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CHEVY NCS AT RICHMOND 2: William Byron Press Conf. Transcript

NASCAR CUP SERIES
FEDERATED AUTO PARTS 400
RICHMOND RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
SEPTEMBER 9, 2021

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 1LE, Teleconference Transcript Highlights:

HEADING TO RICHMOND THIS WEEKEND, WHAT ARE YOUR PRIMARY THOUGHTS AFTER THE CHAOS WE SAW AT DARLINGTON?
“I think it’s going to be just a normal Richmond race. Richmond is a place where you can get pretty strung out. Car performance and driver performance is really critical. For us, I think it’s just to focus on getting the best finish we can and hopefully having a lot of speed. Based on our Spring race at Richmond, we should have a lot of speed. I feel good about it. Richmond has not been a good place in the past for us, but this year it has. I feel like we can take that momentum and performance and apply it to this weekend and hopefully get ourselves above that Playoff bubble.”

DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE NEXT GEN CAR A LOT OR DO YOU COMPARTMENTALIZE THAT UNTIL A LITTLE FARTHER DOWN THE ROAD, EVEN WITH THE TEST?
“Yeah, I’ve definitely thought about it over the last two days because I was down there testing and experiencing the car. I feel like I learned a lot of things. I still keep a pretty open mind just because we are six months out from racing and a lot changes as soon as the teams get a little more time with the car and have a chance to really work on it and understand the things that make it tick. But all I can do it just give them the best feedback possible and I felt like I did that over two days and that we made some good progress in terms of philosophy and ideas on the car. We did some drafting runs with the pack, which was good, and those went really well. So for me, it’s just all about continuing to learn. But I kind of put that in some box now and focus on this year because that’s ultimately what really matters right now. So, for me, right now, I’m just focused on the Playoffs. After the last two days, I just kind of put that into next year’s.”

JUST HOW DIFFERENT WAS THE CAR THAT YOU DROVE THIS WEEK COMPARED WITH THE CAR YOU TESTED A YEAR AGO?
“That’s a good question. I feel like it’s very different in terms of the details. The rear-view camera, that’s a big difference that I think we all underestimated the ability of that. The interior design of the car was a lot more similar to the current car than I thought it would be. We spent a lot of time at the shop trying to get that right and make sure my seat position was good. I sit slightly lower than I do in my current car, which I don’t like. So, we’re going to work on that. The steering is still a work in progress. I don’t know if it’s really the steering of if it’s the tire and the stiffness of the sidewall, and also the stiffness of the suspension parts and things. So, that’s an interesting work in progress because I feel like that’s going to throw some guys off because you’re not moving the wheel as much and the car is very responsive to everything. So, that’s interesting. Very normal in the shifter. I feel really good about that. The drafting aspect of the car was okay. I think the speeds were a little bit lower than the current car, but some of the similar characteristics in pushing and things like that were still there. So, that’s kind of my general summary.”

CAN YOU EXPLAIN THE ‘RESPONSIVE STEERING’ A BIT MORE?
“I think it’s good in the fact that yeah, it takes less effort. The car is quicker to respond. It’s definitely going to be a good thing on short tracks. I think about Martinsville and how much easier it’s going to be on the drivers and then yeah, it’s just going to be easier. The car is going to turn better at a short track, I think. But when it comes to Daytona, it was very easy to go around a corner almost with no effort. I don’t know if that’s exactly what you want. Typically, at Daytona you want to have some forgiveness if you get out of shape or something like that to be able to save it. I think everyone is very interested just to see how it is when you do get out of shape and whether or not you can correct it and keep going, or what. That’s probably the question we all have and it’s probably going to just take until somebody crashes in a big pack to kind of see. That’s probably my biggest question. I think it’s a good thing and something to still work on, too.”

WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM LAST YEAR ABOUT THE RANGE OF EMOTIONS THE PLAYOFFS CAN HAVE FROM ONE WEEK TO THE NEXT?
“When I look at the Playoffs for myself, in general, it’s all about eliminating the big numbers. I think that unfortunately we had a big number this past weekend and not really of our making. Really, not of our making at all. Even the tire issue was just a one in a thousand chance that a lug nut or something hits the inside of valve stem on the inside of the tire and cuts down the inner liner. So, just a very freak kind of incident that we can’t really control. The guys did a good job bringing a fast car, number one. Fixing the car to make it still fast after the damage with the No. 48 (Alex Bowman). So, I feel like for us, just going into Richmond, I mean we just have to have a smooth race. We have the speed, and we have the ability. We were top three or four in points all season long. A lot of the reason for that was because of our consistency and speed. Those two things are things that are going to get you through each round. We’ve just got to focus on the next two races. We’re only nine points out of the cutline and I feel like if we just do our jobs, we’re going to be plenty good. So, it is a lot different than last year. I felt like last year, not that I lucked into that Darlington finish, but I didn’t really run top 5 all day and got a good finish at the end, and we knew, going into Richmond, we weren’t going to be very fast. At Bristol, we thought we were going to be okay and unfortunately, we got caught up with a lapped car. It’s just a lot different situation than last year, overall. Our team is a lot different. I feel like our speed is very good. So, we are very capable of advancing through the round.”

QUESTION REGARDING THE COMMITMENT LINE AT RICHMOND:
“To get on pit road I think there are a lot of different techniques. It looks like some guys just kind of ultimately just turn down early and get to pit road extremely early. You kind of run the risk if you stay up there on the track of not getting the car slowed down. I knew I wasn’t going to make it, pretty early on, because the car started wheel-hopping and I couldn’t get the gears to match up and decel. So yeah, it’s a risk you take. On our end, I think there’s going to be more of a conservative approach this race just to make sure we don’t have any issues. You’ve still got to get all you can get. But do so, and make sure you can get there. I don’t see it being a huge issue. We all kind of know what we’re up against. It is hard to see that box at night. I think that’s going to lead to some issues for some guys maybe.”

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON USING REAR-VIEW CAMERA AT THE NEXT GEN TEXT?
“I liked it. The way my seat position was and everything, I could really see very well out of the real mirror on the top. I think that’s just something that we can definitely get ironed out and fixed. So, I kind of used the rear-view camera instead, the whole time, and felt like it was really good and accurate. You could see the spoiler and it seemed like the refresh rate on the camera was pretty accurate. I think that’s going to be a tool. I’m not sure how many guys will use it right away, but I’m sure over time, if you’ve got access to electronics like that, it’s better than the alternative of not. I think over time, guys will adapt to it and use it.”

HOW DID YOU FEEL IN THE DRAFT DURING THE NEXT GEN TEST AT DAYTONA?
“A lot of us compared it, like the runs were not as big as the current car. Maybe a little bit more like the Xfinity package, where there’s a little bit more gap there. But once you were close to somebody, you could still push and affect that car and go forward. We could still run two-wide. So I don’t know if the energy was enough with eight cars to really know what the draft is going to be like for sure. But it sounds like we’re going to do another test in January at Daytona. We’ll definitely be pushing and shoving there, if there’s 20-plus cars, and have a better idea of what it’s going to feel like.”

HOW HAS WORKING WITH RUDY FUGLE (CREW CHIEF) AND ENTERING THE PLAYOFFS BEEN WITH HIM FOR YOU AND YOUR TEAM?
“It’s been great. Rudy has done a phenomenal job all year. In anything, there are growing pains of a new team and crew chief and driver, even though we worked together in the past, there are definitely new things in the Cup series you have to learn. But we’ve continued to believe in each other all year in the very good times and the very bad. For us, we continue to work together well and just are very open with each other. I think that’s all really good. The biggest thing that he’s done all year is bring really fast cars that are balanced well and set-up well, and that’s his job to do and our job to get right. He’s done a phenomenal job with all that stuff.”
Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

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

NASCAR Champion Jeff Gordon to Serve as Judge for Best of Show in Second Annual NABC® Rides for a Reason Virtual Car Show Presented by United Recyclers Group

  • National Auto Body Council® Announces Celebrity Judging Lineup for Second Annual NABC® Rides for a Reason Virtual Car Show Presented by United Recyclers Group
  • NASCAR Champion Jeff Gordon to Serve as Judge for Best of Show
  • Virtual Car Show to Run August 23 to October 22, 2021

CHARLOTTE (September 8, 2021) – The National Auto Body Council® announced today the lineup of celebrity judges who will select the winners of the Second Annual NABC® Rides for a Reason Virtual Car Show Presented by United Recyclers Group, LLC (URG), an association of auto recyclers with over 675 locations across the U.S. and Canada. The star-studded judging panel is headlined by NASCAR Hall of Fame member Jeff Gordon, Axalta Global Ambassador and Vice Chairman of Hendrick Motorsports.

The show is an innovative fundraising event that will allow car lovers across America to join NABC® members, their company employees and auto enthusiasts to put their passion and pride on display.

“What an honor to have Jeff Gordon, NASCAR star and driver of some of the most amazing paint schemes we’ve seen on the track, join us as the judge for the NABC® Rides for a Reason Virtual Car Show presented by URG award for Best in Show,” said Clint Marlow, chairman of the board of the National Auto Body Council® and director of claims for Allstate. “He joins an all-star panel of judges from the world of automotive design, restoration, painting and racing, and we’re excited to see all of their selections in their respective categories.”

The judging panel includes some of the best-known and most-loved stars of the automotive world, including:

  • Best of Show – Jeff Gordon, Axalta Global Ambassador, Vice Chairman of Hendrick Motorsports, four-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Fame member
  • Antiques/Vintage – Jeff Hammond, two-time NASCAR Cup champion crew chief, and NASCAR TV and radio analyst, is a longtime car builder, restorer and racer
  • Hot Rods, Rat Rods and Customs – Charley Hutton, car designer and builder, multiple Ridler award winner and former member of American Hot Rod and Foose Design build teams
  • Classics: Best of the 50s, 60s and 70s – to be announced
  • Old School Muscle Cars: 60s and 70s – Bill Elliott, NASCAR Hall of Fame Member, 1988 NASCAR Cup Champion and 16-time Most Popular Driver in NASCAR
  • Modern Muscle: 1980s to Today – Lauren Fix, nationally-recognized automotive expert and host of His Turn-Her Turn™ and Car Coach Reports
  • Trucks – Mark Oja, founder of California Speed and Custom and A-Team Build Lead on the classic “Overhaulin’” series
  • Motorcycles – Kyle Morley, owner and operator of XecutionStyle Kustom Paint and a leader in custom paint designs for motorcycles
  • Wild Card Presented by Allstate – Clint Marlow, Claims Director for Allstate,and Ian Roussel, custom car builder and host of Full Custom Garage on MAVTV
  • Best Paint Presented by Axalta – Keith Bell, Distribution and Industry Relations Director, North America, for Axalta Coating Systems

The USA’s most spectacular virtual car show will once again feature top cars, truck and motorcycles from NABC® members, virtual car clubs, featured car corral, automotive stars and celebrity judges. Proceeds support the National Auto Body Council® mission of Changing and Saving Lives through initiatives like the NABC Recycled Rides® program, NABC First Responder Emergency Extrication (F.R.E.E.™) program and NABC® Drive Out Distraction program.

The NABC® Rides for a Reason Virtual Car Show Presented by URG will include something for every car lover:

  • Enter your Ride for a $25 donation to showcase your passion and pride – and compete to take home top honors
  • Tour the Car Corral to see all the spectacular entries

To learn more about participating in the NABC® Rides for a Reason Virtual Car Show Presented by URG, visit https://nationalautobodycouncil.org/2021ridesforareason/ or contact NABCadmin@nationalautobodycouncil.org.

ABOUT THE NATIONAL AUTO BODY COUNCIL®

The National Auto Body Council®, which celebrated its’ 25th anniversary in 2020, is the premier organization of collision industry partners dedicated to strategic networking opportunities that positively change lives in the communities we serve. The collaborative membership of the National Auto Body Council® has gifted more than 2,750 vehicles, provided extrication opportunities for more than 4,300 First Responders and contributed to thousands of distracted driving pledges in communities through NABC Recycled Rides®, NABC First Responder Emergency Extrication (F.R.E.E.™) and the NABC Distracted Driving Initiative™. That effort equates to a 4:1 ROI in dollar value delivered from NABC® membership dollars. The National Auto Body Council® is changing the paradigm of how the collision industry works and is viewed. For more information, visit www.NationalautoBodyCouncil.org.

M&M’S Racing: Kyle Busch Richmond Advance

KYLE BUSCH
Law of Averages

HUNTERSVILLE, North Carolina (Sept. 9, 2021) – While the opener of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series playoffs at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway did not go the way Kyle Busch envisioned, there are a couple of strong tracks on the horizon as he looks ahead to the next two races in the Round of 16.

The good news for Busch, driver of the No. 18 M&M’S Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR), is that the two remaining races in this opening round of the playoffs are two of his favorites – Richmond (Va.) Raceway and Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway. Busch has a combined 14 wins at those two tracks so, when he says both tracks are favorites, his success at both backs it up.

A quick look at Busch’s Cup Series statistics at Richmond shows six career victories – most among active drivers – including two in the last three races there. In addition to those six career wins, Busch’s Richmond stat sheet shows 18 top-five finishes and 24 top-10s in 31 career starts, making him the most consistent active driver at the track.

The Las Vegas native also leads all active drivers with his Richmond average finishing position of 6.8. Next best is Kevin Harvick at 8.4. Busch has completed all but one of the 12,429 laps available to him in his 31 Richmond starts. Of those, Busch has run in the top-15 for 11,079 laps, or 89.1 percent, which ranks second among active drivers.

Four of Busch’s six career Richmond wins came in consecutive spring races from 2009 to 2012, besting Richard Petty’s previous record of three Richmond spring-race wins in a row from 1971 to 1973. Busch’s other two Richmond wins came in a sweep of both races there in 2018. With his impressive statistics and records to back him up, it’s little wonder that a visit to Richmond is one of Busch’s favorite stops on the NASCAR tour.

Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 will be run on the 20th anniversary of the September 11, 2001, a day which will never be forgotten all across the United States. With support from partner M&M’S, Busch will be donning his Red, White, and Blue firesuit and helmet while he and millions of Americans remember those who were lost that tragic day 20 years ago.

So, as the series heads to the “Capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia” for the second playoff race of 2021, Busch and the M&M’S team look to bring home their seventh win there. Whether or not they make it back to victory lane, history has shown Richmond could be a key race to help him climb into the top-12 when the Round of 16 is completed.

KYLE BUSCH, Driver of the No. 18 M&M’S Toyota Camry for Joe Gibbs Racing:

Is Richmond one of your favorite tracks, and what are your expectations there this weekend?

“Richmond is a great place for us and our M&M’S team. You’ve really got to be mindful of the bottom of the racetrack and also mindful of your brakes and how you use them, just because the track is so hard on brakes, especially getting into turn one, that you can really overheat your brakes, which overheats your tires and makes you slide around more. Having good cars there has certainly been something we’ve been fortunate with at Joe Gibbs Racing over the years. I’ve won there six times and I’ve been in the top-five about every time we go there, so I would like to think that we can keep that string going and, more importantly, get a win. It would certainly be a good time for it, so we look forward to Richmond being one of those places where we can do that.”

What does it take to get around Richmond?

“Richmond is getting a little trickier, it seems like, just with the asphalt kind of getting older and the way the cars are. The consensus at Richmond is, of course, just trying to get your car to turn, but also having really good forward bite. You have to be able to get off the corners at Richmond. All of it correlates. Everything you want as a racecar driver, you’ve got to have most all of it and, if you don’t, then you better hope you have more forward bite than the rest of them. That’s sort of the equation of Richmond. It’s a fun place to race. It’s really cool. As a driver, you wish it could widen out and give you more options of being able to run around in different grooves, but it hasn’t shown us that the last couple of years. We’re hoping to get our M&M’S Camry another win there and put last week behind us.”

How important is it to unload perfectly in this first playoff round?

“It’s really important to start the race off strong. You’re starting the race with all of the rest of your championship contenders you’re racing against, so to be able to get those points right out of the gate, it’s hard to do because you’re all starting right around each other. There’s really not a lot of opportunity at some of these places for pit stops or chances to work on your car in the first stage to get those points. Even if we did have an opportunity to start up front, we would fall out of the top-10 and not have an opportunity to get (bonus) points, not even stage wins, but to get points that matter. You get two stage wins and a win at Richmond and Bristol both, and boom, you’re right back in the mix. Being able to have success racing against the rest of your title contenders is certainly a big challenge.”

Can you compare Bristol and Richmond, both places where you’ve been successful?

“There’s really no comparison between racetracks, honestly, because Charlotte, Texas, Atlanta – they all look the same from overhead, but they all drive not even close to the same. Richmond and Bristol are more than oil and water, more than day and night. Bristol is an attack-type racetrack yet, when you attack, you can get yourself in trouble. Richmond is a very methodical racetrack and you have to be – you’re very much on edge there all the time, especially corner entry, getting into the corners. You’re always loose there and you have to be able to be loose there in order to carry the speed through the middle and have good drive off.”

Event Overview:

● Event: Federated Auto Parts 400
● Time/Date: 7:30 p.m. EDT on Saturday, Sept. 11
● Location: Richmond (Va.) Raceway
● Layout: 0.75-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 400 laps, 300 miles
● Format: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 155 laps / Final Stage: 165 laps
● TV/Radio: NBCSN/ MRN/ SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Meet the No. 18 M&M’S / Joe Gibbs Racing Team

Primary Team Members:

Driver: Kyle Busch
Hometown: Las Vegas

Crew Chief: Ben Beshore
Hometown: York, Pennsylvania

Car Chief: Nate Bellows
Hometown: Fairfax, Vermont

Spotter: Tony Hirschman
Hometown: Northampton, Pennsylvania

Over-The-Wall Crew Members:

Gas Man: Matt Tyrrell
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Front Tire Changer: Blake Houston
Hometown: Enochville, North Carolina

Jackman: T.J. Ford
Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Tire Carrier: Joe Crossen
Hometown: Salisbury, North Carolina

Rear Tire Changer: Jeff Cordero
Hometown: Salem, Connecticut

Road Crew Members:

Race Engineer: Seth Chavka
Hometown: Soldotna, Alaska

Truck Driver: Chris Miko
Hometown: Bronx, New York

Truck Driver: Tom McCrimmon
Hometown: Spicer, Minnesota

Mechanic/Tire Specialist: Justin Peiffer
Hometown: Lebanon, Pennsylvania

Mechanic: Scott Eldridge
Hometown: Warsaw, Indiana

Notes of Interest:

● Playoff Points: Busch has racked up 22 important playoff points he can take with him through each round. He sits 14th on the playoff grid with 11 top-five finishes and 16 top-10s as he is just two points below the top-12 cutline with two races remaining in the first round.
● All in the Stats: Busch has six wins, 18 top-five finishes and 24 top-10s and has led a total of 1,489 laps in 31 career Cup Series starts at Richmond. Busch’s average Richmond finish is 6.8.
● Alone in Ninth: With Busch’s win at Pocono in June, the two-time Cup Series champion scored his 59th career win in NASCAR’s top series as he moved past Kevin Harvick into sole possession of ninth on the all-time win list. Next up on the win list is Dale Earnhardt, the seven-time Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer who won 76 races during his storied career.
● 222 and Counting: Busch will be aiming to add to his record 222 overall wins among NASCAR’s top three series this weekend at the Richmond. In addition to his 59 Cup Series wins and 102 in the Xfinity Series, Busch has 61 wins in the Camping World Truck Series.

Trans Am Drivers Focus on Championship ahead of Doubleheader Weekend at Watkins Glen

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (8 September 2021)- With only four rounds remaining in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli season, it’s make-or-break time for numerous competitors and teams vying for their chance at 2021 titles. For the first time in series and track history, Watkins Glen International will set the stage for an all-class Trans Am 100-mile double feature with more than 40 TA, TA2® , XtremeGT and SuperGT cars slated for the Watkins Glen SpeedTour event September 10-12.

Trans Am Heavy Hitters

It’s been a long eight-week summer break for the TA class. Though their Pirelli tires have had some time to cool, the battle for the championship title is still just as heated. While 10 of the 20 drivers entered in the TA championship are still mathematically viable, three drivers have been at the top of their class throughout the season.

Chris Dyson leads the TA standings with 201 points, securing four wins and a pole position in the last seven rounds. Driving the No. 20 ALTWELL CBD Ford Mustang, Dyson started his fourth Trans Am season with a victory at Sebring and followed it up with three consecutive wins at Lime Rock, Mid-Ohio and Road America, before Ernie Francis Jr. broke his streak at Brainerd. Dyson finished third on the Minnesota road course, working his way back from a spin off course to finish third overall.

This weekend will mark a special milestone for Dyson, as he celebrates his 20th pro racing anniversary at the same track where the New York native’s career began.

“Watkins Glen has always meant a lot to me,” Dyson said. “It’s the track where my dreams about racing really started to take hold. I remember being here in 1987 and watching my Dad win the big IMSA GTP event here, and Dyson Racing had a lot of success as a team here in the 90s and into the 2000s. I did the bulk of my early regional and national racing here, too. I won the Watkins Glen Six Hours overall with James Weaver in my rookie season and that was a dream come true. It’s always a great track in just about any car. The Trans Am cars in particular are an absolute thrill to race around this circuit. And it’s technically my ‘home’ track, being in New York and only a few hours away from home. We’re ready to race this weekend and we’ve done everything we could to ensure a strong result.”

The remaining three rounds have been won by Boris Said (Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta), Tomy Drissi (WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca) and Francis Jr. (Brainerd), all of whom are entered for Watkins Glen.

Drissi’s consistent driving all season has led to one of his best overall career performances. Driving the No. 8 Lucas Oil Slick Mist Chevrolet Camaro, Drissi has captured extra points in four of the seven rounds by securing the Motul Pole Position. Unlike Dyson, Drissi has won at Watkins Glen, claiming the checkered over pole-starter Said in 2018. The ‘Rockin’ Moroccan’ trails Dyson by 20 points in the campaign for his second National championship.

Seven-time champion Francis Jr. has had a very quiet season (for him) so far. Juggling three full-time race series this year (Trans Am, FR Americas and SRX), the 23-year-old started to look more like the driver Trans Am fans have been accustomed to seeing after his come-from-behind win at Brainerd. Prior to his triumphant victory, Francis Jr.’s last podium visits were at the beginning of the season at Sebring and Road Atlanta where he placed second in both rounds. The No. 98 Future Star/Breathless Racing driver also secured pole position starts at Sebring and Lime Rock.

Francis Jr. set a new track record for Watkins Glen (1:45.201-seconds) during the series last visit to the Northern New York circuit in 2019, beating Said’s previous record set in 2018. That same year, Francis Jr. went on to take the win from pole on his way to claiming the championship later that season. Francis Jr. also holds the all-time record for most career poles in Trans Am at 49 (a record formerly held by Tommy Kendall with 46). This weekend, Francis Jr. could become the first Trans Am driver in history to reach 50 pole position starts.

“Looking ahead to WGI has us feeling optimistic,” said Francis Jr. “It’s a track we have won at before and feel we have a good shot of getting back to the front of the championship standings. Our goals going into the next four rounds are the same as they always have been – consistent finishes up front and keeping the car clean. We are excited to see where it all shakes out at the end of the season!”

Road Atlanta winner Said (No. 2 WeaverRacingTechnique/SRI Dodge Challenger) will also be thrown into the mix this weekend, looking to steal valuable championship points away from his Trans Am rivals. Two-time TA champion Amy Ruman was victorious at Watkins Glen in 2016 and will be looking for her first class win of the season this weekend in the No. 23 McNicholsCo/CornertechCNCSolut Chevrolet Corvette. Charlotte Motor Speedway winner Oscar Teran (No. 27 Oscar Teran Ford Mustang) will also return to the lineup, piloting the same Breathless Racing prepared Ford Mustang that he dominated in on the famous Roval.

After a successful Trans Am debut at Road America, the 2003 Le Mans 24-Hour winner and 2011 IMSA American Le Mans Series champion Guy Smith will return to the No. 21 Amamos La Vida Tequila Ford Mustang cockpit for CD Racing.

TA Full Chamioship Standings

TA2® Close Competition Continues

Nine drivers out of 65 can still make a title-run in TA2, respectively, though four, Rafa Matos, Mike Skeen, Thomas Merrill and Connor Mosack, have pulled away from the pack.

In the last round on the streets of Nashville, Matos started back in 18th following power steering issues in qualifying, Matos slowly worked his way through the pack on the difficult street circuit. He managed to take the point before falling down the order after his power steering issues returned with 20 laps remaining in the race. Matos held on without power steering to finish seventh, earning enough points to keep the championship lead over reigning class champion Skeen (226 vs. 208).

Following a tumultuous outcome in Nashville, Matos is chasing a rebound at Watkins Glen, a track where he’s experienced quite a bit of success driving the No. 88 3 Dimensional Services Group Ford Mustang. The 2018 champion is on the hunt for his third consecutive win at Watkins Glen. He took the checkered there in 2018 and 2019, setting a new track record for TA2 during the series last visit (1:51.197-seconds).

“Winning at WGI the last two years gives myself and the whole Peterson Racing a big boost,” said Matos. “WGI is a proper road race track with incredible history, and to make it three in a row would be a great achievement for us. The championship is getting close to an end but we still need to keep improving our game and performance every session, qualifying and race. The goal is obviously to try to increase our points lead, and I have the equipment and team to do it.”

In his first full season with Trans Am, Skeen took the track by storm to claim the championship in 2020. This season, the No. 1 Liqui-Moly/Turn14Distribution Chevrolet Camaro driver has earned the best qualifying record of the season, starting from pole in half of the rounds (four of eight). The reigning champion went on to win two races from pole.

This weekend will be Skeen’s first appearance at the Glen in a Trans Am car, though he’s driven the course several times in other series, including IMSA.

Merrill and Mosack are more than 70 points (75 and 78) behind Matos, but there’s still a chance for either to claim the championship with 140 total points still on the table.

Merrill’s second full season in Trans Am got off to a great start, as the HPTuners/MikeCopeRaceCars Ford Mustang driver wheeled from pole position to take the win in the opening round at Sebring. Since then, Merrill has faced mechanical gremlins among other on-track incidents that have kept him from revisiting the top step. He’s earned two third-place finishes (Road Atlanta and Laguna Seca) and recovered to finish second after an incident left his No. 81 car damaged at Nashville. Merrill will sport a new number, No. 26, for Watkins Glen as his No. 81 Ford Mustang is still in repair.

While Merrill trails Matos by 75 points, he’s shown in the past that he’s a top contender who makes every drive count.

Driving consistently all season, Mosack finally broke through to the podium in Nashville with a third-place finish. Coached by Scott Lagasse Jr., Mosack is fourth in points (148) and is the leading scorer for TeamSLR in the No. 28 NicTailor/IFS M1-SLR/Fields Chevrolet Camaro. While claiming the championship might be a stretch in his first full season of TA2, Mosack is quite capable of snagging wins and the points that go with it away from Matos, Skeen and Merrill.

Other TA2 drivers to watch this weekend are teammates Doug Peterson (No. 87 3 Dimensional Services Group Chevrolet Camaro), who won at WGI in 2015, and Adam Andretti (No. 86 3 Dimensional Services Group Ford Mustang). The pair have worked together since mid-season at Mid-Ohio to help Matos defend his championship lead and his position on track.

Returning after three-year hiatus is 6th Gear Inc. founder and president Robert Sabato (No. 43 6th Gear Garage Ford Mustang). Sabato won the IMSA prototype lites championship in 2011, having made a handful of TA2 races in the meantime ahead of this weekends outing.

TA2 Full Class Standings

XGT Class Set to Make WGI Debut

The XGT class will make its debut this weekend on the Grand Prix Watkins Glen course. The last time Trans Am visited Watkins Glen was in 2019, before the inception of the newest Trans Am class. Erich Joiner in the No. 10 Good Boy Bob Coffee Roasters Porsche 991 GT3 R and Randy Hale in the No. 31 Hale Propeller Chevrolet Corvette will be pitted against each other, both trying to set the track record and make history as the first XGT winner at The Glen.

Natalie Decker returns to the lineup, putting pressure on SGT class rookie and points leader Justin Marks in an Ave Motorsports prepared Audi R8 (No. 29 NI29 Technologies LLC Audi R8). In March, the NASCAR Xfinity driver took second at Charlotte Motor Speedway after starting on the pole. This will be Decker’s first attempt at The Glen.

“Racing with Ave Motorsports in the Trans Am Series is amazing and I continually am learning from the best,” said Decker. “This will be my first time at Watkins Glen and I have been preparing for the race by iRacing, watching videos and we did a test day at VIR (Virginia International Raceway).”

Weekend Timetable

Trans Am drivers have the option to test on Thursday before official practice starts on Friday at 11:45 a.m. Eastern. Drivers will qualify in their separate classes in 15 minute intervals on Friday evening, starting at 5:15 p.m. Eastern with TA2, followed by TA, then the production classes (XGT/SGT/GT). The first of two 100-mile races will be held on Saturday at 1:00 p.m. Eastern, and the weekend will culminate on Sunday with all drivers taking the green at 11:35 a.m. Eastern. Prior to racing on Saturday, the track will host a fan walk with Trans Am drivers and cars from 12:20-12:50 p.m. Eastern.

HaasTooling.com Racing: Cole Custer Richmond Advance

COLE CUSTER
Richmond Advance
No. 41 HaasTooling.com Demo Day Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

Event Overview
● Event: Federated Auto Parts 400 (Round 28 of 36)
● Time/Date: 7:30 p.m. EDT on Saturday, Sept. 11
● Location: Richmond (Va.) Raceway
● Layout: .75-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 400 laps/300 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 80 laps / Stage 2: 155 laps / Final Stage: 165 laps
● TV/Radio: NBCSN / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Fresh off a near-top-10 finish in Sunday night’s Southern 500 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, Cole Custer and the No. 41 HaasTooling.com Demo Day Ford Mustang team for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) look to continue their momentum in Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond (Va.) Raceway.
● Appearing on Custer’s SHR Mustang for the second of two consecutive races Saturday night will be Haas Automation’s Demo Day in leadup to this year’s annual event at the network of nine Haas Factory Outlet (HFO) locations throughout the country. Demo Day provides HFOs an opportunity to feature the latest CNC machines, innovations and technology from Haas Automation. HFOs will showcase machine cutting demonstrations, as well as educational seminars to explain how the latest Haas machines and options can make companies more efficient and profitable. Current Haas users, potential customers and anyone in the manufacturing industry are also invited to attend. To find the nearest HFO, and for more information, click here.
● Saturday night’s 400-lap race at Richmond oval will be Custer’s 67th Cup Series start and his fourth on the .75-mile oval. The reigning Cup Series Rookie of the Year’s 14th-place finish there last September, the best of his previous three outings. He started 21st and finished 23rd at Richmond in April.
● In NASCAR Xfinity Series competition, Custer’s seven career starts at Richmond is more than he’s had at any other track. Best among those starts was the April 2019 race, when he qualified fourth in the No. 00 SHR Ford, led a race-high 122 of 250 laps and took the checkered flag 2.639 seconds ahead of runner-up and fellow Ford driver Austin Cindric. He followed that up with a third-place finish in that year’s September race for his fourth Xfinity Series top-six in seven Richmond starts. Custer also started on the pole and led 43 laps en route to a sixth-place finish in the April 2018 race in his SHR Ford, and scored a sixth-place finish in his Richmond debut in the Xfinity Series, driving the No. 5 JR Motorsports entry in the April 2016 race.
● Custer’s first two Richmond outings came in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East in 2013 and 2014. The first year, he started and finished third after leading 24 of 100 laps, then came back the following year to qualify second and lead a race-high 52 of 100 laps en route to his fourth of four career victories in K&N Pro Series competition.
● After last weekend’s 11th-place finish on the egg-shaped, 1.366-mile Darlington oval, Custer arrives at Richmond 28th in the driver standings.
● Returning to Custer’s No. 41 Ford Mustang is team co-owner Gene Haas’ newest holding, Haas Tooling, which was launched as a way for CNC machinists to purchase high-quality cutting tools at great prices. Haas cutting tools are sold exclusively online at HaasTooling.com and shipped directly to end users. HaasTooling.com products became available nationally last July, and the cutting tools available for purchase at HaasTooling.com have proven to be even more important during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic as CNC machines have become vital to producing personal protective equipment. Haas Automation, founded by Haas in 1983, is America’s leading builder of CNC machine tools. The company manufactures a complete line of vertical and horizontal machining centers, turning centers and rotary tables and indexers. All Haas products are constructed in the company’s 1.1-million-square-foot manufacturing facility in Oxnard, California, and distributed through a worldwide network of Haas Factory Outlets.
● September is Hunger Action Month, and 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 asking fans to think about their answer to a simple question: How will you choose to end hunger? Hunger Action Month is an annual campaign dedicated to driving awareness and inspiring action to help end hunger in America, both on a national scale and on the ground in local communities. It’s a time when the Feeding America network of food banks and the public come together to raise awareness and inspire action to help people facing impossible choices due to hunger. Fans are encouraged to visit the Hunger Action Month page via the Feeding America website to learn how they can take action through sharing, volunteering, pledging to advocate, fundraising and making a donation. Each $1 donated helps provide at least 10 meals secured by Feeding America on behalf of local member food banks. Custer and the No. 41 SHR Ford team have accumulated nearly 100 volunteer hours to date, working with Second Harvest Food Bank of Metrolina in packing bags and helping with drop-off events at Charlotte-area schools.
● Fans can do their part 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 HaasTooling.com Demo Day Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing

You’re coming off a near-top-10 finish on a tough racetrack at Darlington last weekend and are headed to another tricky track at Richmond this weekend. Do you feel you and the team might be mounting some momentum for the home stretch of the season?

“It felt like one of our better efforts of the season in most every respect, so that’s definitely a good thing. It was one of those typical up-and-down days, but Mike (Shiplett, crew chief) made a great strategy call that moved us up near the top-10 late in the race. Hoping what we learned at Richmond in the spring race will benefit us this weekend, although the conditions will be pretty drastically different, being that the race is under the lights. We did pretty well in the night race there last fall, and it seemed all of our SHR cars were pretty solid with this 750 (horsepower) package last weekend at Darlington, so I hope all of that bodes well for us and our HaasTooling.com/Demo Day Ford team.”

Saturday night’s race marks your 13th career start at Richmond between the Cup Series, Xfinity Series and K&N East Series. What’s been your favorite Richmond memory?

“Definitely winning there in the Xfinity Series a couple of years ago. It was my first short-track win in the Xfinity Series and it meant a lot because we worked pretty hard to try and get our short-track stuff better, and it’s not an easy track to get around. So, it meant a lot to win that one.”

You’ve run at Richmond so much during your career, are you immersed in footage and data from your previous runs there to figure out how you’re going to get around there Saturday night?

“Yeah, that’s every weekend for me. I look at old races and try and talk to Kevin (Harvick) every weekend to find out what he’s looking for. He’s been a huge help the last couple of years. All of my teammates have been. It’s been tough, though, going straight to racing with no practice or qualifying. You can look at as much film and data as you want, but you’re still missing the experience of actually being out there. You know what you need to work on, but you really don’t learn as much until you’re actually out there on the track.”

No. 41 HaasTooling.com Demo Day 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

‘Let’s Play Two’: TeamSLR Watkins Glen Trans Am Advance

‘Let’s Play Two’
Connor Mosack and Jack Wood Ready for Watkins Glen Doubleheader

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (Sept. 9, 2021) – Baseball great Ernie Banks would definitely be a fan of this weekend’s Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli event at Watkins Glen International. The affable Hall of Famer who played for the Chicago Cubs is credited with the saying, “Let’s play two,” as he enjoyed the game so much that his serial belief was why play one game when you could play two?

The canceled Trans Am round Sept. 3-5 at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park in Bowmanville, Ontario, due to COVID-19 paved the way for a doubleheader Saturday and Sunday at Watkins Glen… but not just any doubleheader.

For the first time in series and track history, Watkins Glen is playing host to an all-class Trans Am event on its 3.4-mile, 11-turn layout in upstate New York. Two 100-mile races with more than 40 TA, TA2, XtremeGT and SuperGT cars are on tap, with each driver eyeing a similar racing line as they chase a class victory.

Knowing there would be a packed field on The Glen’s high-speed, technical layout, TeamSLR tested at the track Aug. 31-Sept. 1 with drivers Connor Mosack and Jack Wood.

This is Mosack’s first full season in Trans Am’s TA2 division, and while the 22-year-old is still considered a rookie, he has plenty of experience in doubleheaders. Mosack’s first four TA2 starts came during two doubleheader weekends last fall at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) and Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. And in the time since those doubleheaders, Mosack’s development has been impressive. The Charlotte, North Carolina-native secured his first career podium finish June 26 at the Mid-Ohio Sportscar Course, just a month-and-a-half after graduating with a degree in business entrepreneurship from High Point (N.C.) University. And in the most recent TA2 race Aug. 8 on the streets of Nashville, Tennessee, Mosack earned another podium finish.

Mosack will be joined at The Glen by 21-year-old Jack Wood, who is looking to burnish his racing resume with some road-course experience in Trans Am. Wood ran his first career TA2 race July 18 at Brainerd (Minn.) International Raceway and finished a respectable 11th.

Wood is a fulltime driver in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series who made his debut in that division on May 22 at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas. Wood described the road-course race as an “eye-opener” as his only prior road-course experience came in go-karts and in a lone NASCAR K&N Pro Series West race in 2019 at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway. The Loomis, California-native’s second Truck Series race took place Aug. 7 at The Glen, providing Wood with valuable, real-world experience heading into his second career TA2 start.

Mosack and Wood are coached by the father-and-son duo of Scott Lagasse and Scott Lagasse, Jr. They have combined to win more than 100 races and seven championships across a variety of series and styles of racecars, from paved ovals to road courses to dirt tracks.

It’s all a part of TeamSLR’s comprehensive driver development program, which includes car-building capabilities. TeamSLR is the exclusive representative of M1 Racecars, an official TA2 constructor. It builds rolling chassis and complete Chevrolet Camaros, Ford Mustangs and Dodge Challengers for Trans Am competition.

Mosack and Wood will wheel their M1 Racecars-built Chevrolet Camaros around The Glen in Trans Am’s 33rd visit to the storied track where Jerry Titus won the inaugural race in 1968, ending Mark Donahue’s eight-race winning streak.

Connor Mosack, driver No. 28 Nic Tailor Custom Fit Underwear/Interstate Foam & Supply Chevrolet Camaro:

You were able to test at Watkins Glen Aug. 31-Sept. 1. How did it go and what did you learn?

“I think it went really well. We didn’t get a whole lot of clean laps because there were a lot of cars on the track. We were able to run hard in all sections of the track and got good data to look at, information to come back for our setup that will help. The lap times we got on our clean laps were really fast for the tires we were on. We were trying to work on our long-run, late-race type of balance. I’m sure our competition was faster, too, from the last time they were there, but it looks like we definitely made good progress from the last time the team was there.”

The Trans Am Series runs the long course at Watkins Glen, which includes the Boot. Many fans are unfamiliar with that section because NASCAR doesn’t use that portion of the track. What’s that section of the track like?

“It’s a pretty high-speed section. I’m definitely glad we get to run that part of the track. Turn seven is a really fun corner with a lot of banking, almost like an oval-track type of sensation but going uphill. Turns eight and nine are pretty technical, especially turn nine. It’s a series of turns NASCAR misses out on, but it’s a lot of fun and I’m glad we get to run it.”

Describe a full lap around Watkins Glen.

“Overall, the track is really high-speed. There are no really slow corners. Turn one is a heavy braking zone where you use a lot of track on exit. It’s really important where the car sets up there for when you come to the esses, where cars run wide open. The speed you carry through turn one will help you all the way to the Bus Stop. Uphill through the esses is a really fun section. The car’s going through a lot of load, but it’s probably the most fun part of the track. That leads you down a long straightaway into the Bus Stop, which is a really fast chicane. There are bumps there and your car has to go really well over those. That leads to the Carousel, which is a really fast, long, winding right-hander that leads to the Boot section. Then, you come back on the NASCAR circuit for turns 10 and 11, which are two, pretty fast left- and right-hand 90-degree corners. They’re banked and are very fun.”

Watkins Glen represents a doubleheader with a points-paying race on Saturday and another on Sunday. You competed in two doubleheaders last year at VIR and Road Atlanta. Do you like these kinds of weekends where in less than 24 hours you can apply what you learned in Saturday’s race to the race on Sunday?

“Last year, I was glad to do the doubleheader weekends because I was new to the series and I was able to get a lot more track time, and we usually improved a lot from the first race to the second race both weekends. I think it will help us again this year because I’m still new compared to most of these guys. We’re running with the TA cars, which changed the dynamic when we did that last year, so it’s hard to say how that will affect the outcome this weekend. There’s a lot going on with so many cars out there with the speed differences. There are so many TA2 cars that we have enough to have our own race and not have to worry about the faster TA cars. Some of them are faster than us down the straightaways but slower than us through the corners, and that’s a challenge for us.”

Trans Am has been off since its last race at Nashville in early August. What have you been up to since then?

“The only races I’ve done since Nashville are the two ARCA races at Michigan International Speedway and the Milwaukee Mile. Michigan was going really well. We had to start at the back based on points, but we were running fifth on lap two or three and had a second- or third-place car most of the race but, unfortunately, we had a fuel pressure issue. We came in to change the fuel pump about 20 laps in, which put us about 10 laps down, so we went back out to just put in some laps. About halfway the fuel pump went out again, so we had to retire. At Milwaukee, we just didn’t have a good car all day and we struggled a lot, so it wasn’t our best day.”

Trans Am. ARCA. Super Late Models. You’re racing them all this year. Do you feel that competing in different series and in different cars is making you a more well-rounded racer, to where the experience in one series is helping you in another?

“For me, seat time is really the most important thing. Experience in just about any car is really helpful. The Trans Am car and the Super Late Model drive a little bit more similar. The ARCA car is much different, a little bit heavier and a different type of chassis that takes a little bit of time to get used to, and all we race on are much bigger tracks, which is very different. It can be tough, jumping around. The Super Late Model is the hardest to just hop into, but I feel pretty comfortable getting back in the Trans Am car every time, and I do feel pretty comfortable getting up to speed in the ARCA car. We have one more ARCA race left this year at Kansas and, obviously, a few more weekends left in the Trans Am car.”

Jack Wood, driver No. 96 M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro:

You were able to test at Watkins Glen Aug. 31-Sept. 1. How did it go and what did you learn?

“It was good to get laps. It was an open track day, so it was helpful in navigating lapped traffic, and just getting to see the place was good. It was my second time ever being there, but the first time ever running the Boot configuration, so it was really good for me to be able to just go and do that. We were able to look at all the different sectors and compare them to Connor’s. It was good to get a little bit of a head start going in. It was a little weird for me to have practice because in the Trucks right now, we don’t have practice, so it’s nice to be able to run laps before getting there on race weekend. I think it’s going to be a big help for us.”

The Trans Am Series runs the long course at Watkins Glen, which includes the Boot. Many fans are unfamiliar with that section because NASCAR doesn’t use that portion of the track. What’s that section of the track like?

“I think it’s a lot of fun. The NASCAR circuit of Watkins Glen is just really high-speed, so it’s not super-technical, and I think the Boot adds a little bit of slower-speed stuff and makes the track a little more technical. It’s a really fun layout in a Trans Am car that’s light with the kind of grip it has. I don’t know how it would be in a Truck, but it just makes the course a little longer and adds a little more to it.”

Describe a full lap around Watkins Glen.

“It’s high-speed, so you’ve got to stay focused and you can’t get behind. And the thing is, everything is so high-speed that if you’re one or two miles an hour slower through a corner, it’s really going to affect you. So, you’ve just got to be really proactive about what you’re doing. There are some big, heavy braking zones, like through turn one and the Bus Stop – the Bus Stop is a really important area – and then there’s the Boot and turn eight. It’s a high-speed track, so you’ve really got to be careful and mindful of the fact that every corner really affects you because, basically, every corner leads onto a straightaway compared to somewhere like Sonoma or COTA, where you have little short sections. If you miss one corner by a little bit, it’s going to affect you for the next half-mile or more.”

Watkins Glen represents a doubleheader with a points-paying race on Saturday and another on Sunday. Do you like these kinds of weekends where in less than 24 hours you can apply what you learned in Saturday’s race to the race on Sunday?

“Having a doubleheader is really, really good because, quite honestly, you get a practice race before you really race. I mean, they’re both races but I think, at least for me, you almost treat the first one like a practice race, getting comfortable being around other cars, trying to learn what I can during restarts and stuff like that, and then being able to sleep on it and apply it to Sunday’s race. Having a doubleheader is huge because it’s twice as much seat time for me and it’s also a lot of fun. It’s going to be challenging because you’re going to be in the car longer, so you’ve got to really focus on recovering and getting yourself rehydrated for Sunday. But it’s a good challenge and definitely a good scenario for me to put myself in, to make myself uncomfortable and to keep pushing myself forward.”

In addition to testing the TA2 car at Watkins Glen, you raced there in the Truck Series back on Aug. 7. How helpful will that experience be as you gear up for the TA2 doubleheader this weekend?

“The biggest thing that helped racing in the Truck there was just the restarts and being comfortable racing in a pack through the esses and all that. I was able to be in a lot of racing scenarios during the Truck race, which is going to come into play, for sure. I think the Truck guys were a little more aggressive than what I think the Trans Am guys are going to be this weekend, but I think any time you get seat time in a racing setting is really going to help, so I think a lot of that stuff is going to apply toward this weekend.”

Your first and most recent Trans Am race came nearly two months ago at Brainerd in July. How helpful was that race in preparing you for the Truck Series race at The Glen, as that was only your second career Truck Series start on a road course?

“My road-course experience is very minimal, so every lap I get to turn right is huge for me. So far, it’s been a really big learning curve, but it’s been coming together really well. For me, it’s been a big asset just to be able to come and run with a program like this outside of Trucks to try and get a leg up on the next guy. Running the race at Brainerd was definitely a big help for me, just to get more time in the seat running a road course where my background is almost 100 percent paved oval racing.”

It was announced not too long ago that you’ll be racing the full Truck Series schedule next year for GMS Racing. With road-course racing becoming more and more prevalent, how important are outings like this one coming at The Glen to further prepare you for when the Truck Series races on road courses?

“It’s huge. I think me being able to get my contract done and knowing that I’m going to be back in the Truck next year is great for me. I have a pretty good idea of what the schedule is going to look like next year, so for me to be able to know early like this, I’m really able to focus on auxiliary programs like this that are geared toward road-course racing. It’s definitely going away from the traditional mile-and-a-half racing in NASCAR, and they’re starting to mix up the schedule quite a bit.”

Scott Lagasse, Jr., owner of TeamSLR and driver coach:

You were able to test at Watkins Glen Aug. 31-Sept. 1 with Mosack and Wood. How did it go and what did you learn?

“It was a good couple of days and I’m really happy with both drivers. Connor and Jack both did a great job and I feel like we left there with some good things to work on to get better. We will have implemented those and it should be a good weekend coming up.”

Watkins Glen represents a doubleheader with a points-paying race on Saturday and another on Sunday. Do you like these kinds of weekends where in less than 24 hours you can apply what you learned in Saturday’s race to the race on Sunday?

“I think it’s really good for the rookies because it gives them a chance to learn what they need to do with their cars. It evens up the playing field a little bit the next day. I’m looking forward to it. These kids we work with, they’re fast. We don’t have to worry about them being fast. Our job is to give them experience and, in my case, teach them the mistakes that I’ve already made. So, we’ll go with that same thing. That’s really where our emphasis is with our program. Speed for the drivers is not an issue, which makes it fun.”

What goes into preparing for a doubleheader? Specifically, what goes into turning the racecars around from Saturday’s race to Sunday’s race, and what kind of driver coaching takes place between the two races?

“All of it kind of comes together – you prepare ahead so hopefully you don’t have to do a lot of work between races. You have everything pre-built up, ready to go. Then, if you don’t have any issues, you’re able to put 100 percent of your energy into just making the cars better and the drivers better from the first day, and that’s the goal. As a group, we tend to carry our hauler that way no matter what, week in and week out, supplies-wise, with stuff pre-built up – prepare for the worst and hope for the best. So, I don’t know that anything changes much from the standpoint of the guys and our preparation, our hauler and all that, because that’s how we try to operate all the time, anyway. We just try to be prepared and, honestly, over-prepared. That’s just the philosophy that’s been instilled in me by guys way smarter than me, my dad included. Personnel-wise, we’re definitely going to be heavy on people, making sure we’ve got plenty of people if there is a problem that we can turn stuff, whatever we might have to do. The neat thing about our group is there are a lot of motivated guys with the work-hard, play-hard mentality. It makes it fun.”

Nothing beats experience. How helpful is your dad’s racing experience at Watkins Glen, specifically in regard to telling the drivers what to expect before they even climb into the racecar?

“You can’t put a price on him. Dad took me to The Glen for the first time a few years ago (for the 2018 TA2 race) and we started in turn one. He worked on me – we really didn’t work on the racecar, we worked on the driver – until we got all the way around the racetrack. And by the time all was said and done, we were incredibly fast, and not a bit of it was working on the racecar, it was all working on the driver. He’s got a ton of experience there and he’s been fast in everything he’s ever been in there, and he’s got some very unique ways of looking at the racetrack. Frankly, it makes it even more fun than the place already is. We’re keeping him fresh. We’re pampering him. He wasn’t even allowed in the shop this past week. We have him conditioned because if he can do with our guys like he did with me the first time I went there – like I said, we got through a good portion of the racetrack during the test days and we’ll start up where we left off and keep grinding. He’s going to be tired after the weekend, running from corner to corner. My first year I went there, we qualified on the pole and we had a straightaway lead on the field, a half-second faster than anybody, and we stuck a gearbox. Not the driver’s fault. It actually was a part failure. But the next year there we finished third. We were quite a bit better than that, but we had a little hiccup. So, I’ve had The Glen circled on my calendar – it’s a big one on my mind for us this year.”

Do you or your dad have a favorite or standout memory from competing at Watkins Glen?

“There are a lot of people who will remind me – and I don’t even know if Dad remembers this of the first time he ever ran a Cup car there and was with the Roulo Brothers, which was an ARCA team at the time, and he ran really, really well. He and I are funny, we don’t tend to reminisce and talk about the old days much. We tend to look forward and try to get better – maybe to a detriment, at times. That’s usually why both of our conversations are always about trying to make things better. Maybe we’ll reminisce one day.”

About TeamSLR:

TeamSLR competes fulltime in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli in a multifaceted effort that includes dedicated entries in the TA2 division, customer programs, driver coaching and car construction. Its history dates back to 1985 and covers a wide spectrum of motorsports, including NASCAR, IMSA, SCCA, ARCA and ASA. TeamSLR is a family-owned organization run by Scott Lagasse Sr., and Scott Lagasse Jr., The father-and-son duo have combined to win more than 100 races and seven championships across a variety of series and styles of racecars, from paved ovals to road courses to dirt tracks. For more information, please visit us online at www.TeamSLR.com, on Facebook, on Twitter, on Instagram and on LinkedIn.

THE #47 WEATHERTECH CANADA | GROUPE BELLEMARE TEAM AT THE LEGENDARY FLAMBORO SPEEDWAY

Photo Credit: Matthew Manor CSCG
EventsMotomaster 125 & Quick Wick Firestarter 125 – NASCAR Pinty’s Series
TrackFlamboro Speedway (Millgrove, Ontario) – Oval
Schedule (EDT) /Race Center·   Motomaster 125 – Sunday, September 12: Practice 11:00 am | Qualifying 1:45 pm | Race 4:05 pm.·   Quick Wick 125 – Sunday, September 12:Race 5:45 pm Canada: TSN.ca and on the TSN app | United States: TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold | Live Timingnascar.ca/race-center/
Dates / Television (HAE)·   Motomaster 125 – RDS2 – Saturday, October 16, 2:00 pm | TSN – Sunday, October 10, 12:30 pm·   Quick Wick 125: RDS2 – Friday, October 22, 9:00 pm | TSN – Sunday, October17, 12:30 pm

Trois-Rivieres (Quebec, Canada), September 9, 2021 – Louis-Philippe Dumoulin and the #47 WeatherTech Canada | Groupe Bellemare will be back on track this Sunday, September 12, for a doubleheader (two 125-lap races) at the Flamboro Speedway oval. Last year, he finished seventh and fifth at that track. Currently second in the championship points, Louis-Philippe Dumoulin is looking to regain the lead this year, and we know that the racing will be exciting on the typical short low-banked oval.

“We are happy to go back to this short, fun-to-drive track where we had good results last season. The track has a low banking that makes especially difficult to pass, as it is not really possible to run fast two-wide. Passing for position or to lap someone is always hard work there. Our goal remains the championship and we have had a strong start to the season with one win, three podiums and five top-five finishes in six races. With 240 points, we are second in the championship, eight points behind the leader, and we are aiming for wins at every race between now and the end of the season to close that gap and win the championship,” explained the driver of the #47 WeatherTech Canada | Groupe Bellemare car.

“A tight oval like Flamboro Speedway is very different in terms of driving than a road course like CTMP where we were last weekend. On a road course, the driver can compensate for the car’s behaviour by adjusting his driving, whereas on an oval, the set-up has to be perfect from start to finish. If necessary, it is essential to correct a problem by going through the pits. The other difference is in the intensity. On a small oval, we are almost always changing direction. We are driving “actively” with cars all around us, and have to work the steering wheel, brakes and throttle constantly. The spotter informs us of the track and traffic conditions – so there is no respite except during caution periods,” concludes the determined Louis-Philippe Dumoulin.

Flamboro Speedway – Sixty consecutive years of racing!

Flamboro Speedway was built in 1961 and has offered a full summer schedule of stock car racing every year since, making it at age 60 one of the oldest active stock car tracks in Canada. The original 1/3-mile asphalt oval track has always attracted racers of all levels, from beginner cars to the fastest “Super Modified”, showcasing five racing series at its regular Saturday night events.

Successive owners improved and upgraded the facility over the years, including a new foundation and paving of the racing surface in 1998, and major improvements in 2004, including new lights, paint and scoreboard.

Flamboro Speedway continues to attract spectators with a variety of series and car types in a region that features, along with Flamboro, a total of six short oval tracks that are still in operation: Delaware Speedway (London, Ont.), Grand Bend Speedway (London, Ont.), Peterborough Speedway (Peterborough, Ont.), Sauble Speedway (Nord-ouest de Toronto, Ont.), Sunset Speedway (Barrie, Ont.), Laird Raceway (Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.) and Varney Raceway (Nord-ouest de Toronto, Ont.).

Passion – Performance – Partnerships

2021 RESULTS

EventDateRoadOvalLP Dumoulin
 Start FinishPos.Points
Sunset Speedway sunsetspeedway.ca01-08O311632/79
Grand Prix de Trois-Rivières gp3r.ca15-08R153/119
Circuit ICAR icarexperience.ca28-08R532/160
Canadian Tire Motorsport Park canadiantiremotorsportpark.com04-09R211/207
05-093112/240
Flamboro Speedway flamborospeedway.ca12-09O   
Autodrome Chaudière autodromechaudiere.com29-08O   
Delaware Speedway delawarespeedway.com26-09O   

ABOUT PARTNERS

WeatherTech is committed to designing, engineering and manufacturing the finest products possible for your vehicle, home and your pet. From the industry leading FloorLiner to the 100% non-toxic Pet Feeding System, WeatherTech has dedicated itself to exceed customer expectations of quality, craftsmanship and environmental sustainability for over 30 years. To see the full line of automotive, home and pet products that are guaranteed for life, visit weathertech.ca.

Groupe Bellemare is a 3rd generation family business that has been serving clients since 1959. Today, the company has more than 500 employees and provides them with an innovative work environment facilitating work-family balance and a healthy and safe quality of life. With over a half century of experience and its sustained R&D efforts, the Company offers high-quality products and services in areas as diverse as concrete, abrasives and minerals, dimensional load transportation, and recycling. Groupe Bellemare is also very involved in its industry and attaches great importance to its social and environmental role as a member of the business community. Groupe Bellemare makes a positive contribution to the quality of life of citizens in the communities it serves by supporting numerous social causes and promoting local purchasing through its responsible procurement practices. groupebellemare.com

Dumoulin Competition. Jean-François and Louis-Philippe Dumoulin founded the Dumoulin Competition Race Team in 2009. Working with financial, marketing, logistics and sports management experts, they built up a solid business structure. Dumoulin Competition prepares its on race cars in-house since 2016. Their motto: “Passion – Performance – Partnerships” expresses their will to perform on the track and offer their partners maximum visibility and profitability in return for their commitment. Their vision: To become Canada’s leader in motorsports through track performance, entrepreneurial and human values dumoulincompetition.com

SUMMARY – HIGHLIGHTS IN LOUIS-PHILIPPE DUMOULIN’S CAREER

NASCAR Pinty’s Series

·         Inducted into the Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame (2020) for his outstanding contribution.

·         In 2020, the sanitary situation forced the NASCAR Pinty’s Series to present only 6 races in the “Pinty’s FanCave Challenge”. Louis-Philippe Dumoulin scored 1 win and 3 top-5 finishes.

·         2019: Third in driver and owner championships (2 wins, 4 podium, and eight top-5 finishes from 13 events).

·         2018: Champion (3 victories, 7 podiums, 2 poles, eight top-5 in 13 events). Saw his name added for the second time to the NASCAR Hall of Fame (Charlotte, NC) / Wins“Driver of the Year” and “Best Performing Driver” awards.

·         2017: Fourth in the driver championship (3 podiums, nine top-5 and eleven top-10 finishes from 13 events).

·         2016: Joint fourthin the driver championship (4 podiums, six top-5 and seven top-10 finishes from 12 events).

·         2015: Fourth in the driver championship (2 podiums, six top-5 and nine top-10 finishes from 11 events).

·         2014: Champion (2 victories, 5 podiums and nine top-5 finish from 11 events). Saw his name added to the NASCAR Hall of Fame (Charlotte, NC) / Awarded the “Driver Of the Year”, “Best Performing Driver” and “Gilles-Villeneuve” awards.

·         2013: Fifth in the driver championship (2 victories, 3 podiums, four top-5s, six top-10s and five-time top-3 grid positions from 12 events).

·         2012: Sixth in the driver championship (1 pole, three top-5 and seven top-10 finishes from 12 events).

·         2011: Rookie of the year.

Rallying and Road Racing

·         2015: Participated in FIA World Rallycross Championship round in Canada (Grand Prix of Trois-Rivieres).

·         2012: Second in class in the 12 Hours of Sebring (American Le Mans Series – GT3 Cup). The only Canadian driver on the podium.

·         2004 to today: Front runner in the Grand-Am and Rolex Sports Car series, in Porsche, Ferrari and Daytona Prototype cars – Races in the 12 Hours of Sebring / and the Rolex 24 At DAYTONA events.

·         2002Champion in the Canadian Formula Ford Championship.

·         2001: Awarded the ‘’Gilles-Villeneuve’’ and ‘’Quartz’’ trophies.

·         Records: Holder since 2002 of Formula Ford Series records for most victories (6) and most pole positions (7) in a single season.

WEBSITES / ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

WeatherTech Canadaweathertech.ca/behindtech

Groupe Bellemare: groupebellemare.com

Flamboro Speedway: flamborospeedway.ca

Fondation québécoise du cancer: fqc.qc.ca

Musée Gilles-Villeneuve: museegillesvilleneuve.com

Festidrag développement: festidrag.com

Série Mini Sportsman Québec: seriesportsman.ca/mini-sportsman-calendrier

Dumoulin Compétition: dumoulincompetition.com

Série NASCAR Pinty’s: nascar.ca

Facebook: facebook.com/dumoulincompetition

Twitter: @DumoulinDC / @DumoulinLP / @jf_dumoulin

Youtube: youtube.com/user/dumoulincompetition

Instagram: @dumoulincompetition

KENNINGTON BACK ON THE OVALS IN CASTROL EDGE DODGE

September 9, 2021. Coming up this weekend for DJ Kennington and the #17 Castrol Edge Dodge team: they return to the ovals for rounds seven and eight of the 2021 NASCAR Pinty’s Series. Kennington will race in twin 125-lap races Sunday, September 12th at Flamboro Speedway near Hamilton, Ontario.

It’s oval tracks the rest of the way in the Pinty’s Series schedule and Kennington knows how to get to the front on tight racetracks like Flamboro. Kennington’s strengths are consistent lap times and staying away from trouble, both of which are keys to success at Flamboro.

Here’s what you need to know.

Weekend Race Event Previews:
September 12th
Motomaster 125
Race seven of 11 in 2021
This is the 3rd NASCAR Pinty’s Series race at Flamboro

September 12th
QwickWick 125
Race eight of 11 in 2021
This will be the 4th NASCAR Pinty’s Series races at Flamboro

The Track:
1/3-mile paved oval

Best finish: 4th in 2020

Career Victories: 21

Most Recent Win: Jukasa Motor Speedway 2020

DJ Quote: “We finished top-five in both races at Flamboro last year and we expect the Castrol Edge Dodge to be right there again. I hadn’t raced at Flamboro until last year, but it’s a fun, challenging track that’s pretty much one groove and it makes a great show for the fans.”.

TV & Live Streaming
The races will be streamed live on TSN.ca and the TSN app in Canada and through Trackpass on NBC Sports Gold in the US. The Motomaster 125 begins at 4PM and the QwickWick 125 at approximately 5:45 PM ET.

The Motomaster 125 will be broadcast on TSN Sunday October 10th at 12:30PM and on RDS2 on Saturday October 16th at 2PM. The QwickWick 125 will be broadcast on TSN Sunday October 17th at 12:30PM and on RDS2 Friday October 22nd at 9PM.

Race fans can follow DJ Kennington and the #17 Castrol Edge Dodge team on their official social media platforms:

Twitter www.twitter.com/@djkracing
Instagram www.instagram.com/djkracing
Website www.djkracing.ca
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/DJKenningtonRacing/

8 Reasons To Spend A Weekend In Nature

If you’re tired of the bustling city, a weekend in nature can become a great idea. Firstly, you will be able to see new beautiful places, and secondly, you will receive benefits for your health.

So, get in your car (or if you do not have it, you can rent it. If you ask Where to rent a Land Rover near me?, as Range Rover Sport is an ideal choice for a weekend outside the city, you can apply to RealCar New York), and go exploring unfamiliar territory with family or friends. Here’re the top 8 reasons why you should definitely add such activity to your life.

Anxiety Reduction

Numerous studies have shown that spending time outdoors has a very positive effect on health – it promotes peace of mind and reduces stress levels. Fresh air and sounds of nature such as birdsong and foliage noise act as the best antidepressants and stress relievers. Being in nature helps to lower cortisol levels, not only while you are there, but also over the next few days. Breathing in the fresh air helps you get in touch with your thoughts and emotions and makes you feel calmer and happier.

Stimulation Of Creative Processes

No matter what type of outdoor rest you choose (it can be both active recreation and sports, or a lazy weekend), you will see how your desire to work and create will increase and you will be happier to start a new work week. Do not forget to take beautiful pictures to remember from your vacation.

Natural Vitamins

In cold seasons, many are deficient in vitamin D, which is also called the solar vitamin. So, outdoor weekends are a great choice to help your body produce this important vitamin. Also, clean air actively saturates the body with oxygen, improves metabolism, and restores efficiency. An additional bonus will be improved vision since you will spend less time with your gadgets.

Workout

What kind of life do you lead on weekdays? If you do not exercise much, then a weekend outside the city will help you improve your health and burn excess calories. Walking is very beneficial – it will help increase your heart rate and improve blood circulation in the body.

Even if you are wondering can you exercise with a pacemaker, remember that walking and moderate hiking are safe activities for people with pacemakers.

If you have a dog, then you can run around with it a lot – both you and your pet will get a charge of positive emotions and a good mood.

Improved Brain Abilities

Time in nature improves our mental abilities and helps us focus. It can be very difficult for city dwellers to concentrate because every day they receive a huge amount of various city noise and information. This often leads to an irritable mood and excessive temper. Try to regularly surround yourself with nature and you will see how your mental and physical health will change for the better.

Improved Memory

Recent studies have also shown that people who spend a lot of time outdoors, and especially those who walk a lot, have a better memory than those who live in metropolitan areas who very rarely leave the city. This is a great reason to get out of town or city and enjoy nature at least occasionally.

You Can Learn Something New

It’s never too late to have a new hobby. For example, maybe you have always been interested in photography, but you have not found inspiration in your weekdays. A weekend in nature can be a great start for such an activity. You don’t have to buy professional equipment. Try to start with photos using your smartphone. In the future, you will be able to fill your family albums with a lot of beautiful pictures.

Rethinking Life And Internal Attitudes

When we lie on the grass and listen to the singing of birds and the rustle of leaves, we involuntarily think about our life, our relationship with other people, goals, and our inner feelings. In such an environment, we can think and decide what we did wrong or what actions need to be reviewed.

Kyle Busch Picks Up Brand New Lifetime Sponsorship After Not-Very-Accidental Swearing Snafu

(NOTE: The following story is a work of satire…I think.)

WALLA WALLA, WASHINGTON: Maybe it pays to say bad words on TV?

While most every other human being in the known universe might not feel so great after being fined for $50,000 worth of expletive-laden outburst (with an added bonus of doing so on live TV in front of God, Sponsors, and Everyone), oh, and driving like a blind autocross racer over orange cones. Along with blowing through a crowd of people like he sees the world as a bowling alley, and every other human out there is a pin to knock over. Kyle Busch is no such human with these sorts of sensitivities, as he will instead be swearing his way to the bank. Thanks to a new lifetime sponsor in the form of The Society of American Cheeses and Bratwursts and Colon and Rectal Surgeons in Walla Walla, Washington.

Dr. Colon Exhaust, President of that society, elaborated further.

“The SACBCRS is a prestigious institution that has been in existence since 1871. However, since we are not one of those fancy medical societies, you know, like those attention hogs that run all of those psychiatry and psychology outfits and they’re a bunch of fakes anyway. Yeah, Jim, I’m talking to you, that’s the last time we play with a bunch of cheaters at our annual full-contact Cornhole tournament. Anyway, because our line of work is less glamorous than most of those other societies, we get a startling lack of attention in the press.”

Dr. Exhaust continued on.

“I accidentally stumbled across the first half or so of the Darlington race last weekend and saw this colorful yellow race car with what appeared to be brightly colored rabbit droppings painted on both sides. We here at The Society of American Cheeses and Bratwursts and Colon and Rectal Surgeons know poop-shaped objects when we see them. I was of course horrified to discover later on that the car was sponsored by M&M’s. Anyway, that car crashed, the driver parked his car, and was interviewed afterward.”

Dr. Exhaust spoke a bit more.

“I was initially horrified to hear that driver, Kyle Busch, speak so derogatorily towards his teammates and use so many ‘S-words’ on live TV. I mean, I’m in that line of work, and none of us in this business use that language even in private, as proctologists, well, we are simply far too educated and intelligent for it to ever occur to us to ever say s*** like that.”

“I was also shocked to see him driving so dangerously into the pit area, but since most of us here at the office actually drive worse than two-time championship-winning Kyle Busch in a rage. I’ve crashed three Mercedes SUV’s just this year. This isn’t an area where neither anyone I know personally or myself can pass judgment. I drive so badly, the only checkered flag that I will ever have waving at me is if I crash at full speed into a checkered flag factory.”

“But after the horror of the initial shock wore off, a mental light bulb went off, no, make that an entire city of light bulbs: Kyle Busch, with his beautiful, innate ability to speak of scatological byproducts like he so colorfully does on live TV, why he would be the absolute best spokesperson to give our almost unknown Society of American Cheeses and Bratwurst and Colon and Rectal Surgeons the public voice we need to get our name out there. Look, we’ve literally thrown every form of, um, excrement at the wall in the form of PR events and nothing so far is sticking. Just look at him! He’s perfectly okay with saying ‘s***’ on live TV, no matter who might be watching! THIS IS THE MAN WE NEED!”

“So to that end, heh, that was a pun there, we here at The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons have offered Kyle Busch a lifetime sponsorship in the hopes that he will swear more often during post-race interviews. Because not only will we here at the SACBCRS be giving Mr. Busch a generous salary to be our spokesperson, it will be an explosive relief for him to learn that we will actually be pushing him to say more S-words on live TV. In addition to him receiving lifetime rectal exams in any of our sponsored facilities, we will also be paying whatever fines he incurs during live TV spots, which means he can engage in verbal diarrhea however and wherever he wants, just as long as colorfully adds the ‘S-word’ to every sentence. With this offer to Mr. Busch, we’re hoping to land our organization into the public perception end-zone!”

No word as of yet has been received concerning whether or not Kyle Busch has accepted the offer.