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Feeding America® / Wow Wow Classic Waffles Racing: Cole Custer Texas Advance

COLE CUSTER
Texas Advance
No. 41 Feeding America®/Wow Wow Classic Waffles Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview
● Event: Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 (Round 33 of 36)
● Time/Date: 2 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Oct. 17
● Location: Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth
● Layout: 1.5-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 334 laps, 501 miles
● Format: Stage 1: 105 laps / Stage 2: 105 laps / Final Stage: 124 laps
● TV/Radio: NBC/ PRN/ SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Cole Custer and the No. 41 Feeding America®/Wow Wow Classic Waffles Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) are ready for back-to-back NASCAR Cup Series races on 1.5-mile intermediate ovals beginning with Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth. Next week takes Custer and his Cup Series counterparts to Kansas Speedway in Kansas City. He’ll sport the Feeding America®/Wow Wow Classic Waffles paint scheme at both events.

● Sunday’s 500-mile race will be Custer’s 72nd Cup Series start and his third points-paying outing at Texas. An accident ended his day early in his Texas Cup Series debut in July 2020 before he returned in November to finish 14th. He also finished 14th at Texas this past June in his second career appearance in the non-points NASCAR All-Star Race.

● Custer was victorious at Texas in the November 2018 NASCAR Xfinity Series race, one of his six outings at the track in that series. He has three other top-five finishes to go with an eighth-place result in his most recent Xfinity Series visit in November 2019.

● In NASCAR Camping World Truck Series competition at Texas, Custer has a best finish of ninth in the November 2016 race, driving the No. 00 JR Motorsports entry.

● After his 18th-place finish last Sunday on the Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway Roval, Custer arrives at Texas 28th in the driver standings.

● SHR, its partner Wow Wow Classic Waffles, and Feeding America®, the largest hunger relief organization in the United States with a network of 200 food banks and 60,000 food pantries and meal programs, are collaborating on an online auction late next month with proceeds to benefit Feeding America. Fans will have a chance to bid on items including a 2021 Ford Mustang NASCAR-raced car, a race-worn Wow Wow Classic Waffles firesuit, helmet, shoes and gloves, autographed racecar sheet metal and tires, and a race-day experience to a 2022 NASCAR Cup Series race of the winning bidder’s choice. The auction begins Nov. 26 and will close 10 days thereafter. Information on how to place bids will be announced on the SHR website, as well as all SHR and Cole Custer social media channels.

● SHR, Wow Wow Classic Waffles and Feeding America are also asking fans to continue to do their part in helping to end hunger in America by texting HUNGER to 50555 to make a $5 donation to Feeding America, by visiting the Feeding America donation page on Facebook, or the donation page via the Feeding America website. Each $1 donated helps provide at least 10 meals secured by Feeding America on behalf of local member food banks.

Cole Custer, Driver of the No. 41 Feeding America®/Wow Wow Classic Waffles Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Texas seems to be one of the tracks on the schedule drivers seem to get just a little bit more excited about. Do you feel that’s the case?

“Yes it is. If you want to see some cars going really fast, then Texas is the place to go. I mean, it’s just a big track, a lot of grip, a lot of speed. We’re just going as hard as we can pretty much the whole lap and the whole race. And honestly, you usually see more incidents there than a lot of the other intermediate tracks because there’s not a whole lot of room to race. You’re constantly going to try and kind of fight over a line.”

What is it about Texas that makes it that way?

“Texas is just fast, wide open, and you’re trying to get as much speed as possible out of your car. It’s a place where you’re on the gas and on the throttle so much that it means a ton to have that car that can just make more speed than everybody else and you’re going to see people trying to get there as soon as possible.”

What’s your favorite memory racing at Texas?

“For me, it was winning there in the Xfinity Series a few years ago. It actually catapulted us into the championship race. It was a last-second kind of really good, tight finish at the end, so it was a really cool one to win.”

Off the track, it seems you and your team, along with SHR partner Wow Wow Classic Waffles, have been working hard to support the initiatives of the Feeding America® network. Talk about that.

“We’ve been able to do some really cool things through our partnership with Wow Wow Classic Waffles and Feeding America. It’s been eye-opening to see how many in our area need help and we’ve been able to provide meals for many families through the work we’ve done, but we need help. There are so many ways to help and it doesn’t take much to make a difference for the many families out there who are in need.”

No. 41 Feeding America®/Wow Wow Classic Waffles Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Cole Custer
Hometown: Ladera Ranch, California

Crew Chief: Mike Shiplett
Hometown: Amherst, Ohio

Car Chief: Tony Cardamone
Hometown: Bristol, Virginia

Engineer: Davin Restivo
Hometown: Ashboro, North Carolina

Engineer: Scott Bingham
Hometown: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Spotter: Andy Houston
Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: John Roselli
Hometown: Terre Haute, Indiana

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

Tire Carrier: Chad Emmons
Hometown: Tyler, Texas

Jack Man: Matthew Schlytter
Hometown: Ponte Vedra, Florida

Fuel Man: Corey Coppola
Hometown: Bluefield, West Virginia

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Joe Zanolini
Hometown: Sybertsville, Pennsylvania

Mechanic: Nick McIntosh
Hometown: Havre, Montana

Shock Specialist: Aaron Kuehn
Hometown: Kensington, Connecticut

Tire Specialist: Thomas Gagliano
Hometown: East Hampton, Connecticut

Engine Specialist: Evan Cupples
Hometown: Hudson, Illinois

Transporter Co-Driver: Eddie DeGroot

Hometown: Baldwinsville, New York

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

Roush Fenway Weekly Advance | Texas II

Roush Fenway Weekly Advance | Texas II

The Lone Star State hosts the NASCAR Cup Series this Sunday, a track where Hall of Fame Owner Jack Roush has amassed 18 wins including nine in the NCS. This weekend marks a return home for Chris Buescher, who is a native of nearby Prosper, Texas. Buescher is coming off his best finish of the season a week ago at the ROVAL (P3).

Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500

Sunday, Oct. 17 at 2 p.m. ET

NBC, PRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

· Ryan Newman, No. 6 Violet Defense Ford Mustang

· Chris Buescher, No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang

ROVAL Recap, Texas Preview

· Newman’s ROVAL race was cut short last weekend as he made contact with the wall just 20 laps in, relegating him to a 39th-place finish.

· Buescher ran much of the race inside the top-10, and the latter stages inside the top five, to finish third, his best result of the 2021 season and best overall finish at the ROVAL.

· Violet Defense, who joined the Roush Fenway fold a few weeks ago, is back as a primary this weekend, this time on the No. 6 machine for Newman.

· Fastenal is back with Buescher in his home state with four races remaining in 2021.

“Dream Season”

Roush Fenway won both the first NCS (Jeff Burton) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (Mark Martin) races at Texas in 1997. Burton began the afternoon from the fifth position and led 60 laps en route to the inaugural victory.

Houston, We Don’t Have a Problem

Roush Fenway has earned nine NCS victories at Texas, dating back to the inaugural event in 1997. Former drivers Burton, Martin, Greg Biffle, Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth have captured the checkered flag in the Lone Star State.

J.R.’s ‘08 Sweep

Edwards swept the 2008 NCS races for Roush Fenway at Texas, leading 335 laps in the two events.

9 A.M. in Dallas

Roush Fenway has started 148 NCS races at Texas, recording a total of nine victories, 38 top-five finishes, 59 top-10 finishes, an average finish of 15.9 and has led 2,524 laps. Biffle earned Roush Fenway’s most recent victory at Texas in the April 2012 event.

North Dallas Forty

Roush Fenway has earned eight victories, 26 top-five finishes, 47 top-10 finishes and an average finish of 13th at Texas in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Roush Fenway won three of the first four races at the 1.5-mile oval.

Jack Roush; Texas Motor Speedway Hall of Fame Member

Based on the strength of Roush Fenway’s numerous accomplishments at Texas, team owner Jack Roush was inducted into the Texas Motor Sports Hall of Fame in 2013.

Tale of the Tape

Roush Fenway has started 299 races all-time at Texas Motor Speedway, recording 18 wins, 76 top-fives and 133 top-10s. RFR Fords have captured nine poles at the 1.5-mile track and led 3500+ laps while turning more than 110,000 miles.

Roush Fenway Texas Wins

1997 Burton Cup

1997 Martin NXS

1998 Martin Cup

1999 Martin NXS

2000 Martin NXS

2000 Biffle Truck

2002 Kenseth Cup

2005-1 Biffle Cup

2005-2 Edwards Cup

2007-1 Kenseth NXS

2008-1 Edwards Cup

2008-2 Edwards Cup

2010-2 Edwards NXS

2011-1 Edwards NXS

2011-2 Bayne NXS

2011-1 Kenseth Cup

2012-1 Biffle Cup

2012-1 Stenhouse NXS

DiBenedetto Has Lofty Goals for Texas

As the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season enters the homestretch, with just four races left to run, Matt DiBenedetto and the No. 21 Menards/Atlas/Mohawk team continue to put fast Ford Mustangs on the race tracks and come away with good results more often than not.

DiBenedetto and the team, having posted nine top-12 finishes in the past 13 races, hope to keep that momentum rolling in Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 at Texas Motor Speedway.

The team heads to the 1.5-mile track in Ft. Worth coming off a sixth-place finish on the ROVAL at Charlotte Motor Speedway. That was his and the team’s ninth top-10 finish of the season, and they’re hoping to move into double digits this weekend at Texas, where they finished eighth last fall in their most recent appearance there.

DiBenedetto said his and the team, now 19th in the points standings, are more focused on the checkered flag than statistics and the standings as the season winds down.

“Our Menards Mustangs have been fast at Texas,” DiBenedetto said. “It’s crazy to think the season is almost over, but Texas is a track where we have had excellent speed in the past.

“Our only goal is to go for the win.”

There will be no practice or qualifying prior to the start of Sunday’s 501-miler. DiBenedetto will start 13th as the line-up was set based on metrics from the most recent race, at Charlotte, with the eight remaining Playoff contenders starting in front of all others.

The green flag is set to fly just after 1 p.m. (2 p.m. Eastern Time) with Stage breaks at Laps 105 and 210. NBC will carry the live TV broadcast.

Menards

A family-owned and run company started in 1958, Menards is recognized as the retail home center leader of the Midwest with 236 stores in 15 states. Menards is truly a one-stop shop for all of your home improvement needs featuring a full-service lumberyard and everything you need to plan a renovation or build a home, garage, cabin, shed, deck, fence or post frame building. Menards is known for friendly Customer Service and as the place to “Save Big Money” with low prices every day, and sales too! For more information, please visit Menards.com to learn about our store locations, offerings and services.

Wood Brothers Racing

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

Toyota Racing – Weekly Preview – 10.13.21

NEWS RELEASE

This Week in Motorsports: October 11-17, 2021

· NCS/NXS: Texas Motor Speedway – October 16-17

PLANO, Texas (October 13, 2021) – It’s a home race weekend for Toyota Motor North America as NASCAR’s top two series head to Texas Motor Speedway.

NASCAR National Series – NCS| NXS

Busch the reigning winner… Kyle Busch is the reigning winner of this weekend’s Cup Series race at Texas Motor Speedway. Busch led the final 24 laps last October on his way to his fourth victory (2013, 2016, 2018) at the Fort Worth-based track. Busch’s win was part of a top-three sweep for Toyota with Martin Truex Jr. and Christopher Bell coming home in second and third, respectively. Busch also has 10 Xfinity Series wins at Texas Motor Speedway including earlier this June.

Cup Playoffs… Denny Hamlin clinched his spot in the Round of 8 with his victory in Las Vegas, and he was officially joined by Truex and Busch in Charlotte as the Joe Gibbs Racing drivers are three of the final eight racers vying for a Cup Series championship. Hamlin scored Toyota’s first two victories at Texas – a season sweep in 2010 and added another win in 2019.

Burton plans to go back to victory lane… Harrison Burton charged late one year ago and made a pass for the lead on the last corner en route to his third victory of his Rookie of the Year season. Burton – who qualified for the Round of 8 for the first time – is looking for a repeat, which would lock him into the Championship 4.

Three Supras in the Round of 8… Burton is joined in the Round of 8 by his Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Daniel Hemric and Brandon Jones. Both Hemric and Jones had a stellar Round of 12. Hemric scored top-five finishes in all three races, while Jones had three top-six finishes, including a season-best runner-up run at Talladega. Jones is also making his 200th career Xfinity Series start in Texas.

Lupton, Hill competing at Texas… Dylan Lupton and Austin Hill are back behind the wheel of Supras this weekend at Texas. For Lupton, it’s his second start aboard the No. 26 Toyota Supra for Sam Hunt Racing. Hill, who scored a top-20 finish at the Charlotte ROVAL last weekend, is making his fifth Xfinity Series start of the season for his Truck Series team – Hattori Racing Enterprises.

Stay Connected

https://www.toyota.com/racing @ToyotaRacing.com @ToyotaRacing

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About Toyota

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

Toyota has created a tremendous value chain and directly employs more than 47,000 in North America. The company has contributed world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 40 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama that begins production in 2021.

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

Brandon Jones to make 200th Xfinity career start at Texas

Photo by Don Dunn for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Competing in his sixth full-time season in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Brandon Jones is set to achieve a milestone start. By taking the green flag in this weekend’s Playoff event at Texas Motor Speedway, the driver of the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Supra will reach 200 career starts in the Xfinity circuit.

A native of Atlanta, Georgia, Jones made his Xfinity Series debut at Iowa Speedway in May 2015. By then, he had achieved two victories in the ARCA Menards Series and one victory in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East, all while competing for Turner Scott Motorsports. Driving the No. 33 Chevrolet Camaro for Richard Childress Racing on a part-time basis, Jones started fifth and finished eighth in his Xfinity debut.

Jones returned for four additional Xfinity races in 2015, starting at Iowa in August, which was followed by the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in August, Bristol Motor Speedway in August and at Kentucky Speedway in September. During this span, Jones notched a career-best fifth-place result at Kentucky.

In 2016, Jones took over the No. 33 Chevrolet Camaro as a full-time Xfinity Series competitor. Commencing the season with a seventh-place result at Daytona International Speedway, Jones achieved a total of 12 top-10 results throughout the 33-race schedule. He also made the inaugural Xfinity Series Playoffs, where he was eliminated following the first round, and settled in 10th place in the final standings.

While Jones achieved his first Xfinity career pole for the 2017 season-opening event at Daytona in February, he only achieved a total of three top-10 results throughout the 33-race schedule and failed to make the Playoffs before ending up in 16th place in the final standings.

Following the 2017 season, Jones departed RCR and joined Joe Gibbs Racing to pilot the No. 19 Toyota Camry for the 2018 Xfinity season. Starting the season with a 10th-place result at Daytona in February, Jones achieved a pole, two top-five results, 17 top-10 results and a spot in the Xfinity Playoffs, where he was eliminated from title contention following the first round and went on to settle in ninth place in the final standings. By then, he surpassed 100 Xfinity career starts.

Finishing in third place in the 2019 Xfinity season opener at Daytona, Jones logged in four top-five results and 13 top-10 results throughout the 26-race regular-season stretch, which were enough for him to make the Playoffs based on points. After finishing 11th, 16th and 37th in the Playoff’s first round, however, Jones was one of four competitor who were eliminated early from title contention. Jones rebounded the following weekend at Kansas Speedway in October by avoiding late calamity and fending off top Playoff contenders to score his first Xfinity Series career victory. He went on to finish in the top 10 in two of the final three races before settling in 10th place in the final standings.

The following season, Jones achieved his second Xfinity Series career win at Phoenix Raceway in March following a late pass on teammate Kyle Busch. Following NASCAR’s return to action in May amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Jones completed a last lap pass on Austin Cindric to win for the second time in 2020 at Kansas in July. Six races later, Jones overtook teammate Denny Hamlin and Ross Chastain prior to the final lap to achieve his third victory of the season and fourth of his career at Darlington Raceway in September. Returning to the Playoffs for a third consecutive season, Jones remained in title contention through the Round of 8 at Martinsville Speedway in October, but he fell short in making the Championship Round at Phoenix Raceway in November and contending for his first NASCAR title. Nonetheless, Jones and his No. 19 JGR Toyota team finished in sixth place in the final standings, which marks Jones’ best points result to date. 

This season, Jones has recorded a stage victory, three runner-up results, 11 top-five results and 16 top-10 results through 29 scheduled Xfinity starts. After qualifying for the Xfinity Playoffs for a fifth season, Jones is coming off three consecutive top-10 results and is one of eight competitors to transfer to the Round of 8. He is currently lined up in eighth place in the Playoff standings with 3,003 points as he continues his pursuit for his first NASCAR national touring series championship.

Through 199 previous Xfinity starts, Jones has achieved four career victories, three poles, 30 top-five results, 85 top-10 results, five Playoff appearances, nearly 600 laps led and an average-finishing result of 15.5.

Jones is set to make his 200th Xfinity Series career start at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday, October 16, at 3 p.m. ET on NBC.

6 Great Features that will make you want to buy a Dash Cam

Photo by Viktor Theo on Unsplash

As if the tiny little cameras on our dashboards weren’t already a crucial part of our car and safety, thanks to the new, technologically advanced features, Dash Cams now provide a whole new level of security and driving assistance that make them a necessity to have installed in your vehicles. But before you buy, you should be well informed of the latest tech and features that the Dash Cams can offer and that is why we are here. Here are the 6 extraordinary features that make a Dash Camera a worthwhile purchase!

24/7 Global Surveillance 

When you are walking through an unpopulated area at night with little to no streetlights, don’t you feel insecure and vulnerable? But what happens when you spot a policeman or any other legal governing body, you feel safe right? That’s exactly how a Dash Cam makes you feel when you are out on your long road trip through the outskirts of your city. Global Positioning Systems, or GPS, no longer just help you navigate the roads to reach your destination, they actively pinpoint your precise location and the speed at which you are traveling using the many satellites in our orbit. This information when integrated with the video captured from the fleet dash cam can help in simulating any event that might have occurred to the vehicle. This also means, your entire journey is supervised by a professional and competent company that is only interested in your safety. Don’t you feel safe already?!

G-Sensor

Modern Dash Cams can easily track the movement of your vehicle using the G-sensor or G-shock sensor technology through which a detailed picture can be painted of any incident that might befall your automobile. An extra useful is added where the sensor triggers the Dash Cam to respond appropriately to the situation. For example, upon the detection of a sudden, irregular and significant movement, the Dash Cam will automatically lock that specific video file and saving any important footage captured. This helps in determining the cause of the incident and now can be avoided in the future. Most Dash Cams that feature the G-sensors have the option to set the sensitivity to avoid this function being triggered by potholes, speed bumps, and other minor incidents.  

Automated SOS to the Emergency Departments

At times you are involved in a health emergency or an accident that renders you incapable of calling for help or a close relative, which worsens the otherwise non-threatening situation. Thanks to the SOS feature integrated with the G-sensor, your Dash Cam can now alert the authorities as well as your emergency contacts when it has determined that unusual activity has taken place. The sensors send an in-car signal to the driver and if the driver is unable to respond accordingly, the appropriate directive is initiated to measure the seriousness of the scenario. If the system concludes that the situation is dire, it relays all the relevant information to the nearby authorities and the emergency services and tries to make sure that proper help arrives on the scene immediately. 

Parking Protection 

This feature is the best example of the statement ‘Spend money, to save money’. While most all Dash Cam for cars offer state-of-the-art assistance and security when you are driving, they can also act as a security guard substitute for the vehicle when it has been parked and you have left the vicinity. Protection isn’t limited to just marking and recording small collisions and bumps with other cars, but it also will discourage people who may be looking to break in and steal something valuable from your car. When the vehicle becomes stationary and the power is turned off, to save memory and power, the camera will engage a motion detection function where the video will only be recorded when it detects any nearby movement. For example, if the car has been moved either by someone tampering with it or due to a collision, it will begin recording so that it be used as evidence later.

Say Hello to Alexa 

According to Edgar Snyder, cell phone distractions cause 1.6 million crashes each year. That’s not a safe number at all! These distractions include receiving a voice call, text messaging someone, or even using the GPS on the handheld device. The integration of Artificial Intelligence, or AI, into the Dash Cam allows distraction-free access to all the mentioned distractions. Meaning, you can now text, call and use the navigation using voice commands, and the Alexa Voice Control system will make it happen. This feature can significantly reduce the chances of you being caught up in an accident due to a cell phone or other related distractions. 

High Definition & Loop

Blurry images and unclear videos are a thing of the past now, modern Dash Cams are equipped with cameras able to capture videos at 1440p or 2k resolution! Now that’s a lot of pixels. Clear footage allows it to be used as an official type of evidence if ever needed that can prove it invaluable depending on the situation. You won’t be just recording the road and cars ahead of you, but their number plates and many other small details will also be included in the footage that could be the difference between proving your innocence in case of an incident. Due to the high resolution being recorded, the memory of the Dash Cam was being negated at a fast pace. Therefore, the Loop function was introduced. When the memory slot is at full capacity, the Dash Cam begins to wipe out the oldest footage and records the new one over it. This way you don’t need to do this task over and over and no new, possibly crucial footage is lost. 

How NFL & Motorsports are Becoming Ever More Intertwined

At first glance, the worlds of American Football and motorsports have little in common, other than a will to win and sets of fans who are truly dedicated to the sport they love.

However, as the sporting landscape becomes flooded with crossover interests involving investment vehicles that own portions of multiple sports enterprises and teams, all the way through to wealthy athletes themselves investing in their interests away from their chosen profession; there are now some major synergies and links being made between sports like the NFL and NASCAR.

Here we take a look at all the ways in which the worlds of NFL and motorsports are becoming ever more intertwined, to the benefit of the fanatical followers of both.

NASCAR’s banked circuits are a far cry from the green fields that NFL teams play on, but the two sports organizations have been building ties over recent weeks and months

NFL Players Enlisted to Drive Interest and Invest

One of the first ways in which people from the NFL are getting involved in NASCAR is by them being hired by the racing organization to promote its races, drivers, and teams to new generations and football betting fans. This has been most evident in the hiring of New Orleans Saint Alvin Kamara, who now acts as a Growth and Engagement Advisor for NASCAR. This means that as well as promoting NASCAR to his vast fanbase, there is now more and more of a chance that one day Kamara’s name will be found both at the online NFL picks and parlays columns at the same time as appearing in those associated with NASCAR. This is because the role he has undertaken with NASCAR has also convinced him to think about buying into a NASCAR team himself. Kamara would be following in the footsteps of Michael Jordan, who partnered with recording artist Pitbull to acquire the 23XI Racing team. Don’t bet against Kamara delivering for sports betting fans on the pitch and on the track in the not-too-distant future.

The Super Bowl is still one of the most-watched sporting events on the planet, so any time a racing series can ally with the NFL it is a good thing for motor racing in general

While the league meticulously tackles issues like player health, fans show their unwavering support regardless of the circumstances, with many even eager to find out Super Bowl ticket prices early in the season, demonstrating that the passion for the game remains strong.

Joe Gibbs – From Side-lines to Pit Lanes

More so than anyone else in the NFL, former Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs has some major clout in NASCAR, not least because he founded and owns Joe Gibbs Racing. The team has had some of the best drivers in the business race for it including the likes of Kyle Busch. Today Gibbs spends far more time on the pit wall rather than pitch side, although his love for both sports is as fierce as ever. It just goes to show that a great sporting mind can excel in both football and racing if he puts his mind to it.

Young Drivers Getting a Leg Up from NFL Players

A trend that continues to grow in sports is that of well-paid athletes investing in other athletes from other sports, often beginning to build a book of athletes who they then mentor, sponsor, and manage. The first instance of this occurring between an NFL player and an up-and-coming NASCAR driver is Antonio Williams of the Buffalo Bills backing Joe Graf Jr. who races in the Xfinity Series. The two men were put in touch by a mutual friend and now Williams is part-bankrolling the career of one of the US’s most promising drivers. Graf Jr. will be hoping that Williams can get off the Bills’ practice squad and into the 1st team so that both men’s careers can flourish.

Ty Dillon, No. 94 GMS Racing Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

Ty Dillon, No. 94 GMS Racing Chevrolet Camaro ZL1

  • Ty Dillon & GMS Racing turned their first laps together in a NASCAR Cup Series organizational Next Gen test at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, marking a milestone for the pairing that recently announced their plan to compete on a full-time basis starting with the 2022 season.
  • Dillon, who also raced in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race on Saturday, turned over 50 laps on Monday while getting used to the feel of the new car. These laps were crucial to the team’s Next Gen program as they built a solid baseline on what to aim for during the second day of the test.
  • On Tuesday, Dillon ran an additional 50 laps, gaining speed and becoming more consistent with the overall balance of the new car. The No. 94 team was able to run a faster lap on the second day of the test, but more importantly, was able to get the car to Ty’s liking in a race setup.

Monday Quote: “Fun, exciting day testing at the Roval, just so much to learn with a brand new team and a brand new car. We’re taking it day by day and inching up on it, it’s a very exciting time. These cars are really fast and fun to drive! Right now in this off season it’s all about gathering data, so the more laps we can run will help us learn about this car and learn about each other, which will help propel us into 2022.”

Tuesday Quote: “That’s a wrap on day two of the Next Gen test. It was a lot of fun getting to drive the new Camaro, these things are very fast and you can be really aggressive driving them. We got a lot of information and learned a lot about this new car that we have to fix system-wise, so we’re working really hard on that. There’s going to be a lot of learning up until next year, but boy am I excited to drive these things full time.”

ABOUT GMS RACING:

GMS Racing competes full-time in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series with drivers Sheldon Creed, Zane Smith, Tyler Ankrum, Chase Purdy and Jack Wood. The team also competes in the ARCA Menards Series with Daniel Dye and Jack Wood. Since the team began in 2014, GMS Racing won the 2016 and 2020 Camping World Trucks Championship, the 2015 ARCA Menards Series championship as well as the 2019 & 2020 ARCA East championship. GMS has grown to occupy several buildings located in Statesville, N.C. The campus also includes operations for GMS Fabrication. More information can be found at https://gmsracing.net

SOCIAL MEDIA:

To keep up-to-date with the latest news, information and exclusive content, follow GMS Racing on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Next Gen Test

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Next Gen Test | Tuesday, October 12, 2021

NASCAR conducted a two-day test with the Next Gen car at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Ford drivers Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney held Q&A sessions with members of the media on Tuesday and offered their view on how testing has progressed.

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang — HOW HAVE THE LAST TWO DAYS COMPARED TO YOUR FIRST TEST IN THE NEXT GEN CAR ABOUT TWO YEARS AGO? “Everytime we go out there we learn a lot. This is the first I’ve been on a road course with this car and definitely going from something so fresh, which was the Roval race on Sunday, and then the next day being out here the next couple days you have a great comparison of the old car and the new car and the differences in it and what you can and can’t do. I think everyone will probably agree, you can brake a lot deeper into the corner. Another big piece is that when you overshoot a corner right now you start wheel-hopping with the truck arms and all that, it seems like it just locks the rears up and you just let your foot off the brake and it comes back. It doesn’t bounce off of itself like the truck arms have in the past, so there are some pretty key differences there that the driver will have to adjust to, and then obviously as you start working on this car. It’s underdeveloped at the moment. It’s brand new to all of us. We have no data. We have no sim tools really to go off of to figure out what we want to do, so that’s what we’re doing right now is try to grow that database by making changes to the car and seeing if it’s better or not. It’s an old-school test and kind of feels like back in the late model days where you don’t have all the computer sims and everything to go off of to say this is where everything needs to be. I don’t want to say you’re shooting from the hip, but a little bit you are as we kind of learn it, and that will progress over time. But, for now, we’re just trying to figure it out together and the field will keep getting closer and closer as everyone manages to get their balance right and learn what works and what doesn’t.”

DOES THE CAR FEEL FASTER? SLOWER? MORE NIMBLE? HOW DOES IT COMPARE TO WHAT YOU DROVE ON SUNDAY? “I think if you ask any race car driver they want more horsepower. There’s never enough of that, so I think we’ll always want more, but with the wider tire you’re just able to carry more speed for the most part. You drive in harder. You have bigger brakes. You drive in the corner harder, you have more mechanical grip with the bigger tire, you also have a softer compound than what we just raced here as well, so I think that’s some of the biggest things you notice. And then I think the independent rear suspension giving it a lot more rear bite, especially leaving the corners. It seems like where that stands out the most. It’s still a stock car. It’s still heavy. You still can’t transfer load too quickly and you still have to be smooth with it and all that, which is what we’re all used to, but it’s still a pretty big transition to what we used to have, where, like I said, if you drove in too hard you’re wheel-hopping off the racetrack. You can recover now, so I don’t know if that’s good or bad. You can probably be the judge of that. It’s the same for everyone. If it was just my car like that, it would be great but everyone’s car has that, so it will be interesting to see how it is. Something I’ve learned already is that even though we all have the same parts and pieces on the cars, for the most part, besides the engines and the bodies and what-not, but with the suspension pieces all being the same there are still a lot of ways to put it together where we’re trying to figure out what direction to go with some of those adjustments.”

NOT HAVING SIDEFORCE, HOW MUCH DIFFERENCE DOES THAT MAKE AT A PLACE LIKE THIS? “It’s noticeable. How we’re gonna be able to pass cars? I don’t know yet. I haven’t really got around anybody out there. At test sessions every time you get near someone they just let you go or vice versa, but I will say that some of the big differences, you brought it up, the body itself it seems like once you get a little free it’s one thing, but then it kind of goes past the point of no return and all of a sudden you realize you’re at the lock of the steering and you’re spinning out. So that’s something a little bit different than what we’ve been used to. The other piece that I think is maybe one of the biggest things is those aluminum red blocks on the bottom of the car. That’s a travel limiter for us and how that works and honestly what the rule is gonna be around it as well. When you hit those things they’re hard. You see the racetrack, there’s a lot of scrape marks on the racetrack from everyone getting down on them and rubbing them, so how much can you wear off? There are so many different questions that we still have to answer from even just a rules perspective of what that’s gonna be because I know when you land on them it’s hard. You come off a curb and you hit those it’s tied directly to your seat with no suspension in between it and it hurts. It knocked the wind right out of you. Those things are no joke.”

HOW CLOSE IS THIS CAR TO BEING READY TO RACE ON A RACETRACK IN A RACE? “I think on the road courses you’re not far off. I think you can line us up and go. I think we’ve proven in the last year or two, whatever, just line us up and race. I always go back to Daytona last year when we showed up with no practice on a brand new racetrack that none of us had ever raced on. That’s the craziest thing I ever heard and we were fine. We’ve had two days to test it here. We could race at the Roval now. That’s fine. I think there will be some areas we still want to make better as a group, as NASCAR in general, whether it’s heat inside the car, steering issues that a lot of teams are having right now. Those type of things we’ll need to fix. That’s one of the big concerns from my point of view on this whole thing is we’re not building the parts on the car anymore, so if something breaks, you know what I mean? You didn’t build them, so it can be on somebody else’s quality control that you may not control, so we’ll have to go over every piece ourselves before we put the things on the race car because we’re not building the parts and pieces anymore. That’s something that is concerning. You want to make sure you have something on there because the last thing you want is to be racing for a championship at Phoenix and all of a sudden your steering rack takes a dump on you. That’s the last thing you want, so things like that are probably the most concerning to me at this point that we have to make sure is right because we don’t want our championship story to come down to something like that.”

ARE YOU COMFORTABLE WITH THE PROGRESSION OF WHERE THE CAR IS FROM A SAFETY STANDPOINT? “Yeah, I’m not an expert on safety. I know my head is sitting further away from the roll cage. That’s a plus for me because a taller guy seems to be able to sit lower. The line of sight is where you want to be, so that’s a gain for me personally. I don’t know if it’s the same for the shorter drivers, but for me it’s a good thing. You can look at one of these cars without a body on it and say, ‘This thing is pretty stiff and there’s a lot of metal.’ So, that’s probably where a lot of that stuff comes from because just from the naked eye you’d say this thing is a lot stiffer than what we’ve got, which is good in some ways and bad in others. I think after they crashed it in Talladega there’s probably some data backed it that said we need to soften it up, but I don’t know all the details to speak on it.”

HOW DOES IT FEEL INSIDE THE CAR FROM A COMFORT LEVEL COMPARED TO DAYTONA WHERE IT WAS SO HOT? “It’s just not as bad at the Roval than it would be at Daytona. For one, it’s just really hot in Florida and so that was one piece of it, but you’re on the gas a lot at Daytona. You’re on the gas all the way around, so as you imagine the exhaust temps become significantly hotter than here. You’re not wide-open for a large amount of time here at the Roval, so naturally the cars are cooler because of that and it’s also a case where the ambient temperature outside is cooler. It’s hard to compare. Did we make gains on cooling the car? I don’t know. There are too many variables to really say it’s black-and-white and saying this is better or not. I don’t know if you can do that right now.”

DOES IT FEEL LIKE STILL NEED MORE TESTING AT A PLACE LIKE DAYTONA IN TERMS OF THE HEAT AND DO YOU NEED MORE TESTING THERE? “Yes. We need to test more at a track like that to make the cooling better, to answer your question. It’s the hottest thing I ever drove by a long shot; 15-20 laps into that thing you’re done. It’s hot. It’s really, really hot.”

WILL THIS CAR DIMINISH THE EDGE SOME GUYS WHO ARE GOOD ON ROAD COURSES HAVE ON THE REST OF THE FIELD WITH NO WHEEL-HOP AND A SEQUENTIAL GEAR BOX? “It’s definitely easier from that standpoint. With that being said we’re racers and we’re gonna find a competitive edge. The best are still gonna be the best. You just have to find a new way to be the best because I think some of that edge will be washed away just with the change of the car, change to setups, whatever it may be. What makes the 5 and the 9 so good on these road courses lately? Well, it’s a combination of everything. The drivers are really good, yes. But the cars are really good as well. That’s gonna change throughout all of this. They’re still gonna be fast, don’t get me wrong. They’re still gonna be good because their teams are good and their drivers are good, but it’s gonna have to be in a different way. The same things they’ve been doing you can’t physically do it anymore. It’s a completely different car, so that will wash away a lot of the edge from those type of teams for sure.”

DOES THIS GIVE YOU ANY DESIRE TO RACE SPORTS CARS? “I’d race anything. I like racing. I wish I raced more than I do. I’d love to sign up for more races personally. To your point, yeah, it is more like a sports car would be. I don’t have much sports car experience at that, but a lot of things line up now. You’ve got the lower profile tire. You’ve got the independent rear suspension. You’ve got the sequential shifters. All of that stuff kind of goes that direction. I think our cars are still heavier and probably less downforce and what-not on all those things, but it definitely probably takes us halfway to what those cars are. I think the most laps you make the better, especially these days where you don’t get any practice anymore.”

HOW HAS THIS TEST CHANGED YOUR WEEK IN TERMS OF PREPARING FOR THIS WEEKEND? “It’s a grind, not necessarily as much for the drivers as it is for the guys working on the cars 7-9 two days immediately after a race. One, you’ve got to get the cars ready to go to Texas and it’s a pretty far haul to Texas, so it’s not like you’re driving down the road to Charlotte, so you’ve got to have the cars ready fairly quickly. It’s a grind on those guys, which you want to have your road crew guys, your typical guys that work on the car here at the test because as much as we’re learning they need to learn as well on how to work on this thing, how to change parts and pieces on it. But the playoffs are still going on and we’re in the Round of 8, so it’s just a tough week. The only thing that makes it better is that it’s pretty much the same for everybody. Everyone is kind of going through it, so it’s not like someone has an advantage over the others for the most part.”

ARE THERE SIMILARITIES OF HOW YOU GUYS ARE GOING INTO THIS ROUND IN 2021 AS LAST YEAR? “When I look at it I don’t feel like we’re out by no means. I feel like we’re in pretty decent shape, and I do think we can point in from where we are. We’re not that far out points-wise to getting into the top four. Now, what makes a difference is who wins the next three. If it’s the 5 or the 11, OK, that’s one thing. But if it’s one of the other guys, well, hang on that takes up a spot and then you look at it and say, ‘Well, maybe it is a must-win,’ but at the moment you have to just go out there and maximize your day. I don’t think we’re in must-win territory quite yet, but that changes by the lap on what you need to do, so you’ve just got to be ready to adjust and take advantage of the opportunity that comes your way.”

WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE SOME OF THE DOWNFORCE REMOVED? “I don’t know if there’s too much downforce here. I guess I haven’t been in dirty air to answer that question good enough. It’s hard to say what’s mechanical grip and what’s downforce. We definitely have more mechanical grip than we did on Sunday. That’s no doubt because you have more grip when you’re going slow. The faster you go the more you notice the aero piece of it, so I don’t know if the aero piece we’re having a ton more downforce from that standpoint yet. I feel like as long as the difference behind a car isn’t so big. I think that’s the part that matters the most to me. You want to be able to be the trailing car and not be at a huge disadvantage in dirty air to where you can’t catch the car in front of you and you can’t pass him. That’s what you want to try to minimize is the wake in the air, in other words. Whether that’s with a lot of downforce or a little bit of downforce, I think minimizing the hole in the air behind the car is the biggest thing.”

HAVE YOU EXPERIENCED PROBLEMS WITH YOUR STEERING RACK? “Yes. You name it. I don’t know where to start. We’ve had issues.”

DO YOU HAVE ANYTHING ON YOUR WISH LIST YOU WOULD LIKE TO SEE ON THIS NEXT GEN CAR? “There are two wish lists. There’s the wish list of how do we make the car better for the sport, and then there’s wish list of how do you make my car better. It’s two different things and when you’re at a test like this you kind of have to play both sides of the fence a little bit. Like I said earlier, from a safety point we want to make sure the car is safer than what we have today. That’s a key. Anytime you build a new car it should be better than what you had in the previous generation, and I think also some of the heat things, the sounds, those type of things is something that I’ve brought to attention to NASCAR a while ago and they’re working on it. You’re seeing changes and ways and trying to fix it. It’s not like everyone is just sitting on their hands right now and saying we don’t have anything to worry about. There are still areas to improve. It’s a new car. There’s a lot of development on both sides of the fence, whether it’s on the team side or on the NASCAR side, so we all just have to work together.”

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE LOOK OF THE MUSTANG RACE CAR COMPARED TO THE STREET MUSTANG? “They look really good. They’re actually pretty close to what the street version is. I said it when we unveiled this car is that it looks like you took a GT500 and put a wide body kit on it and slammed it on the ground. That’s what a Cup car looks like now, which is cool because for years we’ve always said, ‘Oh, it looks more like the street car,’ and it’s kind of like that’s what we say every time there’s a new generation of car, but this one actually looks more like the street car. You set the street car next to it and you’re like, ‘It looks pretty close.’ That’s cool. The styling of the Next Gen car, I feel like all the OEMs really nailed it on that side of it, to where they look pretty close to what the real cars look like.”

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 DEX Imaging Ford Mustang — HOW HAS THIS TEST GONE FOR YOU? “It’s obviously nice to get in this new car, especially a day or two after we just ran here. It’s a good comparison of something that’s fresh in your head and not thinking of months before, so that’s been nice. It’s been nice to have long, long days today and yesterday of working through things, not only the drivers learning the car, but the crew also working on it. I mean, it’s a massive change from what they know as well, so it’s giving them a lot of practice too, trying to make changes, trying to make changes rapidly and just figuring out how to perfect everything. It’s been really good. It’s nice the weather has held up good and we’ve been able to make a ton of laps, so that’s nice.”

HAVE YOU HAD ANY STEERING ISSUES? “Yeah, we did. Yesterday morning I made half-a-lap and I had an issue, so we came in and changed it. We changed the steering box and everything and was good for a couple runs and then started going south again, a lot of vibration with it mainly on the oval — kind of when you’d get up to max speed under load, and then it would slowly start losing power-steering assist and that was just kind of getting worse, so we put another new one on it yesterday and that seemed to last the rest of the day. I still had some of the shake, so we took some boxes back to Penske and kind of took them apart and were able to tinker with them a little bit and today I’ve been pretty happy with it, so it’s just one of those things. You get these new parts and pieces and you try them out on these really wild racetracks you’re gonna have some issues and this is why we have these tests to sort out those issues, so I’m happy we were to kind of sort that out and today I feel like everyone feels better about it when they’ve got a chance to look at them and work on them and mess with them, so that was good to figure it out. You’re just gonna have those things with new parts and pieces and stuff that no one really knows anything about.”

HOW CLOSE IS THIS CAR TO BEING READY TO RACE IN AN ACTUAL RACE? “That’s tough. The thing drives pretty nice in the infield. I didn’t really know what to expect. I tested it at Texas about three or four months ago and it’s a way different deal than this. Through the infield this car is pretty neat. I mean, you can hustle the heck out of it. The brakes on it are pretty amazing — a lot more than what we’ve got now. I think the biggest thing you’ve got to figure out is the steering side of it, racing with people. Are we gonna go to Bristol and have this same problem? A massive high load racetrack on everything? Are we gonna have the same issue? I don’t know. You would hope not, but you’ve got to think that Bristol has a lot more load on everything than here, so those are just the things you’ve got to figure out. I think if you get the steering deal better, other than that we haven’t really had any problems and issues that I’m like, ‘We need to fix this and fix this.’ The heat side of it, I’d like to see a little bit better cooling inside the race car. It’s not been bad the last two days. It’s been kind of cool outside, so I haven’t really noticed. You’re not baking in there. I know at Daytona drivers said they were, but it was a little bit different it was a hotter down there, but you still have to get the things to where you’re not cooking turkeys inside the race car. I think it’s close. I think they’ve done a good job of developing it and that’s what all these tests the last two days and the three or four tests coming up in the winter is to try and work some of the bugs out and I think it’s getting there.”

DO YOU HAVE ANY SENSE OF WHAT THESE CARS WILL RUN LIKE HERE WHEN YOU ARE RACING IN A PACK? “No idea. I don’t know. That’s hard to tell. It’s hard to tell what’s gonna happen and what it’s gonna be like. It’s one thing running by yourself and another thing running around cars. You won’t notice as big of a difference like running on the road course in a pack to compare it to when we do the oval test here next month. That will be the big deal to see how they run in the pack because at the end of the day the car is gonna drive the way it drives by itself no matter what it’s like handling-wise and things like that. We always complain about, ‘Oh, they’re terrible in traffic.’ Not these cars, but the cars now, ‘Oh, they stink in traffic.’ So, that’s the biggest thing is making sure they’re better in traffic than what we’ve got now. That’s what we all talk about, so I can’t give a great answer on that. I’ll have a better one next month after we run at the oval and get those cars with the different downforce package and get them in a pack of 10 cars and kind of see how they are.”

DO YOU FEEL PRESSURE TO GUIDE YOUR TEAM A CERTAIN WAY OR IS THERE AN UNDERSTANDING THAT THERE’S ONLY SO MANY ANY OF YOU ARE GOING TO KNOW? “I have no guidance right now in these cars. I’m a blind squirrel out there just like they are trying to work on this thing and trying to figure out the best way to go about stuff. They obviously know a lot more about making changes and building it more than I do. The best I can do is give the best feedback I can on changes we make because you’re not putting track bars down, you’re not messing with truck arms. Everything is different and some of the changes we made were like, ‘OK, this is we think a comparison of like putting the track bar down.’ I’m like, ‘OK, does it do what I think it’s supposed to do?’ I don’t know. So a lot of it is a new experience for us as drivers, just trying to figure out what changes do what because we don’t know. A lot of the things we’ve done over the last couple days, some of them have done the opposite of what we predicted it to do. That’s just the learning curve of everything, so we’re all learning together and I think these two days are really nice for everybody to kind of sit around and just gather data of everything. Yeah, we have one data car and you’re kind of looking at everything and stuff like that, but we’re all learning together. We’re all pretty green on this side right now, but it’s the same for everybody and it’s the teams who learn it the fastest and pick it up quickest and find little things here and there that are gonna thrive come next season.”

ANYTHING ELSE REAL DIFFERENT FROM THE OLD CAR BESIDES WHEEL-HOP AND BRAKING? “It’s way different. You don’t really have wheel-hop anymore. You’ll like lock the rears — that sensation of just locking the rears and sliding. There’s no more of that wheel-hop, which, honestly, if you’re gonna pick one I’d rather completely lock the rears up and slide than wheel-hop because wheel-hop is a hard thing to get out of, so that’s different. The braking potential of these cars are so much more than what we’ve got now. You look at the brakes on them and they’re massive compared to what we have. That’s gonna be the same for everywhere, mile-and-a-halves, everything, so the braking potential is huge it’s just a matter of what we’ve been working on — I think a lot of teams are — is how the car reacts to these huge brakes because the brakes have more potential I feel like than the car handling right now in heavy braking zones. Like the backstretch, we’re braking two markers later than what we were Sunday and you could go more, the brakes will handle it, but the car just kind of starts sliding around, so that’s the thing everyone is trying to balance. And then just driving it with the wider tire and independent rear suspension. It feels like the limit is higher the way you can push the car, but then I feel like with the lack of sideforce that these cars have compared to what we’ve got now is it’s a lot easier to kind of jump over that line and be in big trouble, so it’s kind of hard. We spent a long time yesterday kind of finding. You want to find your limit, but I spun out twice yesterday trying to find it and didn’t even think I was close to spinning out and it just spins out. So that side has been pretty tough to kind of figure out. What’s the limit? It’s easier to jump over that limit, if that makes sense. You can push them harder, but they’re easier to kind of cross that line. Those are the biggest things to me. There are a lot of other things I could probably touch on, but just everything is different in the car. Even your visual, sitting in the car is different. We’re sitting lower in these cars and the front glass and the rear glass have more angle to them, so you can’t see as much. It’s not as straight-up, the glass in front of your face, so your visual signs are different. That takes a while to kind of get used to and change and your surroundings are different. If you change something in your cubicle, it’s gonna bother you and our cubicle is way different right now, so everything is kind of messing with you and you’re trying to make it as comfortable as you can. It’s just a lot of that stuff from driving it to just sitting in the car has changed so much, but it’s what you’re gonna have to get used to and the forward and back transmission. That’s a little different, too. There’s no more getting in it and making sure it’s in neutral. That doesn’t work. It’s a number on the dash.”

DO YOU FEEL THIS IS MORE OF A DRIVER’S CAR? “I think that’s the goal of it. That’s the whole goal of limiting teams to what parts they can make and cannot make. I mean, right now as far as I know, there’s not a lot of parts that teams are making anymore for these new cars. It’s all coming out of one manufacturer. It’s all coming out of one company. Do I like that? To an extent I do, but on the other side we have full-time jobs for people who make these parts for us that aren’t gonna have those jobs anymore, so that side I’m not a fan of, but on the same end we can still probably find places for them in our company. I think it brings it closer together. If you don’t have these big teams and little teams, the big teams can make all their parts out of lightweight stuff. They have more money to spend. That’s where all that money goes, and now it’s kind of shrunken that deal as far as everyone is getting a lot of parts from the same vendor, so I think it’s gonna put a lot of pressure on the engine manufacturers because that’s like the one things we can still really find from Roush Yates to Toyota to Chevy. It’s gonna put a huge emphasis on motors next year, I think, just because a lot of the parts and pieces are the same except for the motor side. That’s still kind of their own. I do think the driver’s side of it is gonna show up a little bit more, which is nice for sure. That’s what everyone wants. You want to see new teams and start-up teams have a better shot at really running well. That draws more new owners and teams to the sport. If it’s not as much unknowns of getting in the sport, if it’s like, ‘All right, you get your stuff from here and here and here, so does everybody else.’ Well, that’s a lot easier than having to figure out a way to make all these parts if you’re gonna compete, so I think it’s accurate what Corey said, for sure.”

WHERE DID YOU SPIN OUT YESTERDAY? “I spun out in the same spot. I spun out on the backstretch chicane in that second curve, the right curb. I just hit it wrong. You’re getting in there you have the left one and then you kind of go back to right, and I hit the left one not in a great spot. It wasn’t bad, though. I did it a lot on Sunday and was still able to save the car, but this is good for test sessions because you’re pushing limits. In that area if you spin out there you’re not gonna hit anything, so instead of spinning out like in three or something like that, so you kind of find your spots to where you want to push the car. That’s the thing I was talking about earlier is you can push the cars harder, but your limit of like slip angle on the tire is smaller, I think, because I thought, ‘Oh, I can just power out of it and slide it and be good,’ and the next thing I knew I was sitting turned around, so, the same spot back there yesterday. They had the curbs. We’ve got the aluminum blocks under the car everyone talks about. There are six of them, so when you hit curbs on the road course and it comes down it hits those blocks hard, and I think that kind of upsets cars a lot more, too, so that’s gonna be another thing about being sensitive about is how you can hit those blocks and how low you can run the cars. I think that played a factor in me spinning out and just landing hard and turning around.”

HOW DOES THIS TEST CHANGE YOUR WEEK IN TERMS OF PREPPING FOR TEXAS? “If it was my choice I would drive a race car every day of the week, just the seat time is good no matter what it’s in. It doesn’t change my aspect at all. Todd was here for the first half of the day yesterday just kind of seeing how everything goes. Hassler has been running the crew chief job here these two days, just me and him kind of getting acclimated because this is the car we’re gonna work on next year. Todd was here to kind of make sure that it was just constant communication between all of us, so he helped out as much as he could, but then he went right back and worked on the Texas car. So, for me, it doesn’t change anything. He and I have just been texting the last two days and we’re trying to figure out things on Texas. For me, it doesn’t change it. A lot of the guys working here today they were racing Sunday. They have to get up, 7 a.m. garage opens here, run 10-hour days, and then they’ve got to go work on Texas. I’d say it’s harder for those guys to try and get their rest, but, for me, I prefer it. I enjoy testing. Back when it was wide-open we’d test all the time, so it’s kind of been nice to have that back again here for a little bit.”

YOU’VE WON A COUPLE RACES WITH THE 550 PACKAGE THIS YEAR. HOW DO YOU LOOK AT THIS NEXT ROUND AND TEXAS IN PARTICULAR? “I think this upcoming round is pretty good for us, honestly. Texas, Kansas, Martinsville have been really good tracks for us. The last 550 we were in was Vegas and I thought we had a really strong car at Vegas. We were able to drive up through the field from having to take the wave around in the second stage and got back to fifth. We probably could have run third. I would have liked to line up with the 11 and the 9 to see what we had for them, so I’m enjoying going to Texas. We had a really good run there, especially last year. It’s just been a place that kind of works for what we do, so you just hope you unload with solid cars and have good days and obviously winning is the best way to get into the championship, but you just can’t have any mistakes. You see people have mistakes, really fast cars had their mistakes throughout the rounds and it costs them. We’ve done a really good job of managing maybe not our best days, but we’ve managed to do a good job and come home solidly but our cars have been fast too. I’m looking forward to this round. It’s nice to have the bonus points that we have to just go up there and race and see what happens. Obviously, winning Texas would be nice this weekend and not have to worry about it for two weeks and then focus on Phoenix, but we have a lot of confidence. Hopefully, we keep improving and getting better and better and having good runs and make it.”

THERE WAS TALK ABOUT A REARVIEW CAMERA AT DAYTONA. HAVE YOU BEEN USING IT FOR THIS TEST? “We have. The way I said the front and rear windshields have more angle to them so you can’t see as much, and there’s all these air tubes that run through like the back glass and things like that, like our traditional mirror now you can’t really see much, so they’ve got this camera, it’s like the cameras that are on the front of the cars for in-car cameras or the roof cam, it’s pointed back, and we’ve run it the last couple days and I’m not a huge fan of it. It doesn’t have a huge field of vision. Like, you can see your spoiler and there’s nothing outside of it. I know they’re working on one with a lot more range of view, I guess, so that will be good, but the bad thing is — I know it’s gonna get better, but ours crapped out today, our camera, and we haven’t been able to use it. Hopefully, you don’t have one do that in the race and you have no rearview of sight. I think it’s got good potential, it’s just a matter of getting the range opened up more. I don’t know if you do a fisheye, but then you kind of mess with distortion and your depth perception is kind of messed up, too. I thought I was about to back over a ladder and they were like, ‘No, you’ve got six feet to the ladder.’ You just don’t know. It’s just gonna take getting used to, but I have seen it and I know they’re working on ways to make it better on multiple angles.”

SO THAT’S IN ADDITION TO WHAT YOU TYPICALLY HAVE IN THIS CAR? “From what I understand next year the digital rearview mirror is gonna be optional and then I think the year following, like in ‘23 it’s gonna be mandatory. That’s just what I was told, so I don’t know if you can run both, if you can run a traditional mirror and the digital one next year. I don’t know, but we’ll have to figure it out. But that’s definitely new, for sure.”

DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU CAN ADVANCE TO THE CHAMPIONSHIP ROUND AND, BESIDES A WIN, WHAT IS IT GOING TO TAKE? “It’s been a good year. It’s been a fun year. It’s been nice to get multiple wins, especially for Todd’s last year. It’s great to have a really cool year with him. It’s been a lot of fun. Yeah, I think this is the best consistently that we’ve run throughout a whole year, like especially put together a solid playoff run, for sure. Yeah, I do like our chances a lot to get in, whether that’s a win or pointing our way in. I feel like all three of these tracks we’re going to go to the next three weeks we have a shot to win at, for sure. It’s just about putting everything together and I think our team can do it. We’ve got to find a little bit of speed here and there, but I feel like with the progress we’ve made on speed in our cars and the execution we’ve had the last six weeks has been really, really solid, and we’ve just got to keep that up. I’ve got a lot of confidence going into it and I think everyone on Team Penske does too. It’s nice that we have three cars in the Round of 8. Obviously, I want to get in. It would be nice to get all three of our cars in, but I think these are good tracks that line up for us, we’ve just got to go capitalize and do what we can do best.”

ARE TOP THREES GOING TO BE WHAT YOU NEED TO ADVANCE ON POINTS? “I think so, for sure. All of the cars in the Round of 8 are really good. You get that every year. You get the field cut down to eight cars and you’re competing against really, really good teams and really good drivers and a lot of them don’t make mistakes. That’s why they’re there. I feel like if you can’t win, you’ve got to get really good stage points — like 15 stage points at least a race — and then top three, for sure. I know Joey and Brad are in a little bit different spot than me not having as many points, but I still feel like on our side you have to make that happen and you need to be running in the top five the whole race to get your stage points and finish good because that’s what it’s gonna take. It’s gonna be tight. It’s gonna be really tight unless people have problems, so I definitely agree with what he said.”

Chris Buescher – Texas II Advance

Team: No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang
Crew Chief: Scott Graves
Twitter: @17RoushTeam, @RoushFenway and @Chris_Buescher
Race Format: 501 miles, 334 laps, Stages: 105-105-124
Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 – Sunday, Oct. 17 at 2 p.m. ET on NBC, PRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

ADVANCE NOTES

Buescher at Texas Motor Speedway

  • Buescher returns to his home state of Texas for his 12th Cup start at the 1.5-mile track. He has a best finish of 15th which came in the 2018 spring race.
  • Prior to a 34th-place finish in this race a year ago, Buescher had two-straight runs of 19th.
  • He also made five Xfinity starts for Jack Roush, finishing ninth in 2015 in the No. 60.

Scott Graves at Texas Motor Speedway

  • Graves will call his 10th Cup race from Texas this weekend, where in nine starts he has an average finish of 19.6 with three different drivers.
  • His best finish came in his first race there with Newman as they ran 11th in the 2019 spring event. He followed that with finishes of 15th, 13th and 19th.
  • Graves also has two top-10s and one top five in the NXS at Texas, finishing fifth with Suarez in 2016 and ninth with Buescher in 2015.

QUOTE WORTHY
Buescher on racing at Texas:
“It’s always good to get back home, and I’m excited to see some family and friends this weekend while we’re out there. We’re coming off a really good day a week ago and feel good about where we’re at, so our hope is to ride that wave into this weekend and see where we shake out in the Fastenal Ford.”

Last Time Out
Buescher recorded his best finish of the season a week ago at the ROVAL, finishing third after running much of the race inside the top-10, and a majority of the closing laps inside the top five.

On the Car
Fastenal returns to the fold at Roush Fenway for its 11th season in 2021. They spent three years on the No. 99 before jumping to the No. 17 Cup Series entry, and were the primary partner on the No. 60 Xfinity team that captured the owner’s championship in 2011.

Fastenal will feature top suppliers MSA, Portacool, Superior Glove, Master Lock and Norton on Buescher’s Mustang as he competes this weekend. For more information on these suppliers, visit Fastenal.com, and stay up-do-date on social @FastenalRacing, @Fastenal.

Roush Fenway will also run some variation of pink on its Ford Mustangs throughout the month of October in support of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. This weekend, the No. 17 both on the door panels and the roof will be bright pink. Buescher is also participating in the pink window net initiative through the Kurt Busch Foundation, which also supports awareness throughout the month.

About Fastenal
Fastenal [Nasdaq: FAST] is North America’s largest fastener distributor and a ‘one-stop’ source for hundreds of thousands of OEM, MRO and Construction products. With more than 2,600 stores worldwide, the company supports B2B customers with tailored local inventory and dedicated personnel, who visit regularly, quickly respond to emergency needs, and provide efficient inventory management solutions. Fastenal’s service-oriented business network includes the world’s largest industrial vending program, 14 regional distribution centers, 8 custom manufacturing facilities, thousands of delivery vehicles, and industry-leading sourcing, quality and engineering resources.