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Chandler Smith – No. 18 Safelite Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks Darlington Preview

Chandler Smith: Driver, No. 18 Safelite® Toyota

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
Event: Dead on Tools 200, Race 7 of 23, 147 Laps –45/45/57; 200.1 Miles
Location: Darlington (S.C.) Raceway (1.336-mile egg-shaped oval)
Date/Broadcast: May 6, 2022, at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

Mr. Smith Season 2:

Chandler Smith and the No. 18 Safelite team head to Darlington Raceway for Friday’s Dead on Tools 200. As part of Darlington’s throwback weekend, Smith will have fresh colors on his Tundra under the lights Friday night. Smith’s normal paint scheme on his Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM) entry is based off Safelite’s MobileGlassShop vehicles that have been predominately black with silver and red stripes since 2013. This week the No. 18 will throw it back to before 2013 when Safelite’s MobileGlassShop vehicles were predominately white with red and black stripes on the side. Safelite – the nation’s largest provider of vehicle glass repair, replacement, and recalibration services – has been a partner of KBM since the 2017 season and will be the primary sponsor on Smith’s Toyota for 16 races this season.

Smith has had a strong start to 2022, finishing inside the top 10 in four of six events including his victory earlier in the year at Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway. The 19-year-old driver sits second in the regular season point standings, 38 tallies behind reigning series champion Ben Rhodes. Through the first six events of the season Smith leads Truck Series regulars in average starting position (4.7), ranks second in average finish (9.3) and third in driver rating (107.5) and average running position (7.654).

Friday night will be Smith’s fourth start at “The Lady in Black.” While he’s had strong runs each time racing at Darlington, he hasn’t had the results to show for it. Smith’s best result came last September when he finished seventh.

The Georgia driver earned NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year honors in 2021 and finished eighth in the championship standings after producing two victories, one pole, 213 laps led, six top-five and nine top-10 finishes in his first full-time season. He earned his first career Truck Series victory at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in September and in the series finale at Phoenix (Ariz.) Raceway earned his first career pole and swept all three stages en route to his second victory.

Veteran crew chief Danny Stockman will once again call the shots for Smith and the No. 18 team in 2022. Stockman’s drivers have produced six victories at KBM across his first two seasons, including two with Smith behind the wheel in 2021. The veteran crew chief captured a Truck Series championship with Austin Dillon in 2011 and also won an Xfinity Series championship with Dillon in 2013. Stockman’s drivers have produced one top-five and two top-10 finishes across five Truck Series starts at Darlington resulting in an average finish of 15.4. His best result was fifth with Dillon in 2010.

The Camping World Truck Series will be racing for the 650th time this week at Darlington. Chris Showalter, the truck chief on Smith’s No. 18 Tundra TRD Pro, has remarkably been a crew member for all 650 races dating back to the series’ inaugural event held on February 5, 1995 at Phoenix Raceway. The Ohio native has been a part of 16 wins across his 188 races since becoming a truck chief at KBM in 2014. His most notable accomplishment was being the crew chief for Travis Kvapil’s Truck Series championship in 2003 for Xpress Motorsports.

Charge Me will be as an associate sponsor on the bedtop of Smith’s No. 18 Tundra TRD Pro for 16 races this season, including this weekend at Darlington. Charge Me was founded on the principle that the electric vehicle (EV) revolution will require robust infrastructure support at all levels.

Chandler Smith, Driver Q&A:
Will getting to race in the Xfinity Series the last two weeks while the Truck Series was off benefit you?
“Getting seat time in any race vehicle always helps no matter what, so it was good to get behind the wheel of Sam Hunt’s Xfinity car for two weeks while the Truck Series was off. I have to thank ChargeMe and QuickTie for being apart of my Xfinity Series debut, I couldn’t have had the opportunity without their support.”

You’ve shown a lot of speed in your previous starts at Darlington. Is there something about that track that fits your driving style?
“Darlington is a lot of fun to race at. It’s a wore out track that you have to take care of your tires and having that characteristic definitely matches my background coming up Super Late Model racing. We’ve been really fast the first three times I’ve gone there but didn’t get the finishes we deserved. Looking forward to trying to get the Safelite Tundra TRD Pro in victory lane Friday night.”

You’ve been a big proponent of getting practices back, will having practice this time around at Darlington?
“It was definitely hard the last few years as a young driver going to tracks and just lining up and racing. Even though practice time is limited most places this year, it gives me the opportunity as a driver to get a feel for the truck and work with Danny (Stockman, crew chief) to get the balance of the Safelite Tundra TRD Pro more to my liking for the start of the race. The past couple of years you would have to wait until the first pit stop to make an adjustment and if you did anything substantial it would cost you spots on pit road and put you behind. We’ve been close at Darlington the last few times, so hopefully having practice is a difference maker.”

Chandler Smith Career Highlights:

  • Across 44 career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts has recorded three wins, 362 laps led, 17 top-five and 22 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 14.2.
  • Earned NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year honors in 2021 and finished eighth in the championship standings after producing two victories, one pole, 213 laps led, six top-five and nine top-10 finishes in his first full-time season. He earned his first career Truck Series victory at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway in September and in the series finale at Phoenix (Ariz.) Raceway earned his first career pole and swept all three stages en route to his second victory.
  • Has posted an average finish of 29.5 across two NASCAR Xfinity Series starts in 2022, with a best result of 22nd coming at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway.
  • Has collected nine wins, 10 poles, 1783 laps led, 22 top-five and 29 top-10 finishes en route to an average finish of 5.4 across 34 career ARCA Menards Series starts.
  • Has numerous Super Late Model victories across his career, including two marquee wins: the Snowball Derby at 5 Flags Speedway in Pensacola, Fla. (2021) and SpeedFest at Watermelon Capital Speedway in Cordele, Georgia (2018). Will compete in several Super Late Model events around his Truck Series schedule in 2022.

Chandler Smith’s No. 18 Safelite Tundra:

KBM-70: The No. 18 Safelite team will unload KBM-70 for Friday night’s race at Darlington. This Tundra has won the last two races it entered as Smith collected his first victory of 2022 at Las Vegas in March in its lone appearance this season and won with it in the 2021 season finale at Phoenix Raceway. KBM-70 was also the chassis Smith was behind the wheel of when he posted a seventh-place finish at Darlington last September.
KBM-70 Performance Profile

KBM Notes of Interest:

  • KBM drivers have collected one win, 95 laps led, three top-five and six top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 14.0 across 11 starts at Darlington. Kasey Kahne led a race-high 95 laps en route to victory in the 2011 event.
  • KBM holds the Camping World Truck Series records for most career wins (92) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). With his victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway Corey Heim became the 18th different driver to win a Truck Series event for KBM. In addition to collecting a series-record seven Owner’s Championships, the organization has produced two championship-winning drivers: Erik Jones (2015) and Christopher Bell (2017).
  • The No. 18, the number which was on the first Tundra that went to victory lane for KBM in 2010, has 24 career victories.

John Hunter Nemechek – No. 4 Mobil 1 Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks Darlington Preview

John Hunter Nemechek: Driver, No. 4 Mobil 1 Toyota

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
Event: Dead on Tools 200, Race 7 of 23, 147 Laps – 45/45/57; 200 Miles
Location: Darlington (S.C.) Raceway (1.33-mile egg-shaped oval)
Date/Broadcast: May 6, 2022, at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

Nemechek #Back4More in 2022:
John Hunter Nemechek and the No. 4 Mobil 1 team return to action this weekend at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway after a two week break in Camping World Truck Series action. After the first six races of the 2022 campaign, Nemechek sits fifth in the Camping World Truck Series championship standings, 62 tallies behind ThorSport Racing driver Ben Rhodes in first. The talented wheelman’s three straight top-five finishes (Circuit of the Americas, Martinsville, and Bristol Dirt) have helped him gain three positions in the championship standings over that span. After six races Nemechek leads all Truck Series drivers in average running position (7.453), is second among Truck Series regulars with 85 laps led and ranks fourth in driver rating (99.1).

The 24-year-old driver will be making just his third start at Darlington in the Camping World Truck Series. In his first two starts, he has tallied 104 laps led, one top-five, and two top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 5.0. In last year’s Spring event, Nemechek led a race-high 65 laps and earned a Stage Two win before getting turned into the outside wall while leading on a restart with just under 30 laps remaining. In three NASCAR Cup Series starts at the “The Lady in Black”, Nemechek has one top-10 finish, when he finished ninth in May 2020. He finished 21st in his lone Xfinity Series start at the South Carolina track.

Nemechek is an 11-time winner in Camping World Truck Series action, winning at least one race each season from 2015 to 2018 for his family-owned team, NEMCO Motorsports, and returning to victory lane in 2021 with KBM. Across 130 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, he has compiled three poles, 1,266 laps led, 43 top-five and 69 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.6.

The Toyota Racing driver made his fourth NASCAR Xfinity Series start of the season behind the wheel of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 GR Supra at Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway last weekend. Nemechek was relegated to a 39th-place finish after experiencing brake failure in Stage Two. Nemechek will be pulling double duty at Darlington this weekend, competing in the Xfinity Series with Sam Hunt Racing. In his first two starts piloting the No. 26 Toyota GR Supra, Nemechek has recorded a 12th-place finish at Las Vegas and a fifth-place finish at Phoenix where he led 11 laps.

Eric Phillips returned to lead the No. 4 team in 2022. His 41 career Truck Series victories make him the winningest crew chief in Truck Series history, with 32 of those coming while at KBM including five last year. Phillips led the No. 18 team at KBM in its debut season in 2010 and helped build the organization into one of the premier teams in all of NASCAR before departing at the end of the 2014 season. Under his guidance, the No. 18 team won eight races in its inaugural campaign and became the first team in Truck Series history to capture an owner’s championship in its first season of competition. In 2014, the Illinois native led the No. 51 team to an owner’s championship and his team’s 10 wins spearheaded KBM to a single-season Truck Series record of 14 wins. Phillip’s has been atop the box for five starts at Darlington. In those five starts, his drivers have tallied one win (Kasey Kahne – 2011), 199 laps led, two top-five, and three top-ten finishes resulting in an average finish of 10.2.

The world’s leading synthetic motor oil, Mobil 1, will return as the primary sponsor of the No. 4 Tundra TRD Pro. Mobil 1 recently made the switch from a matte black look to a matte white finishing with the Mobil 1 Pegasus returning to the side of the truck. Mobil 1 will continue the new paint scheme throughout the remainder of the 2022 season.

John Hunter Nemechek, Driver Q&A:
You had really strong runs last year at Darlington, are you looking forward to going back there?
“I’m really looking forward to getting back to Darlington this weekend as I feel like we had two really strong Toyota Tundra TRD Pro’s there last year and had a shot to win both races. After having some momentum on our side the last few weeks, I feel good about our chances going into this weekend.”

You’ll have Xfinity practice and qualifying right before the truck race on Friday, will that extra track time be beneficial?
“I think anytime you can be on track, the more the better. Understanding which way the racetrack is going and how it’s changing, how the rubber is being laid down while lines come into effect, I think that there’s a lot of information that you can learn from that.”

Are you looking forward to having a stretch of eight straight races in the Truck Series?
“Man, I’m excited. I don’t feel like a lot of guys are used to eight weeks in a row in the Truck Series, so I feel like it’s going to take a lot of effort and determination to continue to work hard every single week and put your best foot forward. I feel like you’ll see some teams hidden during certain weeks and not others. We plan on giving it our best shot to go win all eight.”

John Hunter Nemechek Career Highlights:

  • leven-time winner in Camping World Truck Series action, winning at least one race each season from 2015 to 2018 for his family-owned team, NEMCO Motorsports. Across 130 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, has compiled three poles, 1,266 laps led, 43 top-five and 69 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.6. Registered a career-high and series-leading five victories in 2021 and earned the NCWTS Regular Season championship and third in the final standings after qualifying for the Championship Four for the first time in his career.
  • Produced three top-10 finishes and an average result of 22.4 while competing for rookie of the year honors in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2020. He recorded a career-best eighth-place finish twice, both coming at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.
  • Across 60 career XFINITY Series starts, has totaled two wins, one pole, 510 laps led, 16 top-five and 35 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 11.9.

John Hunter Nemechek’s No. 4 Mobil 1 Tundra TRD Pro:

KBM-53: The No. 4 Mobil 1 team will unload KBM-53 for Friday’s race at Darlington. Nemechek drove this Toyota three times throughout the 2021 season, accumulating 125 laps led and an average finish of 4.3. Nemechek last drove KBM-53 in March at Atlanta where he led 11 laps before being relegated to a 24th-place finish due to a flat tire.
KBM-53 Performance Profile

KBM Notes of Interest:

  • KBM drivers have collected one win, 205 laps led, three top-five and six top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 14.0 across 11 starts at Darlington Raceway.
  • Kasey Kahne picked up the organizations lone win at “The Lady in Black” in 2011.
  • KBM holds the Camping World Truck Series records for most career wins (92) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). With his victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway on March 19, Corey Heim became the 18th different driver to win a Truck Series event for KBM. In addition to collecting a series-record seven Owner’s Championships, the organization has produced two championship-winning drivers: Erik Jones (2015) and Christopher Bell (2017).
  • The No. 4 has 16 career victories at KBM and was the number for both of the organization’s driver championships.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Chris Buescher Looking to Maintain Momentum at Darlington

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Darlington Advance | Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Chris Buescher, driver of the No. 17 Socios Ford Mustang, will be driving a paint scheme made famous by Matt Kenseth in 2004 as part of this weekend’s Throwback Weekend at Darlington Raceway. Buescher, who scored his first career NASCAR Cup Series pole last week at Dover, spoke with members of the media this morning about a variety of topics.

CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Socios Ford Mustang – HOW GREAT WAS IT TO GET THE POLE LAST WEEKEND FROM A CONFIDENCE PERSPECTIVE? “For us, we’ve had some good momentum for this season. We’ve been building up steadily, but probably a little bit slower than what we would like. That was definitely a bigger step to have that speed off the truck, which is something we feel like we’ve been chasing a little bit. It’s become very important with such a limited amount of practice and then qualifying has become very important as well with some of these races that have been a surprisingly amount of track position sensitive. It was definitely a pretty awesome weekend for us. We didn’t get that win we need to really swing that momentum over, but very good progress nonetheless. It was a good race for us. We were mostly clean throughout the day and kept out of some of the chaos. I wish we could have gotten a few more spots towards the end and also wanted to be racing for a win, but just a few really small tweaks away from being able to do that.”

WHAT HAS THE CHEMISTRY BEEN LIKE WITH YOU AND BRAD? “It’s been really good. It’s been really neat to see Brad come in and obviously have a little bit more skin in the game than most of your typical teammates would. It’s been fun to learn from. I think a lot of Brad’s experience from his truck team, from his advance manufacturing company that he’s operating, I think a lot of that is coming into play as he’s come over to RFK and applied some of that. I think it’s been neat to see him and Jack work so well together. I think they have a ton of similarities the more I’m around them I start to see a lot of each other in both of them, so that’s been neat to see and it’s been working out really well. I’ve been able to lean on Brad, I think back to specific cases where tracks that have not been my best through the years – and I go back to Phoenix and a track that Brad has had a lot of success at. I went down there and tested and was able to lean on Brad for a lot of advice and what he’s looking for and what he’s been successful with there at Phoenix in the past and was able to apply that and come home with a 10th-place run there at the beginning of the year. That was just one of the first cases where it was like, ‘Man, this is gonna be really helpful for me.’”

DO YOU FEEL THE ALL-STAR RACE SHOULD MOVE AROUND OR IS THERE ANYTHING YOU FEEL LIKE TEXAS CAN DO TO MAKE THINGS A LITTLE MORE EXCITING? “In my opinion, the All-Star Race should move around. I know that hasn’t been how it has been through the years, and that’s not the history of it, but if you want to call it an All-Star Race, I think you need to give an opportunity to different drivers who have different skill sets for different racetracks. At some point, it should probably go to a road course. I don’t think it should go to dirt (laughing), we should keep it to the asphalt roots, but we do enough road racing now that maybe that’s an opportunity in the future. I don’t think that’s the first place we should be switching it over to. I think there’s a lot of different racetracks. We’ve given it a few different shots here. I got asked this question not too long ago, or something similar, and the first thing that came to mind is if we took the All-Star and went to Phoenix every year, we would be really worried about Kevin Harvick winning every All-Star Race. That’s probably not the best indication for an All-Star Race if you’re trying to make it exciting and make it about who can get it done for a heads up and nothing on the line race. Well, it’s still gonna play into strong suits for different drivers, for different teams at different racetracks, so I’m a proponent for moving it around a little bit. I don’t know that it needs to be every year. I don’t know if it needs to be every two or three, I don’t have those answers, but I could see it moving around and that being a benefit of keeping it fresh as we keep going through it. Asking about Texas specifically and what they can do, I don’t know that there’s anything that needs to be done or can be done. The race can be good there. It’s a little bit dependent on track conditions. I know we’ve messed around with PJ1. We’ve tried to see if we could make that work. I don’t know with this car how it’s really been received as a good option or not, but I think that’s something we’ve got to keep in mind, that there are small options. At the end of the day, I just think if we move it around some it will keep it fresh and keep it exciting.”

YOU SAID YOU DON’T TYPICALLY PUT MUCH EMPHASIS ON QUALIFYING. NOW THAT YOU WON THE POLE AND SCORED STAGE POINTS YOU MIGHT WANT TO RETHINK THAT AND GET MORE AGGRESSIVE RIGHT OUT OF THE BOX? “To elaborate a little more on that statement, it’s not that we don’t focus on qualifying because it is very important and this weekend showed that. There are several that have, but I don’t know it’s specifically about sitting on the pole because there have been a lot of weeks through my career that sat on the pole and been like, ‘Man, this is great for one lap, but we’ve got a lot to work on for our race car.’ And then there’s been the opposite. There have been weeks where we had a really good race car and not worried about the qualifying side of it. There’s a balance. Qualifying is very important and very much so until we learn how to make this car less aero dependent from a team standpoint if that’s something we can accomplish, but it is a big part of what we’re racing. I guess if you’re going to the track to be the fastest, from my point of practice through qualifying and through the race, that does need to be the goal, but I don’t think the emphasis needs to be sitting on a pole every weekend. We’re gonna give it all we’ve got, but good race cars and everything we can do to win a race and I think we had a good balance of that this week. We had a really good race car, a really good qualifying car, but know some things now that maybe we would have given up a little bit of qualifying speed for some race speed that we would go back and put in the car at the expense of maybe a few positions for qualifying.”

DO YOU FEEL YOU AND SCOTT GRAVES ARE RECAPTURING THE CHEMISTRY YOU HAD FROM 2015 OR WAS THAT TOO LONG AGO TO COUNT ANYMORE? “No, it’s worth something. We’ve been able to get back in the swing of things and both of us have a whole lot more experience now than we did at that point, but a lot of the same characteristics and same nuances with each other are still there – a lot of the same positives are there that we’re able to work around and understand each other quickly. Neither one of us are, I guess if you’d want to say excitable or high-emotion people, but I think we can communicate very quickly and clearly because of that. So, I think there’s a certain amount of it that has definitely come into play and it’s starting to click here as we get into the first third of the season. I think it’s going to continue to get stronger as we all work as an entire team together and as the entire group is getting more comfortable with each other and figuring out what everyone needs and what we can all accomplish together, so there’s something to it and we’re gonna keep building on it to make sure there’s more of it as we keep going.”

WERE YOU A LITTLE EMOTIONAL AFTER GETTING THE POLE LAST WEEKEND? IF SO, WHY AND WHAT WAS IT LIKE WAITING FOR ALL THE CARS TO MAKE THEIR RUNS? “There was some pretty awesome emotion from it. It was definitely a cool feeling. It’s kind of wild to think, but I haven’t actually had a NASCAR pole across any of the series, unless you go back to the ARCA Series, so it was very neat. It was cool to go out there and put a lap down. We were the fourth car in our group to go out and qualify and the fourth car to qualify at all, so we waited around for a really long time and realized right then that our lap was gonna hold up pretty good. I stayed in the car because I was too nervous to do anything different. I was like, ‘OK, I put up a good lap. I’ll stay in the car and we’ll see how the rest of the field goes and, if need be, we can go back to the hauler.’ But I ended up staying in it through both groups and right up to our next lap. We were the second car to go out for the final round and felt pretty good about the lap. I had a little bit of a lift over in three and four that I thought might cost us, and I knew we had some fast cars that went and made only one lap and put down really good speed, so there was the thought in our team’s mind that they had fresher tires and they saved something for this round, too. I don’t know that we were real nervous. We were watching, paying attention, but didn’t turn the SMT on. We were sitting there talking about it. If we had SMT and we were sitting there watching, I don’t know if that would have made the nerves better or worse. If you’re sitting there and knew that you had him off of two, but they gained into three and see if you can get ‘em off of four. It was a little easier for us to just watch the monitor up top and see them come across the line and watch the times. It kind of took that split-second to react once it was all over. It’s like, ‘We are good, right? That was it?’ So it was definitely a cool one. Hopefully, it’s the first of many through the season. I think we have a lot of good things to build off from the Dover weekend – qualifying related, race related, race car related. There are a lot of positives from it, so it was definitely special. It’s cool to get that pole. It was cool to run well all day. I wanted to run a little better and I think we had some good ideas on how to balance it out for that single-lap speed versus long-run speed now.”

WHAT’S BEEN THE HARDEST PART FOR YOU OVER THE LAST EIGHT YEARS NOT BEING ABLE TO CONSISTENTLY REMIND PEOPLE WITH YOUR ON-TRACK PERFORMANCE THAT YOU ARE AS GOOD AS YOU ARE? “I think through my career, my Cup career more specifically, we had a lot of success in ARCA pretty quick and Xfinity pretty quick, and then when the Cup season came around after the championship, it was kind of a wild silly season for us, thinking that I was going to a Cup car at Roush. Through some downsizing ended up going over to Front Row and getting to drive for them and kind of doing the team alliance program that you see through many teams nowadays. I was fortunate enough to go over there and have some really good runs with Bob Osborne on top of the box, and got a win at Pocono and actually made the playoffs, which was pretty neat. I know we did it in an unorthodox way, but it was cool to do that in our first season and kind of do it as an underdog through all that. We’ve had splashes of really good runs through the last many years and we’ve been close in a lot of races, just trying to find consistency and really find a home base to land and build from. I think something that sticks out to me is it’s always difficult to go two or three years and make a complete change and try to build that chemistry back up and build that comfort or that confidence in everybody to be able to go have that success. It’s so hard to do that instantly, so it’s always taken a little bit of time to get that back going and always with a little bit of uncertainty with what next year may bring. I feel good about where we’re at at RFK right now. It’s the team that I started my professional career with. It’s the place where I’ve worked in the shop. I know most of the people throughout – volunteer over at pit practice over here, so it’s a place that I’ve put in a lot of effort. I’ve seen a lot of work go into it from everybody. I’ve seen growth through most of the employees there and I fee like it’s a place I can finish my career at as I always envisioned when I signed up 12 years ago. It is cool now to have that ability and thought process that this is something we’ve got to build towards a really long term and keep our heads down and get after. There’s a lot of potential here, a ton of potential, and I think with Brad coming in it’s opened a lot of people’s eyes and made them see some differences. It’s gotten a lot of people excited. He’s brought an energy that’s been really good and, like I said earlier, he reminds me a ton of Jack, but he is in every single piece that goes on his race car he’s involved and he’s in it, and I think that’s gonna help lead us towards even more success. I think there’s a ton of possibilities over here right now. I think that this last weekend was a good splash and a good start, but we’re gonna keep building on it and keep making it better.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL THE NEXT GEN CAR WILL BE AT DARLINGTON, WHERE IT’S ALWAYS DIFFICULT? “It’s difficult every week. Darlington has never been accused of being an easy track, so there is that. I think at the beginning of the year we may have been thinking of Darlington with a little bit more nerves knowing that simple wall impacts were really tweaking toe links and wrecking race cars, and I think we’ve moved past some of those issues. What I’m sitting here wondering right now is we’ve seen the composite bodies and the durability of the Xfinity cars kind of make heroes out of some drivers with a lot of aggression that would have paid a pretty big consequence in years past. I feel like we’re to a point now with the durability of our cars and with the bodies where they are, I think that there’s probably less penalty for being aggressive at Darlington. The stripe is something we always talk about when we go there, but it recently has cut tires down consistently. The body tolerances had gotten so tight that you hit the fence, knock the fender in on the tire and you cut it down and you’re done, or you’re playing catch-up the rest of the day. That’s the difficult part is judging where we’re gonna be there, judging what dirty air is gonna be like. I think that this car has been significantly better running side-by-side. We have not had the big aero loose moments. I think Dover showed a lot of that on restarts where the bottom does not get that loss of side force and that major penalty coming through one and two and even three and four on restarts. I think that’s gonna come into play at Darlington as well, but the car is still very sensitive front to rear and so that aero push when you’re getting in line, that’s gonna be tough to overcome. There are a handful of things that aren’t quite known and that we have some questions on. I think it’s gonna be a fun race car to drive there. I think now that the turn two bumps have been smoothed out and repaved and are much better there, I think that’s a good thing for this car as we’ve seen the bumps be a real big trouble area for it, so I think that part of it has been addressed to a point where we won’t be thinking about that as our major concern. At the end of the day, it’s gonna be like every week. We’re going into it with a whole lot more questions than we have answers and we’re just gonna go figure it out as we get on track and start making laps.”

ANY PARTICULAR EXPERIENCES OR MEMORIES YOU HAVE WITH MATT KENSETH SINCE YOU’RE RUNNING HIS OLD PAINT SCHEME THIS WEEKEND? “There’s a handful that weren’t really directly from the Cup racetrack. When I was running Legends cars at the Summer Shootout we got the opportunity to get Ross (Kenseth) into our other Legends car for the Shootout. I do remember Matt coming and hanging out with us then before I was really involved with Roush. Any of that was just through friendship with David Ragan as he was over at Roush at the time, so it was a cool moment for us as a kid just trying to get into the racing world – for him to come out and hang out as a normal person and get to hang out with Ross a little bit. It poured that weekend, so it was not the most ideal weekends, but fast forward up to 2011 and it was when I was running ARCA. We were getting ready for Salem race weekend and that’s when I got a call to come run my first Xfinity race at Richmond. It was very last-second. Trevor Bayne was the driver and he got sick that weekend, so I got called to sub in. I got to Richmond, got all of our stuff filled out and went and ran that race and then it was like, ‘Man, this is gonna be tough. I’ve got to get all the way over to Salem now for our race tomorrow.’ I don’t know if it was Matt offering or if Robbie Reiser was begging, but I did get to take Matt’s plane. I was the only person on his plane. It was the first time I had been in any kind of nice, private aircraft like that, and he was really nice enough to get me over to Salem so that I could get some rest and get ready for the race weekend and get after it as we were racing for a championship that year. Matt was really good to me early on when he probably hardly knew who I was, and then enjoyed being able to have some of those conversations with him during those times. It’s pretty cool to have his paint scheme on the car. It’s one of the more iconic paint schemes on board of our 17 Mustang. It did not go over so well with some of the crew as we’ve had one of our guys say, ‘You know it’s not good when our throwback is a car I used to work on. That just makes you feel old.’ So, I don’t know if it’s his favorite that we’ve run so far, but it is a really sharp looking race car. I’m really looking forward to getting it on track with Socios on board and the opportunity that they’ve presented not only us, but us and the 6 car with an opportunity for the fans to vote on their favorite schemes out of a certain handful and this is the one they chose that we get to go out and try to win with.”

CAN YOU SEE ANYTHING THE CHEVROLETS ARE DOING THAT HAS ALLOWED THEM TO WIN MORE TO START THIS SEASON? “At the end of the day seven out of 11, you can’t chalk it up to just circumstances. There’s speed there. It’s definitely something we’re all chasing. I don’t know that I have the answers for you on what it is. If I could tell you, we’d probably be working on it right now more aggressively, but I know that we’re working really hard from the Ford camp to put fast race cars on the track. I think you go back all the way to Daytona and had some awesome speed working together there, and I think we had that potential at Talladega and we got most of our fleet of Fords wiped out by the end the first stage, so we didn’t really have the opportunity to show that. There’s been a lot of speed there. We’re all working on it and trying to find it. If you get an answer from somebody, let us know so we can get after it, but we’ve had some really good Ford Mustangs on track and we’ve had speed. We’ve got to put it all together. I know Doug and the entire Roush Yates Engine shop are working really hard to provide us with excellent horsepower that’s been completely reliable, which has been a big part and a big unknown with this car as well as we’ve seen some really big temperature spikes at a lot of these racetracks where we wouldn’t typically. A lot of work is going into it. We’re getting after it. I don’t have a good answer for you yet, but we’re not quitting or we’re not sitting stagnant right now.”

’22 ADRL Tour Kicks Off May 13-14 at Texas Motorplex With Dragstock

DALLAS – The 2022 Extreme Racing Oil & Fuel American Drag Racing League (ADRL) Tour presented by RJS Racing Equipment kicks off its new season next Friday at the Texas Motorplex and as always, tickets are FREE!

For only $20 per carload, race fans can see the most powerful eighth-mile drag racing in the country and thanks to ADRL, every ticket is free. Just head to https://www.adrltour.com/print-free-tickets and print out as many as needed for two days of intense side-by-side competition.

Tickets can also be obtained at the Summit Racing Equipment location in Arlington in addition to hundreds of other locations in the greater DFW area.

The top names in Pro Extreme racing are scheduled to stake their claims as the Lone Star State’s baddest racer, names like Frankie “The Madman” Taylor, Bubba Stanton, “Fast” Eddie Rogers, Steve Wiley, and more. Dragstock represents the first of two full ADRL events hosted by the Motorplex this year, with the US Drags coming to the Dallas/Ft. Worth area Sept. 16-17.

“Off seasons seem to get longer every year,” said ADRL Promoter Mel Roth. “This year, though, has been worth the wait. No more masks! We’re finally able to get things back to normal at the race track and there’s no better place to kick off the season than the Texas Motorplex!

“There’s just something about racing in Texas,” he continued. “The fans here are rabid and know a good product when they see it. For us, that means putting on the best-possible show and thankfully, we’ve got the racers and the track crew to do it!”

For more information on the 2022 ADRL Dragstock at the Texas Motorplex, visit the official event page on Facebook by clicking HERE.

Marketing partners and racers interested in being involved with the 2022 Extreme Racing Oil & Fuel ADRL Tour presented by RJS Racing can email info@adrltour.com or by calling/texting Roth directly at 661-917-3078.

2022 ADRL Tour Schedule:

Dragstock May 13-14: Texas Motorplex
Gateway Drags Aug 5-6: World Wide Technology Raceway
U.S. Drags Sept 16-17: Texas Motorplex
Stampede of Speed Oct 11: Texas Motorplex (Pro Extreme Only)

Get the Gear! Need your merch for the 2022 ADRL Tour? Get everything you need by clicking HERE or by heading to the at-track Adrenaline Zone at every ADRL event!

For more information on the American Drag Racing League and to stay up-to-date on breaking news, follow them on their official page on Facebook at Facebook.com/ADRLTour and on Instagram and Twitter at @ADRLTour. Fans can also visit the official ADRL website at ADRLTour.com.

American Trucks Positive Payload Program

Parts Authority Donates $81,300 To Assist Local Non-Profits

PAOLI, Pa. (May 3rd, 2022) – Aftermarket parts authority, AmericanTrucks (AT) continues to give back through its ongoing Positive Payload Program. The initiative was designed to benefit non-profits who use and rely on pickup trucks to better their community. Since the program’s inception in 2017, AT has donated over $81,300 to deserving organizations across the U.S.  

Positive Payload Program awardees receive a $250 donation to support their efforts. Recent winners have included charities dedicated to affordable housing, animal rescue, disaster relief, food distribution, and more. Collectively, this represents 482 trucks driving over 2.5 million miles annually to complete 14,000+ community projects annually.

AT invites eligible charities to submit their application using the online form found on the Positive Payload Program page below. Visitors to the page will find requirements of entry, plus a list of recent participants and photos of the trucks they use to get the job done.

AT wishes to congratulate all its grantees and looks forward to helping even more charities achieve their goals throughout 2022.

Apply herehttps://www.americantrucks.com/positive-payload.html 

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About AmericanTrucks

AmericanTrucks is regarded as one of the best, most reliable online aftermarket retailers providing parts and accessories for F150, F250, Ranger, Silverado, Sierra, and RAM. Catering to the needs and demands of late-model truck owners and enthusiasts, AmericanTrucks provides the best parts with support from genuine truck experts. Located just outside of Philadelphia, AmericanTrucks is dedicated to offering the truck community with the highest quality of parts and customer service. Please visit https://www.americantrucks.com for more information.

RFK Weekly Advance | Darlington I

Roush Fenway Keselowski Weekly Advance | Darlington

The annual NASCAR Throwback weekend is on tap this weekend at Darlington Raceway as the Cup Series battles the track Too Tough to Tame Sunday afternoon for its first of two race events in 2022. Jack Roush has 20 wins all-time at Darlington including five in the Cup Series.

NASCAR Cup Series Race at Darlington
Sunday, May 8 | 3:30 p.m. ET
FS1, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90
· Brad Keselowski, No. 6 Socios Ford Mustang
· Chris Buescher, No. 17 Socios Ford Mustang

Throwin’ it Back to 2004

Both of RFK’s Ford Mustangs this weekend will match that of 2004 schemes from the Roush Racing days. Keselowski’s No. 6 machine will be similar to Mark Martin’s iconic blue and white scheme from the 2004 season, while Chris Buescher will recognize the popular No. 17 scheme Matt Kenseth made famous in 2004.

Darlington Two-Step

RFK has twice won consecutive NCS races at Darlington, including a season sweep in 1999 with former driver and current NBC commentator Jeff Burton. RFK also earned victories in consecutive seasons at the egg-shaped oval in 2005 and 2006 with Biffle.

Tale of the Tape

In 254 all-time NASCAR starts at ‘The Lady in Black,’ Jack Roush’s Fords have 20 wins, 69 top-five and 119 top-10 finishes, along with 20 poles. Over the years RFR has led 4,500+ laps across the Cup, Xfinity and Truck series, with more than 89,000 miles logged at the 1.366-mile track. In NCS action alone, RFK has finished top-10 in 43 percent (72-of-168) of the races with 35 top-five results and five wins.

Kickin’ It Old School

Legendary RFK drivers Mark Martin, Jeff Burton and Greg Biffle are responsible for the five Cup wins for Jack Roush at Darlington. Martin earned Roush’s first Cup win back in 1993 after leading 178 laps. Burton swept the 1999 events as the dominant car, and Biffle earned the two most recent victories in 2005 and 2006.

Most All-Time

It’s no secret that when Roush has dominated in the Xfinity Series at Darlington. In 79 starts, the organization has 15 wins, 33 top-five and 44 top-10s. Mark Martin is responsible for eight of the victories, second-most for him among any track, after winning five of the first seven races at the track for Roush from 1993-96. He also went on to win in 1999 and swept again in 2000. Jeff Burton got in on the fun with wins in 1997, 2001 and 2002, while Biffle earned a win in 2004. Most recently, Kenseth drove to victory lane in 2005 and 2009.

RFK Darlington Wins

1993-2 Martin Cup

1999-1 Burton Cup

1999-2 Burton Cup

2005 Biffle Cup

2006 Biffle Cup

1993-2 Martin NXS

1994-1 Martin NXS

1994-2 Martin NXS

1995-2 Martin NXS

1996-1 Martin NXS

1997-2 Burton NXS

1999-2 Martin NXS

2000-1 Martin NXS

2000-2 Martin NXS

2001-2 Burton NXS

2002-1 Burton NXS

2002-2 Burton NXS

2004-1 Biffle NXS

2005 Kenseth NXS

2009 Kenseth NXS

Toyota Racing – Weekly Preview – 05.04.22

This Week in Motorsports: May 2-8, 2022

· NCS/NXS/NCWTS: Darlington Raceway – May 6-8
· ARCA EAST: Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway – May 7

PLANO, Texas (May 4, 2022) – It’s officially throwback weekend at Darlington Raceway, as team’s showcase paint schemes of the past. The ARCA Menards Series East also hits its halfway point of the season in Nashville.

NASCAR National Series – NCS | NXS | NCWTS

Toyota Racing celebrates a milestone… Toyota is set to mark a significant milestone this weekend when the green flag waves in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race. The race will mark the 1,500th NASCAR event for Toyota since joining the Camping World Truck Series in 2004. To celebrate that moment two of Toyota’s Cup drivers – Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell will showcase schemes that led to milestone moments for Toyota. Hamlin will campaign his 2016 Daytona 500 winning scheme, while Bell will run his 2017 SiriusXM Truck Series championship title scheme. In the Truck Series, Tyler Ankrum and Chase Purdy will honor founding members of Team Toyota. Ankrum will honor Mike Skinner, one of Toyota’s first drivers in 2004 who won 12 races and earned 35 pole positions in a Tundra, and Purdy will honor Darrell Waltrip, one of Toyota’s first team owners in the Truck Series.

Truex looks to repeat… Martin Truex Jr. is looking for his first win of the season and Darlington Raceway seems like a perfect spot. Truex is the reigning winner of this race – an event that he dominated by leading 248 of 293 laps and winning both stages. It was Truex’s second victory at the track. He also won the Southern 500 in 2016.

Hamlin wins at Darlington… Denny Hamlin simply wins at Darlington Raceway. The Virginia-native earned his first win at the track ‘Too Tough to Tame’ in 2010 and has since added three additional victories – including a win last fall.

Bell continues to move forward… Christopher Bell is on a very impressive run as the third-year driver has scored four top-10 finishes in the last six races, including a fourth place run on Monday in Dover. Bell has moved from 29th in the point standings to 10th with the solid performance.

Jones returns to Darlington with momentum… Brandon Jones continues to hold momentum coming into Darlington after his Martinsville Raceway victory and pole at Dover Motor Speedway last weekend. Jones is a former winner at Darlington, winning the fall 2020 race in a Toyota throwback livery honoring Toyota’s first stock car champion, Robert Huffman.

Nemechek back in the 26… John Hunter Nemechek is back for a second consecutive week in the Xfinity Series, but this time he is back aboard the Sam Hunt Racing (SHR) No. 26 Toyota GR Supra. In two starts this season, Nemechek is averaging a top-10 finish and led the team’s first laps in Phoenix. Nemechek has several more Xfinity starts scheduled with both SHR and Joe Gibbs Racing this season. He will also be continuing the championship hunt in the Truck Series as he looks to finish one spot higher on Friday night than he did in Darlington last fall where he finished runner-up.

Heim looks for redemption… Corey Heim is back aboard the No. 51 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro this weekend, one season removed from making his series debut at the track. Heim was impressive as he drove through the field to the lead, before being involved in an accident.

Rhodes leads… Ben Rhodes continues to lead the Camping World Truck Series point standings as he looks to join his teammate Matt Crafton as a back-to-back champion in the series. Rhodes won the series’ most recent event in Bristol and has finished inside the top-five in five of the six races this season.

NASCAR Regional Series – ARCA East

Smith returns to Nashville as the leader … Reigning ARCA East champion Sammy Smith is back at Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway looking for another victory. Smith led over half of the laps on his way to his second career ARCA East win. A victory would also help grow his championship lead, which currently sits at two points.

Stay Connected

https://www.toyota.com/racing @ToyotaRacing.com @ToyotaRacing

facebook.com/ToyotaRacing Camera With Flash on Apple iOS 11.3 ToyotaRacingMedia.com

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About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs more than 48,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 43 million cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With the more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, more than a quarter of the company’s 2021 North American sales were electrified.

Through the Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Black’s Tire Supports Gilliland at its Hometown Track

South Carolina Based Auto Service Company to Pack the Track on Sunday

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (May 4, 2022) – NASCAR Cup Series Rookie Todd Gilliland will have the biggest cheering section in the grandstands this Sunday thanks to Black’s Tire. The Whiteville, N.C.- based company is expecting over 800 family and friends at the company at the track to cheer the No. 38 Black’s Tire Ford Mustang team and Gilliland. Gilliland will be making his first NASCAR Cup Series start at the track.

“It’s just so cool to know that I’m going to have all this support this weekend from Black’s Tire,” said Gilliland. “It just shows how dedicated they are to the Carolinas and to NASCAR. They are big race fans and have been involved in the sport and with our family for a long time. I just want to do them proud.”

Gilliland is also eager to make his first Cup Series start at the Darlington (S.C.) Raceway- one of NASCAR’s most difficult tracks. Luckily for Gilliland, he comes back to the track with experience.

He accumulated a Top-five and a Top-10 in his time in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. He is now ready to come back in the Black’s Tire Mustang.

“Darlington is a big rhythm track,” Gilliland said. “I like those types of races where you can just run your race and hopefully have a pretty good day. The track itself is tricky, you are running extremely high, and it is very easy to get that famed ‘Darlington stripe’ if you get into the wall. We just need to be patient and let the track and race come to us.”

Black’s Tire will return their new 2022 scheme that debuted at the Richmond (Va.) International Raceway earlier this year. They are excited for the weekend.

“This is a big weekend for everyone involved with our company,” said Ricky Benton, Owner, Black’s Tire. “We have hundreds of people attending the race and we are going to make a big presence. We want everyone cheering for Todd and the Black’s Tire Ford Mustang and we are going to be the leaders. We are proud to represent all the fans in the Carolinas where we live and do business this Sunday in Darlington.”

Gilliland and the Black’s Tire team will take the green flag from Darlington this Sunday at 3:30 pm ET on FS1.

About Black’s Tire

Black’s Tire was formed as Black’s Service Station by W. Crowell Black in Whiteville, N.C. in 1929. Now, with 63 locations in the Carolinas. Black’s operates 54 tire & automotive service locations, 6 warehouse/distribution centers, three satellite wholesale DCs, BTS Tire & Wheel Distributors, a commercial sales division and a tire-retreading business, Carolina Retreads. The Black’s Tire family includes more than 930 family members.

To learn more about Black’s Tire or to find a location, visit www.blackstire.com. Follow Black’s Tire and Auto Service on social media: Twitter at @BlacksTire, Instagram at @BlacksTire and Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/blackstire.

About Front Row Motorsports

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Camping World Truck Series and the 2021 Daytona 500 champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team– from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

Smith Ready to Return After Lengthy Two Week Break

Looking to Put FR8 Auctions in Victory Lane at Darlington

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (May 4, 2022) – Zane Smith is ready to get back to racing this weekend at the Darlington (S.C.) Raceway. The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is coming off a two week break after Smith finished 10th on the dirt at the Bristol Motor Speedway.

Smith enters this Friday’s race fourth in the driver standings and is currently the only driver in the Truck Series with two win this season. The team hopes to add a third this weekend in Darlington- especially for partner Fr8 Auctions.

“I’m itching to get back behind the wheel this weekend at Darlington,” Smith stated. “It’s been a long two weeks, but not without a lot of hard work. The guys have been putting in a big effort for Darlington and I feel good about the truck we are preparing.”

Smith is excited to have Fr8 Auctions back on his Ford F-150 at Darlington, a track that has been kind to him in the past.

“I enjoy racing at Darlington,” said Smith. “It’s one of those tracks that you have to find a good rhythm to be fast, and I like that challenge. And I really want to take Fr8 Auctions to victory lane for Front Row Motorsports. They are a loyal partner to Bob (owner Bob Jenkins) and their truck looks cool. We want to win just as much for them as we do for us.”

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Darlington will air live on Friday at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

ABOUT FR8 AUCTIONS

Fr8Auctions partner with freight lines, distribution companies, and consumer product-based businesses to help sell excess, discontinued or damaged inventory outside of traditional distribution channels. Utilizing industry leading merchandising techniques, product presentations, and a competitive bidding environment, Fr8Auctions offers both their partners and buyer’s opportunities to maximize returns on their investments. Buyers can also access online (sealed bid) auctions to bid on the thousands of pallets of merchandise, which can range from gas grills to ceiling fans and cleaning products.

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Camping World Truck Series and the 2021 Daytona 500 champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team– from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

McDowell Confident Leading into Darlington

Navage Nasal Care Ford Driver Has Top-10 Speed

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (May 4, 2022) – Michael McDowell and his No. 34 Navage Nasal Care Ford Mustang team will tackle the always challenging, egg-shaped, Darlington (S.C.) Raceway this weekend.

McDowell, has had three consecutive weeks of top-10 speed, taking home two top-10 finishes in the last three events. Darlington has always been a challenging track for all drivers, but he is poised for another great finish ahead.

“It wouldn’t be too far to say that this season has been our strongest yet. While we don’t have a win like we did last year though this point, the consistency and performances have been there. It’s always great to finish top-15 with the competition we have in the Cup Series this year. To already have three top-10’s this early in the season with our Navage Nasal Care Ford is great. It really shows the dedication and work that Blake and all the guys have been putting into this car each week.” says McDowell.

He continues, “We were pretty nervous last weekend about how the new car would take to the abrasive surface and bumps in Dover, but after the run we had, I’m confident that we can replicate that this weekend as well. Darlington is tricky with how you dial the car in with it’s different profiles of corners, but the key to success is finding that perfect balance between the two. If we can do that like we did last week, we will have another competitive result in our Navage Nasal Care Ford.”

McDowell and the No. 34 Navage Nasal Care Ford Mustang team will race again this Sunday, May 8th, at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

ABOUT RHINOSYSTEMS, INC

RSI is the creator of Naväge Nasal Care, a ground-breaking product developed to improve people’s lives through daily nasal hygiene. Naväge is the world’s only nasal irrigator with powered suction. Naväge products are available online at navage.com and at CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Bed Bath, Target, and Walmart.

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Camping World Truck Series and the 2021 Daytona 500 champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team– from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.