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Ford Performance NASCAR: Chase Briscoe and Joey Hand Prepare for COTA

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix Advance |Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Chase Briscoe and Joey Hand took part in today’s Ford Zoom media call. Briscoe will be going for his first road course win in the NASCAR Cup Series on Sunday while Hand is making his season debut in the No. 15 Ford Pass Ford Mustang for Rick Ware Racing. Here’s a transcript of today’s Q&A session.

CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Mahindra Tractors Ford Ford Mustang – WHAT SUITS THIS NEW CAR TO YOUR DRIVING STYLE? “I don’t know. I don’t feel like I’m really doing anything different. I feel like the last couple weeks the car has driven pretty similar to the old Cup car, not the 550 stuff, but the 750 package and things like that, so I don’t know. I feel like just as a team we’ve gotten better. We’ve had more speed in our race cars where last year was obviously a struggle, but, to me, they don’t drive a whole lot different. I don’t know if other guys just have more habits to break, where I didn’t really have a lot of things to break as far as from an experience standpoint, but I don’t feel like I’m doing anything different and don’t feel like the cars drive a whole lot different. It is kind of a hybrid between a Cup car and an Xfinity car from a feel standpoint, but I just feel like our cars have been really good. We’ve had a lot of speed and we’ve been able to capitalize on that, where last year we never had speed a lot of the time and the races we did have speed and ran up front, we didn’t have it consistently like we’ve been able to this year so far.”

ALL OF THE WINNERS THIS YEAR ARE UNDER 30. IS THERE A REASON ALL THE YOUNG GUYS SEEM TO BE WINNING RACES? “No, I don’t think so. I think there’s a majority of guys are under 30 now and you throw in the guys under 30, a lot of them are at good teams. The guys that are over 40 or over 30 there’s not very many of them and a lot of them are at good teams, too, but I think we just have the numbers. In the past, it was always a lot more older guys and there wasn’t very many younger guys and if there were younger guys there weren’t very many that were in good cars. Now, we just have a higher percentage every week of winning just from a numbers standpoint. I don’t think there’s really much to read into it as far as younger guys being better in this car. I think it’s just a case of the numbers and the probability of it all. We just have a better chance, typically, because there’s more of us.”

HOW DOES IT COMPARE RUNNING UP FRONT TO IN THE BACK OR MIDDLE OF THE PACK? WHAT ARE YOU LEARNING? “I would say all the racing is hard, but when you’re racing for 20th in the Cup Series, at least for me in my career, it’s the hardest I’ve ever had to race. It’s so cut-throat, where when you get in that top five you’re still racing super hard, but there’s more give-and-take, there’s a lot cleaner racing. It’s just a different atmosphere. Guys are running for the win, but they will typically run as close as they can without hitting you, where when you’re running 20th it’s just guys hitting you and everything else. It’s just chaos, truthfully, back there and there’s just a lot more respect, I feel like, the farther up towards the front you get, so it’s been nice this year to be able to run farther up in the front and earn that respect and earn that trust with guys that are running up there weekly, and hopefully we can continue to. I feel like that’s where we need to be and we’ve shown that we’re capable of doing that this year, so I would say that’s the biggest difference, just the style of racing and the respect in the top five versus when you’re running for 20th.”

HOW DIFFERENT ARE THINGS BEHIND THE SCENES WITH YOUR NEW SPONSORS? “It’s been really cool. I’ve been super fortunate my entire career. All of my sponsors that I’ve had I’ve had really good relationships with and are all incredible people and we’ve been able to build a lot of really cool things, but where Mahindra is different is it’s really the first time I’ve been aligned, with the exception of maybe on or two times, with an actual consumer brand. You look at High Point, for example, it’s not as much of a consumer play. It’s more of a B2B thing, whereas Mahindra is trying to sell tractors to fans and that’s something that I haven’t really had at the higher levels of NASCAR is a consumer brand as a sponsor. It’s been cool to see the approach and what they’re trying to do to correlate that over to tractor sales and it’s been a lot of fun. Anytime you can bring a new partner into the sport it’s special, and to be able to do it and do it in a way that we’ve been able to do it and make a big splash, and it’s all because of them. They are obviously investing a lot, not only with the race team, but with our broadcast partners and things like that, so it’s been really cool for me. I feel like it’s only helping my brand to let people see my personality in these commercials and things like that, so it’s been really cool. We’re not done doing stuff yet. There are still a lot of cool things coming down the pipe and hopefully we’ll be able to announce some of that soon. It’s just been a lot of fun for me to see how enthusiastic they are about this race team deal and it’s been a lot of fun.”

WHAT WERE YOU THOUGHTS ABOUT COTA AND AUSTIN LAST YEAR? YOU AVOIDED A LOT OF THE ISSUES OTHERS ENCOUNTERED IN THE RAIN. “From the racetrack standpoint I’m kind of going there for the first time, just because last year I don’t think I ever ran a single lap in the dry. I don’t think I ever ran a single lap in the dry. I think we practice, qualified, everything in the wet, so it’s gonna be like learning a whole new racetrack this week. I know from a facility standpoint it’s pretty remarkable. It’s super cool to go out there. The fan, even last year in the rain, there were a ton of them out there, so I’m excited to see what it looks like this year. From a city standpoint, I didn’t do a ton of exploring last year, but I know Austin is a really cool town from everybody else that’s explored. I’m gonna try to do a little bit more this year while we’re there, just because we’re there a little bit longer than typical. I’m super excited to get back. I’m really excited, truthfully, just to get this Next Gen car on a road course. I think by themselves, when I’ve run them at the Roval, they’re a blast to run on the road course. I’m curious to see what the racing will be like. I think it will definitely change the landscape of these road course races. I think you’re gonna see a lot more guys be competitive than year’s past because you can drive this car so much harder. It does a lot of things a lot better than the old car, so it’ll be interesting to see how that works out and plays out, but I’m super excited to get out there. It looks like the weather is gonna be really good and it should be a great show.”

TONY STEWART HAS SAID YOU ARE SECURE IN YOUR SPACE AT SHR. HOW MUCH DOES THAT HELP YOU IN TERMS OF JUST BEING ABLE TO FOCUS ON RACING? “It’s huge. I think from a confidence standpoint it’s always hard when you’re running in that midpack area you’re always questioning, ‘Are they gonna want you back the following year?’ So running up front definitely helps, but hearing it from your owner, whether it’s Justin Marks at Trackhouse or Tony at Stewart-Haas, whenever your owner tells you, ‘Hey, you’re good. Just go out there and do your own thing and do whatever you feel you need to do,’ it definitely gives you a confidence and it relaxes you and you just go out there and relax. I feel like whenever you’re always questioning if you’re gonna be back or you’re really on the edge of your seat as far as coming back the next year, you start second guessing what you’re doing and when you’re second guessing, at least for me, I feel like I make the wrong decisions, so whenever you can go out there and just react and be confident and trust your abilities, I feel like it goes a long ways on the racetrack as far as results go. I can’t speak for how Ross reacts to that, but it seems like this year he has been really really fast and up front week in and week out, so I think that goes a long way. Like I said, I know it does for me.”

DID THAT WIN TAKE THE PRESSURE OFF? “Yeah, a little bit, but just because you won once doesn’t mean you’re safe. I think you have to keep winning and running up front, so I think it shows you’re capable and you proved that you can get it done, but, again, getting it done once is different than getting it done 10 times. You’ve got to keep doing it and you’ve got to keep repeating and trying to be up front. I think that’s where it’s more important. Winning one race is really nice. I’m not saying that. It’s awesome to win one race, but we want to win a lot more than one. I do think it gives you a little bit of security for a couple weeks, but this sport is so up-and-down as far as the stock side of things go. You can win every race and then you start struggling for a couple weeks and people start questioning you. Look at Jimmie Johnson, the guy won seven championships. He’s an incredible race car driver and towards the end of his NASCAR career people thought he couldn’t drive and that’s the furthest thing from the truth. He’s still capable of going out and running up front. He didn’t forget how to drive overnight, so I think you have to keep trying to run up front just because your stock is always up-and-down, but winning is definitely nice. I feel like it gets some stress off your back for a couple weeks, but you’ve got to go to the racetrack the next week and continue to try and back it up.”

HOW MUCH PASSING CAN WE EXPECT WITH A DRY RACETRACK THIS WEEKEND? “I think it’ll definitely be different. I mean, last year’s race will look way different than this year’s race with the weather. I think there was really good racing last year. It’s a different style of racing when it was that wet, but from a driver’s standpoint it’s a lot of fun, just the visibility is obviously tough and then from a fan’s standpoint it’s tough to see what’s going on and a little more miserable than if it was a really nice day. I think this car on the road courses is where it’s really gonna shine and, truthfully, on the oval stuff it’s been a lot better than what people expected. I think the road course is probably gonna blow it out of the park. It’s a really well-built race car, especially for road course racing. It’s gonna be interesting to see with 40 of us out there going for it versus just a test session – what that difference looks like – but I think COTA is a really good racetrack to unveil this thing on a road course and I’ve been really excited to get there, so I’m looking forward to it.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THIS NEW CAR AT RICHMOND IN A COUPLE OF WEEKS? “I think the racing has been good in the past, it’s just so circumstantial. Everybody’s view of what makes it a good race is different. Some people want to see a lot of passing. Some people want to see the cars slipping and sliding around. Some people want to see wrecks. Others just want to see a close finish at the end. That definition of a good race is different for everybody, so I think, for me at least, I think in the past Auto Club has been a blast. I had a blast there this year, too. Richmond, I don’t really know what to expect. I do think this car probably creates a little more grip than the old car does at places like Richmond, but I honestly don’t know what to expect when we go to Richmond. I think that we haven’t really seen this car on a true short track. Yeah, Phoenix is a short track, but there’s not a lot of tire fall off, where at Richmond there’s a ton of fall off, so how does this car react to that. It’ll definitely be interesting just how this car plays into tire saving and guys going hard and things like that. I do think that this car everywhere we go there are a lot of comers and goers. You have guys that are extremely good on the short run, guys that are good on the long run and with this car you’re just constantly changing positions and I think you throw in the tire fall off side of things at Richmond and it’s gonna be interesting for sure.”

CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH JOHNNY KLAUSMEIER? “I feel like from the get-go we’ve always gotten along really well. From a personal standpoint, I feel like we’re both a lot alike. That’s kind of been different for me than crew chiefs I’ve had in the past. A lot of my crew chiefs aren’t as, I guess, I don’t even know what the word would be, just as laid back and relaxed as Johnny is. So it’s been kind of different for me because normally it’s a deal where it’s hot and cold, where one guy is more amped up all the time and the other guys is really relaxed, where me and Johnny are both pretty relaxed all the time. I think as we’ve continued to learn each other we’ve only gotten better. Last year was tough just from the standpoint of no practice and no qualifying, trying to learn each other. He was trying to figure out what I was even asking for sometimes. He hasn’t worked with any sprint car guys before and just our lingo and what we look for and I felt like towards the end of last season we really started to click as far as what I liked in the race car and this year we’ve done a phenomenal job of doing the same. I think our success on the racetrack has honestly become a lot because of having practice and having qualifying and all these things, where last year we were always trying to catch up and it just made it a real struggle. By the end of the race I always felt like our car drove really good and we were one of the faster cars, but we were just buried from a track position standpoint. We were already a lap down from the beginning of the race, so us being able to have practice and get our car driving really good and then go qualify and be able to start up front has been really good for our team.”

HOW HAS JOEY HAND HELPED YOU WITH YOUR ROAD COURSE DEVELOPMENT? “It’s been huge. Joey is obviously an extremely good road course racer. He has a little bit of a dirt background, so he can kind of relate to what I go through, but it’s been huge. Anytime you can have somebody come from a different discipline and different style driving cars and give input, it’s huge. We’ve seen that with other manufacturers kind of doing the same thing and, for me, I like criticism. I like people telling me what I’m doing wrong and he literally just gave me a whole sheet of things I could try different, and I think the good thing about being at the simulator and having Joey here is just the fact that you can run laps, he can see it and come out and say, ‘Hey, try this, this and this,’ and you can apply it. You don’t have to wait until the weekend to try things. I know last year I as definitely able to find speed in places that he was telling me to try things in the simulator. Now we have to race against him. I’ve been telling him all day long that I think he’s gonna be really, really good this weekend. It’ll be interesting to see how those guys run. This thing, in a sense, is a lot like a sports car, which is what he’s used to, so I’m excited to see him run this thing this weekend and think he’ll be one of the guys to beat.”

JOEY HAND, No. 15 Ford Pass Ford Mustang – ARE YOU FAMILIAR WITH WHAT THEY’VE DONE AT COTA AND WILL IT CHANGE THE RACING? “I haven’t been on it. I am familiar with where they’ve re-asphalted and I’ve got some friend that have driven there in some Trans Am cars and TA2 cars. I don’t think it’s gonna change the racing much. It will be interesting to see how much grip the new surface has. It’s from two all the way pretty much down to turn 11, right at the start of the brake zone for turn 11. I think the big things is, what everybody is talking about, is there are a lot less bumps through the esses, so a lot of places where you had some big bumps finishing the esses and into that turn six area it sounds like it’s a lot smoother. So, like we’ve been talking about here when coaching some of the guys, I don’t see the line changing. I think it potentially is gonna be a little easier to balance the car and not have to go through these bigger bumps. I don’t think it’ll change a lot. I think the grip level over on the other side, like in the 12, 13, 14, 15 area, that’s been a pretty slippery spot in year’s past and I think if that adds grip – the one thing that will be interesting is what it looks like if they started the repave right at the end of the brake zone, at the end of the back straightaway so entering turn 12, so you’re gonna come off old pavement and onto new. So, that will be interesting if the new pavement has more grip, chasing the front. The front gets there first. Does it grip up and get the car loose and then how do you chase that? It will be cool of that section has more grip because that’s where you kind of see these cars just kind of idle around there, just working and trying to find that rear grip, so it will be cool if it’s better there.”

DID YOU TALK TO TRUEX AFTER THE ROVAL RACE AND DOES THAT IMPACT HOW YOU HANDLE BEING SOMEONE WHO DOESN’T RACE REGULARLY IN THE SERIES? “I did talk with him immediately the next morning. We were both at the Next Gen test and we both have some mutual friends – Boris Said and Justin Marks, who owns Trackhouse. He’s one of my best friends. I walked right up to him (Truex) and said, ‘Hey, I didn’t mean to do that, for sure.’ I just rolled off the brakes and got in the back of him and didn’t expect that at all. It wasn’t intentional. It wasn’t in my best interest at all, that’s for sure. My car had been torn up. I got dumped in the wall there and it wasn’t driving right and I shouldn’t have ever been that close to him to start with, but it’s the end of the race and there’s a lot going on, for me at least, just handing onto that thing and just rolled in there and got a piece of him. I talked to him about it. He was like, ‘Aw, man. I don’t even remember that. I was mad for 20 minutes after the race and not a problem anymore.’ So that’s how it ended. I stood there and talked to him. Actually, Justin Marks walked up at the same time and we had a chat. I had never talked to him before in my life, to be honest. A good dude. Everybody I know that knows him says he’s a great guy and we actually chatted a couple more times during the day. He just stopped and asked me how the car was going and what I thought and stuff like that, so no problem there, that’s for sure. Again, it wasn’t what I meant to do, but things happen, so at least he got through the playoffs and nothing bad.”

DRIVER’S DON’T FORGET THOSE KIND OF INCIDENTS, BUT REPORTERS DON’T FORGET EITHER. “It’s funny, a lot of people ask me what the best attribute is for a race car driver and I tell them, a short memory, which I have a good short memory because some days you’re gonna win and some days you’re gonna lose and the next day you’re gonna win or you might lose, so I always tell my son, who is racing, a short memory because you might be really great and the next day you’re not. Some people, in that case with Martin, he was like, ‘Forget it, let’s move on.’ And I was the same way. Certain times, I will say, the memory gets longer if somebody gets you in a really important time, then that memory kind of sticks in there.”

WHAT ARE THE SPECIAL CHALLENGES AT COTA AND WHAT DO YOU LOOK FORWARD TO MOST DRIVING AROUND IT? WHAT ATTRIBUTES MAKE FOR A GOOD ROAD COURSE DRIVER? “I think the thing about COTA that people notice is you can take a lot of risks there without a lot of issues, so the worst thing if you miss the esses is you run wide, you don’t stuff it in the fence – there’s a lot of run off – so you can take a pretty high amount of risk and not really wreck your car, let’s put it that way if we’re talking about driving your own lap. So, that’s one thing about COTA. I think it’s a fun track. When I went there 10 years ago at least for the first time it’s one of the more difficult tracks to learn because how you set up for the start of the esses, which is turn three, can affect you in turn seven and you can’t really get back. If you get it wrong, seriously talking that turn seven can be wrong. So it’s the kind of place where if you know some stuff and know a few tricks and you place your car properly, you can be much better off. You can fight the racetrack if you don’t, so that’s a lot of stuff I’m doing here trying to help guys out, just what I’ve learned there because I just have straight up more experience because I’ve been there more – what things can get you in trouble, what doesn’t, where to place your car, where not to, things like that. Attributes of a race car driver is probably reps. The more reps you do anything the better off you’re gonna be, but the big thing you’re always gonna see in road racing is who’s the best on the brakes. Most people when you’re just joking around with your buddies it’s like, ‘I’m gonna just brake when I get down there and I’m gonna do it and whatever.’ There’s no real expertise to it and everybody thinks it’s just about putting the power down. We’ll I can teach anybody to get the power down and drive the car straight off the corner, but it’s really difficult to teach people how to really push that brake zone, how to get those downshifts done, how to manage a weight transfer and all this different stuff. What you’ll notice in road race guys is the best of the best are the best brakers. Look at F1, Senna was great on brakes. Guys that are legends are normally the guys you call King of the Late Braker or just really effective on brakes, so that would be the number one attribute, I think.”

WHICH FORD DRIVERS HAVE STOOD OUT TO YOU IN THIS MENTORING ROLE AND WHY? “I worked with five yesterday and this week I’m about 10 or 11 between truck, Xfinity and Cup, but everybody has a different background. Like Chase was talking about, he’s a dirt racer and so the one thing that I’ve learned when I get in here is, let’s just say one thing is I started coaching when I was 15 years old. I started teaching at driving schools when I was young. I started my own driving school when I was 16 years old, a karting school back in California, and one thing about coaching people is it teaches you how to drive better also because painting the picture and getting things across to people is not always the way you say it or the way you feel it that’s gonna work for them, so you’ve got to kind of quickly understand who you’re dealing with. Chase is a dirt guy and he’s got some different lingo maybe and he likes to drive a car a little bit more free than most guys, so you have to take all that into account. You’ve got Kevin Harvick, who has done way more laps at any of these track in these cars than I have by a lot, so when I went to Sonoma to help him I’m like, ‘How am I gonna help this guy? He’s been doing it for 20 years at this track,’ But the thing about it is I’m trying to pick up tiny little things. If I can help the guys that have been doing this a long time get a tenth or two, then I’ve helped them out because of how close NASCAR racing is, but I don’t think anybody stands out better than the other, but everybody is definitely different on style of how they drive and just how they need to get feedback and how it needs to be spoken to them. It’s not a lot different for me than, the same thing what I tell my son, who is 15 years old, you need to be able to paint the picture for the engineer, for your crew chief. That’s something that’s really helped me in my career is how to paint the picture of how the car is driving, so that they can make a change in the right direction and not just have to throw one from the hip and be a 50/50 change, right or wrong. So the better you paint that picture, the better off you are and that goes the same in here when I’m helping these guys. I just try to paint the picture. I try to explain it. I use my hands a lot. That’s a big thing for me and us race car guys we do do that – pitch and heave and side and roll. I will say that since I started doing this last year it’s impressive how good these guys are even though we’re talking about road courses and everybody calls me a road course specialist or ringer or whatever, but these guys know how to drive. They just know how to drive. They really take tips and run with them really well.”

IS THERE A WALL YOU HAVE TO BREAK THROUGH WHEN TALKING WITH A VETERAN LIKE HARVICK, OR ARE THEY RECEPTIVE RIGHT AWAY? “These guys have been super receptive and it’s one of the things I was a little concerned about coming in here was how am I this guy that doesn’t even run NASCAR and these guys do it all the time, should I really be telling them what to do? It was that kind of thing. I was very pleasantly surprised on how receptive everybody has been, especially Kevin. You understand why he’s done what he’s done and he’s won what he’s won. He really studies stuff. He spends a lot of time trying to get better, so it’s been all good. Everybody is very receptive and we actually have a good time with it. I get to hop in and drive a little bit, not just my time, I’ll hop in and give my feedback to them and kind of give them some direction that way also, so it’s been good. There is no issue there. We have fun. I’ve got some new friends, for sure. I spend more time with others just because of how it works out with the timing in here, but it’s been cool and cool to meet all these guys.”

CAN YOU GIVE ME A SENSE OF HOW THIS NEW CAR CAN POTENTIALLY BRIDGE THE GAP BETWEEN NASCAR AND ROAD COURSE RACING? “It’s definitely gonna bridge that gap between the difference in driving. When I hopped in the Gen 6 car it was very different having that 15-inch tire, kind of a balloon-ish tire, where you have to be real careful with it, it could chatter really easy. What I noticed with the old car was like me driving 80 percent was the right amount to push that car. As soon as I was in the race I was like, ‘I’m gonna lay one down. This is gonna be the one,’ and add five or 10 percent, I was off the track, wide, sliding the tire, chatting the tire. That’s the difference is, not necessarily this car is gonna be easier to drive (the Next Gen car), but it will be easier to run right on the ragged edge, so it’ll be a 95 percent car driving all the time. The tire works better being a bit wider, being a lower profile. The independent suspension, the sequential gearbox, it all drives a lot more like a GT car would. It’s still very heavy, though, so that’s one of the things you still manage – roll, where you manage that weight distribution, things like that – that’s still the NASCAR feeling of it, but having some underbody downforce for the diffuser and a fairly good functioning splitter, it changed a lot. The brake markers, let’s just say a marker-and-a-half deeper, just about that, so that’s a good bit deeper on the brakes. I think when you compress those brake zones, the racing is gonna get better. It is gonna be more door-to-door, I think, down into these brake zones. It won’t be as easy to just send it down in there. Because it’s condensed, it’s gonna be a little more about stuffing it in there and really be aggressive with your brake zones. I have a good feeling the racing is gonna be even better. I enjoyed my little bit there at the Roval and I’ve enjoyed watching NASCAR all my life on road courses, but I do think this is going to up the game as far as road course racing goes and, for sure, it’ll be better as far as guys leaving NASCAR, these guys going to run sports cars, it’ll be a much easier swap over other than most stuff is running ABS now in sports cars, but, other than that, the swap over will be a lot closer. And, don’t tell anybody, but I think it will be easier coming from sports cars to here a little bit also. I like this little bit. My buddy, Andy Lally, is gonna be running this weekend. I’ll get to race against my old buddy AJ Allmendinger. We used to throw down in go karts when we were kids, and my buddy, Boris Said. There are gonna be some road racers out there, for sure.”

AS A PARENT NOW OF A 15 YEAR OLD, HOW DO YOU LOOK AT THE OPTIONS AVAILABLE IN TERMS OF RACING SERIES AND GETTING HIM THAT EXPERIENCE? “People ask me that a lot because I”ve been in the business a long time and a lot of friends have kids at the race and just people walk up and say, ‘Hey, you’ve done it. You’ve made it. How do I get my kid there?’ I’m like, ‘That’s a very good question.’ I don’t know how I got here necessarily. I know I got here with a lot of good people helping me out. From our standpoint I will answer that question directly the way I look at it. We don’t have enough money as a family to go race on and pick what we’re gonna race, so what I tell everybody is we’re gonna race whatever the next person says, ‘Hey, you want to come drive my car?’ We’ve had some luck lately with my son, not jumping off topic, with that situation – a friend, somebody that’s kind of helped him out a little bit with karting and travel and stuff like that, that has some stock cars said, ‘Hey, you want to come drive our stock car one night on an oval, a late model?’ And he was able to do that and that was his first drive, but I’m not big on picking a direction. I don’t think that’s the way to do it. I’m more of a throwback, old-school kind of a guy where I think you should just drive everything. I’m more on the Larson frame of mind, where sit in a sprint car, sit in a late model, sit in a stock car – whatever you can get into – a prototype, whatever. But in our situation specifically, it’s gonna be whatever somebody offers up as a test and go drive it. My goal for him is be prepared to capitalize on opportunities. That’s all I did. Somebody said, ‘Come drive my sprint car.’ ‘OK.’ ‘Come test the formula car.’ ‘OK.’ But I don’t think there’s any better thing than being versatile in this day and age and being able to jump in something and go fast, and I really don’t think being young is that big of a deal. I don’t think you have to be 13, 14, 15 and driving a stock car right now. I moved on. My first race car racing season I was 19 years old in 1998, so I think it’s more about being prepared. We’re not rushing anything, that’s for sure, and what I would tell people is I would just say be ready for the opportunity and that means reps – practice, race, whatever you can do. Be ready for whatever opportunity comes.”

DO YOU SEE OTHER PARENTS ARE IN A HURRY? THAT IF THEIR CHILD IS 15 OR 16 THEY SHOULD BE AT A CERTAIN POINT ALREADY? “I see that pressure all the time and that’s what I’m saying. I think that you can be ready at a young age, but you don’t have to be. I know the reason I got jobs in my career mostly was because I could finish the deal. I could race and I could finish. I would be a guy that you’d want to put in when it was time to get going and finish it up. I think that’s the most important thing. If you’re not ready and you move on, it’s not any different than any other sport – a guy comes out of high school and instead of playing college or whatever and then is not ready and he doesn’t make it the whole way or he’s out, you don’t know his name in a few years. I just think you need to be ready for whatever you’re gonna do and there’s no real timing. I mean, unfortunately you get in your early twenties and stuff people just kind of judge you and say you’re too old, but when we’re talking about teenage kids I think it can be a little bit of anything. If I had a choice for him, when I see this kind of racing and having NASCAR going towards Next Gen stuff and seeing the way the cars drive and seeing where IMSA and sports car racing is going right now, these kids that are coming up through right now – it’s a great time to be a race car driver if you’re trying to make it up through because there’s a lot of opportunity coming in sports cars because of the great leadership there and what they’re doing with all that. As far as I’m concerned, when talking about my kid and maybe I’ll teach him that this Next Gen car is a great place for him to go, too, because I will have some experience.”

DO YOU SEE THE NASCAR NEXT GEN CAR DRIVING SIMILAR TO A SPORTS CAR? “Oh yeah, for sure, but the big thing is always gonna be downforce. Obviously, prototypes right now are the highest level of downforce. We’re talking about sports cars and not Indy Car or F1, but in our world here, sports cars, we’re talking about prototypes have high downforce and the GT has high downforce now too. The GT3 spec, which is where everything is gonna go to and is going to is a pretty high downforce car – not huge horsepower, but plenty and then it has ABS, that’s really the big difference. The Next Gen car, again we have a huge difference in downforce from the old car, especially coming from the bottom of the car with the diffuser and the splitter, so it’s definitely more in that direction. I would say the Cup car just drives a little more sideways. You would always drive this car a little more yaw just because it has a little bit less downforce. Obviously, when we go up on downforce we drive the car much straighter, we drive the cars into push more, understeer more. In the Next Gen car, that will be the case in some of the higher speed corners when the diffuser is really making downforce, but up off these slow corners – first gear corners at a lot of these tracks – you’re still gonna see the cars drive in a similar manner, where guys are working throttle and working the yaw and trying to get traction, trying to put traction into action. You’re still gonna see that.”

Brad Keselowski – COTA Advance

Team: No. 6 Wyndham Rewards Ford Mustang
Crew Chief: Matt McCall
Twitter: @RFK6Team, @RFKRacing and @keselowski
Race Format: 231.8 miles, 68 laps, Stages: 15-17-36
Practice – Saturday, March 26 at 10 a.m. ET on FS1, SiriusXM Channel 90
Qualifying – Saturday, March 26 at 11 a.m. ET on FS1, SiriusXM Channel 90
Race – Sunday, March 27 at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

ADVANCE NOTES

Weekend Format

· With practice and qualifying back on the horizon for the NASCAR Cup Series, with it comes a unique format. For COTA, teams will have the opportunity for a full practice session Saturday morning, immediately followed by qualifying to set the field.

· Qualifying will again be split into two groups with the top-five fastest cars in each group transferring to the final round. The final round of qualifying to determine the pole sitter will feature 10 cars, as all qualifying this weekend will include just one lap per car.

Keselowski at COTA

· Keselowski finished 19th in last season’s inaugural Cup race from COTA. He started 24th in that race, and was one of the team’s to take tires late before it was cut short due to inclement weather.

· Overall on road courses, Keselowski has 31 Cup starts with seven top fives and 10 top-10s with a 15.4 average finish. In six road course races in 2021, Keselowski finished fifth (Daytona Road Course), 15th in Sonoma, 13th in Road America, 35th at Watkins Glen, 24th on the Indy Road Course, and 20th on the Charlotte ROVAL.­­

· Keselowski has a 14.6 average starting position on road courses.

Matt McCall at COTA

· Last season in Austin, McCall finished 27th with the No. 1 team after starting 13th. Overall on road courses McCall has 10 top-10 finishes and four inside the top five on road courses.

· McCall was strong on road courses in 2021 with two fourth-place finishes (Daytona RC, Road America) and two sixth-place runs (Sonoma, Indy Road Course).

· He has an overall P14 starting position in 21 Cup starts on road courses.

QUOTE WORTHY
Keselowski on racing at COTA:
“Going to our first road course race is for one exciting, and two a chance to see what our guys at RFK have put together for this type of racing. Last year in Austin was a rough day in terms of the weather, and because of it varying strategies played out, which you saw in the results. Road course racing is different, challenging and fun if you can make it work, so we’ll see what we have this weekend in our Wyndham Rewards machine.”

Last Time Out

Keselowski overcame a couple of mid-race bumps to finish fifth in stage two, before going on to record a 12th-place result as the field wrecked coming to the checkered flag.

On the Car

Wyndham Rewards, now a partner across both RFK teams in 2022, will make its lone appearance with the No. 6 team this weekend in Texas. They were the primary for Buescher’s No. 17 team at Las Vegas earlier this season.

About Wyndham Rewards
Wyndham Rewards® is the world’s most generous rewards program with more than 50,000 hotels, vacation club resorts and vacation rentals worldwide. Designed for the everyday traveler, members earn a guaranteed 1,000 points with every qualified stay and may redeem points for a wide range of rewards, including free nights at over 8,900 hotels or thousands of vacation club resorts and vacation rentals globally through affiliation with Wyndham Destinations and others. Wyndham Rewards has 86 million enrolled members around the globe. Join for free today at www.wyndhamrewards.com. You’ve earned this.®

Chris Buescher – COTA Advance

Team: No. 17 Fifth Third Bank Ford Mustang
Crew Chief: Scott Graves
Twitter: @RFK17Team, @RFKRacing and @Chris_Buescher
Race Format: 231.8 miles, 68 laps, Stages: 15-17-36
Practice – Saturday, March 26 at 10 a.m. ET on FS1, SiriusXM Channel 90
Qualifying – Saturday, March 26 at 11 a.m. ET on FS1, SiriusXM Channel 90
Race – Sunday, March 27 at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

ADVANCE NOTES

Weekend Format

· With practice and qualifying back on the horizon for the NASCAR Cup Series, with it comes a unique format. For COTA, teams will have the opportunity for a full practice session Saturday morning, immediately followed by qualifying to set the field.

· Qualifying will again be split into two groups with the top-five fastest cars in each group transferring to the final round. The final round of qualifying to determine the pole sitter will feature 10 cars, as all qualifying this weekend will include just one lap per car.

Buescher at COTA

· Buescher finished 13th a year ago at the inaugural COTA event after starting 28th.

· Overall he has 20 Cup starts on road courses with two top-five finishes, including a P3 finish on the Charlotte ROVAL in 2021, and a fifth-place run on the Daytona Road Course in 2020.

Scott Graves at COTA

· Graves and the No. 6 team finished 24th on the Austin road course a year ago. Overall he has five top-10 finishes in Cup on road courses, including a seventh-place run at Sonoma in 2019, and a pair of top fives with Daniel Suarez at Watkins Glen.

· Graves also has two Xfinity Series wins on road courses, including one at WGI with Carl Edwards in 2012, as well as a victory with Buescher at Mid-Ohio in 2014.

QUOTE WORTHY
Buescher on racing at COTA:
“Any time you get the chance to go back or near home is a great thing. I am fortunate to have a lot of family and friends still out in Texas that I’ll go and see this weekend, and appreciate all of the Texas support we do get. COTA was an oddball last year with our first visit there, then the weather had a huge effect on things. We’re confident in what we’ve done on road courses in the past, though, and are looking for much of the same come Sunday in the Fifth Third Bank Ford.”

Last Time Out
Buescher earned his second-straight top-10 finish and second of the season Sunday in Atlanta, sliding across the line backwards at the checkered flag for a seventh-place result. He was in and around the top-10 for much of the chaotic 500-mile race before ultimately securing his third career top-10 at the track.

On the Car
Fifth Third makes its 2022 debut this weekend in Texas, where it will debut its new scheme, accompanying’s Buescher’s return to his home state. Fresh off celebrating its 10th season as a partner with RFK in 2021, Fifth Third returns this season for five races in total in 2022, while serving as an associate in all events for the No. 17 team.

The bank will also feature Solo Stove this weekend on the decklid of the No. 17 machine as part of the Fueled by Fifth Third pass-through program.

· We design simple, ingenious outdoor products to help you create good moments that become lasting memories.

· Create good; We are driven by this mantra. Our fire pits, camp stoves, grill, and accessories are designed to help you get in touch with whatever is “good” for you. Whether it’s a primal moment in awe of a flame, the moment right after you’ve taken a hot sip of coffee in the mountains, or your kid’s face when they bite into a delicious s’more.

· We believe we are part of a shared humanity, and we are grateful to have these moments right in front of us to connect with those we love, to remember something meaningful inside ourselves, to appreciate nature in its stunning beauty.

· Good moments. Good memories. Good products. So you can create a good life.

About Fifth Third Bank
Fifth Third Bancorp is a diversified financial services company headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio and the indirect parent company of Fifth Third Bank, National Association, a federally chartered institution. As of June 30, 2020, Fifth Third had $203 billion in assets and operated 1,122 full-service banking centers and 2,456 ATMs with Fifth Third branding in Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Florida, Tennessee, West Virginia, Georgia and North Carolina. In total, Fifth Third provides its customers with access to approximately 53,000 fee-free ATMs across the United States. Fifth Third operates four main businesses: Commercial Banking, Branch Banking, Consumer Lending and Wealth & Asset Management. Fifth Third is among the largest money managers in the Midwest and, as of June 30, 2020, had $405 billion in assets under care, of which it managed $49 billion for individuals, corporations and not-for-profit organizations through its Trust and Registered Investment Advisory businesses. Investor information and press releases can be viewed at www.53.com. Fifth Third’s common stock is traded on the Nasdaq® Global Select Market under the symbol “FITB.” Fifth Third Bank was established in 1858. Deposit and Credit products are offered by Fifth Third Bank, National Association. Member FDIC.

John Hunter Nemechek – No. 4 ROMCO Equipment Tundra TRD Pro Camping World Trucks COTA Preview

John Hunter Nemechek: Driver, No. 4 ROMCO Equipment Toyota

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
Event: XPEL 225, Race 4 of 23,42 Laps – 12/14/16; 143.22 Miles
Location: Circuit of the Americas (Austin, Texas) (3.426-mile 20-turn road course)
Date/Broadcast: Mar. 26, 2022, at 1:00 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

Nemechek #Back4More in 2022
Nemechek and the No. 4 ROMCO team turn their focus to the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) for the second running of the XPEL 225 at the 3.426-mile, 20-turn road course in Austin, Texas. In last year’s inaugural event, Nemechek ran in the top 10 for the majority of the race before an uncontrolled tire penalty set back the No. 4 team. Despite the penalty, Nemechek rebounded for a 12th-place finish.

Through the first three races of the 2022 season, Nemechek currently sits eighth in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series standings, 52 points behind Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM) teammate Chandler Smith in first. While he doesn’t have the finishes to show for how he has ran this season, the second-generation driver leads the NASCAR Truck Series with three stages wins and 84 laps led. He has led double-digit laps in each of the first three races.

The 24-year-old driver has made eight road course starts in the Camping World Truck Series. He has tallied one win (Canadian Tire – 2016), 36 laps led, four top-fives and five top-10 finishes with average finish of 9.3. In last year’s inaugural event at COTA, Nemechek started sixth and came home with a 12th-place finish.

ROMCO Equipment Co., a long-time partner of Nemechek, will serve as the primary sponsor on the No. 4 Tundra TRD Pro this weekend at COTA. A Texas tradition since 1961, ROCMO Equipment serves the earth moving, ground engaging and materials handling markets by providing superior quality construction and mining equipment. ROMCO has supported customer’s purchase decisions with outstanding parts and service for over 52 years.

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 127 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, he has compiled three poles, 1,265 laps led, 40 top-five and 66 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.9.

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 at been at the helm for four road course races with his drivers collecting three top-five and three top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 5.0. His best result was a runner-up finish with Nemechek last year at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International.

John Hunter Nemechek, Driver Q&A:

Despite not having the finishes to show for it is there a silver lining that you’ve led laps and won stages?
“Yeah, we’re definitely fast and have the equipment to run up front. We’ve led some laps and have three out of the six stages wins, which is a huge plus for us considering our finishes so far this season. They haven’t been spectacular or what we wanted but hopefully we can get this bad luck, or little slump, out of the way early and not have it go through the year. We’re working hard and not changing anything, just trying to show up to the race track and win, have good runs, and good results. We’re a little bit back in points right now, but I do foresee coming on strong in the future and moving our way up the points race and getting some wins underneath our belt.”

Do you enjoy road course racing?
“I do, road course racing is a lot of fun. Being able to go to COTA, last year was our first year there and we had a little bit of everything; we had a dry practice day, wet qualifying session, and then the start of the race was raining. Then, it dried out through the race, so we stayed on wet tires. I feel like we learned a lot about all conditions there last year having them all thrown our way. I’m looking forward to getting back there this year, I was able to test there a few weeks ago as well in a TransAm car and had a lot of fun doing that so I’m looking forward to going and chasing our first win of the year at COTA.”

Are you looking forward to having ROMCO back on the truck?
“Yeah, for sure. ROMCO has been a great company, Mr. Mullins and everyone that has been involved has been behind me and have supported me throughout my career. They started out as a really small sponsor and have grown with me through the ranks. Luckily, we’ve been able to get them wins in two of the top NASCAR Series so far and hopefully we can do the same this weekend. I know that they will have quite a few people there; employees and different vendors, so I’m looking forward to meeting everybody and hopefully we can put on a show for them.”

John Hunter Nemechek Career Highlights:

  • Eleven-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 127 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, has compiled three poles, 1,265 laps led, 40 top-five and 66 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.9. 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 58 career XFINITY Series starts, has totaled two wins, one pole, 375 laps led, 15 top-five and 34 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 11.6.

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

KBM-61: The No. 4 ROMCO Equipment team will unload KBM-61 for Saturday’s race at COTA. Nemechek raced this same Tundra twice on road courses last year with finishes of third at the Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway Road Course and 12th at COTA. The Tundra’s best result was a runner-up finish with Alex Tagliani at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ont. in 2019.
Click Here for KBM-61 Performance Profile:

KBM Notes of Interest:

  • KBM drivers have collected one win, 87 laps led, 10 top-five and 12 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 13.1 across 32 road course starts. Erik Jones picked up the lone road course win for KBM at Canadian Tire in 2015.
  • 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 last week, 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.

One Cure Racing: Cole Custer COTA Advance

COLE CUSTER
COTA Advance
No. 41 One Cure Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview

● Event: EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix (Round 6 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3:30 p.m. EDT on Sunday, March 27
● Location: Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas
● Layout: 3.426-mile, 20-turn road course
● Laps/Miles: 68 laps/231.88 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 15 laps / Stage 2: 15 laps / Final Stage: 38 laps
● TV/Radio: FOX / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Cole Custer is perhaps the most thankful among the NASCAR Cup Series competitors who are headed to Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, to see the weekend weather forecast features warmth and plenty of sunshine with virtually no chance of rain. When the series debuted on the 3.426-mile, 20-turn road course that is home to the Formula One United States Grand Prix a year ago, heavy rains forced officials to stop the scheduled 68-lap race 14 laps short. And Custer’s day was cut even shorter when poor visibility led to an accident just 24 laps into the race. Custer is hoping dry conditions this weekend will yield much better results in the season’s first of six road-course races.

● Custer and the No. 41 Ford Mustang team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) will be joined for the first time this season by the One Cure project, which is led by the Flint Animal Cancer Center at Colorado State University with a mission to find a cancer cure through research benefiting man’s best friend. It is founded on the principle that cancer affects all creatures and that treatment breakthroughs come through collaboration between scientists and doctors working with people and animals. This approach is known as comparative oncology and it is the guiding concept of One Cure and the Flint Animal Cancer Center. The center works to improve prevention, diagnosis and treatment of cancer in pets, and teams with the human medical field to translate research findings that will help people with cancer.The center, located in Colorado State’s James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital, sees more than 1,500 new animal cancer patients every year, with approximately 130 of them enrolled in carefully monitored clinical trials specific to their cancer type. The canine and feline patients are helping pioneer cancer research, moving cutting-edge treatments out of the laboratory and into clinical practice, ultimately providing hope for the next generation of animal and human cancer patients.

● In lead-up to this weekend’s partnership on the racetrack, One Cure partnered with Custer on a “$41 for 41” fundraising campaign that generated a total of $4,362 from 75 unique donors.

● This weekend’s 68-lap, 231-mile race marks Custer’s 81st career NASCAR Cup Series start and his 10th on a road course. His best road-course outing in the Cup Series was an impressive ninth-place run on the Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway Roval in October 2020. In February 2021, he rallied for a 13th-place finish on the Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway road course after dropping back as far as 24th while avoiding a multicar accident in the closing laps.

● In his 11 road-course outings in the NASCAR Xfinity Series from 2017 through 2019, Custer finished outside the top-10 just once with a best result of fourth in the 2018 race at Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin.

● Custer has top-10s in all three of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series outings on road courses, all three occurring at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ontario. His best was his most recent, a second-place run from the pole with a race-high 39 laps led in the No. 00 JR Motorsports entry in 2016. He also made three starts apiece on the road courses at Sonoma and Watkins Glen in NASCAR K&N Pro Series competition, with best finishes of third in the 2016 East Series race at Watkins Glen after having qualified on the pole there the previous year, and fourth in the 2019 West Series race at Sonoma.

● After an accident less than halfway through last weekend’s race on the newly reinvented Atlanta Motor Speedway oval, Custer arrives at COTA 29th in the driver standings, 94 points out of first.

● Custer will be pulling double duty this weekend as he’ll also be behind the wheel of the No. 07 Ford Mustang for SS Green Light Racing for Saturday’s Pit Boss 250 Xfinity Series race.

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

You and your Cup Series counterparts made history last year by racing by racing for the first time at Circuit of the Americas. What was the significance of that weekend in your mind?

“Aside from the huge rain on race day, it was a cool race to be a part of, the first race at that racetrack. It’s pretty prestigious. It’s a place F1 cars have raced and there were a lot of unknowns, obviously, because we hadn’t raced there. But it was pretty exciting to feel that place out.”

How would you describe the racetrack at COTA?

“It’s a very technical track and a little bit awkward. Not a ton of flow because there are long straightaways and how tight the corners are, and every single corner is different. It’s a very difficult track – some people do really well in parts of it and struggle in others. There are a lot of passing zones and it’s racey as hell.”

In general, what is it like to race on a road course in a stock car?

“It’s like driving a bulldozer around. A lot of road courses are meant for small cars that can move around that are really agile, where a stock car is really bulky and we’re beating and banging around. But this new NextGen car should handle a lot better than what we’re used to. The body being more symmetrical is a huge benefit. The changes to steering and the sequential shifter will all make a difference this weekend. We’ve seen a lot of great racing with the new car but now we get to see what it does on a road course which should make for some really exciting racing.”

The number of road-course races on the schedule has doubled in recent years. How does that change the way you condition, and your mental preparation?

“It’s not too much different physically, honestly. You might work out the right side of your neck a little bit more because we rarely use that part, but you don’t change too much, I would say. Mentally, the biggest thing is being prepared. You really have to have a good game plan and have an idea of what you’re unloading with and what you’re expecting to do the first few laps of practice, now that we have it. From there, you’re thrown into a lot of different situations so you have to know how to adapt. Being able to know what the best move is in those situations means a lot. Doing your homework and making sure you’re watching film and looking back on your notes from the past will help you in those situations.”

Talk about racing in the heavy rain at COTA last year.

“Well, the rain happened and, once it started falling, it was kind of chaos. You really couldn’t see much because there’s so much spray that comes up from behind the racecars that you can hardly see 3 feet in front of you. So you’re just kind of moseying around down the straightaways and all of a sudden some car is stopped in front of you. It’s definitely a nerve-wracking feeling and, based on the weekend forecast, we won’t have that again. But it’s something that’s in the back of your mind, for sure.”

No. 41 One Cure Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Cole Custer
Hometown: Ladera Ranch, California

Crew Chief: Mike Shiplett
Hometown: Amherst, Ohio

Car Chief: Tony Cardamone
Hometown: Bristol, Virginia

Engineer: Lee Deese
Hometown: Rockingham, North Carolina

Engineer: Scott Bingham
Hometown: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Spotter: Andy Houston
Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

Over-The-Wall Members

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

Rear Tire Changer: Coleman Dollarhide
Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

Tire Carrier: Chad Emmons
Hometown: Tyler, Texas

Jack Man: Matthew Schlytter
Hometown: Ponte Vedra, Florida

Fuel Man: Dewayne Moore
Hometown: Griffin, Georgia

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Joe Zanolini
Hometown: Sybertsville, Pennsylvania

Shock Specialist: Aaron Kuehn
Hometown: Kensington, Connecticut

Tire Specialist: Austin Greco
Hometown: Harrisburg, North Carolina

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

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

Silver Hare Racing Riding Momentum to Road Atlanta

Connor Zilisch Hopes Last Weekend’s Commanding Speed on Charlotte Roval
Translates to Top Result in Georgia; Maurice Hull Returns to Cockpit

HIGH POINT, N.C. (March 22, 2022) – Last weekend’s race result aside, anyone who follows the TA2 class of the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli will agree Connor Zilisch is heading to Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta in Braselton, Georgia, for Saturday’s Atlanta SpeedTour with a boatload of momentum.

The 15-year-old from Mooresville, North Carolina, served notice last weekend on his hometown Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway Roval that he and his Silver Hare Racing/KHI Management Chevrolet Camaro will be among the car-and-driver combinations to beat for the remainder of the 2022 season.

In only his third career TA2 race weekend, Zilisch laid down Friday’s fastest laps in practice and qualifying, the latter with a lap of 1:20.310 around the 2.25-mile, 17-turn Charlotte Roval that surpassed the track record. It certainly brought back memories of Zilisch’s TA2 debut last fall at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) in Alton, where he became the youngest pole-winner in Trans Am history with a lap of 1:48.905. Zilisch’s second career pole and record lap were nullified at Charlotte, however, when his racecar was found to be a small fraction of an inch low in post-qualifying tech inspection, leaving him with the 28th and final starting position for Saturday’s 45-lap race.

Unfazed, the young Zilisch tightened up his belts and wasted no time Saturday charging toward the front from the wave of the green flag, working his way into the top-15 by the 15th lap of the race. Along the way, he turned a lap of 1:21.967 that earned the young driver the Omologato Fastest Lap of the Race Award. Zilisch was the only driver to crack the 1-minute, 22-second barrier the entire race, and he did it on multiple occasions.

The only blemish to an otherwise stout weekend on the track, however, came on lap 15 when Zilisch began losing electrical power. The culprit turned out to be a single, frayed piece of wiring that required two trips to pit lane to remedy. It cost him five laps and any chance of a highly anticipated top finish, but once he rejoined the race in earnest, Zilisch continued to run laps a second or more faster than the leaders on a consistent basis. He was up to 19th when the checkered flag flew.

This weekend, Silver Hare Racing returns to a two-car entry with Zilisch back in the No. 57 Camaro he raced last weekend, and team owner Maurice Hull behind the wheel of the No. 75 Waukegan Farms/Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Camaro, and both are relishing the opportunity to put the speed Zilisch enjoyed at Charlotte to work on the 2.54-mile, 12-turn Road Atlanta circuit. Hull stepped out of the cockpit last weekend while recovering from burns he suffered at Sebring as the result of a damaged coolsuit system.

Both Silver Hare drivers are tremendously fond of Road Atlanta and have enjoyed some of their most successful outings there, Zilisch racing Mazdas and Hull racing vintage stock cars. Just two weekends ago, Zilisch took part in a Spec Miata doubleheader at the track, winning one race, finishing runner-up in the other, and qualifying on the pole among a field of 60 competitors. In last fall’s Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 doubleheader during Petit Le Mans weekend at Road Atlanta, Zilisch set a track race-lap record in the first race and brought home a top-five finish in the second.

While this weekend marks Zilisch’s first TA2 race at Road Atlanta and only his fourth ever, Hull returns to the track where in 2020 he clinched the his second consecutive TA2 masters championship when the race served as the Trans Am season finale. When the race was moved to March last season, Hull drove his Silver Hare Camaro to a 13th-place overall finish that was tops in the masters class.

A field of 46 TA2 competitors are entered for Saturday’s 40-lap race, set for a 12:40 p.m. EDT start. Zilisch and Hull hope momentum is in their corner and the gremlins stay in the rearview mirror, along with the rest of the field, as they vie for a top finish during the third race weekend of the season.

Silver Hare Racing leverages its Trans Am effort to promote its arrive-and-drive program, where aspiring racers and even tenured professionals hone their road-racing skills on some of the most revered tracks in North America. NASCAR Cup Series drivers Daniel Suárez, William Byron, Harrison Burton and Christopher Bell have all wheeled Silver Hare Racing-prepared cars to burnish their road-racing abilities. In addition to top-flight equipment, Silver Hare Racing provides professional driver coaching by general manager Michael Self, an ARCA and Xfinity Series veteran.

The team offers six, professionally built and maintained TA2 chassis from Howe Racing for both competition and private testing. Silver Hare Racing has a dedicated, fulltime crew and operates out of a state-of-the-art facility in High Point, North Carolina. At the track, two 53-foot Featherlite transporters serve as the team’s base, each outfitted with a lounge and smart TVs for data and video review, as well as for hospitality.

“With NASCAR having so many more road-course races, it’s our goal for Silver Hare Racing to be the preferred team for drivers to get that road-course experience,” said Laura Hull, team manager, Silver Hare Racing. “We want to be that important step in the ladder for the young, up-and-coming drivers like Connor, which we’re doing in collaboration with Kevin Harvick Incorporated.

“It started when they brought him to us for testing at VIR a year ago, and now we’re delighted to have him under contract. That’s how we’re trying to position this. We want people to know we have an arrive-and-drive program, where people who want to run this track or another, we provide the opportunity for them to do that and be successful.”

Connor Zilisch, Driver No. 57 Silver Hare Racing/KHI Management Chevrolet Camaro:

“Road Atlanta, I was there two weekends ago, so it’s pretty fresh in my mind. I really like that track and I’m excited to drive that track in the Trans Am car. I think it’ll be ton of fun. We have a really fast car, so going into it, we’ve just got to be really smart, be patient, and work it and get it as fast as we can as quickly as we can and hopefully come out with a good result.

“I’ve been to Road Atlanta at least four times, so I’ve got a lot of time on that track. I ran second there in MX-5 Cup with IMSA until I made a mistake, and I’ve won a number of national Spec Miata races there, so I think we’re going to be really good.

“Hopefully the bad luck we’ve had the last two races is out of the way. We’ll be looking to go to Road Atlanta and have some good luck on our side, finally. In the big picture of things, we’ve got 10 weekends to go, so this is just the beginning of it and I’m really excited to move forward because I know we’ve got a really fast racecar.”

Maurice Hull, Owner/Driver, No. 75 Waukegan Farms/Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Chevrolet Camaro:

“I feel really good about going to Road Atlanta. Number one, we didn’t tear anything up at the Roval, which is actually pretty amazing. That’s a victory in itself. So we’ve got some pieces we can take down there, which is great. Connor and I both like Road Atlanta. We’ve both driven there a fair number of times and been very successful – won there. Looking forward to going back to a place that’s a little more friendly, from an experience standpoint. We’ve been there, and we’ve hit everything down there, too. But from an experience standpoint, it’s not as new as the Roval, or contrived. It’s a classic racetrack, very fast, so I’m looking forward to it. Road Atlanta is always a great trip. If we get our little gremlins taken care of, we’ll be right there.

“I’m excited to get back into one of our cars after the show Connor put on at Charlotte. I’ve driven every car in the stable over the years, and between all the drivers we’ve had here, everybody’s driven every car. We try to build all six cars the same. Everything is identical as much as possible. That way you can work on them, you can set them up the same, they’re just different numbers.

“So I’m looking forward to getting back in the racecar. Frankly, Charlotte was a difficult weekend, standing outside. It’s going to require making sure I’m comfortable with all the belts and everything as I finish healing. I like to say I’ve got a great nurse – my fellow team owner (wife Laura Hull) is also doubling as my nurse, so it’s a pretty good deal. She’ll put some gauze on me, tape it up and tell me to hush, to just get in there and drive.

“Road Atlanta is a fast track. There are a lot of really fast corners. There’s a little, teeny bit of banking. There are big hills. You go under the bridge under speed. It’s just got a lot of everything, it really does. And it’s a difficult racetrack, it’s a very technical track but it’s very, very fast, so there’s a lot of rolling speed everywhere. It’s a wonderful place to go. Runoff there can bite you – there are walls, they’re there. Weather is usually a factor there, so let’s hope it’s a nice, sunny weekend because it’s a difficult track when it’s wet.”

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 won the 2020 TA2 Masters class championship with driver and team co-owner Maurice Hull. Under the leadership of Hull’s wife, co-owner and team manager Laura Hull, and general manager Michael Self, Silver Hare Racing provides a variety of services that includes private testing and arrive-and-drive programs. The team offers four, 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.

CADILLAC RACING POST-SEBRING: ZOOM TRANSCRIPT

Following the dramatic victory in the 70th Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Presented by Advance Auto Parts on March 19, driver Earl Bamber and first-year race engineer Danielle Shepherd (No. 02 Cadillac Accessories Cadillac DPi-V.R) met with the media March 22 via Zoom conference. Bamber co-drove to the overall win with Alex Lynn and Neel Jani. Full transcript (by individual):

EARL BAMBER (No. 2 Cadillac Accessories Cadillac DPi-V.R):

NOW THAT YOU’VE HAD A COUPLE DAYS TO THINK ABOUT IT, TELL US HOW IT WENT DOWN.
“It definitely was an eventful race. I think we rolled off the truck and knew that the 01 and the 02 were strong; we had a really good test there. It was really productive. As a team, we felt like we had really good speed at Daytona, but we obviously didn’t get to show our full potential. We were really looking forward to try to show what we had a Sebring. We started off P4 on the day, and I think all of us on the 02 side – maybe Danielle can agree – we’re still learning. Even though I’ve done IMSA for quite some time, the GTLM and the DPi style of racing is quite different. The strategy is different, and I think we’re learning on our side of the garage each time we go out and race the rhythm of the race. Danielle did a great job and got us some track position. I remember after my first stint I said to her if you can get us in the lead or near the front we’ll drive away, and she managed to do that in my second stint where I managed to create quite a good gap. Alex (Lynn) managed to hold that gap, and I managed to give it away all again with a drive-thru at the end there and I managed to spin myself again after I got back in the lead. I think it gave Chip (Ganassi) and Danielle and everyone three more heart attacks than what they need to win this one. Without such a good car from Chip Ganassi Racing and Cadillac that we came in with, it wouldn’t have been as easy to recover from those two mistakes. I have to say hats off to them for giving us such a great car, and now it gives us really good momentum and confidence going into the sprint-style of races that we can do it, we have quick enough cars, we have crew going forward. For me, personally, just to get the win at Sebring was huge. It was one I wanted to check off the box and it’s not that often that you get those opportunities with such a good car. You have to get the most from it and capitalize on winning the race Saturday night.”

YOU WERE EXHAUSTED, YOU GOT THE WIN AND STILL IN THAT MOMENT YOU MADE SURE TO SHOUT OUT DANIELLE. WHY WAS THAT IMPORTANT TO YOU?
“For us inside the car, we’re an important part but I’m a big believer in that if you don’t have the best people behind you, the bets engineers, the best team, then you also can’t win the race. You need both to go hand in hand. I really believe that we’ve got one of the best in the paddock with Danielle on the timing stand. I remember our first test together was Atlanta in October last year and it was the time when they were sort of deciding the crew to put Alex together with us and they also had Danielle on the timing stand, and I remember them asking at the time, ‘What do you think?’ And I said, ‘We have to have her.’ She was awesome at the test and we had such a strong car performance-wise. I was a big believer just from that first day. We had just started working together and I annoyed her all hours of the day with random phone calls and questions, and I think she is one of the best in the paddock and she has a bright future. And I think that’s making my job and certainly Alex’s job in the car easier because we’re given very good race cars of the truck.”

WHAT KIND OF LEADER IS SHE? DOES SHE PUSH YOU HARD OR ARE YOUR TRYING TO GET ANYTHING PAST HER?
“She definitely likes to push the limits and I like that she’s not afraid of making some bold moves sometimes as well. That’s what is important in racing is to test the extremes, and she doesn’t leave any stone unturned before going to the race to make sure she gives us the best car, and I think that’s what makes her strong. We had a great car in practice and then in final night practice she was still tweaking away at it, trying to make it even faster than what we had. That’s the mentality. She wants to continuously improve, and that’s what I like about her character on that. And she does keep us on the straight and narrow.”

WHAT WAS GOING THROUGH YOUR MIND WHEN YOU COLLIDED AND THEN HAD A BIT OF A CRASH?
“To be honest, I came out of the pits and I knew the gap was about 25 seconds and I was actually quite calm and smooth and I heard the spotter call out the LMP3 and it had just pulled out in front of me. Most LMP3s had been braking super early and I just went to the inside casually and it just happened to brake very, very late. I knew that I would be called for the penalty and it was my mistake, my fault. So, I knew what was coming and I already knew that we would roughly come out in line or 3 or 4 seconds behind. I definitely knew we had the stronger pace, so I just kept a calm head and tried to catch back up. I had to manage the fuel there as well to make sure we didn’t burn too much in catching back up, but we did have a one-lap advantage over the 5 (car) at that moment in time. Then I got back (Richard) Westbrook and I came on the radio and said, ‘Let’s go win this thing,’ and two corners later I had contact with a Ferrari, which I couldn’t believe myself. Then got going again quickly and were lucky we didn’t flat-spot the tires. Then I thought if I don’t bring this home Chip is probably going to fire me come Monday while having such a strong car. Got back up to Westy quite quick and got by when he got muddled in some messy traffic through (Turns) 15 and 16 and just passed him on the backstraight. To be honest, he is one of fairest guys you could race in the whole IMSA paddock. I’ve raced him for many years in GTLM, and if there’s one person that you can have a very hard and fair fight with, it’s someone like Westy. He is a proper racer and gives you the room. It was easy to recover with such a good car. If we didn’t have such a strong car we probably wouldn’t have won that, so that’s why I say the people from the timing stand had done such a great job for us. It was pretty nerve-racking.”

WHAT ARE THE TEAM DYNAMICS BETWEEN YOU, ALEX AND NEEL ON A RACE WEEKEND?
“I’ve known Neel for many years from the LMP1 program, and I had no doubt as soon as we were told that he was going to jump in the car – which I think was only Monday; it was a late call – I knew that he would be quick immediately in the Cadillac. Our car is well-fitted and as soon as he drove he said, ‘Wow, this thing is east to drive,’ and he got the handle of it very quickly. Alex had already won Sebring, so he definitely knows what he’s doing. The entire lineup that Chip Ganassi Racing has chosen I think is really strong because it brings together different drivers from different forms of motorsport. Alex came from Formula E, I come from the Porsche GT LMP1 program, and you have Sebastien from INDYCAR and Renger from sports car background. So, I think the combination of all four drivers definitely forms a very strong package of knowledge and experience of those categories, and I think that’s what also is helping at the moment with the strong cars because you can’t forget that. The 01 was strong if you look at the night practice. They deserve a break at the next one.”

WITH YOUR EXPERIENCE IN THREE DIFFERENT CARS HELP YOUR INPUT INTO THE CADILLAC LMDH FOR NEXT YEAR?
“I certainly hope so. I think there’s a lot of experience from the 919 project, but equally they are very different cars with the hybrid system and stuff like that. And definitely with the GT there’s a lot of things that have come into play with the tools you can provide the drivers and the team and the way the strategy comes across. But I don’t think it’s just solely from me but the other three drivers. Alex has brought some really good ideas from Formula E. It’s going to be a lot of hard work. When people have asked what it’s like to go out and win a big race like Le Mans or Daytona, for me it’s not doing just that individual race. If you just turned up at Le Mans or Daytona and won the race, it’s not as special as doing the entire project in journey with everybody starting from day zero, having to develop and build that car and then take it to the racetrack and make sure it performs. There’s hours and hours of work and something to be proud of that you build the best race car on the track. I think everyone’s looking forward to that journey. Chip Ganassi Racing did a great job with the Ford GT program. I had to race against them for many years and they did an excellent job. I’m really looking forward to that next phase that’s kicking off really soon.”

LOOKING AHEAD TO THE SPRINT RACES, DO YOU FEEL CADILLAC’S STRENGTHS WILL BE WHAT WE’VE SEEN IN RECENT YEAR OR CAN YOU SPRING SOME SURPRISES?
“My experience is pretty limited in following the cars, but definitely from what I’ve seen from Daytona and Sebring that the Cadillac is good on mechanical grip and we’ve seen that Long Beach has been a Cadillac circuit with mechanical grip. Once we get into midseason, roll into Mid-Ohio, Road America and certainly Watkins Glen, I think (Acura) is going to be strong. We looked very good on the bumps at Sebring, I think that was one of our strengths. So, I’m curious to see how the Acuras roll out at Long Beach. It’s going to be such a tough season. If you look at the qualifying at Sebring, it shows the level of the category and the level of the teams at the moment. It’s going to be those small gains that are going to win or lose. I don’t think that you’re going to see one car one second faster. It’s going to be pit calls, strategies, the guys in the lane. It’s going to be a real team effort that’s going to win this championship this year. I think that at any given time, all six of the main cars can win a race or be on pole or be on the podium. It’s not like you can roll up to the weekend and the 02 is going to blitz the circuit this weekend. For me, I’ve noticed that track position is so critical. It’s so difficult to pass. We can pass, don’t get me wrong, we can pass when we do a good pick in traffic and we can make the gains in traffic. The racing style is absolutely awesome, but there is big strategy if they get us up front and we have a strong car it’s hard to get past us. Being that close, you’re not going to drive through the entire field.”

WHEN YOU WIN THE OVERALL, DOES THAT MAKE YOU HUNGRIER? WHAT’S IT LIKE FROM WINNING THE CLASS TO WINNING THE OVERALL AT A PLACE LIKE SEBRING?
“As any driver, you always want to hunt the overall wins. I’ve been really lucky now to get a lot of the big overalls and there’s not too many to tick off. For me, though, that Sebring race rates right up there with Le Mans. Some people might say how can you say that, but it was such a hard, grueling race. You saw a lot of drivers getting out completely exhausted with the heat and temperature. Just the racing style in IMSA I really enjoy. With Danielle and everyone at Chip Ganassi Racing I really do rate it right up there. I’m really looking forward to the rest of the season. Daytona eludes me. Definitely want to try to get the overall there one day. I think we had a really good shot this year and hopefully we have a good chance next year as well. The rest of the season everyone in the organization is really excited. It’s the second big win of the program; they had one last year in Detroit and you could feel the momentum build. Now, getting one of the big ones at Sebring, it’s really good timing for everyone here heading into the sprint season. I think Danielle is really pumped to get into this sprint style of racing as well. It’s probably what she’s more used to with the INDYCAR stuff as well, so I think she’s going to bring some really good strategy ideas to Long Beach.”

IS DPI AS COMPETITVE AS GTLM WAS A FEW YEARS AGO?
“I think it’s just as competitive. Certainly for us, because we’re quote late to the game, the car is in its sixth year but people like Action Express and Wayne Taylor Racing have been here from the beginning. For a long, long time they know this category inside and out, so with us coming as sort of the new people and learning it is quite difficult to catch up with them. Those teams are world-class teams at some of the highest level in sports car racing. You look at Meyer Shank as well in INDYCAR. It is a really nice challenge to go race against them. You see some familiar faces like Westy – I thought I got rid of him moving to prototypes – but he’s still there. Like I said, he’s a formidable competitor and a really hard racer but fair racer, and I think the style of the category is we have short stints so sprint most of the time. We’re not fuel saving, which was a big thing of GTLM. Everybody sort of held position and fuel saved the whole time. In the prototype, you can make enough difference in traffic that you can sprint and you don’t get the penalty of fuel. You’ve got the traffic in the mix, so you can make a difference in that to improve. And I would say it’s even more dependent on the crew because the tire change is slightly longer because it’s more difficult with the car and the potential to have a short fuel stop is difficult and you lose track position, so the team element is even more critical than GTLM. I think the whole thing is a little bit of a step up. I can’t imagine what it’s going to be like in 2023 with like 18 of the cars on the grid and that style of racing. It’s going to be pretty hectic. I really love the style of racing of the DPi cars; I loved it the first time I jumped in at Road America. It puts a smile on your face every time you drive it. And I think the style of tracks in America are great. I’m not a big fan of big runoffs, and with these cars if you take a risk you gain in lap time. If you talk to all the drivers and they say I haven’t put a lap together and I have to take a deep breath and take a risk if I want to get pole rather than just trying to keep the car between two white lines. So, I think it’s a combination of everything. The circuit boss at Sebring came up and said congratulations. I said if you could do one thing, please don’t change this track because it’s phenomenal to race at. Never change the bumps.”

DANIELLE SHEPHERD (No. 02 Cadillac Accessories Cadillac DPi-V.R race engineer):

AS EARL TALKED ABOUT HIS EXPERIENCES FROM THE COCKPIT, ESPECIALLY THOSE CLOSING 90 MINUTES, WHAT WAS GOING THROUGH YOUR MIND?
“Like Ear said, we knew track position was big for this race. We started off with a drive-thru with Alex, so that put us in a bit of a deficit and we were waiting for our opportunity to regain some track position. We were able to do that on one of the pit exchanges and we were trying different things throughout the race to figure out what techniques would work the best to get us in good position at the end. We got Alex in toward the end and were doing our best to maintain and just not give anything up at that point. And Earl gets in the car and gives us three heart attacks. Luckily, the car was good and he was able to recover from the mistakes.”

THERE’S A WOMEN IN MOTORSPORTS PROGRAM THAT THE TEAM HAS LAUNCHED. CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THAT?
“Chip Ganassi Racing is partnering with PNC (Bank) to host positions for females interested in any range of motorsports. It will be great to have women here that I can show the ropes to and get them interested in motorsports, and it’s great that they are focusing on that for this internship.”

HOW DID IT FEEL IN YOUR SECOND RACE TO CLOSE THE DEAL?
“That’s obviously why we’re here and what we hope for. It shows the strength of the entire Chip Ganassi Racing team, the whole Indianapolis building and specifically the Cadillac cars themselves. It shows the strength of the program that we have and where we can take it going forward. It’s obviously why we’re here and what we hope to accomplish.”

IN BEING CONSIDERED FOR A LEAD ROLE, WHAT DID YOU THINK AND WHAT WAS YOUR DECISION-MAKING?
“It’s always bene my goal to be the lead engineer, so the opportunity came and I told them I was interested in doing it and I think they thought I was hopefully the right person for the job. It was good.”

WHAT, IF ANYTHING DID CHIP HAVE TO SAY TO YOU AFTER THE RACE?
“He was just happy. He was happy we could bring it home.”

WHAT WAS THE DIFFERENCE IN SETUP BETWEEN YOUR CAR AND THE OTHERS THAT GAVE YOU THE STRENGTH TO RUNN IN BOTH THE HOT AND COOL CONDITIONS?
“Obviously, the 01 car was strong there last year even though they weren’t able to capitalize last year with the collision at the end of the race, so we had a strong baseline to start with. While we were focusing on the night, we were trying not to compromise the daytime hot running. I think it was just a balance and I was adjusting things as we went through the race, adjusting tire pressures and everything and making sure we were trying to keep in the range and keep the car balance the way we were. So, it was slight adjustments from my side along with a good baseline car that we started with and just keep it in the window the whole day. It stayed pretty warm the whole time. The track did cool off at the end, so we tried to set ourselves up that we were ready to go. With the way Sebring is, you try to maintain during the day to try to capitalize at night. That was our philosophy as well just because we’re racing for the win when it’s slightly cooler conditions, even though it wasn’t cold by any means.”

DID THE NEW SETTINGS FOR CAMBER AND PRESSURE ON THE TIRES HAVE A BIG AFFECT ON YOU? WOOULD YOU RATHER HAVE GONE LOWER PRESSURES AND BIGGER CAMBER SETTINGS?
“There are limitations, obviously, and we have to respect them and they are enforcing them and we are trying our best to abide by the rules. Given the opportunity, I always like more grip.”

INDYCAR IS VERY MUCH A SPEC SERIES. DO YOU FIND A LOT MORE POSSIBILITIES FOR YOU TO BE THE ENGINEER YOU WANT TO BE BY WORKING ON AN IMSA CAR OR FIND IT MORE RESTRICTIVE WORKING ON A CAR IN ITS SIXTH YEAR OF DEVELOPMENT?
“INDYCAR is a spec series, but with the homologation rules and everything in IMSA, that’s kind of the new part of it for me and it is quite restrictive, so I feel it’s more working with the strategy and with the drivers and that side of it where the gains come instead of car development. It’s a six-year-old car, so it’s been run a long time and quite a bit of the development has already been done. The homologation has been set and nothing is being adjusted this year. It’s kind of in its box and it’s working with strategy and other things like that where the engineering side comes into it for this year at least.”

ARE THERE CERTAIN THINGS THAT CADILLAC IS ALLOWED TO PASS ON TO OTHER CADILLAC TEAMS?
“We’re not really at a development stage where we’re sharing information. It’s kind of already set at this point, so it’s more individual preference of how the car is run. There’s not really development being done and shared; we’re kind of past that phase of this car.”

WHEN WILL YOU START TO LOOK AT THE LMDH CAR AND WILL IT BE HARD TO BALANCE YOUR PRIORITIES IN TERMS OF WINNING THE CHAMPIONSHIP AND WORKING ON THE LMDH PROJECT?
“We’ve already been working with Dallara and Cadillac on the LMDh program, so we’re in the midst of a weekly discussion with them on development. It’s part of our job to manage both programs. We’re not looking to compromise the DPi program at all with development for next year, but we also want to get the car as well-prepared for next year as we can.”

I UNDERSTAND YOU’RE A JIMMY VASSER FAN AND YOUR PIT WAS NEXT TO HIS AT SEBRING. WHAT WAS THAT LIKE?
“I worked at KV (Racing), so I’ve worked with Jimmy when I was in INDYCAR. He was the team owner when I was there. I was always a fan of his on TV and it was great to work with him when I was in INDYCAR. He’s still a friend; I still talk to him.”

DID HE SAY ANYTHING TO YOU AFTER THE BIG WIN?
“I don’t think I actually saw him after the win because by the time we got back from cleanup he was not there, so I didn’t get to see him then. But I did wish him luck before the race.”

DOES IT SEEM LIKE IT’S COME FULL CIRCLE?
“It’s interesting and weird emotionally because it’s like the thing you achieve for, the thing you’ve worked so hard for is kind of there. You can always strive for more, but it is exciting.”

WERE THERE ANY CHALLENGES YOU WEREN’T EXPECTING AS THE EVENING WORE ON AS TRACK CONDITIONS CHANGED THAT YOU HAD TO ADAPT TO?
“I think we spent the evening practice trying to get the car dialed in and ready, so I think we were pretty confident going in and knew we had a solid car for the evening so it was kind of surviving during the day to make sure we got to the evening where we had put most of our effort into tuning the car. There wasn’t really anything that was a big surprise. Luckily, most of the parts stayed on the car so we didn’t any changing to do.”

WHILE EARL WAS HAVING HIS LATE-RACE DRAMATICS, WHAT’S GOING ON IN YOUR MIND AND WHAT INFORMATION WERE YOU RELAYING TO EARL TO KEEP THINGS ON THE STRAIGHT AND NARROW?
“Obviously, it wasn’t ideal, but it happened. It’s just looking at the gaps, making sure after the first drive-thru where we knew where we were going to come out and making sure he had the information of after the drive-thru where is he in position, who’s behind him, giving him the information he needs to keep going forward and recover the lap. It’s just recovering from there and making sure we capitalize from there.”

ANY CHANCE OF YOU PIVOTING BACK TO INDYCAR FOR THE MONTH OF MAY?
“I don’t know yet. Nobody has asked me yet. I don’t know what the plan is yet. We’re going to focus on Long Beach and then we’ll go from there. I’ll do whatever they ask me to do.”

About Cadillac
A leading luxury auto brand since 1902, Cadillac is growing globally, driven by an expanding product portfolio that features distinctive design and technology. More information on Cadillac appears at www.cadillac.com. Cadillac’s media website with information, images and video can be found at media.cadillac.com.

2019 Mustang GT | AmericanMuscle

Parts Authority Releases New “Customer Build” Video

PAOLI, Pa. (March 21st, 2022) – Aftermarket parts authority, AmericanMuscle (AM) releases a new episode in its “Customer Builds” YouTube series. The new video spotlights a 2019 Mustang GT with classic styling. AM’s Justin Dugan chats with the owner, Nick C. to dig deeper into his mods list and the reasons behind each choice. The episode features a virtual walk around and plenty of inspiration for Mustang owners ready to get working on their own ride at home. Viewers can get all the specifics on this 2019 Mustang GT by heading to the dedicated build page at americanmuscle.com.

In ‘Velocity’ blue with black accents, Nick’s GT is hard to miss. “Whenever I was trying to build it out, I was actually trying to think of ways to pay homage to the 1969 Mach 1,” he says. The RTR Grille with LED Accent Vent Lights was a ‘must-have’ and with the installation of the Roush Performance Power Pac the “car finally drives like the way it looks.” Other key mods include a set of RedLine hood struts, MMD by Foose bumper vents and side scoops, SpeedForm Aluminum Rear Window Louvers, and more. Future upgrades and a nickname for Nick’s ride round out the episode giving viewers additional food for thought.

A complete breakdown of the mods on this 2019 Mustang GT can be found on AM’s website along with extra photos and product specs. From the retro styling mods to the thoughtful performance upgrades, the video aims to be the catalyst that helps other Mustang owners move forward with their own project. Viewers are invited to subscribe to AM’s YouTube channel to stay on top of new Mustang content as soon as it is released.

View it here: https://www.americanmuscle.com/profiles/44027

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About AmericanMuscle

Starting out in 2003, AmericanMuscle quickly rose to be one of the leading aftermarket Mustang parts providers in the business. With the addition of Challenger in 2018 and Charger in 2020, AmericanMuscle provides the most sought-after parts, accessories, and fast shipping. Located just outside of Philadelphia, AmericanMuscle is dedicated to supporting the Mustang, Challenger, and Charger communities with the highest level of customer service. Please visit http://www.AmericanMuscle.com for more information.

Kyle Busch – No. 51 Safelite Tundra Camping World Trucks COTA Preview

Kyle Busch: Driver, No. 51 Safelite® Toyota

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
Event: XPEL 225, Race 4 of 23, 42 Laps –12/14/16; 143.22 Miles
Location: Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas (3.426-mile, 20-turn road course)
Date/Broadcast: March 26, 2022, at 1 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

The Report on ‘Rowdy’:
Owner-driver Kyle Busch gets behind the wheel of the No. 51 Safelite Tundra TRD Pro Saturday at COTA for his second of five NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts in 2022. Despite having 161 Truck Series starts under his belt, Saturday’s 42-lap event will mark his first-ever start on a road course in the Truck Series. Busch, the winningest driver in series history, enters COTA having won 37.8% (61/161) of the Truck Series races he has entered and finished first or second in 57.1% (92/161). The talented wheelman has finished first or second in 20 of his last 22 starts, including a second-place finish in his first Truck Series start of the 2022 season at Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway.

The No. 51 Tundra TRD Pro that ‘Rowdy’ will be piloting at Circuit of the Americas will have a different look this week. Busch will get behind the wheel of a flat white Safelite Tundra TRD Pro with Safelite, the nation’s largest provider of vehicle glass repair, replacement and recalibration services, as the primary sponsor. Busch’s white truck is a reciprocal of the No. black Safelite Tundra TRD Pro that Chandler Smith drives on a regular basis. The two drivers have engaged in a challenge on social media, pledging that the lower finisher in Saturday’s event will clean all the windshields at KBM next week.

In addition to his Truck Series leading 61 wins, ‘Rowdy’ also ranks first all-time among Truck Series drivers in driver rating (123.6), average finish (6.6) and is second in laps led (7,559).

While it will be Busch’s first time racing on a road course in the Truck Series, the 36-year-old driver has already found victory lane at COTA. He captured the pole for the inaugural NASCAR Xfinity Series race at the 3.426-mile, 20-turn road course last year and went on to lead 35 of 46 laps en route to his 98th career series victory. The Las Vegas native has collected four wins on road courses in the NASCAR Cup Series and his victory at COTA last year was his fourth in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

Mardy Lindley returns to KBM for his second season atop the pit box of the No. 51 team. In addition to this year’s win with Corey Heim at Atlanta Motor Speedway, the No. 51 team produced three victories in Lindley’s first season as a crew chief at KBM, two with Busch and one with Martin Truex Jr. Before arriving at KBM, Lindley guided his drivers to 32 wins and four ARCA Menards Series East championships since 2013, including back-to-back titles with Sam Mayer the last two seasons. Additionally, he earned the ARCA Menards Series Sioux Chief Showdown championship with Mayer in 2020. Behind the wheel, the second-generation driver won 11 races on the Pro Cup Series from 2000 to 2006 and was crowned the series champion in 2001. Lindley’s one race atop the pit box at COTA resulted in an 18th-place finish with Parker Chase last year.

Rowdy Energy, the enhanced hydration formula energy drink created by Busch, and vendor partner QuickTrip, one of the top convenience store retailers, will adorn the bedtop of the No. 51 Tundra for Saturday’s 42-lap race. Rowdy Energy Drink is currently available in 10 flavors, including seven sugar free options that are KETO certified. Use Rowdy Energy’s store locator at https://rowdyenergy.com/pages/store-locator to find where you can pick up a can today, or order online at www.rowdyenergy.com.

Kyle Busch, Driver Q&A:
Are you looking forward to your first-ever road course start in the Truck Series?
“I guess it’s kind of crazy to think that I’ve made so many starts in the Truck Series and this will be my first on a road course. Back when I was running more races in the Truck Series, in the late 2000’s and early 2010’s, there wasn’t many road courses on the schedule and the ones that were on the schedule were typically stand alones. When the schedule came out last year, I had COTA and Watkins Glen on my wish list at first glance, but Cup Series drivers weren’t eligible for either of those two, so I’m glad that it worked out this year where not only will I be racing this weekend at COTA, but Sonoma in June is also on my truck schedule. Hopefully, we can check off another box and get a win on a road course in all three series. Safelite has been a long-time sponsor of ours at KBM, so it’s cool to have them sponsoring my truck this weekend and they’ll be on again at Charlotte. The flat white Tundra TRD Pro looks really good. Hopefully, we can put it in victory lane Saturday and celebrate with all the Safelite folks — they are a great sponsor who always brings a lot of associates out at the track and that is cool to see.”

You are running both the Cup Series and Truck Series races this weekend. Are doubleheaders fun for you?
“I feel like preparing for a doubleheader is pretty easy. I’ve always been used to running in two or three races in a weekend, running the Truck, Xfinity, Cup, whatever it may be. I like that, so I think it gives us an opportunity to get out there and get our feet wet in the Truck Series, and get a feel for the tire and the new car and really think about what you can learn. I’m a bit of a perfectionist, so it will be nice to have some extra track time to work on my car and get some experience and also have just a little bit more knowledge of what it’s like beyond what we do in our SIM and other ways we prepare for races and the limited practice time we will have.”

Kyle Busch Camping World Truck Series Career Highlights:

  • Busch has a total of 161 Camping World Trucks starts and is ranked first all-time in wins (61), driver rating (123.6) and average finish (6.6).
  • The 36-year-old driver has won 37.8% (61/161) of the NCWTS races he has entered and finished first or second in 57.1% (92/161).
  • Busch stands alone as the leader in all-time career wins in NASCAR’s national touring series with 222 total victories. He has earned 59 NASCAR Cup Series wins, 102 NASCAR Xfinity Series wins, and 61 NCWTS wins.
  • In August of 2010, Busch made history when he won the NCWTS, NXS and NCS races at Bristol Motor Speedway, becoming the only driver to sweep all three of NASCAR’s top three series at one track on the same weekend. He then repeated the feat in August of 2017.

Kyle Busch’s No. 51 Safelite Tundra:

KBM-71: The No. 51 Safelite team will race KBM-71 for Saturday’s race at COTA. In its lone start, Corey Heim finished 18th with this Toyota at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International Raceway last August.
Click here to see KBM-71 Performance Profile

KBM Notes of Interest:

  • KBM drivers produced an average finish of 21.0 in last year’s Truck Series event at Circuit of the Americas with John Hunter Nemechek scoring a team-best 12th-place finish.
  • Erik Jones’ victory in 2015 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Bowmanville, Ont. is KBM’s lone win on a road course.
  • 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 (Ga.) 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).
  • With 38 victories, the No. 51 is the winningest number in KBM’s Truck Series fleet.

Wilson Expects Next Gen Mustang Will Impress at COTA

This weekend, in the Echopark Texas Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, NASCAR’s Next Gen car gets its first real test on a road course.

Brian Wilson, crew chief of the No. 21 Freightliner Mustang driven by Harrison Burton, expects the new car to ace that test.

“The Next Gen car should be really well suited to road-course racing,” Wilson said. “A lot of the new technology -or at least new to NASCAR – has been on sports cars for a long time.”

“The independent rear suspension gives us new ways to tune the setup that we didn’t previously have. I believe the Next Gen car will take our road course races, which already were highly entertaining, and make for a great weekend of racing.”

Wilson said COTA, which has hosted many forms of racing including Formula One, is a great and challenging facility.

“Like every world-class road course it has some hard braking zones, long straights, elevation changes and switchback rhythm sections,” he said.

Wilson said that while his rookie driver hasn’t raced COTA in a Cup car, young Burton does have the benefit of lots of laps run there last year, when he finished sixth in an Xfinity Series race.

“I think any experience at a track helps, and Harrison has a lot of laps around COTA since we had a practice session and race there in the Xfinity series last year,” said Wilson, who was crew chief on the Mustang that Austin Cindric drove to a fifth-place finish in that race.

The Freightliner team also will take advantage of the resources provided by Ford Motor Co. as they prepare for the first road-course race of the Cup Series season.

“Through Ford we will also utilize their simulator to make even more laps with the setups that we’re preparing for this weekend,” Wilson said. “I’m sure that Harrison and the team will be ready when practice starts on Saturday.”

Practice for the Echopark Texas Grand Prix is set for Saturday morning at 9 a.m. (10 a.m. Eastern Time) followed by qualifying an hour later. FOX Sports 1 will carry the live coverage.

The 68-lap, 232-mile race is scheduled to start just after 2:30 p.m. (3:30 p.m. Eastern Time) with TV coverage on FOX. Stage breaks are set for Laps 15 and 30.

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