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7 Top Tips for Buying Your Dream Car Smartly

Watching your colleague swerve that fancy car in the parking lot may shatter your heart into a million pieces. Despite working so hard, most of us cannot afford our dream wheels.

You can blame it on advancing technologies or inflation, but getting hands-on with your personal car in this age seems impossible. What if we devise an action plan for you?

This blog provides you with seven tips that will enable you to afford the car you have always wished for. Let’s jump in and find out how!

Step # 1 – Set goals

Yes, goal-setting works beyond workplaces too.

The purchase of your dream car takes incredible conviction and constant reminders. There could be a whole list of needs and wants that you want to fulfill. 

It would be best if you analyzed where a car purchase stands.

Goal-setting to buy a car is similar to your plans when purchasing your new house or sending your kid to college. For example, determine the make, model, and price of the car you wish to buy. You should have it all in writing to create a strategy accordingly.

Also, understand that this car is an investment. It may lose value over time so examine the rate of its depreciation. And if you are buying a second-hand model, many variables will judge the price of the car. 

Do not jump at the first deal that you find online or at the local dealership. Instead, lay out the entire plan and then work your way towards achieving it.

Step # 2 – Apply your savings

If you have a dormant savings account that you haven’t used so far, it’s time to activate it again. If you have already saved some amount, buying a car is a fantastic way to apply those savings.

However, if you don’t have any money in the reserves, you can examine the best ways to get that amount. Start by analyzing your budget and how you can save some money from your everyday expenses.

For instance, most of us are habitual of getting our on-the-go coffees from the café around the corner. This often involves buying a cookie or a pastry as a sideline.

How about skipping this consumption? 

Instead of spending money on coffee, that amount to your car fund. Those groggy morning hours are a price you are paying to afford your dream wheels.

Step # 3 – Raise your credit score

Since cars involve hefty payments, most of us don’t have cash lying around to pay upfront. Relying on diverse financial options has made getting our hands-on luxury wheels easier. Nonetheless, it also involves being vigilant about your financial situation.

If you have successfully maintained a good credit score, it gets you a much better rate on the money that you borrow. It makes the car cheaper for you in the long run. 

Keeping a good credit score involves paying bills on time and keeping the credit card functional. Closing a credit card extracts the credit limit out of your average. This can lead to a declining credit score.

Another option to keeping a good credit score is taking out a personal loan that helps you improve your credit. You can raise your credit score when you make timely payments and don’t pile up debts.

Step # 4 – Determine your limits

We all have that urge to splash hundreds of bucks on our dream car. Yet sometimes, we just need to stay within our boundaries.

It is pretty messy when you get the car of your dreams, but you are forced to sell it because it is beyond your purchasing power. One wrong decision could lead to a prolonged imbalance of budget.

On the other hand, if you work on your savings account and stay patient, you will be better financially. This process will take some time, but it is better to buy your dream car through Atlanta Auto Broker when you are strong financially.

Step # 5 – Look for surplus income sources

Working part-time is one way to earn more money. The times we are living in today demand that we work hard to ensure we don’t run out of money at the end of the month. 

The option of working beyond regular hours may be unavailable to some people. For example, those with a high-demanding job or a family that needs attention cannot work after hours. Nonetheless, one should keep looking for ways to earn more income.

The increasing technological advancements make it easier for us to make money from home.

You can sell some products online or offer your services to digital marketing agencies. All of this requires learning skills to help you buy the car you have always dreamt of.

Step # 6 – Don’t swing at every ad

You may come across a few highly appealing car-selling ads. The process they define to get it may lure you into exploring it. We strongly suggest determining your dream wheels before you swing at such offers.

Keep all temptations away until you are entirely sure about the make and model of the car you want. Test-driving some vehicles may be exciting and compel you to go for it. But, if it isn’t the car you had in mind, don’t jump into the deal.

Stay patient and keep looking out for your pitch. The car of your dreams is out there and will pop at an appropriate time. Until then, keep saving for it!

Step # 7 – Know all the expenses waiting ahead

Once you have figured out how much goes into buying that car, it is time to do the other math. Take some time to calculate the expenses that tag along. This involves knowing about gas expenses, loan payments, insurance payments, cleaning, and customizations.

It gets easier to plan and structure your future costs when you know all about what comes ahead.

Concluding Remarks

All of us have to work hard to make our dreams come true. There is no guilt in having materialistic desires and staying on your toes to achieve that.

We hope you all will eventually flash your dream wheels soon. Don’t forget to send us a cool boomerang when you finally get to do that!

Ford Performance NASCAR: Cindric and Burton Preparing for IMSA and NASCAR Openers

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Preseason Media Availability | Friday, January 14, 2022

Austin Cindric and Harrison Burton are both preparing for their first season in the NASCAR Cup Series. Cindric will be driving the No. 2 Ford Mustang for Team Penske while Burton takes the wheel of the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford. Before jumping into their new rides for the start of the 2022 season, both will be teaming up to drive a Mustang GT4 for PF Racing in the four-hour Michelin Pilot Challenge event at Daytona International Speedway on Jan. 28. Both drivers took part in a media Q&A session this afternoon.

HARRISON BURTON, No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang – HOW HAVE YOU BALANCED THE PRESSURES AND DEMANDS OF RACING FOR ONE OF THE MOST WELL-KNOWN TEAMS IN NASCAR? “It’s definitely a cool opportunity and a big responsibility to carry on that legacy and do it the right way. That’s not lost on me, but I think the biggest thing for me is that I’ve kind of always put that same pressure on myself to perform and do well. External pressure doesn’t really change my mentality about things. I think all drivers want to be the winner. We all want to do the best we can and I think that personality is the same with Wood Brothers and we’re all aligned with our goals. We just have to work really hard to go accomplish them.”

HOW EXCITING IS IT GOING FROM XFINITY TO THE NEXT GEN CAR? “It’s definitely a different race car. That’s for sure, but at the end of the day it’s still the same techniques, the same mentality. I thought Daytona in particular was a lot more like the older generations racing. I think the pack runs that we did were really racy and really competitive and it was challenging. We did some runs where we were hitting each other and trying to bump draft. Me and Austin worked pretty extensively on that and it’s challenging. The way the cars line up and they’re a handful, which is good. It should be harder to drive these race cars and it was a fun weekend, for sure, trying to figure all that out. I got to work with my teammates and race team and I think we made some good progress there.”

HOW DO YOU THINK COMPETING IN THE IMSA RACE WILL HELP ADAPT TO THE NEXT GEN CAR? “Any seat time helps. After Daytona, I went right to the go-kart track and drove my shifter kart because I think it helps. This is no different. The cars are now coming kind of more closely aligned with that series and so there’s an opportunity there for me to get track time on one of the road courses and do it with people that I regard really highly in road racing, guys like Austin that are winning races and have chances to win. You watch Austin run a Cup race, at COTA in particular he had a chance to win. He was fast and if you can do that, I think that’s really impressive. Using those resources to get better. I think if I’m being honest and I’ve had these conversations with my friends at Ford and at the Wood Brothers and at Penske, the one thing I wanted to work on to be better was be a better road racer. To have an opportunity to do that right off the bat is awesome and credit to them for being committed to helping me get better. That’s really all a driver can ask for.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – HOW DO YOU FEEL YOUR YEARS IN SPORTS CAR RACING WILL HELP WITH THE NEXT GEN CAR? “With regards to the rearview mirror, I think the digital mirror provides some advantages compared to a conventional mechanical device mirror. It’s got pros and cons. Obviously, reliability is a question mark. Is it gonna vibrate itself to death after 500 miles at Daytona? You don’t know that. We have not done 500 miles at Daytona beating bumpers, so there still is a regular mirror in the car for those reasons, but as far as my experience with other rearview cameras, actually I just got back from South Carolina shaking down the car I’ll be running in the Rolex and it does have a different camera in it. There’s different information, like the Bosch camera gives you, for example. That’s something that I think has been developed by Corvette Racing for like the last 10 years or whatever. They’ve provided it for customer programs and stuff like that, but regardless, the information that those mirrors seem to give you is kind of the importance. In sport car racing, you don’t necessarily use the mirror to make the close maneuvers we’re gonna be making at big, fast tracks like mile-and-a-halves, two-mile and two-and-a-half mile racetracks. I would still say that it’s still all very new to everybody, but, otherwise, most new street cars all have rearview backup cameras. No one is turning around and looking out the back glass anymore. Some cars have it, but otherwise it’s what’s in the street cars now and I think it makes it more relevant for those watching as well as obviously myself being involved.”

DO YOU ALSO THINK WITH THE SEQUENTIAL SHIFTING AND RACK-AND-PINION STEERING YOU’LL BE ABLE TO ADAPT QUICKLY TO THAT IN THE NEXT GEN CAR? “I don’t know if there’s a production car or vehicle that is made with a steering box anymore, so I’d say the rack-and-pinion is definitely a long time coming. I see no reason why that should really even be a talking point if I’m blunt about it because it’s such a commonality. Yeah, there is obviously development. You’ve got to get it right and it’s new for our type of race cars, and I think that’s why it’s become an early talking point, but, for us, the last couple tests it hasn’t really even come up in conversation other than normal trying to figure out what ratio you want to run for certain racetracks, but otherwise it still provided a driver with plenty of feedback if done correctly.”

HARRISON BURTON CONTINUED – HOW LONG CAN YOU DO THE TANDEM DRAFTING IN THE RACE AND IS THAT GOING TO BECOME A THING LEADING UP TO THE 500? “I think it was kind of hard to watch and understand how challenging it was to do. Me and Austin were having to communicate and work together to try and figure out how to do it. I know Austin did it with Joey beforehand and did some work with Ryan afterwards as well. It was something we had to work at and it was challenging. I don’t think it will be like the old tandem racing. I think the pack is still gonna be the biggest way towards the front. I think it can be a tool that you use for a short amount of time, but that’s really it. We were working on it to evaluate that and evaluate its viability in the race and we felt like it was something we could use in a few situations, but nothing that was gonna kind of take over the race. It’s not something we can do all race long, that’s for sure.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED – HOW DO YOU BALANCE WANTING TO SHOW WHAT YOU CAN DO QUICKLY IN THE 2 CAR WITH HAVING TO NOT WORRY ABOUT RUNNING OVER THE EDGE AND WRECKING CARS? “You just described being a race car driver. I think being able to balance the opportunity. I think Harrison and I both would agree that this season is a great opportunity for us to learn, but also establish ourselves at a top level in this sport. If I give myself the luxury to think about those things, then I’ll probably let them consume myself. Otherwise, I’m just excited to get to work. I’m excited to start the communication with my race team. There’s a lot of change happening within the industry. I think change is opportunity and also change is quite difficult, whether if that’s, for example, I’ve worked with the same race team for the last four years and developed some really close relationships. For me, now shifting to a different race team and a different race car and different competitors – those changes are all probably more at the forefront of my mind than the changes in this car. That’s what’s gonna make being a rookie in the Cup Series challenging, but, otherwise, I’m excited for it. You ask and you strive your whole career to try to make it to the top level, so there’s no reason to shy away from it once you’re there.”

HARRISON BURTON CONTINUED – WHAT WAS THE EXPERIENCE LIKE GOING TO DAYTONA AS A CUP DRIVER FOR THE NEXT GEN TEST? “It’s been awesome. All throughout this offseason I’ve been kind of gearing up. I think Austin and I both are really trying to gear up for our first season and being as ready as we can. For me personally, it’s just such a cool feeling to roll into Daytona, to see your name on the leaderboard with the guys that you’ve always wanted to race against, the guys my dad raced against – some of them. I always thought that it was the coolest thing in the world that they were able to do that and what they did was awesome and now looking back on how bad I wanted to be in the opportunity that I have now, to have it is really neat. The biggest thing for me is to kind of understand that it’s a huge blessing to be here and an insane opportunity for me to be here and also understanding that I have to make the most of it. There’s a very limited amount of seats in this sport and you have to earn your keep. That’s what these first few years are really about. You see the guys that kind of sink or swim and you definitely want to work hard and be the guy that swims. For me, being here is awesome, being in this opportunity is awesome, but I don’t think anybody is really just satisfied with just being here. It’s cool and you have to keep in mind that it’s cool, but you also have to go to work and take advantage of the opportunity that you have at hand.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED – WHAT DOES IT FEEL LIKE TO HAVE GOTTEN TO THIS POINT WITH THE EXCEPTIONAL CAREER YOU’VE HAD ALONG THE WAY? “In a lot of ways it is gratifying as far as the conversation topic that I have no influence on. That’s a lot of external noise and, for me, I’ve been surrounded by really great people and I would say Roger Penske has built an incredible race team. I think everybody knows that, but the way he does things and the way he goes about things and the people that he sets up to carry out those jobs is what makes the difference. I’ve really learned that. It’s plastered in our shop and he says it quite often – human capital is the most important thing to our race team. I’ve learned that. I’ve been surrounded by some great people and I feel like there are a lot of people within the walls of Team Penske that are the reason I’m at where I’m at. I probably couldn’t have told you that when I was racing Bandolero and Legends cars that I was ever gonna drive the 2 car. I’m not sure that was even like a thought. I remember playing video games with Brad Keselowski in my basement. In my bedroom at home still has a signed picture from Brad after he won Bristol. It’s kind of one of those things where you almost have to tell yourself not to think about because I have a job to do and I’m excited for it. It’s what I’m passionate about. It’s what keeps me up at night. It’s what gets me out of bed, but now it’s kind of the time to start doing it. I’m glad that it’s that time. I’ve spent the last however many months thinking and organizing and trying to figure out how to do it and within the next couple of weeks we’ll be in L.A.”

YOU HAVE A GOOD RELATIONSHIP WITH YOUR TEAMMATES. DO YOU FEEL IT’S A GOOD COLLECTIVE GROUP THAT WILL WORK TOGETHER WELL? “Yeah, I really do. The first opportunity we kind of had to do that we actually went to Indianapolis to promote the race before the Brickyard weekend. It was myself and Ryan and Joey and that was after Brad’s announcement came out. That was after my announcement came out, so it was kind of the first time. It was kind of a preview of things to come and I think the three of us all left that experience like, ‘this is gonna be a lot of fun.’ I think in a lot of ways we’re all very competitive. I think we all bring different strengths to the table, but a lot of things that can help push ourselves forward, and obviously Harrison is involved with that as well. I think Harrison has been a great addition to our technical relationship with the Wood Brothers and I’m excited for that to continue. I think we’ve got three, four including myself, guys that are pretty level headed and pretty committed to making things work and not have any distractions. I’m excited for that. I think that’s a huge part because when it comes to having teammates, which I haven’t had teammates in like four years, so it’s kind of cool. It’s cool, but you have to kind of manage your time differently and utilize the information that you get from different people differently. It’s been a fun experience and looking forward to being put to the test. The Daytona 500 is the first real test of all that and I think the Fords in general have worked extremely well together in the past and really kind of cultivated some of this manufacturer movement in these plate races and I look forward to being as effective with that as possible.”

HARRISON BURTON CONTINUED – HAVE YOU EVER BEEN SPORTS CAR RACING BEFORE? “The only thing that’s been close is I’ve done some Trans Am races before in the TA2 Series, so kind of, sort of, but not really. I’ve never been in a full-on sports car race like what we’re getting ready to do, so it’s definitely gonna be a new experience. Talking about learning your competitors and things like that. What’s the etiquette like? What’s all that stuff? I don’t know. I don’t want to show up and be the NASCAR guy that uses his bumper or whatever. I don’t know what the rules are, so I’ve got to talk to my buddy Austin about that in great detail, but it’s my first time doing it and I’m excited to try some new things. This is definitely going to be new for me.”

IS IT SO NEW YOU HAVEN’T BEEN IN THE CAR YET? “I’ve never sat in it before. I’m gonna show up and figure it out. The people at the Ford Performance Center are going to help me and get some simulator time, which is gonna be very helpful to kind of at least know the feeling of the car and get a sense for the capabilities of the car. That’s been an awesome tool for me throughout my career is simulators, so I feel like I can correlate that well to real life. That will be a huge tool, so, other than that, that’s gonna be my first time on the racetrack will be for practice.”

IS THE REASON FOR DOING THIS RACE JUST TO GET ROAD RACING EXPERIENCE? “Yeah. I mean, number one it’s gonna be fun. I’ll never turn down the opportunity to drive a race car, especially a fast Mustang like we’re gonna have. As far as my motive behind doing it is I think that’s the biggest thing is focusing on being a better road racer. Now, the Next Gen car is gonna kind of perform a little bit more similar to this car will, so that’s gonna be a good thing for me to kind of get in the mindset of. The only real road races I’ve ever done are old generation stock cars, so understanding the capabilities, understanding what’s different and what’s not is gonna be a huge advantage when we roll into our first road races and hopefully kind of bridge that gap between the guys that have done it before and the guys that haven’t.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED – CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR ROAD RACING BACKGROUND AND HOW YOU GOT TO STOCK CAR RACING? “My career path has been fairly unconventional when it comes to the NASCAR side of things or maybe just in general, but I would say the transition for me with doing primarily road racing and rally car racing was my relationship with Ford. Back in the same series that Harrison and I are going to be racing in at the end of the month on Friday before the Rolex, that’s where I got my start with my relationship with Ford. That started back in 2015 and ran a full season in IMSA and what was the Continental Tire Series, now the Michelin PIlot Challenge, and that relationship started and I had a few kind of one-off opportunities to drive some stock cars through that relationship and through my relationship with Penske and Cunningham and that started into a few one-off Truck races. In 2017, I had the opportunity to go full-time racing in IMSA at a high level with manufacturer support or go start a NASCAR career racing for Brad in the Truck Series. I feel like that opportunity wasn’t gonna come again and, sure enough, it wouldn’t because Brad’s truck team shut down a year later, but, either way, that’s what started it all – my relationship with Ford and I’ve been driving Fords and Mustangs ever since. I would say a really strong relationship and a lot of fun in some blue ovals.”

HOW ARE YOU GOING TO HANDLE DOUBLE DUTY ON ROLEX WEEKEND? “It’ll be my third time doing it, so I’ve kind of done it before. I’ll actually say this is probably gonna be one of the easier times that I’ve done it and, by that I mean a lot of the time when I’ve run the Rolex it’s like a last-minute thing. You get the phone call back on Monday saying you’re in the car and then you go to the Roar and you try and figure things out and maybe get six or seven laps in the car. With four co-drivers it’s a bit of a cluster and then you have to go back and forth between both paddocks and it can be a bit stressful. It all depends on where your pit box is because my walking time spent if my pit box is in two different places and walking between both garages and finding my helmet – all of that stuff are things you have to calculate out very carefully and then you’re working with engineers and people that don’t know, so you have to correlate everybody else’s drive time schedule. It can be a disaster. It hasn’t been, and it is a lot of fun. I’ve left those weekends feeling very grateful because there are only a few guys that’ll be down there. I haven’t looked at entry lists for the Michelin Pilot Challenge, but there are usually six or seven guys that end up doing it, kind of 28 hours of racing and it’s pretty special because, like Harrison said, anytime you get to drive a race car you’re not gonna turn it down. I think I’ve gotten two quality opportunities to go and contend and try to have some success before the NASCAR season.”

SO HOW MANY TIMES HAVE YOU DONE BOTH? “I’ve done it twice. This will be my third time doing double duty. It’ll be my fourth Rolex attempt and the first time I did it was between the GT4 Mustang and the LMP2 car, a prototype, so I would say that’s probably almost the biggest speed differential you can get throughout the entire weekend, which actually makes it easier. It’s harder when the braking points are within 50 feet, but the tough part is about doing with the GT Pro Class is you’re one of the slower classes with the prototypes, so you’re always having to look in the mirror the whole time, where in GS we’re gonna be the fastest class. One of the hardest things about endurance racing is traffic management and it’s like both ends of the spectrum. I’d say switching back and forth that will probably be the hardest thing between Friday and the 24 Hours in the weekend.”

WHAT IS SO DIFFICULT ABOUT JOINING A CREW THAT HAS BEEN TOGETHER FOR A WHILE? YOU ARE THE ONLY NEW FACE, RIGHT? “Exactly. I’m the new guy and the guy before me was a Cup champion, so there’s a lot different. I have absolute confidence in the team. I think from a difficulty standpoint change is hard. It would be just like anybody else changing jobs or going and working with a different group of people or starting class with a different teacher. It’s quite a bit different. You have to learn personalities and understand certain things and all while we’re trying to develop a new car in a new situation, but change can be difficult and change can be rewarding and change can be an opportunity, so I’m excited for it. I think Jeremy and I have really started to develop a pretty good relationship. We’ve been able to do a lot of these tests together so far and kind of jump start that process and try and get ourselves the communication down as well as possible before the season starts.”

HARRISON BURTON CONTINUED – DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU HAVE TO PROVE YOURSELF A LITTLE BIT MORE TO YOUR TEAM COMPARED TO AUSTIN WHO WON AN XFINITY CHAMPIONSHIP? “Yeah, obviously that was tough, especially coming off the end of the season before that we had. Not having the results that we wanted was a tough pill to swallow, but at the end of the day the people at Ford and the people at the Wood Brothers and an alliance with Team Penske all kind of believed in me and I got hired, so I feel like they believe in me. I feel like that’s the biggest thing is having a team that believes in you, that surrounds you and wants to go to work with you. I’ve gotten nothing but confidence from the people around me. They believe that we can go and be successful and that’s from our crew chief level to the people at Ford, all the way down to just saying hi to the people in the shop. It’s nothing but excitement and that’s been cool to see. It’s definitely nice to be wanted to be a part of a race team and I definitely feel like they want me to be here and I definitely want to be here, so as far as that goes I don’t feel like there’s any pressure to prove myself, but for myself personally there is. I’ve always wanted to be the best I can be and I feel like last year didn’t really show that, but there’s always room to improve and I feel like those years always kind of make you better.”

WHAT SPECIFICALLY ARE YOU HOPING TO LEARN DRIVING THE GT4 MUSTANG THAT WILL HELP WITH THE NEXT GEN MUSTANG? “The biggest thing I’m looking for is learning the braking capability of a new car. I think being used to having to adapt to things is a good thing, where this is gonna be a completely new thing for me. I’ve never sat in this car before and I’m gonna have to show up and race against some really, really talented race car drivers and go try and beat them. That’s a good thing to do. That’s kind of what I’m gonna do all year is I’m gonna show up in a series I have never competed in with a bunch of guys that I don’t normally race against in a new car and go try and beat them. They’re obviously gonna be the best stock car racers in the world, so just being used to change, being comfortable being uncomfortable is kind of a term that best describes what you have to be as a race car driver and, for me, that’s one of the biggest things I look forward to kind of taking away from this and just learning basic road course techniques from guys and learning how different people approach things. In house we’ve got some amazing road racers with Austin and the Indy car side of guys that I’ve kind of worked with some and talked to, and I feel like I’ve already learned and I’m gonna be better from it and this is gonna be an opportunity for me to trial and error some of those things and see how they work for me.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED – AS A SPORTS CAR VETERAN IS THERE ANYTHING YOU’RE LOOKING FOR SPECIFICALLY YOU’D LIKE TO GET MORE ACCLIMATED WITH BEFORE GOING TO NEXT GEN FULL-TIME? “I might correct you and probably say I’m not a sports car veteran, but I certainly feel like I’m gonna racing against a lot of good guys. Being in GTB Pro, you look at the entry list and my jaw kind of dropped, so I’m excited for that challenge. I think to Harrison’s point, though, that’s why I’m so excited about this Rolex probably more than any other one I’ve competed in because if you’re doing something in that class that means you’re good because you’re gonna beat the best. It’s the same mentality that i’m probably gonna have to take away to bring to the Cup Series this year because you’re racing against the best and if you do anything, it’s because you’re good. There’s no excuses. There’s no external factors. Everybody is good, so if you’re doing something it’s because you’ve earned it as a team or as a driver or whatever it may be. As far as relationship between why it’s relevant and what’s important, obviously seat time is very crucial and important. Harrison and I are gonna have a very busy two weeks ahead of us right now with the Roar and the test and then the Phoenix Next Gen test and then back to the Rolex. That’s kind of busy, but I think, for me, I have a very strong desire to win the Rolex 24 and that’s my motivating factor to do this race. I’ve worked really hard every offseason to try and make something happen, not to get in a five-driver lineup just to go do the race and experience it. I’ve kind of done all that. I’d say the Rolex is probably the most realistic race I can look at and say I would like to win that race, and I think this is a great opportunity for me to do that or at least establish my capabilities to do so and, like I said, against a group of drivers that are incredibly talented, incredibly experienced all in their cars. You’ve got a lot of guys that are very specialized for the cars that they’re in. I’ll use Dirk Muller as an example, one of my co-drivers. I mean, he’s won the Rolex twice. He’s won so many races. Patrick Assenheimer knows the car. He’s raced in the Nurburgring 24, NLS races. It’s guys that know their car super well, so I’ve got some homework to do to do so, but I’m excited for the opportunity. It’s a fun way to start the year. It’s kind of gratifying because the last two years I haven’t done the race and I would say over the last two years I’ve found myself now in a position where I’ve got a great opportunity with a very well-organized well-oiled team, drivers, crew, mechanics, engineers that are ready to put our best foot forward.”

YOU ARE A ROLEX SPORTS CAR VETERAN. ARE YOU SURPRISED YOU ARE THE ONLY FULL-TIME NASCAR CUP DRIVER IN THIS RACE? “Yes and no. I would say no because I know how hard it is to get in the race no matter what your situation or status is. There are a lot of really really talented drivers that aren’t in the race that aren’t NASCAR drivers that probably have more on their resume that would make them valuable to a team, but it is challenging because there’s a lot more than just being a good driver that gets you a seat in a race car. That’s the reality of the sport and it’s frustrating, but at the same time I know there are plenty of Cup drivers that did try and make the race or understand what it would take to do so, but I think my relationships within that world certainly keep eyes on me as far as what I do in the NASCAR spectrum. There are a lot of people I’ve worked with – probably half of the race teams that are down there that know me, so it’s about relationships just like anything else, but at the same time probably not top of priority. I’ve got more than just getting seat time motivating me to go do that race. Like I said before, I’ve got a pretty strong desire to go be successful in that race. Then there are other guys. I’ll use Chase Briscoe as an example. He is doing this Michelin Pilot Challenge race with us in the sister car for PF Racing, but he’s got the Chili Bowl this weekend and there are a lot of NASCAR guys doing the Chili Bowl this weekend. That’s a lot to put together. I know he’s pretty stressed about his schedule right now because he’s got the next three weeks flat-out. There’s balancing that, but if I was to look at it subjectively I think we’ve got seven or eight road courses and one dirt race, so as far as prioritizing doing different things, I think the dirt race is more of an exhibition than the seven road course races.”

ANY SPORTS CAR RACES IN YOUR FUTURE BEYOND DAYTONA? “I think we have one off weekend, so it’s probably not gonna happen.”

HARRISON BURTON CONTINUED – “That’s a really good point. I’d love to do it, but the schedule is so tight and it’s definitely gonna be a challenge to try.”

WHAT HAS THE TRANSITION BEEN LIKE GOING FROM TOYOTA TO FORD? “It’s been, like Austin has spoken to a few times, change is definitely difficult. It’s been not as difficult as I thought it would be, honestly. I was really nervous because I had been in the Toyota camp for a long time and I had this amazing opportunity here. I was nervous to kind of change everything that I had done and it’s been a really gratifying change just because of the open arms that everyone at Ford and the Wood Brothers and Penske has welcomed me with. It’s been a pretty easy change for me. I feel right at home and where it also helped was the people at TRD were excited for me. They were not upset I left. It was cool. Everyone seemed to be happy that I had a really cool opportunity and so I’m really appreciative of that and now as you see with us doing these IMSA races and Ford being committed to helping us get better, it’s been a quick start. We’re ready to go racing and it’s been good. It’s been harder to remember everyone’s names, but other than that, it’s been a gratifying experience.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED – IS THERE ANYTHING YOU CAN TAKE AWAY FROM THE CUP RACES YOU RAN LAST YEAR THAT WILL HELP THIS SEASON WITH THE NEW CAR? “Yeah, absolutely. Everything that we’ve learned at those tests are things we’re gonna apply for the season and it’s pretty much the only data points we have to apply for the season, so these tests have been crucially important. I think the one observation or maybe a question that I have or something I’m trying to understand or at least a part that I’m proud of is that at Team Penske we’ve had all of our available cars able to run laps and make miles and have changes and be able to understand, so I think our team has done an incredible job at being prepared with a lot of unknowns. The early part of the season there’s still gonna be a lot of unknowns. There’s not a lot of practice. I would also say that there’s not as much compared to kind of what this garage is used to as far as making changes, so I say that kind of plays hand-in-hand, but knowing where the tires are gonna go. There were certain things that we had a lot of control over as a race team that are now gone, so as far as like from a car side. I think there are a lot of differences, a lot of change, mentality shift, and these tests have been really good for those things that aren’t just mechanical pieces on the car.”

Conor Daly earns full-time ride with Ed Carpenter Racing for 2022 IndyCar season

Photo by James Black/Penske Entertainment.

After splitting driving responsibilities between two organizations during the previous two seasons, Conor Daly will have Ed Carpenter Racing to call as his sole home for the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series season as it was announced that Daly will be piloting the No. 20 ECR Dallara-Chevrolet as a full-time competitor for the upcoming season with sponsorship support from BitNile Holdings, Inc.

Daly, a 30-year-old native from Noblesville, Indiana, and a former Star Mazda champion, is coming off his fourth full-time campaign in the IndyCar Series, where he split driving duties between Ed Carpenter Racing and Carlin. His best on-track result during the 2021 season were back-to-back 11th-place results at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course and at World Wide Technology Raceway in August. He also led a race-high 40 laps during the 105th running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where he finished 13th.

For the past two seasons, Daly contested on the road and street course events for ECR while competing on the ovals for Carlin except for the Indianapolis 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where he remained at ECR.

Daly made his IndyCar debut during the 97th running of the Indianapolis 500 in May 2013, where he drove the No. 14 A.J. Foyt Enterprises Honda to a 22nd-place result. Through 2021, he has achieved one pole, one podium result and 16 top-10 results. His best result in the IndyCar Series is a runner-up result at The Raceway on Belle Isle during the first of a Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix doubleheader feature in June 2016. He claimed his maiden pole at Iowa Speedway in July 2020 during a doubleheader weekend.

“Being chosen to represent BitNile is without a doubt one of the most important opportunities of my career,” Daly said. “This is an incredible partnership that we look forward to being able to strengthen and grow as we go after race wins together. To be able to come back to Ed Carpenter Racing for the full season is incredible. I haven’t had the chance to be with one team for the entire year since 2017, so this is something I am very, very thankful for. I have a lot of faith in ECR, and each year we continue to get better together. I couldn’t be more excited to get on track in the BitNile Chevrolet.”

BitNile Holdings, Inc., which will make its inaugural presence in the IndyCar Series, will serve as a primary sponsor on Daly’s No. 20 Chevrolet as part of a multiyear partnership with Ed Carpenter Racing. The company will also serve as an associate sponsor for ECR’s No. 21 Chevrolet driven by Rinus VeeKay, who remains as the team’s second full-time competitor as he is coming off a season where he claimed his maiden IndyCar victory at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course in May.

“I’ve been a fan of INDYCAR racing for a long time, and we are proud to have the opportunity to team up with Ed Carpenter Racing,” Milton “Todd” Ault III, BitNile Founder and Executive Chairman, said. “It’s a natural fit for BitNile to join an Indiana business like Ed’s as we have a number of investments in the Midwest, including our mining facilities. BitNile operates with a ‘Risk On’ philosophy where risk is an integral element if you want to win. Conor Daly and ECR share that mindset, making us in perfect alignment.”

“I am extremely proud to welcome BitNile to the ECR family,” Carpenter, who plans to compete in this year’s 106th running of the Indy 500, added. “It is exciting to be able to expand our team’s involvement in the culture of Bitcoin after running the Bitcoin car last May. We will also represent a few other exciting brands within BitNile Holdings as the year progresses, so there is more to come.”

Daly is scheduled to make his first start as a full-time competitor for Ed Carpenter Racing at the Streets of St. Petersburg for the 2022 season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, which will occur on February 27 at noon ET on NBC.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Team Penske and Front Row Motorsports Preseason Outlook

WALTER CZARNECKI, Vice Chairman, Team Penske – SOME THINK PENSKE COULD HAVE A LEG UP ON OTHER TEAMS BECAUSE OF ALL THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF RACING YOU HAVE DONE. ANY VALIDITY TO THAT? “I think that our experience in all these other series does help, but I’m not sure that it ‘gives us a leg up’ versus the competition because there are other teams that are in similar situations given their OEM affiliations. There will be a lot of sharing of information, but I will say we’ve had some experience with a similar car in the Australian Supercar Series. It did quite well there and I think we’ve been able to learn some things running there. Now whether that gives us some clear-cut advantage as we go down the road, that remains to be seen, but I would say our experience will help us.”

WHAT ABOUT THE INVENTORY GOING INTO THE SEASON? DO YOU HAVE ENOUGH CARS TO FEEL GOOD? “I do. In fact, I’m glad you asked that question because I just had a conversation with Mike Nelson, who is our vice president of operations, and we were talking about that very topic, about inventory going into the season and Mike feels like we’re in reasonably good shape right now as we get into the first phase of the season, as we get to the west coast swing, so I think we’re in pretty good shape. In fact, I was telling Mike I said, ‘We’ll see after the Coliseum how well these new bodies hold up.’ That might have an impact.”

HOW DID YOU DETERMINE YOUR CREW CHIEFS FOR THIS YEAR AND WHAT WAS YOUR PROCESS? “First of all, I want to congratulate Todd and thank him for the years he spent with us and the great success he had with Team Penske. And now I see he’s getting into the media business. I heard that this morning that he’s gonna be on SiriusXM, so he’ll be a great great asset there. In the case of Austin, Jeremy Bullins will remain on the No. 2 car. He’s gonna bring all that experience. Paul Wolfe, of course, will remain with Joey as we go into the season and then Jonathan Hassler, who had been a race engineer on the 22 car and then earlier this year moved over and became crew chief on the 21, will be coming back and be working with Ryan Blaney. I think it’s indicative, it’s an example again of our promoting from within, working within our organization. We try to identify people, regardless of the position, where if something were to happen to an individual that there be one or two others ready to step in and take that role. I think Jonathan is an example of that. A further example, of course, is Brian Wilson, who again started as a race engineer with us. He worked on the 2 car with Brad for many many years and then with Austin in the Xfinity Series the last three years, and now has the opportunity to work with Len and Eddie and Jon on the Wood Brothers team. Again, cultivating the experience, working with people, seeing how they operate in our own organization. We’ve got people identified who have performed and are ready to step into these roles.”

WHAT MADE YOU GO INTO WEC THIS YEAR AND WANT TO COMPETE IN THE 24 HOURS OF LE MANS FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1971? “That’s right. Mark Donahue and David Hobbs drove that car. They used to call that, I think that was the world’s fastest Ferrari that never won a race someone once told me. But going back to our earliest days with Mark Donahue, the roots of our team is really in sports car racing. First of all, Roger’s experience as a driver and then the development of the team and then Mark coming on board and running in the Trans Am, Can Am, Le Mans – whatever. We’ve always wanted to be in sports car racing, but the opportunities never quite presented themselves. We exited in the mid-seventies. We came back again in the mid-2000s with Porsche. That passed, continued with Acura in the last couple of years and then this opportunity presented itself with Porsche. Porsche has been a great partner of ours in other motorsports over the years. They’re also a business partner of ours. We’re one of Porsche’s largest dealers in not only the U.S. but in Europe, so we’ve got that relationship and they wanted to go and they wanted to compete and asked us if we would consider forming this alliance – Penske Porsche Motorsports, which will begin running this year in the WEC. We’re gonna run in the LMP2 category and this is really gonna be a learning experience for us. I think there are four or five of the events that are off shore. The endurance events, as you said, we haven’t been to Le Mans in 50 years. We’ll be going back to Sebring here in a couple of weeks, of course, so it’s gonna be a learning opportunity for us for the team. We’ve got I say two new drivers, Dane Cameron will be driving. Dane drove for us in the last couple of years. Felip Nasr joins us and then Emmanuel Collard, who drove six races for us with the Porsche’s back here in the 2000s, so forming a new team, putting some new people in place both on the Porsche side and the Penske side, again, it’s something we wanted to do and I think Roger has made it very well known that he wanted to go back to Le Mans and do it one more time at least. So, that’s the short story. It was a long time in the assembly, but I’m glad we’re at this point.”

WHAT’S THE PHILOSOPHY AT TEAM PENSKE REGARDING DRIVERS COMPETING IN OTHER SERIES? “You’re right. We’re seeing that and I think it’s good for the sport. I love to see a Kyle Larson not only run the Cup Series, but I love to see him in a sprint car and midget car. Who knows, a sports car maybe at some point. Our philosophy has always been, and I say always been – it has been for many years – to keep the drivers restricted to their own discipline. We’ve expanded on that in the last couple of years and this year is a good example. Austin is gonna be driving in one of the support events for the Daytona 24 Hours in a Ford Mustang GT4 and then he’ll be driving in the Daytona 24 Hour race coming up next week. I think you’re gonna see a couple of our drivers perhaps participating in other series. It will help them, I believe, in developing those skills for some of the new venues that we’re going to, going back to dirt. I know it was interesting to watch Joey Logano last year run in a super modified race, I think it was in New Smyrna. It was quite a whole new experience for him, but it really benefited him when they went to Bristol, so we’ll pick and choose and work with the drivers. We want to be flexible. We want to give them opportunities to expand their skill set. Is Ryan Blaney gonna be running full-time in the World of Outlaws? I don’t think so, but there will be opportunities that will present themselves.”

WHAT IS THE STATUS OF THE TEAM’S XFINITY PROGRAM GOING INTO THE SEASON? “At this point we don’t have any races scheduled in the Xfinity program and any decision that we make to run will be sponsor driven. We’ll work with our sponsors and if there’s an appetite to do something, we’ll certainly sit down and talk with them about the number of races and the drivers that would participate.”

WHAT HAS AUSTIN BROUGHT TO THE CUP PROGRAM THAT MAYBE WE’RE MISSING? “I don’t know that you being the media in general are missing anything about Austin. I think his experience has been well-documented. I think everybody has seen the way he’s performed. I really don’t think you’re missing anything. We felt that he was ready to make the move last year. That’s pretty well known, and then when the opportunity presented itself with Brad moving on it just accelerated that to move Austin, but we never had any doubts that he would be a Cup driver for us.”

WHAT ARE THE EXPECTATIONS FOR HIM THIS YEAR? “Run competitively. I know there are people who have high expectations for him. I’ve heard it from some in the media. I’ve heard some pundits talk about his doing this or doing that. We want him to run competitively, continue to learn, to develop the relationship with his crew chief – with Jeremy – and just build a solid foundation. Anything else on top of that. Do I think he’ll win a race? I happen to think he’ll win a race, maybe more than one, but that’s not one of the goal posts that’s been set. It’s to go out there and learn, learn, learn because as successful as he’s been in the Xfinity Series, we all know that we’re stepping up to the big league fastball right now. It’s gonna be a little bit of a different universe. He’s acquitted himself well in the several races he ran last year, but I think it’s gonna be a challenge for him as he goes through 36 points events this year.”

ARE ALLIANCES AS IMPORTANT AS THEY USED TO BE WITH THE ADVENT OF THIS NEXT GEN CAR? “We believe that they’re just as important and just as critical as they have been in the past. We are not dismissing them at all. First of all, we really appreciate the opportunity to work with Len, Eddie and the Wood family. That’s number one. That goes without saying. It’s an honor to be associated with them. We continue to learn. We continue to share information. There are things Eddie said in his comments a minute ago about learning something and we’re not gonna tell everybody. Well, no, they tell us. So I think there’s gonna be a lot of benefit because there’s still so much for us to learn, using that cliche. I know we made great progress on this Next Gen car. I’ve seen it since the end of the season. I’ve been in touch with our people to talk about our test results and the learning curve just continues to escalate, continues to go on. We’re feeling a lot more comfortable, so if there are any things that Eddie, Len, Harrison Burton and Brian Wilson can share with us, we’re all ears.”

RCR ANNOUNCED A HEMP-BASED SPONSOR. HAVE YOU HAD ANY OF THOSE CONVERSATIONS AND DO YOU CONSIDER IT A DIFFICULT ISSUE TO NAVIGATE? “First, we’ve not had any of those conversations, so I guess I can’t really respond to your question, but you do bring up a good point about sponsors. Our team at the Cup level is fully sponsored, all three cars, for every race. I think that’s quite an accomplishment in this day and age. Our primary spot, of course our partnership with Ford drives everything else, but Pennzoil, Menards and Discount Tire will still be our three primary sponsors, along with the cadre of sponsors that we’ve worked with and partnered with in the past. We’re always open to talking to new potential partners, but at this point, since we’re in a sold-out position, it would just be conversation.”

THIS NEW CAR HAS PROMPTED SOME NEW OWNERSHIP. IS IT ENCOURAGING TO SEE THAT AND SOME OF THE NEW IDEAS THEY’RE BRINGING? “I think like most of us on this call we remember those days when 48 cars would show up at a Cup race and try to qualify. The more the merrier. It think it’s really illustrative of the strength of this sport. I saw this report yesterday that I’m sure you all shared in it, but Daytona being a sell out for this year. I think a lot of that is driven by the Next Gen car. More team owners, more participation is only gonna make it better for everybody. This is a golden opportunity given the economic advantages that teams have now to get into this sport. The cost of entry is somewhat reduced from what it’s been in the past as a result of the new car and we’ve got some bright, young, progressive, aggressive owners participating, so we welcome it, for sure. That makes it healthy for everybody.”

HOW DO YOU FEEL YOUR PAST SUPERSPEEDWAY SUCCESS COULD CARRY OVER TO THE NEXT GEN CAR? “Confidence is an important word. You’re right, we’ve had great experience over the last several years and we’ve built a wealth of information on the Gen 6 car. We’re just starting to build that on the Next Gen car with this new iteration. Having said that, I think the fact that someone said with this Next Gen car teams that were good will continue to be good, so I think we’ll continue to be good because we’ve been in these situations before. Whether this car is competitive, not competitive, a lot is gonna be learned in these next 10 months that we don’t know now. I think we bring this wealth of experience with the same people to Daytona and I think that’s gonna serve us in good stead when we race there in a couple weeks.”

EDDIE THINKS THE FIRST PERSON TO FIGURE OUT THE CAR COULD HAVE AN EDGE FOR THE SEASON. DO YOU AGREE? “Did he say for the season or Daytona?”

I WOULD ASSUME FOR THE SEASON, BUT COULD INCLUDE DAYTONA TOO. “I agree generally, but I think this is gonna be a moving target with the car because, again, at the risk of being redundant here, we haven’t run it in competition yet. Daytona is one thing. Fontana is one thing. Bristol is one thing, so we have a lot to learn. The new Atlanta track is gonna be a learning experience, so I think that’s what we’re gonna see throughout the entirety of 2022. Again, I see building this collection of data and then really putting it to work as we get into ‘23. Now, you might hit on something in a race that you have some success. I guess that’s what Eddie was probably talking about. I agree with that for sure. I’m not ready to make a blanket recommendation for 2022 quite yet.”

HOW DO YOU LOOK AT THE DAYTONA TEST AND BEING AT THE TOP OF THE SPEED CHART? WHAT DOES THAT MEAN AT THIS POINT? “I really want to be top three at about 6 p.m. on February 20th. I’m not dismissing the fact that we ran pretty well. We had some competitive times, but I really don’t put a lot of stock in it. The whole intent of this exercise the last 48-72 hours was to continue to generate more data, learning how cars run. I talked to Joey Logano at length after he ran. He shared some things with me, things that he feels still need to be worked out. He said we worked on the low-hanging fruit, but there are some issues that still need resolution once we get there. I watched some of the drafting practice yesterday – six, seven cars is fun to watch, it was interesting. Frankly, I was impressed with how well the cars drafted. That’s the information I got back, but I want to see what it’s gonna look like when there are 40 cars out there, so I’m still being open-minded.”

ARE THERE ANY LOGISTICAL CONCERNS AT THIS POINT WITH SO MANY RACES AT THE START OF THE YEAR BEING SO FAR AWAY FROM THE SHOP? “Not at the moment. Clearly, this early schedule creates some logistics issues. You go to Daytona. We come back to Mooresville. We leave Mooresville, we go to Phoenix. You come back from Phoenix, we go to Los Angeles. You come back from Los Angeles, we go to Daytona. You come back, you load up and go back out to the west coast. Those kind of logistics things are part of this sport. We’re dealing with it, but in terms of our inventory of cars and spare parts right now, as I said a few minutes ago, I’m reassured by our management with the race team that we’re in good shape.”

DO YOU SEE A DIFFERENT ROLE FOR JOEY NOW THAT HE IS THE SENIOR NASCAR DRIVER AT TEAM PENSKE? “First, I want to congratulate Brad and wish him well. He did so much for our team both on the track and off the track and we’re grateful for what he did for us. You’re right, he was the leader. Joey is stepping into that role. Joey is now in his 10th season with Team Penske beginning with this year. He’s 31-years-old gonna be 32. The average age of our team someone said is 27-years-old. I’ve got running shoes older than that, but Joey is prepared. We’ve had this conversation with him. He not only has to help mentor Austin and he’s of course worked with Ryan, but also work with Harrison Burton and he takes that very seriously. We’ve encouraged him to do that, so if you want to call him the elder statesman, I guess that’s a good way to describe it. I would say he’s the most experienced Cup driver on the team and we want him to share that experience with his colleagues.”

SHR HIRED A RESERVE DRIVER. DO YOU SEE THAT AS A GOOD WAY TO KEEP DRIVERS PART OF YOUR ORGANIZATION? “I understand why teams are doing this. Number one, we do not have a reserve driver per se. I’d like to think, and I want this to come out the right way, that if there were an opportunity with Team Penske I think there would be folks knocking on our door. Maybe that came out the wrong way, but at this point we don’t have a locker room full of guys ready to strap on their helmets and come.”

YOUR BOSS SHOWS NO SIGNS OF SLOWING DOWN. IS RACING THE DRIVING FORCE THAT KEEPS HIM STILL INVOLVED AT THIS AGE? “Our offices are adjacent to each other at our building here in suburban Detroit, so I see him every day. He’s motivated not only by motorsports, he’s motivated by our entire business. The passion and the dedication, commitment, leadership that he shows in motorsports he shows in all of our businesses as well. That is who he is and I see no diminution of that. Clearly, as we all get a little bit older you’re maybe a half-step slower in some things, but I certainly haven’t seen it in regard to motorsports or any of out other businesses with Roger.”

JERRY FREEZE, General Manager, Front Row Motorsports – HOW HAS THE DAYTONA 500 WIN LAST YEAR BENEFITTED YOUR TEAM THAT MAY NOT BE SO OBVIOUS? “I think you always think about from the marketing perspective with sponsorships and it certainly got us in the conversation more so on sponsorship opportunities. Last year it helped us close a couple of deals that we still hadn’t closed at that time, so from a marketing perspective I think it’s helped us somewhat. It was big early on and then it’s maybe diminished a bit, but still to always have a Daytona 500 champion in your propaganda that you’re sending out is always helpful and so I think it still does have some value for sure. I think just as important is the guys on the team, both teams, and their attitudes going back to that track or going to other races last year and knowing that we can pull this thing off. We do build a winning race car out of here and there’s no reason why we can’t do it again, so I think it’s kind of helped from that perspective as well.”

WHERE DO THINGS STAND IN TERMS OF PARTNERSHIPS FOR 2022? “Many of the same partners that we’ve had last year and past years with the 34, starting with the 34 we’ve got Love’s Travel Stops is our anchor partner there and they’ll do half the races this season. FR8 Auctions has been with us for a long time and it looks like they’re gonna be on the car for up to five or six races this year as well, and we’re still nailing down the last elements of their program. We’ve got a couple other new partners that we’re working on and hopeful to have some announcements on in particular around the 34 in the coming weeks for some of those other races, so we’re pretty close. I think we’ve got maybe about five races left on the 34 to have it sold out for the year, so we’re getting closer and closer and probably in better shape than we’ve probably ever been with the car. I think they Daytona 500 has certainly helped that cause a bit. With the 38 with Todd’s car it’s building the program out a little bit more and there’s a bit more opportunity around it. We’ve got a partnership with Speedy Cash that’s evolved and changing a bit. We’ll have some announcements about that in the coming days, but it looks like they’ll be involved with it, and some of the partnerships that have been with Todd for a long time with Frontline and Crosley brands I think will participate at some kind of level too. We’ve still got a lot of holes to fill on that one, but got a lot of good opportunities and some partnership one-race deals that we had last year that we’re talking to about multiple race deals for this coming season that I feel like are looking promising, so there’s a lot of good opportunity out there that we’re working on, but still more holes to fill for sure.”

ARE YOU RUNNING A THIRD CAR FOR THE DAYTONA 500? “We are not. It’s something that we’ve done the last few years and I know we would love to do it again and actually talked to David Ragan about it some early on, but just given the challenges with getting the new car and getting enough inventory established there was no way we could put a fair effort together for David and so I think he decided to look with another opportunity with Rick Ware. I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re in a better position to do it next year we might try to do it again, but for this year we won’t.”

ARE ALLIANCES AS IMPORTANT AS THEY ALWAYS HAVE BEEN? “I think from some perspectives it is and some it’s not. To give you an example, we’ve been with Roush Fenway in a technical alliance for a number of years and we continue to be so in 2022. Now, that alliance also gave us access to buy chassis from them, buy suspension parts, buy various parts to basically try to build our own Roush race car and then share information at the racetrack. Obviously, with the new car we’re all out of the manufacturing business, they more so than us, so that part has definitely changed an awful lot, but as far as sharing information at the racetrack we are still taking the same style car to the track and we’re still racing Fords and they’re racing Fords, so we’ve been working hand in hand with them at the tests just trying to match our data points up with their data points and hopefully we all collectively come out in a better place. That part, from my perspective and not being somebody that’s been at any tests but just talking to a few guys here today with some post-Daytona discussion that that is certainly just as strong and just as vital to the end goal as ever.”

WHERE ARE YOU GUYS IN TERMS OF CARS BUILT AND IS THERE CONCERN ABOUT IF YOU WILL HAVE ENOUGH CARS TO MAKE IT THROUGH THE WEST COAST SWING IF SOMETHING HAPPENED AT DAYTONA AND YOU START LOSING CARS? “I will say that we are concerned, for sure. We’re in the same boat. We’ve got two cars that I would say you could take to the racetrack tomorrow and a third one that’s on its way to being assembled, but that’s about it for us right now. The chassis parts are becoming more readily available, but some other things are still I feel like behind a little bit. Hopefully, we will have more inventory, but I’ve got to believe that these cars that you take to the Clash they’re gonna end up being Daytona backup cars or California primary or something. It’s certainly much different than the days of you’ve got 30 race cars in the shop and just send one down to Daytona if you wreck one. We’re pretty concerned about it, for sure, on our end. I know everybody I talk to on other teams everybody seems to be in the same boat, so you can’t cry too much about it. We’ve all got to make it work and I’m sure everybody will be at these races and we’ll figure it out.”

ANY DISCUSSION ABOUT A CONTINGENCY PLAN IF THERE’S A SHORTAGE OF CARS IN A WORST-CASE SCENARIO? “Not on my end. I won’t say there hasn’t been discussion about it, but certainly nothing that I’m aware of our privy to, but we’ve all seen it happen. You can wreck a car in practice. You can wreck in the 150s and you’re on your third car by the time Sunday rolls around, so, yeah, it’s a cause for concern if the worst happened. I think you probably will see a little more laid back racing or practicing or a qualifying race than you’ve seen in the past, just to make sure you’ve still got that good bullet for Sunday in the 500, but I don’t know. Maybe we’ll be in better shape with cars and you can be a little more aggressive. Where it stands right now in the middle of January is certainly a bit concerning.”

WAS THERE ANYTHING SPECIFIC ABOUT NOT RUNNING A THIRD CAR THIS YEAR? WAS IT LACK OF PARTS AND PIECES OR SPONSORSHIP? WHAT WAS IT? “It was the parts and pieces, honestly. People played a factor. We’ve had a little bit of change in some personnel here in the offseason, so I won’t say that didn’t play a factor in it. Another example, Derrick Finley had been with us for 10 years or more and has moved on and he kind of always shepherded that deal whenever we would run that extra car, so not having Derrick here certainly played a factor, but the biggest factor is just not having enough inventory. Just like we talked about in the last question, it’s kind of foolish to believe that we’d have enough inventory to go do that and I’ll be honest we did it last year and it was also the first year that we kind of had the in-house truck team and a lot of our track equipment was over with the truck team and we had to beg, borrow and steal from everybody to get to Daytona last year. Derrick and David and everybody did a great job to make the race, so for a few different reasons it was just gonna be extra challenging to get it done this year.”

RCR ANNOUNCED A HEMP-BASED COMPANY AS A SPONSOR. HAVE YOU HAD ANY TALKS WITH COMPANIES IN THAT SPACE? “I will say we did have an opportunity, it might have been two years ago I think. Once the category kind of opened and we were learning as we went with what kind of testing needed to be done and it just got a little too overwhelming or wasn’t gonna work out. We didn’t get very far with it to be honest with you, but that’s really been the only experience that Front Row has had with it and I really didn’t from any involvement. Our sales guys did more so than me, so I really couldn’t even tell you. I knew there was a lot of hurdles to jump through at the time. I saw the video that Richard Childress did at Daytona and talked about the process a bit and it certainly seemed to be that’s the way it was gonna be when we had that one opportunity, but we haven’t had a lot of experience in that, so I don’t know that I’ve got any great comments around it.”

AS A SMALLER TEAM IS THERE ANY ADVANTAGE OF HAVING LESS IN TERMS OF KNOWING HOW TO DEAL WITH THE PARTS AND PIECES ISSUE YOU TALKED ABOUT COMPARED TO BIGGER TEAMS THAT MAY NOT HAVE HAD TO WORRY ABOUT STUFF LIKE THAT? “I don’t know. Maybe we’ve been a little more nimble in the past than some might be, but I think the fact that you just can’t go out there and make whatever you need changes the dynamic quite a bit. If we have to run this widget and we have to buy it from this vendor rather than find the guy to go and make it, I think that just poses the big challenge there. It certainly is a different situation. I don’t really think that Front Row is in a better position as you state because we are maybe a little more nimble and can adapt a little bit easier maybe, but I don’t know if that really helps us in this regard. Just because we’ve had in the past a smaller fleet, we’ve got a really small fleet now, but we’re all having to purchase from the same vendor and it’s what we signed up for. I think ultimately it will be good for a team like Front Row to have a more competitive race car on the racetrack and we’re just having to go through a bit of these growing pains to get there.”

IS THIS THE LEVEL OF CONCERN YOU EXPECTED A YEAR AGO KNOWING THIS NEXT GEN CAR WAS GOING TO BE SUCH A BIG CHANGE? “I don’t know that anybody ever thought we’d be sitting here in the middle of January and have three cars in the shop, but I think you knew that there were gonna be some significant growing pains to get here. You still worry about what’s all the changes that might be coming along down the pike. I mean, hopefully we’ve got a very raceable car and everything that we’re purchasing right now we can get the full use of, but in the back of your mind you know that things can change. We are definitely spending a lot of money right now. For a guy that really worries about the money being spent it’s a tough time to get through right now, but I do think, to answer your question, we all thought there would be growing pains. I don’t know if any of us ever would have imagined that we’d have this few complete race cars at this point, but, again, it’s the same for everybody. I don’t feel like we’re at any disadvantage by any shape.”

WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE GUESSED YOU WOULD HAVE HAD BY NOW IN TERMS OF COMPLETED CARS? MAYBE 6 CARS AS OPPOSED TO 3? “Yeah. I would have thought if you are gonna have a seven-car inventory and a back-up car that you would be pretty close to at least whatever your number of chassis were gonna be and, who knows, we might get there sooner than later. That’s been very surprising, for sure.”

THERE WAS A LOT OF TALK AT THE END OF 2021 AND WHERE BOB JENKINS WAS IN TERMS OF NASCAR FUTURE. GIVE US THE PERSPECTIVE OF WHERE IS BOB THESE DAYS AS HE LOOKS AT THE CUP SERIES AS A TWO-CAR TEAM AGAIN IN 2022? “I think clearly there was an opportunity to do something different beginning with 2022 for Bob and at the end of the day it just didn’t work out and we continued down the lot with Front Row Motorsports as we’ve known it for a long time. We had talked about it for a few years that if you’re ever gonna do something different before the Next Gen car comes would probably be the best time to do it. It wasn’t anything that he ever was looking to get out of the sport. It was more, ‘is there a way that we can just position ourselves to be in a better position long-term and have a stronger relationship with an OEM or whatever?’ Again, just to be in a more competitive place long-term, so obviously there were some opportunities last year and one that we worked on pretty hard for a while and at the end of the day it just didn’t work out. I feel like we really haven’t talked about doing anything different ever since. Once he decided that he just wanted to keep Front Row going and let’s just grow this and take advantage of whatever opportunities we can to make it better and hope that the direction the sport is going with the Next Gen cars and we’re in a position to have Front Row be more competitive and I think putting Todd in the seat in the 38, we’ve been around with Todd for a while and we feel like he’s got a bright, bright future and, honestly, I didn’t anticipate keeping the truck team going with moving Todd up, but Bob certainly wanted to do it. He loves the truck team and the Truck Series and the opportunity to work with Zane Smith too. I think he’s looking at stuff down the road and we feel like Michael is gonna be in a more competitive position with this car and being more of a road racing style car fits his background. I think we’re making more commitments long-term into how does Front Row get better, so maybe it’s more organic of how Front Row gets better more so than just lining up with another organization.”

HOW MOTIVATED IS THE TRUCK PROGRAM THIS YEAR? “It’s super motivated. The only thing that has changed with the truck team is Zane. Zane in for Todd and the same crew chief in Chris Lawson, the same engineer, same car chief, same road crew. We were really happy with that team’s performance last year. We had moved that team in-house, assembled the trucks here at Front Row. We still have an alliance relationship with DGR. The bodies get hung at their place, but otherwise it’s an in-house Front Row truck, so, again, it was something we started more for Todd because we thought Todd was kind of getting a bum rap where he was at and we wanted to try to help get his career back on course a bit. I feel like we did and I think he’ll benefit us long-term now and he already has been benefitting Front Row for sure with his performance in the truck. I think we all enjoyed the truck being as competitive as it was. It was fun to watch on those Friday nights and to Bob’s credit he wanted to keep it going and bring Zane in. That was his thing. ‘Hey, if we can get a guy like Zane Smith, I want to keep doing it. Let’s just don’t go hire somebody just because they’ve got a little bit of sponsorship but they’re a mediocre driver, so let’s see if we can get him.’ So we got on the horn real quick and Zane was still available and we were able to put it together. We certainly have championship aspirations with that team and, first off, you’ve got to get off to a good start and win a race and get in that first round of the playoffs and Zane has certainly shown that once he gets in the playoffs he knows how to get it to the final four and maybe we can help him get one spot better this year. We’re excited about the Truck Series and think it’s gonna be a really good program this year.”

DOES IT HELP TO HAVE TODD ON A MULTI-YEAR DEAL COMPARED TO A ROOKIE EVERY YEAR? “I think so. I kind of think of Todd similar to John Hunter, where both of those guys were rookies but they had a lot of racing experience and a lot of experience winning races at various levels. With John Hunter, just the circumstances, the whole thing with COVID and sponsorship issues and everything kind of left us at the end of the year – both of us at a bit of a crossroads of where it goes from here – and I think he decided to do what he did to go back to the Truck Series with KBM and that looks like a really good move for him, for sure, but I think with Todd just because we’ve had a relationship with Todd since he was 10-years-old in some way, shape or form and he’s been driving our truck for the last couple of years and I think there’s a much better opportunity to grow something that does have some staying power. That’s the one thing that we just need to do with the 38. I think we’ve done a good job with the 34 of having some constant there and building relationships around Michael and having a pretty good sponsorship base, but we’ve just kind of had a little bit too much turnover through the 38 for the last three years and so having Todd under our roof moving into the Next Gen series where it’s maybe a good place for a rookie to start to move up to the Cup Series with the Next Gen platform, I think it does give us a good opportunity to now build a program around a constant in Todd and I’m confident he’ll get the job done this year. With performance you get some attention from those partners that want to be a part of it, but the first step is we have to perform on the track a bit.”

WHY SKIP THE XFINITY SERIES WITH TODD AND GO STRAIGHT TO CUP, AND ANY CONSIDERATION TO GET AN NXS PROGRAM FOR HIM? “I think once we decided to stay with our two-car effort with Ford and race the Cup Series this year, then it became what are we gonna do with the 38 car. There were a few options. There were guys out there that were looking for opportunities, but, for us, it just kept circling back to ‘man, we’ve got the guy under our own roof that we feel like has got as much potential as anybody,’ and he was killing it every week in the Truck Series no matter where we went. Whether it was a short track, big track, road course, dirt track, whatever, he’s very competitive, so I don’t know that any driver has to run the Xfinity Series to be ready to be a Cup driver. I think there are some examples in the past that have made that leap from Trucks to Cup cars, but without racing Xfinity. I think the biggest thing was the car is changing, so it’s gonna be new for everybody. Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch and those guys don’t have 15 or 18 years of experience over a rookie this year. They’re rookies with this car just the same way that Todd is and Harrison Burton are. I don’t know if there is ever a really good time to bring a rookie in, but if there ever was it would probably be this year before everybody does start to figure this car out a bit. I think you look at the downforce packages from truck to what a Next Gen car is versus what an Xfinity car is, the Xfinity car is the outlier. Trucks have a lot more downforce, but Todd is kind of used to this style of racing, this momentum style of racing and has done really well with it, so I don’t know if spending a year or two in Xfinity and trying to figure those cars out and then move on to the Cup Series, at the end of the day does he get more seat time in a slower progression through the competitiveness of the different series? Yeah, he does, but I don’t know that it makes him that much more better prepared to take it on, so, for us, we had a need and we had the guy under our roof and we just chose to go in that direction.”

ANY LOGISTICAL CONCERNS AT THE START OF THE YEAR WITH SO MANY RACES SO FAR AWAY FROM THE SHOP? “Yeah, it does for sure. It’s certainly the busiest January we’ve ever had, but a lot of stuff you normally do in January – wrapping the hauler and getting the pit boxes ready and all that stuff, you just had to get done so much quicker because these things are gonna be on the road in some cases for the bulk of January. There’s the additional wear and tear on the people. We all know the schedule this year is really tight with one off week the whole season and now you’re adding in a few trips in January, so it’s made it tough from that perspective, too. I’ll even say, because I get involved on the hiring side of it, sometimes it’s hard to sell a guy on this Cup schedule versus what the Truck Series runs and if he’s got an opportunity to go there, too. Logistically, I guess you can look at when we tested at Charlotte and the RCR car wrecked and they could take it back to the shop and fix it. That’s not what you’re gonna do if you wreck at Phoenix, so I don’t know. That was just kind of a different scenario there because we were testing at Charlotte, but you certainly wouldn’t be able to repair it unless we had some spare body parts at Daytona and I’m sure we will at Phoenix, then we could do a minor repair but nothing too major. The biggest thing is just the wear and tear on the people and then some of that operational stuff that you do in the offseason just had to be done pretty quick once you got back from Phoenix. Everything had to go to the power coater right away and get sandblasted and repainted and reassembled because we were gonna be on the road so much in January.”

HOW WOULD YOU FEEL IF MORE TESTS WERE ASSIGNED TO NEW TRACKS THIS YEAR? “I hadn’t heard about anything at like St. Louis being an obvious one, but I haven’t heard about a St. Louis test. I think there’s some talk about some other tests later on this year, nothing in the first part of the year, but I think at some of the more established tracks, more organizational type tracks, but we’ll have the extended practice days at those places, at Gateway, so I think it will be more than the warm-up that we’re gonna get week in and week out, so, again, as long as it’s the same for everybody it doesn’t bother me. We’ll just take advantage of that extra practice time and line them up and race.”

HAS THE WORKING ENVIRONMENT CHANGED IN THE SHOP WITH THIS NEW CAR? HAVE JOBS SORT OF FLIPPED OVER INTO SOME OTHER CATEGORY? “It has in some regard. Some guys that were with us for a long time just moved on to do something different. We had, for instance, it’s kind of a cool story I think is we had a guy that was one of our better body hangers, he was a real craftsman and the new car just wasn’t quite his cup of tea. He’s such a good guy and somebody we would want to keep around and figure something out for, but he found a job with a restoration company restoring Volkswagen Beetles, like 1960s generation Beetles, so I respect a guy who knows what he’s happy doing and knows that this just isn’t quite for him going forward. He’s doing something that he loves to do, so we had a case like that and we’ve had some attrition, especially from the fabrication side of things over the last year-and-a-half with this change being inevitable and I think other guys finding opportunities outside of racing because they knew teams would be downsizing, so we, honestly, haven’t downsized a bit. We did exactly what you said. There are a few guys whose roles have changed and they’re doing something different than what they used to do, but they’re good diversified guys. I think it’s something that we’re just gonna learn as we go. I was just talking to a crew chief a minute ago about one guy and we don’t really know what all the skill sets are we need week in and week out with getting this car completely ready to go every week, so it’s just something that we’ll adapt to through the course of the year. At Front Row Motorsports between two Cup teams and a truck team we’ve got right around 75 people, so we’re not one of the mega-sized teams anyway and so we’ve got a few less people than we had last year at this time, but it’s not anything extraordinarily different. I think a year from now we’ll all have a better feel for how many assembly mechanics do you need? How many guys do you need to assemble the body and things like that.”

NASCAR SAYS THIS NEW CAR WILL REDUCE COSTS. WILL YOU SEE ANY OF THAT IN THE FIRST YEAR OR HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE TO REALIZE THAT? “We definitely won’t see it the first year. I can assure you of that. I don’t know how long it’s gonna take. It feels like an avalanche right now, but we kind of knew it would be this way. Time will tell. I think that’s another one that a year from now we can probably answer that a little bit better. We’re not a team that had 30 assembled cars anyway. I’ve never really thought that the Next Gen program is gonna save us a whole lot of money because we’re not over-staffed. We don’t have 30 race cars and we’re not trying to build trick of the week, so I feel like teams are probably scaling down more towards the size of Front Row Motorsports a bit. I mean, we don’t have the engineering depth that some of those other teams have and that’s why we have the Roush alliance, but I think to get back to answering your question, I think time will tell on that. I think it’s gonna take at least three years if there is a significant cost savings. I think it’s just gonna be so incremental for Front Row Motorsports compared to how we’ve raced in the past to get there, but time will tell on that one.”

Tony Stewart Racing Partners with Dodgell SRT and Mopar in NHRA

Leah Pruett To Drive Dodge Power Brokers Top Fuel Dragster;

Matt Hagan To Drive Dodge Power Brokers Charger SRT Hellcat Funny Car

BROWNSBURG, Ind. (Jan. 14, 2022) – Tony Stewart Racing (TSR) begins its inaugural season in the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series with Dodge//SRT and Mopar powering its two-car lineup for Top Fuel driver Leah Pruett and Funny Car pilot Matt Hagan.

In addition to being the manufacturer for TSR, Dodge//SRT and Mopar will be the anchor partners for Pruett and Hagan. Their nitro-fueled machines will have primary branding from Dodge Power Brokers and Direct Connection.

The Dodge Power Brokers dealership program is the exclusive source for all new Direct Connection performance parts, including tuner, stage and performance kits for the Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat and race-ready kits for the Dodge Challenger Mopar Drag Pak. Dodge Power Brokers dealership staff will be trained to deliver a performance-focused customer service experience.

“The Dodge brand has a long history of competing in and supporting motorsports,” said Tim Kuniskis, Dodge Brand Chief Executive Officer – Stellantis. “For nearly a decade, NHRA drag racing has been our primary motorsports focus, helping deliver products like the Dodge Demon, 1320 and Super Stock; cars that resonate with the Brotherhood of Muscle. These vehicles will hold a place in muscle-car history for years to come. The Dodge brand embodies the philosophy of the ‘last tenth,’ and we are not done pushing the performance envelope. So, we are extremely excited to partner with Tony Stewart and his drag racing team to help take Dodge to the next level. Tony is a racing legend with an attitude, personality and competitive drive that aligns perfectly with our goals.”

TSR’s roots are in sprint car racing, with Mopar powering its multiple entries in USAC and the World of Outlaws from 2001 through 2007. Seven of TSR’s 27 open-wheel championships were won with Mopar.

“I’m really pleased to have Dodge//SRT and Mopar as partners with our new NHRA venture as manufacturer and sponsor for our two entries in Top Fuel and Funny Car with Leah and Matt,” said Tony Stewart, TSR team owner and multi-time racing champion. “It shows confidence in your program when an OEM wants to be on your team and for you to help support their program as well. They have obviously had a great relationship with both drivers for the last few years and to be able to continue that association is key to this team’s success and a huge benefit to the continuity for everyone involved. Having that kind of history definitely helps flatten the learning curve while raising expectations for our inaugural NHRA season. It’ll be nice to work with Dodge and Mopar again after sharing success together in USAC and the World of Outlaws nearly two decades ago. We are certainly setting the bar high and look forward to being competitive from the start.”

Dodge//SRT and Mopar have supported Hagan since his rookie season in 2009. Pruett first joined forces with Dodge//SRT and Mopar in 2016.

“I’m so grateful to have represented and shared so many successes with Dodge//SRT and Mopar for most of my career and to say I’m excited to continue our relationship in this next chapter with Tony Stewart Racing is an understatement,” Hagan said. “I’m looking forward to the challenge ahead and introducing our passionate fans to a new-look livery featuring Dodge Power Brokers and Direct Connection.

“My family has been a Dodge dealer since 1979 and we’re really proud of that. We’re ready to celebrate Mopar’s 85th anniversary this year as we battle for a championship with a few wins along the way.”

Hagan is a three-time Funny Car champion (2011, 2014 and 2020) who finished runner-up in the 2021 title chase. The 38-year-old from Christiansburg, Virginia, has 39 Funny Car event wins. His career-best elapsed time run is 3.799 seconds (Sept. 1, 2017 in Q1 at Indianapolis) and his best speed is 338.85 mph (May 20, 2017 in Q2 at Topeka, Kansas).

Pruett is a nine-time Top Fuel event winner whose career-best elapsed time run is 3.631 seconds (Nov. 10, 2018 in Q4 at Pomona, California) and her best speed is 334.15 mph (Feb. 24, 2018 in Q3 at Phoenix). The 2022 season will mark her 26th consecutive year of NHRA competition, which began in the series’ Jr. Drag Racing League as an 8-year-old. She won the 2010 NHRA Hot Rod Heritage Racing Series championship in the Nostalgia Funny Car class and has spent the last eight years advancing her way through Top Fuel. However, the native of Redlands, California, has not confined herself to the NHRA’s top class. Pruett has pulled double duty for a number of years by also competing fulltime in the NHRA Factory Stock Showdown, winning the 2018 title in her Dodge Challenger Drag Pak.

“It was very important to me to continue the close relationship I’ve had with Dodge//SRT and Mopar in this new journey with Tony Stewart Racing,” Pruett said. “I’m appreciative of the support that Dodge and Mopar, and all their fans, have shown me these past few years, and I’m proud to fly their colors as we move forward together and work to bring home wins and a championship in 2022.

“Having Direct Connection branding on my dragster this season is really exciting because it has such a rich history of success at the drag strip with racers like Don Garlits. It’s amazing to help continue to build on that legacy and introduce it to a new generation of Dodge enthusiasts.”

In addition to carrying on the legacy of drag racing innovator and multi-time champion Garlits, representing Direct Connection has personal meaning to Pruett.

“While Dodge//SRT was developing the new Drag Pak, we were also testing and developing some of the stage kits,” Pruett said. “It seemed almost unbelievable that an OEM would make available various stage kits capable of adding so much additional power, all while maintaining the car’s warranty. To be on the presenting side of a massive program that I contributed to while watching it progress in pure secrecy makes me incredibly proud to run Direct Connection and Power Brokers on my Top Fuel dragster.”

TSR will make its NHRA debut during the 2022 season opener Feb. 17-20 at Auto Club Raceway at Pomona. Those interested in partnering with TSR for its inaugural NHRA season can contact the team at TSRnitro@TonyStewart.com.

-TSR-

DodgeGarage: Digital Hub for Drag Racing News

Fans can follow all the NHRA action this season at DodgeGarage, the one-stop portal for Dodge//SRT and Mopar drag-racing news. The site includes daily updates and access to an online racing HQ, news, events, galleries, available downloads and merchandise. For more information, visit www.DodgeGarage.com.

@DodgeMoparMotorsports on Instagram

The @DodgeMoparMotorsports Instagram channel continues to share content capturing Dodge//SRT Mopar drivers on the track. Fans can see action from the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series and NHRA Sportsman grassroots racers, competing in classes such as Factory Stock Showdown, Stock and Super Stock, as well as additional motorsports series.

Mopar

This year marks the 85th anniversary of Mopar. A simple combination of the words MOtor and PARts, Mopar offers exceptional service, parts and customer-care. Born in 1937 as the name of a line of antifreeze products, Mopar has evolved over nearly 85 years to represent both complete vehicle care and authentic performance for owners and enthusiasts worldwide. Mopar made its mark in the 1960s during the muscle-car era with performance parts to enhance speed and handling for both on-road and racing use. Later, Mopar expanded to include technical service and customer support, and today integrates service, parts and customer-care operations in order to enhance customer and dealer support worldwide. Complete information on Mopar is available at www.mopar.com. For more information regarding Stellantis (NYSE: STLA), please visit www.stellantis.com.

Follow Mopar and company news and video on:

Company blog: http://blog.stellantisnorthamerica.com

Media website: http://media.stellantisnorthamerica.com

Mopar brand: https://www.mopar.com/

Mopar blog: https://blog.mopar.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mopar

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialmopar

Twitter: https://twitter.com/OfficialMOPAR

Dodge//SRT

For more than 100 years, the Dodge brand has carried on the spirit of brothers John and Horace Dodge. Their influence continues today as Dodge shifts into high gear with muscle cars and SUVs that deliver unrivaled performance in each of the segments where they compete. Dodge drives forward as a pure performance brand, offering SRT versions of every model across the lineup. For the 2022 model year, Dodge delivers the drag-strip dominating 807-horsepower Dodge Challenger SRT Super Stock, the 797-horsepower Dodge Charger SRT Redeye, the most powerful and fastest mass-produced sedan in the world, and the Dodge Durango SRT 392, America’s fastest, most powerful and most capable three-row SUV. Combined, these three muscle cars make Dodge the industry’s most powerful brand, offering more horsepower than any other American brand across its entire lineup. In 2020, Dodge was named the “#1 Brand in Initial Quality,” making it the first domestic brand ever to rank No. 1 in the J.D. Power Initial Quality Study (IQS). In 2021, Dodge brand ranked No. 1 in the J.D. Power APEAL Study (mass market) – making it the only domestic brand ever to do so two years in a row. Dodge is part of the portfolio of brands offered by leading global automaker and mobility provider Stellantis. For more information regarding Stellantis (NYSE: STLA), please visit www.stellantis.com.

Follow Dodge and company news and video on:

Company blog: blog.stellantisnorthamerica.com

Media website: media.stellantisnorthamerica.com

Dodge brand: www.dodge.com

DodgeGarage: www.dodgegarage.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/dodge

Instagram: www.instagram.com/dodgeofficial

Twitter: @Dodge and @StellantisNA

YouTube: www.youtube.com/dodge and www.youtube.com/StellantisNA

Gus Dean Returns to ARCA Menards Series with Venturini Motorsports

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.: Two-time ARCA Menards Series winner Gus Dean (@gusdean) is returning to the ARCA Menards Series in 2022 and will join the potent Venturini Motorsports in a minimum three-race deal beginning with the season-opener at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway on Feb. 19, 2022.

A competitor in the ARCA Menards Series since 2016, the Bluffton, S.C.-native returns to the “World Center of Racing” for a sixth time focused on delivering Venturini Motorsports their fifth consecutive ARCA triumph at the 2.5-mile superspeedway aboard the No. 55 Toyota Camry.

Dean scored his first career ARCA Menards Series victory in just his second start at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in 2016 but has been cursed at Daytona over a period of five previous races and is hopeful that the opportunity to “Fly the V” will prove to be the cure and deliver his third career ARCA victory.

“I am very excited about this opportunity to join Venturini Motorsports at Daytona,” said Dean. “Ever since I’ve been competing at ARCA, Venturini Motorsports has proven to be a dominant fixture in the series, especially on the superspeedways.

“To have the chance to pilot one of their Toyota Camrys, work closely with their dedicated and experienced crew and be surrounded by great teammates is sure to bring all the emotions of when I first joined the ARCA Menards Series. I’m just thankful to be a part of the team’s superspeedway lineup this season and look forward to putting myself in contention for the victory.”

Venturini Motorsports’ Billy Venturini has been wanting to add Dean to his driver roster for years and is thankful that the opportunity presented itself for the 2022 season.

“It’s great to have Gus with us,” said Venturini. “We’ve been racing with him as a competitor for years and it’s great to finally have him under our banner this year. With his experience and Venturini Motorsports’ success at superspeedways, we believe have a wonderful chance at getting to Victory Lane!”

Added Dean, “While we have been fierce competitors on the track, I have always had the utmost respect for Billy, Mr. Bill Venturini and the entire Venturini Motorsports team. Not having the chance right now to race in a premier series on a weekly basis, I have to make the most of any opportunity and being a part of Venturini Motorsports provides me a shot to not only have fun but hopefully that opportunity to experience the bliss and emotions of celebrating in Victory Lane again.”

In addition to Daytona, Dean will return to ARCA competition with Venturini Motorsports at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in April and at Michigan International Speedway in August.

The 27-year-old South Carolinian is poised to have a busy 2022 season between ARCA, Late Models, Mud Truck Racing and a hopeful sporadic appearance or two in one of NASCAR’s National Series.

“With no championship on the line for me this season, it’s about having fun,” sounded Dean. “Whether that’s competing with Venturini Motorsports in ARCA, DLP Motorsports in Late Model competition, or the other racing endeavors we have planned for this season. Of course, the urge to still compete full-time is there, but it takes marketing partners and a lot of financial commitment to make it happen.

“Until we can hopefully put ourselves back into that position again, we’ll take the path that has been laid out before me and make the most of it. Venturini Motorsports is going for an unprecedented fifth straight
ARCA victory at Daytona and I want to be that driver that gets it done for them!”

Before Dean buckles in at Daytona, he will have a busy week leading up to the 2022 ARCA season opener, as he’ll also be competing at New Smyrna (Fla.) Speedway in the highly contested World Series of Asphalt driving for DLP Motorsports.

Dean will kick off his new tenure with Venturini Motorsports by competing in the open ARCA Menards Series test at Daytona on January 14 – 15, 2022.

A sponsorship lineup for the Feb. 19 Lucas Oil 200 driven by General Tire for Dean will be announced later.

For more on Gus Dean, please visit GusDean.com, like him on Facebook (Gus Dean Racing) and follow him on Twitter (@GusDean).

TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Premieres GRMN Yaris in Japan

GRMN Yaris "Circuit package" / GRMN Yaris "Rally package"

Limited to 500 Units, Reservation Lottery Starting Today on TGR Website

CHIBA CITY, JAPAN, Jan 14, 2022 – (JCN Newswire) – TOYOTA GAZOO Racing (TGR) premiered the “GRMN(1) Yaris”(2) at Tokyo Auto Salon 2022(3) on January 14. Sales of a 500-unit limited edition model are expected to begin at GR Garages nationwide around summer 2022. The GRMN Yaris is a fully tuned model of the GR Yaris that has gone through rigorous refinement with professional drivers. In addition, a new program is to be activated that will deliver to customers the type of daily vehicle evolution and driver-tailored customization that takes place in motorsports.

Since its launch in September in 2020, the GR Yaris has been involved in various motorsports, such as the Super Taikyu Series(4) where President Toyoda got behind the wheel as Morizo and participated with ROOKIE Racing, and the Japanese Rally Championship(5), where it won the season championship.

The GR Yaris has been refined through “driver first” car development. Issues under extreme use conditions are identified through driver feedback and quickly resolved. Each car can be tailored to the driver to evolve into a safe and easy-to-drive vehicle.

The development of the GRMN Yaris began from Morizo’s desire to “deliver cars to customers that evolve quickly and can be tailored to individuals like in the field of motorsports.” Using lessons learned from motorsports competition, body rigidity has been enhanced, weight has been reduced by approximately 20 kg(6), overall width has been increased by 10 mm(6) for aerodynamic improvement, and vehicle height has been reduced by 10 mm(6) for a lower center of gravity. Also, it uses mechanical LSD, a close-ratio gear transmission, and a low final gear set, which has been improved through repeated “breaking and fixing”. The GR Yaris has evolved into a car that can be driven faster and with more peace of mind, with improved braking force, grip, cornering and following performance based on feedback from professional drivers.

Additionally, through the two Update Program and Personalization Program services, we will provide customers with “cars that evolve quickly and can be tailored to individuals” just like they are in motorsports. The GRMN Yaris offers the enjoyment of race-car like ongoing progress by achieving real-time car evolution for each race with the Update Program and driving experiences that that bring out performance through tailoring the car to the driver with the Personalization Program.

(1) General name for limited-quantity models at the top of TGR’s GR sports car series
(2) “GRMN Yaris” is used for marketing purposes; the name used in vehicle registration, etc. is “GR Yaris GRMN”
(3) A customized car event held at the Makuhari Messe in Chiba from January 14 to January 16, 2022 (with a trade/media day on January 14 and public days on January 15 and 16)
(4) ROOKIE Racing GR Yaris, based on the GR Yaris, competed in ROOKIE Racing from the 2020 season to the second race of the 2021 season
(5 ) GR YARIS GR4 Rally based on the GR Yaris competed from the 2021 season
(6) Comparison GR Yaris RZ “High Performance”. The changes of overall width and vehicle height only apply to “Circuit Package”. Vehicle height: The overall height not including rear spoiler

For more information, visit https://global.toyota/en/newsroom/toyota/36416645.html.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Wood Brothers Preseason Media Availability

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Preseason Media Availability | Thursday, January 13, 2022

Executives from three of Ford’s NASCAR Cup Series teams participated in a media Zoom call this afternoon to talk about the upcoming 2022 season. Co-owners Eddie Wood, Len Wood and Jon Wood from Wood Brothers Racing; Walter Czarnecki, vice chairman of Team Penske, and Front Row Motorsports general manager Jerry Freeze all participated.

EDDIE WOOD, Co-Owner, Wood Brothers Racing – HARRISON WAS FASTEST IN DAY TWO OF NEXT GEN TESTING. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR YOUR CONFIDENCE GOING TO DAYTONA? “I spoke with Harrison this morning and he said he was really comfortable in the car. He put up a couple of good laps both days and, of course, that was drafting. It was actually tandem drafting and that’s nose-to-tail where they’re actually connected like they did – and I was talking to him and I was like – ‘are you talking about like back in 2011”’ which is when Trevor won that race and he said that’s how they did it. It was pretty tricky and they could only do it for like a lap and then they would have to swap. That’s what they did in 2011. The engines would get hot and they would have to switch up, but he was really comfortable in the draft. He drafted quite a bit with Austin and Blaney and Logano, and then they had like a 10-lap race or 10-lap event, whatever you want to call it, with the pack and I think that was probably 16-18 cars and he said he was comfortable with it. He was really pleased with the way the car drove and also said that there’s still work to do, which I’m sure everyone is in that position because in the past you can test and do all that you want to and try to simulate the real race and you just can’t do it. When they all get out there for the qualifiers will be the first real race with the speedway package and then you’re gonna know. If there are problems, they’ll be magnified then or it won’t be any big deal. Len and I went through this – we’re telling our age which everybody knows we’re old – in ‘81 when they downsized from the big cars down to the current wheelbase and everybody thought that was gonna be the end of the world. ‘There’s no way they can race these cars like that.’ Everybody complained and they had the race. Bobby Allison won it and they went on to Richmond the next week and everything was fine. I kind of think that’s the way it’ll be. It’ll be some things that will have to be worked out, but it’ll be fine.”

HAS HE TALKED ABOUT HOW HE’S ADAPTED FROM THE XFINITY CAR TO THIS ONE? “I think he ran Talladega last year or the year before, but compared to that he said these cars drove fine. Like I said, it’ll all be different when it’s real. The competition level. Everybody’s game will be upped. They’ll be taking more risk and stuff like that because nobody really wants to be the guy that starts a big wreck now, but he seemed very confident and he seems to be really really fitting in with Brian and all the guys on our crew. They were commenting just how well he’s fit in and his temperament and just his demeanor is just so down-to-earth and they just all seem to really be getting along really well. He’s interacting really well with Blaney and Cindric and Joey. That all seems to be going really well.”

WHEN YOU EVALUATED YOUR TEAM WHAT DID YOU FEEL HARRISON BROUGHT TO YOUR ORGANIZATION AND HOW DO YOU FEEL HIM COMPETING IN THE ROLEX WEEKEND WILL BENEFIT HIM? “It gets back to his demeanor and his willingness to learn. He just seems to really fit in with everyone. I think he brings some energy that only youth can bring. I’ve seen it before and there’s just something special about a kid that’s 20-years-old just getting started and already driving race cars. Len and myself, we go back to the early days. I think when David Pearson started driving our car he was 37-years-old. That’s 17 years older than Harrison is and he’d already won a couple of championships, so this is just a different time. You spoke of the road race down there, I think being competitive and just laps racing people will help him. I was really excited to hear he was gonna be able to do that.”

LEN WOOD, Co-Owner, Wood Brothers Racing – “He’s in the four-hour race that’s on Friday beforehand that Austin and Harrison are in.”

JON WOOD, Co-Owner, Wood Brothers Racing – “I think what’s neat about the attitude that Harrison has that’s different is instead of a lot of drivers – and I’m not singling any out in particular – but the typical mindset of driver is ‘what can you do for me?’ Like, ‘What more can you give me?’ And I’ve noticed a lot with Harrison that his question is, ‘Do you need anything from me? What can I do for you?’ He’s asked that several times and that’s just different and it just speaks to his maturity but his mindset. It’s something different and I appreciate it and I’m sure they appreciate it too.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – “That’s well said. For instance, at the Charlotte test – day one of the first Charlotte test – he showed up two hours early in his uniform ready to go. I wouldn’t do that, but I thought that said a lot without saying anything. He was ready to go and didn’t want to miss anything. Like, ‘I’m here to help.’ To back up what Jon said, they did a really good job of bringing him up – Kim and Jeff did.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT IS YOUR IMPRESSION WITH THIS CAR AS FAR AS THE WIGGLE ROOM? WHAT CAN YOU DO TO MAKE THIS CAR BETTER? IS THERE SPACE TO MOVE AROUND IN? “There’s less wiggle room now than there used to be. I think the rules will be tighter on them. Things kind of got out of hand before on moving stuff around and they tried reigning it back in, but I think this is a reset from that. I think every mile that you can put on a car in testing helps the engineering group, the aerodynamic group to basically go back and fine-tune everything. When we go back, that’s when everybody will have to go through the room of doom or whatever you want to call it – through the Hawkeye – and that’s when we’ll really know what we have. Kind of like what Eddie said, you won’t know until the green flag falls for the Daytona 500 really about where we’re gonna be, but I think it looks like it’s shaping up to be a good race.”

DO YOU HAVE ENOUGH CARS TO FEEL COMFORTABLE GOING INTO THE SEASON? “Yeah. I mean, I was at Penske this morning and I think everything is going along OK. There are some parts that they’re waiting a little bit on, but if we go back 30 years ago we were trying to race on four cars, and I think one thing comes to mind for me was when Childress’ group wrecked that car at the Charlotte test and went home and fixed it in like four hours or something like that. That’s kind of a game-changer on these cars. Before, if you hit something, then you’ve got to send that car back to the chassis shop and stuff like that. I think Childress probably, by wrecking and doing that, may have a little bit of an advantage on knowing. They were the first ones to do it and maybe they developed a plan on fixing stuff and that’s something our team needs to do is let’s just say change engines, change transaxles, change the rack-and-pinion steering, so when we get to the racetrack it’s not something knew to them. We had steering boxes for 50 years and now we’ve got steering racks, so there are a lot of things that are different about this car – more like a stock car.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – “And another thing. I guess this was back in the eighties when people could change engines during a race. They could change an engine in less than 20 minutes, so everyone will figure out how to work on these cars, how to change things quicker because it’s just a completely new animal. It’s new to everyone, but, like Len said, I think it’s gonna be OK.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT GOING TO THE COLISEUM FOR THE CLASH? “It’s gonna be different, for sure. The pictures and stuff I’ve seen that a lot of you guys have dug up and been involved with getting some good video and information about it, I think it’s gonna be really good. I’m a big fan of Bowman Gray Stadium. If I had to pick a racetrack to go to other than Daytona Beach, that’s probably where it would be. It’s similar. It’s a quarter-mile, flat, all that stuff. When they first started talking about it I was like, ‘What?’ But the more you think about it and the more information that comes out, especially after you see the pictures of how they did it, it looks like a first-class effort. I think it’ll be fine. I’m looking forward to it just like you guys are and my expectations are like yours. I think that’s one thing that’s cool about this car as well as going out there. I don’t know anymore about it than anybody else or you don’t know anymore about it than anyone else. Nobody has really tested it. It will be a first for everyone. It’s kind of like shooting the first rocket up with Alan Shepard in it. Everybody was pretty sure that if it went up it was gonna come down, but they’re gonna have it and I’m looking forward to it.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – “It’s just another track, really. Last year, we had COTA in the rain. That was a pretty challenging week, so I look at the pictures, the video stuff that’s online right now. They did a very nice job from the looks of what we see. There again, there will be some bumping and banging and there will be hurt feelings and there will be some people happy, so it’s just another race.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT IS IT ABOUT BOWMAN GRAY THAT MEANS SO MUCH TO YOU? “I guess the biggest thing was my dad raced there. He won four races at the Cup level and all four were at Bowman Gray, and the last race he ran there was in ‘63 and I was there. I could take you to the very seat that I was sitting in. That’s one cool thing about that place. It’s still like it was when it started. The grandstand. They’ve changed the track a couple of times. They’ve repaved it and did some things, but the grandstand is the same and I guess as you get older it just brings back fond memories, whatever you want to say, but it was once said, and I’ll tell you who said it, it was Gary Myers, which would have been Billy Myers’ son, which would be Chocolate’s nephew I guess or uncle. Anyway, they said this may not be the greatest race you ever saw, but it’s probably the best show you’ll ever see and that’s kind of the way I’m thinking about this race in L.A. It may not be the greatest race ever, but it may be one of the best shows you’ve ever seen. No one knows what to expect and I think there will be a lot of crashing and beating and banging and stuff like that.”

CAN YOU GIVE SOME PERSPECTIVE ABOUT AN EVENT LIKE THE COLISEUM AND WHAT IT USED TO BE LIKE AT SHORT TRACKS LIKE THAT? “I think that reignite may be the right word. Like I said, nobody really knows what’s gonna happen, but when you put that many good drivers with that many good cars together and they’ve got to beat each other, that’s one cool thing I think they’ve done is the format. Nobody is really locked in except I guess Larson would be because of the way they’re gonna do it, but everybody’s got to make the show. In ‘09 until we went back full-time in I guess ‘16 we had to make races and that’s a whole different animal than being locked in with points or charters, whatever you want to call it. You pay attention to the weather. You live by the weather because if you had a rainout, you’re gonna miss a race in our case. It’s just one of those deals that there’s so much anxiety about, ‘Am I gonna make it or am I not gonna make it?’ And now everybody shares in that, and I think that’s gonna up the competition level and the risk taking. If you’ve got to do something, you’re gonna take more risk and be willing to than if you were already locked in where you would just do enough to get by. I think that’s one of the qualities of this race that will make it different, and I think it will bring back some of the old days and I think that’s really cool.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – “I think we’ll get to see how tough these cars are from the beating and banging, which will be a pre-look for Martinsville, Bristol, Richmond – places like that.”

JON WOOD CONTINUED – HOW MUCH CAN THE COLISEUM EVENT HELP RECONNECT THE SPORT WITH THE YOUNGER FANS? “I think it’s a good experiment. Attention spans and trends in entertainment are different than they were even just a few years ago, three years ago. This would seem to maybe cater towards the current demographic of sport fan/entertainment fan/tv viewer, so I think it’s a good change-up. It’s good to see. The race itself, the place, whatever, that is what it is, but the fact that it’s a completely different format, a shorter event, everything that a lot of people have been asking for and complaining about this kind of does that. You hear a lot of people talk about how they wish races were shorter. They wish this. They wish that. Well, this kind of checks all those boxes, so I think it depending on how the race goes, it could have impact on future races, the places we go, the type of racing, the type of things these fans like.”

WHAT ARE THINGS YOU WILL BE LOOKING AT IN TERMS OF THIS EVENT? “I think it’ll be pretty clear. I don’t think it’s gonna be a mixed bag of opinions. I look back to the Dirt Race at Bristol and I, for one, had very low expectations going into that race. I thought it would be a one-and-done, just a waste of time really, and I was proven very wrong. So, I think it’s gonna be very clear whether this was successful or not and, again, if it is successful like every indication seems to be that it will be, it could seriously impact the trajectory of the sport. The 500-mile races are good, but are they good 36 times a year? Is that what people really tune in to watch, or is it more of a heat race/feature type atmosphere that the Dirt Race had? This is more along the lines of that Bristol race and I think it’s worth doing. It’s a lot of trouble. It’s a lot of effort to ask the teams to do this the first race of the season right out of the gate with this new car, but it’s probably an appropriate time to get it out of the way and see what it can do.”

WHAT CHANGED FOR YOU WITH THE BRISTOL DIRT RACE? “I don’t know that my opinion really changed. I think it’s more of just the opinions of nine out of 10 people. Everybody seemed to favor that race in some aspect to some degree. There was something about it they liked better than every other weekend throughout the year, and I don’t know what that was but whatever it was it worked. So, people smarter than me seem to agree with that and, again, this is more of a version two of that type of an event. It’s doing it again but on asphalt.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – ASIDE FROM PERFORMANCE WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST CHALLENGE THIS YEAR? “I think the challenge for our race team is pretty much the same as everyone else. It’s kind of like the first guy to figure out, the first team to figure out what this car likes because right now, even with all the testing and we talked about this before you got online, until they race it, it just hasn’t been raced. Drivers are in control of how hard they run and only they, each driver, knows themselves the risk is what I’m really talking about. The first group that figures out, ‘OK, this works on this car.’ Of course, we’re not gonna tell anyone and that’s the way racing has been forever. This is a little different now because the cars are basically the same cars, but the areas that you work in are still areas you worked in. They’re smaller than they’ve ever been, but everybody is on the same page with all that, so I think the people that get something figured out, whether they’re smart enough to figure it out or they luck into it. A lot of things have happened in racing down through the years with us where it was just trial and error. ‘That sounds like a good idea. Let’s try it.’ Now, you don’t have a lot of practice time which gets back to engineering and simulation and stuff like that – windtunnels – and that’s part of our life now. I think the first one to figure it out will be faster in the first few races and we’ll just have to see how that all shakes out, but I think it’s gonna be OK.”

Laps for Charity gives fans a chance to drive around the all-new Atlanta Motor Speedway

HAMPTON, Ga. (Jan. 13, 2022) – For the first time since Atlanta Motor Speedway’s repave and reconfiguration, race fans are invited to drive their own cars on the track’s steeper high banks.

The opportunity will come during Laps For Charity, hosted by Speedway Children’s Charities Atlanta. During the event participants will take laps around Atlanta Motor Speedway’s revamped 1.54-mile oval on Friday, January 28. The event is the first opportunity for fans to drive on the reconfigured speedway, which is all-new for the 2022 season. Proceeds benefit SCC Atlanta’s mission to help local children in need.

With a donation of $60 per vehicle, participants will get to drive their personal vehicle onto the new 28-degree banked turns and make three laps around the same track NASCAR’s stars will race on later this year.

Participants will receive a Certificate of Completion recognizing them for being among the first to drive on the new track, as well as a link to download pictures from their experience. A limited number of VIP laps offering a solo, continuous five-lap experience on the track, are also available for $150.

VIP track drives will be held from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. with general laps running from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 28. Drivers will be required to complete a waiver and present it upon arrival. Seatbelts must be worn by all participants. Participants are encouraged to pre-register for the event online at www.speedwaycharities.org/events/atlanta/laps-for-charity/.

Attendees will access the event by entering the infield through the main tunnel located off Speedway Blvd. Participants will then follow signage to check-in.

To learn more about Laps for Charity and the newly revamped Atlanta Motor Speedway go to www.AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com.

About Speedway Children’s Charities

The mission of Speedway Children’s Charities remains true to the ideals it was founded upon in 1982: To care for children in educational, financial, social and medical need in order to help them lead productive lives. SCC provides funding for hundreds of nonprofit organizations throughout the nation that meet the direct needs of children. Our vision is that every child has the same opportunities no matter what obstacle they are facing.

Follow Atlanta Motor Speedway:

Keep track of all of Atlanta Motor Speedway’s events by following on Twitter and Instagram or become a Facebook fan. Keep up with all the latest news and information with the Atlanta Motor Speedway mobile app.

eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series Returns with New Tracks in 2022

Dynamic schedule, teams and drivers continue to build fan interest in NASCAR’s longest-running Esports series

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Jan. 13, 2022) – New tracks are set to debut in the 13th season of the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series with drivers competing on virtual circuits that more closely mirror the NASCAR Cup Series schedule. Six tracks make a first-time appearance on the 19-race calendar, including the much-anticipated Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, which opens the season with an exhibition race on Tuesday, February 1.

“We’re raising the bar with the most competitive virtual racing in the world and leaning into iRacing’s technology to blur the lines between virtual and reality,” said Nick Rend, Managing Director of Gaming and Esports, NASCAR. “The eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series has grown monumentally over the past two seasons with new investments made by teams, drivers and world-class partners. This season will be no different as we anticipate more intense competition among drivers testing their clout on new and historic tracks alike.”

The L.A. Coliseum virtual exhibition race will run in conjunction with the NASCAR Cup Series’ preseason debut at the same real-life venue on Sunday, February 6. iRacing played a vital role in the track’s design with NASCAR Cup Series drivers and eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series competitors simulating test runs on different setups to develop its configuration for NASCAR.

In addition to the L.A. Coliseum, virtual events will also debut at the newly reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway, Bristol Dirt Race, Dover International Speedway, World Wide Technology Raceway and Nashville Superspeedway. For the first time in its history, the series will conclude at Phoenix Raceway on October 25.

“The 2022 eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series season is shaping up to be one of our most exciting yet,” said Tony Gardner, iRacing President. “With a refreshed schedule, led by our opening exhibition at the L.A. Coliseum, a track developed in iRacing, the pursuit of this year’s championship will take some exciting new turns this year. We’re excited to kick off the chase for one of the largest purses in sim racing, with well over $300,000 on the line, and look forward to crowning a champion in Phoenix!”

Competition will again be tight with 20 teams and 40 drivers contending for the championship. 2021 eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series champion Keegan Leahy returns to defend his title with team owners including Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Kansas City Chiefs player Kyle Long securing drivers for the upcoming season. Professional Esports organization Charlotte Phoenix will also join the competition. Teams have begun to announce their 2022 driver lineups this week on Twitter.

The full 2022 eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series schedule is as follows*:

  • February 1: L.A. Coliseum Exhibition
  • February 15: Daytona International Speedway
  • March 1: Las Vegas Motor Speedway
  • March 15: Atlanta Motor Speedway
  • March 29: Richmond Raceway
  • April 12: Bristol Dirt Race
  • April 26: Dover International Speedway
  • May 10: Kansas Speedway
  • May 24: Charlotte Motor Speedway
  • May 31: World Wide Technology Raceway
  • June 21: Nashville Superspeedway
  • July 5: Road America
  • July 19: Pocono Raceway
  • August 16: Watkins Glen International
  • August 30: Darlington Raceway
  • September 13: Bristol Motor Speedway^
  • September 27: Talladega Superspeedway^
  • October 11: Homestead-Miami Speedway^
  • October 25: Phoenix Raceway^

^Denotes Playoffs Event

*Subject to change

All races will be broadcast live on eNASCAR.com and iRacing.com/live, as well as the NASCAR and iRacing Facebook and YouTube channels. Race streams will kick off at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

For more information on the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series, visit www.eNASCAR.com. For more information on iRacing and for special offers, visit www.iracing.com.

About NASCAR

The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR consists of three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour), one local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series) and three international series (NASCAR Pinty’s Series, NASCAR Peak Mexico Series, NASCAR Whelen Euro Series). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).