutter Protection Camaro ZL1

Start: 34th

Stage 1 Finish: 9th

Stage 2 Finish: 6th

Finish: 25th

“We didn’t finish where we would have liked to at Road America, but we did have some great stage points. It was shaping up to be a solid day, but we had a pit road issue during a green-flag stop which set us back a bit. Overall, we learned quite a bit.” – Justin Haley


Henry 180

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Nutrien Ag Solutions Chevrolet

Start: 38th

Stage 1 Finish: 9th

Stage 2 Finish: 24th

Finish: 6th

“It was a disappointing day. The speeding penalty just added a little bit of insult to injury, but we finished about where we should have. I’m proud of everybody on this No. 16 Nutrien Ag Solutions team. We’ve worked hard to try to make it better, but honestly, we just needed everything we could possibly get. It was okay for a lap or two, but the tires went away pretty quickly. Bruce (Schlicker) and everybody did what they could to try to make it better, but we just missed it.” – AJ Allmendinger

Daniel Hemric, No. 11 AG1 Chevrolet

Start: 22nd

Stage 1 Finish: 13th

Stage 2 Finish: 27th

Finish: 29th

“Road America is a race track that I love. I loved the challenge of this weekend, and it was definitely that. We unloaded with decent short-run speed but the driver made too many mistakes in qualifying that set us back. The guys on this No. 11 AG1 team tried to come up with the best strategy possible, but unfortunately, we found ourselves behind the hornets nest and just got mixed up in other peoples’ issues, resulting in damage at the end of the race. I’m disappointed, but we will carry on to Atlanta next week.” – Daniel Hemric

Landon Cassill, No. 10 Voyager Chevrolet

Start: 20th

Stage 1 Finish: 27th

Stage 2 Finish: 29th

Finish: 32nd

“Really frustrating end to our day with a wreck in front of us in the middle of the straightaway. It’s just hard to miss that kind of wreck. I always try to think of something I could have tried differently, but I didn’t know what was ahead of them. The track was blocked, and I had to slam on the brakes but couldn’t avoid it.” – Landon Cassill  


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.

CHEVROLET NCS: Tyler Reddick Gets First Career NASCAR Cup Series Win at Road America

NASCAR CUP SERIES
ROAD AMERICA
TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONFERENCE
KWIK TRIP 250

TYLER REDDICK GETS FIRST CAREER NASCAR CUP SERIES WIN AT ROAD AMERICA

Chevrolet’s 10th NCS Win of 2022; Ninth-Consecutive Road Course Win

· The win is Tyler Reddick’s first career victory in 92 NASCAR Cup Series starts.
· It also marks the 110th NASCAR Cup Series triumph for Richard Childress Racing.
· Reddick’s victory is Chevrolet’s ninth-consecutive NASCAR Cup Series road course win.. a streak that started at Circuit of The Americas in May 2021.
· Reddick is now the 13th different NASCAR Cup Series winner thus far this season, seven of which are Chevrolet drivers.
· Chevrolet drivers swept the top-five finishing positions; led by Reddick (1st), Chase Elliott (2nd), Kyle Larson (3rd), Ross Chastain (4th) and Daniel Suarez (5th).
· The victory moved Chevrolet to double-digit wins on the season, marking the Camaro ZL1’s 10th NASCAR Cup Series win of 2022.
· The winningest brand in NASCAR, Chevrolet now has 824 all-time NASCAR Cup Series victories.

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (July 3, 2022) – Coming so close to his first career NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) win on several different occasions, Tyler Reddick was finally able to accomplish that feat after powering his No. 8 3CHI Camaro ZL1 to victory lane in the Kwik Trip 250 presented by JOCKEY Made in America at Road America. The 26-year-old California native became the 13th different winner of 2022 in NASCAR’s premier series and the most recent driver to secure a Playoff berth.

The No. 8 3CHI Camaro ZL1 team showcased their speed throughout the weekend, taking the green flap from the fourth-starting position. Pit strategy from atop the box; a strong performance on pit road; and smart driving behind the wheel put the No. 8 3CHI Camaro ZL1 in position to start the race’s final stage on the front row. Consistently cutting down the gap between him and then race leader Chase Elliott in the closing laps, Reddick was able to make the winning pass on lap 47 and leading the final 16 laps en route to the checkered flag and the monumental win. It was not only a special moment in Reddick’s career, but also for Richard Childress Racing’s Randall Burnett, who is now a winning crew chief in the NASCAR Cup Series for the first time.

“Randall (Burnett, Crew Chief) has been working at this for a very long time and he’s always believed in me,” said Reddick. “Everyone on this team at Richard Childress Racing has believed in me. I’ve made a lot of mistakes along the way; but man, this year has been one step, one mistake away from greatness all year long. We finally did it today. It feels good.”

Reddick’s victory at the 14-turn, 4.048-mile Wisconsin circuit kept the road course win streak alive for the bowtie brand. Chevrolet leaves Road America with nine-consecutive road course victories.. a feat that dates back to Chase Elliott’s victory at Circuit of The Americas in May 2021. The Camaro ZL1 has also hit a double-digit win count for 2022, with Chevrolet sitting at a manufacturer-leading 10 wins in 18 points-paying races. Reddick is now the seventh different Chevrolet driver to have recorded a win and a Playoff berth with just eight races left in the NCS regular season.

Reddick’s win was celebrated by a strong bowtie brigade right behind him, with Chevrolet drivers performing a sweep of the top-five finishing positions. A notable road course favorite, Chase Elliott scored top-10 finishes and Playoff points in both stages, going on to lead a race-high 36 laps to take the checkered flag in the runner-up position for his 12th top-10 finish of 2022. Reigning NASCAR Cup Series Champion Kyle Larson drove his No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 to a third-place finish, giving Larson his eighth top-five finish of 2022. Trackhouse Racing, who won the first two road course races of the season, continued to show their strength in road course-style racing. Ross Chastain and Daniel Suarez drove their Chevrolet-powered machines to fourth and fifth-place finishes, respectively, to round out the Team Chevy top-five sweep.

The NASCAR Cup Series season continues next Sunday, July 10, at Atlanta Motor Speedway with the Quaker State 400 Presented by Walmart at 3 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on USA Network, the NBCSports Gold App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

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

THE MODERATOR: We’re going to continue to roll with our post-race press conference here at Road America for today’s QuikTrip 250 presented by Jockey. Here with now our race winner Tyler Reddick, who we could call the man of the hour, but I think it’s been a little bit more than an hour now. Congratulations, Tyler.

We know this one has been a long time coming but one specifically your team has been searching for and hoping for many races, but especially this year after a lot of runner-up finishes in different situations with kind of heartbreak finishes there at the end. Tell us what it felt like to not only win today but be able to come off that final turn and see the checkered flag and know what that felt like for you inside the car, as well.

TYLER REDDICK: It was just a huge sense of relief. This whole team, we’ve been at it for a couple years now together, and even some of us back to the Xfinity Series days. That first year together in the Xfinity Series we were able to go out and back up a championship and win a lot of races.

Then we got slapped in the face with the reality of what Cup racing is like, and just I’ve had to learn a lot over the course of these last three years in the Cup Series as a driver, but I’ve had some really great people behind me to help me do that, whether that was my crew chief, Josh Wise, Curtis Walls, just a lot of great people getting a lot of time at Chevrolet in the simulator to work on my driving style and just my habits, my mistakes, whatever it might be.

A lot of great people have helped an immense amount along the way, and it’s just — what a crazy ride it’s been, and just had to put a lot into it. All of us have. It’s really nice to get it finally done.

Q. To beat Chase Elliott on a road course, how much more special does that even make this one?

TYLER REDDICK: I mean, it certainly does. He’s been the guy that’s won more road courses over the last couple years than anybody, and then you look at who was behind him in Kyle Larson and Ross Chastain, guys that have been really good on road courses, and we’ve been right there with them a lot of the time over the last I’d say two years, it’s just sometimes our agendas have been different.

When we were here last year we were going to go after points and we had to stay out. It was nice to get those stage wins and stage points, but it really put a dampener on us being able to go out and battle with guys like Chase who won this race last year and some of those guys that were able to really battle up at the front at the end of these road course races.

It was kind of nice in some way to be in the spot where we were where points really weren’t going to matter that much over the next 10 races. We knew we needed to go out there and win. To kind of just put points aside and put the whole day together like we did and not make the big mistakes and just all day long, it was nice to be coming off pit road right there off the bumper of the 9 car and just me and him go at it and may the best team win, and thankfully it was us today.

Q. Tyler, what was the last lap like for you? Also, has anyone told you that Austin Dillon had a mechanical problem?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I finally heard about that. I think Richard is the first one that told me actually. That was crazy. But I’m glad it didn’t bring a caution out for sure. But hey, I would have been ready for it, honestly.

Q. What was the last couple of laps like for you?

TYLER REDDICK: You know, the last five were pretty nice. I’d say from that 10 to 5 range when Chase was kind of closing back in and right there, I was kind of searching within myself what I needed to be doing, that was probably the most stressful part, because I could kind of get away, he would close back in, and I was kind of worried about my brakes fading late, and they kind of would, late in a tire run.

But up until that point in the tire run late, I had been behind somebody else or I’d been on the bumper of another guy, whatever it would be, kind of in dirty air, warmer air, more turbulent air, and that definitely has a factor on — plays a factor in how your tire temperatures would be, your brake temperatures would be, even your engine temperatures would be.

Being in front, I kind of was playing it a little too safe, honestly, and I realized that my brakes and my car was good and I could push a little harder in the braking zones again, and that allowed me to get out to a comfortable distance. The last five laps were pretty stress free. It was really nice to know that I had that much left in the tank in the car to be able to hold him off and have that gap and then manage it.

Q. Would you have ever expected that your first win would come on a road course?

TYLER REDDICK: Sounds crazy but I honestly thought that’s where the first one would come. Last year, honestly. I thought last year it would come here. We had good speed at COTA last year. The rain coming in really kind of was something I wasn’t expecting. We got the pole there in the dry there at COTA and then it was just a downpour all day on that Sunday a year ago. It was really disheartening for me because I had a lot yet to learn in damp conditions.

Then the other road courses that we got to, when we came here last year and then Indy we were having to go for points and not just the win.

I felt good about our road courses where we were with the last car, and then when we had the Charlotte Roval test in like October or whatever it was, we were really strong, so I felt really good about our chances this year on road courses, too.

Q. Richard Childress had said this morning he had told you that he thought you were going to win today. I don’t know what y’all’s pre-race routine normally is, if that’s something that happens a lot, or what your reaction was when you got those words from him earlier today.

TYLER REDDICK: He’s always had a lot of confidence in me, but it seems like a place like this, and it was obvious last year we had good speed, circumstances just kind of played its part. A lot of the road courses this year, even COTA we ran up at the front and led late, and I thought COTA honestly from the drop of the green we missed it. We weren’t as good as we should have been.

The whole team knew that, unfortunately.

But today was a different story. We unloaded in practice, we were strong, and in qualifying we were strong. Just as the race was unfolding we were in a lot of dirty air for the most part and we were able to stay close where other cars would kind of drop off after five, six laps, we could stay right there. That told me we had a great car.

I guess anyways, yes, he had a lot of confidence coming into the day. I had a lot of confidence in the car. I was just stressed and worried about how the race would play out, if we’d have any hiccups, but thankfully we didn’t and things went our way.

Q. You’ve had so many races where you’ve been in striking distance, on the verge of winning. How have the close calls toughened you as a driver or what kind of impact has that had?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, it was a good impact, knowing that in those days where we ran second, there was one or two things that happened that weren’t good for us, that could have been avoided or could have been different where we could have maybe had another spot — could have changed the outcome of a race where we ended up second but we could have been ahead of that guy that won the race at some point in that race if a mistake didn’t take place.

Knowing that we’d been that close with the minor mistakes that we have had along the way, we’ve been so close to just having a mistake-free race a number of times that I know we’re capable of it, and it was great to see it play out today where we didn’t make those huge mistakes and everything went right.

Q. Tyler, I know this has been a long time coming. I heard your interview with Winston and you said coming here as a Xfinity driver, this changed your career, and you didn’t even — you questioned whether you were man enough to continue as a race car driver because this really tested what you had. I’m just kind of curious, to feel that way four years ago and then to come back and for this to be the place, it’s got to hold a special place in your heart.

TYLER REDDICK: It does, because I remember coming here in the 9 car, and I can pretty much run you through the day. We were junk in practice. It was kind of misting out, and I ran my couple laps that I needed to as a rookie, and I’m coming down the back straightaway, and pretty much halfway down the back straightaway, I put it in neutral, I’m just kind of going to coast it back to pit road, and just being the space cadet that I am, I didn’t realize I was going way too fast, no engine braking to slow me down, and I just plowed it off into the sand trap off Canada Corner coming in for the laps that I had to make as a rookie and just created a disaster of a day for my whole team.

Then we go out there in qualifying and we’re about a 30th place car, and Dave wants me to go out there, Dave Elenz, and wants me to go out there and rerun, and I’m like, I’m going to wreck this thing if I go out there and rerun because I truthfully was going to. I was that far off.

It was just a nightmare of a day. I think I had missed a shift and pretty much put a hole in the rear end cover, and we lost all the grease, the gear grease out of our rear end and slung the axle out of the thing. It was just a disaster of a day. I was just so far off here four years ago that it just had me really questioning if I had what it took.

We walked away from here, Dave really did a good job of getting me back to where I needed to be, and we went to Darlington that next week and we were great in practice. We had a really awesome throwback scheme with — Tim Richmond throwback, Old Milwaukee on the car, and from that point on in that 9 car, things started to click.

It was about here that things could have went one of two ways. It could have went one way where I was pretty much giving up on the thought of — I don’t think I had it. But I had a lot of good people around me that believed in me, got me back where I needed to be, and from that point on, things have been a lot better. It’s really crazy that this is the place I got my first win because this place four years ago had me questioning everything.

Q. When you first came in here, you said it’s been a long, wild, crazy ride. I know everything is probably still spinning in your mind with everything that’s happened the last hour and a half, but are things coming into focus of what that crazy ride is and what are the images or what are the things that come to mind when you say it’s been one long crazy ride that starts to come out and illustrate that in this hour and a half since you’ve won?

TYLER REDDICK: It’s starting to sink in. The nice thing about it is the hard work you put in is what you get out of it. For the last two years especially, I knew that road courses were a weakness for me, and when I say weakness, I mean we’d struggled around 30th, honestly.

To turn it around like we have and continue to put the work in and not just settle for good enough, I mean, a year and a half ago or so we rolled into the beginning of the year, we were way better, and that was great, but it wasn’t good enough because we still didn’t get the job done. We still didn’t win. So we just kept plugging away at it.

It was really inspiring. It made me really look at the other racetracks I wasn’t good at and try and figure out what I can do, what we can work on to get better, what are we missing, and it really opened up a part of my brain that I wasn’t really even really prepared to use and just was able to not just get better at road courses, get better at the places like Loudon and Martinsville, the short tracks if you will, just the oddball tracks that I wasn’t good at, just how do we get better. It was kind of a nice surprise that I could do it at the road courses and was able to kind of carry it and apply it to other places where I was struggling, too.

Q. Obviously it’s a lot of things that probably helped you. Was there one particular thing? I know you’ve worked with Josh and he’s had Scott Speed work with you guys. Was that part of the time when you kind of transitioned to being better on the road courses or were you doing that even before you were coming out working with Josh?

TYLER REDDICK: It was all kind of about the same time. Working with Scott and working with Josh has been very beneficial. I’ve been working with Curtis Walls since I was at Chip Ganassi Racing when he was there, and he’s done a lot in really helping me and my mindset, as well. I’ve had a lot of really great people around me. Then obviously my whole team, going to the simulator at least once a week and working with my engineer Andrew Dickenson and working on stuff — I think he’s — tire engineer does a lot of stuff at our shop, Byron Daley, he’s really done simulator on what I need to do better and just opening my mind up and approaching a corner differently.

Just had a lot of great people that have been willing to put the time and effort in to help me get better, and it’s all added up, everyone. You take one part of it out, one person out of the puzzle, we’re not here sitting — I’m not sitting here talking to you about winning this race today.

Q. Talking with Austin Cindric as he was walking up pit road to come and meet you, he said he was all excited, couldn’t wait to see you, and you’re one of the guys that he really likes and obviously I know you guys had your time at BKR and he says he’s just a goofy, weird guy —

TYLER REDDICK: I am. He is, too.

Q. He goes, I’m the same way. What was it like to see him, and that was quite a hug that he gave you in Victory Lane.

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I really wanted to go see him after he won the Daytona 500, but I know how crazy and how busy it was. I just appreciate him coming over and seeing me because I wanted to come do the same thing for him when he won the 500, but I knew my whole team was going to be mad as they could get if they were waiting on me because I tried to go see him and whatever it was, so I appreciate him making the time to come see me.

But yeah, there’s a lot of great people that I’ve been teammates with, been friends with. Austin is one of them. Ross Chastain is another, AJ Allmendinger, Brad Keselowski as a boss. I could go down the list. There’s so many people that I’ve worked with at one time or another.

I know if Daniel Hemric was here he would have came and saw me. There’s a lot of great people that have done a lot for me, have helped me a lot, and I really appreciate them coming and congratulating me and sharing the moment.

Q. That was quite a hug he gave you.

TYLER REDDICK: Well, and that’s what he does. I’ve seen him give that hug to other people. I think he’s given it to me before. That’s his deal, he’s a big bear hug, pick you off the ground. I don’t weigh as heavy as I used to these days. I’m a little bit lighter, so it makes it a little easier for him.

Q. Are you someone that kind of pays attention to history? The first two road courses this year, first time winners. There have been five first-time winners out here in the Xfinity. Do you look at that and say, this is a shot for me?

TYLER REDDICK: Those details, no. But obviously I’m aware of it, but I don’t think in a way it plays — it wasn’t a motivating factor for me because I know guys like Chase, guys like Kyle, Ross Chastain, it was no surprise that they were up there and battling for the win today.

So yeah, I mean, we have seen first-time winners happen here, but I knew the guys that are really, really good at maximizing the braking zone and really understand how to kind of piece all these corners together would be up front today, and they were.

It’s great that I kind of added to that today, but I knew that I’ve been watching what they’ve been doing over the years, obviously with what Chase has been doing over the last couple years and then Kyle comes in with Hendrick and really does a good job on the road courses, and you’ve see Ross do the same thing this year. Been paying attention to what they’re doing, and we’ve been trying to do a lot of the same things at RCR, and so it was nice to see it pay off and we were able to best them today.

Q. I think we were told it was a spotter that told you, don’t look out your mirror, look out your windshield. How many times did you look out the rear view mirror? Did you listen?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I was looking at my mirror, but it certainly affected me a couple times to the negative side. It hurt me a few times. But more than not it was a positive because I could kind of see where he was gaining, where Chase was gaining on me and where I was making gains on him, too.

Using the mirror to a point can help you but it can hurt you, and I kind of experienced both, but it was great to see once he was getting smaller and smaller that I was starting to do the right things and build that gap.

Q. I asked Randall this question: What is it about road course racing that tends to produce so many first-time winners? Like we mentioned the five in the Xfinity here and Ross and Daniel earlier this year. From a driver’s perspective is there a rhyme or reason for that? Is that just luck or is there something more to it from your perspective?

TYLER REDDICK: No, I think you look back over the history of time, and 10 years ago you would say road course ringers come in here like AJ, like Marcos Ambrose, Juan Pablo Montoya, they come in here and just make us look like fools. I think that’s because as drivers when we only had two of these races a year, we weren’t really maximizing, we’d just kind of get to the road courses, kind of like I was a couple years ago, oh, we’ll get through it. And you still see it to a point. A lot of the drivers have really done a great job of really figuring out road course racing and maximizing the whole lap and figuring out the braking zones, what they need in their car.

But still to a degree when you see a guy like Daniel go out there and win at Sonoma, you can still just find a whole new level, if you will, in your car and as a driver and just — if you’re on it one day, you’re just going to be on it that day. Seeing him go out and win Sonoma the way he did, it wasn’t surprising because I know that he’s capable of that. That team is capable of that.

But over the last couple years, the drivers, the teams have really been honing in on it, but you still see days where someone just hits it, hits it really good, doesn’t make the mistakes, executes their strategy and they win.

Q. The first couple of stages, Chase pulled out to about a five- or six-second lead by the end of the stage. What was the difference in the final stage? Was it merely track position? Did they make an adjustment to your car? What was the difference that allowed you to stay so close?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I think it was just track position. I was behind Kyle and — somebody else.

Q. Chastain?

TYLER REDDICK: I don’t think I was behind Chastain. I think it was Briscoe, yeah. I was behind those guys, and the more traffic you’re in the more you’re having to work to kind of stay in touch. Chase was able to — most of the day get out front, have the clean air, manage the brakes, manage his tires pretty well, and just kind of as the race was progressing, I went from being fourth to third as Briscoe stayed out and took the stage points, so I got a spot there. Then was able to pass Kyle in Stage 2, and just — I just kind of had to pass one car a stage and essentially the further we got, the closer we were.

Yeah, he would get that gap, but I think it was kind of a product of him having clean air the whole time and being able to manage his stuff very well where we were having to battle very hard to get around Chase or get around Kyle.

Q. Once you cleared him through 5 and 6 when you made the pass, were you surprised that he came back at you so hard right after that?

TYLER REDDICK: No, you know, we made a little bit of contact in Turn 6, so I didn’t want to totally take away — he was close enough, and I didn’t know if he was upset about the contact or not. I didn’t want to take his entire line away. I didn’t want to shut the door on him getting a bump, getting me out in the grass, whatever it may be, so I kind of left him some air, if you will. I don’t know if I should have done that or not.

But it gave him the run into Turn 8, and I knew that he was going to — if I went to block him he was probably going to give me the bumper because we made contact earlier, so I left him the lane and just wanted to get through Turn 8 good enough to be at his right side going into the carousel, and thankfully I was, and from there I was able to kind of build a gap and manage it from there.

Q. I asked you like variation of this question back at Speedweeks at Daytona and I asked it because there were a lot of first-time winner last year. We had four coming into today. Over the last two years, seeing guys who had been around for a long time finally get their first win or guys who hadn’t been here very long get their first win, and it kind of seemed like you were the only guy still waiting who’s been around a while, seeing those guys click those off one after another, after a while did that get to you on any level, that it was like just you left?

TYLER REDDICK: No, no, because it was very obvious that they would go out there and have those days where they just executed all day long. They’d have a good car. They wouldn’t make the critical mistakes that you can’t afford to make, and they would be in position to capitalize at the end of the race.

I knew if they can do it, we can do it. So if anything it was probably motivating and encouraging. It wasn’t demoralizing by any means.

Q. I want to say you had five runner-up finishes before today. What type of person were you those nights after those runner-up finishes? Were you miserable? Would you not have wanted to be around you? How did you react to those?

TYLER REDDICK: I’d say I was pretty miserable, yeah. I don’t think Alexa enjoyed being around me when I’d run second place. Yeah, second place isn’t a bad place to finish. But we’re here to win races. We’re here to get those five playoff points. We’re here to get into the playoffs.

For me when we run second, the smallest little things over the course of the day, whether it was in Stage 1, the opening laps, Stage 2, whatever it was, one thing could have changed the outcome of that second place. It could have made it a win.

For me, it was very frustrating because I know that there were little things that I did in the race that I could have done better that could have changed that.

Q. So do you obsess over those things? Do you watch it over and over?

TYLER REDDICK: No, I don’t obsess, but I go back and I look at it and I realize there were things I could have done differently. Then I try to learn from it and apply it going forward so I don’t make those mistakes. Just like yesterday, I drove through — if I didn’t do the Xfinity race yesterday, if I didn’t get in that massive pile-up, whatever it was, I wouldn’t have learned that I drove through too many boxes leaving unfortunately in the 48 car. I may have made that mistake today. I’m glad I’m getting to get these extra reps in an Xfinity car and learn from those little mistakes that I may make.

Q. You knew right away that you had five before this when it came to runner-up finishes. Is that something that sticks with you where you can list them off and remember how each one played out?

TYLER REDDICK: Well, I can’t necessarily list them off, but you hear enough about it on TV, that whether it’s — when you go back and watch a race and try to pick up on some information, whatever it is, it gets talked about. I mean, I’m aware of it, but again, it may be in the heat of the moment, the night after or when you go to bed that night from a second-place finish, yeah, it eats away at you a little bit, but again, I try and look at it, how can I learn from this, how can I learn from Bristol.

Yeah, I got wrecked, but I had a gap and I let him run me back down and get there. I gave him an opportunity. I look at Darlington, I could have done a better job on that restart. I could have had a run on Joey and William, but I kind of got messed up myself.

There’s a lot of things I could have done differently over those five second-place finishes I had to where I could have won the race, so I try to look back at that and learn from it. So hopefully when I’m in a position to win a race again, I don’t make those same mistakes.

Q. You gave your friend Antonio a shout-out right away. Does he know you’re coming in hot? Does he know you’re coming to crash the party?

TYLER REDDICK: I feel like he probably has an idea now, yeah. I still haven’t looked at my phone, but he told me before I left and came over here that he’s going to have a lot of people over for the 4th of July on Sunday and on Monday and that you and Alexa, Bo, everyone can come over and have fun. Normally like last year we would get in late enough that the party is kind of calmed down but they’d want us to come over anyways and they would feed us, we’d eat the leftovers, whatever it is, and we’d help them clean up after it’s all said and done.

Q. Now it’s going to get a full restock?

TYLER REDDICK: We’ll see. I know that they’re really excited. I kind of crashed their vow renewals on the off weekend when they were doing that in downtown Mooresville, so I had a lot of fun doing that. They always like it when we kind of crash their party.

Q. This wasn’t just your first Cup win, this was Randall’s first Cup win. Afterwards you walked down pit road and he got congratulations from a lot of people who were finally happy to see him get it. What did it mean for you that you get to share this moment in the same kind of capacity?

TYLER REDDICK: Well, I mean, it means a lot because I know we both really wanted it. There’s a lot of people on our team that really wanted that win. There’s a number of people on our team that haven’t won in a long time or haven’t won ever. They’ve decided to stick it out with me because they believe in me and they know that we can get it done, and it means a lot to be able to give those their reward that they’ve been wanting, that they’ve been holding out for.

THE MODERATOR: BKR Racing, the legacy of that team, yet another winner in Victory Lane. What’s it say about the legacy of that team when you see guys like Chase Briscoe and yourself making it to Victory Lane this year, Austin Cindric?

TYLER REDDICK: Yeah, I think it’s four out of the five first-time winners were all BKR graduates. Yeah, Brad, Jeremy Thompson, they had a vision. They just saw it in their drivers. Me and Jimmy, we’re old BKR boys. We come from the same place. That’s also really cool for me. I’ve got Jimmy back here helping me keep me in check, and we go out here and win our first race together. That’s also really cool.

Brad just — Brad had a vision but there was also something about that place that was really special. There was a lot of great people. They all loved to be there. It was a tight knit family. Just we worked really hard there at BKR, and everyone I know that’s ever drove there really loved being there.

THE MODERATOR: Congratulations again on your first NASCAR Cup Series, I’m sure it won’t be your last, and good luck next week in Atlanta.

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

THE MODERATOR: We’re going to roll into our post-race coverage here for today’s QuikTrip 250 presented by Jockey here at Road America. We’ve now been joined by Randall Burnett, who’s the race-winning crew chief. Randall, you guys have been looking for this win or hoping for this win I should say for quite some time. What does it mean to be able to know that you guys have won this race but have also put yourself in position in the playoffs, as well?

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, I think it’s a pretty big deal for us, RCR, everybody at ECR, to finally get that win for Tyler. He’s worked really hard, especially at these road course tracks, to do everything he can to make himself the best he can be on these places, and it showed today. He went toe-to-toe with Chase, which is arguably one of the best road course racers we’ve got, and came out on top. I think that shows how much work and effort he’s put into it, and just really happy we gave him a car that he could go out and run with him.

Q. I was curious about that last pit stop because you said that you told the crew if they saw any indication that 9 was going in you guys were going to follow him. Because we’re down here and you guys were up there, the way the camera looked, it looked like Chase almost cut you guys off. I’m kind of wondering what that moment was like. We really didn’t have a good view of it from in here.

RANDALL BURNETT: Yeah, so we both didn’t have the greatest stops at the end of the race. Our guys, we closed the gap on him a little bit coming off pit road. I told Derek a few laps before that we were within our window, and if we saw the 9 come to pit road, we need to at least come with him.

We were talking about trying to maybe short pit him a lap but didn’t want to put ourselves right up against the window, too, in case a caution would come out. We had a big enough cushion and we were close enough to Chase to see what he was going to do, so it just kind of worked out a bunch of them had peeled off the lap before, and I think that kind of forced both ours and the 9’s hand to be like, okay, now we’re in the window, we’ve got a lap on fuel on almost everybody else that’s already pitted, it’s time to get in here and do it.

Like we said, we followed them down, and we got the jump out of the pit box and kind of got out, and it looked like Chase was kind of a little slow getting out of his box and tried to get out in front of him. It was just a good race off pit road. That allowed us to close the gap up to him and put a little bit more pressure on him for sure towards the end of the race.

THE MODERATOR: Now we’ve also been joined by race winning owner here, Richard Childress. Richard, you’ve been a longtime supporter of Tyler, obviously bringing him on board at RCR several years ago but fighting for that first victory in the NASCAR Cup Series. What does it mean to know that that has been accomplished today?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: It’s great to see Tyler Reddick in the winner’s circle. It wasn’t a matter of if he was going to do it, it was when they were going to win. That’s what we kept telling them. Had a couple of meetings, all of us, and talked about what it’s going to take to get us in the winner’s circle, and that’s not beat yourself and be solid, and that’s what these guys did today, and they did that.

When you beat Chase Elliott, you beat one of the best, and Hendrick’s guys, hats off to them, they’ve got their four cars in, we’ve got one of ours. We’ve got one more to try to get in. So we’re going to be a contender for the championship, right?

RANDALL BURNETT: Absolutely.

RICHARD CHILDRESS: That’s the answer I wanted.

Q. We’ve all watched Tyler mature over the last three or four years, but I’m just curious, Richard, I can remember you all throughout your career, when you find a guy and you really light on to him, you can find talented drivers. I’m just wondering what was it specifically about Tyler that you said, I want to bring this guy in, I know I can build an organization around him?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, I’ve watched Tyler since he was running the trucks. He struggled a little bit there, but he was always driving the trucks to their limit. Then when he got in the Xfinity at JR Motorsports, he was the same. He drove — he’s got so much talent, he just pushes that limit every week, and I knew between Randall and myself and talking with him, and I told him this morning, you’re going to win this race, we just can’t beat ourselves; be solid. I think I told y’all that on the radio when the race started.

I was just proud of what these guys have done and accomplished, and it’s been a huge team effort, and to have our engines today out there running like they were, the HCD engines that Hendrick and I are working together to develop, it made me feel really good.

Q. Randall, would you have guessed that your first Cup win and Tyler’s first Cup win would come on a road course?

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, not originally I wouldn’t think that, but like I said, Tyler has worked really hard over the past couple years at these road courses. In 2019 on the Xfinity side, he was like, man, I hate road course racing; I’m not very good at it. He’s pretty good at everything he does, so for him to say that, it was a little bit of a challenge. We came here and we ran really good in the Xfinity car.

So I was excited when they put this race on the schedule. This is a great place. It’s a cool place to come for the 4th of July. I give Tyler a lot of the credit for success on the road course stuff. We’ve obviously got to put a good car underneath him, but he’s went above and beyond on effort to get better at road course racing.

I think that’s a nice little cherry on top for him to know that he’s worked that hard to get as good as he has on these places, so I think it’s pretty special for him to actually win on a road course for the first time.

Q. Earlier this year at Kansas he told me about when you were coming up through racing your brother labeled you with the nickname P2 for all the times you placed second. Now you’re finally P1.

RANDALL BURNETT: Yeah, that’s nice. I can finally go to my brother and tell him he can’t call me P2 anymore. That comes from me racing late models and finishing runner-up all the time in the late model stock deal.

It’s kind of funny, they labeled me that throughout the years, and of course we’ve finished second with Tyler I think five or six times now. They give me a lot of trouble for that, so it’s finally really good to break that.

Q. Richard, you’ve come so close to that first win so many times, so many near misses. When a guy finally gets over the hump and gets that first win, how much weight can be lifted off his shoulders just in terms of future progress from that point forward?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Yeah, I think he said it well when he was talking about Tyler putting the effort in. He does work really hard at it. Both drivers work really hard. I was going to bring him over and talk to him like we did here, and just sit down and talk some. I knew this would be a good shot he had at winning this race, and he was over at the road course at Charlotte on the go-kart track practicing.

We talked a little bit up here this morning that we knew what we could do here to get it right.

As far as being nervous at the end of the race, four or five laps to go, I said, we just don’t need a caution. Then with two to go I guess it was, the 3 blew a left front rotor coming into 5, and I said, here we go again, here’s that caution. But he was able to get off and go straight and saved the day for us.

Q. Randy, obviously three road courses this year, three first-time winners. It’s commonplace out here; I think three or four Xfinity winners out here have been first-time winners. Why do road courses seem to produce more first-time winners?

RANDALL BURNETT: That’s a great question. I don’t know that there’s a specific reason for it. I think a lot of it’s circumstantial, like how the cautions fall, hot your pit strategy falls. Today’s race we obviously didn’t have any cautions except the stage cautions, so it was pretty straightforward. I know we came in with a game plan that we felt like we were far enough out in points that if anybody else had won, we were going to be in a whole lot of trouble.

We came in and we elected not to take any stage points. We called the race aggressive to try to give ourselves track position. We said that. We said that in the truck. We all talked about it, and we’re like, we came here to win, and that’s what we’re going to try to do today. We called the race that way.

I think Sonoma is the same way; the 99 did a similar thing there.

Obviously the race at COTA was pretty crazy at the end with Ross.

I don’t know. I don’t know why road courses produce a lot of first-time winners. I don’t know. I enjoy road course racing. I like it. I think it’s a lot of fun, especially with these Next-Gen cars. It’s a lot of fun for these guys with big brakes and everything that we’ve got on these things.

Q. Randall, Richard kind of hit on it, but the hub failure by the 3, what was going through your mind when you saw a team car have that issue?

RANDALL BURNETT: Well, a lot of teams had saw some issue with some cracking in the rotors, this, that and the other. NASCAR allowed us to change rotors if we thought it necessary.

Everybody took a look at their rotors. I know the 3 had a little bit of problem with theirs. This place is a little tricky and we’re still learning a lot about the braking system on these new cars. It’s a little bit tricky in the fact that their straightaways are so long and at the end of the them there’s such a high braking zone or high pressure on the brakes to get low down for the next corner, especially at like into 1, into 5 and into Canada Corner back there that it kind of shocks the rotors and sometimes you’ll see when they have a big heat change at a rapid pace, they’ll sometimes crack a little bit. We saw a little bit of that in practice.

I was a little bit surprised we didn’t see a little bit more of that in the race actually.

Fortunately for ours, we looked pretty good in practice, and I wasn’t overly worried about it, but there was definitely some teams that had some issues.

Q. Randall, when you talk about aggressive in terms of pit calling, I know your last two stops you guys followed Chase in, so in one sense it was easy. I know the first stage you went in a lap early. When you’re talking about aggressive, what do you mean in terms of aggressive calling because it seemed like you were kind of shadowing the 9.

RANDALL BURNETT: So the first — we’ve got to be in the first stage, we had fell far enough back that the time that we need to get on pit road and get to the commitment line is about five and a half, six seconds here, from the time behind the leader at that point. We had fallen just behind that the first stage, so that’s what made us pit three laps instead of two laps from the end. We were close enough the second stage, we were within I think four seconds at the end of that one, so we were able to pit with him.

You know, just shorten the stages. Some guys stay out for points, things like that. That’s what I meant by calling it a little bit aggressive. But here I think it was pretty straightforward you’re going to have to do that right off the bat. The pace falloff wasn’t near as bad as it was last year I don’t think, so it kind of leaned towards doing that, short pitting the stages to try to keep your track position when the caution came out.

Q. For both of you, I know the saying is “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,” and I’m sure those runner-up finishes were great finishes, but it’s not those wins. There have been some tough times admittedly the last few years. What got you through and what got you guys to this moment today? For you, Richard, what got you, and for Randall, what got you and this team together to get to this moment?

RANDALL BURNETT: I think a lot of hard work by a lot of people, honestly. We worked hard up at RCR, worked hard with this Next-Gen car getting it off the ground in our shop. We’ve put a lot of effort into this deal and worked really hard up there. We’ve got some great people up in the shop. We’ve got ECR engines. They’re a huge help for us.

I don’t know, I think just everybody carrying their weight and pulling together and pulling the rope in the same direction. I think it’s come a long way since I’ve been there. I started there in 2017 on the Xfinity side, and I think the 8 team and the 3 team work together about as good as any teammates I’ve ever seen, a lot of support there between the two teams, so that’s something special to have, and I think it helps us grow our company.

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Yeah, I think he hit on about everything. I think it’s just never give up, never quit, keep digging. I think that’s what we all did. We all keep talking about winning. Being able to win here is just a feather in the hat to everybody at RCR and ECR.

Q. What does it mean, Richard, to get the win, get in the playoffs, get that potential for extra bonus money for down the road with the way the charter system is and all the things that a win means for an organization and being able to get that for the first time in a couple years?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, I think this win puts the 8 in the Chase, and that’s what we put a lot of effort into this race, because this would be the race we knew he could win. I told him this morning he was going to win. We were able to pull it off.

Getting in the Chase, we don’t just want to get in the Chase. We talk about being a contender for the championship, and I think we can. I truly think that we will be a contender for the championship when we get into it. Now we’ve got to get the 3 in, so we’ve got to put a lot of effort there.

Q. Richard, I think going back to Ryan Newman’s final win with you, the last four RCR wins have been really last-minute pit strategy calls or the Daytona 500 which was a last-lap incident. This race you went out, you took it convincingly, it was yours. Does this feel different than those last batch of wins that this team has earned?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: Yeah, I think anytime you go out and beat the best, it feels good. Like I said earlier, to beat Chase, he’s won how many out of the last how many. He’s won a lot of the road courses. To be able to go out and beat him, I think that gives us a lot more strength going into the Chase, and I think when you drive and you go out there and you beat him and you win the race, that’s what you’ve got to do.

Q. Randall, was it you who told Tyler over the radio I think maybe seven laps or something like that, out the windshield, don’t look in the mirror; was that you?

RANDALL BURNETT: That was Derek. I was talking to Derek, too, trying to keep him calm. Derek does a great job on that. He’s our spotter. He does a really good job. Him and Tyler work really good together. Derek does a good job with Tyler like helping him manage traffic, helping him manage everything, especially when he was leading like that. Just letting him know, hey, man, you’ve got plenty of pace here. The 9 is using his stuff up behind you trying to get to you and he’s using it up and just trying to keep his cool with him, and Derek does a great job with that.

Q. Over the years what kind of coaching does Tyler respond to the best in these kind of high-tension scenarios?

RANDALL BURNETT: I think the way Derek handles it is pretty good. Just give him enough information. Don’t overly coach him. Don’t coach him every corner but give him enough information so he understands what’s going on around him, so he understands, hey, I’m pushing 95 percent, the 9 looks like he’s pushing 100 percent behind us so I can pace myself, and Derek does a good job of helping him manage that.

Tyler doesn’t need a whole lot of cheerleading a lot of times. Sometimes he gets down on himself a little bit and beats himself up if he makes a mistake. I think that’s the biggest thing with him is you’ve just got to keep him pumped up and let him know we can’t dwell on it; we’ve got to get on with it and go about our day.

Q. Richard, I believe it’s the second win for RCR at this track, Menard went out in the Xfinity a couple years ago. What does a win at Road America mean for you and the organization?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, this is a great track. I love coming up here. Brandon Gaughan won his first race here, also, and so did Paul — not his first. It may have been the last race here. I can’t remember. One of them did.

It’s just a special place. It’s just a challenging racetrack, and the drivers — a lot of it’s in the drivers’ hands, how they can do it, attack it, and not overdo it. He had some good coaching today from Derek, and I’m just happy to be up here again at my old age still winning. That’s all I can say.

Q. You guys were mentioning at the end there where Austin was having trouble? Does Tyler kind of owe Austin one for him pulling off?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: No, no, he just did what he had to do. He would have got off. We just didn’t want to see a caution. We talked to him earlier, him and the 14 and 2, there was about five of them back there racing and beating and banging, and he got knocked off — 19 knocked him off in the corner over here. I said, oh, here we go, here’s a caution. So he gathered it back up, so they had a good race, and we won. That’s what counts.

THE MODERATOR: Richard, one final question. I know the sponsor on Tyler’s car today is a newer one to RCR. What does it mean when sponsors can get their first win, as well?

RICHARD CHILDRESS: You know, to Justin Turner right here, he’s the owner of 3Chi, and for us to get NASCAR to let us bring in — it’s a Delta 8, correct? I just asked for some a while ago. I had a back operation. My back is bothering me. So I’m going to use it tonight. To be able to bring a company in, a whole new category to racing, and to be able to have 3Chi on the car on our first win with Tyler, that’ll go down in history. We made history by bringing — and Justin reaching out and taking a gamble on us.

I think at Indy, you seen us at Indy that’s where you talked to us, that’s where the company is out of, and to be able to bring a win for them and to let people know how important to have them in our sport is, it’s a big win for all of us.

THE MODERATOR: Randall and Richard, congratulations again on this victory. I know you will enjoy this one, and we thank you for spending some time with us.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

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Silver Hare Racing Solid All Around at Road America

Connor Zilisch Finishes Sixth, Maurice Hull 17th and Tops in Masters Class,
Marc Sharinn Caps Trans Am TA2 Debut with 22nd-Place Run

Overview:
Date: July 3, 2022
Event: Ryan Companies present The Trans Am 100s (Round 8 of 12)
Series: Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli
Division: TA2
Location: Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin
Layout: 4.048-mile, 14-turn road course
Format: 25 laps or 75 minutes
Weather: Sunny, mid-70s
Race Winner: Brent Crews of Nitro Motorsports

Silver Hare Racing:

● Connor Zilisch – Started 6th, Finished 6th (Running, completed 25/25 laps)

● Maurice Hull – Started 40th, Finished 17th (Running, completed 25/25 laps)

● Marc Sharinn – Started 46th, Finished 22nd (Running, completed 25/25 laps)

Note: Zilisch pulled double duty at Road America, competing in both the TA2 race and the Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup doubleheader. Zilisch swept the two MX-5-Cup races, starting from the pole in each. His win on Saturday was his first in the series and his win on Sunday saw the 15-year-old racer lead all but one lap of the 45-minute race.

Connor Zilisch, Driver No. 5 Silver Hare Racing/KHI Management Chevrolet Camaro:

“It was a really busy weekend here at Road America. Overall, we kept getting better throughout the weekend. We qualified sixth and in the race we were up to fourth early on. And on a restart, the two cars behind me both jumped it and kind of made me three-wide – I was stuck in the middle and had to wait for a gap. And then, in turn five, Rafa (Matos) got up inside me a little late and doored me out of the way and I fell back to 11th or so. I managed to crawl back to sixth place to finish off the race, but I think we were really fast. We had the second-fastest lap of the race. We were headed in the right direction until that restart. We’ve got a few little things we need to work on, but overall I think we’re headed in the right direction.”

Maurice Hull, Driver No. 57 Waukegan Farms/Silver Hare Racing Chevrolet Camaro:

“Road America is just a wonderful place. It’s really fast, and today it was full of cars. We had a full field and everybody behaved themselves for a while, and then the class got rowdy and things started happening. We had a super car. I can’t complain about my car at all, it was absolutely perfect. We had speed, the car handled great, we had good brakes, everything worked. The only problem I had was that my air tube fell off the top of my helmet but, other than that, it was about as good as it gets. We came from pretty far back. Really enjoyed the run. I thought the series did a good job not putting the black flag out. We had a couple of full-course cautions, but the race finished under green the way it should have and it was full-tilt racing the whole time. We were very fortunate that we missed all the carnage. We were in the middle of it at times, had some parts and pieces that actually hit the car, but we did well on the restarts. We made up a number of positions on each restart. It was fun, and a good ride for my first time since Road Atlanta back in March. It’s fun when you can race, and I got to race today.”

Marc Sharinn, Driver No. 75 Silver Hare Racing Chevrolet Camaro:

“The weekend got off to an inauspicious start but we kept at it. The car was well-prepared all weekend, I just needed to get comfortable in it. The race itself was quite eventful. There was a lot of carnage and I tried to keep my nose clean. I had a bit of a spin but I stayed on track and just kept working at it and, fortunately, moved up a number of places. I look forward to running with this group again. They were fun and they were top notch – professionals, polite, welcoming, it was really a nice environment and I was just glad to be a part of it.”

Next Up:

TA2 competitors in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli have a month-long reprieve before heading to the streets of downtown Nashville, Tennessee, Aug. 5-6 for the Big Machine Music City Grand Prix, an event headlined by the NTT IndyCar Series. The race weekend begins with a pair of practice sessions on the 2.17-mile, 11-turn temporary street circuit on Friday, Aug. 5. Qualifying takes place on the morning of Saturday, Aug. 6 with the TA2 race going green later that afternoon. Coverage will be livestreamed via SpeedTourTV.com and the SpeedTourTV page on YouTube.

About Silver Hare Racing:

Silver Hare Racing is a fulltime competitor in the TA2 division of the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli. The multicar team has won the TA2 Masters class championship three times (2018, 2019 and 2020) with driver and team co-owner Maurice Hull. Under the leadership of Hull’s wife, co-owner and team manager Laura Hull, Silver Hare Racing provides a variety of services that includes private testing and arrive-and-drive programs. The team offers six, professionally built and maintained TA2 chassis from Howe Racing and operates from a state-of-the-art facility in High Point, North Carolina. For more information, please visit SilverHareRacing.com.