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Top 5 Racing-Themed Online Casino Games You Must Check Out

Photo by Jaroslav Nymburský from Pexels

Racing-themed online casino games are exciting, and virtually everything about the games keeps your mind racing. Some are about driving fancy vehicles, making them the perfect choices for anyone in love with fancy cars. You will have the opportunity to see and play with several fancy cars in the game. 

The game will give you a realistic experience as you control professional digital drivers in racing competitions. It features a 3D environment just perfect for entertainment for both gamblers and non-gamblers. The game isn’t just about car racing but also involves other racing forms, like horse racing. Many Swiss online casino sites offer racing-themed games to keep you entertained, and their exciting interfaces boost their popularity. If you desire to venture into casino racing games, you have come to the right place. This written piece will show you some of the best racing-themed online casino games worthy of note. 

  1. Formula X

This is a top-rated 3D racing-themed casino game requiring the player to race towards the finishing line marked by the checkered flag. The racing online slot game features five reels and 25 paylines. You can win a jackpot if you win the game, and you must play the maximum lines of 25 to qualify for the jackpot.

  1. Highway Kings

This slot game features 5 reels and 9 paylines. It also offers an exceptional gaming experience and the impressive actions will keep you at the edge of your seat. You can also win some cash and earn bonuses along the way. The game equally offers a jackpot. 

  1. Greenlight

The slot game features 5 reels and 20 paylines and offers an impressive slot gaming experience. The color and the entire racing theme make the game preferable to many slots players in Sweden and worldwide. 

  1. Racing for pinks slot

The game features 5 reels and 243 paylines. The players can also access several rewards, including free spins. The game’s programming includes unique themes and runs on the Microgaming software platform, which is among the leading gaming software developers across the globe. 

  1. Sure win slots 

This racing-themed slot is a horse racing casino game, and it is highly competitive. You can get huge returns on your stake if you win. The game features  5 reels and 25 paylines, giving the players opportunities to win a lot of money based on the combinations achieved. 

Conclusion 

There are many racing-themed online casino games for Swedish players today, but the ones mentioned above stand a head taller than many others. They offer incomparable entertainment and give you unique opportunities to make a lot of money. 

Nevertheless, always check the terms and conditions before playing any of them. Also, risk only the amount you can afford to lose when staking on slot games or other online casino games. 

Weekend schedule for Atlanta Motor Speedway – Updated

During the NASCAR Cup Series Quaker State 400 presented by Walmart at Atlanta Motor Speedway on July 11, 2021 in Hampton, Georgia. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

This weekend all three NASCAR national series head to Atlanta Motor Speedway. The revamped and repaved 1.54-mile asphalt track now includes 28-degrees of banking in every corner, making it the steepest intermediate track on the schedule.

Throw in the variable of a new car and a style of racing similar to the superspeedways of Daytona and Talladega and Atlanta promises to deliver an exciting racing experience.

“Our goal all along for the reconfiguration of Atlanta Motor Speedway has been to create a first-of-its-kind experience on the NASCAR circuit and we’ve done just that,” said AMS Executive Vice President and General Manager Brandon Hutchison. “Never before has NASCAR raced on an intermediate track like ours with 28 degrees of banking, much less with superspeedway cars. Both will happen for the first time in Atlanta this year.”

Press Pass Live will be available throughout the weekend.

All times are Eastern.

*Friday, March 18 – All on-track activity canceled due to rain

3:05 p.m.: Truck Series Practice – All entries – FS1 – canceled
4:05 p.m.: Xfinity Series Practice – All Entries – FS1 – canceled
5:05 p.m.: Cup Series Practice – All Entries – FS1 – canceled

Saturday, March 19

10:40 a.m.: Truck Series Qualifying Canceled, Replaced by a practice session – Starts on FS2, Moves to FS1 at 11 a.m. – Chandler Smith will be on the pole
11:40 a.m.: Xfinity Series Qualifying Canceled, Replaced by a practice session – FS1 – Noah Gragson will be on the pole
12:40 p.m.: Cup Series Qualifying Canceled, Replaced by a practice session – FS1 – Chase Briscoe will be on the pole

2:30 p.m.: Truck Series Fr8 208 Race
Stages 30/60/135 Laps = 207.9 Miles
FS1/MRN
The Purse: $669,442
2021 Race Winner: Kyle Busch

5 p.m.: Xfinity Series Nalley Cars 250 Race
Stages 40/80/163 Laps = 251.02 Miles
FS1/PRN/TSN3
The Purse: $1,232,553
2021 Race Winner: Justin Allgaier

Sunday, March 20

3 p.m.: Cup Series Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 Race
Stages 105/210/325 Laps = 500.5 Miles
FOX/PRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Purse: $8,263,045
2021 Race Winner: Ryan Blaney

John Hunter Nemechek: Driver, No. 4 Pye-Barker Fire & Safety Toyota

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Overview:
Event: Fr8 208, Race 3 of 23, 135 Laps –30/30/75; 207.9 Miles
Location: Atlanta (Ga.) Motor Speedway at (1.54-mile Quad-oval)
Date/Broadcast: Mar. 19, 2022, at 2:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR 90

Nemechek #Back4More in 2022
Nemechek and the No. 4 Pye-Barker team head to Atlanta Motor Speedway looking to rebound from a 25th-place finish in the previous race at Las Vegas. After capturing the pole and finishing in the top-10 in each of the first two stages at Las Vegas, Nemechek was involved in a late-race incident, relegating him to a 25th-place finish. Nemechek currently sits 10th in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series standings after the first two races of the season.

The 24-year-old driver will be making his fifth career start at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. He has tallied one win (2016), two top-five and two top-10 finishes with average finish of 14.3 in his first four starts at the 1.54-mile oval. In his lone NASCAR Cup Series start at the Georgia track, Nemechek finished 18th in 2020. Additionally, he has made two NASCAR Xfinity Starts at Atlanta, with a best result of fourth coming in the 2018 event.

Back on January 4th, Nemechek participated in a Goodyear Tire Test at the newly repaved Atlanta Motor Speedway where he turned over 200-laps in the new Tundra TRD Pro. The No. 4 team will unload the same chassis, KBM-53 this weekend that was used during the Goodyear Tire Test.

Pye-Barker Fire & Safety, an industry leader in commercial fire protection since 1946, will serve as the primary sponsor for Nemechek at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Pye-Barker, who acquired Nemechek’s long-term partner Fire Alarm Services in 2021, will also serve as the primary sponsor of the No. 4 Tundra TRD Pro at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway (5/27), Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (9/15) and the season finale at Phoenix Raceway (11/4).

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 126 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, he has compiled three poles, 1,254 laps led, 40 top-five and 66 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.8.

Nemechek spent the Truck Series off weekend racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Phoenix (Ariz.) Raceway last weekend. He started 11th, led 11 laps and ended the day with a fifth-place finish for Sam Hunt Racing.

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. At Atlanta, Phillip’s drivers have collected seven top-five, and seven top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 11.0 across 13 starts.

John Hunter Nemechek, Driver Q&A:
John Hunter Nemechek | Atlanta Motor Speedway
You participated in the Goodyear Tire Test at Atlanta, what’s your take on the “new Atlanta” for this race?
“Don’t know what to expect going back. We were a part of the tire test in January — I think that they are bringing a really good tire back to Atlanta Motor Speedway. Not sure how it’s going to race, though. A lot of things have changed since we were there at the tire test, double yellow line rule now, I know that they’re changing some of the walls around, some barriers for different angles so if you do hit it’s not as violent. A lot of changes going back, we were supposed to have a 50-minute practice on Friday but it doesn’t look too great with rain coming so not sure if we’ll get on track Friday. The first laps in a pack may be at the start of the race so a lot to learn, a lot to figure out in a short of time but hopefully it’ll be fun and hopefully we can bring home our first checkered flag of the year.”

In addition to running in the Truck Series, you have been running some Xfinity Series races. Does racing during those off weekends help you stay sharp?
“Yeah, I think being able to be in the seat when the Truck Series is off, being able to go out and run laps and race, you’re learning something. I think being able to run at Phoenix last week was a great addition for me with Sam Hunt Racing, being able to go turn laps, have a really solid day, not make any mistakes and learn. We raced really hard all day — had to come from the back and pass a lot of cars. That’s where our championship finale is, so the more laps the better.”

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 126 career starts in NASCAR’s third division, has compiled three poles, 1,254 laps led, 40 top-five and 66 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.8. 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 Pye-Barker Tundra TRD Pro:
KBM-53: The No. 4 Pye-Barker Fire & Safety team will unload KBM-53 for Saturday’s race at Atlanta. Nemechek drove this Toyota three times throughout the 2021 season, accumulating 125 laps led and an average finish of 4.3. Nemechek wheeled KBM-53 to a third-place finish at Atlanta last spring after leading 21 of 130 laps. Back on January 4th, Nemechek participated in a Goodyear Tire Test at the newly repaved Atlanta Motor Speedway where he turned over 200-laps driving this chassis.
Click Here for KBM-53 Performance Profile:

KBM Notes of Interest:

  • KBM drivers have collected three wins, two poles, 689 laps led, 10 top-five and 13 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 12.8 across 26 starts at Atlanta. KBM Owner-driver Kyle Busch won last year and in 2019 while Christopher Bell brought home the trophy in 2017.
  • KBM holds the Camping World Truck Series records for most career wins (91) and most wins in a single season (14 in 2014). With his victory at Bristol Motor Speedway last September, Chandler Smith became the 17th 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.

RFK Weekly Advance | Atlanta I

Roush Fenway Keselowski Weekly Advance | Atlanta

NASCAR returns to a brand-new Atlanta Motor Speedway this weekend as the Cup stars are set to battle 500 miles on the newly-repaved 1.5-mile surface. Jack Roush has 13 wins all-time at AMS including six in the NCS.

NASCAR Cup Series Race at Atlanta

Sunday, March 20 | 3 p.m. ET

FOX, PRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

· Brad Keselowski, No. 6 Kohler Generators Ford Mustang

· Chris Buescher, No. 17 ITsavvy Ford Mustang

New-Look Atlanta

AMS underwent a massive overhaul in the offseason with a repaved surface. The track is now narrowed to just 40 feet in width, with the banking changing to 28 degrees, becoming the highest-baked intermediate track.

Buescher is one of three drivers (Kurt Busch, Ross Chastain) to have tested the new surface this offseason.

RFK at Atlanta

RFK has 269 total starts at AMS in the three major NASCAR touring series, totaling 13 wins, 59 top-fives, 111 top-10s and 9 poles, while leading 3,154 laps and turning over 103,000 miles. The team has 186 starts in NCS action with six wins and 72 top-10s with four poles.

AMS/RFK History

RFK competed in its first NASCAR event at AMS on March 20, 1988, finishing 31st after getting

involved in an early crash. Just three years later the organization claimed its first win there in the fall of ‘91 with the No. 6 Ford. RFK won its first of seven NXS races at the track in the spring of ’97. The team’s top outing at AMS came in the fall of 2005, when the organization placed four cars inside the top seven, with three cars finishing in the top five including race winner Carl Edwards. Altogether, in the two races at AMS in 2005, RFK posted six top-five finishes and two wins.

Spring Forward

All but one of RFK’s Cup wins at AMS came in the fall, with the only spring win coming

in 2005. Three of RFK’s seven NXS wins came in the fall.

RFK Atlanta Wins

1991-2 Martin Cup

1994-2 Martin Cup

1997-1 Martin NXS

1998-2 Martin NXS

2000-1 Martin NXS

2002-2 Busch Cup

2005-1 Edwards Cup

2005-1 Edwards NXS

2005-2 Edwards Cup

2008-1 Kenseth NXS

2008-2 Edwards Cup

2011 Edwards NXS

2012 Stenhouse NXS

HighPoint.com Racing: Chase Briscoe Atlanta Advance

CHASE BRISCOE
Atlanta Advance
No. 14 HighPoint.com Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Folds of Honor 500 (Round 5 of 36)
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday, March 20
● Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway
● Layout: 1.54-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 325 laps/500 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 105 laps / Stage 2: 105 laps / Final Stage: 115 laps
● TV/Radio: FOX / PRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 14 Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR), earned his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory Sunday at Phoenix Raceway. He joins Alan Kulwicki (1988) and Bobby Hamilton (1996) as the third driver to earn his first Cup Series win at the desert mile oval. He is also the first Cup Series driver to take a car carrying the No. 14 to victory lane at Phoenix, and is the 200th Cup Series winner of all time.

● Briscoe started sixth at Phoenix and led three times for 101 laps. He held off a late-race charge from Tyler Reddick and Ross Chastain during a lap-293 restart and was in the top spot when the caution flag flew on lap 305 of the scheduled 312-lap race, setting up a green-white-checkered shootout. The 27-year-old from Mitchell, Indiana, then drove away from Reddick, Chastain and nine-time Phoenix winner and SHR teammate Kevin Harvick, among others, to score his first win in NASCAR’s top series and the first win for the No. 14 team since 2018. Clint Bowyer drove the No. 14 SHR Ford to victory in that year’s June race at Michigan.

● Sunday’s Phoenix win came in just the 40th career start for the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year. It was just the fourth race for the new NextGen car, NASCAR’s latest version of stock car that debuted in 1949. In four races this season, Briscoe has earned a win, two top-three finishes and his career-best staring position on an oval – third at Las Vegas Motor Speedway the previous weekend. He is tied with Kyle Larson for fourth in the driver standings and currently holds a spot in the 16-driver playoff field.

● Transform Your IT –The blue-and-white colors of HighPoint return to the No. 14 Mustang for the first time in 2022 after first appearing on Briscoe’s car in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2020. Briscoe earned four of his nine wins in the Xfinity Series that year sporting HighPoint colors and earned all three of his top-10s in his rookie Cup Series season with the company headquartered in Sparta, New Jersey. The leading IT infrastructure and solutions company introduces a more tech-inspired livery just in time for the Cup Series’ first visit to the transformed Atlanta Motor Speedway.

● The track in Hampton, Georgia, underwent a reconfiguration in the offseason to create tighter, superspeedway-type racing on its 1.54-mile oval. The racing surface was narrowed from 55 feet to 40 feet and the banking was increased to 28 degrees – the most of any intermediate track on the schedule.

● In two starts at Atlanta, Briscoe has a best finish of 15th earned last July. He also has three NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Atlanta with a best finish of ninth in 2020, and a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series start there in 2017.

● Last weekend’s victory was crew chief Johnny Klausmeier’s third win atop the pit box and first at Phoenix. Klausmeier’s 2019 SHR driver Aric Almirola qualified on the pole and brought home a top-10 at Atlanta.

Chase Briscoe, Driver of the No. 14 HighPoint.com Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

Talk about the emotional moment of being able to take the No. 14 car back to victory lane for your hero and now team co-owner Tony Stewart, and discussing the win with him postrace.

“This car is obviously his, and he has a lot of passion and drive for that car. He took a chance on another guy who is kind of like himself, a dirt Sprint car racer. We grew up in towns that are 45 minutes apart and my dad raced against Tony in Sprint cars. I was a diehard Tony fan growing up and diehard 14 fan, so for me to add my name to the list of guys that have driven the No. 14 car to victory lane is definitely special for me. Looking back, when I was 6 or 7 years old and wearing the Tony Stewart helmet and uniform, I never in a million years thought I would get to take his car to victory lane in the Cup Series, and it was really cool for him to call, and to get to hear how excited he was for that to happen.”

Have you noticed any significant strides in yourself or the team compared to last year?

“I think from a confidence standpoint I feel like I belong this year. Last year, it was very ‘eyes wide open.’ I was racing against guys I had watched on TV for years and that I’ve looked up to. Now I don’t look at the 18 car and go, ‘That’s Kyle Busch.’ It’s just the 18 car, another guy out there. I think that confidence has come a long way. Obviously with the results, the confidence builds. I feel like I belong. Especially, now, winning, I’ve proven I belong in the Cup Series. When you come in in your rookie year, you think you’re ready, but you’re never ready. To run up front and lead laps is special, for sure.”

Next we head to Atlanta and, even though you’ve raced there twice in the Cup Series, the track has undergone significant changes since the last visit. You’re coming off a win, which typically gives the team a lot of confidence and momentum, but how does the track change affect your preparation for this weekend?

“It’s going to be wild. It’s great to win on Sunday, but this coming week there are going to be 39 guys that are going to try the same thing. A couple of guys in the shop asked me how it feels to get that first win and it feels good, but it doesn’t mean anything if we go run 40th this week. You’ve got to be able to go do it again. So I think, this week, there are a lot of unknowns for a lot of reasons. The NextGen car still is a big variable that we don’t really know a lot about, but then the track is totally different than anything we’ve ever had. It’s supposedly going to be like a mini-Daytona or Talladega with pack racing and drafting, but what really happens when we get there? It’s going to be intense, it’s going to be wild, it’s going to be a narrow track with a lot of speed and a lot of excitement. It’ll be interesting to see where we stack up when we get there. I don’t know what to expect. I’ve been on the simulator quite a bit trying to figure it out, but we won’t really know what it’s going to be like until we get there.”

No. 14 HighPoint.com Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Chase Briscoe
Hometown: Mitchell, Indiana

Crew Chief: John Klausmeier
Hometown: Perry Hall, Maryland

Car Chief: J.D. Frey
Hometown: Ferndale, California

Engineer: Mike Cook
Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

Engineer: Marc Hendricksen
Hometown: Clinton, New Jersey

Spotter: Joey Campbell
Hometown: Berlin, Connecticut

Over-The-Wall Members

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

Rear Tire Changer: Chris Jackson
Hometown: Rock Hill, South Carolina

Tire Carrier: Jon Bernal
Hometown: Shelby, North Carolina

Jack Man: Brandon Banks

Hometown: High Point, North Carolina

Fuel Man: Corey Coppola

Hometown: Bluefield, West Virginia

Road Crew Members

Underneath Mechanic: Stephen Gonzalez
Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Interior Mechanic: Trevor Adams
Hometown: Naples, Florida

Tire Specialist: Keith Eads
Hometown: Arlington, Virginia

Shock Specialist: Brian Holshouser
Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Engine Tuner: Jon Phillips
Hometown: Jefferson City, Missouri

Transporter Co-Driver: Todd Cable
Hometown: Shelby, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Rob Fink
Hometown: Mocksville, North Carolina

DGR NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Advance: Atlanta Motor Speedway

Saturday, March 19
Track: Atlanta Motor Speedway, 1.5-mile oval
Race: 3 of 23
Event: Fr8 208 (135 laps, 208 miles)

Schedule

Friday, March 18
Practice: 3:05 p.m. ET

Saturday, March 19
Qualifying: 10:30 a.m. ET
Race: 2:30 p.m. ET (FOX Sports 1)

Hailie Deegan, No. 1 Wastequip Ford F-150

  • The Fr8 208 on Saturday afternoon will mark the third start of Deegan’s sophomore season and 26th of her career.
  • Deegan is hoping to turn her luck around this weekend after sustaining damage in each of the first two races this season. The previous race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway saw the Temecula, California native’s day end early, retiring after 44 laps.
  • The Ford development driver has one previous start at Atlanta Motor Speedway finishing 21st last season. The new configuration should present an intriguing challenge for the entire field when the track goes green for practice on Friday afternoon.
  • With the new surface, you can essentially toss the record book out the window. However, Mike Hillman Jr. has had quite the career at the 1.5-mile Georgia oval. In 17 NCWTS starts, the veteran has one win, six top-fives and 11 top-10s.

Tanner Gray, No. 15 Ford Performance F-150

  • Tanner Gray will compete in the 51st race of his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career when the series visits the newly reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia this weekend.
  • Off to the best start of his young career, Gray has back-to-back top-five finishes in the first two races of the season, finishing fourth at Daytona and fifth at Las Vegas.
  • After the first two events, the Ford Performance driver sits second in the series standings, five points behind point leader Chandler Smith and 10 points ahead of third-place Ty Majeski.
  • Unlike most of the field, Friday’s practice session will not be the first laps on the new Atlanta surface for Gray. The 22-year-old served as the Ford representative at the manufacturer test back in January and hopes that the speed he showed at the test will parlay into a third consecutive top-five run.

Ryan Preece, No. 17 United Rentals Ford F-150

  • Ryan Preece will make his second of seven starts behind the wheel of the No. 17 F-150 on Saturday afternoon. United Rentals will return as the primary partner for the second of three races in 2022.
  • At Las Vegas Motor Speedway two weeks ago, the Connecticut native qualified fifth and finished fourth after nearly snagging the lead in the closing laps of the 134-lap event.
  • Preece has an impressive 1-2-3 stat line thus far in the NCWTS. He has one win, two top-fives and three top-10s in his three career starts.
  • On the previous configuration of Atlanta, Preece has six career starts between the Cup and Xfinity Series’ with one top-10.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Chris Buescher Atlanta Advance

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 Advance | Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Chris Buescher, driver of the No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang, is coming off a 10th-place finish last weekend at Phoenix Raceway. As the series heads to Atlanta this weekend for the first race on a freshly repaved Atlanta Motor Speedway, Buescher took questions from the media and discussed expectations.

CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Fastenal Ford Ford Mustang – ATLANTA MADE SOME CHANGES TO THE WALL AFTER THE TIRE TEST. WHAT DID YOU SEE AND HOW DOES MOVING THAT WALL CHANGE THINGS? “I will say that it won’t affect our racing or on-track line or activity there. It’s really not even taking away usable racing space for us. It’s just rounding out the dogleg or the tri-oval or whatever you want to call it. Sitting there looking at it after the repave and adding in all the extra asphalt, I think all the drivers were seeing it as a high potential angle for impact, so just trying to smooth that out. SMI and NASCAR were all very open and listening to everybody talk about it and went to work to try and smooth that out for everybody. I think at the end of the day it should be safer. That’s not really for me to determine, but that being said I think it’s not going to affect our on-track line or the space we really have. It’s pretty much either filling in the gap for all the marbles and dust would collect and you would never really get to anyway.”

YOU’VE TESTED THERE. DO YOU KNOW WHAT TO EXPECT OR ARE YOU AS CLUELESS AS EVERYBODY ELSE? “Yep, I’m right in line with everybody else. It was superspeedway-like with three cars. We were able to be wide-open and stay pretty tight. Handling was in play very quickly. Like any new paved racetrack, tires are very much on edge, so I think you’ll be really trying to be aware of that and be ready for that. And then I think we’ve also seen the pack speed at Daytona with these cars and how fast it got over single-car runs. We had three cars, but I think once you get a bigger group out there the speeds will go up even more, so I think it will start forcing you to lift a lot more. I don’t expect it to be a Daytona or a Talladega, but it may be closer to that than some of our older mile-and-a-halves.”

CAN YOU GAUGE IF TIRE FALL OFF WILL BE A FACTOR IN THIS RACE OR IS IT TOO HARD TO TELL?

“I think the goal has been to try and find some fall off everywhere we’ve gone, and I think Goodyear has done a really good job of that at a lot of places. With new asphalt at Atlanta and speeds as high as they are and loads as high as they are, I don’t know what kind of box that puts them in. I would say that we ran through a bunch of different compounds, but I don’t know that we a good read on what we’d expect for fall off or where the grip would go. I would say that bigger thing that came up across the three drivers that were there was not so much sliding tires as much as chattering. New asphalt, when it gives up, it goes to a chatter more than a slide and just trying to hang on. I’m not sure what to expect there exactly. I don’t know how this one will react and I don’t think that I have all the information from the test or if we actually did long enough runs on certain compounds or the compound that we’re gonna actually run to be able to get a good answer for you on that one.”

HOW HAS THE SEASON GONE IN TERMS OF EXPECTATIONS FOR RFK? “I would say that expectations were probably a little higher for everybody. That being said, we’ve had some really good high spots along the way and we’ve had some misses as well. The Clash was a miss for us and, unfortunately, with that weekend schedule being so far from home there wasn’t really anything we could do about what we had at that time. We have a really good idea of what we did wrong and did differently going back to Phoenix, which obviously isn’t the same racetrack by any means, but it was a really good day for us and really turned around the feeling of disappointment from the Clash for us. Daytona was really good to be able to win the Duels, have a shot to win the 500 – no doubt in our minds there. So we had some highs there. Fontana, we saw everybody going through growing pains out there. There were more spins and more cautions than everybody probably expected and with that we were steadily getting better before we cut a left-rear down, so I would take that one as a pretty decent day for us – not quite as good as we had hoped, but a pretty decent day there. Vegas wasn’t real good, so that was one we underachieved on and expected more, and then Phoenix, to be pretty blunt about it, has probably been my worst track for years now. To be able to go there and not fire off in practice near like we wanted, got better for qualifying, started improving each stage and was able to have a solid top 15 race car and then be able to have some good strategy at the end and sneak a few more spots to grab a top 10 was a small victory in my eyes for Phoenix. So that was a pretty big plus. Even though it’s not what we wanted, we’re not content at that point, but it was a large step in the right direction. There’s been some really good. There’s been some really bad. There’s been a lot that’s just OK or been pretty decent. We just have to get more. We want to be more consistent with it. This car is tough. We’re all just all learning every time we go to the racetrack and we have a lot of different racetrack styles coming up here. We have already, so we’re gonna really touch on all of them right from the get-go and we’ll be making a notebook and hopefully by the second half of the season we’ll be able to erase all those lows and create a much more constant line in the high.”

HOW CRITICAL IS THE FRIDAY PRACTICE? “I would say we’re still in the same storyline of not having quite enough parts to be able to go out there and be 100 percent aggressive, but we do have to learn. We need to get out there and get some group runs in. I would expect that you’ll see teams try and control their groups, stay with cars they know and trust. I think that will be our initial plan. If we feel like we need to get in a bigger group, we will. I don’t know if that will be the case. I will say that even though the Truck and Xfinity races are much different now from us, we will be paying very close attention to those races to watch how it plays out, what the track trends towards, if it will get to three-wide. If it does, it will be a very narrow three-wide. Obviously, the side force or the lack thereof in these cars is pretty much overcome by the diffuser, so I feel like we are able to race side-by-side better than especially the Trucks. So, we’ll kind of take everything with a grain of salt along the way, but we’ll be paying a lot of attention to every session that’s on track, not just that Friday session for us, weather permitting. It’s gonna be an interesting weekend. I don’t think anybody knows what to expect right now and so that’s the tough part. We’re all winging it. We’re all trying to figure out how to get all the information we can without tearing up race cars ahead of the race. Once we get into it, I’m sure the aggression level goes up and we’ll inevitably have some exciting moments through the race, but we’ve got to get to the race first.”

WHAT KIND OF SPEEDS ARE YOU EXPECTING AND WHAT DID YOU SEE IN YOUR TEST SESSION? “I do not know that. They don’t give us speedometers and it’s probably a good thing. I know we can rework math and get that, but I tell you, that big digital speedometer on the entry to turn one at Fontana is a terrible idea. I hate that thing, so I’d much rather not know – the whole ignorance is bliss thing, we’ll stick with that for now. I’d say it’s gonna be fast. It’s gonna be if not wide-open, very close to it. There’s gonna be drafting and there’s gonna be handling and moving around, but it will be quick just like Atlanta always has been. It’ll be interesting to see how it all plays out and figure out where it goes, but I guess the short answer to all of that is no. I don’t have an idea on the miles per hour right now.”

HOW WILL THE RACE AT ATLANTA COMPARE TO DAYTONA OR TALLADEGA WITH THE TRACK BEING A MILE SMALLER THAN THOSE TWO? “That’s a fair question. We don’t have that extra half-mile at the end of the straightaway or quarter-mile to do something with that run, so it will be a little bit tougher. More than likely, the racetrack is gonna be pretty narrow. In reconfiguring it and adding the banking it narrowed up the racing surface at the same time, so I don’t know how much room there really is to take a run, where you can go with it. We’ve talked about in the past that Daytona is not real easy to be three-wide and, to be honest, we didn’t do a whole lot of three-wide racing at the 500. We always know that Talladega lends itself to a lot better than that and I’m sure we’ll see that once we get there, but even Daytona we weren’t that aggressive on three-wide. I think some of that was just the newness of it for everybody, but it is narrow and Atlanta is gonna be worse yet. The frontstretch is very flat there, so I think that even in the test with just a few cars losing the nose is a lot easier or worse. I guess it is a worse condition, but losing the nose makes it tough to stay in line tight, so if you’re two-wide through there, losing the nose and sliding up to that outside lane you’re gonna have to lift or drag some brake, which is gonna hurt your line. I think you’ll probably see a lot more comers and goers and a lot more movement initially until we figure out what to do with it, but it is tight. Even to be on a speedway package and wide-open around Atlanta while we were there with just those three cars, it’s a significantly tighter radius than the other superspeedways, which we know, but you felt it on track pretty quick, so it’s gonna be a lot different in certain ways. It’s gonna be very similar in others, but it’s gonna be a fun one. We have a lot to learn. That’s what I know for sure.”

WHAT WAS YOUR MOST IMPORTANT TAKEAWAY FROM COTA LAST YEAR WHEN YOU WERE OUT THERE IN THE DRY? “I was getting ready to say Rain-X. That was the biggest thing, but I don’t know yet. We did not spend very much time on the dry at all. Our qualifying was in the dry and at that point we had brake problems that surfaced from the rain in practice, so we did not get any really good, hard dry laps, unfortunately. I did go there and run some Mustangs ahead of COTA last year and got to go around with some instructors and learn a little bit about the track, so I think that will probably be more applicable than our Cup race was last year. I think this car is going to lend itself really well to road racing. The sequential shifting is gonna be fun. It’s not gonna be that much of a game-changer. The old four-speed had gotten very good, very efficient for what they were, but it’ll be fun to have an extra gear, have another option just like we’ve seen at Phoenix with a ton of cars shifting there and some shifting on both ends. It’s giving us some options there. The brake package in this car is very large, very good. You’re gonna be able to get in the corner a whole lot deeper with the rear suspension, without the truck arms underneath them. Wheel hop is less of an issue. I would expect it will start surfacing as people get more comfortable getting more rear brake in them, but it is less pronounced and a little bit more controllable. I think obviously the composite bodies lend themselves to not pushing metal in on a tire and cutting a tire down. I don’t think that I’ve seen any side-by-side contact cutting a tire down yet and having an issue just from that. I may be wrong in seeing it and obviously I don’t have the best vantage point during the races to see the whole field, but I think that’s not been too much of an issue or any of an issue, which I thought might have been a little bit more so. I think we’ll be able to have a little bit more close quarters racing and with that I don’t think the brake fade, going back to the brakes being bigger, being more efficient, I don’t think brake fade is gonna be near the issue that we’ve struggled with with the outdated technology that we were working around for the last 70 years.”

WE DON’T HAVE OFFICIAL WORD YET ON THE DOUBLE YELLOW LINE, BUT THERE HAS BEEN SOME TALK THEY SHOULD DO IT ON JUST THE FRONTSTRETCH OR ALL THE WAY AROUND. DO YOU HAVE A PREFERENCE AND DO YOU THINK IT’S NEEDED? “Waiting to hear the official word as well. I think that from the test, what I’ll say from the test, is with the way the frontstretch was paved and all the extra asphalt was added, the transitions didn’t match up to the previous racing surface or the current racing surface, and it left some very rough areas, some big dips. Basically, it’s stuff that would be flat-out dangerous at the end of the day, so I think that the frontstretch needs something. We need to have some kind of boundaries and at the same time we’ve been talking about the racing surface being maybe wide enough for three-wide and the frontstretch being wide enough for six, and where in the world are you gonna go if you realistically get four-wide on the frontstretch, which is very doable if you use it all – where do you go from there? Somebody is gonna have to give, and if it’s not the right car or truck and they end up having to enter the corner on the apron, you’re setting yourself up for disaster. That’s not what we’re trying to do. We’re not trying to create a demolition derby, so I would say there needs to be some kind of boundary for it. If the racing surface was six lanes wide once we got to turn one, then have it. Smooth out some of the transition stuff. Smooth out some bumps and say go for it, but when you funnel it down to that narrow of a racing line, you just can’t expect everybody to give that up every time. We’re all gonna be hard-headed and we’re gonna try to stay in it and that just won’t create good racing. It’ll create a spectacle for wrong reasons.”

IT SOUNDS LIKE THERE WILL BE A CHOOSE RULE FOR THIS RACE. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THAT IF THEY OFFICIALLY MAKE THAT A RULE THIS WEEKEND? “I like the choose. I loved it when the idea came up. I grew up racing in the Summer Shootout in Legends cars choosing. Obviously, we didn’t have all the data ahead of time and somebody in your ear and going through numbers and really studying it. It was kind of more of a seat-of-the-pants feeling at that moment, but I think the choose has been really good. I think it’s exciting every week. I don’t think that it’s gonna create any more teamwork issues than the current restart does at a superspeedway because inevitably when teammates are pushing, one is gonna end up on top and one on the bottom – somebody is gonna slow up the whole line, lift, drag the brake, let them in. I think that creates just as many issues as letting us choose and get in line ahead of it before we take the green, so I think it’s good. I don’t have any issues with the choose rule anywhere. I think there is some similar sentiment throughout the garage area that it can be just fine anywhere we go, so I think that’s good that we’re gonna have that option for Atlanta, especially as the race plays out and we see where we want to be on the racetrack. If you want to be moving up or if you would prefer to be down on the bottom and wrapping that line, give us the option to try and get there ahead of time, so I like it. I think it’s good.”

ARE THERE ACTUALLY BUMPS COMING OUT OF TURN TWO? “Yeah. There’s a handful of bumps around the track and we’ve been told and kind of shown where they ground and smoothed out a lot of those bumps from the initial paving. Our understanding is off of turn two it’s not so much a bump up as much as it is a dip, which they can’t really do anything about. So, yes, there will be some character there. Considering how rough Atlanta was beforehand, it’s amazing it’s as smooth as it is. That being said, I love the character of Atlanta. I love character anywhere we go, so bumps are not a bad thing. We wouldn’t expect it to be like glass, but that will be one that is probably more pronounced than others, which is a little surprising because you expect tunnel bumps or where different asphalt meets up, but this one seems to be more of just a dip off of turn two that will show up pretty aggressively in our cars.”

IS IT JUST A DIP IN THE TRACK THAT ONCE YOU GO DOWN YOU STAY AT THAT LEVEL? “I believe it’s just a dip that if you were in a Ford Explorer going down the road you wouldn’t think twice about, but when we’re sitting on stops and the car gets light across where it just kind of falls into the dip when it loads up, I think that’s what’s gonna hit you. It’s gonna feel like you’re going up, but it’s really caused from the fall into it first, and I think it’s large enough that it is gonna send spike loads through, just like Fontana backstretch was. When the ground Fontana on the back the reason we saw the bumps as rough as they were is because it’s not all just asphalt rolling up and swelling, it’s still a lot of dips and you can’t grind enough asphalt to make that dip line up with the rest of it, so I think it’s just something that’s gonna be there for this race and I think, like Fontana – I mean, we’re gonna put these cars on dirt in a few weeks. We better get used to a few bumps here and there.”

Burton, DEX Imaging Team Preparing for All-New Atlanta Track

With the introduction of the NextGen car, and some new drivers on the circuit, the 2022 Cup Series season has been one of significant change. This weekend’s race at Atlanta Motor Speedway offers a new element of uncertainty.

The 1.5-mile track, one of NASCAR’s cornerstone facilities, has undergone a major transformation in the offseason.

The track, which has hosted NASCAR’s elite series since 1960, has been repaved and reconfigured. The banking in the turns has been increased from 24 to 28 degrees and the width of the straightaways has been narrowed from 55 to 40 feet in the turns and 42 feet on the backstretch, while the frontstretch has been widened to 61.5 feet.

For this weekend’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, NASCAR has decided to use the Daytona/Talladega 510-horsepower package and the Daytona aero package with the seven-inch Daytona spoiler.

While some, including AMS officials, are saying Sunday’s race might resemble one at a superspeedway like Daytona or Talladega, Harrison Burton, who will drive the No. 21 DEX Imaging Mustang at Atlanta, said he believes the race will be more like the 2018 All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. That race was run using a handling package similar to the one that will be used at Atlanta this weekend.

“I think Atlanta will more or less mirror the All Star race from a few years back at Charlotte where it was more of a pack race,” Burton said. “It’s going to be a challenge to find out for sure.”

Burton said the pre-race practice session on Friday will be key to having a good-handling car in Sunday’s 500-miler.

“We will have to be adaptive to a lot,” he said.

Friday’s practice session is set to start at 5:05 p.m., with qualifying scheduled for Saturday at 12:30 p.m.

Sunday’s Folds of Honor/QuikTrip 500 is set to get the green flag just after 3 p.m., with TV coverage on FOX.

Stage breaks are set for Laps 105 and 210.

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

COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES:
Reducing Operating Costs
Reducing Paper Consumption
Increasing Productivity

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

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

King Shocks Dominates 2022 Mint 400, Sweeps Overall Podium

The Mint 400 “unlimited race” 2022 The Mint 400 The Mint 400 Photography

King Shocks-equipped teams led by drivers Kyle Jergensen, Tim Herbst, and BJ Baldwin took the top three overall positions in the 2022 BFGoodrich Tires Mint 400 on Saturday, conquering four laps of an intense race course to sweep the Great American Off-Road Race. As top rival competitors suffered mechanical issues that ended their days early, Jergensen and navigator Shawn Shanks braved the King Sand Whoops and more than 90 miles of other challenges per lap to post a final finishing time of 6:43:49 and collect a $10,000 contingency bonus from King Shocks.

Running their second Mint in four months, Jergensen and the #127 Brenthel Industries Unlimited Truck team were in a podium position for most of the event. After qualifying sixth, Jergensen finished the first lap in third, behind fellow King-equipped driver Ryan Arciero, who led more than half of the event. Jergensen moved up to second entering the final lap, and capitalized on the misfortune of another competitor to take the lead. While the rugged terrain posed challenges for everybody, and the #127 squad gave up some time for necessary on-the-fly repairs, Jergensen’s King Shocks held tough through the final 30 miles to make it to the finish. The victory also earned Jergensen a $10,000 contingency bonus from King Shocks.

Herbst’s #19 Monster Energy/Terrible Herbst Unlimited Truck was 3:19 behind the winning squad with a total time of 6:47:09, while Baldwin and the #97 Black Rifle Coffee Company Unlimited Truck completed the podium with a time of 6:51:09. Elsewhere in Saturday’s Unlimited Race, King-equipped James Dean and Ronny Wilson also scored the top two spots in Class 1, while Thor Herbst placed second in Unlimited Truck Spec. King also took second place overall in Friday’s Limited Race with Bruce Binnquist’s BDI Geiser Racing machine in the UTV Turbo division, first in Class 11 with Justin Hertel and Blake Wilkey teaming up to take the checkered flag in the popular Volkswagen Beetle division, and first in the ½ 1600 class with Kevin Sanchez taking his King Shocks-wrapped car to victory.

“Congratulations to King Shocks’ own Kyle Jergensen and Brenthel Industries for winning the 2022 Mint 400!” said Ramses Perez, King Shocks Senior Director of Marketing. “It’s been an incredible start to 2022 for us across the board, from dominating King of the Hammers to now sweeping the podium at the Mint. Kyle is an amazing racer whose results this year have lived up to his incredible potential, and it’s hard to think of a more deserving driver to take home the $10,000 King winner’s bonus. Tim and BJ are two legends of the sport who are more than deserving of their own Mint results this year as well. We’re thrilled to have supported all of our racers at this year’s Mint, and look forward to defending the crown once again in 2023!”

A successful Mint 400 weekend is just the latest in a long line of successes for King Shocks to start the 2022 off-road season. Jergensen’s Mint 400 triumph joins his King of the Hammers Desert Challenge T1 victory, while King-backed racers also took wins in the Desert Challenge T2 and B1 events, Class 11 Showdown, and the Race of Kings itself to start the year. King Shocks would like to thank all of its racers at the 2022 Mint 400 for once again demonstrating the performance and durability of King products, and congratulates all of the winners and finishers who rode with King to the victory.

Racing, prerunning or just having fun, whatever your application; King Shocks has the shock for you with the performance, reliability, precise tuning and adjustability you need. King Shocks, The Leader in Off-Road Technology!

About King Off-Road Shocks
King Shocks is a world-class manufacturer and servicer of custom made adjustable and rebuildable automotive shock absorbers and performance racing products for utility vehicles, OEM replacement and professional racing use. For over twenty years King Shocks has taken pride in putting quality, performance and customer service above all. Every product sold is the result of constant testing and development done with top racers in competition worldwide. This real world testing exposes their designs to a level of abuse and destructive forces that cannot be duplicated in a laboratory. King Shocks, The leader in Off-Road Shock Technology.

Toyota Racing Weekly Preview – 03.16.22

This Week in Motorsports: March 14-20, 2022

· NCS/NXS/NCWTS: Atlanta Motor Speedway – March 19-20
· ARCA EAST: 5 Flags Speedway (Pensacola, Fla.) – March 19

PLANO, Texas (March 16, 2022) – NASCAR is back on the East Coast as they take on the newly repaved Atlanta Motor Speedway, while the ARCA Menards Series East takes to the track for the second time this season in Pensacola, Florida.

NASCAR National Series – NCS | NXS | NCWTS

Toyota’s First Cup Win… Atlanta will always be a special place for Toyota and Kyle Busch. On March 9, 2008, Busch drove Toyota to its first Cup Series win at Atlanta. Busch has since added another Cup Series win at the track in September 2013. He also scored Toyota’s first Xfinity win at Atlanta in 2016.

Kurt Busch looks to continue to check boxes… Kurt Busch checked another box in his first season for 23XI on Sunday as he drove the No. 45 Toyota Camry TRD to a top-five finish. Busch has a stellar record at Atlanta Motor Speedway with three wins at the track, including his most recent victory last July.

Bayne adds Atlanta… After two stellar runs, Trevor Bayne has added Atlanta to his 2022 NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule. Bayne, who will now make eight starts in the No. 18 Toyota GR Supra for Joe Gibbs Racing, won the pole and finished fourth in Phoenix. The Tennessee-native sits 12th in the point standings despite only starting two of the first four events.

The 26 turns 50… Sam Hunt Racing will make the organization’s 50th start in Atlanta coming off one of its best ever performances in Phoenix as Truck Series championship contender John Hunter Nemechek led the team’s first ever laps and scored its second-ever top-five finish. After four events, the team sits ninth in the owner’s standings and ranks as the top-single car team. Jeffrey Earnhardt returns to the No. 26 Toyota GR Supra this weekend for the team’s milestone start.

Georgia state of mind… Toyota has several drivers heading home this weekend. Atlanta-native Brandon Jones is coming off a season-best second place finish in Phoenix. He drove to a career-best fourth place finish at his home track in 2019. In the Truck Series, Kyle Busch Motorsports drivers Chandler Smith and Corey Heim will both compete at their home race. The Truck Series most recent winner – Smith – is from Talking Rock, Georgia, while Heim, who is making his track debut, is from Marietta. Smith is also the series points leader heading into Atlanta.

Majeski off to impressive start… In his first full-time season with ThorSport Racing, Ty Majeski is off to an impressive start as one of just three drivers with top-10 finishes in both races to start the season. The Wisconsin-native sits third in the overall point standings and will make his second Truck Series start at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Saturday.

NASCAR Regional Series – ARCA East

Smith plans for strong start to continue… Sammy Smith is the defending race winner at 5 Flags Speedway. The 17-year-old Toyota development driver led 145 of 200 laps on his way to his first ARCA East win. The reigning ARCA East champion started the season strong with a win at New Smyrna Speedway and leads the point standings heading into 5 Flags Speedway.

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About Toyota

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

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

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