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CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES – TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
FIRESTONE GRAND PRIX OF ST. PETERSBURG
STREETS OF ST. PETERSBURG, FL
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP
FEBRUARY 26, 2022

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN CLAIMS CAREER-FIRST NTT P1 AWARD WITH CHEVROLET POWER
Will Power Gives Chevy and Team Penske Front Row For First Race of the Season

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA (February 26, 2022) – Scott McLaughlin transferred his fast time in this morning’s practice to his first ever pole in just his second season in the NTT INDYCAR Series. McLaughlin was the final car on track for the six-minute Firestone Fast Six session when time expired. His lap of 59.421 seconds bested Team Penske teammate Will Power to lock the No. 3 Dex Imaging Chevrolet into the pole starting position.

McLaughlin’s pole is the 285th for Team Penske in INDYCAR competition, and 112th pole (earned and awarded) since Chevrolet returned to the NTT INDYCAR Series in 2012 with the 2.2 liter, V6 twin turbo direct injected engine. It was the eighth pole for Team Chevy since 2012 for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

For the 12th time in his career, Power will start on the front row on the Streets of St. Petersburg: He has nine poles and three outside front row starts. During the Q2 Fast 12 session, he set a new track record of 59.3466 seconds.

Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 Sonax Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet, qualified for his first ever Firestone Fast Six and secured the fourth starting spot. Two-time winner at St. Pete Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet qualified in the ninth starting position.

The race will air live on NBC, the Peacock streaming service and SiriusXM IndyCar Nation (Channel 160). Live timing and scoring will be available at racecontrol.indycar.com.

DRIVER QUOTES:
SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 DEX IMAGING CHEVROLET, POLE WINNER:
“I love qualifying. You have to put it all on the line. I’m working really well with Ben Bretzman (new race engineer). The DEX Imaging Chevy is phenomenal. Ben is a legend. We said we could do it. I’m really proud. I know Mom and Dad will be watching at home, so this is awesome. I have my in-laws here and I haven’t seen them in two years. I’m super proud for that. Chevy has done a tremendous job giving us driveability. The engine is handling so much better and I’m so confident. I’m so happy… I have a race tomorrow and can’t use too much energy!”

YOU SAID YOU WERE TIRED OF STARTING AT THE BACK OF THE FIELD. HOW DIFFERENT WILL THE PERSPECTIVE BE TOMORROW? “I’m a competitive bloke so I hate starting at the back! At the end of the day, it’s a new thing for me. I’ll be starting from the front and leading a group to the first corner. I’m used to braking with people in front of me so I have to make sure I don’t overshoot it like an idiot! We’ll have fun. I appreciate all the fans coming out. It’s great to see so many fans and I can’t wait for tomorrow. The show is going to be big.”

BEN BREITZMAN, ENGINEER, NO. 3 DEX IMAGING CHEVROLET:
“It’s been an interesting offseason with a big transition for both of us. We’ve put a lot of work in, a lot of ‘How are we going to do this together and what do we need to learn together?’ I’m super proud of him. The speed has always been there, it’s how do you extract it? So far so good.”
DID YOU THINK A POLE WAS POSSIBLE? “Honestly I wasn’t sure until I saw where we were when we unloaded. When we unloaded, all that work that we did over the offseason really came to fruition. We were quick right off the truck, and then I knew we could do something. I’m pretty excited. A lot of work went into this so I’m really proud of everybody.”

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, STARTING 2ND:
“ I was very happy up until the last run. I was like P1, P1, P1, P2. But it was good. Like honestly, I feel like I got the most out of the session. I guess there’s not much I could have done. What I could have done in the last one was to fuel for just one lap and may have had a shot. But yeah, like I said, starting way ahead of last year at this track.”

RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, STARTING 4TH: “Very happy with qualifying. P4 and first ever Firestone Fast Six
experience-very happy and very proud with the team, and with all of my guys-they gave me a great car! We had an amazing off-season and it paid off with a great result. So, very happy and on to a great result tomorrow.”

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, STARTING 9TH: “The car was fine. The traffic is horrible. The Hitachi was really comfy. I think it felt good from a balance standpoint. We’re fighting some issues is what I’ll say. There are a couple of things in the background that are working against us. Overall, ninth isn’t a horrible starting spot. It gives us a fighting chance for tomorrow. We just need to sort out some of these things out that we have going on. It’s a new team for us, really. Everyone is doing a great job getting along and jelling. There are just a couple of things that you wouldn’t like to have around to start out a weekend. It’s what we’re dealing with. Overall I feel really confident. Team Chevy is here supporting us and they’re doing a great job as you saw with our teammates. We’re feeling good for tomorrow to at least start our year on a positive note.”

YOU HAVE A NEW ENGINEER WITH ERIC LEICHTLE. IT’S HARD TO START A RELATIONSHIP WITH TWO PRACTICES AND STRAIGHT INTO QUALIFYING. “This was probably the hardest offseason because we only had one test day. For Eric, it’s like trial by fire. He’s doing a great job. He’s been around us for awhile in IndyCar with the Team Chevy camp. We have a great group here. I have to remind myself that this is the first race. As much as I want to come out and knocking down the fence and being the fastest car out here every session – and I’d love to do that – it doesn’t seem like it was destined to start this year. We’re going to try and make the most out of tomorrow, hopefully get a podium and maybe sneak in a win.”

KYLE KIRKWOOD, NO. 14 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, STARTING 12TH: “The first goal was to get to Round Two. I wanted to get in the Fast Six. I pushed as much as I could out of the car but unfortunately when you push that hard, I made a mistake just into the first corner after the timing line so I was playing catch-up from there. I was pushing my brake points further, and the car took it really well, but I caught myself out coming out of Turn Nine. I got to power where I thought maybe I could just get back on it and it just set free a little bit. I brushed the wall and after that, I wasn’t sure if anything was wrong. This car is a tank… I hit the wall pretty good and only the piece of the floor was brushed. I was super-happy with it. I think we were quickest out of the rookies, so that was the first goal but I really wanted that Fast Six. I think we have the car to do it.”

WHAT HAS THIS WEEKEND BEEN LIKE? “It’s cool because I have a lot of experience around this track. I’m able to drive here. Every other one I have to fly to. This one feels like home to me. I have a lot of friends and family here, and I know they’ll be cheering me on. I’ve got a lot of experience here and some wins in other categories in US F2000 and IndyLights. Hopefully I can take that knowledge over to this for tomorrow.”

DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, STARTING 14TH: “First day of qualifying with our No. 4 K-Line car. We had a great run in our Team Chevy here on the Streets of St. Petersburg Grand Prix. It’s a really fun event. The track was great. We really the nail on the head from a set-up standpoint on the Firestone blacks. We were a little free, then when we went to reds, it really came to us. We only had that one lap to get it done.

PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 McLAREN CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, STARTING 16TH: “I had the pace for sure. The car had it. We started off the weekend not very good, but we made some great changes. The car has pace. Just note to self for next time: Don’t smash the wall halfway through the wall if you want to transfer! It’s all my mistake. I just didn’t quite judge the amount of snap I was going to get and I didn’t want to back out of it. I paid the consequences. I think tomorrow we are going to have a good race. The car is good and let’s see what we can pull off.”

WHAT HAPPENED THE LAST TIME YOU STARTED 16TH AT DETROIT LAST YEAR? YOU WON. “That’s a great memory. But yeah, tomorrow is going to be tough with the heat. Strategy-wise, it’s going to be difficult. Luckily for us, we’ll have a new set of reds that the Fast Six won’t have. That can play into our favor and what strategy we pick out. Let’s just see where we go!”

CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 DYNAMIC EDGE CHEVROLET, JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING, STARTING 19TH: “It was quite a difficult session. It’s very, very tight. We made a lot of improvements over the weekend and are getting closer. As you see, it’s a tenth here and there and you’re moving up a lot. We’re going to work on a few things. We’ll have a big meeting tonight to see what we can do. We can definitely race from there. The first race of the year will be a tough one, but let’s see what we can do.”

CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, STARTING 20TH: “Today we had a great performance from our teammate. Rinus did a great job. I just could not find the grip I needed. The team has given me a great car. We’ve improved a lot from last year. I feel way better than I did as a driver. The race is obviously what we look forward to. Not what we wanted in qualifying for sure. And there are a lot of positives from what we’ve done from a balance standpoint and what we are going after tomorrow. The race is what matters.”

FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, STARTING 21ST: “It was kind of a weird session. The black primary Firestones were a good step forward from practice, and felt we didn’t need any adjustments for the red alternates. We went out and the tires were ready to go straight out of the pit lane. That’s not what we are used to, I expected them to come in on the second or third lap. I just took too much out of the tires on the first lap and couldn’t complete a better lap after that. It was a good lap, but kind of weird how the tire just went away. There’s a lot of lap time left to find, but we will focus on the race. I think we have a pretty good race car, so I’m not too worried. We will push tomorrow.”

TATIANA CALDERON, NO. 11 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, STARTING 25TH: “It’s been such a warm welcome. Honestly I wasn’t expecting something like this, so I’m happy. Every session we went out, I improved a lot. The team gave me a great car and I’m really happy to drive the RokIt Chevrolet IndyCar. It’s been awhile since I’ve been on a street circuit but I’ve been fortunate enough to do Monaco in Formula Two and Macau, as well. This is something different. I’m building up to it. I think we’ve done a good job particularly in qualifying. I felt like I found a ton of grip so I’m looking forward to the race and getting into a rhythm. The level of competition here is extremely high. You have champions of literally everything. You have ex-Formula One drivers, upcoming stars… there is no one who is going to give you anything. It’s 27 cars that are the most competitive ones I’ve faced in my career. I expect things to be tough but I love this kind of challenge and hope through the year we can make those jumps.”

POST QUALIFYING TRANSCRIPT – SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN AND WILL POWER

THE MODERATOR: We’ll get started here this afternoon after qualifying earlier today, getting set for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg tomorrow presented by RP Funding. Joined now by Will Power, who picks up his 12th front-row start here on the Streets of St. Petersburg, also now the new track record holder at 59.3466 around this 1.8-mile layout. Not pole position for you, Will, but it’s a Team Penske front row. How special is that to kick off the season?

WILL POWER: Well, it’s just much better than last year. Last year was P20, so here’s to starting further up the front and hopefully the first corner is good. Many names went through my head who were behind me then. I’m like, there’s some potential for a bit of mayhem there.

THE MODERATOR: Well, if it’s your teammate you might have a little discussion beforehand?
WILL POWER: Well, he’s beside me. He’s gone. He’s good. It’s the dudes behind you you’ve got to worry about.

THE MODERATOR: Talk about overall your day today. Happy with it?
WILL POWER: I was very happy up until the last run. I was like P1, P1, P1, P2. But it was good. Like honestly, I feel like I got the most out of the session. I guess there’s not much I could have done. What I could have done in the last one was to fuel for just one lap and may have had a shot. But yeah, like I said, starting way ahead of last year at this track.

Q. The speeds today with so many guys being under a minute, did everybody come in here expecting it was going to be the case? Is there any reason for it?
WILL POWER: No, I was surprised actually. I didn’t even know what they did last year, and when they said that was the lap record, I was like, oh, okay. Yeah, I didn’t know that. That shows how far these cars and engines have come. They’re pretty fast.

Q. The Team Penske performance, you guys got the front row lockout and I think Josef was ninth, an encouraging start for you guys?
WILL POWER: Yeah, definitely. We had a bad year last year, so certainly came into this season determined but with a lot of work behind that, a lot of work and understanding. When you have a struggle, a year of struggle, you always come back and have a pretty close look at what you were missing.
That’s kind of what we turned up with here. Missed out on qualifying last year, so I was very determined to make it to the Fast Six was the first thing. Well, make it to the Fast 12, honestly, and then the Six. So we got there, just one short of pole, man.
Poles keep eluding me down to this last like five that I need. After that I don’t care about pole.

Q. You just want 67?
WILL POWER: No, I want 68. 68, yeah. I know it’ll be tough. A lot of good guys.

Q. Scott only made the Fast Six once all last season. Was that surprising to you, and to see his performance today and the lap he put together, is that what you were expecting from him as a rookie last year?
WILL POWER: I mean, man, the experience he had in the series down there in Australia, he’s had a number of years at a very high level as a professional. He knows how to put it together. It’s just a matter of him getting used to this car which he has now, and yeah, I’m expecting him to be a contender for the season.

THE MODERATOR: And fresh off celebrating career pole No. 1, welcome in the driver of the Dex Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet, Scott McLaughlin.
A couple questions for you guys. First of all, Scott, congratulations. A year and a half after making your NTT INDYCAR Series debut here, you come back a year and a half later and pick up your first career pole. How thrilling for you?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It’s amazing. I don’t know what other words. Pretty speechless. It’s something that you know you can do, but sometimes — obviously in Australia we had a lot of success with poles and wins and all that sort of stuff and you know you can do it, but you have a hard year like ’21 where it just didn’t click and there was a few things where you just didn’t put it together, but you know the speed is there. It’s all about taking pressure off yourself and just focusing on what you need to do, and that’s what we did today.
Really working well with my new engineer, Ben Bretzman, who’s been fantastic for me. Jonathan Diuguid, who I used to work with, he basically helped me to this moment. He was the one engineer I worked with to this point, and Ben has picked me up and just polished me off a little bit there. I feel good.
Yeah, it’s one. Hopefully I’d like to have more, but at the end of the day, it’s qualifying, and tomorrow is the big day, so we’ll see what we’ve got.

THE MODERATOR: Your previous best start was fifth at the GMR Grand Prix on the Road Course at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It is INDYCAR Series pole No. 285 now for the Captain, Team Penske.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: This guy next to me has taken a few of those. Yeah, I’ll try and help him add to those and maybe we’ll get 300.
Q. Will, the red tires clearly have a nice peak. They’ve got a lot of speed in them for a little bit of time. How long are they going to last?
WILL POWER: Yeah, it’s a good question because no one has done more than two laps on them. We heat cycled them and did another one or two laps. Yeah, that will be an interesting story tomorrow because I don’t even think in warmup you’ll be able to tell because the condition will be so cool and good, you won’t get a feel for is it going to go off or not.

Q. Do you like it when you get that big delta from red to black?
WILL POWER: Yeah, I do. I think it’s good. Yeah, I like that.

Q. Will, when it comes to Scott, do you think that we kind of poked the bear there and that we’re going to see him a lot more winning these poles?
WILL POWER: No, I think it’s a one-off thing. He falls off a cliff now. (Laughter.)
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Bring it on.
WILL POWER: No, it’s not surprising. You saw it in practice last year. He just had a few issues in qualifying getting through the rounds a couple times. But the potential was there.
He’s been at a very high level in a very competitive series for quite a few years, so he knows the game. He knows the game well. He knows the car now. You really expect him to be there every time.

Q. Scott, how important would it be to get all three of you up there fighting for wins and a championship?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I mean, you guys asked me if I needed to step up for these two, and I feel like I’ve really worked hard over the off-season to make sure I was ready to go. It is important, and I’m right there, and it’s important that I push these guys because it’s only going to make them better and it’s only going to make me better, as well, as a team. Yeah, pumped to be able to put it together. As Will said, struggled to get through some of the rounds last year, but I feel good.

Q. Scott, what do you put this performance down to in terms of your development and where you are in terms of the team and the car?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think it’s just a lot of putting things — like put it together this time. I feel like, like Will said, we showed some speed last year and I was just getting better and better as the car went on. I think rolling out with a car that suited me from the get-go was important.
We worked very hard on this track with the simulator, and thankfully this simulator has been fantastic for that, and getting me to a great baseline setup that I’ve really only touched a little bit here and there just tweaking it trying to figure out what was right.
I know what I’m driving out there and I’m able to just punch out the laps and find the time within myself, which is exactly what I did in that Q3 lap. I put together a lap that I had worked on the whole session and didn’t quite get it right; looked at a bit of Will’s data, looked at a bit of Josef’s and just put it together. Didn’t panic. And I guess experience. You can’t buy experience. I’m certainly feeling really comfortable now in the series and in the car.

Q. Scott, the pole lap you were best known for before today was at Bathurst a couple of years ago. Could you compare and contrast how tense that lap was to how tense this lap was, the commitment differences between that lap and this lap?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, this is a minute shorter. That’s about it, because man, the intensity is crazy. Honestly, the way you’ve got to extract the speed out of both cars is pretty full on, and at Bathurst you’re right up against the wall.
I guess one thing I’ve learnt as well as I’ve got used to these open wheel is my proximity of the walls, and I’m used to slamming the walls with my doors and whacking the mirrors off. I can’t do that, and I’ve done it plenty of times in INDYCAR and didn’t come off too good. Didn’t do it today and it worked out good.

Q. Scott, we just talked about it with Chris, you had a bit of a different strategy there in qualification, a one-lap kind of shootout, kind of Bathurst style. Tell me about that.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: We wanted to stay on the red tire purely because I didn’t want to change between blacks and reds. I’m still getting up to speed with the confidence going from compound to compound, so I guess I felt like it was more important for me to roll out on the same set regardless. We knew that our first set that we ran in Q1 we were going to save for last because we only did one lap on it, so it was all about just using the oldest set, do a lap, feel it out. I only did like a 60.5, then I come out and slap the 59.4 or whatever it was.
I knew I could do it; it was just a matter of just feeling what the track was like in that Q3 and then it was like I had tires up my sleeve to do that.

Q. About alternate start/finish lines:
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Sorry, but I think that the alternate start-finish line, I probably don’t agree with it. I think it should just be the start-finish line. I said that before; it happened at Portland a couple times, and I caught Grosjean — Romain in a peculiar spot. I feel like coming around a blind corner, everyone is trying to get a lap started. That’s the only point we can really start our lap to get a good run. It does choke up there and it’s just — you don’t see. Unless we get a flag, you don’t see.
I’m probably a big fan of probably moving the line depending on what track we go to. That’s just my personal opinion.

Q. They do that at Long Beach, I think, or somewhere else?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I don’t know.

THE MODERATOR: We have an alternate at Long Beach, as well.

Q. Scott, for you, you joked about it that you haven’t started an INDYCAR race before and usually you’re behind guys braking. Now you’re leading them and you said, I don’t want to be an idiot and overshoot it. How long has it been since — you’re an accomplished guy. I know you did a lot in Supercars, but are you going to go back and watch video? Are you going to talk to people? How do you get yourself in the frame of mind that I am starting this race?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think it’s 12 years since I led a rolling startaway because of go-karting. It’s a standing start in Supercars. Yeah, just hopefully I’m not an idiot. I’ll come out of 2 and I’ll be all right.
WILL POWER: Just keep the throttle down.

Q. Just for Will, just to go on to the traffic situation, is there anything INDYCAR could do to help with traffic in these tight tracks for qualifying?
WILL POWER: I mean, we’re splitting the field, so everyone should be able to get a clean lap. It’s up to the guys to sort it out. You know when you’re leaving the pits in a line of cars that you’re going to have to give the guy a gap. I just think it’s ridiculous when some of these guys go out and try to pass the line of cars that are all trying to get their gap to start the lap.
Practice you’ve got the whole field, so you’ve got to try to sort it out. Sometimes it’s a bit rough, but that’s just the way it is. We don’t run on the longest tracks here. We have some short street courses, and yeah, it’s a game. Not much you can do about it. The only way you can fix that stuff is have less cars. But I don’t think anyone wants to split practice up.

Q. When you saw or heard that Scott grabbed pole, what did you think? Were you surprised?
WILL POWER: Very surprised.
Well, no, I wasn’t actually. Honestly if you saw what he did in practice and then throughout qualifying, it’s clearly going to be kind of a battle — you have three people there, Herta, myself and Scott. Yep, it was a good lap, man. I don’t think there’s much left in that.

Q. Scott, you’ve kind of touched on it a bit, but jumping on to the reds, just how committed were you and was there any close calls during that pole lap?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: The pole lap was pretty good, but probably leading up to that lap. I knew I had the speed in the car just to get through to like Q3 and Q2, so it was about learning in those laps trying to figure out where I could get better and get worse. Whatever. My words are all jumbled.
Got to Q3 and felt like I could nail that, and yeah, it felt pretty good. I feel a lot more comfortable with the red tire now, and certainly feel like we can certainly have a good go moving forward in the season.

Q. Wanted to ask Will if he knows where — I think it’s 12 hundredths we’re missing. They said on INDYCAR Radio that you got a bit sideways at Turn 9. Or did everyone get sideways at Turn 9?
WILL POWER: Yeah, 9, that’s where on my first lap I lost time is out of 9. I probably lost a tenth down the back straight.
Yeah, apart from that it was a pretty good lap. That’s the only place where I overcharged the entry a little bit and didn’t get the ideal exit. Yeah.

Q. Scott, obviously massive congratulations on fulfilling the potential you showed last year. Do you feel that the Chevy is more drivable than it was last year, and do you think this also helps you feel more comfortable, especially on street tracks?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, I think it’s been an absolute massive step forward Chevy is taking with our drivability in particular, and it’s a lot of hard work from them and working with all the teams. So certainly feel a lot better, and we’re definitely some of the microsectors that we were slower in over the last couple of years were really good, and the drivability there is a lot nicer. To be honest, it’s starting to come into my liking a little bit not having to — yeah, I’m not going to into too much detail because there’s a Honda guy sitting next to me, but I feel a lot better, and certainly, I think, Will would say the same.

Q. Scott, can you kind of talk us through what you and Ben worked on over the off-season as you guys sort of attempted to learn each other and see where you can grow coming into St. Pete?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Me and Ben sat down, we had like a three-, four-hour meeting, and we worked — we looked at every track throughout the year, and we looked at all my notes and the trends of my qualifying cars because I’ve always been reasonably quick in practice, and then we sort of just slowly worked on, all right, well maybe when we go qualifying we’re either adding too much front wing or we’re doing a few things that maybe we should just relax on going into qualifying. Then we went to the simulator, and thankfully Chevy has been working very hard on the simulator and got that very close, too, which has been fantastic, and I was able to really knuckle down along with Will and Josef, good baseline setup for this weekend and for the street courses and road courses, and that paid dividends when we went to that test. I felt like I had a really good baseline car, and then when I rocked up here at St. Pete, I felt really, really strong, and we have hardly touched the car since it’s rolled off the truck.
We’ve played with things. We’ve experimented with things and we experimented with things even in that qualifying session, but we somehow always come back to what we rolled out with, and that’s just been a lot of hard work between the two of us, and my performance engineer Malcolm Finch.
Yeah, very proud. Just iron out a few creases and working on where we can get better, and that’s what motorsport is all about and that’s why I enjoy it so much.

Q. Knowing what he accomplished with Simon, what was your level of excitement whenever you guys figured out that he was going to be your race engineer, and where did you think he could help you improve the most?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I’ve known Ben for a long time now. He was actually the first guy that I’ve come over from Australia and worked on the simulator with to see if INDYCAR was somewhere that I wanted to go.
So we play a lot of golf together, so I was very excited to hang out and take this partnership into more of a business professional level, and yeah, look, what he’s done with Simon is a testament to those two and the 12-year partnership that they had.
I think he’s really invigorated with me, a new partnership, and we’re certainly working together well, and I’m excited for that.
Jonathan Diuguid who I had, like I said, big props to him. He was the guy that really got me up to speed, and then it was all about just polishing me off. Yep, feel okay, just got to keep this going.

Q. When was that when you first met Ben and came over and did the simulator? Do you know what year that was?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: 2019.
THE MODERATOR: Great way to start the weekend. Congratulations, Scott McLaughlin, Will Power. Thanks, guys.

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McLaughlin Grabs First Career NTT P1 Award in Last Second at St. Pete

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022) – Scott McLaughlin targeted a main goal after his rookie season in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES in 2021 – improve his qualifying performances.

Consider that job done after just one race in 2022.

McLaughlin earned his first career NTT P1 Award by leading the Firestone Fast Six with a lap of 59.4821 seconds Saturday afternoon in the No. 3 DEX Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet, taking the top starting spot for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding. The pole also came in his first race working with Team Penske engineer Ben Bretzman.

“I love qualifying, and you’ve got to put it all on the line,” McLaughlin said. “I’m working really well with Ben Bretzman. The DEX Imaging Chevy, the car is just phenomenal. I’m super proud of everyone. I just feel confident, and now I’m so happy.”

McLaughlin’s pole was part of a front-row lockout by Team Penske. Will Power – who has won the pole nine times for this event – qualified second at 59.6058 in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, losing the top spot on McLaughlin’s final trip around the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit.

“That was two good laps I did,” Power said. “I could have done better on the first; I made a little mistake on the back straight. I think Scott got the most out of it. That was a solid lap.”

Live coverage of the 100-lap race starts at noon (ET) Sunday on NBC, Telemundo Deportes on Universo and the INDYCAR Radio Network.

Three-time Australian V8 Supercars McLaughlin will lead the field of 26 cars to the green flag for the first time in his open-wheel career. His best start in 2021 was fifth for the GMR Grand Prix on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, but that was his only single-digit qualifying performance on a street or road course all season.

“I’m a competitive bloke, so I hate starting at the back,” McLaughlin said. “At the end of the day, it’s a new thing for me, starting from the front and leading a group into the first corner. I’m used to braking with people in front of me, so I’m going to have to make sure I don’t overshoot it like an idiot. I can’t wait for tomorrow. It’s going to be big.”

Colton Herta was the leading Honda-powered driver in qualifying, as he will start third after turning a top lap of 59.7104 in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda. Rinus VeeKay qualified fourth at 59.8102 in the No. 21 SONAX Chevrolet.

Romain Grosjean rebounded from an accident during practice Saturday morning to qualify fifth at 59.8116 in the No. 28 DHL Honda. Simon Pagenaud rounded out the Firestone Fast Six at 1 minute, .2041 of a second in the No. 60 AutoNation/Sirius XM Honda.

In the second qualifying session, Power turned a top lap of 59.3466 to set the track record. The previous mark was 1:00.0476 by Jordan King in 2018.

NTT INDYCAR SERIES action will start at 8:45 a.m. (ET) Sunday with a 30-minute final practice, with live coverage on Peacock Premium.

Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding Qualifying Results

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida – Qualifying Saturday for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.8-mile Streets of St. Petersburg circuit, with qualifying position, car number in parentheses, driver, engine, time and speed in parentheses:

  1. (3) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 59.4821 (108.940 mph)
  2. (12) Will Power, Chevrolet, 59.6058 (108.714)
  3. (26) Colton Herta, Honda, 59.7104 (108.524)
  4. (21) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 59.8102 (108.343)
  5. (28) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 59.8116 (108.340)
  6. (60) Simon Pagenaud, Honda, 1:00.2041 (107.634)
  7. (9) Scott Dixon, Honda, 59.7579 (108.438)
  8. (8) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 59.8241 (108.318)
  9. (2) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 59.8862 (108.205)
  10. (10) Alex Palou, Honda, 59.9584 (108.075)
  11. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda, 59.9870 (108.023)
  12. (14) Kyle Kirkwood, Chevrolet, 1:00.2616 (107.531)
  13. (27) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 59.9931 (108.012)
  14. (4) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 59.9521 (108.086)
  15. (30) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 1:00.0276 (107.950)
  16. (5) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 1:00.0021 (107.996)
  17. (06) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 1:00.1426 (107.744)
  18. (29) Devlin DeFrancesco, Honda, 1:00.0850 (107.847)
  19. (77) Callum Ilott, Chevrolet, 1:00.2121 (107.620)
  20. (20) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 1:00.1921 (107.655)
  21. (7) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 1:00.3918 (107.299)
  22. (51) Takuma Sato, Honda, 1:00.2930 (107.475)
  23. (45) Jack Harvey, Honda, 1:00.5333 (107.049)
  24. (18) David Malukas, Honda, 1:00.4601 (107.178)
  25. (11) Tatiana Calderon, Chevrolet, 1:00.9391 (106.336)
  26. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 1:01.0273 (106.182)

Rollan Survives Wild St. Petersburg Race for First Mazda MX-5 Cup Win of 2022

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (February 26, 2022) – Starting from seventh on the grid at his favorite track, Selin Rollan (No. 87 Hixon Motor Sports) kept his nose clean and his brakes cool to win his first Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by BFGoodrich® Tires race of the season. He was followed closely across the line by his teammate, Connor Zilisch (No. 72 Hixon Motor Sports).

The tight and unforgiving nature of street course racing can sometimes lead to an increase in on-track incidents. That was certainly true Saturday at the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, where Round Four of the Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup was in a full-course yellow situation before the entire field even made it through Turn One.

Too many cars going for the same piece of real estate at the start resulted in Woody Heimann (No. 82 JTR Motorsports Engineering) on his roof. Thankfully the safety team was on the scene within seconds and Heimann was able to exit the vehicle and walk away.

When the race restarted, Daytona race winner Tyler Gonzalez (No. 51 Copeland Motorsports) led the field to the green flag, having passed polesitter Glenn McGee (No. 23 JTR Motorsports Engineering) at the initial race start.

This time, in Turn One, it was Friday’s race winner Jared Thomas (No. 96 JTR Motorsports Engineering) getting together with McGee. McGee got the worst of it, spinning around and unable to get going until the full field was past. Thomas was issued a drive-through penalty for incident responsibility but went on to finish seventh.

Rollan was using all of this to his advantage and was up to third by lap six.

The field had eight more laps of green before the next full-course caution came out for rookies Dante Tornello (No. 27 Hixon Motor Sports) and Aidan Fassnacht (No. 15 McCumbee McAleer Racing) colliding in Turn 10. Both cars were unable to continue.

During those eight green laps, defending champion Gresham Wagner (No. 5 Spark Performance) took over the lead from Gonzales.

On the second restart, Rollan was able to grab the lead after Gonzalez went straight into the Turn 10 runoff with a mechanical problem.

The race remained green to the finish and Rollan held the lead the whole way.

“Those were some crazy opening laps and really busy for the starts and restarts,” Rollan said. “But there isn’t much give and take—you have to take whatever you can get here. Tyler [Gonzalez] was strong but I think had an issue. I’m so happy to win the race here at St. Pete again. It’s been a little while since the last win so it feels great. I’m also ecstatic that Connor [Zilisch] was in second. He was making me a little nervous at the end, but I think he had the drive of the race, 20th to 2nd, and I’m really happy for him. Really a great day for Hixon Motor Sports and the Austin Hatcher Foundation car, it looked awesome and it’s great to have this result for the points.”

Zilisch began to catch Rollan toward the end and tried to draft past his teammate down the front straight but came up 0.061-second short. Remarkably, Zilisch started the race from 20th and his drive to second earned him the Hard Charger Award in addition to his first Mazda MX-5 Cup podium.

“I could not have done it without the Hixon team,” Zilisch said. “The car was just awesome and I could put it where I needed to put it. It’s been a rocky start for the team this year so I’m proud to be part of this 1-2 finish and to be on the podium with my teammate Selin. It was an awesome race. I just needed a 48-minute race rather than a 45-minute one! But I’m happy to take second and move on to Mid-Ohio and hopefully get on the top step there.”

The 2021 MX-5 Cup Rookie of the Year, Sam Paley (No. 28 McCumbee McAleer Racing), did well to finish third considering he spent his race in some of the toughest fights of the day.

“The car was really good,” Paley said. “I had some contact early on and got unlucky on some of the restarts. The race was pretty crazy in the beginning and I got caught out a couple of times. At the end, I had good pace but with the damage to the car it wasn’t enough to catch Conner. I was a little lucky with some of the guys ahead of me getting penalties, but I’m happy with the podium, especially with everything that went on in the race.”

Chris Nunes (No. 32 Formidable Racing) narrowly beat Paley to the line but had to settle for fourth. Justin Piscitell (No. 89 McCumbee McAleer Racing) completed the top five.

MX-5 Cup has a bit of a break before it resumes for Rounds Five and Six at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, May 13 – 15. All races are streamed live and archived on the RACER magazine YouTube channel.

About: The Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by BFGoodrich® Tires is the signature spec series for Mazda Motorsports. The series has been operated by Andersen Promotions since 2017 and is currently sanctioned by IMSA. Mazda-powered grassroots champions can earn Mazda scholarships for this pro-level series. The Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup champion is awarded $250,000 as the top rookie nets $80,000.

Find out more at http://www.mx-5cup.com.

The NASCAR Foundation and Kaulig Racing Kick Off Partnership for Speediatrics Fun Day Festival Program

Program Aimed at Inspiring Children to Live Healthy Lifestyles Expands to Nine Markets in 2022

Daytona Beach, FL (February 26, 2022) – The NASCAR Foundation’s Speediatrics Fun Day Festival powered by Kaulig Racing kicked off the season on Friday, February 25 at Auto Club Speedway. This season, the partnership between the Foundation and Matt Kaulig’s multi-car NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series organization expands to nine race markets, bringing healthy living programming to children across the country.

The NASCAR Foundation’s Speediatrics Fun Day Festival powered by Kaulig Racing will bring the sport of NASCAR to life for kids ages 7 – 12 through a specialized curriculum and a NASCAR-themed at-track festival before NASCAR race weekends at Auto Club Speedway, Phoenix Raceway, Martinsville Speedway, Darlington Raceway, World Wide Technology Raceway, Pocono Raceway, Michigan International Speedway, Daytona International Speedway, and Homestead-Miami Speedway.

“The Speediatrics Fun Day Festival has continued to grow over the last six years into a meaningful program that introduces kids to the sport of NASCAR while inspiring them to live a healthy lifestyle,” said Mike Helton, NASCAR Foundation Chairman. “Thanks to Matt Kaulig and Kaulig Racing, we’re able to elevate our efforts with this program to a level that will provide even more momentum for future growth.”

As part of the partnership, and to enhance the curriculum provided to the Foundation’s community partners, Kaulig Media has produced six new videos featuring Kaulig, members of his race team, including NASCAR Cup Series driver Justin Haley, Motor Racing Network reporter Kim Coon and Executive Director of The NASCAR Foundation Nichole Krieger. The videos complement an activity book provided to participants and introduces them to healthy living concepts through the sport of NASCAR. The week-long program leads up to the main event the Speediatrics Fun Day Festival happening on track property.

“We are proud to team up with The NASCAR Foundation again and help provide an influential program for kids who are impacted by the Foundation’s Speediatrics Children’s Fund,” said Matt Kaulig, team owner of Kaulig Racing and founder of Kaulig Giving. “Our partnership with The NASCAR Foundation is a natural fit for us as both of our organizations look to improve lives beyond the track. We look forward to continuing to impact local communities by helping children live a healthier lifestyle and provide them with new opportunities.”

The partnership between The NASCAR Foundation and Kaulig Racing is facilitated by Kaulig Giving, the philanthropic arm of Kaulig Companies. As Kaulig’s community impact organization, Kaulig Giving supports the well-being of children and families and develops partnerships with like-minded nonprofits especially in Northeast Ohio.

The NASCAR Foundation’s Speediatrics Fun Day Festival powered Kaulig Racing is a program of the Foundation’s Speediatrics Children’s Fund, which supports needs expressed by hospitals, specialty clinics, camps and other organizations providing children’s medical and healthcare services.

Since 2017, The NASCAR Foundation has encouraged nearly 3,500 children to live a healthy lifestyle through the Speediatrics Fun Day Festival program. In addition, the Foundation also provides a charitable donation to the community partner in each market to help support ongoing healthy living programs long after the festival is over.

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About The NASCAR Foundation

The NASCAR Foundation is a leading charity that works to improve the lives of children who need it most in NASCAR racing communities through the Speediatrics Children’s Fund and the Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award. Since 2006, The NASCAR Foundation has contributed more than $41 Million to impact the lives of more than 1.5 million children across the country.

About Kaulig Giving

Since 2018, Kaulig Giving has partnered with more than 150 non-profit organizations in Northeast Ohio and beyond to create a lasting impact for children and families. As an integral part of the Kaulig Companies Charitable Giving Programs, Kaulig Giving continues to help support the well-being of children and families through direct giving, community involvement, and partnerships with like-minded organizations. To learn more about Kaulig Giving and its current partners and projects, visit kauliggiving.com.

About Kaulig Racing™

Kaulig Racing™ is a full-time multi-car NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) team, owned by award winning entrepreneur, Matt Kaulig. Established in 2016, Kaulig Racing™ has made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started and made the Championship 4 round in both the 2020 and 2021 seasons. They will continue fielding three, full-time NXS entries; the No. 10 Chevrolet driven by Landon Cassill, the No. 11 Chevrolet driven by Daniel Hemric, and the No. 16 Chevrolet driven by AJ Allmendinger. With multiple wins, Kaulig Racing has come to be one of the top competitors on track each weekend. The team made multiple starts in the NCS in 2021 and won in its seventh-ever start with AJ Allmendinger’s victory at “The Brickyard” for the Verizon 200 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The young team has acquired two charters for the 2022 NCS season, with Justin Haley competing as its first, full-time driver in the series. The team’s second entry will be shared by part-time teammates AJ Allmendinger, Daniel Hemric and Noah Gragson. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

CHEVY NCS AT AUTO CLUB SPEEDWAY: Kyle Larson Press Conference Transcript

NASCAR CUP SERIES
AUTO CLUB SPEEDWAY
WISE POWER 400
TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
FEBRUARY 26, 2022

KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series practice and qualifying session at Auto Club Speedway. Press Conference Transcript:

WHAT ARE YOUR INITIAL THOUGHTS OF THE NEXT GEN CAR? WE’VE HAD IT ON THE SHORTEST TRACK AND THE LONGEST TRACK; OBVIOUSLY TWO COMPLETELY DIFFERENT SCENARIOS. HERE, WE’RE KIND OF GOING INTO THE MORE NATURAL FLOW OF THINGS WITH THE PACKAGE THAT WE’RE GOING TO BE RUNNING FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR. DO YOU HAVE ANY EXPECTATIONS; OR IS WHEN THE GREEN FLAG WAVES, IT’S PUTTING ON THE LEARNERS HAT AND LEARNING AS MUCH AS YOU CAN AS QUICK AS YOU CAN?
“I don’t know what to expect. I didn’t have much experience in the car this off season, so I was learning a lot when I got to the Clash and even Daytona. I thought it was a fairly similar feeling to the other cars. It has its little bit of differences, but those tracks are so unique that I don’t think we’re really getting an idea of what the differences are and what stands out until we get out on track today and really through this west coast swing. I think it’s a good test for what we’ll feel and what it’ll be like throughout the rest of the year. We’re at a 2-mile track this week, 1.5-mile next and a short track following that. So, once we get through the west coast swing, I think we’ll have a good idea of the differences and who’s learning quickly and who’s not.”

DAYTONA IS A WILD CARD FACTOR, BUT HOW IMPORTANT IS IT TO GET BACK ON TRACK AND PUT UP GOOD FINISHES RIGHT AFTER?
“Yeah, definitely. We had a DNF, so we need to come here, have a good run and makeup on the points that we lost out on there. It’s definitely an important weekend to go out there, qualify good and race well tomorrow. I’m excited about it. I love this place. I’ve had some good runs here in the past, so we’ll try and get another one tomorrow.”

DO YOU HAVE ANY CLUE IF YOU’LL BE ABLE TO RUN THE HIGH LINE HERE?
“Yeah, I’m not sure. Watching a little bit of the Xfinity practice, it doesn’t look way different. Guys are still moving around; the pace falls off a lot. So, it doesn’t seem too different. I haven’t talked to anybody if the grip feels different or whatnot with the resin anyways. With the new car, I don’t know if we’ll be able to run the fence like we did before. I guarantee (Tyler) Reddick will probably be one of the first ones to try it, so we’ll all keep an eye on him. If he’s making speed up there, then yeah, we’ll try it. I just feel like with the aerodynamics of this car, it might be a little tougher to pack air against it and go really fast. But hopefully our car is good enough that we don’t have to rely on that.”

WE’RE HERE BACK IN CALIFORNIA, YOUR HOME STATE. WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO YOU TO BE HERE IN FRONT OF A HOME STATE CROWD?
“Yeah, it’s great. I feel like we’re spending a lot of time out here in California to start the year, so that’s good. It’s just a fun place. It doesn’t matter to me I guess that it’s in California or not, I just love this race track and love coming here. I’m probably biased to it for sure, but I feel like the west coast fans are the best. This infield, to me, is the best in the sport. Just a lot of fun throughout there. Everybody riding their bicycles around with their wheels lit up; parties throughout different campsites and stuff. They enjoy it and it helps us all enjoy it too. And then you get to go out there and compete on a really fun, worn out racetrack.

“I love being out there. Southern California is a lot different, so it doesn’t feel like home to me like Northern California. But either way, you get to come out here, eat some good food and enjoy some great weather.”

THIS WEEK, IT WAS ANNOUNCED THAT YOU’RE PROMOTING AN EVENT AT BULLS GAP SPEEDWAY PRIOR TO BRISTOL. HOW DID THIS COME ABOUT? WHAT ARE YOUR GOALS AND EXPECTATIONS? HOW DOES THIS FIT INTO THE EMPIRE, IF YOU WILL?
“It kind of came together late. Just through my relationship with Flo Racing – initially the idea of it started because I want to someday, somehow, bring back something similar to the Prelude to the Dream. So, I got talking with Michael Rigsby about that. That kind of turned into – well there’s no race at Bristol leading up to the Cup race like they had last year where a lot of the Cup guys went and ran. So then, Bulls Gap kind of got thrown around and we ended up putting on that event. It should be a lot of fun.

“For me, I just hope people pay attention to it; a lot of fans come out and experience a new style of racing that maybe they’ve never seen in person. It’s only 45 minutes or so from Bristol and it’s the night before we’re on track there. So hopefully, we get a lot of fans there. But then, in the future, I would love to get an event going like Tony (Stewart) and Eldora (Speedway) had with the Prelude. There’s obviously a totally new generation of drivers out there. I never got to compete in the Prelude to the Dream. It ended right when I got to NASCAR, so I would love to do that and would love to bring it back someday. To me, this is kind of the beginning of that or moving towards that. Like I said, hopefully someday we can do it.”

YOU SAID YOU REALLY ENJOY THIS TRACK AND YOU’VE HAD A LOT OF SUCCESS HERE. WHILE THE POTENTIAL FOR THIS TRACK GETTING CONVERTED TO A HALF-MILE IS ALWAYS STILL THERE, WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THAT? IF IT WERE CONVERTED, WOULD YOU MISS THE WAY THE TRACK IS RIGHT NOW?
“Yeah, I mean I would miss it. I love this style of track and the way the surface is wore out. But as much as I love these intermediate-style tracks – and we saw it at the Clash – that short tracks are what makes this sport, to me, exciting. I’m for more short tracks. They don’t suit me very well, but I still think for the betterment of the sport, that we need more of them. I would like to see it. I know that it’s a big undertaking and I’m sure budgets and stuff have changed since COVID. So, that may be why it hasn’t happened to this point yet. But yeah, I think it would get a lot of people even more excited about this event.”

WITH THE REINTRODUCTION TO QUALIFYING AND A VERY CONDENSED VERSION OF PRACTICE, LAST YEAR IT WAS A SOLID YEAR FOR YOU. YOU WERE STARTING UPFRONT BECAUSE YOU WERE FINISHING GREAT. HOW ARE YOU GOING TO TAKE ALL OF THIS COMING BACK THIS YEAR?
“Yeah, I think it’ll be interesting. There’s really no time to work on your car. Especially here in the early portions of the season, with me, I don’t know what to expect when I got into turn one at any of these racetracks until we get a few races in and all that. I don’t know – it’s a cool opportunity to get some track time and kind of shake the order of the starting lineup up a little bit. Last year, we started upfront a lot because we were upfront in points, were running fast laps and finished up front. Which was awesome and I think our car was fast enough that we probably could have qualified on the pole as often as we earned the pole with the criteria that they had.

“But yeah, at least we’ll get some sort of competitiveness to try and go out there and help our weekends out. Especially too, like for us, with last week at Daytona and having a bad race, we would have started in the 30’s here. So, now we have an opportunity to go out there and start on the pole, which is great. Not a lot of track time to learn and really get an idea, but it should be fun.”

WHAT DO YOU HOPE TO GET OUT OF THESE 15-MINUTES OF PRACTICE?
“Just get comfortable with the car, really. Like I said, I don’t think there’s enough time to adjust on your car at all. And two, with the surface and how quickly it wears your tires out, I think making two or three-lap runs and coming in and trying to make an adjustment – unless your car is way off – will only hurt you. We’ll try and go out there; run as long as I can and just get familiar with things. Just get comfortable. We haven’t been here in a couple of years. I haven’t run this car on a track like this, so just try and get comfortable and confidence before qualifying.”

DENNY HAMLIN’S CREW CHIEF SAID THIS TRACK IS PROBABLY THE HARDEST TRACK FOR ROOKIES OR FOR YOUNG DRIVERS. DO YOU AGREE WITH THAT AND DO YOU THINK WE’LL SEE THE VETERANS EXCELING HERE BECAUSE IT’S JUST SUCH A TOUGH TRACK FOR THE YOUNG, TALENTED DRIVERS?
“It’s definitely a tough track, but I think everybody is really talented. And for like Chase Briscoe, for instance, I feel like he does really well on tracks like this. This place kind of reminds me of a dirt track, just because of the seams, patches and little marks that you have to try and hit to get grip.

“Yeah, I mean I think there’s that part where the veterans know those areas that allow their car to go a little bit faster. I think veterans will have the edge for a little while; but like I said, everybody’s talented, so they’ll figure it out. If your car is good, your car is good and you’ll go fast.”

Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

Toyota Racing – NCS Auto Club Quotes – Kyle Busch – 02.26.22

Toyota Racing – Kyle Busch
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

FONTANA, Calif. (February 26, 2022) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch was made available to media prior to the Auto Club Speedway race this Saturday:

KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry TRD, Joe Gibbs Racing

What are you anticipating taking to the track for the first time in almost two years?

“Just really the biggest difference I feel like is the new car. The track is very similar – not much difference on that. It’s still California Speedway, but the biggest thing is the new car and how this thing drives. When it feels good and everything is right, it drives similar to the old car but there is a lot of different things on it that makes it different. The feel is going to be different, just finding all of what that is in a short 15-minute practice to get ready for qualifying is what is first and foremost here.”

Have the drivers been told anything more about Harrison Burton’s flip in Daytona?

“Just looking at it, watching some of the replay – the 24 (William Bryon) was spun to the left. I was spun to left. We were actually sliding faster MPH than what the 21 (Harrison Burton) was when the 21 got hit. That’s when it kind of raised it up a little and got him lifted and so I don’t know. When you’re playing ping pong balls at 180 mph, while sliding, I’m not sure you’re going to be able to keep them on the ground. It’s fact of the matter, but the cars that did slide, it seemed as though they were just fine, I wouldn’t say there is an issue.”

Do you have your thoughts on what you expect with this new package?

“That’s definitely the number one priority – trying to be the fastest guy, trying to learn it the quickest, but also expectations – what do you expect? I think it’s going to be more similar to the 2018 cars when we were here with the smaller rear spoilers and the lesser downforce where you are going to be slipping and sliding a little bit. It’s not going to be locked down – great grip, almost wide open the last two times we ran here in 2019 and 2020 with the big, high downforce package and 550 horsepower package. Trying to just feel it out and see what it’s like. I think you are going to see a greater separation of the haves versus the have-nots just because who has this car figured out and who doesn’t yet. I think you will see some guys that really, really hit on it and they are going to be super-fast and some others where either their sim tools didn’t figure it out or they didn’t have sim tools to figure it out and they are going to be lost.”

What do you hope to get out of these 15-minute practice sessions?

“I don’t know really. You are just basically getting a gist of what your car is and an idea because even if you get 15-minutes of practice and you qualify terrible, you can’t take it to the garage and strip it apart and fix it. You’ve got what you’ve got. I think we are wasting a set of tires and gas with as short as it is and not being able to work on it. If we had the 15-minutes and then went straight into qualifying, great – no problem. I’m good with that, but if we all wanted to take it back to the garage and work on it overnight to fix our issues – me being able to talk to the crew chief (Ben Beshore), talk about what it is doing, not doing, what I need it to do better and all of that and then we sort of go through our simulation, go through ideas and concepts of what to do, what to try, what to better for the next day, you rebuild your car and you go to the tail of the field and you start the race where you start the race after rebuilding it overnight. That’s not the system we are in. That is not the sandbox that we are in. I’m in fantasyland.”

What are your thoughts on the potential track changes?

“This is a great drivers track. It’s very fun for us. It’s challenging. You are going really fast down the straightaways. You’re still going pretty fast through the turns, but you’ve got five lanes to work with – you’ve got bottom all the way to wall. Go back to 2013, I think was the last race in Michigan before they repaved that and then we came back in ’14 and Michigan has been terrible ever since. More banking at Michigan – it is different – but still a two-mile racetrack, but the racing has not been what this place has been able to produce. Being that it may go to a half-mile short track is completely different ballgame. We look at Atlanta – Atlanta went through a complete renovation, face-lift, all of that, and it’s going to be a superspeedway race. It’s going to be a completely different race than we’ve seen at Atlanta, but a half-mile here could be interesting, but they also have a great half-mile racetrack about 30-minutes from here too that I’ve seen some really good shows at, and we also put on a good show at the Coliseum, so I don’t know. It’s everybody’s interpretation and opinion really. Us drivers enjoy this place and like it the way it is. We liked Atlanta the way it was, but time for change – time for new. We all kind of learned. We saw that new can work with the Coliseum. I will 99% sell you that this place will get chopped up.”

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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.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Aric Almirola, Chase Briscoe and Kevin Harvick Media Availabilities

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Media Availabilities | Saturday, February 26, 2022

Stewart-Haas Racing drivers Aric Almirola, Chase Briscoe and Kevin Harvick met with members of the media at Auto Club Speedway prior to practice and qualifying for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race. Below is a complete transcript.

ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Rush/Mobil Delvac 1 Ford Mustang — WE’VE SEEN THE CAR ON THE SHORTEST AND BIGGEST TRACKS ON THE SCHEDULE SO FAR, WHAT ARE YOUR INITIAL THOUGHTS ON THIS CAR IN RACE ACTION: “I honestly like you can’t really gauge anything off of the Coliseum or Daytona as it relates to here or next week at Vegas. I think these are going to be more of our bread and butter type race tracks for the season and the ones we are going to have to be good at as we go through the season and you want to compete for a championship. You have to be good at the 1.5 mile and 2-mile race tracks. The downforce package is going to be the same all year whereas in years past we have had higher downforce and higher drag at the 1.5-mile and 2-mile race tracks and the lower drag, lower downforce package at the shorter tracks. Now we are going to have the same package with this new car at all the race tracks. How we run here, Vegas and Phoenix will really give us a good indicator of what we are in store for the season. Last week was essentially a superspeedway race like it always is. Daytona is only a really good indicator of what we will have at Talladega. I think even Atlanta is going to be different than what we had at Daytona.”

CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Mahindra Tractors Ford Mustang — “I would echo what Aric said. I feel like the short track deal, a lot of cars are going to drive similar on the short track and same as the superspeedway. I feel like they are all going to have that same look and feel to them. I think this weekend is definitely going to be the biggest test we have seen out of the Next Gen car, not only from a driving standpoint but durability and everything. I think this will be a hard test for the car with how hard this race track is on equipment and how slick it is and a lot of things. It will be interesting how this race plays out and then along with Vegas and then we have laps at Phoenix from testing. It will be interesting. Like Aric was saying, it will be nice to have the same package everywhere we go. I feel like we can finally learn some things.”

THIS FORMAT FOR PRACTICE AND QUALIFYING, HOW DO YOU APPROACH YOUR 15-MINUTES OF PRACTICE AND WHAT IS COMING UP HERE TODAY? “I think it is nice to have practice. We haven’t had that over the last year and a half. On the new car, you can’t really change anything. There are very minor adjustments. It is really just to kind of get a shakedown and have a general idea of what your car is going to do when it goes off into the corner on lap one of the race. I think qualifying was something that needed to come back. Doing the metric deal week in and week out, if you got buried in points you kind of just sucked for the whole year. It is nice to qualify but your strategy, I think with how hard it is to change anything, especially at a big track like this where you aren’t going to get a ton of laps because it is 40-second laps, you have to go run all the laps straight and hope there is not a caution to take away time. I think when you get to short tracks you might be able to come in and make one quick adjustment but outside of that it is going to be hard to change anything. It will be crucial for the teams to truly be on their game when they unload. It is hard to do that when we don’t really have any experience with this car. The simulators are going to get more and more use and it will be interesting to see what teams hit it right.”

ARIC ALMIROLA CONTINUED — “Yeah, I think here you are just not going to have enough time. By the time you roll out unless a car just drives awful on your first out lap and the travels are off or something like that, you are going to run all of practice. You just don’t have time. You don’t have time to roll down pit road, make a three or five-minute adjustment and go back out because practice will be over. From that aspect, yeah, every race track is going to be unique. When we go to Richmond, you don’t need to run all 15-minutes because that will be 45 or 50 laps, so you can go out there and run 15 or 20 laps and come down to make a quick adjustment and then go back out and run another 15 laps. It will be different from track to track for sure but I do think that bringing back qualifying is nice. The 15 minutes of practice, I don’t know how much that is really going to help us other than to give us an idea of what our car is going to drive like. Bringing qualifying back is nice and I was on both sides of it. Two years ago it seemed like we started in the top six or seven spots every week because we were up high enough in points and finishing good and running good and had fast laps during the race. It seemed like every week we started up front and it sure made it easier. You ran in the top-10 almost guaranteed the first stage of every race when you start up front and you scored stage points and you have a better selection on pit road which helps you. This past year I was on the opposite end of it where we finished last at Daytona and started the season off on speed and got buried in points and it seemed like we never started inside the top-20 except when we would qualify. We went to Nashville and qualified on the pole and it set the tone for our whole weekend and we had a good car and ran up front, all those things. Qualifying coming back is really nice just to be able to eliminate last weekend. Like, however you ran last weekend good or bad, that weekend is gone. The last couple of years that always seemed to kind of haunt you and carry over.”

IS THERE ANY EXTRA SENTIMENTALITY KNOWING THAT SOME OF THESE TRACKS IT IS THE LAST TIME YOU WILL BE HERE AS A FULL-TIME DRIVER? “Not really. Daytona was that way a little bit for me just because it is kind of home and it is the Daytona 500 but all these other race tracks as much as I enjoy coming and racing at all of them, I have done it long enough. I think this is maybe my 13th or 14th time here in a Cup car, even though it is a different kind of car. I have run a handful of Xfinity races here as well. It is business as usual. Fly out to Fontana, come here and go run a race. For me, it really is no different. I am focused on trying to maximize my weekend here and do everything we need to do in practice and qualifying today to set us up for tomorrow and try to win.”

CHASE BRISCOE CONTINUED — ANYTHING DIFFERENT FOR YOU BEING THIS IS YOUR FIRST RACE HERE AS A CUP DRIVER? “It will be different in terms of the guys I am racing against and the competition level. The good thing for me is that I don’t feel like I am at a disadvantage like I would typically be. Everybody hasn’t been here for over a year and their first laps in this car on this race track are going to be in practice. Last year in the old car, I felt like I would have been at a disadvantage jus showing up and racing and trying to figure it out but now I feel like I am on an equal playing field. I feel good about it. This is a slick, worn out race track and I feel like that has always done well for me in the past at race tracks like this. The Next Gen cars, who knows if you will be able to slip and slide it around like the old car but it will be fun to go out here and be on an equal playing field.”

ARIC ALMIROLA CONTINUED — HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT SOME OF THE CHANGES AT STEWART HAAS RACING AS WE GET INTO THIS CRITICAL TIME OF THE YEAR? “I feel really good but we always do at this time of year. There is so much optimism starting the year. Nobody starts out the year going, ‘Man, we are going to be terrible this year.’ You don’t think that or feel that way until you realize it and usually, it is too late and you are scrambling and trying to figure out how to turn the ship around and that takes time. I feel good about it. I feel like Mike Bugarewicz is one of the smartest individuals in this entire garage and I felt that way when he was my crew chief as well. Moving him to a more leadership position in the organization and allowing him to focus on our entire organization versus just one car is going to be hugely beneficial. Just even after Daytona we came back and had meetings at the shop and his insight and his recommendations and the things that he sees and just his work ethic is already proving beneficial for our entire organization. I think it is going to be a huge bonus for our team to have him in that role. On the flip side, I think Drew is a great team leader and a great crew chief and has a proven track record with a lot of success when he was at Roush and has been at teams that haven’t had as much resources as he has now at SHR. I think he is going to be a great addition to our organization. I feel good abou tit and good about the direction we are headed on the shop floor and the way the whole engineering group and everybody is going about trying to maximize this new car. It is a new opportunity for everybody and it is really about who figures it out and sciences out all the nuances of this new car the fastest.”

KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Subway Ford Mustang — WE’VE SEEN THE CAR ON THE SHORTEST AND BIGGEST TRACKS ON THE SCHEDULE SO FAR, WHAT ARE YOUR INITIAL THOUGHTS ON THIS CAR IN RACE ACTION AND WHAT DO YOU EXPECT GOING INTO THIS WEEKEND IN TERMS OF WHAT WILL BE TESTED WITH THE CAR? “I don’t really have any expectations. I feel like this is going to be trial and error as we go through several of these weekends. I don’t really have any expectations because I don’t have any real-life happenings that are relevant to what we are getting ready to do. I think as we drop the green flag and start the race, that is when you will really start to learn.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT SOME OF THE CHANGES AT STEWART HAAS RACING AS WE GET INTO THIS CRITICAL TIME OF THE YEAR? “I think for our team it was probably our best year that we have had, last year, working through all the things that we did and wound up in the same spot we did winning nine races the year before. I think obviously Mike Bugarewicz is going to be a big key in the whole process and trying to speed that up and implement things and get the information to the crew chiefs and do the things that we need to do there. He has a great relationship with all the guys on the shop floor from his crew chief role and doing the things that he did. I feel like that is the biggest change. I think for our team it is to do exactly what we have done for the last eight years. I can’t speak for the others and what they think but I can speak on what I think of Mike and his position is ultra important because the process that we are going to go through with these cars as we go to these race tracks is going to be pretty rapid as far as the evolution of the car and understanding everything that comes with the car. Right now it is just a guess. It is a very well-educated guess but you truly have no idea until you put all the cars on the race track. Last week was a great example of that. The way you raced in the Duels was not the way you raced in the Daytona 500. They were two totally different situations. Everything at this particular point is somebody’s speculative guess, in my opinion.”

GIVEN WHAT YOU WENT THROUGH LAST SEASON, WITH THE NEXT GEN CAR GOING INTO THIS YEAR, DO YOU AND RODNEY LOOK AT IT AS A RESET? “No. That is what I just said. We are going to do the exact same thing that we have done for the last eight years. Last year is irrelevant. There is nothing to take from last year. It is all so much different. We could have a good week or a bad week and last week is irrelevant too. It is no different. In the end, you look at the box score and we finished fifth in the points both years. Top-10’s, top-fives we were about the same. We just didn’t get to victory lane but we had our chances to win a few of them and didn’t get to victory lane. It is just the way this works.”

YOUR SON KEELAN HAS GONE UP A LEVEL IN HIS RACING, I JUST WONDERED WHAT YOU THOUGHT OF HIS PROGRESSION SO FAR AND DOES HE SEEM TO ENJOY IT AS MUCH AS HE DID WHEN HE FIRST GOT STARTED? “His progression has been fine. He won his first national event in the upper class a couple of weeks ago, so that was sooner than expected. For him, as he gets older and matures and does things and sees and realizes the work that he puts in is rewarded with the results he gets out of it, I think that is starting to become a little bit different in the way that you can see him react when you tell him to do something and it isn’t the defensive, ‘I wanna go play’ look. Holding him accountable is important I think. A lot of drivers don’t get held accountable throughout their career and then you get here and get eaten up by the accountability that comes with your job and making those young kids realize, even at his age, that accountability is not only for racing but life in general of your actions and reactions and the things you do have accountability that goes with them. I think the speed hasn’t been a problem. Just teaching those types of things is as important as how fast he goes and how many races he wins.”

KYLE BUSCH SAID WITH HIS SON THAT HE IS STARTING TO PICK UP THINGS THAT HE IS COACHING HIM ON AND THEN WHEN HE GETS TO THE TRACK HE (KYLE) THINKS OF THE SAME THINGS. DOE THAT HAPPEN TO YOU? “Yeah, you know, we coach a lot of the same things. I think being repetitive with the things that you tell him and really implementing those basics of how to drive are important. For Keelan, I think his is a little bit different as we have brought other people in to try to create a little bit of a barrier between dad and son and just tried to coach through the coach and tried to have some sort of separation there. For him, it is received a little bit better. I think it just depends on what period of time you are in and one week they will do great and the next week show up and forget everything you’ve ever talked about and the next day they will remember everything. They are just young kids. At this point, you just want to get them as much experience as possible.”

DO YOU REMEMBER BEING THAT WAY OF NOT WANTING ADVICE OR WERE YOU JUST SORT OF DIFFERENT? “I would say there are a lot of similarities in the reactions and his demeanor and the way he goes about reacting to some of the things that you say. He carries a lot of the same tendencies that I do as far as driving style and things like that. There are some similarities.”

HARRISON BURTON HAD HIS FLIP IN THE RACE LAST SUNDAY. I KNOW YOU CAN’T ALWAYS KEEP CARS ON THE GROUND BUT IS THERE ANY CONCERN ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED AND HAS NASCAR TOLD THE DRIVERS ANYTHING ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED? “I am of the opinion that you will never design a car that will stay on the ground on a superspeedway. I have said that in meetings and everybody looks at me like I have three eyes but if you just go back and look through time, I have seen guys flip over on their own in qualifying. YOu just create so many situations where there are cars sideways and backwards and cars on the door and I just don’t know that it is a solvable problem.”

WHAT IS THERE TO TAKE AWAY FROM A RACE LIKE THIS, KNOWING THERE IS A POSSIBILITY THAT THIS TRACK COULD BE ENTIRELY DIFFERENT NEXT TIME WE COME HERE? “You guys all think about that a lot differently than we do. For us, it is one week at a time and it is just another race. If we come back next year and it is a short track then we will come back with a short track setup. This is a driver favorite as far as being able to move around the track and the surface and everything that comes with that but there is also the reality of the type of race that everybody wants to see and short tracks are obviously a focus and something that everybody enjoys. Whatever they do, we will support it.”

IS THAT SOMETHING YOU SUPPORT OR WANT TO SEE CHANGED? “It doesn’t matter to me either way. I don’t have real deep feelings about it as far as the shape of the race track. It is just another race track.”

RCR Event Preview – Auto Club Speedway

Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Cup Series at Auto Club Speedway … Richard Childress Racing has made 92 overall NASCAR Cup Series starts at Auto Club Speedway and has tallied one win, a thrilling victory by Kevin Harvick in 2011. RCR has three pole awards at the California track, led by Austin (2016 and 2019) and Mike Skinner (2000), and has 12 top-five and 30 top-10 finishes.

Richard Childress Racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Auto Club Speedway … In 61 NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at the 2.0-mile speedway, RCR has captured two victories with drivers Jeff Burton (2007) and Austin Dillon (2016) and has won five pole positions. The Welcome, N.C., based organization has racked up 20 top-five and 38 top-10 finishes, led 272 laps and completed 8,871 of a possible 9,154 laps (96.90 percent).

All Aboard … This weekend, NASCAR Cup Series drivers Austin Dillon and Tyler Reddick are bringing back two new partners on their Chevrolet ZL1’s. Dillon will pilot the No. 3 Dow Coatings Chevrolet while Reddick hits the track in the No. 8 Lenovo Chevrolet. Both are longtime partners of RCR and the entire organization is excited to have them on track this weekend in Fontana.

NASCAR is Back in Fontana … The most recent visit by NASCAR to Auto Club Speedway was in February of 2020, making this the first race back in two years. RCR driver Anthony Alfredo piloted the No. 21 Chevrolet Camaro SS to a respectable sixth-place finish in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race while Tyler Reddick led the NASCAR Cup Series effort with an 11th-place finish in our last NASCAR Xfinity Series appearance at the track.

Catch All of Saturday’s Action … The Production Alliance 300 will be televised live on Saturday, February 26 at 5 p.m. ET on FS1 and will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90. Prior to the race, you can catch Xfinity Series practice at 12 p.m. ET followed by Xfinity Series qualifying at 12:30 p.m. ET on FS1. The NASCAR Cup Series will hit the track for the first time at 2 p.m. ET for practice and will qualify directly after that at 2:35 p.m. ET on FS1.

Tune-In Information for Sunday’s Action … The Wise Power 400 at Auto Club Speedway will be televised live Sunday, February 27 beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX and will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

This Week’s Dow Coatings Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Auto Club Speedway … Dillon has seven previous NASCAR Cup Series starts to his credit at Auto Club Speedway, earning back-to-back top-10 finishes in 2018 and 2019. He is a two-time pole award winner at the 2.0-mile track (2016 and 2019). Dillon is a former NASCAR Xfinity Series race winner at Auto Club Speedway.

Dow brings a science and engineering crew who is driven by limitless curiosity to the RCR Team … Austin Dillon and the RCR team are again supported by Dow’s materials science expertise and technologies this season. Backed by the power of data analysis and virtual modeling, Dow develops and manufactures high-performance components and materials custom-made for the No. 3 car. Dow and RCR’s partnership has expedited innovation and shortened testing time in the automotive industry by recreating in the lab one of the most extreme environments – the racetrack. After nine years of collaboration, Dow scientists and RCR engineers are continuing to work together to make the No. 3 car faster, safer and more precise. Stay up to date with Dow’s exciting developments at www.dow.com/sports and follow us on Twitter @DowSports & @DowNewsroom.

Welcome, Dow Coating Materials … Dow Coating Materials is the most innovative coatings raw material supplier in the world; driving fundamental shifts in the coatings industry and moving the market as the expert’s expert in coatings solutions. Through its mission of collaboration, inspiration, innovation and growth, the business provides material products, science, technology, and manufacturing solutions to the architectural and industrial coatings industry worldwide. Dow Coating Materials manufacturing and R&D footprint spans across all major geographic markets where Dow does business. For more information, please visit https://www.dow.com/en-us/industries/consumer/paints-and-coatings.

AUSTIN DILLON QUOTES:
Describe the racing at Auto Club Speedway.
“Tire wear is the biggest part. You’re running all the way against the fence, and all the way against the bottom. There’s a good mixture. You have to have speed at the beginning of a run and then hold it for a long run. If you can’t take off you get beat on the restarts and if you can’t hold on they’re going to lap you at the end of a run. You have to have a good balance between the short and the long run. If you can do that, you’ll be pretty good. We’ve done pretty well in the past there, but it’s been a while since we’ve raced at Auto Club Speedway and there are quite a few unknowns this year heading into the race with the Next Gen for the first time. I love the track, though, and feel pretty good about it. The fans are amazing at Auto Club Speedway. Actually, the fans are amazing at all of the races during this west coast stretch so I’m looking forward to getting out there.”

Where does Auto Club Speedway rank for you among the West Coast swing races?
“I think my favorites now are between Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Auto Club Speedway. I like Phoenix Raceway, too, but between Vegas and Fontana it’s a tight race.

What stands out to you about the Next Gen race car?
“It’s very futuristic compared to what we’ve been driving. I think it’s going to be a breath of fresh air. We have a lot of kinks and things to work out right now. There are a lot of unknowns, but I think that change is good for the sport. I think a lot of the fans are going to love to see the different things we do with the car. We’ll figure a lot out as we go. We had so much time and effort put into the old cars. We’re still figuring out things to make the old cars faster, which is crazy to think about when you look at how long we’ve had them. With the Next Gen, I think the engineers in our sport are going to be learning at a very fast pace, and we’re going to have to try to keep up with them as drivers.”

Are you concerned about the inventory of cars?
“I think it goes back to short track racing. When you are coming up through the ranks short track racing you do not have the inventory of cars that we’ve always had in the NASCAR Cup Series. If you wrecked your car, you could be out the next weekend. I don’t know that the inventory situation with the Next Gen car is that serious, but a wreck early in the season definitely could put you behind and put your team in a bind early in the season. Until we get more inventory of these cars, you want to take care of your equipment, but you also want to win and put it all out on the line.”

This Week’s Lenovo Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at Auto Club Speedway … Tyler Reddick has one previous NASCAR Cup Series start at Auto Club Speedway under his belt. His first and only start came in 2020 for Richard Childress Racing, when he started 19th and finished 11th. Reddick also made two starts at the Fontana, California track in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. In 2018, Reddick started 16th and finished seventh and in 2019, he started from the pole position and finished fourth.

About Lenovo … Lenovo’s story has always been about shaping computing intelligence to create a better world. With the world’s widest portfolio of technology products, we deliver our vision of Smarter Technology for All through products, solutions, software, and services that individuals, communities, businesses, and entire populations need to fulfill their potential. We serve more than 180 markets, and we own the majority of our facilities, giving us unrivaled scale, efficiency, and control of our supply chain. Our global manufacturing allows tailored offerings to regional markets and includes more than 30 manufacturing facilities, including in-house, joint venture, original design manufacturer, and contract manufacturer sites in Argentina, Brazil, China, Germany, Hungary, India, Japan, Mexico, and USA.

TYLER REDDICK QUOTES:
Describe what you think the racing is going to be like this weekend at Auto Club Speedway.
“Heading back to Auto Club Speedway for the first time in two years and with the new Next Gen car will bring a lot of unknowns. I’ve only been to Auto Club in the Cup Series once and it was in 2020. It’s just that type of racetrack, even when you’ve got the best car, it’s easy to make mistakes and step over the line. This car has already proved it’s unforgiving. You’ve got to drive the daylights out of it, but it will fight you if you don’t respect it. Maybe the drivers will play it safe, maybe I’m wrong, but I expect some mistakes. I’m expecting a tire management approach. You’re going to really have to keep the tires underneath you, especially because it hasn’t been run on in so long. All of it is going to play out really quickly in our warmup and leading into qualifying but it’s going to be an exciting start to this format that we have because you’re only going to really get maybe 10 to 12 laps, maybe 15 laps, in a practice session. That’s a good amount of time to kind of get an idea of what your comfort level is but it’s barely enough time to know if you have the right setup underneath you.”

Where does Auto Club Speedway rank for you among the West Coast swing races?
“Auto Club is my favorite track on the West Coast swing because of the many racing lanes.”

Everything is different with this new car. What is the biggest thing you had to adapt to with the Next Gen car?
“For me, the biggest challenge is pit road. All aspects of pit road, but especially entering pit road. Exiting pit road at a speedway is about the same- you just hammer down and get through gears as fast as you can, but entering the box is certainly more challenging. Just as the car is more of a fine line and less forgiving on the racetrack, it’s less forgiving on pit road, too. Once you lock up the tires coming in, you want to lock them up when you get about one pit stall away, but it’s much easier to lock them up three or four pit stalls away and then you’re rolling too fast and you roll through the pit box. I actually had that happen to us on our last yellow flag stop at Daytona International Speedway before we were out of the race. Your marks, everything, are so different. It happened a lot throughout the Duels and throughout the race. Drivers were using their old marks from the old car and they’re not even close anymore. It’s been fun learning and getting up to speed on that, but I think it’s going to play a huge role in how the races play out in the first two months of our season. Whoever can clean up the details on pit road the best will find themselves in Victory Lane.”

Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation and Logistics Chevrolet Camaro SS at Auto Club Speedway… Hill will be making his second career NASCAR Xfinity Series start at Auto Club Speedway. He claimed a 16th-place finish in the 2020 event.

A Pair of Firsts at Daytona … Hill scored his first-career NASCAR Xfinity Series victory in the season opening event on Feb. 19 at Daytona International Speedway. The driver of the Bennett Transportation and Logistics Chevrolet Camaro SS passed AJ Allmendinger on the last lap to claim the win in just his 16th career start. The Daytona event was also Hill’s first start at Richard Childress Racing.

Locked Into the Playoffs … With his Daytona victory, Hill has clinched a spot in the 2022 NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoffs. He enters the event at Auto Club Speedway second in the series championship standings, four points behind leader Allmendinger.

About Bennett Family of Companies … McDonough-Ga. based Bennett Family of Companies is a woman-owned, Women’s Enterprise Business Council (WBENC) certified, diversified transportation and logistics company. Through its nine affiliated operating companies, the Bennett Family of Companies delivers integrated transportation and supply chain management solutions worldwide. The company will use race experiences to recruit and retain hundreds of truck drivers for their organization in 2022. For more information, visit www.Drive4Bennett.com.

AUSTIN HILL QUOTES:
You won at Daytona and you’re in the Playoffs. What does that feel like?
“It takes a lot of weight off your shoulders because now we can go to Auto Club Speedway this weekend and not feel like, man, I need to run really well this weekend and stack up points. Like I said on the radio right after the race, I came to RCR for one thing and one thing only, and that’s to win races. We got one under our belt, and we expect a lot more. I feel like Richard Childress Racing is the type of organization that I want to be around because they’re very family oriented and that’s what I love about this team. They’re always there for you. I think that’s why this organization just works for me, and hopefully we can work together for a lot of years to come.”

There hasn’t been a race at Auto Club Speedway in almost two years. How big of a factor is that?
“NASCAR does a really good job of cleaning the track off but it’s still a challenge. The first laps on the racetrack there’s dust flying everywhere and you just see a cloud of dust behind you. It’s going to be a worn out surface and managing tire wear is going to be crucial. Maybe start the run at the bottom for a little bit and if your car is really good and you’ll go up and be running the fence by the end of it.”

Sheldon Creed and The No. 2 Whelen Engineering Chevrolet Camaro SS at Auto Club Speedway … Creed will be making his first start in any NASCAR National Series this weekend at Auto Club Speedway. He scored a second-place finish in the Truck Series in 2019 at Michigan International Speedway, a track similar to the 2.0-mile oval in Fontana, California.

Home Sweet Home … Creed is a native of Alpine, California and will be competing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series for the first time in his home state.

Solid RCR Debut at Daytona … Creed posted a sixth-place finish in the Xfinity Series season-opener last Saturday at Daytona International Speedway. He claimed his best finish in five series starts and second consecutive top 10. Creed is ninth in the series championship standings, 20 points behind leader AJ Allmendinger.

About Whelen … Whelen Engineering is a family-owned company with a pioneering spirit and a passion to protect the lives of those who protect and serve others. The company mission is to provide industry-defining safety solutions around the world, while creating a community of problem-solvers who are inspired to push boundaries and continue our legacy of delivering ground-breaking innovation. As a global leader in the emergency warning industry, Whelen has been trusted to perform since 1952, when George Whelen III invented the first rotating aviation beacon. Whelen now encompasses two state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities in Connecticut and New Hampshire with over 750,000 square feet of engineering and manufacturing space and the largest design staff in the industry. Every part of every Whelen product is proudly designed and manufactured in America. We embrace quality as our foundation, we celebrate innovative engineering in every product we produce.

SHELDON CREED QUOTE:
This is going to be your first time racing at Auto Club Speedway in NASCAR and it’s your home track. How excited are you to make your debut?
“This weekend will be special for me at Auto Club Speedway. I’ve never raced there so it’s going to be special because I consider it my home track. I grew up only a couple of hours south of Fontana. I really want to have a good run there in our Whelen Chevrolet Camaro. I’ve been putting in a lot of time doing my best to prepare, doing everything from watching video to iRacing to spending time in the Chevrolet simulator. I wanted to give myself the best chance and do everything I can to have a good run there. I just want to learn everything I can early in the season.”

Thomas Continues Mazda MX-5 Cup Win Streak in St. Petersburg

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (February 25, 2022) – Jared Thomas (No. 96 JTR Motorsports Engineering), the current Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by BFGoodrich® Tires point leader, continued his winning ways on the streets of St. Petersburg, finishing well ahead of Gresham Wagner (No. 5 Spark Performance) and Selin Rollan (No. 87 Hixon Motor Sports).

Starting from the sixth position, Thomas had a tremendous start and was in the fight for the lead on the opening lap. He had to concede the lead to Tyler Gonzalez (No. 51 Copeland Motorsports), however, the only other driver to have a win so far this season.

It didn’t take long for Thomas to gain control of the lead, where he stayed for the remainder of the race. It was by no means easy, with two full-course yellow periods that forced Thomas to go on the defensive for the hectic restarts. It didn’t hurt, however, that his primary opposition, Gonzalez, had to pull off just past halfway with a mechanical issue.

“It wasn’t easy,” said Thomas. “At this place, half the challenge is the car and the track instead of just the competitors. Even though I started from sixth, I knew I wanted to get out front and stay out front. I just maintained that gap, so I didn’t have to push any harder than I needed to. It worked out and I’ll be happy to do it again tomorrow!”

This is three-straight wins for Thomas, who won the season opener at Daytona International Speedway in January, as well as the 2021 season finale at Road Atlanta in November. He provisionally extends his lead in the championship to 130 over Chris Nunes (No. 32 Formidable Racing).

Though Wagner started and finished second, those results do not illustrate the amount of work Wagner had to do to claim the runner-up spot. In the end, there wasn’t much fight left in the car to challenge Thomas for the win.

“I was really nervous on some of the restarts just to be able to keep my position,” Wagner said. “I thought I was going to struggle if I got shuffled to the back so I drove really hard. I’d be able to build up a cushion, but then I’d need to save my brakes a bit, so it was a tough balance. Jared [Thomas] drove a great race and he had enough of a gap so he could manage all the way to the finish.”

A winner at St. Pete last year, Rollan clawed his way to third from 10th on the grid. It took some time to make his way through the bottom half of the lead pack, but his experience showed as the Floridian made smart choices and conserved his braking power.

“I had to be smart with my brakes but that was the case for everyone I think,” Rollan said. “Joey [Antanasio] gave me a run for my money at the end. That was a lot of pressure and that made me nervous, but I was happy to keep the consistent laps down and keep him behind me and then secure the podium. I’m really happy. Hopefully tomorrow we can do the same thing.”

Crossing the line in fourth was the highest rookie finisher of the race: Joey Antanasio (No. 43 Formidable Racing). He had an inspired run from 10th to fourth, finding an advantage whenever his competitors were struggling.

His teammate, Nunes, finished fifth, which must have been a relief after changing engines overnight.

The close confines of the St. Petersburg street course made for some incredible battles, especially in the top 10, where the order could be turned upside down with the slip up of just one driver, or a car slowed by a brief mechanical issue. That pack included last season’s Rookie of the Year Sam Paley (No. 28 McCumbee McAleer Racing), polesitter Glenn McGee (No. 23 JTR Motorsports Engineering) and the race’s Hard Charger, Jameson Riley (No. 31 Copeland Motorsports).

Riley picked up 10 positions during the race, having started seventh.

Saturday’s Round Four race is slated for 10:00am ET and will be streamed live on RACER.com.

McGee is once again the polesitter, sharing the front row with Wagner.

About: The Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by BFGoodrich® Tires is the signature spec series for Mazda Motorsports. The series has been operated by Andersen Promotions since 2017 and is currently sanctioned by IMSA. Mazda-powered grassroots champions can earn Mazda scholarships for this pro-level series. The Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup champion is awarded $250,000 as the top rookie nets $80,000.

Find out more at http://www.mx-5cup.com.

McElrea Grabs Dramatic Pole in Indy Lights Debut at St. Petersburg

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Friday, Feb. 25, 2022) – With the pressure maxed out at 10 in a dramatic qualifying session, Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires rookie Hunter McElrea posted a statement lap as time expired to score the pole for Sunday’s Indy Lights Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

McElrea posted a best lap time of 1 minute, 5.2812 seconds in the No. 27 Andretti Autosport entry with no time left on the clock. His rise to first was the last of six changes at the top of the board in the final five minutes alone.

That monster lap put McElrea nearly three-tenths of a second ahead of second place Linus Lundqvist, who put down an impressive time of 1:05.5735 in the No. 26 HMD Motorsports with Dale Coyne Racing entry. Other drivers to hold P1 in the final five minutes of the 30-minute qualifying session were Christian Rasmussen and Benjamin Pedersen.

Even McElrea, who will start his first Indy Lights race at 9:30 a.m. (ET) Sunday (live on Peacock Premium and INDYCAR Radio Network), was caught off guard by the lap.

“I knew I had to do it on that last lap, and the tires were honestly a little bit past their peak,” he said. “I just did a lap. I didn’t expect to be on pole by three-tenths. I thought it was good enough for pole, probably, but when they said, ‘Pole by three tenths,’ I was shocked.”

McElrea’s Andretti Autosport teammate Sting Ray Robb will start third after posting a best lap of 1:05.6751 in the No. 2 car. Lundqvist’s HMD Motorsports teammate Pedersen, who also races under the Global Motorsports Group banner, will start fourth after a best lap of 1:05.8377 in the No. 24 car. 2021 Indy Pro 2000 champion and Andretti Autosport driver Rasmussen rounds out the top five with a lap of 1:05.8580 in the No. 28 car.

In 26 Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires races in St. Petersburg, Florida, the pole winner has won the race 13 times. It happened in both races here last year with Kyle Kirkwood and David Malukas. McElrea, 22, from Los Angeles, figures he has a good chance to continue that streak.

“It just sums up how good the car is,” he said. “It’s probably one of the best cars, if not the best car, I’ve ever driven. We’ve been fast, and then we’ve had issues that made us third or fourth instead of fastest. It was nice just to have a representative session with everyone on the same tires.”

The session was red-flagged just once with roughly 16 minutes remaining when HMD Motorsports with Dale Coyne Racing’s Danial Frost locked the brakes entering Turn 10 and slid into the tire barriers. His car suffered damage to the front wing and was towed to pit lane. He will start 12th in Sunday’s race.

This came just moments after Rasmussen overshot Turn 10. He went into the runoff area and was able to continue.

McElrea Tops Final Practice, Too

Mirroring how he ended qualifying Friday afternoon, McElrea posted a fast lap as time expired in final practice to end the session at the top of the charts with a best lap of 1:05.7693. He stole the top spot from Frost, who rebounded nicely from a qualifying incident to land second on the speed chart with a best lap of 1:05.8655. Lundqvist backed up his strong run in the morning practice session by rounding out the top three with a best lap of 1:06.0056.

Lundqvist Opens Season Fastest in First Practice

Lundqvist opened the day by posting the top speed in the first practice session of the day at 1:05.7856, picking up right where he left off in 2021 when he scored three wins, including the season-finale at Mid-Ohio. Denmark’s Rasmussen rebounded from a mid-practice spin to place second with a best lap time of 1:05.8080. McElrea rounded out the top three with a best lap time of 1:05.9255.

About Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires

Celebrating 35 years, Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires develops drivers and teams to compete in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES and the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. Past champions include INDYCAR SERIES champions Tony Kanaan, Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden, Paul Tracy and Cristiano da Matta. In 2021, 20 drivers in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES were Indy Lights graduates, including rising stars and race winners Colton Herta, Pato O’Ward and Rinus VeeKay. The 2022 season consists of 14 races in the United States. The NTT INDYCAR SERIES, Indy Lights, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and IMS Productions are owned by Penske Corporation, a global transportation, automotive and motorsports leader. For more information on Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires, please visit www.indylights.com. For more information on INDYCAR and the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, please visit www.indycar.com.

About Cooper Tire

Cooper Tire, a subsidiary of The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (NASDAQ: GT), specializes in the design, manufacture, marketing and sale of passenger car, light truck, medium truck, motorcycle and racing tires. Cooper is headquartered in Findlay, Ohio, with manufacturing, sales, distribution, technical and design operations located in more than one dozen countries around the world. For more information on Cooper, visit www.coopertire.com, www.facebook.com/coopertire or www.twitter.com/coopertire.

About Goodyear

Goodyear is one of the world’s largest tire companies. It employs about 72,000 people and manufactures its products in 55 facilities in 23 countries around the world. Its two Innovation Centers in Akron, Ohio, and Colmar-Berg, Luxembourg, strive to develop state-of-the-art products and services that set the technology and performance standard for the industry. For more information about Goodyear and its products, go to www.goodyear.com/corporate.