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A new year brings new milestones for South Boston Speedway

Photo Courtesy Joe Chandler/South Boston Speedway

By Joe Chandler
Director, Public Relations
South Boston Speedway

SOUTH BOSTON, Va. (Jan. 5, 2022) — It’s a new year and new milestones are on the horizon as South Boston Speedway celebrates its 65th anniversary throughout 2022.

South Boston Speedway kicks off a new era with a change in leadership, the addition of new first-time events, new ticketing opportunities for fans, a bigger push into digital marketing and livestreaming of events and a month-long celebration of the track’s 65th anniversary celebration in August.

After having served as South Boston Speedway’s general manager for the past 21 years and having been involved in the speedway’s operation for over three decades, Cathy Rice retired from the post at the end of 2021. Helen Barksdale, the track’s long-time office manager, also retired at the end of the 2021.

Chase Brashears is taking the reins of South Boston Speedway, stepping into the general manager’s role, and his wife, Carly Brashears, will serve as director of marketing and administration for the speedway.

“South Boston Speedway’s history and tradition of being one of NASCAR’s premier short tracks is well-known across the nation,” said Chase Brashears.
“Our goal is to take the speedway to the next level, continuing to build upon South Boston Speedway’s tradition of providing fans the best in racing at a quality facility with a family-friendly atmosphere.”

Brashears is bringing some new events to South Boston Speedway in 2022. Drifting, a different form of motorsports, will be featured at “America’s Home Track” on March 5. The fastest cars on asphalt, 410-winged sprint cars, will visit the track for a two-night event on April 29-30.

“These are new, first-time events for South Boston Speedway, and each offers its own unique brand of excitement,” Brashears pointed out.

Last year South Boston Speedway implemented an online ticketing system that enabled fans to purchase advance tickets as well as race-day tickets on the speedway’s website. In December of this past year, for the first time ever, fans had the ability to purchase tickets for the track’s 2022 events prior to the Christmas holidays. Fans can purchase tickets for the 2022 season events at any time using the online ticketing system. The online ticketing system offers convenience and provides a contactless method for fans purchasing tickets to the speedway’s events.

“We are pleased to be able to offer advance tickets for all of our 2022 events for sale at this early date,” Brashears said. “Our ticketing system provides a great convenience for fans that like to plan ahead and avoid lines at the ticket booth on race day.”

South Boston Speedway is looking to expand its livestreaming platform heading into the 2022 season. The speedway began livestreaming events in May 2021 and looks to grow the platform for 2022. Fans across the country tuned into different events across the course of the 2021 season.

While the track’s 65th anniversary will be touted throughout 2022, the speedway will stage a month-long celebration in August that will include vintage races by drivers in the Southern Ground Pounders Vintage Racing Club on August 6 and the East Coast Flathead Ford Racing Association on August 20.

The first of four special events will take place on Saturday, April 2 when the SMART Modified Tour returns for the second straight year. Last season’s SMART Modified Tour race at South Boston Speedway was a thriller as Ryan Preece held off Chuck Hossfeld and Burt Myers in a seven-lap dash to the finish to win the 99-lap race.

The Sentara Healthcare American Sprint Car Weekend on Friday, April 29 and Saturday, April 30 marks the second special event of the season with the track hosting winged 410-sprint cars for the first time ever.

A full slate of racing featuring the winged 410-sprint cars, the fastest cars on asphalt, will be held both nights. South Boston Speedway’s Limited Sportsman, Budweiser Pure Stock and Budweiser Hornets Division competitors will compete as part of the Friday night action. The track’s NASCAR Late Model Stock Car Division teams and the drivers of the Southern Ground Pounders Vintage Racing Club will be featured on Saturday night along with the winged 410-sprint cars.

South Boston Speedway will hold its pre-Fourth of July showcase event – the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 presented by Grand Atlantic Ocean Resort– on Saturday, July 2. Along with the 200-lap Late Model Stock Car Division race, the first race of the Virginia Late Model Triple Crown, fans will see the track’s Limited Sportsman Division, Budweiser Pure Stock Division and Budweiser Hornets Division competitors in action. A practice day and fan fest are slated for the day before on Friday, July 1.

The track will kick off a month-long celebration of its 65th anniversary on Saturday night, August 6 with Davenport Energy Night at the Races. As part of that event, fans will get a glimpse back in time as competitors in the Southern Ground Pounders Vintage Racing Club will hit the track in their Modified and Late Model Sportsman cars. Drivers in all four of the track’s regular NASCAR racing divisions will also be in action that night.

South Boston Speedway’s month-long 65th anniversary celebration continues with the Italian Delight presents South Boston Speedway’s 65th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday night, August 20. A full night of racing highlighted by twin 65-lap NASCAR Late Model Stock Car Division races, a 65-lap Limited Sportsman Division race and a race for East Coast Flathead Ford Racing Association will be featured at that event.

South Boston Speedway will close out its 2022 season of NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series points races with Championship Night on Saturday night, September 4.

In another special event, the CARS Tour will return to South Boston Speedway on Saturday, October 22 featuring its Late Model Stock Car Division competitors in a 125-lap race and its Pro Late Model divisions teams in a 100-lap race.

South Boston Speedway will also be hosting a drifting event on Saturday afternoon March 5 with the possibility of additional events being added later in the season.

South Boston Speedway’s 2022 season schedule, ticket information, and the latest news and updates can be found on the South Boston Speedway website and through the speedway’s social media channels.

Spire Sports + Entertainment, Pfaff Motorsports Partner for Marketing, Business Development Agreement

North of the Border Partnerships Prove Robust for North Carolina Agency

CORNELIUS, N.C. (January 5, 2022) – Spire Sports + Entertainment (SS+E), a full-service marketing, strategic brand consulting and business development agency, has reached an agreement with Pfaff Motorsports to represent the 2021 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship GT Daytona (GTD) Class Champions in its 2022 efforts.

SS+E will consult with and service Pfaff Motorsports’ commercial efforts by leading its business development outreach and facilitate partnership marketing programming.

The Pfaff partnership marks yet another opportunity for the Cornelius, N.C.-based organization to work with a Canadian-based entity and champion its marketing efforts. Previously, SS+E staffers have worked closely with Canadian brands such as the rock band Simple Plan, NTT IndyCar driver James Hinchcliffe and Petro-Canada Lubricants.

With a storied history in marketing initiatives rooted in NASCAR and IndyCar racing, SS+E’s relationship with Pfaff marks its first venture into the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship with a top-flight organization.

“When you look at the landscape of a global brand like the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, it’s important for our agency to explore opportunities beyond American borders,” said Spire Sports + Entertainment President Bill Anthony. “Pfaff Motorsports is a highly-regarded team throughout Canada and across the IMSA paddock. With an abundance of OEMs and a robust television package with NBC, the team checks all the boxes for SS+E when we look at what an ideal client looks like. There’s no mistaking the buffalo plaid Porsche 911 on the racetrack, and we’re thrilled to put pen to paper and officially add Pfaff Motorsports to the SS+E client roster.”

Over the past decade, Pfaff Motorsports has been one of the most successful sportscar teams in North America. The Pfaff name has been synonymous with Canadian motorsport since the company was founded in 1964.

Since then, the team has earned championship honors on seven occasions, amassing 34 race wins and 36 pole positions while leading over 5,000 laps. Pfaff Motorsports continued to raise the bar in 2021 by logging four IMSA GTD wins, including the famed 12 Hours of Sebring. The Canadian team was rewarded for its 2021 efforts with the IMSA GTD Class Championship.

Buoyed by its championship-winning pedigree, Pfaff Motorsports will move up the IMSA ladder this season and compete for the 2022 GT Daytona Pro (GTDP) Class Championship. Matt Campbell and Mathieu Jaminet will handle the team’s driving chores for the entire season, with Felipe Nasr joining Campbell and Jaminet for the four Michelin Endurance Cup rounds at Daytona, Sebring, Watkins Glen and Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.

“We’re thrilled to be partnering with SS+E for the 2022 season,” said Pfaff Motorsports General Manager Steve Bortolotti. “They are a company that deeply understands the racing landscape and has a proven record of success of building partnership programs for the brands they have represented. With their international ability to execute activations for partners at a very high level, SS+E is a key component of Pfaff Motorsports’ plan to raise its game both on- and off-track in 2022.”

The 60th running of the Rolex 24 at Daytona will take the green flag Saturday, January 30, beginning at 3:30 p.m. EDT. The first of 12 races on the 2022 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship will be televised live across NBC, USA and Peacock.

About Pfaff Motorsports
Founded by team principal and owner Chris Pfaff, Pfaff Motorsports is the 2021 IMSA GT Daytona Class champion. With a pedigree that dates back to 1964, Pfaff Motorsports is building on its winning heritage and stepping up to GT Daytona Pro in 2022. The team’s winning mentality starts at home with its group of automobile dealerships across Canada. The group represents Volkswagen, Audi, BMW, MINI, Porsche, McLaren, Singer Vehicle Design, Pagani, BAC Mono, Harley-Davidson, Mercedes-Benz, Subaru, and Automobili Pininfarina automobiles and motorcycles, and also operates Pfaff Tuning, Pfaff Leasing, and Pfaff Autoworks.

About Spire Sports + Entertainment …
Spire Sports + Entertainment (SS+E) is bolstered by principled employees with decades of collective experience in brand consulting, athlete management, business development, partnership marketing and media relations. With decades of demonstrable success, SS+E staff members have identified, negotiated, placed, represented, and serviced a host of blue-chip partners.

Kevin Harvick Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum Advance

KEVIN HARVICK
Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum
No. 4 Busch Light Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum
● Time/Date: 3 p.m. EST on Sunday, Feb. 6
● Location: Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
● Layout: Quarter-mile oval
● Format: 150-lap Feature with a 23-car field set by Heats and Last Chance Qualifier (LCQ)
● TV/Radio: FOX / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
● Note: Heats and LCQ are broadcast live from 3-5 p.m. EST. Feature airs live at 6 p.m. EST.

Notes of Interest

● While 2022 marks the 74th year of the NASCAR Cup Series, it also ushers in a new era for stock-car racing’s premier division. A new car debuts on a new track, with the NextGen car seeing its first racing action Feb. 5-6 on a purpose-built, quarter-mile, asphalt oval inside the confines of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum kicks off the 2022 season at a track other than Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway for the first time since 1981 when the series opened its schedule on a road course at Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway, approximately 50 miles east of Los Angeles. Riverside is long gone, the site now home to the Moreno Valley Mall, but the L.A. Coliseum was at 311 Figueroa Street 34 years before Riverside opened its doors in 1957 and it’s still there today. It’s a juxtaposition of old and new, a microcosm of this brave new NASCAR world.

● The NextGen car is an entirely new racecar, and if you’re keeping score at home, it’s the seventh version of the stock car NASCAR introduced in 1949. Each version has been an improvement from its predecessor, be it from a manufacturer standpoint with more aerodynamic bodies or from a NASCAR standpoint with better overall safety. Dimensions have varied over the years with drivers, teams and manufacturers politicking for various changes to spoilers, splitters, roof railings, ride-heights, etc., resulting in a multitude of templates that have shaped the on-track product. But the NextGen car is a massive leap forward, as never in NASCAR’s 73 prior years has this much time, energy and money been spent to bring a car from concept to reality. Say goodbye to such time-honored traditions as the H-pattern shifter, 750-horsepower engines, five-lug wheels and even centered door numbers. You can say “Hi” to them at the NASCAR Hall of Fame, but not at a NASCAR Cup Series track. Instead, say hello to a sequential shifter, 670-horsepower engines, a single center-lock wheel nut akin to Indy cars and sports cars, and car numbers just behind the front wheels. But that’s not all. Introduce yourself to carbon fiber-reinforced plastic body panels, a carbon-fiber floor that covers the entire underneath portion of the car, and a rear-end diffuser – all of which are in place to reduce dirty air. And it’s more than skin deep, as rack-and-pinion steering replaces the archaic recirculating ball, and an independent rear suspension is a drastic upgrade from the full floating axle first championed by 1950s-era Detroit iron. The bottom line is that the NextGen car is much more in line with what manufacturers sell and consumers want. Win on Sunday, sell on Monday has never been more accurate.

● In true L.A. fashion, almost any NASCAR Cup Series team can show up at the Coliseum, but not everyone is getting past the velvet ropes to participate in the 150-lap main event. Because the track at the L.A. Coliseum is only a quarter-mile in length – the shortest track the NASCAR Cup Series will compete on in 2022 – only 23 cars can compete in the feature. Getting to the main event is much more arduous than walking the red carpet and slipping the bouncer a $100 bill. Here’s how it will work…

  • On Saturday, Feb. 5, NASCAR Cup Series competitors will take to the track for practice prior to single-car qualifying runs to determine the starting order for four heat races. The field will be open to 40 entrants. On Sunday, Feb. 6, on-track action will begin with four, 25-lap heat races consisting of 10 cars each. Below is a breakdown on how the heat races will be filled out:
  • The top-four fastest qualifiers from Saturday’s single-car qualifying session will be on the pole for each heat race, while cars that qualified fifth through eighth will make up the other half of the front row in each heat.
  • The remainder of each field will be filled out using this methodology: Heat one will be made up of cars with qualifying positions of one, five, nine, 13, 17, 21, 25, 29, 33, 37.
  • The top-four finishers (16 total cars) from each heat race automatically advance through to the Busch Light Clash, with the winner of heat one winning the pole and the heat two winner earning the outside pole.
  • The winners of heats three and four will fill out the second row, with the remaining order of those 16 cars being determined in the same manner.
  • The remaining six finishing positions from each heat (24 total cars) that did not advance will continue through to one of two 50-lap Last Chance Qualifying (LCQ) races. Below is a breakdown on how the LCQ will be filled out:
  • The starting order for these two events will be determined based on finishing positions in the heat races.
  • Those who did not advance from heats one and three will make up the first LCQ race. The second race will be made of up those from heats two and four.
  • The fifth-place finishers from heats one and two will be on the pole in their respective LCQ races. The fifth-place finishers from heats three and four will be on the outside pole.
  • This pattern will continue to fill out 12 cars in each event.
  • The top-three finishers (six total cars) from both LCQ races will advance to the Busch Light Clash, filling out positions 17-22 of the 23 available positions.
  • The final spot in the Busch Light Clash will be reserved for the driver who finished the highest in the 2021 points standings who does not transfer on finishing position in the heat races or LCQ races.
  • All other drivers will be eliminated from competition for the remainder of the event weekend.

● Go fast and turn left puts all of the above in more succinct terms, something Kevin Harvick has proven particularly adept at in his 21 previous years of NASCAR Cup Series competition. The driver of the No. 4 Busch Light Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) has 58 career Cup Series wins and is alone at 10th on the all-time win list. Not included in that total are Harvick’s wins in non-points races. He has two victories in the NASCAR All-Star Race (2007 and 2018), two wins in the Duel at Daytona qualifying race (2013 and 2019) and three wins in the Budweiser Shootout/Busch Clash (2009, 2010 and 2013), the precursor to the Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum.

● The quarter-mile oval at the L.A. Coliseum is the shortest of short tracks. That suits Harvick just fine. Harvick has totaled 119 wins across the NASCAR Cup Series (58), NASCAR Xfinity Series (47) and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (14). Twenty-eight of those victories have come on short tracks, with seven Cup victories, 17 Xfinity wins and four Truck triumphs.

Kevin Harvick, Driver of the No. 4 Busch Light Ford Mustang

Does the NextGen car make this season a blank slate, to where whatever you knew with the old car really isn’t applicable to this car?

“It’s all relatively the same as far as the thought process, but the way to achieve that goal, in what you need and what you want, how you race, is going to be different. As to how that equation comes together to make the car go fast, to be competitive, how you race and all that is still to be developed, but it’s the same as all the other cars. I think the development is much different, but in the end you still have to go race. As many differences as there are with the car and the things that you do with the car, in the end we want our Busch Light Ford Mustang to go faster than everybody else’s car, and that really comes down to communicating with the team, understanding what the car feels like, and trying to be a part of that evolution.”

Will the Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum give you a decent understanding of the NextGen car’s characteristics in racing conditions before you begin points-paying racing with the Daytona 500?

“I don’t think so, but the thing that it will give you is just that time in the car in an environment that’s at a low rate of the speed to be able to kind of diagnose it all. I mean, we’re still at a point where we’re diagnosing how the throttle works and how it functions, the steering, and how hot it’s going to get inside, and vision, and all the little nuances in the driver’s compartment that you’ll want to try to have out of the way before you do get to a place like Daytona. It gives us a great opportunity to do something we all know how to do, and that’s short-track race. But it allows us to still diagnose those things in a situation where you really can’t quit, or come into the pits and say, ‘This isn’t working right, let’s fix it.’ You’ll have to work through it. And are those things that you’re going to have to work through for 500 miles? How do we work through these things methodically in order to just survive? Or, what are the things that are OK and you’re going to have to pick and choose the things that you’re just going to have to survive with for a while?”

Since 1972, we’ve referred to this time in the sport as the modern era. Does the NextGen car usher in a new era, where statistics and records need to align with how different this racecar is to its predecessors?

“I don’t think so because, in the end, it’s still the same process and it’s still a race. And no matter how they lined them up in 1975 or 2020 or 2021, you still had the same goal in the end, and that was to go faster than the other guys on the racetrack no matter the number of cars, no matter the type of car. In the end, it’s still the same goal no matter what you race.”

What’s the shortest track you’ve ever raced on and what was that experience like?

“The shortest track I’ve ever raced on was the Orange Show Speedway. It was in the football stadium and it was a paved, quarter-mile racetrack in San Bernardino, California. That’s definitely the shortest racetrack – in a car – that I’ve ever raced on, which is exactly what we’re getting ready to do in a much heavier, much bigger car. That was in my Southwest Tour, my Late Model days, that we raced there, so that was always one of the smallest but, definitely, the narrowest because it was, literally, the running track, but paved.”

What did you have to do to finish that race?

“It was a demolition derby and you had to be willing to race like it was a demolition derby in order to pass people. Obviously, how the Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum develops is yet to be determined.”

What are your expectations for the Busch Light Clash?

“It’s going to be a lot of quick throttle, heavy brake, and the speeds are going to be so much slower compared to what we’re used to that you’re going to have to just wing that part of it.”

You grew up in Bakersfield, California, and were around for the Mickey Thompson Off-Road Series that raced at the L.A. Coliseum and the 1984 Summer Olympics, which held many events at the Coliseum – what has shaped your perception of the Coliseum, and does racing there as a California native hold any special meaning?

“I’m not 100 percent aware of the full history of the L.A. Coliseum, but I have enough of the history of the L.A. Coliseum in my past, living in California, that I understand the magnitude of putting our vehicles on the ground there and having a race, and the historic events that have happened in the L.A. Coliseum. I remember those Mickey Thompson Off-Road races with the trucks and the buggies jumping out of the arches at the top of the stadium, down the hill, and usually at the bottom of the hill, once they landed, they went into a 90-degree turn. So, from a racing standpoint, I have memories of that. So it’s just a unique event and, when you look at the facility itself, there are just a lot of prestigious moments that go along with it.”

No. 4 Busch Light Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Kevin Harvick
Hometown: Bakersfield, California

Crew Chief: Rodney Childers
Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

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

Engineer: Dax Gerringer
Hometown: Gibsonville, North Carolina

Engineer: Stephen Doran
Hometown: Butler, Pennsylvania

Spotter: Tim Fedewa
Hometown: Holt, Michigan

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Shayne Pipala
Hometown: Frankfort Square, Illinois

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

Tire Carrier: Jeremy Howard
Hometown: Delhart, Texas

Jack Man: Stan Doolittle
Hometown: Ninety Six, South Carolina

Fuel Man: Evan Marchal
Hometown: Westfield, Indiana

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Richie Bean
Hometown: Bradford, Vermont

Mechanic: Nick DeFazio
Hometown: Orange, California

Tire Specialist: Jamie Turski
Hometown: Trumbull, Connecticut

Engine Tuner: Robert Brandt
Hometown: Mobile, Alabama

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

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

Why do people choose fun88 for playing slots online?

Photo by Hello I'm Nik on Unsplash

Slots comprise more than 70 percent of the casino online games, proving their popularity. There are several factors that are responsible for the popularity of slots online, but you must play them at dependable sites. Some benefits you can derive from playing slots at fun88 are as follows:

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Types of slots online

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First 5 Mods for Your 2017+ Ford F-250 | “The Haul”

AmericanTrucks Breaks Down its Top Picks

PAOLI, Pa. (January 3rd, 2022) – Aftermarket parts authority, AmericanTrucks(AT) rings in 2022 with the release of a new episode in its YouTube series aptly named, “The Haul”. Hosted by Eric Donaldson, the video outlines AT’s top 5 mods for 2017+ Ford F-250’s. From protection to performance, the parts are explained one by one along with the reasons behind each choice.

“We chose some parts that are performance capable, but also look great,” says Eric. He kicks off his list with a hard tri-fold tonneau cover that is easy to use, while still delivering the protection and functionality truck owners are looking for. Next, Eric recommends upgrading to a set of retractable running boards, citing benefits that include extra ground clearance, improved visibility, a slip-resistant surface, and durability. Upgraded Fuel wheels, 33” tires, LED headlights, and floor mats make up the remaining recommendations. 

AT’s new episode of “The Haul” shares its top 5 mods for F-250’s, 2017 or newer. The information and suggestions help truck owners save time and money by zeroing in on top-quality parts that boost the looks and function of this hard-working, utility-based vehicle. Viewers are invited to share their thoughts on the video and subscribe to keep up with all the latest product reviews, customer builds, and other F-250 content as soon as it is released.

View it Here: https://www.americantrucks.com/thehaul-december-2021.html

 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________

About AmericanTrucks

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

Indianapolis 500-Winning Team Owner Kalkhoven Dies at 77

INDIANAPOLIS (Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2022) – Indianapolis 500-winning team owner Kevin Kalkhoven, who also played a major role in the reunification of North American open-wheel racing among other racing-related ventures, died Jan. 4. He was 77.

Kalkhoven was co-owner, with CART champion Jimmy Vasser, of the No. 11 Hydroxycut KV Racing Technology-SH Racing Chevrolet that Tony Kanaan drove to an emotional victory in the 2013 Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge.

Kanaan’s first Indy 500 win was the highlight of more than a decade of team ownership for Kalkhoven, who fielded teams in the Champ Car World Series and the NTT INDYCAR SERIES for many champions and stars of the sport, including Kanaan, Vasser, Will Power, Cristiano da Matta, Paul Tracy and Sebastien Bourdais. Kalkhoven’s teams – known as PK Racing, PKV Racing and KV Racing Technology – earned seven victories between 2003-16 in major North American open-wheel competition.

Ownership of various racing teams was only part of Kalkhoven’s deep involvement in motorsports that started after a very successful career as a business executive in fiber-optic telecommunications networks and as a venture capitalist.

Kalkhoven, a native of Adelaide, Australia, joined Gerald Forsythe and Paul Gentilozzi to purchase the assets of CART in late 2003 and formed the Champ Car World Series. In November 2004, Kalkhoven and Forsythe bought iconic racing powertrain company Cosworth Engineering from the Ford Motor Company.

In February 2008, Kalkhoven and then-INDYCAR SERIES and Indianapolis Motor Speedway CEO Tony George completed extensive negotiations that reunified North American open-wheel racing after 12 years of two competing series. The final Champ Car race took place in April 2008 at Long Beach, California, an event co-owned at the time by Kalkhoven and won by Power in a KV Racing Technology entry.

Kalkhoven was a noted philanthropist. He served on the board of directors of the Association of Hole in the Wall Camps, which benefits children with serious illness. He also was an avid aviator, with a commercial pilot’s license and experience in a variety of aircraft, including Gulfstream intercontinental jets.

Statements from Roger Penske, Mark Miles about Passing of Kevin Kalkhoven

INDIANAPOLIS (Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2022) – Statements from Roger Penske and Penske Entertainment Corp. President and CEO Mark Miles about the passing of Indianapolis 500-winning team owner and motorsports executive Kevin Kalkhoven, who died Jan. 4 at age 77:

“Motorsports has lost one of its true leaders. Kevin Kalkhoven had a great passion for open-wheel racing, and his vision and support helped guide the sport through some turbulent times. As a leader of the Champ Car World Series, Cosworth Engineering and the KV Racing Technology team, Kevin had an incredible impact on INDYCAR. Our thoughts are with the Kalkhoven family and Kevin’s many friends and colleagues that are coping with his loss.” – Roger Penske


“I met Kevin in 2013, and we quickly developed a personal friendship and a lot of common ground in racing. In many ways, winning that year’s Indianapolis 500 with Tony Kanaan must have been the highlight of his racing life. I’m sure he didn’t come back down to earth for many months. Kevin was a colorful, forceful personality who constantly brought new ideas to the table in an effort to grow the sport. I will miss him.” – Mark Miles, President and CEO, Penske Entertainment Corp.

Luke Lambert Named Crew Chief for Gragson, No. 9 Team at JRM

2022 Driver, Crew Chief Lineup Solidified for JR Motorsports

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (Jan. 4, 2021) – JR Motorsports has named veteran NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series crew chief Luke Lambert to lead its No. 9 Bass Pro Shops/TrueTimber®/Black Rifle Coffee team with driver Noah Gragson for the 2022 season. Lambert takes over JRM’s highest-finishing team from 2021, as Gragson finished third in the 2021 NXS point standings.

Lambert, 39, comes to JRM after spending eight seasons in the Cup Series and has been a top-flight NXS crew chief as well, leading former JRM driver Elliott Sadler to a runner-up finish in 2012 while at Richard Childress Racing. The North Carolina native spent the past two seasons with Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing calling the shots for drivers Chris Buescher and Ryan Newman.

“I’m really excited to have the opportunity with JR Motorsports,” Lambert said. “I’ve been fortunate to have a lot of really good opportunities and experiences in the sport, and looking at JR Motorsports and what I think we are capable of accomplishing, it felt like a really good fit. That’s what was exciting for me, because I feel like we have the opportunity to be really competitive and make a run at the NASCAR Xfinity Series title. That’s what I wanted to be part of here.”

While Lambert and Gragson are in the early part of building a relationship, the new crew chief sees much potential in the 23-year-old Las Vegas native, who capped the 2021 season with three wins, 13 top-five and 20 top-10 finishes.

“I can’t wait to start working with Luke and to see what his experience and knowledge can bring to this No. 9 team,” said Gragson. “After how close we came to winning the championship last season, there’s a ton of momentum on this No. 9 Bass Pro Shops/TrueTimber®/Black Rifle Coffee team, and I think Luke will bring a fresh perspective to what we already have at JR Motorsports.”
Lambert, a native of Mount Airy, N.C., graduated from North Carolina State University’s Wolfpack Motorsports program and joined RCR as an engineer in 2005. In 2011, Lambert took over as crew chief for Jeff Burton in the Cup Series, leading the team to two top-five and five top-10 finishes in 17 races, including a runner-up result at Talladega Superspeedway.

As a Cup Series crew chief, Lambert has one victory (in 2017 at Phoenix Raceway with Newman), 26 top-five and 86 top-10 finishes. In 2012, Lambert headed RCR’s No. 2 team with driver Sadler in the NXS, earning four victories, 15 top-five and 24 top-10 finishes on the way to a second-place finish in the series point standings.

The announcement sets JRM’s driver and crew chief lineup for 2022. Jason Burdett will return to the No. 7 Chevrolet with driver Justin Allgaier for a seventh season, while Mike Bumgarner will have Josh Berry for the full season in the No. 8 Chevrolet and Taylor Moyer will pair with Sam Mayer in the No. 1 Camaro full time.

ABOUT JR MOTORSPORTS:
JR Motorsports is the racing operation co-owned by NASCAR Hall of Fame member and 15-time Most Popular Driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kelley Earnhardt Miller and NASCAR Hall of Famer Rick Hendrick. Now in its 21st year of overall competition, JR Motorsports competes in multiple divisions, including the NASCAR Xfinity Series where it currently fields four full-time teams and earned championships in 2014, 2017 and 2018. The company also races in Late Model competition and owns four championships in regional Late Model divisions and added a prized national title in 2020. To learn more about the organization, its drivers and its sponsorship opportunities, visit www.jrmracing.com.

Stewart-Haas Racing Bolsters Competition Leadership with Key Promotion and New Addition

Mike Bugarewicz Promoted to Performance Director;
Drew Blickensderfer Named Crew Chief for Aric Almirola and No. 10 Team

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. (Jan. 4, 2022) – Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) has bolstered its competition leadership by promoting Mike “Buga” Bugarewicz to the newly formed role of performance director and by adding Drew Blickensderfer to its crew chief lineup.

Bugarewicz is an eight-year SHR veteran who has spent the past six seasons as a NASCAR Cup Series crew chief, most recently with driver Aric Almirola and the No. 10 team. Bugarewicz has won with every driver he has been paired with, including SHR co-owner Tony Stewart. His promotion to performance director merges Bugarewicz’s hands-on experience as a crew chief with his engineering mindset, as the 39-year-old from Lehighton, Pennsylvania, holds a master’s degree in mechanical engineering from Penn State University.

“With the NextGen car being brand new, there will be continuous development on it every time it turns a wheel. Going into it, we knew we needed to shore up our resources and really bolster our competitive approach. Buga is the right guy to tackle all the newness that’s coming at us pretty fast,” said Greg Zipadelli, vice president of competition, SHR. “He’s an engineer and he’s also a racer. He will be that glue between simulation, at-track reality, engineering and our race teams, and his laser-like focus in this new role of performance director will be a huge asset to our team.”

With Bugarewicz’s promotion, Blickensderfer takes over as crew chief for Almirola and the No. 10 team. Blickensderfer is a NASCAR veteran who already has a history with Almirola. He served as his crew chief while together at Richard Petty Motorsports (RPM) for the last few races of 2016 and then all of 2017 before Almirola departed RPM for SHR in 2018. Blickensderfer comes to SHR from Front Row Motorsports where the 45-year-old from Decatur, Illinois, won the 2021 Daytona 500 with driver Michael McDowell. It was Blickensderfer’s fourth NASCAR Cup Series victory as a crew chief. He previously guided David Ragan to a win and Matt Kenseth to two victories.

“Drew has been in the sport a long time and knows how to get the best out of the people around him, and that’s really what the job of crew chief has become,” Zipadelli said. “We have the same parts and pieces, but what we do with those parts and pieces will make the difference. Drew has worked with a lot of drivers and managed a lot of people. He already has a rapport with Aric, and that will make the learning curve in a season full of learning a little less steep.”

The rest of SHR’s crew chief lineup remains intact across both its NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series teams.

Rodney Childers, crew chief for the No. 4 team, will begin his ninth year atop the pit box for driver Kevin Harvick. The Harvick/Childers duo is the longest-tenured active driver-crew chief pairing in the NASCAR Cup Series garage, a partnership that has netted 35 points-paying wins and the 2014 championship.

John Klausmeier remains the crew chief for the No. 14 team and driver Chase Briscoe. Klausmeier helped Briscoe secure the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series rookie-of-the-year title. The 2022 season will mark Klausmeier’s fifth season as a crew chief.

Similarly, Mike Shiplett remains the crew chief for the No. 41 team and driver Cole Custer. The 2022 season will be the fourth straight year Custer and Shiplett have been paired together. The duo first joined in the Xfinity Series in 2019 where Shiplett oversaw a seven-win season and a runner-up finish in the championship standings. Custer and Shiplett moved to Cup as one in 2020, with Custer handily securing the rookie-of-the-year award via his win at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta.

Richard Boswell has been the main steward of SHR’s Xfinity Series program since its inception in 2017 and he will continue in that capacity in 2022. He will again serve as crew chief for driver Riley Herbst and the No. 98 team. Boswell has been the crew chief for nine of SHR’s 21 Xfinity Series wins.

About Stewart-Haas Racing:

Stewart-Haas Racing is the title-winning NASCAR team co-owned by three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Tony Stewart and Gene Haas, founder of Haas Automation – the largest CNC machine tool builder in North America. The Kannapolis, North Carolina-based organization has won two NASCAR Cup Series titles, one NASCAR Xfinity Series championship and more than 90 NASCAR races, including such crown-jewel events as the Daytona 500, Brickyard 400 and Southern 500. For more information, please visit us online at StewartHaasRacing.com and on social at Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and LinkedIn.

Leidos Joins 23XI Racing as Primary Partner in 2022

Mooresville, NC (January 4, 2022) – Today 23XI Racing announced Leidos will join the team as a primary partner beginning with the 2022 season. Leidos, a Fortune 500® technology, engineering, and science solutions and services leader, with a focus in the defense, intelligence, civil, and health markets, will partner with Bubba Wallace and the No. 23 Toyota Camry TRD.

“We are thrilled with our decision to once again team up with Bubba Wallace and now with 23XI Racing,” said Leidos Chairman and CEO Roger Krone. “Bubba’s efforts have paved the way for real change, pushing for a culture of inclusion and diversity not only in NASCAR, but throughout the world. We see this as much more than a sponsorship – we see an opportunity to fight for our shared values. We are proud to have Bubba Wallace representing Leidos both on and off the track.”

The new partnership will reunite Wallace and Leidos, who previously had an affiliation from 2016-2017 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

“I’m pumped to partner with Leidos again,” said Bubba Wallace. “We had a great partnership when I was running Xfinity and to now have them on board our No. 23 Camry TRD and continue supporting my career and what we are doing both on and off the racetrack at 23XI is really a cool thing for me. I’m excited to have them on board for the ride.”

“Bringing Leidos back to NASCAR and building upon the relationship they previously had with Bubba is another step forward for us as we move 23XI into our second year,” said 23XI Racing President Steve Lauletta. “To add a technology brand like Leidos to our lineup gives us a new platform to reach a wider audience, allowing us to continue growing both the 23XI brand and the affiliation with Leidos.”

Leidos will appear on the No. 23 Toyota Camry TRD for its first race at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas on March 27, 2022.

About Leidos

Leidos is a Fortune 500® technology, engineering, and science solutions and services leader working to solve the world’s toughest challenges in the defense, intelligence, civil, and health markets. The company’s 43,000 employees support vital missions for government and commercial customers. Headquartered in Reston, Va., Leidos reported annual revenues of approximately $12.30 billion for the fiscal year ended January 1, 2021. For more information, visit www.leidos.com.

About 23XI Racing

23XI Racing – pronounced twenty-three eleven – was founded by NBA legend Michael Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin in 2020. With rising NASCAR star Bubba Wallace selected to drive the No. 23 Toyota Camry TRD, the team made its NASCAR Cup Series debut in the 2021 Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway. Wallace made history on October 4, 2021, when he captured his first career Cup Series win, becoming just the second African American to win in the Cup Series, and earning 23XI Racing its first-ever victory. 23XI Racing will expand to a two-car organization in 2022 with Cup Series Champion Kurt Busch driving the No. 45 Toyota Camry TRD.

How to find competitive prices to insure a Chevy Malibu

Photo by Zane Lindsay from Pexels

If you own a Chevrolet Malibu or if you are considering the purchase of this vehicle, you will want to find the best automobile insurance coverage at a competitive price. With so many different insurers available to choose from, it can sometimes be difficult to know just where to begin. Let’s start by taking a look at all of the different factors that can influence the cost of insuring a Chevy Malibu.

Full insurance coverage for your Malibu will normally include liability insurance, collision insurance, and comprehensive insurance coverage and will usually come with a monthly average payment that will be approximately $115.

Liability insurance is required in most states and includes coverage for bodily injury and property damage that you may cause to another vehicle while collision insurance will cover the cost to repair or replace your car due to damage from an accident. Comprehensive insurance will cover the expense to replace your car if it is stolen and will cover the repair costs due to damage from things such as hail or vandalism.

You can expect to pay around $46 per month if you only want basic, or liability, insurance coverage which is substantially less than many other vehicles.

However, there are several different factors that will have an impact on the price you will pay. The age of the driver or drivers, the age of the Chevy Malibu, your driving record, and where you live, will all contribute to and influence the insurance rate that will be available to you.

For example, someone who is a new driver or who has only been licensed for a few years will pay substantially more than an experienced driver who has a clean driving history with no violations. Drivers who are under 20-years-old can expect to pay $1,500 – $1,700 more per year than an experienced driver who is 30-years-old. This is especially true if the driver has traffic violations on their record. With a clean driving history, you can save between $550 -$600 per year.

Those who live in a large city, particularly one that has congested traffic, will also be charged higher insurance rates.

If you are insuring a new Chevy Malibu versus one that is several years old, you can expect to pay a higher insurance rate. The newer the vehicle the more it will cost to make repairs or to replace the vehicle, if necessary.

But, on the plus side, another item that influences your insurance rate is based on the safety rating of the car. Newer cars will generally come with features that raise their safety rating. These include but are not limited to, airbags, anti-lock brake systems, traction control, and daytime running lights.

One of the best ways to obtain affordable insurance is by getting quotes from different insurance companies. Determine which companies offer the most competitive rates but also offer discounts for safe driving records and take into consideration the safety rating of the Chevy Malibu. State Farm, GEICO, Progressive, Liberty Mutual, and Allstate are currently the top five insurance companies that offer competitive rates and discounts for the Chevy Malibu.