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6 Hidden Factors that can affect your Car Loan Interest Rate

Photo by Joey Banks on Unsplash

Getting a car loan and fulfilling your ambition of owning your dream car is easy in today’s world. There are many options available like banks, car dealerships, or other lending institutes which are willing to give you a loan as long as you fulfill their criteria. Mainly they check your credit score, employment history, income sources, etc., and based upon this they approve your loan at an interest rate. There are various factors that determine the interest rate on your loan. 

In this blog, we will share six hidden factors that can affect your car loan interest rates.

Let’s jump in!

  1. Debt to Income Ratio 

Debt to income ratio is the ratio of monthly debt (mortgage payments, loan payments, etc.) to your monthly income (salary, pension, rental income, etc.). Lenders see this ratio and figure out that you are a valid candidate to qualify for a loan. Debt is the main thing that affects your credit card score directly. That’s why you need to cover your debt first. You can get a loan until your next payday to cover everything before getting your car loan.

Example – If you have credit card debt of $150,000 and your monthly income is 30,000$, then lenders are unlikely to give you approval for the loan. Even if you qualify for the loan, then the interest rate of that loan will be high and eventually, you will suffer. 

On the other hand, if you never had a mortgage loan history or credit card payment history then the lender will be unwilling to give you a loan. The reason for this is that they are not able to figure out how reliable you are for the monthly payments. Managing your debt will be helpful in the foundation of good financial health and saves you from future money problems. 

Maintaining a good debt to income ratio will be helpful in getting approval for loans from banks, used car dealerships, etc. A good debt to income ratio varies from 28 percent to 36 percent. 

Here are some steps that you can take to lower debt to income ratio:

  • Increase the monthly payment because this will help you in lowering your overall debt. 
  • Avoid taking more debt in future. 
  • Postpone the large purchases from your credit card. Instead, save money and then try to make as much downpayment as possible during purchase of the product. 
  • A decreasing DTI ratio will be a motivating factor and you are able to manage your debt more effectively. 
  • Maintaining a good credit score by paying your installments on time. 
  1. Age of the Vehicle 

The age of the car you are looking to buy directly affects your auto loan interest rates. However, the variation of interest rates with age is different for different vehicles. 

To understand this concept let’s see how the car loan works. First, you contact a lending company and apply for a car loan. If the lender agrees to give you a loan and the car you bought acts as collateral. If you failed the monthly payments then the lender will seize your car and get back the debt money. 

As we know, the value of the car depreciates with time. So, the lenders also take into account the depreciation risk and due to this, they may charge slightly higher interest rates. 

New cars are more prone to depreciation as compared to used cars. The value of a new car depreciates by 25% at the end of one year. So, to compensate for this risk they charge more interest rates on new cars as compared to old cars. The best rates are available on models which depreciate slowly and have high resale value. 

Approved Auto Loans provides hassle-free approval of car loans at affordable interest rates. So, if you are looking to finance your car then visit our website. 

  1. Employment History and Profession

The employment history plays a vital role in determining your interest rates on a loan. The lending institution wants to know whether you have a fixed source of income like pension, salary, or other sources to repay the debt.

 The lenders even ask for your bank statement as proof of your income or employment. 

If your employment history is not good or you are being fired many times then the lender may hike the interest rates as compared to normal rates. 

The profession you are in determines a lot about the interest rate. The doctors, lawyers, Chartered Accountants, etc. with stable jobs have higher chances of loan approval as compared to a person working in a place like a restaurant, cafe, bar, or in other words, have low-paying jobs. This may sound like discrimination but lenders usually take a closer look at your profession and financial background before giving debt. 

  1. Relationship Status 

Here I am not talking about your Facebook relationship status but your actual relationship status whether you are married or unmarried. The lenders usually charge a low-interest rate to couples having stable employment history because if the borrower fails, he/she has someone to support financially. The job profile of your better half also matters here. 

If you are single then the lenders may charge you a slightly higher interest rate. To avoid this you can take out a loan on your parent’s credit score but that doesn’t mean they are paying for your car or you mess up their credit score by irregular payments. You have to be responsible and plan your finances in such a way that the monthly installments will not be a burden. 

  1. Home Ownership

Homeownership also plays an Imperial role in the approval of your auto loans. If you have recently taken out a mortgage on your home then lenders may not be willing to give you a car loan. Having said that, if you are an owner and have paid all your installments at the proper time then your chances of loan approval are high. Owning a home provides more stability than renting. 

  1. Economy 

Unlike other financial products, car loans are also influenced by the economy. If the economy is strong, which means people are earning well and spending money in the market. In this case, the Bank of Canada hikes the interest rates and lenders also increase their interest rate accordingly. 

When the economy is in a downturn,  then people are spending less, so the Bank of Canada decreases their interest rates. In addition, lenders also lower their interest rates. 

If these six factors are in your favor then your chances of getting a loan are 100 percent. Not being able to qualify for these factors causes a hike in interest rates as it is more riskier for the lender to provide you a loan. 

CHEVY NCS AT THE BRICKYARD: AJ Allmendinger Press Conf. Transcript

NASCAR CUP SERIES
VERIZON 200 AT THE BRICKYARD
INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 15, 2021

AJ ALLMENDINGER TAKES CHEVROLET TO VICTORY LANE AT INDY

INDIANAPOLIS (Aug.15, 2021) – AJ Allmendinger is no stranger to road course racing. But heading into this weekend’s Verizon 200 at the Brickyard for the NASCAR Cup Series, Allmendinger and his No. 16 Hyperice Camaro ZL1 1LE team were not sure how the cars and the competitors were going to adapt to tackling the Road Course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Allmendinger qualified well, starting eighth, but suffered a speeding on pit road penalty and had to come back up through the field. After surviving six cautions for 25 laps involving multiple cars in each incident, the veteran driver found a way to weave his way through one melee after another to lead one lap, the final one, and capture his second career NASCAR Cup Series victory.

The win is the13th of the season for the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE in 24 races, and the 808th for the Bowtie Brand in NASCAR’s premier series.

Team Chevy drivers claimed six of the top-eight finishers. Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 1LE, finished third and was credited for leading twice for 26 of the 95-lap race. He continues to lead the point standings for the regular season championship.

Chase Elliot, No. 9 Hooters Camaro ZL1 1LE finished fourth. Kurt Busch, No. 1 Monster Energy Camaro ZL1 1LE, Erik Jones, No. 43 Petty’s Garage Camaro ZL1 1LE and Justin Haley, No. 77 Fraternal Order of the Eagles Camaro ZL1 1LE finished sixth, seventh and eighth respectively.

Next on the schedule on August 22, 2021 at Michigan International Speedway.

POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT: AJ Allmendinger, Matt Kaulig, Chris Rice

THE MODERATOR: We’re going to start with our post-race presser here this afternoon for today’s Verizon 200 at the Brickyard for the NASCAR Cup Series. We’ve now been joined by our race winning team, including driver AJ Allmendinger, team owner Matt Kaulig and president of Kaulig Racing, Chris Rice.
First of all, AJ, you’ve made several comments in your interviews before that you’re only going to keep doing this as long as it’s fun, so my question is, was that fun?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: That was fun. Yeah, I mean, it was — that was chaotic. Honestly we didn’t really have a race-winning car on outright speed, probably about seventh to tenth. I sped on pit road, so I just kind of carried on for how I felt yesterday, so put us in the back there, and we were just fighting hard.
I thought we probably maybe would get in the edge of the top 10 and have a solid day. For a makeshift really pit crew — I shouldn’t say makeshift, but a crew that we don’t work with all the time, they did a fantastic job, great pit stops.
But yeah, once that chaos started happening and we started getting close to the front, I had a really good restart on the front. I think we were restarting 17th with eight to go and was able to get to seventh through all that mess and thought, all right, now we’re at least in shouting distance of it.
Knew a couple of the cars had older tires, and that second restart, got to third, and it’s like, okay, now we’ve got a shot at this.
The best part is when you’ve got Matt Kaulig and Chris Rice on the radio just going, Hey, we’re not here for friends, we’re not here for points, we’re here to win this race, so win it or basically bring it back on the hook. That kind of frees up a race car driver to go after it.
I just can’t believe the way it played out. I had a great restart. I thought I might take the lead off Turn 2, and Denny kind of leaned on me, which he should; I would have done the same thing.
I saw Chase come back on the racetrack. Well, at that point they were just telling me that he had a penalty, so I thought, all right, maybe I can kind of make a run for the last lap and a half here with Denny, and then had contact, and all of a sudden the seas parted and then from there it was just run like hell because I knew Kyle and Chase and Ryan were back there and they were pretty good all day. I put in about as good of a lap and a half as I could.

THE MODERATOR: Matt, congratulations on this NASCAR Cup Series victory. You guys had so much fun kissing the bricks and enjoying the celebration. Just give us a quick recap of what it feels like.
MATT KAULIG: Well, it’s a really surreal situation. I’ve been coming here since I was a little kid. I lived in Cincinnati, grew up in Cincinnati and then lived in Chicagoland, so we’d come down to the Indy 500 every year, and just to be — and I was at the very first — the Brickyard 400, that inaugural race, I think, back in ’94. So I’ve been to several of those.
To actually be the team that gets to do that is just — it’s actually surreal. Even just sitting in front of you guys right now and looking at the empty track and knowing that we were just out there and have this trophy now is just — I’m really excited for these guys that have been doing this.
These guys have been doing this their whole life. I’ve been doing it for six years. Just really proud of you guys and all of our teammates that have made racing their life and NASCAR their life.
So the fact that we were able to deliver this is really cool.

THE MODERATOR: Chris, give us your thoughts. I was afraid there for a minute you might fall off the pit box when AJ crossed the finish line. Tell us what it means to bring home today’s victory.
CHRIS RICE: It’s unbelievable. I thought I was going to throw up walking down pit road.
The day AJ walked in I didn’t know who he was. I knew I liked AJ and I liked his fire, and I knew we needed somebody to help us grow our program with Justin Haley, Jeb Burton and all those guys, and I knew AJ if he came and had fun would win races for us. He made us so much better at these right-hand turns and left-hand turns and he’s made us great.
To win a Cup race and to sit in an amazing venue like this and think about it, I don’t even know what to say.
I told somebody down there just a minute ago, they said, just soak it all in, and I said, I can’t; I don’t even know what to do. I still have cold chills.
I love these guys. AJ knows how much I love him. He was at my house the other day. And yeah, to win a race here, I still want to cry, but I can’t — everybody at Kaulig racing, my wife that’s here and put up with me when we didn’t even have nothing. When Matt Kaulig said, Hey, you want to start a race team? I’m like, You’re crazy; it’s October 31st. He said, No, let’s do it. To win it at Indy five and a half years later, I love it. Thank you.

Q. Dinger, how special is it to get your first win here the same year that your good friend Mike Shank won his first INDYCAR race, the Indy 500?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Yeah, Memorial Day weekend there I sat in my house bawling, like watching — when Helio won, just knowing everything that Mike had been through, I like literally just couldn’t stop crying during the day because I was so happy for him. I just remember thinking, God, I wish I could just share that with him.
Like to show who Mike Shank is, he came to our race at Mid-Ohio the next week. He had better things to do, but came and supported us, and we won there.
I mean, it’s just unbelievable to be able to like now have this rich history and be able to share that with him and do it in the same year, it’s like both of these — I drive for Mike and it’s the same thing with Matt and Chris. Like I drive for them, but I’m not the driver and they’re my bosses. Like they’re — we’re all brothers and close friends, and you want success for that, and you want to be able to share that.
Like to be able to do this now on the same year, it’s like — I’m sure me and him are going to — we actually have his golf tournament tomorrow so that’s going to be fun. Like I don’t know what to do. Like it’s going to be insane. We’re going to be sitting there like, really? Like the same year we just did this?
It’s so — special is not even — like the biggest understatement in the world.

Q. Also you drove for Roger Penske in NASCAR. You led laps here in the 2013 Indy 500 and now you were able to basically get the trophy from him in Victory Lane. How cool is that?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Well, I saw him right before the race. As I was getting in the car, he hugged me, and I said, Roger, I love you because everything that Roger has always done for me. At that time I was like, I’m not a big fan of yours right now because you beat me yesterday in the Xfinity race, so I wasn’t a big fan of that.
But no, I mean, it’s — what Roger has always done for my life and my career and what he’s done for this place, it’s always been so beautiful, but now you look at it with all of his staff and the IMS staff that have really upgraded this place, it’s so cool looking.
CHRIS RICE: The bathrooms are really nice. I’m going to give him that.
AJ ALLMENDINGER: It’s quite amazing. 2013 happened and it’s always in the back of your mind, was that my real chance to win at Indy. I was so disappointed yesterday because I thought, man, maybe that was my closest chance to win at Indy and we didn’t make it happen.
Even after at Watkins Glen, all the ups and downs through the next couple years, kind of like, I’d like to win another Cup race but it’s freaking hard. It’s hard to win a Cup race, and we did here at Indy.

Q. AJ, the emotions you’re feeling right now, how do they compare to what you experienced in Watkins Glen seven years ago now?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Well, I think Watkins Glen was something that — I mean, it was amazing to go through all the ups and downs and win that race and for Tad and Jodi and Brad. But in a way it was kind of almost like a relief, as well, like I don’t ever have to be asked about will you ever win a Cup race.
So you enjoy it, but at the same point you’re kind of like, okay, thank goodness now, the relief is gone, I don’t have that hanging over me anymore. So it kind of takes a little bit of the enjoyment away.
This is, I’m like, I don’t even know — we know showing up at the road course races we have fast race cars, but like at Indy, the way that played out, I mean, this is just pure enjoyment that I don’t — I’m going to tell them I’m retiring now. Sorry, guys. I’m done, I’m out. I’m not going to Michigan next week.
I’m kidding, by the way. I’m going to Michigan. We’ve got a championship to win.
Q. Matt, this team is basically eight months away, whatever, from starting its first full-time campaign in the series. Does this feel like you announcing your arrival moment? Is this like a shot across everyone’s bow? What does this mean in that sense?
MATT KAULIG: No, I’m really proud of the team. We went into this season knowing that we were going to run a handful of Cup races, maybe eight or ten. We’re running the road courses, we’re running the superspeedways.
One of the reasons that Chris and I talked about doing that is just to get — just almost to get familiar with the Cup Series. It’s a little bit different than the Xfinity Series, and the garage is different and people — we wanted people to know who we were and what we’re all about.
We knew putting AJ in the car every week at these road courses would actually give us a chance to run really well, and so I don’t think it’s — it’s not an announcement to the sport or to other teams that we’re here. I mean, we’ve been here — we feel like we’ve been here and growing towards winning this championship in the Xfinity Series and then being able to compete in the Cup Series.
But you know, what it does allow us to do is it more legitimizes us as a successful race team so that you get — it’s better for your employees, it’s better for your drivers, it’s better for your crew chiefs and engineers. It allows you to get more and better people. It allows sponsors to trust that you’re going to show up and be great.
So for me, it shows that more than anything, and that’s what I’m really happy about. All the success that we’re having on the track, I get happy for all of our teammates, but I’m really — it’s growing our business as Kaulig Racing. So that’s really exciting.

Q. AJ, you kind of had a front row seat for a lot of that late race chaos that went down. I was kind of curious to hear your opinion on this. You won at Watkins Glen and throughout all of NASCAR they tend to allow drivers to use as much and as all of the track as they possibly can. After what you saw today, do you think that NASCAR should continue to allow for you to use any part of the track, or would you like to see them maybe police track limits a little bit more?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: No, I mean, I think it’s tough with these cars. I get it in the sense that we’ve all got to race within the limits of the racetrack, too, but these cars are so big, and it’s not — and haven’t driven an INDYCAR. When these things get out of control, like you’re along for the ride at times. In INDYCAR you can kind of correct and save sometimes and it’s a little easier. These things, when you get side by side, they’re wide, you’re beating on each other. Like you need room to be able to maneuver, to make a mistake and get away with it.
I mean, I thought today with the curbing out like from the Xfinity race yesterday, that was a good call, and I thought the track limits were fine. The biggest problem obviously was the curbing that was coming up.
I was shocked where they were having to fix it because you get shoved over there sometimes or you start using more of it, and that’s when it becomes a problem because I felt like I was hitting the curbing, like I never had an issue with it. Where they were having to fix it was almost like way before where cars were kind of jumping over the top of it.
But the thing is with those curbs you pay a price anyway, and we saw it. When you hit them wrong, you pay the price.
Now, unfortunately today it was a huge price for a lot of cars, and we don’t need that. We don’t need to be tearing up race cars that much. I mean, that’s a lot of money that these team owners have to go through. I was sitting under red like watching it, like holy moley, we’re going through a lot of money right now.
But at the same point, it’s our own job to not run over it that way. So there’s a fine line. Like you can’t just drive wherever you want to.
But this racetrack doesn’t allow that because it has grass. You get off in the grass, it tears stuff up.
I thought the racetrack has the right limitations. It’s just unfortunately the curbing was starting to come up in the wrong spot when he hit it.

Q. AJ, your progress through the field after the caution for the second stage break, how were you able to manage your way through the field like that the way you did before everything went crazy?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Chris going, Hey, don’t tear off the front of this car. Still need the front of it.
That was actually a pretty good impression right there. Feel good about that one.
You know, like it’s — at the end of the day it’s still important to get the best finish possible. Even if you don’t — like at that point I didn’t really feel like we had a shot to win. It’s still big for the team to run inside the top 10 so that’s always my goal is to try to get the most out of the race car and get the highest finish possible, whether that’s 20th that day, 10th or whatever.
So it was just trying to be smart, get up through the field. I thought we were going to get to maybe 12th, 11th and thought, okay, I cost us some track position. I thought we were like a seventh- to tenth-place car. So I’m like, all right.
And then once the restarts happened, when you’re restarting 17th, winning was not even in my mind, but after that first restart with all the chaos that happened, getting up to seventh at that point, there was only about three cars that were ahead of us that were on good tires, and at that point it was game on.
But that’s always the way I feel. Like for these guys and for all the men and women at Kaulig Racing, no matter how it’s going, I still want to get the best finish possible. That’s how I look at it, no matter what’s going on, whether it’s a chance to win or you’re running 15th and you have a chance to finish 13th. That’s the goal is finish as high as you can.

Q. You have a long relationship with Michael Shank. You’ve seen him build up his INDYCAR program from a part-time program to a one-car full-time, now two cars next year. Do you believe that this is the right way that your team owner is doing it now? How well do you think he’s doing it the right way?
MATT KAULIG: How am I doing?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: It’s going all right. I think it’s okay.
No, like all joking aside, I didn’t know Matt, I didn’t know Chris. When they called me at the beginning of 2019 and said, Hey, will you run some races for us, I said, Sure.
Now, I had watched the program for three years. They were a single-car team, and I liked that because I thought, okay, they’re at least building it the right way because you can start trying to just add cars to it and make it better, and that becomes worse.
In 2019 we ran one full-time car, as a part two cars, and obviously at Daytona it was three cars when Ross won, and then the next year it was kind of starting to add more and then this year the right people in place, and you have the right resources to run three full-time Xfinity cars, and then you start the Cup program.
So I’ve always thought the way Matt and Chris go about it are the right ways because you’re not trying to get too big too early because that can really kill a program, and that’s part of the attraction to the team, as well.

Q. AJ, you talked about when Shank won that you cried. Why didn’t you cry for yourself today?
CHRIS RICE: He will. Just give him a minute and a couple more beers.
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Because Matt would make fun of me if I started crying is the biggest thing. Yeah, that’s true.
MATT KAULIG: You’re a race car driver.
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Because it means — like I’m going to really enjoy this; don’t get me wrong when I say this. But it means more to me to watch my close friends, my brothers have success than it does for me because I’m okay in life. Like life is good. I’ve got a great wife. My parents have been fantastic. I love driving for them. Like life is good.
Seeing especially like Mike and me and him having our ups and downs together where there was times he had to pull me up, like Dude, come drive for me, and there was times where he was like, I can’t pay you, and I’m like, I don’t care, I’ll drive for you, like whatever you need.
That means more to me than anything is to see my friends and my close brothers have success, especially at the Indianapolis 500, you can argue the biggest race in the world so that’s what meant so much to me, and that’s why I was just lost for emotion there because it’s huge for him.
I love what we’re sitting here being able to do right now, but for me I’m like, this is awesome for me, but for them, I’m like, they deserve it because he puts so much of his own money into it. He puts every — you can ask Tammy — every dying moment into this race team and all the men and women.
I love it for myself, but I always say I drive really for a couple of people. I drive for myself because it’s pure enjoyment, challenging myself, and it’s really pushing myself for all the men and women at that race team because they’re the ones putting their heart and soul and really my life in their hands.
That’s why I enjoy it so much really.

Q. AJ and Matt, you’ve talked about for next year AJ would be in a partial Cup ride at this point. Obviously things can change. Does this give you consideration to change, and AJ, would you even want to —
AJ ALLMENDINGER: I’ve retired. I’m done.
MATT KAULIG: He’s done.
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Before Matt answers, I will do whatever they want me to do. I’ve told them that from day one. Whatever they feel like I can help raise the organization and help push it, I’ll do that, whatever that may be. Whatever program we’re on, like I’m enjoying it.
MATT KAULIG: Yeah, and we’re working on it, and he does say that, and he has said that, and he truly will. We’d have to make sure whatever the situation is — we would like to run two full-time Cup cars next year, and we’re working out the details as far as drivers and sponsors and just how all of that looks.
CHRIS RICE: You opened up a can of worms, by the way.
MATT KAULIG: You think?
CHRIS RICE: He’s done talking right now.
MATT KAULIG: All right, I’m done talking. (Laughter.)
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Hey, good luck tomorrow.
Q. You had a great view of the 14 getting into the 11 —
CHRIS RICE: Did they fight, by the way?

Q. No, they didn’t. We were trying to egg them on but it didn’t happen. You had a great view of that; what went through your mind when you saw that?
AJ ALLMENDINGER: I honestly didn’t — I saw that as it happened.
I was kind of more worried about — I think Blaney at that point was right behind me because they were telling me that the 14 had a penalty, and I knew Denny was on old tires, so in my mind I was like, I made a run at Denny on the restart and he used me up, and I’m like, okay, that’s fair, I would do the same thing.
I was trying to hold Ryan back, and I thought, okay, if I can just get through these couple of corners, maybe I can make a run, like a last-lap run at this and go for it. Well, when I saw the 14 hook the 11, I was like, well, okay, that’s easier.
At that point I knew the 14 they were still saying had a penalty. In my mind I figured he wasn’t going to stop, he was going to run it out, and if I caught him that was going to cause a problem with Ryan behind me or whoever was going to be behind me.
I didn’t really see how it happened. I just saw the aftermath of it. And then thank goodness Chase went down in the next corner and overshot it, so at that point it was just trying to put in like the best last lap of my life and try to get away, because here at the Brickyard I think all bets are off. Anybody behind you is going to come send it and move you out of the way, so I was just trying to make sure I got out of that area of that happening.

Q. And when they dropped the green flag to restart, was there a lot of blocking and tackling between you and Chase and —
AJ ALLMENDINGER: Actually, no, not really. Denny had a good restart. I had a good launch with him, and I kind of went low and he defended it, and Ryan kind of stuck to my bumper. I think we were all trying to get the inside row to go, and I shot the middle and got in there, and Denny got in wide and I got to the outside of him, and that’s when he kind of used me up, which, like I said, I’d have drove myself straight into the field if I had to. But it was fair.
You know on the restarts anything goes, especially here because it’s a long straightaway into a hairpin corner. I was just happy to get through the first couple of corners clean and then from there see what was really going to happen.

Q. Matt, you have three cars probably in the Xfinity playoffs. I assume you came into the season looking for an Xfinity championship, but does this win no matter what else happens this year does this win make this a successful season math?
MATT KAULIG: Yeah, it’s been a very successful season. We’ve got three wins. AJ has got two in the Xfinity Series and now this. This is like — we wouldn’t have dreamed this — literally wouldn’t have dreamt that even this could happen this year. It wasn’t even part of the plans. You’re trying to run well.
But no, so it’s — again, a surreal experience to be — we’ve got a bunch of races left. We feel like we’re, what, halfway — we’re more than halfway through the season, but no, we’re completely focused on the Xfinity Series. We’re completely focused on winning a championship in the Xfinity Series.
We’ll run a couple more Cup races. Obviously we’ll go out there and try to win those, but believe me, the focus is 100 percent on getting these guys, whoever it is, if it’s AJ or Jeb or Justin, an Xfinity championship, and that’s what we’re doing. That’s what we want. That’s what we want for us.

Q. Chris, was there any thought, did you think that NASCAR might just stop the race with the issues with the curbs, and if they did would you have been okay with it?
CHRIS RICE: I would have been fine with it, but I didn’t think they would. It was the first race here on the road course, the inaugural race. I felt like they wanted to finish it.
You don’t know what the challenges are that they’re going to have with these cars that are low. We ran here for two races and had no issues with that. Our cars don’t have — well, the Xfinity cars are not low-ride cars.
They did a great job. I mean, I applaud NASCAR for even coming here to try something different, so I would have been fine with it, but I applaud them for letting us race it out obviously because we won, but I was happy sitting there seventh to be honest with you. No, I never had a thought in my mind that they would quit it.
Q. Matt, you mentioned you’ve been coming here since you were a kid. Could you share what is your absolute earliest memory attached to this facility or the first time you ever stepped foot on the property?
MATT KAULIG: Let’s see. The race that I remember most was when Danny Sullivan won. What was that, ’85? So I think that’s my earliest recollection of actually — we’d come to the track. It’s huge and fun. But I don’t think I was a giant fan of all the racers.
But I remember — and I actually got to have dinner with Danny a couple of years ago and met him. We were sitting at a reception in New York City, and he and I just started talking about racing, and it was just really cool because I didn’t know it was Danny Sullivan. He looks different than he looked in 1985.
So I’m talking to him, and I said, Hey, what’s your name? He said, Danny. I said, Well, what kind of work do you do? And he said, Well, I was a race car driver. I’m like, Well, that’s cool, like what kind. He’s like, like INDYCAR. I’m like, what’s your name? He said, Danny Sullivan. I’m like, What? Why didn’t you say you were Danny Sullivan?
I still talk back and forth. I’m sure he’ll text me tonight congratulating us on the win. But that’s my earliest memory.

AJ ALLMENDINGER: Yeah, for me, I grew up watching the Indy 500, and I think the one that always stood out to me as a kid was little Al and Emo going through Turn 3 there and having the contact and just the battle.
And I was always such a huge Jeff Gordon fan growing up. That was my guy was Jeff Gordon. Through sprint cars, I just loved watching him in sprint car racing and then when he got in NASCAR and obviously the inaugural race here watching him win that on TV as a kid I was really excited.
First time here honestly for me was like walking into the place was 2007, my rookie year in Cup, and I remember I smashed the wall off of Turn 4 trying to hold it wide open to try to make the show. By the way, that didn’t work out very well; I didn’t make the race.
I remember people always telling me like you walk into it but on race day it’s different. I got to experience that in 2008 here, but really what stood out to me was 2013, like walking through Gasoline Alley for the Indy 500 and I had Roger Penske next to me; he was going to call my race.
Good or bad, I don’t mean it when I say this, but it was like, I’m like, I’m walking with God right now. Like this is what God feels like. I’m walking with Roger Penske, Indy 500, and he’s calling my race, and I’m driving for Roger Penske.
Like that moment will always stand out to me as like I felt like I was an out-of-body — I was watching myself walk with Roger, and it was so special to me.
The way the race played out was crazy, and I remember leading, taking the lead, and in the car I kind of lost my mind, and almost like, Oh, my God, I’m leading the Indy 500. There was still 130 to go. I had to calm down. But all of a sudden, I go, Okay, now I get it; this is what it means here with the packed house and running the Indy 500 for Roger Penske.
That memory will always be special in my mind.
Part of the reason why people ask me if I’ll ever run the Indy 500 again, part of the reason is I don’t ever want to mess that memory up. It’s true because it was so special to me.

CHRIS RICE: Mine is probably more NASCAR. Dale Earnhardt, I think it was ’95 he won his first one. Is that right? And deep down inside I’m a huge Darrell Waltrip fan. Y’all know if you watch my social media how mouthy I am, how wide open I am. That’s the way Darrell Waltrip was.
But Dale Earnhardt winning here probably meant more to me as a little kid than I can remember. Elliott Sadler and myself won a bunch of races that year and won championships, and I always said, hey, we were the Dale Earnhardts of late model stock car racing then.
I remember that race and I remember those cars, and I remember how cool it was to watch all the fans.
The first time I came here I think I was working with the Pettys, and I walked in and I think we tested, I told my wife this story this weekend, and I walked in and I go, holy moley, this place is amazing. It was just how — we would go to St. Elmo’s and you do things like that. I had raced at ORP a bunch of times, but walk in here and see all this and think about thousands and thousands of people packing in here.
I still sit here and cannot believe we kissed the bricks, and just something, that fame. That’s something that is unbelievable.
So probably the Dale Earnhardt win.
Richard Childress Racing being a very, very crucial partner of ours, helping us get to the level we’re at and being part of us is probably something that we failed to talk about today. But they’ve been very crucial. Richard is a good friend of ours. Matt now owns about 14 acres down there and owns a couple buildings.
But Dale Earnhardt probably, the late Dale Earnhardt is probably my favorite memory. I think he won three races here, and every time he won I kind of got cold chills.

THE MODERATOR: Gentlemen, congratulations. We hope you guys enjoy this one, and we appreciate you spending some time with us.
FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

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.

CHEVY NCS AT THE BRICKYARD: Race Notes & Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
VERIZON 200 AT THE BRICKYARD
INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES
AUGUST 15, 2021

TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
POS. DRIVER
1st AJ ALLMENDINGER, NO. 16 HYPERICE CAMARO ZL1 1LE
3rd KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 1LE
4th CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 HOOTERS CAMARO ZL1 1LE
6th KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
7th ERIK JONES, NO. 43 PETTY’S GARAGE CAMARO ZL1 1LE

TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
POS. DRIVER
1st AJ Allmendinger (Chevrolet)
2nd Ryan Blaney (Ford
3rd Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
4th Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)
5th Matt DiBenedetto (Ford)

The 2021 NASCAR Cup Series continues with the FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway on Sunday, August 22. NBCSN will telecast the event at 3pm ET. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

AJ ALLMINDINGER, NO. 16 HYPERICE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Race Winner:
Q. When you think about what this moment means for AJ Allmendinger, he’s going to take a moment to soak it in. An open wheel driver for much of his career, he came here, almost won the Indy 500 for Roger Penske. That fell short, but today he finally gets his Brickyard win. Probably had no idea it would come in a Cup race on the road course, but he’ll take it. The fans know his history with open wheel at this racetrack, and I would argue knowing AJ there’s no racetrack that means more to him than this one. AJ, could there be a more significant place for you to get a win?

A.J. ALLMENDINGER: No. Oh, my gosh, I was so mad yesterday. I wanted to win so bad. I mean, this is unbelievable. In my wildest dreams I could never imagine the way that just played out.
Matt Kaulig, I don’t even know what he’s doing right now. He can’t — he’s almost in tears. Chris Rice, the Hyperice Chevy was so good. We had to fight hard. Robin Miller, I saw him this morning, this one is for you, baby. We love you, Robin, everything that you do. In memory of Bob Jenkins. Baby, I love you so much. Mom and Dad, all my friends and family, oh, my God. We just won at Indy.
Hey, Shank, I just wanted to be like you, baby. I just wanted to be like you.

Q. His good friend Michael Shank won the Indy 500 this year with Helio Castroneves. Is there a way to describe the chaotic race that was today?
A.J. ALLMENDINGER: No, I mean, it was survival of the fittest. We probably had like an eighth-, tenth-place car, sped on pit road. I thought we were going to finish 12th to 15th, and then those restarts were just insane. It’s great when you have a car owner that just says, Go get me trophies. He doesn’t care if that thing is torn up. Chevy, ECR horsepower, RCR, everybody that allows us to do that, all of our sponsors on the Xfinity side of it, we just won at Indy. What’s up! Thank you everybody for coming out. Let’s go!

KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 3rd
Q. How would you begin to describe the racing today, Kyle?
KYLE LARSON: It was wild there at the end. My car was extremely good. Really proud of everybody on our Hendrickcars.com team. We had the best car for sure throughout the second and third stage, and then just we had the caution there with like 10 to go or something and then we had to come down, put tires on, and some guys gambled and stayed out, and that kind of just got us in the mess a little bit. Was able to find my way to the front row and then just got shoved around and put in the grass. Kind of ended my shot to win there.
But able to salvage a third, so happy about that, and a good points day.

Q. How different was the track once they pulled those curbs out of 5 and 6?
KYLE LARSON: I don’t know, we didn’t really get enough time. We were kind of all battling there, and the track was really dirty at that point, too.
Yeah, the curbs, I feel like we need the curb there, but I don’t know if they can just make it out of concrete or something just because that leading edge of the lip seems to pull up and destroy race cars. I’m sure they’ll figure it out for next time.

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 HOOTERS CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 4th
THAT WAS A CRAZY FINISH. WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE DAY?
“It was a wild day, but I finished fourth. It could have been worse.”

KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 6th
“I swear I saw a hole on the outside down the front straightaway to go to the outside of (Kyle) Larson, who blocked us a little bit. We rubbed the fence and got a little hole here but had a shot on the front row with old tires. We did all we could to battle. I put us in a hole by flat-spotting a right front early in the race with the Monster Energy Chevy. But the track has so many slow areas, there’s so much time for trouble. But all in all, we’ll take this. It’s a 6th place finish. We had a couple shots at winning but we were really just trying to navigate the day after we were one set of tires less after I made a mistake early on. But, thanks to my guys, we’ll keep digging and learn from this and find what we need to do better on some of these right-handers.”

ERIK JONES, NO. 43 PETTY’S GARAGE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 7th
“It was a major day of attrition for us in the Petty’s Garage Chevy. We didn’t really have the car we needed but kind of stuck with it all day and things played out for us, and guys were getting into wrecks and into trouble and making a lot of crazy moves. We just stuck through it and stayed on the straight and narrow and kept our car fairly clean and came home with a 7th. We’ll take a Top 10 any day and hopefully it’ll be a good stretch for us coming up with some good tracks for me and some good tracks for Richard Petty Motorsports and keep this string of good runs going.”

TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 BETMGM CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 21st
“We had a fast No. 8 BetMGM Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE this weekend, just ended up needing a little more luck. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course is a lot of fun, really flat and tricky at first. I really started to get the hang of it during the race and was able to attack more and more during the turns as the race went on. It’s great that we were able to capture two Stage wins during today’s race. That will help with our Playoff situation and hopefully gained us some points to close the gap on the No. 4 car. I’m disappointed we got that damage in the closing laps of the race, since killed the momentum we had after a great pit stop and cost us a shot at a top-10 finish. The positive is that we were one of the teams able to continue on to the end. Every single point matters, and I know this team will continue to fight as the Playoffs approach.”

ROSS CHASTAIN, NO. 42 CLOVER CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 29th
“I have no words. That’s one of the craziest races I’ve been in. It ripped the paint off one of those times the curbs came up and started losing oil at the end, so I pulled off. I don’t know. But we were okay. We were pretty fast. The Clover Chevy was okay. We were probably a 10th place car and yeah, on to Michigan.”

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in multi-car accident on Lap 77 – Finished 33rd
“It was so weird. I’ve never had that experience. Like, I come through that corner the same every single lap. We were running fourth there behind (Kyle) Larson, and he gets over the curb in the same spot and something, like after he hit with his right rear, it like peeled up. And as soon as I got there I hit something and it just threw me completely off line. It tore the front end right off of it. Yeah, I wasn’t offline at all. I was actually safe because I saw what happened to him and it looked like he jumped in the air with his right rear. And so I was like, man, let me try to get a little bit further left and I obviously nailed something that came up off the track. Just a bummer. This Axalta Chevrolet was really fast. We weren’t as fast as the No. 5 car (Kyle Larson), but we were a second-place car and made a couple of mistakes early that cost me some track position that we got back. I think we were poised to finish in the Top 5 there. It’s definitely a bummer.”

DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 COMMSCOPE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in multi-car accident on Lap 77 – Finished 37th
“Somebody wrecked the lap before. I didn’t know who it was. But the lap before, I went through fine. I was on my line. I was making sure I was on the right line because I wanted to keep that car on the right side. I was on the regular race track and I hit something almost like the curb was on the race track. I have no idea. I haven’t seen the replay really, I just know that the curb came apart.”

So, in your opinion, you were on the safe part of the race track and whatever you hit came apart on the race track? “Yes.”

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.

Allmendinger storms to historic Cup victory in the inaugural Indianapolis Road Course event

Photo by Simon Scoggins for SpeedwayMedia.com.

In a race highlighted with two red flag periods, late chaos and a number of top contenders being taken out of contention, AJ Allmendinger survived the carnage and stole the lead prior to the final lap to win the inaugural Verizon 200 at the Brickyard on Sunday, August 15.

The victory, which marked the first NASCAR Cup Series event at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, was the first for Kaulig Racing and the second for Allmendinger in NASCAR’s premier series.

Qualifying occurred on Sunday, August 15, and William Byron achieved his second NASCAR Cup Series pole of the year with a pole-winning speed at 100.044 mph. Joining him on the front row was Chase Briscoe, a rookie Cup competitor who won last year’s Xfinity Indy road course event.

When the green flag waved and the race commenced, Byron pulled away from Briscoe and the field entering the first turn and leading through the first four turns. Through Turns 5 and 6, the infield backstretch, the left-hand turn in Turn 7, a series of turns through Turns 8, 9 and 10, and the final round of turns from 11 to 14, Byron rolled back to the frontstretch and led the first lap by half a second over Briscoe, with Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson and Martin Truex Jr. running in the top five.

The following lap and with the field continuing to jostle for positions, Briscoe took over the lead after passing Byron in Turn 7.

Another two laps later, Truex pitted under green to have a tire rub and potential damage addressed on his car.

By the fifth lap, Briscoe was leading by half a second over Byron while Hendrick Motorsports’ Elliott and Larson continued to run in third and fourth. Daniel Suarez was up in fifth followed by AJ Allmendinger, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Michael McDowell and Cole Custer. By then, Tyler Reddick was in 11th ahead of Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch, Matt DiBenedetto and Denny Hamlin. Austin Cindric, winner of Saturday’s Xfinity event at Indianapolis, was in 16th in front of Austin Dillon, Christopher Bell, Kurt Busch and Corey LaJoie. Alex Bowman was in 22nd in front of Aric Almirola, Bubba Wallace and Kevin Harvick. Brad Keselowski was mired back in 28th, Ryan Newman was in 21st and Truex was in 39th.

Not long after, Cindric spun in Turn 1 after over-braking the turn, but the race proceeded under green.

Through the first 10 laps of the event, Briscoe’s No. 14 High Point Ford Mustang continued to lead by nearly half a second over Byron’s No. 24 AXALTA Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE. By then, Aric Almirola pitted to have a tire rub and damage assessed to his car following an earlier on-track contact with Corey LaJoie.

A few laps later, names like Logano, Ross Chastain, Custer, Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, DiBenedetto, Christopher Bell, Kurt Busch, Alex Bowman, Harvick, Bubba Wallace, LaJoie and Ryan Newman pitted under green. Shortly after, the leaders led by Briscoe pitted. 

Back on the track, Tyler Reddick, who has not yet pitted, emerged as the leader after overtaking Michael McDowell in Turn 12. Despite being pressured by McDowell for a full lap around the 14-turn circuit, Reddick was able to cycle back to the start/finish line and claim the first stage victory on Lap 15 along with his second stage victory of this year’s Cup season. McDowell settled in second followed by Austin Dillon, Erik Jones, Ryan Preece, Brad Keselowski, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Justin Haley, Briscoe and Elliott.

Under the stage break, some led by Reddick pitted while the rest led by Keselowski and Briscoe remained on the track. Then, disaster struck for Briscoe, who was penalized and forced to surrender a handful of spots for failing to maintain cautious pace under the stage break.

The second stage started on Lap 19 with Keselowski and Elliott starting on the front row. At the start, Keselowski maintained the lead through the first four turns while Byron mounted a charge to the runner-up spot over teammate Elliott. In Turn 7, Byron attempted to overtake Keselowski for the lead, but he was stuck on the outside lane, which allowed Keselowski to remain as the leader. Soon after, Elliott made his way into the runner-up spot in Turn 12. 

When the field returned to the start/finish line and the frontstretch, Elliott peaked and overtook Keselowski for the lead. Through the infield backstretch, Byron dropped all the way back to ninth after he fell off the pace.

Through Lap 22 and while the field continued to jostle for positions, Elliott was leading by more than a second over Logano while Larson, Kyle Busch and Cole Custer were in the top five. Byron was in sixth while Briscoe and Keselowski battled for seventh. Suarez and Blaney were in the top 10 ahead of Allmendinger, Hamlin and the field.

In Turn 12, Bell and DiBenedetto made contact against one another when DiBenedetto slipped into the grass and Bell, who also slipped, made contact with him through the turn. The following lap, Chastain spun in Turn 1 while battling Hamlin for position. In the midst of the on-track chaos, Kurt Busch pitted under green.

By Lap 25, Elliott extended his advantage to nearly two seconds over teammate Larson while Logano, Kyle Busch and Custer continued to run in the top five. By then, Byron and Briscoe were up in sixth and seventh while Keselowski, who had fallen back to 18th, pitted under green after making contact with the wall in Turn 11 and sustaining significant damage to the rear of his No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang. Soon after, Logano spun and went off course in Turn 7 after he ran into the rear of Larson’s No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE as he dropped from third to 10th.

Through the first 30 laps of the event, Elliott continued to lead by more than a second over teammate Larson while Kyle Busch, Custer and Byron were in the top five. Briscoe continued to run in sixth followed by Allmendinger, Hamlin, Suarez and Blaney. By then, Keselowski was in 39th and three laps behind the leaders while Kurt Busch was in 36th.

The following lap, names like Cindric, Suarez, Briscoe, Truex, Blaney, Logano, Bowman, Bell, Byron, Wallace, Harvick, McDowell, Chris Buescher, Almirola and Newman pitted under green. Soon after, the leader Elliott pitted along with teammate Larson, Kyle Busch, Hamlin and Allmendinger.

Back on the track, Richard Childress Racing’s Reddick and Austin Dillon were running first and second. Both continued to remain on the track as they started the final lap of the second stage. When the second stage concluded on Lap 35, Reddick was able to grab his third stage victory of the season along with crucial stage points in his quest to make this year’s Playoffs. Teammate Austin Dillon settled in second followed by Ryan Preece, Stenhouse, DiBenedetto, Justin Haley, LaJoie, Andy Lally, Larson and Elliott.

Under the stage break, some led by Reddick pitted while the rest led by teammates Larson and Elliott remained on the track.

With 43 laps remaining, the final stage commenced. At the start and with the field fanning out to multiple lanes through the frontstretch, Larson took off with the lead ahead of teammates Elliott and Byron. Briscoe managed to carve his way to fourth ahead of Kyle Busch and the field. Behind, Almirola and Stenhouse spun through the infield backstretch.

Shortly after, the caution flew due to debris — a radiator pan and splitter — being reported across a curb in Turn 6. Under caution, few like Almirola, Stenhouse and Keselowski pitted while the rest led by Larson remained on the track.

When the race restarted with 39 laps remaining, Larson maintained the lead over teammates Elliott and Byron approaching the first turn while the field fanned out to multiple lanes. Through the infield backstretch, Ryan Newman went off course and lost a bevy of spots as he also sustained rear-end damage. 

Through the frontstretch on the following lap, Hamlin and Logano nearly made contact as Hamlin made a bold three-wide move, but slipped while battling Logano and Cole Custer. At the front, Larson continued to lead by eight-tenths of a second over teammates Byron and Elliott while Kyle Busch and Briscoe continued to pursue.

With 35 laps remaining, Larson remained as the leader by more than a second over teammate Byron and more than two seconds over his other teammate, Elliott. Truex was up in fourth followed by teammate Kyle Busch while Briscoe, Logano, Custer, Hamlin and Bell were in the top 10. By then, Bowman, Bubba Wallace and Austin Cindric were in the top 15 along with Blaney and Harvick. Kurt Busch was in 16th ahead of teammate Ross Chastain, Allmendinger was back in 20th, Reddick was in 22nd and Austin Dillon was in 26th. Keselowski, who was back on the lead lap, was in 34th behind Garrett Smithley.

Nearing the final 30 laps of the event, Cindric pitted after being spun by Kurt Busch in Turn 7. In addition, Briscoe pitted under green after he flat-spotted a tire. Soon after, Daniel Suarez also pitted.

A few laps later, names like Elliott, Truex, Bell, Blaney, Harvick and Chastain pitted. Not long after, names like Larson, Kyle Busch, Byron, Logano, Custer, Bowman, Austin Dillon, Erik Jones, LaJoie, Josh Bilicki and James Davison also pitted under green.

Back on the track, Hamlin was leading by nearly 13 seconds over Bubba Wallace while Kurt Busch, Allmendinger and Reddick were in the top five. Larson, Elliott, Byron, Kyle Busch and Truex were back from 11th to 15th.

Not long after, Hamlin locked up his tires and went off the course in Turn 12, though he continued to lead by a large margin over Kurt Busch and Wallace.

With 20 laps remaining, Hamlin surrendered the lead to Matt DiBenedetto to pit. By then, names like Kurt Busch, Wallace, Buescher, Allmendinger, Stenhouse, Haley, Reddick and Preece had also pitted. 

A lap later, Larson cycled back into the lead after he overtook DiBenedetto in Turn 4. 

With 15 laps remaining, Larson was leading by more than five seconds over teammate Elliott with his other teammate, Byron, trailing by nearly eight seconds. DiBenedetto, who has yet to pit, was in fourth ahead of Joe Gibbs Racing’s Truex, Kyle Busch and Hamlin. By then, Briscoe, who was running in the top 15, pitted.

Down to the final 10 laps of the event, Larson remained as the leader by more than four seconds over teammate Elliott and nearly nine seconds over teammate Byron while Truex, Kyle Busch and Hamlin were running fourth to sixth. Then, the caution flew due to debris reported in Turn 6. At the time of caution, DiBenedetto pitted.

Under caution, a majority of the field led by Larson pitted while the rest, including Hamlin, Kurt Busch, DiBenedetto and Briscoe, remained on the track. During the pit stops, Elliott dropped out of the top five and all the way back to 16th due to his car falling off the jack.

With six laps remaining, the race restarted under green as Hamlin and Kurt Busch filled in the front row. At the start, the field fanned out to multiple lanes through the frontstretch as Hamlin remained as the leader ahead of Briscoe through the first four turns.

Through Turns 5 and 6, Truex spun and made contact into the tire barriers after getting bumped by teammate Bell just past the curb, but the race remained under green.

The following lap, the battle for the lead intensified as Hamlin was being pressured by Briscoe for the top spot. While Briscoe gained a run through the frontstretch and the first turn, Hamlin fought back and retained the lead through the following five turns. The battle between Hamlin and Briscoe allowed Larson to close in on the two leaders.

Then, the caution flew for a multi-car wreck that started when Byron, who ran over the curbs in Turns 5 and 6 and destroyed his splitter, slipped sideways and wrecked along with Kyle Busch and Logano, who made hard head-on contact into the tire barriers. In the ensuing chaos, a number of competitors, including Preece, Reddick, Buescher, Bell, Suarez, Davison, Haley and Harvick, wrecked. In addition, Corey LaJoie caught major air after running over the curbs. The carnage forced NASCAR to display the red flag for minutes to give the on-track safety personnel and crew to clear the carnage.

More than 19 minutes later, the red flag was lifted and the field proceeded under caution. During the caution period, the race was sent into overtime.

Following an extensive caution period, the first overtime attempt occurred as Hamlin and Larson filled in on the front row. At the start, Hamlin jumped ahead with the lead as the field fanned out to multiple lanes. Entering the first turn, Larson received a shove from Kurt Busch and was shuffled out of the top five. 

While Hamlin and Briscoe battled for the lead, the caution returned due to a multi-car wreck that involved Cole Custer, Austin Dillon, McDowell, Reddick, Chastain, LaJoie and Truex. Not long after, the race was red-flagged for four minutes before the field proceeded under caution.

When the track was cleared, the race resumed for a second overtime attempt. At the start, Hamlin pulled ahead with the lead while Briscoe got forced off the course entering the first turn. Despite getting into the grass in Turn 1, Briscoe came back on the racing surface with the lead until Hamlin took it back through the infield backstretch. Behind, Ryan Newman ran over the curbs while Keselowski spun.

Back at the front, Briscoe, who continued to battle Hamlin for the lead, was assessed a stop-and-go penalty for driving off the course. Despite the penalty call, Briscoe continued to battle Hamlin for the lead. Then in Turns 9 and 10, Briscoe ran into the rear bumper of Hamlin, sending Hamlin’s No. 11 FedEx Toyota Camry around. With Hamlin out of contention, Briscoe continued to lead until he locked up the tires in Turn 12 and went off the course. In the midst of the chaos, AJ Allmendinger, driving Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 Hyperice Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE stormed to the lead.

When the final lap started, Allmendinger was leading by nearly four-tenths of a second over Blaney while Larson, Elliott and DiBenedetto were in the top five. By then, Briscoe pitted and was parked on pit road to serve his penalty.

For one final rodeo around the 14-turn road course, Allmendinger, who rebounded from a speeding penalty during the race, was able to stabilize his advantage and extend his advantage to nearly a second over runner-up Blaney as he came back around and streaked across the finish line in first place to grab the biggest victory of his racing career. 

In addition to winning the first Cup event on Indy’s road course layout, Allmendinger became the 16th competitor to win a stock car event at the Brickyard as he earned his second Cup career victory in his fourth start of this season and first since winning his first Cup race at Watkins Glen International in August 2014. Allmendinger’s Indy victory made him the 134th different competitor to achieve multiple Cup wins, though he is ineligible for this year’s Cup Playoffs since he is competing in the series on a part-time basis but full time in the Xfinity Series.

In addition, Kaulig Racing achieved its first victory in the Cup Series in its seventh appearance since making its debut in 2020. The team, which competes on a full-time basis in the NASCAR Xfinity Series with Allmendinger, is set to field two cars in the 2022 Cup season.

“Oh my god,” Allmendinger said on NBC. “I was so mad yesterday. I wanted to win so bad [in the Xfinity event at Indy]. This is unbelievable. In my wildest dreams, [I] could never have imagined the way that just played out. We had to fight hard…Oh my god. We just won at Indy. It was just survival of the fittest. We probably had like an eighth-, 10th-place car. I sped on pit road, I thought we were gonna finish 12th or 15th. And then, those restarts were just insane. It’s great when you have a car owner that just says go get me trophies. He doesn’t care if that thing’s torn up. We just won at Indy! What’s up?! Thank you, everybody, for coming out! Let’s go!”

Following the event and their on-track incident, Hamlin and Briscoe, both of whom finished 23rd and 26th, met and exchanged words on pit road. The contact between both eliminated Hamlin’s hopes of grabbing his first victory of the season and locking himself in the Playoffs along with Briscoe, who was within sight of his first Cup career victory.

“I agree [the contact]’s not on purpose, but my team told me that [Briscoe] had a penalty right away and to me, it’s obvious if you cut to the racetrack and if you end up in the lead, you’re gonna have a penalty,” Hamlin said. “Lack of awareness and then, I just said, ‘Race me for a lap.’ He went right in the back of me. You can’t race that way. I don’t think he did it malicious. I’ve raced with him for a year now. He’s not that kind of person, but it’s just a bad judgement…I thought we were probably in good shape there, but this just turns everything upside down.”

“Obviously, [Hamlin]’s upset,” Briscoe said. “I would’ve been, too. He just came down there and asked what I was doing. I don’t think he realized that I didn’t even know I had a penalty until we got to Turn 10…Denny’s been in my situation, where you’re trying to go for your first win. He asked why I didn’t wait. Well, I felt like that was my best opportunity to win the race if I could get under him there…I had to try to get going all I could. I’m sorry that it ruined his day. That was never my intention. I get why he’s upset. Like I said, I would’ve been, too. I didn’t know I had a penalty until I got to Turn 10. As far as I knew, at that moment in time, I was going for the win. That’s what I’m paid to do and that’s what I was trying to do.”

Blaney came home in the runner-up spot followed by Larson, who won the Knoxville Nationals on Saturday and has taken sole possession of the regular-season points lead. Elliott rallied from his late pit road miscue to finish fourth while Matt DiBenedetto rounded out the top five.

Kurt Busch rebounded for a sixth-place effort followed by Erik Jones, Justin Haley, Austin Cindric and Newman. 

Bubba Wallace settled in 13th ahead of Harvick and Truex, Kyle Busch fell back to 20th ahead of Reddick and Keselowski ended his long day in 24th. 

There were 13 lead changes for 11 different leaders. The race featured six cautions for 23 laps. 

With two races remaining until the 2021 Cup Playoffs commences, Kyle Larson leads the regular-season standings by 22 points over Denny Hamlin. Currently, 13 competitors (Kyle Larson, Martin Truex Jr., Alex Bowman, Kyle Busch, Chase Elliott, William Byron, Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch, Christopher Bell, Aric Almirola and Michael McDowell) have clinched Playoff spots based on winning at least once throughout the regular season. Despite finishing 23rd and having a potential first victory slip away, Denny Hamlin clinched his spot for the Playoffs based on points. As a result, Kevin Harvick and Tyler Reddick occupy the final two spots to the Playoffs on points, with Reddick ahead by 28 points over teammate Austin Dillon, 145 over Matt DiBenedetto, 146 over Chris Buescher, 176 over Ross Chastain, 187 over Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 202 over Bubba Wallace, 242 over Chase Briscoe and 258 over Daniel Suarez and Erik Jones.

Results.

1. AJ Allmendinger, two laps led

2. Ryan Blaney

3. Kyle Larson, 28 laps led

4. Chase Elliott, 14 laps led

5. Matt DiBenedetto, one lap led

6. Kurt Busch

7. Erik Jones

8. Justin Haley

9. Austin Cindric

10. Ryan Newman

11. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

12. Chris Buescher

13. Bubba Wallace

14. Kevin Harvick

15. Martin Truex Jr.

16. Corey LaJoie

17. Alex Bowman

18. Josh Bilicki

19. Aric Almirola

20. Kyle Busch

21. Tyler Reddick, six laps led, Stage 1 & 2 winner

22. Quin Houff

23. Denny Hamlin, 27 laps led

24. Brad Keselowski, two laps led

25. Cole Custer

26. Chase Briscoe – OUT, Parked, 12 laps led

27. Timmy Hill, one lap down

28. Garrett Smithley, one lap down

29. Ross Chastain, two laps down

30. Michael McDowell – OUT, Accident

31. Austin Dillon – OUT, Accident

32. James Davison – OUT, Accident

33. William Byron – OUT, Accident

34. Joey Logano – OUT, Accident

35. Ryan Preece – OUT, Accident

36. Christopher Bell – OUT, Accident

37. Daniel Suarez – OUT, Accident

38. Anthony Alfredo – OUT, Suspension

39. Andy Lally – OUT, Rear gear

40. Cody Ware – OUT, Accident

With the regular-season stretch nearing its completion and the start of the Playoffs looming, the NASCAR Cup Series will be making its annual visit to Michigan International Speedway on Sunday, August 22. The event is scheduled to occur at 3 p.m. ET on NBCSN.

RCR Post Race Report – Verizon 200 at the Brickyard

Austin Dillon’s Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course Race Cut Short in No. 3 Dow MobilityScience Chevrolet Following Late Race Incident

Finish: 31st
Start: 23rd
Points: 13th

“We knew strategy would be important today so our RCR team worked hard on a plan and adjusted throughout the race, and our hard work and preparation paid off. The Dow MobilityScience Chevy was tight on the lefts and loose on the rights to start the race, but by Stage 2 handling was pretty good and we were able to finish the stage second to grab some valuable Stage Points. Stage 3 was nothing short of wild. I had nowhere to go and ended up with too much damage to finish the race. Honestly, it was frustrating and disappointing. We took a historic race like the Brickyard and turned it into a demo derby. Truthfully it’s not the track’s fault. It’s the drivers’ fault. Everyone wants to just run over curbs. I do hope the fans loved it though. With only two races remaining in the regular season, we’ll be bringing our A-game to try and get wins at Michigan and Daytona to lock ourselves into the NASCAR Playoffs.” -Austin Dillon

Tyler Reddick Captures Two Stage Wins with the No. 8 BetMGM Team During Wild Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course Debut

Finish: 21st
Start: 11th
Points: 11th

“We had a fast No. 8 BetMGM Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE this weekend, just ended up needing a little more luck. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course is a lot of fun, really flat and tricky at first. I really started to get the hang of it during the race and was able to attack more and more during the turns as the race went on. It’s great that we were able to capture two Stage wins during today’s race. That will help with our Playoff situation and hopefully gained us some points to close the gap on the No. 4 car. I’m disappointed we got that damage in the closing laps of the race, since it killed the momentum we had after a great pit stop and cost us a shot at a top-10 finish. The positive is that we were one of the teams able to continue on to the end. Every single point matters, and I know this team will continue to fight as the Playoffs approach.” -Tyler Reddick

Toyota Racing – NCS Indianapolis Post-Race Recap – 08.15.21

WALLACE LEADS TOYOTA IN WILD INDY FINISH
Bubba Wallace drives back to top-15 after late-race penalty

INDIANAPOLIS (August 15, 2021) – Bubba Wallace (13th) led Toyota with a top-15 finish in a wild finish at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Sunday evening. Denny Hamlin was leading with two laps to go when he got spun out of first place. Despite the finish, Hamlin has clinched his spot in the Playoffs on points, joining Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., and Christopher Bell

Toyota Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course
Race 24 of 36 – 82 laps, 200 miles

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, AJ Allmendinger*
2nd, Ryan Blaney*
3rd, Kyle Larson*
4th, Chase Elliott*
5th, Matt DiBenedetto*
13th, BUBBA WALLACE
15th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
20th, KYLE BUSCH
23rd, DENNY HAMLIN
27th, TIMMY HILL
36th, CHRISTOPHER BELL
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Ground Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 23rd

Are you accepting his (Chase Briscoe) explanation?

“I agree it’s not on purpose, but my team told me that he had a penalty right away and to me, it’s obvious. If you cut the racetrack and end up in the lead, you’re going to have a penalty. Lack of awareness. Race me for a lap. He went right in the back of me. We can’t race that way. I don’t think he did it malicious. I’ve raced with him for a year now. He’s not that kind of person, just bad judgement.”

How would you describe the racing going into turn one? Everybody going for it.

“Yeah, no doubt. I got hit by the 16 (AJ Allmendinger) going into the corner. He shoved me out. Then I shoved him to the right and then the 14 (Chase Briscoe) cut the track and took the lead for a second there. I thought we were probably in good shape there, but this just turns everything upside down.”

CHRISTOPHER BELL, No. 20 STANLEY Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 36th

What did you see in front of you?

“Just a bunch of carnage, that’s for sure. Whenever you are packed up like that racing, you are just kind of following the guy in front of you. I didn’t really see much, just a bunch of crashing.”

Had you felt that curb have issues prior to this?

“For me, no. My STANLEY Camry would be fine over there. You could see where the curb was kind of coming up a little bit throughout the course of the race and then obviously, they kept working on it. I was just kind of running my own line following the guys through there. I don’t know what happened. We all just piled up there.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. and North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands. During that time, Toyota has created a tremendous value chain as our teams have contributed to world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 38 million cars and trucks in North America, where we have 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama (10 in the U.S.), and directly employ more than 47,000 people (over 36,000 in the U.S.). Our 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.) sold 2.8 million cars and trucks (2.4 million in the U.S.) in 2018.

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

Ford Performance NASCAR: Blaney Post Runner-Up Effort in Wild Indy Road Course Finish

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series — Verizon 200 at the Brickyard
Indianapolis Motor Speedway | Sunday, August 16, 2021

FORD FINISHING RESULTS
2nd – Ryan Blaney
5th – Matt DiBenedetto
9th – Austin Cindric
10th – Ryan Newman
12th – Chris Buescher
14th – Kevin Harvick
18th – Josh Bilicki
19th – Aric Almirola
24th – Brad Keselowski
25th – Cole Custer
26th – Chase Briscoe
28th – Garrett Smithley
30th – Michael McDowell
34th – Joey Logano
38th – Anthony Alfredo
39th – Andy Lally

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Knauf Ford Mustang — FINISHED 2nd

“Our car looks better than most. That was a wild race, especially towards the end. I feel like we could have run 10th-12th all day and that is where we were. We just kind of got a couple good restarts and dodged some mess and we had a good shot to try to win the race. I just couldn’t put together a good enough lap and a half to get to A (Allmendinger) to try to pass. We survived all day and did a good job. The whole team did a good job sticking in there. The race got pretty crazy at the end. We almost made it a perfect weekend for Penske Racing, just missed it by one spot.”

CHASE BRISCOE, No. 14 Ford Performance Racing School Ford Mustang — FINISHED 26th

“There at the restart, everybody is trying to out-brake each other getting into one and we all kind of missed it to a certain extent. I was getting ran wide and had nowhere else to go. I knew I was going to go through the grass. It was just a matter of do you go through it slow or gas it wide-open and hope you get through it. I don’t know if there would have been a penalty if I had gone through it slow but that was my only chance to win the race at that point. I went for that and stayed on him tight and knew the16 was right behind me. He was on newer tires. A lot of guys were getting lazy through that turn and would just swing it out wide and leave the bottom wide open. So I was kind of all over him (Hamlin) in the esses and when I went to go underneath him I just clipped him in the right rear. He was already trying to get back to the left so it just turned him right around. It is unfortunate for them. They were probably going to win the race if the 16 didn’t get to him. For us we got a penalty and I don’t even know where we finished. It is frustrating to be that close. You can taste it and imagine what it would be like and then it gets taken away. I have a lot to be proud of. I feel like I showed that I belong here and I will get another chance next year.”

YOU AND DENNY HAD A CONVERSATION, DO YOU FEEL LIKE HE UNDERSTANDS YOUR SIDE OF THINGS? “I don’t know. At first, I didn’t know if I was getting anywhere. Once I explained to him that I didn’t even know I had a penalty until I got to Turn 10. If I knew I had a penalty, there was no need for me to even try to pass him for the win. If I would have known that earlier, I would have done my stop and go and went on. As I understood it, at that moment in time I could still win the race and I was going for it and got into him accidentally. I think at the end he kind of started to understand. He has been there when you are trying to get your first win and especially in our playoff situation, you have to do what you have to do. That is what I get paid to do and that is what I was trying to do.”

HOW ABOUT THE EMOTIONS OF BEING POISED FOR POSSIBLE VICTORY DURING THOSE RED FLAG STOPS? “We had a lot of time to sit there and think about it with all those reds and everything else. I kept running things through my head. I felt like my best opportunity was to be that second row inside. When you are on the outside of one, everybody drives in there and misses it and you just get driven off the race track. I knew it was going to be hard for me to win the race from the front row. I knew if I could maintain somewhat beside him I would have the advantage through two but it didn’t work out that way. The emotions are tough when you sit there and feelo like you can get the win. Early in the race it felt like we were the car to beat and then we swung the other way and were down in the dumps and then at the end you have a shot again. It is unfortunate but we still have two races left to try to do it.”

MATT DIBENEDETTO, No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang — FINISHED 5th

“There is nothing left of the car, I tell you that. We have no rad pan, no fenders, pretty much nothing left on the car. The toe was knocked out a mile and we finished fifth. All this credit goes to crew chief Jonathan Hassler for knowing the strategy and the spot we were in and throwing a hail mary and running all the way until we were about out of fuel and knowing that if any caution came out we could stay out and get all the track position. This is all him. All I had to do was kind of hang on until the end, hang onto the position. Obviously, our car was missing some pieces on it so I just had to hang on for whatever we could get.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 33 MoneyLion Ford Mustang — FINISHED 9th

“It is unfortunate. I felt like there were a lot of high expectations coming into today. Maybe not from my end, I just wanted to get to the end, which we did, just with a lot of damage and a lot of adversity. Then we got dumped by the 1 car at the worst time in the race. Right around the pit cycle and we lost 20 seconds. We came back from whatever it was, 26th to finish ninth. I probably could have gotten a few more spots but we stayed out of trouble on the restarts. We had a lot of close calls where I was in the middle of the pack. A lot of people I was racing around had to drop out of the race. It was a crazy day for our MoneyLion Ford Mustang. I am happy to end my Cup season with a top-10, it is what these guys deserve.”

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang — (Involved in accident on lap 78)

YOU ARE SEEING THE REPLAY NOW. ARE YOU OKAY? “Yeah, I am okay. Thank God those tire packs were there. The hit wasn’t that hard at all. The tires absorbed a lot of it. I don’t believe in luck but that time I feel like it was just bad luck. Wrong place at the wrong time and unfortunately it ended our day. We had a decent run coming to us and maybe a top-five finish for our Shell Pennzoil Mustang and the next thing I knew I was airborne and headed to the wall. I had a lot of time to think about it. I was just along for the ride as a passenger knowing what the end result was going to be. All the fans were cheering right there. They were happy to see me get out which was good do see. It will be an exciting finish to watch on TV I guess.”

THEY HAVE DRAGGED AWAY THE CURB. IF THEY DIDN’T PUT ANYTHING ELSE THERE AND YOU WERE TOLD TO STAY LEFT OF THE BIG CURB, HOW WOULD YOU ATTACK IT? “You better stay left of the big curb because that one is a launchpad for sure. We are wide open through that kink anyway and you can kind of just shoot right through it. Maybe just a single file. Maybe we don’t need it. I don’t know. We will have to go back and look at it and see. It is unfortunate that a lot of cars got tore up.”

CHEVY NCS AT THE BRICKYARD: William Byron Wins the Pole

NASCAR CUP SERIES
VERIZON 200 AT THE BRICKYARD
INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES & QUOTES
AUGUST 15, 2021

TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
POS. DRIVER
1st WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 1LE
3rd CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 HOOTERS CAMARO ZL1 1LE
4th KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 1LE
5th DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 COMMSCOPE CAMARO ZL1 1LE
8th AJ ALLMENDINGER, NO. 16 HYPERICE CAMARO ZL1 1LE
9th ROSS CHASTAIN, NO. 42 CLOVER CAMARO ZL1 1LE
11th TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 BETMGM CAMARO ZL1 1LE

TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
POS. DRIVER

  1. William Byron (Chevrolet)
  2. Chase Briscoe (Ford)
  3. Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)
  4. Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
  5. Daniel Suarez (Chevrolet)

NBC will telecast the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard live today, August 15th at 1:00 p.m. ET. Live coverage can also be found on the IMS Radio Network and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Pole Winner Quote
CONGRATULATIONS ON BEING THE POLE SITTER FOR THE FIRST ROAD COURSE HERE AT INDY FOR THE CUP SERIES
“Oh, I didn’t think about that, for sure. But thanks to Axalta, Chevrolet, and Hendrick Motorsports. They’ve been building phenomenal road course cars and they’ve been super-fast. Hopefully we have the speed in the race on my end to back it up; but definitely been doing a good job in qualifying. I’m glad we got qualifying back because I feel like that’s one of our strengths on the No. 24. So, I’m looking forward to the race. And, like I said, hopefully we can keep it up there.”

THIS IS THE SECOND POLE OF THE SEASON FOR YOU. TAKE US BACK TO EARLIER IN THE WEEK WHEN YOU GOT A LITTLE BIT OF HELP FROM RINUS VEEKAY IN THE CHEVY SIMULATOR, WHO WON HERE IN AN INDYCAR. HOW HELPFUL WAS THAT?
“That honestly might have helped my lap because I felt like through Turns 13 and 14 as you get up on the Oval and go back to the right, he had an interesting technique there with the brakes. I was like quizzing him on it and trying to figure out what I could learn from it. Obviously, they use a lot more brake. They are able to turn a lot faster than we are. But it was really cool to see how up to speed he was, and thanks to him for doing that. It was really cool.”

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

Toyota Racing – NCS Indianapolis Post-Qualifying Report – 08.15.21

NCS Post-Qualifying Report – Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course
Truex leads Toyota with a top-10 starting spot in Indy

INDIANAPOLIS (August 15, 2021) – Martin Truex Jr. (sixth) leads Toyota in qualifying for the Verizon 200 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Sunday morning.

Toyota Racing Post-Qualifying Report
NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course – August 15, 2021

TOYOTA STARTING POSITIONS
1st, William Bryon*
2nd, Chase Briscoe*
3rd, Chase Elliott*
4th, Kyle Larson*
5th, Daniel Suarez*
6th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
14th, DENNY HAMLIN
17th, CHRISTOPHER BELL
21st, KYLE BUSCH
27th, BUBBA WALLACE
40th, TIMMY HILL
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

BUBBA WALLACE, No. 23 McDonald’s Toyota Camry, 23XI Racing

Starting Position: 27th

Was it just a flat tire yesterday? Was there a lot of damage to the car?
“No, there was no damage. There was a smoke screen in front of me and I didn’t feel much at all, so I didn’t know that I was locking them up. Looking at SMT data, it was just that much difference. That’s why I hate road course racing because it’s just that much – that’s just how far I’m off, but no damage. All good – just a right front flat.”

What would you consider a good day today?

“I don’t know. Having fun. I’m just going to leave it at that. This track has been pretty fun. There are some high-speed sections and some heavy braking zones, the esses are fun, so it’s a fun track. I was looking forward to getting some air, but luckily, they took some curbs out (laughter). I figured that would make it more fun, hitting those things, it could have ended my day early, but no I’m looking forward to today. Our McDonald’s Toyota Camry – I know it’s good, I just have to get all the potential out of it.”

Are you becoming more comfortable with road course racing?
“I think so. I have put in a lot of work and trying to do better and better each and every time. There’s nothing like coming off of the two off weeks straight into two road courses back-to-back, but I’ve always liked road course racing. I always get excited about it going into it, but it’s one lap after I get pissed off and frustrated because I can’t figure it out, but I’m trying to keep a positive mindset. It should be fine. It is what it is. I’ll always try to enjoy the road courses.”

Is it better that it’s back-to-back road courses?

“Who knows. It’s always a hold my beer moment for me. I don’t think it matters.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. and North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands. During that time, Toyota has created a tremendous value chain as our teams have contributed to world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 38 million cars and trucks in North America, where we have 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama (10 in the U.S.), and directly employ more than 47,000 people (over 36,000 in the U.S.). Our 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.) sold 2.8 million cars and trucks (2.4 million in the U.S.) in 2018.

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

Ford Performance NASCAR: Austin Cindric Wins at Indianapolis


Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Xfinity Series — Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard
Indianapolis Motor Speedway | Saturday, August 14, 2021

FORD FINISHING RESULTS
1st – Austin Cindric
8th – Riley Herbst
32nd – Ryan Sieg
33rd – Kevin Harvick

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 22 PPG Ford Mustang — FINISHED 1st

YOU JUST WON AT THE BRICKYARD: “Unbelievable. First of all, I have to thank Roger Penske for every opportunity I have had in my career and every opportunity he has given you race fans to enjoy this beautiful weekend with three race series’. How awesome is this facility now guys? It is amazing. I am so proud to be a part of this Penske family with PPG and Ford and everyone that has put so much into my career. This racetrack is so much deeper than just that with my family history and what this place means to me. I can’t even put into words what it means to win at Indianapolis.”

WHAT WAS GOING ON WITH SINGING ‘BACK HOME AGAIN IN INDIANA’? “I didn’t even know I knew the words that well or could remember them that well. Hopefully I didn’t make Jim Neighbors roll over in his grave. I was here the last time he sang the song and it gives me goosebumps every time. I am sure it does for everyone else. I am proud to be here, proud to drive for Roger and proud to win at the speedway.”

HOW BIG IS IT TO WIN AT INDY AS A PART OF TEAM PENSKE? “There is nothing bigger. Nothing bigger.”


POST-RACE PRESS CONFERENCE

TIM CINDRIC, President, Team Penske — WHAT WAS IT LIKE WATCHING YOUR SON CAPTURE THE WIN AT THE BRICKYARD AND KISS THE BRICKS? “Just the fact of the history the Penske organization has and my father had here and so forth. To see him run here the first time, even in a USF 2000 car was pretty amazing. Now to know he is a winner in NASCAR here is a big deal for sure. I think it is not only important to us and our family but if I put my Team Penske hat on, it is a big deal for us too. In the NASCAR world, we have only won here twice and this is the first time we have won on the road course. Obviously, the first race went well today and then he finished it off.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC, Race Winner — YOU HAVE A DEEP APPRECIATION OF THE HISTORY OF THIS FACILITY. NOW YOU JOIN THE LIST OF WINNERS AFTER COMING HERE SINCE YOU WERE A YOUNG KID: “I still walk in the race track and I don’t feel like I should be driving. I have come here a lot more as a race fan than I have as a driver. It feels a bit strange to go out through Gasoline Alley and run laps. It is pretty special. I am proud to be able to win a race here. I have a pretty tall task tomorrow but nonetheless, this weekend has been really fun to be a part of. I think I called it the world’s fair of racing almost with the different cultures and different types of racing and drivers you have seen through the weekend. To see all the people get excited about NASCAR racing and IndyCar racing this weekend and to get a win for Roger here is pretty massive. He has done a lot for my career and a lot for a lot of the guys on my team. I am proud of the work everyone has done to get to this point.”

TIM CINDRIC CONTINUED — YOU WATCHED YOUR BABY BOY JUST WIN AT INDY. WHAT WERE YOU THINKING AS IT WAS HAPPENING? “Proud, but relief for him because I know how bad he has wanted to win here. I also know this might be his last chance to get it done in the Xfinity car and how hard he and the team worked and how close he was to doing it last year and how tough it was to have him come home last year without winning and sitting on the pole and having a great race until the end. As a father, you always want what your kids want, whatever that is. I struggled to want him to be a race car driver but it was inevitable that that is what he wanted to do. I think I’ve told that story a few times. I think to be not only a part of the Roger Penske legacy at Indy but to join the club of winners here in one of the major races is a big deal.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED — HAVE YOU EVER KISSED THE BRICKS BEFORE? “No, I have never kissed them before. Today was a first, absolutely. That is what winners do and I am just a fan whenever I was watching him race. It has been cool to be a part of that and see some of that, but you see a lot more losers here than you do winners. I think the losses show what it really means so much about this race track. My first 2000 race, it is funny you bring that up. It rained and I drove up into a podium position and it started drying out and I ended up not finishing on the podium because a couple of cars had put on dry tires and came up and drove past the field. It ended up being my teammate that won the race. We are good friends but he was quite a bit slower than I was. I was 15 years old and cried my eyes out when I got back to the transporter because that was my first race at IMS. It is hard to put into words what it means. Maybe that is a good example. It hasn’t been easy for me here by any means between that and getting shoved into the grass 15 laps into my first Xfinity race and blowing the motor with a car capable of winning in the next race. Then last year, coming so close like my pops said. Relief is definitely the word for the day.”

IT SEEMED LIKE THE WAY YOU PLAYED THE STRATEGY TODAY WAS THAT WHAT MATTERED WAS THE LAST THIRD OF THE RACE, RIGHT? “Yeah, we forgot about points today. I have said the month of August has been about points racing for us and trying to wrap up the regular-season championship because that pays off quite a few playoff points but today we kind of turned that off. It is pretty important to win here and quite a few late nights in the shop from my guys this week. They have a lot of pressure, just like I do, to perform when we show up to this track. I am really proud of them. It was a really well-executed race and that is why we were in position. I feel like I did my part to do that and that is what great teams are made of.”

TIM CINDRIC CONTINUED — TIM, WHAT WAS IT YOU TOLD ME BEFORE THE INDYCAR RACE WHEN WE WERE TALKING ABOUT THE FAMILY LINEAGE ON BOTH SIDES? “Yeah, you look at it and I said it when I started to actually go work for Roger. You go through this and kind of look at it. If you wrote a racing script, you are kind of living it in some ways. To sit here with my kid winning a race here is a big deal. I grew up not too far from here. My father worked in the wooden garages here until they tore them down. This is kind of my old stomping grounds in a lot of ways. For him to have his name somewhere as part of it, yeah, it is a little odd but I am sure it will all sink in.”

I THINK YOU SAID SOMETHING TO THE EFFECT OF NEEDING TO WIN HERE TODAY: “Yeah, I said the pressure was on him now. It was his turn. So yeah, there was a lot of talk about trying to go 3-for-3 here for the boss. The fact that we got this far is pretty exciting.”

DOES IT MEAN MORE TO YOU IN THAT IT CAME AFTER YOUR FATHER PASSED AWAY DURING THE OFF-SEASON? “Yeah, I can’t lie. I thought about him today. I am not sure if he did or not but we were fortunate to celebrate his life here in the Pagoda. Austin and I and his brother and my sister kind of took a lap around here in his honor when we did that. It was the most important thing to him for sure. Certainly, neither of us knew Jim Truman. We knew of him but neither of us knew him. I think it is pretty special when you look at the whole lineage of it all and he is part of it now. It is cool.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED — YOU HAVE RUN MORE LAPS ON THE TRACK THAN MOST OF YOUR COMPETITORS TOMORROW. GIVEN THAT AND THE AMOUNT OF TRACK TIME YOU HAVE HAD THIS WEEKEND, HOW MUCH CONFIDENCE DOES THIS WIN GIVE YOU FOR THE CUP RACE TOMORROW? “I think what gives me confidence is that I feel like the steps I have taken this weekend, whether it is the tire being the same between the cars and how the track changes evolved, that is where I get my confidence from. Brain and I nailed it today. I am really proud of that. Those 40 cars in the Cup field, those guys are professionals and they do this every weekend, week in and week out. We still haven’t gotten to the end of one of these races in the 33 car. That is my number one goal for tomorrow. Everything else is a bonus. If I am good enough to put myself in position and make it to the end, I will be there. We have a lot of hurdles to overcome and I am excited for the challenge.”

WHEN YOU CROSSED THE FINISH LINE, DID YOU LOOK FOR ANYTHING SPECIAL OR WAS THERE ANY MOMENT THAT MADE IT SINK IN? “I wanted to do a lap around the big track but I saw a trolley line up in the short shute so I decided I wouldn’t do that. that would have probably made the boss upset. I wanted to avoid that. Maybe I might forgo that if I get the opportunity tomorrow. Nonetheless, no, it was just cool to have respect from your competitors. That has always been really satisfying to me. I feel like I struggled with that early on in my NASCAR career and I am sure I will probably struggle with that at another point in my career. Probably next year. But to have guys like AJ (Allmendinger) and the mutual respect he and I feel. 90% of the time he and I can get out of the car and joke with each other and speak honestly with one another. To have a lot of Cup guys in the race today, I think it makes it that much better.”

NASCAR IS REMOVING THE ORANGE TURTLE IN TURN SIX FOR TOMORROW. IS THAT A GOOD IDEA? WE SAW A LOT OF DRIVERS HIT THOSE TODAY. DID YOU FEEL LIKE DRIVERS HIT THEM MORE THAN EXPECTED TODAY? “Yes. I think they hit them more than expected. I feel like if you are hitting that one you are probably going off the track anyway but I am not sure of the extent of the damage caused. If they felt they needed to take it out then it probably leaves a little more room for two-wide racing. The Cup cars are quite a bit lower to the ground. If they felt like that was the right move then I have no problem with it.”

TIM CINDRIC CONTINUED — HAVE YOU BEEN GETTING RECOMMENDATIONS OF WHAT TO DO WITH THOSE FROM OTHER TEAMS? “No, I have nothing to do with the curb layout or anything on that front. No, that is strictly outside of my realm.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED — HAVE YOU HEARD FROM ROGER YET TODAY AND WHAT DID HE SAY? “I have yet to see him actually.”

TIM CINDRIC CONTINUED — “I can say I watched the end of the race with him today, the last 10 laps with him. In what we refer to as our P1 which is the bus. He was pretty excited. I know he asked if we could bring Austin by to dinner tonight but he had some other commitments he had to get to right after this event. He was pretty excited for the fact that not only we won twice but he understands kind of what it all means but at the same time he certainly is somebody that I guess it is almost a double standard in some ways. He has to prove himself in a lot of different ways, which is the way it is going to be. I told him last year when he won the championship that he doesn’t really realize what he just did by winning a NASCAR championship. The respect level you get as a champion is different than being a race winner somewhere. Now, this is Roger’s favorite place in the world and now Austin is part of that.”

WHAT DID AUSTIN DO WITH THE MONEY YOU GAVE HIM FOR SINGING LESSONS? “He was smart enough not to go into chorus and go into band instead, let’s put it that way. It was funny because I had the radio on in RP1, the car radio. And the car radio wasn’t very good as far as the reception in there. Austin starts singing and Roger goes, ‘What is he saying? What is that?’. I said, ‘He is singing something, Roger.’ Then I turned it off. I don’t think he got the whole gist of what went on there because he was pretty confused about what Austin was saying or signing or what the hell he was doing. He was just being Austin.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC CONTINUED — AUSTIN, WHAT MADE YOU BURST INTO SONG? “That is just what I think of when I come to this place, honestly. That song. There is nothing else. Maybe the end of Star Wars Episode 3. But other than that, nothing else gives me goosebumps more than when they sing Back Home Again at the Indy 500. I don’t know. I know I was here for the last time that Jim Neighbors sang the song and the reception this place had. I am sure I didn’t do it justice but nonetheless, I guess I was surprised I remembered all the words today with everything else flowing through my brain and the emotions I had. It was pretty cool. I at least got the entertainment value for my guys.”