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SELLERS SWEEPS SATURDAY LATE MODEL STOCK CAR TWINBILL AT SOUTH BOSTON SPEEDWAY

Peyton Sellers (center) receives the winner’s trophy in Victory Lane from Italian Delight Family Restaurant owner Andrea Ruotolo (left) and South Boston Speedway General Manager Cathy Rice (right) following Sellers’ sweep of the twin 75-lap NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Late Model Stock Car Division races Saturday night at South Boston Speedway. The pair of wins gives Sellers three wins in a row and a total of eight wins this season at South Boston Speedway. Photo Courtesy Joe Chandler/South Boston Speedway

By Joe Chandler
Director, Public Relations
South Boston Speedway

South Boston, Va. (Aug. 21, 2012)… Peyton Sellers swept the pair of 75-lap NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Late Model Stock Car Division races that headlined Saturday night’s Italian Delight Family Restaurant Night at the Races presented by Southside Disposal event at South Boston Speedway, virtually locking up his sixth career South Boston Speedway championship in the process.

“Honestly, anybody could have driven this car tonight,” Sellers remarked after scoring his third win in a row and his eighth win this season at South Boston Speedway. “It was on rails. The first race the car was a handful. It was loose, it was sideways, but everybody else was too. To come back and make some adjustments to the car and be so good at the end of the second race is hats off to H.C. (his brother and crew chief H.C. Sellers) and all of the guys on my team.”

The Ringgold, Virginia resident started third in the opening 75-lap race and muscled his way past leader Landon Pembelton of Amelia, Virginia on the 27th circuit to take the lead. Once in front Sellers stayed in command the rest of the way, edging runner-up Mike Looney of Catawba, Virginia by 1.185 seconds.
Pole winner Carter Langley of Zebulon, North Carolina finished third with Jacob Borst of Elon, North Carolina and Trey Crews of Halifax, Virginia rounding out the top five finishers in the 22-car field.

Despite having to start the second race at midfield in 11th position as a result of having won two races in a row Sellers was able to get to the front of the field just as quickly as he did in the first race.

Deftly picking up positions, Sellers worked his way around Crews on the 20th lap to take the lead. As was the case in the opener, once he got in front Sellers never relinquished the lead.

Borst took the runner-up spot in the nightcap with Crews finishing third. Pembelton finished fourth and former Halifax County, Virginia resident Chris Throckmorton of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina rounded out the top five finishers in the 20-car starting field.

The second race saw the lead change hands twice among three drivers with Sellers leading the final 56 laps. Three caution periods slowed the action.

Jason Myers Wins 50-Lap Limited Sportsman Race, Takes Third Straight Win
Jason Myers of Hurt, Virginia had not won a Limited Sportsman Division race until he swept a twin-race event at South Boston Speedway on August 7. Saturday night, he made it three wins in a row.

Myers took the win the hard way, electing to start at the rear of the 13-car field in an attempt to collect extra points toward the track’s Limited Sportsman Division title and driving to the front to score his third career victory.

“I knew we had a good car,” Myers remarked. “I also knew it was going to be tough. As you come up through the field the cars get harder and harder to pass. Luckily there was a caution that bunched us back up and I was able to pick off a few cars quickly. I got an opportunity when I needed it.”

Myers said the three wins in a row is a family milestone, and one he hopes to break.

“My dad (former South Boston Speedway Limited Sportsman Division champion Billy Myers of Hurt, Virginia) told me before I came to the track the most races he has won consecutively is three in a row,” Myers said. “I at least have tied him, now I want to try to beat him.”

He took the lead from Daniel Crews of Long Island, Virginia with 11 laps to go and held on to edge Crews by .599-second for the win. Daniel Moss of Danville, Virginia finished third, Drew Dawson of Nathalie, Virginia took fourth place and J.D. Eversole of North Chesterfield, Virginia finished fifth.

The race was a highly competitive one, with the lead changing hands three times among four drivers.
The race was slowed by two caution periods.

Scott Phillips, Nathan Crews Split Budweiser Pure Stock Division Twinbill
Scott Phillips of Halifax, Virginia broke a lengthy win drought Saturday night, starting on the pole and scoring a flag-to-flag win in the first of Saturday night’s pair of 15-lap Budweiser Pure Stock Division races.

Phillips finished .394-second ahead of Justin Dawson of Nathalie, Virginia. Division points leader Nathan Crews of Long Island, Virginia finished third with Johnny Layne of Halifax, Virginia and Bruce Mayo of Halifax, Virginia rounding out the top five finishers.

Crews started third in the second race, grabbed the lead on the opening lap, and scored a flag-to-flag win. The win was Crews’ 10th win in 12 starts at South Boston Speedway this season.

Mayo took the runner-up spot 2.729 seconds behind Crews in the caution-free race. Layne finished third, Dawson finished fourth and Phillips completed the top five finishers.

Josh Dawson Scores Seventh Win Of The Season In The Budweiser Hornets Division
Josh Dawson started at the rear of the field, sped past pole starter Jason DeCarlo of Chase City, Virginia to take the lead with two laps to go and held on to win Saturday night’s 15-lap Budweiser Hornets Division race.

The win was the seventh victory for Dawson in his nine starts at South Boston Speedway this season.
DeCarlo hung on to take the runner-up spot. Former division champion Kevin Currin of Chase City, Virginia finished third, Steven Layne of Nathalie, Virginia finished fourth and Kendall Milam of Keeling, Virginia rounded out the top five finishers in the caution-free race.

Next Race At South Boston Speedway

South Boston Speedway will wrap up its regular-season schedule of NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series points events on Saturday night, September 4, with Danville Toyota Championship Night presented by Ad Nerds Media.

The track’s four division champions will be crowned during the event.

A 100-lap race for the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Late Model Stock Car Division competitors will headline the night’s five-race program. Also slated are a 50-lap Limited Sportsman Division race, a 30-lap race for the Budweiser Pure Stock Division and a 15-lap race for the Budweiser Hornets Division.

In addition to races for the track’s four regular racing divisions the regional touring Southern Ground Pounders Vintage Racing Club will make its second visit of the season to “America’s Hometown Track.” The Modified and Sportsman cars of the Southern Ground Pounders Vintage Racing Club will be featured in a 25-lap race.

Registration and pit gates will open at 2 p.m. Practice will begin at 3:45 p.m. and grandstand gates will open at 5:30 p.m. Qualifying begins at 6 p.m. and the first race of the night will get the green flag at 7 p.m.

Advance adult general admission tickets for the Danville Toyota Championship Night presented by Ad Nerds Media event are priced at $10 each and may be purchased online on South Boston Speedway’s website, www.southbostonspeedway.com, through Friday night, September 3. Adult general admission tickets online and at the gate on race day are priced at $15 each. Kids ages 12 and under will be admitted free when accompanied by a paying adult.

For the latest news and information about the speedway and its events fans and competitors are urged to visit the South Boston Speedway website and the speedway’s social media channels.

CHEVY NTT INDYCAR SERIES – WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY RACEWAY: JOSEF NEWGARDEN PUTS CHEVY IN VICTORY LANE IN BOWTIE PODIUM SWEEP

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
BOMMARITO AUTOMOTIVE GROUP 500
WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY RACEWAY, MADISON, ILLINOIS
TEAM CHEVY – POST RACE RECAP
AUGUST 21, 2021

JOSEF NEWGARDEN WINS AT WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY RACEWAY FOR THIRD TIME
CHEVROLET DRIVERS SCORE TOP-FIVE FINISHING POSTIONS AND SIX OF TOP-EIGHT

  • Chevrolet sweeps podium under the lights at World Wide Technology Raceway
  • Chevrolet drivers capture top-five finishing positions and six of the top-eight
  • With runner-up finish, Pato O’Ward takes a 10 point lead in the driver standings with three races remaining in the season
  • Three Chevrolet powered organizations represented in top-five finishers

MADISON, ILL (AUGUST 21, 2021) – Josef Newgarden came to World Wide Technology Raceway with his focus set squarely on doing everything he could to continue his march to secure his third NTT INDYCAR Series title.

The two-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion took his third place starting position, avoided near disaster in the race that was slowed by caution six times for a total of 49 lap and drove to Victory Lane for the second time this season and the third time at the 1.25-mile egg-shaped oval in Madison, Illinois, just east of St. Louis.

It was the 20th career win for Newgarden and the sixth win for Chevrolet in 2021 with 13 races in the books. Newgarden now sits third in the point standings, just 22 points behind the leader.

Pato O’Ward finished second after starting fifth. He was credited for leading once for one lap and as his championship rivals were caught up in on-track incidents impacting their finishing positions, the young Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet driver executed a well-planned race, and is now is the leader in the driver standings with a 10 point advantage going into the final three races.

Pole winner Will Power brought his No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske Chevrolet to the checkered flag in third place to make it a Chevy sweep of the podium. Power led once for one lap and continued on the momentum he built with a strong win at the Road Course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Scott McLaughlin continues his remarkable rookie season with a fourth-place finish in the No. 3 Dex Imagining Team Penske Chevrolet. Rounding out the all-Chevy top-five was four-time Series’ champion Sebastien Bourdais driving the No. 14 Rokit AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet.

Former champion and Indy 500 winner Simon Pagenaud rebounded from an early race incident to finish eighth in the No. 22 Menards Team Penske Chevrolet.

TOP CHEVROLET UNOFFICIAL FINISHING POSITIONS
1st JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 SONSIO TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET
2nd PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET
3rd WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET
4th SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 DEX IMAGING TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET
5TH SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 14 ROKIT AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET
8TH SIMON PAGENAUD, NO. 22 MENARDS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET
11th CONOR DALY, NO. 59 GALLAGHER CARLIN CHEVROLET
12th DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE INSULATORS AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET
16th FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 VUSE ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET
21st RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX/AUTOGEEK CHEVROLET
22nd ED CARPENTER, NO. 20 U.S. AIR FORCE CHEVROLET

Rosenqvist retired from the race due to a mechanical issue. VeeKay and Carpenter were caught in on-tract incidents and sustained too much damage to continue in the race. A total of nine of the 24 starters were in the paddock when the checkered flag flew as a result of several multi-car incidents.

Next on the schedule is the Portland Grand Prix, Portland International Raceway (Oregon) on September 12, 2021.

DRIVER QUOTES:

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 SONSIO TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – RACE WINNER
ON A WILD NIGHT THAT SAW SO MANY CHAMPIONSHIP CONTENDERS HAVE SOME MISFORTUNE, THIS WAS THE ULTIMATE ELIXIR, RIGHT, TO GET YOU RIGHT BACK IN THE TITLE HUNT?
“Yeah, any win is big. It’s been disappointing on a couple of these last events because I felt like we’ve had winning cars. Obviously, Nashville wasn’t supporting for us. It was tough to have a not-so-good-race in your hometown. And the GP wasn’t great. We came here with just an amazing car. Scott McLaughlin tested for us. He made a whole new package for us. I’m real thankful for my team and teammates and just happy to be falling back into this chase with Team Chevy and having Sonsio on the car tonight was good.

“Team Penske is good here. I’m so proud of this team! Team Chevy did awesome as you can tell! Great Mileage. Great Performance. This is so good.”

LET’S GO BACK TO THE BEGINNING WHERE THERE WAS SOME CONTACT WITH SIMON PAGENAUD. AT THAT POINT, HOW CONCERNED WERE YOU ABOUT THE RACE CAR?
“I was real concerned that we were going to have a tire going down. I knew his front wing had touched my left rear. I wasn’t sure how bad it was. I picked up a vibration and I think it ended up just being a bent rim. So, we got really lucky it didn’t get worse, but I knew our car was good. I was like if we can make it through this stint, and not compromise our positioning, then we’re going to be just fine.”

GOING TO THE FINAL STINT, HOW CONFIDENT WERE YOU THAT YOU HAD THE CAR TO BEAT AND THAT YOU WOULD BE ABLE TO KEEP PATO O’WARD AND THE REST OF THE FIELD AT BAY?
“I felt good about it. I was real confident we had the car if nothing silly happened. So, at that point, I was feeling good about things.”

PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET – FINISHED 2ND
LATE IN THE RACE WITH NEWGARDEN ON THE RESTART, DID YOU KNOW HEY, I’M THE POINTS LEADER? DID IT GO INTO YOUR MINDSET AT ALL?
“I knew we were having a good points day. And I just had to keep my nose clean the whole race. Obviously, it would have been great to win. I think I had the car to win. Man, these Penske guys were really, really tough. It was really tough to get by them. I think we maximized today. I think we truly did. So, I’m proud of the Arrow McLaren SP No. 5 crew.”

WE HEAD TO THE WEST COAST FOR THE LAST THREE RACES. YOU ARE THE POINTS LEADER IN THE NTT INDYCAR SERIES
‘Yeah, there are still three races to go. But this is definitely the right way we want to go. So, we need to continue pushing.”

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – FINISHED 3RD
SOMETIMES YOU CAN FINISH 3RD AND SAY I HAD A LITTLE BIT LEFT IN ME AND OTHER TIMES YOU CAN SAY I GOT THE MOST OUT OF IT. WHICH WAY DID THIS ONE GO?
“I was really lucky to finish third. I really didn’t have the car, honestly. I was definitely not as quick as the guys in front.”

HOW DRAINING IS A TRACK LIKE THIS? IT IS HOT OUT HERE
“It wasn’t bad until the end there and we were pushing really hard. Not terrible. Just a little tired like mentally tired in a long race like that. I got a bit tired at the end there, like mentally tired. I was physically fine.”

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 DEX IMAGINING TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FIINISHED 4TH: “I feel like I jumped in a sand pit. I have sand up and down my back and its disgusting. BUT, it was an awesome day for us with the Dex Imaging Chevy. I had a decent car. I fell back at the start so I probably didn’t pick the right hole, I took it a little safe I suppose, but then on the third or fourth or 10th restart, whatever we had, they were crazy starts, but I really got into it, and got comfortable. We got ourselves in a nice position there. We were able to get a good finish.
“We tested here a while back, and my feedback translated to good performance gain for all the guys and I am really proud of that. I’m learning the car and getting more comfortable in it and learning to trust the car and myself. Really proud of the Dex Imaging Chevrolet. We had great fuel mileage and I can’t wait for what’s ahead.”

SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 14 ROKIT AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET – FINISHED 5TH
YOU LOOK LIKE YOU ARE COMPLETELY WORN OUT BY THAT RUN. THAT WAS A HECK OF A NIGHT. TAKE US THROUGH YOUR TOP 5 FINISH
“Honestly, I’m still not quite sure how we didn’t cycle in the lead when the yellow came out and we basically stopped one less time than everybody else, I think. And we stopped after the yellow. But I don’t know. I’ll have to look at it. But I didn’t quite understand at the time and I really thought shit, we’re actually going to be in the lead! But anyway. I didn’t have the fastest car but the car was still pretty solid. I was really trying to bring it to the end because I had that feeling like after the start and looking at all the chaos and the aggressivity and things, one yellow after another, finishing was actually going to be some valuable points. So, yeah I guess we were well inspired this time because there was definitely a lot of attrition and a top-5 finish with the ROKiT No. 14 Chevrolet is definitely a good result for us.”

ON THE STRATEGY AND PIT STOPS
“It was a total team effort for sure. Good strategy, good pit stops, and didn’t make any mistakes on track or in the pits. Actually, if that yellow doesn’t come out, I’m quite sure how it works out. But we’re going to do one less than some of the guys, so for sure. Anyways, we’ll take a top-5; and not really being able to pass anyone because there really wasn’t any passing, is a heck of a result.”

POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
THE MODERATOR: We have joined by the third-place finisher, Will Power. Power’s fourth podium of the season, 85th now of his career. That seems like a lot. Pato O’Ward, fifth podium of the season as he now takes over the overall points championship. He’s up 10 over Alex Palou with just three races remaining in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES season.
Will, tell us about your night.

WILL POWER: Yeah, actually I was really happy to finish third. Definitely didn’t have the car to challenge for the win. Yeah, struggled a little bit to get the car in a window.
Just did a really clean race, clean pit stops, no mistakes. Yeah, stoked to be third.
THE MODERATOR: Clean certainly because there’s a lot of attrition early on. Just staying clean was key. There was one point in the race, maybe the third stint, you lost some ground. Difficult to tell exactly what happened.

WILL POWER: That was when everyone was saving fuel. You literally have to lift at the start/finish line. If you wanted to burn more fuel to pass someone, which a couple guys did to me, you could. I lost track position doing that. I could have burnt more fuel. But I was playing the long game. I wanted to get that number and made sure we went a couple laps longer.
Ultimately I should have kept the track position. Nothing much would have changed to be honest. The guys that I was fighting, most of them just fell out, so it didn’t matter. I don’t think I was going to beat Newgarden or Pato.

THE MODERATOR: Pato, congratulations. Another podium. Perhaps more importantly you now take over the points championship. How big is this for you?
PATO O’WARD: It’s a very big points day for us. To be honest, man, it’s so tight. There’s still three races to go, 150 points on the table. Yeah, I mean, this means we’re going on the right path. We came off a solid run in Indy road course, now we have a podium with second. It would be great to rack up a couple more, a few more podiums.
Yeah, man, we’re just going to push until the checkered flag waves in Long Beach and see where we stand.

THE MODERATOR: Speaking of pushing, were you content with the podium? Were you thinking championship maybe versus the win?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, man, I was happy. In a perfect world, it’s not ideal that Josef beat us. But, man, the guy had everything to win it. He had so much pace. I honestly didn’t have anything to challenge him.
The only way I could have maybe challenged him was if we got stuck behind lapped cars. But they were all very respectful, which is completely fine. Yeah, that’s a change (smiling).
Yeah, I couldn’t really get close enough. I didn’t want to throw away a second.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up for questions.

Q. What did you think of the racing tonight? Scott Dixon said it was erratic, race control needs to look at it. What did you two think?
PATO O’WARD: In the beginning of the race, I mean, I was alongside — I will remain not saying their name, but I was alongside…

Q. Say it.
PATO O’WARD: No. I think you guys know who. I was alongside him. But people know who they can race dirty or not. I had a lot to lose today, and they know that. Yeah, they’re just taking advantage of what position they’re in in terms of the championship because it’s almost finishing.
Other than that, after the first — honestly, I wasn’t even keeping track when it was, but after the first hundred laps, my race calmed down a lot actually. But the start was pretty hectic.
I don’t know what you think, Will.
WILL POWER: It was me, wasn’t it (laughter)? That was the person. No, just kidding.
Actually, it was all behind me. I didn’t have any issues with anyone. I didn’t see anything. Everyone was saying after the race it was a very crazy race. For me, it was a pretty straightforward, no issues with anyone. Yeah, I didn’t fight Herta very hard at the beginning because it’s such a long race.
Yeah, it didn’t matter in the end, so… I just wanted to finish this race. I wasn’t that good, so just wanted to get through it, no mistakes. Yeah, I’ll be interested to watch to see what went on.

Q. Pato, the restart where VeeKay and Dixon and Palou were in their incident, TV said they thought you had backed out a little bit, you were racing safe. At any point were you racing safe?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, I was fully alongside Rossi. I guess he doesn’t look in his left mirror here. He just turned in, so I had to slam on the brakes so I didn’t crash. Marcus had to, as well, because we were going three-wide into there.
I’m assuming that is what caused the checkup behind for sure. For me it was even sudden and pretty aggressive, yes.

Q. (No microphone.)
PATO O’WARD: I mean, I was trying to make positions when I could. I mean, it’s so important. It’s such a long race. Sometimes it’s not really so good to be risking so much in the beginning just because, I mean, so many things can fall.
Yeah, I was trying to make positions when I could. I mean, I had a run. It wasn’t like I was going to brake and let Hunter-Reay and Sato and everyone behind by, I had to pull out. I did but I got blocked.
WILL POWER: Sounded like it was Rossi (smiling). Just kidding.

Q. There seemed to be questions, the first couple of restarts, even the start, that the starts were way too slow. They were coming up in first gear, stacking everybody up. How did you feel about that?
WILL POWER: I actually did the start. I started in first gear. They told me first gear. Go at this point. I did exactly what they said. After that it was Colton. Let’s see, you know more.
PATO O’WARD: I can’t remember who it was. It wasn’t Will because I think you were in the first and second restart. First restart, yeah. I think it was either the third or fourth restart.
The problem was, the guys were starting to accelerate. Everybody is like, Okay, we’re going. They would stop and then go. That’s what makes the checkup so much. I don’t know why it’s so hard to comprehend. Man, just stay in one throttle, then go. It’s so simple.
But when guys just go, then stop, everybody behind us, I mean, at least with me, if you’re fourth or fifth in the line, you see the first jump a little bit, let’s go. If not, you just get eaten. They stop, you stop, you’re relying on the guys behind to stop, it just creates chaos.

Q. Early in the race we saw the high line getting used, especially in three. Did it marble up?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, just all the marbles at the end of the race. Really, I didn’t use the second groove. I had big wiggles when I tried so I stopped.
WILL POWER: Yeah, I think it would be awesome if it got rubbered in. You would see one of the best races you’ve ever seen. It would be like Iowa. Yeah, I don’t know how they do that.
I was speaking to the guys that run the track. Do you grind up there? Do you do something that adds a lot of grip? That’s what needs to be done. It just makes the racing so much better, so much better when you got a second groove to go to, especially on the outside.
Yeah, you’ve literally got 10 laps maybe beginning of the race to do that, then it’s gone.

Q. Now that the last oval is out of the way, you have a couple weeks off before the three-week stretch to finish out the season. How do your respective teams prepare for three weeks out west?
WILL POWER: Yeah, we tested out there for our team. I know those guys tested, as well. Yeah, there’s not much you can do now. We’ll do some sim work. Pretty quick weekends, too. I think they’re shorter weekends. Not much practice.
It will be an interesting three races, as tight as the championship is. It always is this way. I’ve never seen someone wrap it up in all my 15 years in INDYCAR, no one’s wrapped it up the race before the last race. It never happened. Looks like the same here.
PATO O’WARD: Which was the question again?
Q. How does your team prepare?
PATO O’WARD: We prepare like we have been preparing the whole year, I guess. Now championship is more into the mindset of just really be aware of who we’re racing and when. But, yeah, I mean, to make your life easier, you score more points than the guys you’re fighting. It’s not really as easy as it sounds (smiling).

Q. Last week you were pretty frustrated at your race at Indy. Is there any frustration at not getting the top step tonight? Are you happy given what’s going on with the championship right now?
PATO O’WARD: I was happy. We did a really good race. I think I did a really smart — I think I maximized every little bit I could out of our car. But Josef was just really quick. The Penskes in general were just really, really quick.
So, yeah, I mean, I think for us it was a really good day.

Q. Was it difficult to balance the level of aggression towards the end knowing you wanted to get Josef?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, I tried to catch him. I could get within I think 3 or 4/10ths. That’s as close as I could. If not, I was risking too much of getting some takeoff understeering into the marbles. Like I said, I needed him to have his wings messed up with a car in front for me to be able to get more of a run.
When one car has clean air and the one behind doesn’t, the pace is very similar, it’s pretty much impossible to get by them.

Q. Will, with four Penske cars in the top eight tonight, what has changed at Penske?
WILL POWER: Well, nothing really. I mean, like I said at Indy, it wasn’t due to lack of trying or hard work. Obviously there’s a bit of bad luck in there. Yeah, nothing’s changed. I think we’re just kind of seeing our true potential right now, yeah.
When you look at Newgarden’s pace all year, it really is not a lack of performance. It’s just a lack of just circumstance. Yeah, I mean, I expect us to be competitive for the next three races.

Q. Pato, given the intense ups and downs of the championship fight, how have you balanced that mentally with the high stakes of this year’s close competition?
PATO O’WARD: I mean, you try not to think about it too much because there’s so much racing. Whenever it’s so competitive like this series in INDYCAR, just a lot can shift in one race, as we saw today.
You just always try to maximize every session you’re in, whether it’s practice, qualifying, race. Obviously the race counts way more than others. Yeah, I mean, you kind of just have to weigh it out and understand who you’re racing against.
Too bad this guy beat us today so he’s closer in the championship to me. He did a great job.

THE MODERATOR: Obviously joined now by Josef Newgarden, for the third time a winner here, second win of the season, 20th now of his career. We talked earlier about the championship. Josef now 22 points out of first place.
Congratulations. It’s a whole new ballgame now for the last three races of the season, isn’t it?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I think so. It definitely helps a lot. I was surprised when I saw the early wreck. Will and me were talking about it. Yeah, everyone was good, which is great. But it’s about time we got something to come our way a little bit. That’s what it felt like.

Yeah, it does help a lot. It helped a lot today. A win helps a lot. The team did a great job. Will was super quick this weekend. I thought Scott McLaughlin did a great job for us. He came and tested here. He’s a rookie that never has driven on ovals before this year. He helped develop a lot of the things I ran on the car here.

Everybody did a great job of pitching in this weekend. We had great cars. The circumstances have played favorably into helping us get back into this race, which is what we’ve been working towards. I feel really confident about where we’re going.

THE MODERATOR: The big announcement at Iowa Speedway this week where you have won three times. These types of tracks seem to be right in your wheelhouse? How are you so comfortable at tracks like this?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’ve always liked short ovals. I think it’s some of the most fun racing out there. It’s fun to drive these type of cars on these type of tracks. It’s hard competing against Pato and Will at these type of tracks, too. I mean, I’m pretty sure whether it’s Iowa or here, these are the guys I’m racing. It’s not a given. They’re going to be very strong next year, too.
I’m excited to see it back on the schedule. Past success doesn’t necessarily mean future success. We got to stay vigilant. Yeah, I love the style of racing. I would put a lot more short ovals on the calendar if we could. I’d love to go back to Milwaukee, if we can figure that out. Iowa I think is a big favorite for everybody. To have a doubleheader is pretty cool.
I hate when we have these dinky little champaign bottles. This is awesome. Everywhere we should have big bottles like this. I know the boss, so I’ll put in a good word.

THE MODERATOR: We will let Pato and Will go and continue with questions for Josef.

Q. You had a bit of a collision with Simon. What happened on the backstretch?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I knew we touched, his right front wing to my left rear wheel. I knew that. I was just concerned after it, I didn’t know if I had a tire going down or not immediately. I think it was just a bent rim. Fortunately that didn’t turn into something more significant somehow. I just had a vibration after the contact.
Yeah, we obviously had some sort of miscommunication. For me I thought he was making a move, I swung back out wide, went in pretty deep. It didn’t look like he got into the corner deep enough on me. I started to kind of come down so I wasn’t in the marbles. Looked like we just touched from where he was still at getting into the corner.
I would say a bit of a miscommunication. We don’t normally get together very often. It’s been a long time since I’ve touched with a teammate. It happens. Fortunately it wasn’t more significant. I hate to see that it broke his front wing. I came out better of that mix for sure. It only damaged my rim, was able to continue. It obviously ruined his race. I don’t like seeing that. Unfortunately it happened.

Q. From the manufacturer’s standpoint, Chevy was first through fifth. How is that for Chevy as a manufacturer?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Stellar. I think Chevy has been doing a great job for us. Real proud to represent them as always. Had everything I needed tonight as far as fuel, power, reliability. Couldn’t ask for more.

Q. With how your season really started with just a string of bad luck, now two race wins, how big of a morale boost is this for you and the team?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Any win is positive. Everyone is going to be really happy about that. Yeah, I’m pumped for the crew. I felt like we’ve been very competitive all the way through this summer, to be quite honest.
I don’t know that we needed a big jolt of confidence. We needed definitely some more consistency. Last weekend hurt us. It was a small mistake that kind of derailed the weekend with not getting qualifying right. Mostly that was on me. Just not setting my gap correctly. A small little mistakes like that can affect you from winning the race or finishing eighth.
I think when I look at our overall performance, our capability, do we have the capability to come to most tracks or every track and win the race? Yeah, I do. As far as a confidence standpoint, it’s been really strong. But a win, to seal that off, obviously it cements things. I think that’s always positive. Whenever we can get ’em, we’ll take ’em.
We’re going to need some more. This is kind of the situation we’ve been in. Road America didn’t help us, a couple other races that didn’t help us this year. We’re not where we want to be points-wise. But we’re clawing back. We said we would and we are.

Q. The end of the race, how important was it you did not catch Tony Kanaan?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don’t know that it was critical. If I had a preference, I probably would like to not get there. So, yeah, it’s a game. I just turned into a time game at the end, how you want to manage gaps, how fast you really want to go. It’s a little bit boring. Probably didn’t look very entertaining.
It’s definitely a game that you’re playing, trying to figure out what’s the best way to run the car to finish the race, not use it up, not get passed, keep the thing clean.
It wasn’t critical we catch him. My preference was to not catch him.

Q. You could feel the air getting disturbed and it messing you up?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, honestly I don’t think it would have been very different if we caught him 20 laps sooner. I don’t. It disturbs the car. It’s been tough to drive here in the turbulence. I don’t think we probably have the degradation of the tire perfect where we should have it for incredible racing.
But it’s hard to create that perfect storm. It’s a moving target every track, trying to get the conditions and the tire and the downforce, it’s just really hard to nail it, exactly where it needs to be.
Yeah, I guess to answer your question, I don’t know that it would have made a big difference.

Q. Dixon said it was erratic and crazy driving out there tonight, race control needs to look at it. Did you see any of that, share that sentiment?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I saw it last week. When I started 20th last week, I was just trying to protect my race car. First stint of the race, I was about getting run into three or four times. Literally was just trying to not wreck while being aggressive and going forward myself.
Yeah, I mean, I think people are driving aggressively these days. They really are. You almost have to match it to some degree because if you don’t you just get run over. You’re sitting there going, Why are you running me over? Doesn’t matter who is right or wrong at that point, you still got ran over, right?
I would agree with him. Everyone just drives real aggressive these days. They push the cars to the limits, they push how much they can touch or not touch. With these cars you can touch a lot, generally get away with it. I think people are pushing over the edge of that at times.
I definitely feel and understand and probably agree with him that people are driving pretty aggressively these days.

Q. In the other series I cover, there’s allegedly a hierarchy where veterans will talk to the younger guys, say, We don’t do that. Is there a fix for the way guys are driving? Can something be said or done?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: That’s a tough question. Some of it’s self-policing, right? You end up causing enough problems in a row, an individual, that’s going to turn into a bad situation. Everyone’s going to not be happy with that certain individual. I think that frustration will not last too long.
So I don’t think it’s going — if you’re running up front around the same guys every weekend, I don’t think you’re going to have multiple instances week after week. There’s no way you can sustain it. In some ways that’s self-policing. You’re not going to get a lot of multiple offenses.
The hard thing nowadays is you’re up and down the grid. It’s really hard to stay at the front nowadays. Last weekend I had to start 20th. I’d consider us a frontrunner. Every now and then we find ourselves all over the grid. I’m not always around consistently the same people. You end up having these run-ins with people you don’t see very often during the year.
I think that’s part of what’s aggravating the situation, is the field is so competitive, it’s jumbled up every weekend. Different people are around each other all the time now. Couple that with aggressive driving, you’re just having a lot more moments I think where people are upset with each other.
It’s kind of the nature of the beast right now. It’s so competitive and so tight, the field as far as performance goes, you almost have to be aggressive to get in front of people and find an edge.
Like I said before, if you don’t bring that aggression yourself, you end up getting run over now. It’s a hard balancing act. But, yeah, I don’t think there’s like a pecking order as far as the veterans and who gets a talking to. I don’t think the youth really cares anyways.

Q. (No microphone.)
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: If you were talking to Will, we’d get a cage out. We’d settle this UFC style. I’d put some money on Will. That guy’s nuts. He just blacks out sometimes. You should see him drive. I don’t think he even knows where he’s going half the time. He’s literally just driving off instinct.
You put him in a cage, you don’t want to go against Will Power. I think it’s called psychotic, is what it’s called.

Q. Without naming names, are there drivers that when you get up beside them, you’re like, Yeah, no, this is not going to be fun?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: So difficult not to just blurt a name, but I’m not going to do that.

Q. I would be okay with that.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: You would. It’s late at night, between us, not going anywhere. Absolutely not getting suckered into that.
Yeah, we all have our feelings on who we feel like is not the right person to be around or who we think is aggressive more than others. It’s just part of the learning process, trying to understand your competitors.
It’s like that in any series, though. That’s not unique to INDYCAR racing. It’s like that in Formula 1 or sports cars or NASCAR. Everyone knows or has an opinion on who they think is probably not safe to be around on the track as far as protecting your car.
So, yeah, there are instances like that. I won’t be specific, but I think we all feel that way.

Q. Now that it’s time to make the numbers in the fight for the championship, is your strategy to win all three of them?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I think the good news is, is if we win all three, it definitely adds up to winning the championship. That’s the good news.
As far as our approach, I don’t know that we’ve ever really changed our style or procedure. We typically show up every weekend and try to maximize whatever our potential is. We felt like we had a winning car today and we tried to win the race.
I think the name of the game for us is doing that in Portland, Laguna and Long Beach. Kelly asked me this question before the race. Of course, within the race, if there’s situations that arise, bring about an obvious change of course or change of approach, then maybe we would. Say the leaders get taken out like today, leaders of the championship I should say, then maybe you’re going to be a little bit more cautious towards of the end of that race.
But when you go into the weekend, I think you’re just trying to maximize whatever your result is. It’s really the best way to approach it.

Q. Given your past experiences fighting for the title, how much can you rely on that? Can you rely on your teammates with the tight competition?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Definitely can rely on my teammates. We have a lot over the years. They’ve always been good to me. I feel confident that we have a championship-winning team. I felt that, I mean, how many years have I been doing that? Is this my fifth-year at Penske? I think so. I felt that my first four years here. Every single year we’ve had the competitive capacity to challenge for the championship. I feel no different now.
I think, yeah, it definitely will serve us well in this homestretch.

Q. How do you think the strong end of the season will help you in 2022?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, we got to keep it up, right? We’re doing a good job now. Nashville was a little rocky for us. GP was slightly rocky, too. It can swing very quickly. We could be from being a hero this weekend to right back out of it in Portland. It swings that fast.
I don’t think we can be relaxed about anything. We’ve just got to keep doing what we’ve been doing. We certainly have to be strong. We’re not in some cushiony position when we can just sit back and anything can really happen to us. We can’t. We have to be solid. Hopefully we have a good, solid end here. If we do, that could add up to a championship.

Q. Not a very important question. The giant champagne bottle thing, the bigger the bottle, is that so you can get more people?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, in all seriousness, it just looks more professional. When you hand someone a foot bottle, half this size, it just looks funny. When you look at a professional championship, we got a big champagne bottle that doesn’t run out in like three seconds, it just looks better in my opinion.
I think whoever has done a great job and gotten up on the podium should have a nice, big champagne bottle that sprays for a little while. You can hand it to the team and everyone can enjoy it. I just think it’s better for the series. It’s not that hard to do. It’s just a small request. I think it goes a long way to the appearance of the show.

Q. (No microphone.)
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think they would agree. Talk to Roger or Bud about it. I think they would agree. Whatever the small details. I mean, they’re all about the details. Adding a little detail like that is not difficult. Yeah, I think it should be mandatory we have big champagne bottles.

Q. You have two weeks off until you go to Portland. How do you plan on spending the next two weeks off?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I’m going to sleep probably all day tomorrow, I can tell you that. I was really lucky. My dad drove me up here this weekend, about four and a half hours from Nashville. He’s a sweetheart. He’s going to drive me home tonight. I’ll sleep in the car. How lucky am I? 30-year-old, still have my dad driving me around. Feel like the go-kart days.
I’m going to relax. I have some sponsor deals I’m going to do next week and the week after that. Once we go out to Portland, I’m pretty much staying out there, help my team try to maximize three events to go.

About Chevrolet
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Newgarden Wins in Penske Power Play at WWTR; O’Ward Grabs Points Lead

MADISON, Ill. (Saturday, Aug. 21, 2021) – Josef Newgarden earned his second victory of the season by winning the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 presented by Axalta and Valvoline on Saturday night at World Wide Technology Raceway in a race that shuffled the NTT INDYCAR SERIES championship deck.

Newgarden drove his No. 2 Sonsio Team Penske Chevrolet to victory by 0.5397 of a second over Pato O’Ward’s No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP. O’Ward didn’t enter Victory Lane, but he also was a big winner of the night by taking the championship lead by 10 points over Alex Palou, who placed 20th after being eliminated in a three-car accident early in the race.

Two-time series champion Newgarden leaped from fourth to third – 22 points behind O’Ward – with his third career victory on this 1.25-mile oval and his 20th overall career win. He averaged 135.245 mph, leading 138 of 260 laps in the final oval race of the season.

“I couldn’t ask for much more,” Newgarden said. “Everyone did a great job. I’m thrilled. We’ve got to keep going. We know this is going to be a climb, but this goes a long way tonight.

“Any win is important for the year. Wish we had a couple more to this point and were in a different position, but we’ve always got to fight with where we’re at and what we’ve got in our hands.”

There are three races remaining in the season, all on road and street courses on consecutive weekends in September on the West Coast. The next event is the Grand Prix of Portland on Sunday, Sept. 12 at Portland (Oregon) International Raceway.

O’Ward used smart aggression all night to avoid incidents that triggered six caution periods, including five in the first 65 laps. He scored his eighth top-five finish in 13 races this year.

“It was a very solid points day for us,” O’Ward said. “I think we maximized what we could have gotten out of our car and our race.”

NTT P1 Award winner Will Power finished third in the No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske Chevrolet, and Scott McLaughlin gave Team Penske three of the top four finishing positions by placing fourth in the No. 3 DEX Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet.

Sebastien Bourdais finished fifth, tying a season best, in the No. 14 ROKiT/AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet. Formula One veteran Romain Grosjean finished 14th in his oval racing debut in the No. 51 Nurtec ODT Honda, completing 259 of 260 laps.

Newgarden took the lead for good under caution on Lap 203 when Bourdais, on a different fuel strategy from other lead cars, entered the pits for his final stop. Newgarden maintained a gap anywhere from seven-tenths to one second over O’Ward after the restart on Lap 210.

O’Ward closed to within a half-second in the closing five laps but ran out of time to challenge Newgarden for victory.

The complexion of the championship race changed dramatically on Lap 65 during a restart, when six-time and reigning series champion Dixon, Palou and Rinus VeeKay were involved in a crash in Turn 1.

VeeKay’s No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek Chevrolet hit the rear of Dixon’s No. 9 PNC Bank Grow Up Great Honda at the apex of Turn 1 in a thicket of traffic during the restart, sending both cars into a spin into the SAFER Barrier. VeeKay’s car collected Palou’s No. 10 The American Legion Honda en route to the wall, eliminating Palou in 20th and VeeKay in 21st.

Palou had climbed into 10th place after starting 21st due to a nine-spot grid position penalty because of an unapproved engine change after the Big Machine Spiked Coolers Grand Prix last Saturday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

“I thought I was on the outside, and suddenly I got hit,” Palou said. “I had plenty of room with Scott, and Scott had plenty of room with the guy in front, and we just got hit. There was no space there. I don’t know where he (VeeKay) wanted to go.

“It was hard to get up to the top 10. We just wanted to have a clean race, we just wanted to get some points, and I thought we had a good race car. Nothing we could do today. It’s just a shame it played out like that.”

Said VeeKay: “I’m very sorry for Alex and Scott. I had a really good restart on the inside of Alex and behind Scott. I get into Turn 1, and I was really focusing on Scott, just to stay behind him, and it just kind of stacked up. I tried to slow down, but we’re in oval spec, and I think just before I hit Scott, I’m even locking up the fronts. Unfortunately, everybody knows how it happened. All night, people have been checking up, which for everyone is pretty annoying.”

Dixon’s Chip Ganassi Racing crew repaired his car, and he returned to the race to try to gain points. Dixon dropped out late in the race in 19th place, 160 laps down. He dropped to fourth in the standings, 43 points behind O’Ward.

It was the first time Dixon failed to finish a race since this event in August 2019, ending a streak of 28 consecutive races running at the finish.

Marcus Ericsson finished ninth in the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Chip Ganassi Racing Honda to stay fifth in the standings and keep his championship hopes flickering, 60 points behind leader O’Ward.

Andretti Autosport’s tough season continued with more heartbreaking misfortune. Colton Herta entered the pits in the lead on Lap 186, but the driveshaft broke in his No. 26 Gainbridge Honda as he exited the pits, ending his night. He was credited with 18th place after leading 101 laps, second only to Newgarden.

2016 Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge winner Alexander Rossi was running in the top five for part of the race and appeared to be a threat to Newgarden when he hit the SAFER Barrier in Turn 2 on his out lap after his final pit stop on Lap 201. Rossi placed 17th in the No. 27 NAPA AUTO PARTS/AutoNation Honda.

Results Saturday of the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.25-mile World Wide Technology Raceway, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, chassis-engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

  1. (3) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  2. (5) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  3. (1) Will Power, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  4. (11) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  5. (18) Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  6. (16) Takuma Sato, Honda, 260, Running
  7. (13) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, 260, Running
  8. (4) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  9. (6) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 260, Running
  10. (15) Jack Harvey, Honda, 260, Running
  11. (20) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  12. (24) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 260, Running
  13. (17) Tony Kanaan, Honda, 260, Running
  14. (14) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 259, Running
  15. (19) James Hinchcliffe, Honda, 243, Running
  16. (10) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 211, Mechanical
  17. (7) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 200, Contact
  18. (2) Colton Herta, Honda, 185, Mechanical
  19. (8) Scott Dixon, Honda, 100, Contact
  20. (21) Alex Palou, Honda, 64, Contact
  21. (23) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 64, Contact
  22. (22) Ed Carpenter, Chevrolet, 54, Contact
  23. (9) Graham Rahal, Honda, 4, Contact
  24. (12) Ed Jones, Honda, 2, Contact

Race Statistics
Winner’s average speed: 135.245 mph
Time of Race: 2:24:10.9404
Margin of victory: 0.5397 of a second
Cautions: 6 for 49
Lead changes: 11 among 6 drivers

Lap Leaders:
Power, Will 1
Herta, Colton 2 – 57
Bourdais, Sebastien 58 – 67
Newgarden, Josef 68 – 132
Pagenaud, Simon 133
Bourdais, Sebastien 134 – 137
Newgarden, Josef 138
Herta, Colton 139 – 183
Newgarden, Josef 184 – 197
O’Ward, Pato 198
Bourdais, Sebastien 199 – 202
Newgarden, Josef 203 – 260

NTT INDYCAR SERIES point standings: O’Ward 435, Palou 425, Newgarden 413, Dixon 392, Ericsson 375, Herta 324, Pagenaud 320, Rahal 319, Power 315, Sato 279.

Meyer Shank Racing Charges to Top Ten Under the Lights at WWTR

#60: Jack Harvey, Meyer Shank Racing Honda #59: Conor Daly, Carlin Chevrolet

St. Louis, MO (21 August 2021) – After two and a half hours of racing and five yellow flags that saw a quarter of the field retiring from the race, the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 at World Wide Technology Raceway became a survival of the fittest on Saturday night.

But battling through to the finish was Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) driver Jack Harvey, who came home with a tenth following 260 laps of all out racing.

The fast paced schedule of a steamy one-day show required focus, stamina and patience as the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 got underway on Saturday with a one-day race formant that saw practice, qualifying, and then the race all staged in one day. With scorching temperatures adding to the challenge for both driver and team, preparation and execution came to the fore.

Harvey and the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM crew made big gains from practice to qualifying after Harvey posted a 178.090 mph lap to place him 15th at the start of the race.

With 260 laps of racing to go, the Bommarito 500 got off to an unusually slow start with three caution periods within the first 20 laps. But Harvey kept his nose clean to push the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda up to 10th by lap 17.

Following the fourth caution period, the race got into a rhythm which saw Harvey make his way to sixth at the halfway point. With 100 laps to go, Harvey’s No. 60 Honda sat 13th in the order as a range of fuel strategies developed late in the race. With Harvey managing consumption, he was still able to race to sixth before making his final stop on lap 198.

A fifth and final yellow slowed the field, setting up a 59 lap sprint to the finish with Harvey coming home tenth- his best finish of the 2021 INDYCAR season so far.

“It was a great race,” said Harvey. “That last yellow really hurt us and without it, I think that we could have finished fifth or sixth. We made good progress throughout the day. Everyone on pit lane was great and our strategy worked well for us. It’s been a good two weekends in a row and hopefully we can take this with us to Portland in a few weeks.”

MSR will have a weekend off before returning to action along the west coast, starting with Portland International on Sept. 10-12.

Josef Newarden prevails at Gateway with victory, closes in on points lead

Photo Courtesy of Chevrolet Racing

Josef Newgarden and the No. 2 Penske team navigated through early chaos at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway to score his second win of the 2021 NTT IndyCar Season. The Nashville, Tennessee native took the lead on Lap 80 and only surrendered the lead a couple of times before regaining the lead on Lap 210 and going on to win his third Gateway victory.

“Yeah, I think so,” Newgarden said about the victory. “It (winning) definitely helps a lot (closing in on points lead). I was surprised when I saw the early wreck. Will and me were talking about it. Yeah, everyone was good, which is great. But it’s about time we got something to come our way a little bit. That’s what it felt like.

“Yeah, it does help a lot. It helped a lot today. A win helps a lot. The team did a great job. Will was super quick this weekend. I thought Scott McLaughlin did a great job for us. He came and tested here. He’s a rookie that never has driven on ovals before this year. He helped develop a lot of the things I ran on the car here.

“Everybody did a great job of pitching in this weekend. We had great cars. The circumstances have played favorably into helping us get back into this race, which is what we’ve been working towards. I feel really confident about where we’re going.”

Before the green flag flew, qualifying was held earlier in the afternoon and Will Power scored his 63rd career NTT IndyCar Series pole laying down a lap of 24.8508 seconds and 181.081 mph.

As the 260-lap race got underway, four cautions slowed the race pace. Three cautions flew in the first 20 laps of the race. The yellow flew as early as Lap 3 when the No. 18 of Ed Jones slide up into the No. 15 of Graham Rahal in Turn 1 and both cars crashed. Another interesting yellow occurred on Lap 17 for the No. 22 of Simon Pagenaud, when his right-front wing made contact with his teammate Newgarden. Following the incident, Pagenaud’s right-front wing fell off as a result.

A more significant issue happened on Lap 64 that involved championship contenders Alex Palou and Scott Dixon. Both Palou and Dixon were involved in an accident in Turn 1 after the No. 21 of Rinus VeeKay turned into Palou, which then caused Palou to turn into his teammate, Dixon. With Dixon and Palou out of the race, this accident caused major championship implications as Dixon and Palou lost numerous points.

After the stop-and-go pace in the first half, there was a long stretch of green-flag racing. Andretti Autosports’ Colton Herta led early but was overtaken for the lead by Newgarden on Lap 76. From there, Newgarden maintained a sizeable gap over second-place Alexander Rossi.

The lead changed again following the Lap 133 pit stops. Newgarden was able to come out as the leader briefly before second-place Herta overpowered Newgarden heading into Turn 1.

Herta led for 45 laps after taking the lead from Newgarden. Unfortunately, during Herta’s scheduled stop on Lap 185, the Andretti Autosport driver night ended early, as he broke a right-rear driveshaft.

Newgarden once again cycled back into the lead one lap later after Herta’s misfortune, but this time, Alexander Rossi who was looking to turn his season around was lurking in the second position. Rossi was maintaining his pace to Newgarden before his bad luck continued. On Lap 200, Rossi brought out the last caution of the night when his No. 27 NAPA AutoParts machine hit the wall in Turn 2 creating the second DNF of the season.

Succeeding the final yellow, it seemed as though the race would be Newgarden’s to lose as he would have championship points leader Pato O’Ward chasing him down in the final laps. As the laps continued to wind down, O’Ward cut the gap to 0.4951 seconds on Lap 215 and stayed near Newgarden by half of a second. Inside five to go, O’Ward would need help from lap cars or a quick yellow to be able to have a chance at Newgarden. Unfortunately for O’Ward, he came up just a bit short as Newgarden scored his second win of the 2021 NTT IndyCar Series season and closed in on the points battle having a 22 point deficit.

O’Ward however leads the points by 10 over Alex Palou with just three races left in the season.

“It’s a very big points day for us,” O’Ward said about taking the points lead. “To be honest, man, it’s so tight. There’s still three races to go, 150 points on the table. Yeah, I mean, this means we’re going on the right path. We came off a solid run in Indy road course, now we have a podium with second. It would be great to rack up a couple more, a few more podiums. Yeah, man, we’re just going to push until the checkered flag waves in Long Beach and see where we stand.”

Pole sitter Power had a quiet, but solid night as the Australian wrapped up the podium finishers with third place.

“Yeah, actually I was really happy to finish third,” Power said. “Definitely didn’t have the car to challenge for the win. Yeah, struggled a little bit to get the car in a window. Just did a really clean race, clean pit stops, no mistakes. Yeah, stoked to be third.

There were six cautions for 49 laps and six leaders among 11 lead changes. Newgarden led four times for 138 laps to victory.

There were also three penalties handed out during the race. Takuma Sato was penalized for jumping the start on Lap 10, Ed Carpenter for avoidable contact on Lap 13 and Romain Grosjean for unsafe release on Lap 58.

Official Results following the Bommarito 500 at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway:

  1. Josef Newgarden, led 138 laps
  2. Pato O’Ward
  3. Will Power, led one lap
  4. Scott McLaughlin
  5. Sebastien Bourdais, led 18 laps
  6. Takuma Sato
  7. Ryan Hunter-Reay
  8. Simon Pagenaud, led one lap
  9. Marcus Ericsson
  10. Jack Harvey
  11. Conor Daly
  12. Dalton Kellett
  13. Tony Kanaan
  14. Romain Grosjean, 1 lap down
  15. James Hinchcliffe, 17 laps down
  16. Felix Rosenqvist, OUT, Mechanical
  17. Alexander Rossi, OUT, Contact
  18. Colton Herta, led 101 laps, OUT, Contact
  19. Scott Dixon, OUT, Contact
  20. Alex Palou, OUT, Contact
  21. Rinus VeeKay, OUT, Contact
  22. Ed Carpenter, OUT, Contact
  23. Graham Rahal, OUT, Contact
  24. Ed Jones, OUT, Contact

Up Next: The NTT IndyCar Series takes a couple of weeks off before finishing out the season on the west coast with just three races left. Their next race is Sunday, September 12 at Portland live on NBCSN at 3 p.m. ET.

Tasca and Brittany Force gain No. 1 qualifiers for Sunday’s Lucas Oil Nationals at Brainerd

Photo Courtesy of NHRA

Following Friday night’s run, Bob Tasca III knew Saturday was going to be a big change with the weather due to the cold front moving through the area Friday night and bringing cooler temperatures.

After the Friday qualifying run, Tasca provisionally earned the No. 1 spot setting an ET of 3.941 seconds and 326.63 mph. He knew, however, that the time wasn’t going to hold up for Saturday’s session.

In fact, in the second round, it was California’s own Cruz Pedregon setting the pace with an ET of 3.880 seconds and 326.24 mph. The ET was Pedregon’s career-best in 614 starts. Tasca qualified in the fifth position in the second round.

When the third and final round came, Tasca and the Motorcraft Ford team brought their A-game and set the No. 1 qualifier for the seventh time of his Funny Car career, going 3.870 seconds and 334.15 mph, bettering his Friday qualifying run.

“It’s great to be back out here in Brainerd with all these Ford fans,” said Tasca, who is looking for his first career win at BIR. “(Crew chiefs) Mike (Neff) and Jon (Schaffer) have been a little frustrated these past couple races, there’s no question, and we haven’t caught our stride like we did at the beginning of the season.

“They’ve been working hard on a little different set-up and we found it last night. We were disappointed this morning and that last run, at half-track, I was celebrating because I knew it was on a run. It was straight as an arrow and a lot of fun, and we just have to do it four more times (on Sunday).”

The No. 1 spot is Tasca’s second of the season and his first since Houston. Tasca gained a bye run as well and three additional bonus points.

Cruz Pedregon ended up second on the time sheets with two consecutive 3.8s and narrowly got beat for the top spot by .004 seconds. Pedregon will face Gary Densham in Round 1.

Funny Car Qualifying Results :

  1. Bob Tasca III, 3.870 seconds and 334.15 mph
  2. Cruz Pedregon, 3.874 seconds and 324.67 mph
  3. Tim Wilkerson, 3.883 seconds and 334.4 mph
  4. Matt Hagan, 3.891 seconds and 328.06 mph
  5. Paul Lee, 3.900 seconds and 331.61 mph
  6. Robert Hight, 3.909 seconds and 327.51 mph
  7. Ron Capps, 3.922 seconds and 325.22 mph
  8. Blake Alexander, 3.961 seconds and 318.17 mph
  9. Alexis DeJoria, 3.963 seconds and 297.22 mph
  10. John Force, 3.968 seconds and 322.42 mph
  11. J.R. Todd, 3.970 seconds and 321.73 mph
  12. Bob Bode, 4.027 seconds and 309.49 mph
  13. Dale Creasy JR, 4.155 seconds and 298.38 mph
  14. Jim Campbell, 4.230 seconds and 238.38 mph
  15. Gary Densham, 4.796 seconds and 189.63 mph

Top Fuel

While Mike Salinas and his Team Scrappers Racing dragster originally set the No. 1 qualifier in Friday’s qualifying, it was Brittany Force and the Monster Energy dragster that continued their winning momentum following her Topeka victory last Sunday. Force rocketed to a time of 3.675 seconds and 334.98 mph to earn her 27th No. 1 qualifier of her career and the fifth consecutive of the season.

“Coming off of that win in Topeka with my dad (John Force) was pretty incredible for all of John Force Racing,” said Force, who is currently second in points. “We had been chasing that first win all season long and we got it done last weekend. Our plan is to repeat that this weekend in Brainerd. There’s a different energy in the pits after getting a win. There’s no better feeling than winning and that’s why we’re out here. It’s just trying to find that again on race day. We want to win again and I think we’re in a good place. We have to continue to step it up.”

The No. 1 qualifier was her seventh of the 2021 Top Fuel season as well. Thanks to her quick run, Force will have a bye in the first round.

Steve Torrence and the CAPCO team qualified second posting a time of 3.684 seconds and 329.91 mph to earn the No. 2 spot. Torrence is chasing win No. 7 of the season and his first since Sonoma. The Kilgore, Texas native has lost the last two races losing in the semi-final in Topeka to Force and the first round at Pomona to Antron Brown.

Top Fuel Qualifying Results:

  1. Brittany Force, 3.675 seconds and 334.98 mph
  2. Steve Torrence, 3.684 seconds and 329.91 mph
  3. Mike Salinas, 3.711 seconds and 322.58 mph
  4. Clay Millican 3.721 seconds and 325.22 mph
  5. Justin Ashley, 3.752 seconds and 328.3 mph
  6. Antron Brown, 3.752 seconds and 328.22 mph
  7. Shawn Langdon, 3.774 seconds and 281.3 mph
  8. Leah Pruett, 3.789 seconds and 319.9 mph
  9. Doug Kalitta, 3.821 seconds and 308.99 mph
  10. T.J. Zizzo, 3.861 seconds and 317.87 mph
  11. Terry Totten, 4.263 seconds and 204.6 mph

Eliminations will begin at 11 a.m. CT live on NHRA.TV (with a subscription), while FOX will pick up the coverage at 3 p.m. ET for finals coverage.

As a reminder, there will be no Pro Stock and Pro Stock Motorcycles competing this weekend. They will return for the U.S. Nationals at Indianapolis in September.

Allmendinger survives three overtime attempts to win at Michigan

AJ Allmendinger celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series New Holland 250 at Michigan International Speedway on August 21, 2021. Photo: Logan Riely/Getty Images

Coming off a thrilling Cup victory at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, AJ Allmendinger extended his momentum in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The veteran competitor from Los Gatos, California, survived three overtime restarts and a late charge from Brandon Jones to win the New Holland 250 at Michigan International Speedway on Saturday, August 21.

The victory was Allmendinger’s third of this year’s Xfinity season as he continues his pursuit for his first NASCAR championship.

The starting lineup was based on a performance metric formula, weighing the driver’s and owner’s results from a previous Xfinity event, the owner points position and the fastest lap recorded from a previous Xfinity race. With that, Austin Cindric, winner of the previous Xfinity event at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, started on pole position and was joined on the front row with AJ Allmendinger.

Prior to the event, Josh Berry started at the rear of the field due to replacing Michael Annett in the event, with Annett being absent for the fourth time this season as he continues to recover from a leg surgery.

When the green flag waved and the race started, Cindric and Allmendinger battled dead even for the lead until Cindric got dead sideways in the first turn. As Allmendinger pulled ahead with the lead, Cindric got stuck in the middle lane with no cars behind him as a bevy of competitors went by him.

Following the completion of the first lap, Allmendinger was leading ahead of teammate Justin Haley, Noah Gragson, Cindric, Justin Allgaier, Harrison Burton and the field. The following lap, Allmendinger’s advantage over Gibbs stretched out to nearly two seconds.

Through the first five laps of the event, Allmendinger was leading by nearly two seconds over Gibbs, with Cindric, Justin Haley and Noah Gragson settling in the top five. Harrison Burton was in sixth followed by Justin Allgaier, Myatt Snider, Brett Moffitt and Daniel Hemric.

By Lap 10, Allmendinger continued to lead by more than a second over Gibbs. While Cindric and Haley remained in the top five, Harrison Burton made his way into fifth place ahead of Gragson and Allgaier. Behind, Josh Berry was up in 21st behind Alex Labbe.

When the competition caution flew on Lap 15, Allmendinger remained as the leader over Gibbs and the field. Under the competition caution, some led by Tyler Reddick pitted while the rest led by Allmendinger remained on the track. During the pit stops, Reddick missed his pit box and returned the following lap. 

The race restarted on Lap 20 and Allmendinger, the leader, had issues launching at the start, which forced Gibbs and Cindric to place Allmendinger in a four-wide battle for the top spot along with Haley. By the second turn, Cindric made his way into the lead followed by Gibbs while Allmendinger was back in third. Harrison Burton was in fourth ahead of teammate Hemric, Haley, Snider, Gragson and Allgaier.

A lap later, the caution returned due to Caesar Bacarella wrecking in Turn 4. Under caution, names like Allgaier, Jeb Burton, Tommy Joe Maartins, Bubba Wallace, Brandon Brown and Ryan Sieg pitted while the rest led by Cindric remained on the track. Following the pit stops, Allgaier was penalized for an uncontrolled tire violation while Wallace was penalized for an over-the-wall-too-soon violation.

When the race restarted with four laps remaining in the first stage, Cindric muscle ahead of the top spot to retain the lead through the first two turns while Gibbs challenged Snider for the runner-up spot. A lap later, both Gibbs and Allmendinger overtook Snider for second and third.

While the field behind jostled for final opportunities of positions, Cindric cruised ahead to claim the first stage victory on Lap 30, which marked his ninth stage victory of the season. Gibbs settled in second followed by Allmendinger, Snider, Gragson, Hemric, Harrison Burton, Brandon Jones, Berry and Haley.

Under the stage break, a majority led by Cindric pitted while the rest led by Jeb Burton remained on the track. During the pit stops, rookie Sam Mayer took his No. 8 JR Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro to the garage due to transmission issues.

The second stage started on Lap 35 and Jeb Burton rocketed with the lead followed by Tyler Reddick and the field through the first two turns. Just then, the caution flew for a heavy multi-car wreck in Turn 2 that started when Snider slid up the track in Turn 2, made slight contact with Cindric and ran into Brandon Brown before spinning. In the ensuing chaos, Cindric, who was trying to dodge Snider, ran into Hemric and both spun into the outside wall, collecting Bubba Wallace and Brown. Haley and Joe Graf Jr. were also collected in the wreck. 

Under caution, Snider was held two laps in his pit stall for improper fueling. By then, Hemric and Cindric, who was strong at the start of the race and was trying to continue, retired.

Following an extensive caution period, the race restarted on Lap 45. At the start, Jeb Burton retained the lead while Allgaier and Allmendinger overtook Tyler Reddick for spots in the top three. 

By Lap 54, Allmendinger returned to the lead after he overtook teammate Jeb Burton for the top spot. 

Down to the final five laps of the second stage, Allmendinger was out in front by nearly a second over Gibbs with Allgaier in third while Jeb Burton was back in fourth ahead of his cousin, Harrison. 

When the final lap of the second stage struck, Allmendinger continued to lead by nearly a second over Gibbs. With no comers closing in behind, Allmendinger came back around and claimed the second stage victory on Lap 60, thus achieving his eighth stage victory of the season. Gibbs settled in second followed by Harrison Burton, Allgaier, Jeb Burton, Gragson, Brandon Jones, Josh Berry, Brett Moffitt and Riley Herbst.

Under the stage break, the leaders pitted and Allmendinger retained the lead after exiting pit road in first place ahead of Harrison Burton, Allgaier, Jeb Burton and Gragson. During the pit stops, Gibbs got blocked by Josh Williams in his pit box and fell from second to 10th.

With 59 laps remaining, the final stage commenced. At the start, Allmendinger launched ahead with the top spot on the outside lane through Turn 1 while Allgaier muscled his way into the runner-up spot ahead of cousins Jeb and Harrison Burton.

While Allmendinger and Allgaier were running first and second, the Burton cousins occupied third and fourth while Josh Berry, who started at the rear of the field, made his way into the top five ahead of Brandon Jones, Gragson, Gibbs and Herbst. A few laps later, Berry muscled into fourth place ahead of Jeb Burton, who was also being intimidated by Brandon Jones for more.

With 52 laps remaining, Allmendinger continued to lead by nearly four-tenths of a second over Allgaier. By then, Harrison Burton made an unscheduled two-tire pit stop under green due to vibration concerns while Josh Berry moved up to third place.

With 40 laps remaining of the event, Allmendinger was leading by a tenth of a second over Allgaier and four-tenths of a second over Berry, with the two JR Motorsports competitors closing and issuing a challenging on Kaulig Racing’s Allmendinger for the top spot.

Two laps later, Allgaier peaked ahead of Allmendinger through Turn 4 to lead for a lap before Allmendinger fought back through Turn 1. Then, when Allmendinger and Allgaier got stalled behind two lapped cars entering Turn 2, Berry zipped by both on the outside lane to take the lead.

Down to the final 30 laps of the event, Berry was leading by more than a second over teammate Allgaier. 

Nearing the final 20 laps of the event, pit stops under green occurred as Gragson, who was running in the top 10, pitted. Soon after, Brett Moffitt pitted along with Gibbs, who was then penalized for an uncontrolled tire violation. Then, Berry and Allmendinger pitted while Allgaier remained on the track for three laps before pitting.

With approximately 15 laps remaining, Jeb Burton, who had yet to pit, was leading followed by Riley Herbst. A few laps later, however, Burton ran out of fuel as his car was coasting below the banking in Turn 1. Soon after, Herbst also ran out of fuel, but he was able to nurse his car back to pit road and his pit stall while Allgaier reassumed the top spot followed by his hard-charging teammate, Berry.

With 10 laps remaining, the caution flew when Jeb Burton stalled his car near the pit road entrance after he was unable to nurse his car back to his pit stall. At the time of caution, Allgaier, who was locked into a fierce battle with Berry, managed to retain the lead ahead of his teammate.

Under caution, Allgaier surrendered the lead to pit while the rest led by Berry remained on the track. Along with Allgaier, Harrison Burton, Herbst, Jeremy Clements and Gibbs pitted.

Down to the final four laps of the event, the race restarted under green. At the start, Allmendinger muscled into the lead ahead of Brandon Jones and Berry. Then, the caution flew due to a two-car accident on the backstretch involving Bayley Currey and Jesse Little.

With the race sent into overtime, the race restarted as Allmendinger and Berry filled in the front row. At the start, Allmendinger retained the lead. The race, however, was sent into another caution period and another overtime attempt when Mason Massey and Colby Howard wrecked.

In the second overtime attempt, Allmendinger and Berry dueled for the lead as the field fanned out to multiple lanes entering the first turn. Then through Turns 1 and 2, while Berry slowly slid up the track, Gibbs got loose and hit the outside wall. While trying to straighten his car, Gibbs ended up spinning in the straightaway before making contact with the wall again, though he was dodged by the oncoming field. Gibbs’ spin was enough for NASCAR to draw the caution as the race was still not deemed official. At the time of caution, Allmendinger remained as the leader ahead of Brandon Jones, Berry, Gragson and Herbst. 

In the third overtime attempt, Allmendinger received a push from Jones to pull ahead with the lead ahead of Gragson. While the field fanned out through the backstretch, Allmendinger slowly started to place a gap between himself and Jones. 

When the final lap started, Allmendinger was leading by two-tenths of a second over Jones, with Gragson trailing by half a second. Despite a valiant final lap effort from Jones, Allmendinger was able to come back around, retain the top spot and streak across the finis line in first place to claim his third checkered flag of the season.

The victory at the Irish Hills was Allmendinger’s third of this year’s Xfinity Series season and the eighth of his career, with the Xfinity Series making its return to Michigan International Speedway following a one-year absence. The race was also the 11th Xfinity career victory for Kaulig Racing, which achieved its first Cup career win last weekend at Indianapolis with Allmendinger.

“Wow, what a hell of a six days. Oh my goodness,” Allmendinger, who led a race-high 70 laps, said on NBCSN. “This is what’s awesome, though, to have all the fans back. Indy, last weekend, was spectacular. Michigan, thank you. You, guys, make it fun. I’m more tired from the celebrations than I am from driving. When you’re restarting on the front row, the outside [lane] was the place to be. The problem is, you just got to hope you got pushed. Brandon Jones, thank you so much because he pushed me every time. Man, I can’t thank all the men and women at Kaulig Racing enough. I don’t wanna wake up from this dream.”

Brandon Jones finished in the runner-up spot for his eighth top-five result of the season and following three DNFs in the previous four Xfinity races while Noah Gragson settled in third place for his eighth top-five result of the season.

Berry, who led 24 laps, notched a strong fourth-place result as an interim competitor for Michael Annett while Harrison Burton finished in the top five for the eighth time this season. 

Allgaier, Herbst, Moffitt, Jade Buford and Bubba Wallace finished in the top 10. Ty Gibbs, who was in position for a strong result following his late incident, came home in 13th.

There were 13 lead changes for six different leaders. The race featured nine cautions for 43 laps. 

Despite his early accident and retirement, Austin Cindric continues to lead the regular-season standings by 35 points over AJ Allmendinger as the 2021 Xfinity Series regular-season stretch is four races away from being complete.

Results.

1. AJ Allmendinger, 70 laps led, Stage 2 winner

2. Brandon Jones

3. Noah Gragson

4. Josh Berry, 24 laps led

5. Harrison Burton

6. Justin Allgaier, nine laps led

7. Riley Herbst

8. Brett Moffitt

9. Jade Buford

10. Bubba Wallace

11. Jeremy Clements

12. Ryan Sieg

13. Ty Gibbs, one lap led

14. Matt Mills

15. Jordan Anderson, one lap down

16. Tyler Reddick, one lap down

17. Justin Haley, one lap down

18. Josh Williams, one lap down

19. Tommy Joe Martins, one lap down

20. Colin Garrett, one lap down

21. Ryan Vargas, one lap down

22. David Starr, two laps down

23. Jeffrey Earnhardt, two laps down

24. Kyle Weatherman, two laps down

25. Colby Howard, two laps down

26. Landon Cassill, two laps down

27. Gray Gaulding, two laps down

28. Carson Ware, three laps down

29. Jeb Burton, four laps down, 23 laps led

30. Mason Massey – OUT, Accident

31. Alex Labbe, 16 laps down

32. Jesse Little – OUT, Accident

33. Sam Mayer, 25 laps down

34. Bayley Currey – OUT, Accident

35. Caesar Bacarella – OUT, Dvp

36. Myatt Snider – OUT, Dvp

37. Austin Cindric – OUT, Dvp, 12 laps led, Stage 1 winner

38. Joe Graf Jr. – OUT, Dvp

39. Daniel Hemric – OUT, Accident

40. Brandon Brown – OUT, Accident

Next on the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule is the series’ second event of the season at Daytona International Speedway. The event will occur on Friday, August 27, at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN.

Monster Energy Racing: Riley Herbst Michigan NXS Race Report

Herbst Scores Seventh at Michigan
Driver of Monster Energy Ford Mustang Earns Second Straight Top-10 Finish

Date: Aug. 21, 2021
Event: New Holland 250 (Round 22 of 33)
Series: NASCAR Xfinity Series
Location: Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn (2-mile oval)
Format: 125 laps, broken into three stages (30 laps/30 laps/65 laps)
Start/Finish: 8th / 7th (Running, completed 139 of 139 laps)
Point Standing: 11th (520 points, 387 out of first)
Note: Race extended 14 laps past its scheduled 125-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.
Race Winner: AJ Allmendinger of Kaulig Racing (Chevrolet)
Stage 1 Winner: Austin Cindric of Team Penske (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: AJ Allmendinger of Kaulig Racing (Chevrolet)

Overview:

Riley Herbst threaded his way through a multicar accident and three attempts at a green-white-checkered finish to come home seventh in the New Holland 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn. Herbst started eighth in the 40-car field and deftly kept his No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang under him during the first 15 tours around the 2-mile oval. “I am white-knuckling this thing,” said Herbst just after the competition caution waved on lap 15. Chassis adjustments called by crew chief Richard Boswell on the team’s ensuing pit stop and another set of adjustments during a subsequent stop under caution on lap 32 aided Herbst greatly. This was evident on lap 37 when Herbst smartly maneuvered his Monster Energy machine through a seven-car melee off turn two and down the backstretch. After lining up 12th for the lap-46 restart, Herbst cracked the top-10 and held the spot through the end of the second stage, earning a valuable bonus point. From there, Herbst was a top-10 mainstay. When the checkered flag waved after the third attempt at a green-white-checkered finish, Herbst was seventh. It was his eighth top-10 of the season and his second straight, as the 22-year-old from Las Vegas finished eighth last Saturday on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The solid run boosted Herbst’s playoff standing, too. While still holding onto the 12th and final playoff spot, Herbst increased his margin over 13th-place Michael Annett to 41 points.

Riley Herbst, driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

“I just was trying to bide my time and race smart today with our points scenario. I think we expanded on that a little bit and gained into the guy in front of us. All in all, it was a good day. I wish we could’ve ran just a little bit better though and finished in the top-five.”

Notes:

● AJ Allmendinger won the New Holland 250 to score his eighth career Xfinity Series victory, his third of the season and his first at Michigan. His margin over second-place Brandon Jones was .163 of a second.

● There were nine caution periods for a total of 43 laps.

● Only 14 of the 40 drivers in the New Holland 250 finished on the lead lap.

● Austin Cindric remains the championship leader after Michigan with a 35-point advantage over second-place Allmendinger.

Next Up:

The next event on the Xfinity Series schedule is the Wawa 250 on Friday, Aug. 27 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway. The race starts at 7:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by NBCSN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Team Penske NASCAR Xfinity Race Report – Michigan

Team Penske NASCAR Xfinity Race Report
Track: Michigan International Speedway
Race: New Holland 250
Date: August 21, 2021


No. 22 Menards/NIBCO Ford Mustang – Austin Cindric
Start: 1st
Stage 1: 1st (ninth stage win of 2021)
Stage 2: 37th
Finish: 37th
Status: Accident
Laps Completed: 41/139
Laps Led: 12
Driver Point Standings (ahead of second): 1st (+35)

Notes:

  • Austin Cindric was collected in a multi-car accident during Stage 2 Saturday afternoon at Michigan International Speedway. The incident left Cindric with a 37th-place finish in the final rundown. The driver of the Menards/NBICO Ford leads the NASCAR Xfinity Series driver standings by 35 points over second-place AJ Allmendinger. during started from the pole, won the opening stage but was collected in a multi-vehicle incident to start the second stage, ending the day prematurely for the No. 22 Menards/NIBCO Ford team. As a result of the accident, Cindric was scored in the 37th position.
  • Cindric started from the pole but got loose in Turn 1 during the opening laps of the race. He dropped to the back of the top-10, but solid speed in the Menards/NIBCO Mustang allowed the defending series champion to drive back to the top-three before the competition caution waved on lap 15. On the restart, Cindric grabbed the lead from Allmendinger on lap 21, using a big run from the outside of the third row to claim the top spot. Cindric stayed out front for the remainder of the segment, collecting his ninth stage win when Stage 1 ended on lap 30.
  • At the end of the stage, the No. 22 Menards/NIBCO team pitted as other competitors remained on track that had pitted previously. After winning the race off pit road, Cindric was collected in a multi-vehicle incident on the restart at the exit of turn 2, effectively ending the day after showing tremendous speed early. Cindric maintains the regular season point lead by 35 points.

Quote: “I thought we had the fastest car out there today. In some ways, I feel like that is a bold statement coming from me but our guys did an amazing job on this Ford Mustang and I wish we could have contended for the rest of the race because I think we would have had a shot. Never give up. Just being able to get points. Every little bit matters. From the outside, it probably doesn’t mean a whole lot and we don’t want to affect the outcome of the race or get fluid on the racetrack. That definitely wasn’t the goal. That never give up attitude though is what wins championships.”

Toyota Racing NXS Post-Race — Michigan 8.21.21

JONES SURVIVES THREE NASCAR OVERTIMES FOR SECOND-PLACE FINISH
Three Supras Claim Top-10 Finishes at Michigan

BROOKLYN, Mich. (August 21, 2021) – Brandon Jones (second), Harrison Burton (fifth) and Bubba Wallace (10th) claimed top-10 finishes in Saturday afternoon’s NASCAR Xfinity Series

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Michigan International Speedway
Race 22 of 33 – 250 miles, 125 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, AJ Allmendinger*
2nd, BRANDON JONES
3rd, Noah Gragson*
4th, Josh Berry*
5th, HARRISON BURTON
10th, BUBBA WALLACE
13th, TY GIBBS
20th, COLIN GARRETT
39th, DANIEL HEMRIC
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

BRANDON JONES, No. 19 Young Supply Company Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 2nd

Are you pleased with the second-place finish?

“You have to be with that. Every restart was really, really solid. Nothing was too crazy and the last one was really timed perfectly. I pushed the 16 (AJ Allmendinger) all the way into the corner where I thought that was going to be enough to make him pucker up a little bit and maybe miss the corner. We ended up getting pretty tight there at the end. That’s where he got the best of us was off the corner. We made zero mistakes today and we got the results that we needed to. We’ve never been gone this year, but it’s great to see things finally cleaned up this year with a top-three.”

HARRISON BURTON, No. 20 DEX Imaging Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 5th

Are you pleased with the result after coming back from the late-race pit stop?

“Two weeks in a row where we’ve had things go a rye and we’ve had to claw our way back. This time it was a little less dramatic – we had a loose wheel there. That’s racing. We had a bad-fast race car. Our Toyota Supra was good all day. Frustrating to come up short when we were that fast, but overall a good result.”

DANIEL HEMRIC, No. 18 Poppy Bank Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 39th

What happened in the accident that ended your race today?

“I saw a couple guys slide and started to come back across the race track. I thought I was going to clear it or be fortunate to take minimum impact and then hung back to the right side and hit the outside wall. Then it was just carnage after that. Definitely not the weekend we had hoped for with this Poppy Bank Supra, but still thankful to be a part of the NASCAR Xfinity Series, thankful for all they do for us. We have four more shots in the regular season to go win and we’re still sitting in a good spot with good cars. Everybody knows that once we get hot, they’re going to have to beat us week-in and week-out and I look forward to that.”

About Toyota

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