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CHEVY NCS AT WATKINS GLEN: Kyle Larson Race Winner Quote

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TEAM CHEVY RACE WINNER QUOTE
AUGUST 8, 2021

KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Race Winner Quick Quote

Kyle, what a great victory, but there in those closing laps, I have to ask, as you caught all those lap cars were you worried about losing the time there?
“Yeah, I was. Chase was already catching me pretty quick, even with me being in open track, so when I caught those, I think, four cars and got into the 38 right here, I thought I would look at my mirror and the 9 would be right on me, but thankfully had a comfortable enough gap to where I could make a mistake like that.”

“I want to say a big apology to Christopher Bell. I was inside but I wasn’t inside enough, and I didn’t — I needed to have the nose a few feet further ahead, and the angles just caught there in the middle and I ended up turning him. I hate that. I race with him a lot. He’s probably the one guy that I race with the most in all my racing, so hate to turn him like that. We’ve had incredible races together.”

“Anyways, hats off to Hendrickcars.com. Thanks for everything you guys do for me, everybody at Hendrick Motorsports, Rick Hendrick, Jeff Gordon, Cliff Daniels, this whole 5 bunch. Another amazing car. I could tell from about lap 3 after I stopped making a bunch of mistakes that we were going to have a car that could win today.”

This is your fifth win on the season, one of the most successful seasons of all time. What does it mean to come to Hendrick Motorsports and have this successful of a season?
“Yeah, it’s awesome. I mean, it really just shows how good the organization is, all the people that they’ve assembled at their race shop, all the men and women. All four of us could not be getting these wins like we have been without them. Thanks to them, and thanks to everybody else I get to race for. Get to go to Iowa this week and chase another big win, so looking forward to that, and hopefully can just keep racking these wins up.”

What do you want to say to another massive crowd here at Watkins Glen?
“Yeah, thanks all you guys for coming out. It’s been a while since we’ve been here, so hopefully we put on a good show for you. It was definitely a good show from my seat when the three of us were going at it for the lead in the first stage, then there in the second and third stage. Just a lot of fun today, and hope you guys enjoyed it.”

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.

Marcelli and Formal, Missig, Harrison win at Road America

Elkhart Lake, Wis. (August 8, 2021) — The Wayne Taylor Racing stable swept the top two classes, dominating the Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America weekend at Road America with five class wins, six podiums, and every driver finishing top five in class in both races. At the front, the driver pairing of Kyle Marcelli and Daniel Formal commandeered their No. 1 Prestige Performance machine to back-to-back overall wins from pole in the PRO class across the 50-minute races at the 4.048-mile circuit.

Jordan Missig, the sole driver of the No. 53 WTR car, drove brilliantly to overtake five cars and win the PRO|AM class in Race 1, finishing P4 overall. He proceeded to hold position and win the class again on Sunday. This weekend showcased the talent, work-ethic and growth of the 22-year-old, who is still quite new to sports car racing.

Ashton Harrison won Race 1 in the AM class in her Harrison Contracting with WTR No. 25, and despite contact early in Race 2, finished P3 in class for a second podium on the weekend.

Randy Sellari, driver of the No. 03 JG Wentworth LST drove consistently to secure a pair of impressive P4 AM class finishes. He gained two positions in Race 1 by extending his stint, leading the field and clocking fast laps as everyone else pitted. He then used the improved track position to good effect in Race 2.

Prestige Performance with Wayne Taylor Racing concluded rounds seven and eight of the 2021 Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America season with success up and down the grid. The wins in the PRO category mark the fourth time in six years that WTR has come to Road America and swept the top class.

The Prestige Performance with Wayne Taylor Racing team will compete next at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca for Rounds Nine and Ten of the 2021 Lamborghini Super Trofeo Season on September 11-12. Race coverage will be broadcast live on IMSA.com/tvlive.

FINAL RESULTS: ROUND 7

PRO CLASS, No. 1 Prestige Performance with WTR Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Kyle Marcelli | Daniel Formal – P1 overall
Qualification by Practice 1 Timing – overall Pole

PRO|AM CLASS, No. 53 WTR Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Jordan Missig – P1 in class
Qualification by Practice 1 Timing – P3 in class

AM CLASS, No. 25 Harrison Contracting with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Ashton Harrison – P1 in class
Qualification by Practice 1 Timing – P2 in class

AM CLASS, No. 03 JG Wentworth with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Randy Sellari – P4 in class
Qualification by Randy Sellari – P6 in class

FINAL RESULTS: ROUND 8

PRO CLASS, No. 1 Prestige Performance with WTR Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Kyle Marcelli | Daniel Formal – P1 overall
Qualification by Round 7 Finishing Pos. – overall Pole

PRO|AM CLASS, No. 53 WTR Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Jordan Missig – P1 in class
Qualification by Round 7 Finishing Pos. – P1 in class

AM CLASS, No. 25 Harrison Contracting with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Ashton Harrison – P3 in class
Qualification by Round 7 Finishing Pos. – P1 in class

AM CLASS, No. 03 JG Wentworth with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo
Randy Sellari – P4 in class
Qualification by Round 7 Finishing Pos. – P4 in class
Kyle Marcelli, No. 1 Prestige Performance with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo (PRO)
“A perfect weekend here in Wisconsin. The team really needed this. We’ve had our challenges up until now this season, although we had some podiums early on. We just haven’t quite had the speed that we needed. We made some big changes from Watkins Glen to Road America and it paid off. Again, thank you so much to Wayne Taylor Racing for putting the work in and figuring out what we needed to do. To get a pole position and two wins, just fantastic. Danny crushed it this weekend, I had a lot of fun behind the wheel and looking forward to the rest of the year.”

Daniel Formal, No. 1 Prestige Performance with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Huracán Super Trofeo (PRO)
“What a weekend. We go two-for-two here at Road America for the seventh and eighth round of the Lamborghini Super Trofeo North America series. The No. 1 Wayne Taylor Racing Car was on rails all weekend. I’m so thankful for the team, thankful for Kyle, we did a fantastic job. All the mechanics were working so hard the last month to get the car ready after what happened in Watkins Glen. Super happy. Max points, pole position and two race wins. Super excited for Laguna Seca and the world finals and hopefully we get to win some more.”

Ashton Harrison, No. 25 Harrison Contracting with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Super Trofeo (AM)
“Happy with another podium here at Road America, unfortunately due to contact from another competitor we were struggling with steering and front end damage the entire race. Happy to have made up several spots to finish P3. Thankful for my coach Tom Long and the WTR team. Our HCC customers had an amazing weekend and that’s what matters! Onto Laguna!”

Randy Sellari, No. 03 JG Wentworth with Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Super Trofeo (AM)
“Overall the weekend was positive and I’m getting closer to the podium. I was able to improve on my race pace despite our shortened practices and a canceled qualifying. I am happy the team was able to walk away with a strong weekend and that we can carry this momentum into the next races at Laguna.”

Jordan Missig, No. 53 Wayne Taylor Racing Lamborghini Super Trofeo (LB Cup)
“It’s been one of the best weekends I’ve ever had. Can’t say enough about the guys at Wayne Taylor Racing for putting together such a rocket ship, not just my car, but everybody’s car underneath the tent. We’ve all been fast in all three categories. Awesome to see for the team, but awesome to see myself get two wins on the season and sweep the weekend. Unbelievable job and looking to next year to build on the progress we made here, take the motivation to Laguna Seca, and hopefully we’ll be able to get more top five finishes and even some wins.”

Toyota Racing – NCS Watkins Glen Pre-Race Quotes – 08.08.21

Toyota Racing – Pre-Race Media Availability
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

WATKINS GLEN, NY (August 8, 2021) – Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr. and Christopher Bell and 23XI Racing driver Bubba Wallace were made available to media prior to the Watkins Glen race today:

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

What does it mean to be back at Watkins Glen?

“It’s great, love the racetrack, love the atmosphere here. It’s good. Rolling in here, it doesn’t seem like a couple years, but I guess it has. Looking forward to today.”

What do you remember from your win here in 2016?

“We just overcame some adversity and had a couple good restarts and won it. Really, just trying to improve overall the road course techniques that I’m using and hopefully we can take that next step and get another win today.”

What do you love about social media?

“I love it for the informational purposes. I never was someone before Twitter or anything to pick up a newspaper and read it for information purposes, so it keeps you in tune with everything going on.”

How do you feel about Bubba Wallace’s Playoff chances with four races remaining?

“His biggest chance is probably going to come at Daytona. That’s where he’s going to be the most competitive. As good of a shot as any really. It’s going to be a wild and crazy race and it always turns into some drama at the end figuring out who is going to get that last Playoff spot. We just hope it’s us.”

How do you feel 23XI Racing is progressing?

“Satisfied, so-so. Really, I think we need – I look at the finishes and they are trending downwards, I’m impatient like everyone else would be who’s competitive. I want to get those guys more competitive and get Bubba’s (Wallace) confidence back up. I think confidence is a big thing with him. He really hits highs and lows pretty often. How can we keep him a little bit more steady with his emotions and I think he’ll continue that trend in a good direction.”

Does it worry you that you are not technically locked into the Playoffs yet?

“Not really. It doesn’t worry me or anything like that, but really it’s just the battle with (Kyle) Larson that I’m focused on.”

What is the difference with your team this year compared to last year?

“I think our FedEx team has been good, we just have had the crazy stuff happen to us. Lugnut flying in the air at Loudon and taking us out of contention where I thought we probably had the best car. Crazy stuff has happened, but we’re still consistent and we’re up front every week. We’re top-three or four every week, it doesn’t matter what kind of race track we go to. Yeah, it’s agitating that we haven’t gotten a win still, but we’re in a good position in points and I want to keep that point lead for the regular season. If we can do that, I think that’s just as big as one or two wins we could get over the next four weeks.”

What are your thoughts on the Playoff format?

“I don’t know how you change it really. This is what we signed up for or this is what NASCAR wanted was a one-race, winner take all. It used to be a season, then it was 10 drivers then 12 drivers and then 16 drivers. It just kept getting bigger and bigger and the sample size kept getting smaller and smaller. It is what it is. I think you really gauge yourself off of race wins more so than anything right now. I think race win is what we go after every year is to get a handful of them and get yourself to the final four. Then hopefully your fast enough to win it. It’s so hard because the best car over the course of the season like Kevin Harvick last year didn’t make it. I don’t know. I don’t know what’s fair.”

Is Indy the same Indy without running the oval?

“We lost a crown jewel. People hated the racing. I don’t know. Are they really going to get more people out to the road course than what they did for the Brickyard 400? I’m not sure. I don’t love it; I don’t love the move. It took away a crown jewel. I don’t think anyone will consider the Indy road course any sort of crown jewel race. Indy, because of the oval track, that’ what makes Indy so special. I don’t think it’s the last time we’ll be back on the Brickyard on the oval. We can’t just keep adding road courses and just keep adding road courses, everything is cool the first time. The second time…although we might have a good crowd next weekend for the road course, year two, I think it’s going to be back to, where’s all the people? Maybe alternate or something, but certainly I think the Brickyard is special and Indy is special because of the oval, not because of the road course.”

KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Snickers Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

What does it mean to be back at Watkins Glen?

“It’s good. One of my favorite courses here at Watkins Glen. Enjoy this place every year. Kind of bittersweet missing it last year. Nice to be back this year. Hopefully, we can have a good, solid run today.”

Are you able to take in the surroundings at this track?

“Obviously, every year we try to head over to the waterfall and do the hike over there at the gorge, but other than that, it’s just laying back. A lot of guys just showed up today, they’re in and out today. We’re on a whirlwind tour these two weeks of racing with Brexton (Busch, son) so we ran up here in Syracuse with the quarter midget club so that was really fun. He had a good time up there playing with the kids. We’ll be back in the Midwest tomorrow doing some more racing with him.”

Was it a relief that Chandler Smith made the Playoffs in NCWTS yesterday?

“Yes and no. Definitely making the Playoffs is a relief, but a lot of simple mistakes being made over there. We’ve got to clean that up and be better here for these final seven weeks. They’re in a hole, they’re starting in a hole and they’re behind, so they’ve got to do about everything perfect in order to get themselves where they need to be and score some stage points, try to get a couple wins and get themselves further up.”

What are the messages you’ve sent to John Hunter Nemechek regarding wins and championships?

“No doubt. That’s kind of the reason why we got John Hunter (Nemechek), he’s got good experience, but he’s also a good driver and does a good job behind the wheel. We’ve seen that so far this year. Looked like they were off a little bit yesterday, probably about a sixth-place truck or so and he got a second out of it. Good points day for those guys, but the wins are where it’s at with the bonus points and everything in order to get yourself to that final four. I think they’ll have a good shot at that.”

Is John Hunter Nemechek getting better as a driver or is the perception changing because he’s in better equipment?

“I would like to think he’s (John Hunter Nemechek) getting better. I would like to think that some of the help that I’ve been giving him and the talks that we’ve been having is certainly helping him in that regard. He is a good driver, he’s just in good stuff and he’s starting to get that recognition. When he was in his dad’s (Joe Nemechek) stuff, he was doing a good job for what his Dad’s stuff was, but it wasn’t quite the recognition as being with KBM (Kyle Busch Motorsports) and running up front each and every race and finishing top-five every week. That’s certainly been a big bonus for him and the look he’s getting now.”

Is Indy still Indy without running on the oval track?

“For my opinion and my perception, I don’t view it as Indy, no. Indy is the oval. That’s what makes the allure of Indy and that’s the prestige of the place and being around since 1900. It’s been there forever; it has a lot of history there. Spin and win with Sullivan and Mears and AJ Foyt and the Unser story and all that stuff for years. The Andretti story – all of that is IndyCar obviously, but then it all started in 1994 with NASCAR going there and Jeff Gordon winning five times and Earnhardt winning and Dale Jarrett winning, Bobby Labonte winning. It’s like the who’s who has won the Brickyard 400. I don’t foresee that being the same allure being on the road course.”

Does it make a difference that F1 raced on the road course at Indy?

“I don’t know, when the winner wins next week do, they get out and do a kiss on the bricks?”

How does Brexton’s Midwest tour get set?

“Day by day, just looking at it. We had a few of our friends that we raced with at Millbridge, they’re all up here with us. The Millers and Kyle Beaty and his kid, there’s seven of us I guess that are all kind of doing this. They told us all about it and how do you look at what the last race was in the Midwest and then I have to come to New York and there were two days of a break and two days of nothing so is there anything to do in those two days for Brexton. I looked up the Syracuse quarter midget club and a guy reached out to us and offered up his car so that was super nice of them. Really enjoyed being able to go out there and spend time with those guys. Owen King is the kid’s name of Brexton’s kart that he ran.”

What is it that you like about racing at Watkins Glen?

“Just enjoy road racing. You used to only have two a year and you kind of treated them like an off weekend – come in, have fun and try to run hard and what not. Now, there’s four, five, six of them or whatever it is so there’s a bit more work involved to it, but still feel as though it’s a fun track. Always enjoy coming here and I’ve always been fast here. It’s nice when you have a shot to come up to a track that you know you can guarantee yourself a top-three and go shoot for a race win.”

How big of a factor is it when you lose a crew chief hours before the race?

“It’s a big factor, right? If we didn’t need the crew chiefs then we wouldn’t come here with them. We come with them here for a reason and that’s for them to be able to orchestrate our team and kind of be the head coach of everything that’s going on and to make sure we’re getting all we need out of all our team members around the team. We’ve got, but I guess the 20 (Christopher Bell) and the 9 (Chase Elliott) have gotten a shift in today and maybe that will be a little bit different for their race program, but probably not a whole lot. I’m sure they’ll be somewhere on a cell phone or a radio anyway.”

Do you think you’ll have to knock the rust off the first few laps after not racing here since 2019?

“A little bit, yeah, but the simulator and everything everybody does these days, that’s kind of the way of knocking the rust off. I did that earlier last week and was able to do some of that stuff to run some laps and just familiarize myself again with the line that you run around here, and the braking points you do. It’s embedded in my mind anyway from running here for so many years. It’s a good opportunity to get going again with the sim.”

MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 19 Reser’s Fine Foods Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

What does it mean to be back at Watkins Glen?

“It means a lot and feels good. I’m excited about it and have a great crowd here today. Excited about the opportunity to go win another race at this place.”

Do you see yourself as a stronger contender this weekend with the package?

“I’m not sure. We ran second with both the low and high downforce last two times we were here so just have to wait and see how it goes. No practice is always a challenge, but hopefully we showed up with the right stuff and we can drive forward from ninth.”

What have been the big strengths in your career when it comes to road course racing?

“I don’t know, just having experience and having confidence and having great race cars. I think those are the three keys. This place has been good to us, and we’ll see what we can do today.”

What can you say about Ty Gibbs’ success and his win here yesterday?

“Very impressive. Obviously, everything he’s (Ty Gibbs) done this year has been crazy impressive at 18 without having a lot of experience and new tracks, no practice. It’s pretty impressive. He’s on his way.”

How do you compare Watkins Glen to other road courses like Sonoma or Road America?

“It’s definitely its own kind of place. It’s high grip and repaved not long ago so high traction and really fast. This is a fast momentum road course that we go to so it’s own unique challenge and it’s a fun one to drive on.”

What are your thoughts on going to the road course at Indy next weekend?

“No idea. All I know about is what I’ve seen on TV so got a lot of homework to do this week obviously to get prepared and ready for practice on Saturday there. It will be fun. Exciting to go to new tracks and I like road courses as well so it should be good.”

Do you do much simulator work?

“Oh yeah, if you don’t today, you might as well stay home. It’s just the way it is. Especially with no practice and a new track coming up. I think everybody does and there’s so many tools available today, it’s almost like we’re becoming robots. If you don’t use those things and the tools available, you’re going to be behind.”

How does it impact you to have a new tire changer on the car today?

“We hope it doesn’t impact things. Honestly, at the end of the day you hope he’s ready to go. Tough circumstances the way it all worked out because he didn’t even test positive, he was around somebody who did. It’s kind of weird times as we all know, but hopefully it doesn’t affect us.”

How do you feel about where your team is currently with the Playoffs coming up?

“I think somewhere in the summer we hit a speed bump and started having some bad luck and crashes and crazy things. Loudon, it started raining and we crashed and still came back and finished 12th. It’s been a battle but feeling really good about the team and where we’re at and what we can do. Obviously, this place has been really good to us and hopefully we can have a good day today.”

Is your mental health important and do you get down when the performance isn’t on target?

“I think you have to be pretty mentally strong to be a race car driver. We’re having a great season and we’ve won three races; we’ve lost a lot. I guess maybe our sport is different in that we get trained to lose more than we win no matter how good you are. You have to have pretty thick skin and pretty tough mental attitude to do this stuff.”

Do you expect to have to knock off rust these first few laps at Watkins Glen?
“I don’t think so. For the first two or three laps, everywhere you go, it’s always on a road course like this you’re trying to feel things out and not make a big mistake or go off track or whatever. I know my marks, I know where I need to be and just tying, starting ninth to work through that a little bit. Not really rust, just re-acclimation. It always takes a lap or two, particularly here because it’s so fast to hit your marks exactly.”

Where does Watkins Glen rank for you in favorite tracks?

“I don’t know. It’s up there for sure. I have a hard time ranking favorite tracks. You’re favorite one is your next win, I guess. Hopefully that will be us here today.”

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

How does it feel to be back at Watkins Glen?

“Yeah, finally. It feels like it’s been a while. It’s been since ’19, right? I’m excited. It’s been a place that I’ve run decent at. I don’t have a ton of laps here, but I’m excited about road course racing today. It’s obviously been good for us this year so I think we can potentially have a great run.”

What is your mindset with the penalty and your crew chief being ejected?
“It will be tough. It’s pretty tough to pass here, but throughout the last couple races at least, we’ve had to go to the back. It just puts us a little bit behind, but I’m not too concerned about it. I think we’ll work our way up.”

Do you concern yourself too much with what happens in inspection pre-race?

“It obviously caught me off guard, but it is what it is. Just have to start a little further back and not having Adam (Stevens, crew chief) on the pit box will be a little bit of a hinderance, but I have all the faith in the world that Joe Gibbs Racing is going to come through and we’re going to have really, really great Camrys and I think we’re going to be racing up front today.”

What do you have to do differently behind the wheel today?

“I was talking to Adam (Stevens, crew chief) and asked him if it affects our strategy at all and he said not really. Just I have to work a little bit harder to pass guys. It would have been nice to start up front at Watkins Glen, especially not having laps here in a Cup car ever and then only two Xfinity races. It would have been nice to start up front with the experienced guys and learn from them. On the other hand, starting in the back, the pace will be a lot slower, so I have a little more time to get up to speed.”

Are you able to rely on any information gained from the Joe Gibbs Racing Xfinity teams?

“It will be a lot, especially with the way the rules packages are today, the Cup cars and the Xfinity cars are way more similar than what they’ve been in years past. I’m sure the crew chiefs are really looking at the data from yesterday.”

Who will be on the radio with you today?

“I believe Chris Sherwood, who is our car chief and he’s going to be substituting.”

What will you talk with Chris about today that you will need to inform him about?

“I don’t really think it changes too much. I don’t hear from Adam (Stevens, crew chief) very much on the radio during the races, so I think we’re in a pretty good spot where I don’t think it’s going to impact me or at least for me inside the car. I don’t know how much it’s going to affect the team because obviously I don’t see that side of it whenever I’m racing. I don’t hear from Adam very much on the radio.”

What are good passing zones here at Watkins Glen?

“Really your passing zones are where you have really fast mile per hour to really slow mile per hour. Turn one, turn six are really good. The bus stop is a great opportunity to pass, but unfortunately, it’s really hard to pass there just because it’s such a quick turn right, turn left that it’s really hard to be side-by-side there. One and six are really your safe passing zones without contact.”

Is the big challenge keeping the fenders clean?

“Yes, especially the Cup Series and these cars are so fragile. Starting in the back now, I’m going to have to be really careful to not cave a fender in and Watkins Glen is really high speed. It’s going to be very important to make sure that all four of the corners are nice and pretty.”

Will Indy still be Indy being on the road course and not the oval?

“I definitely think the feeling is going to be different for sure. We all grew up watching the oval at Indy so it’s definitely going to be a lot different.”

Have you done simulator work for Indy and what is the curbing like?

“Four and five has temporary curbing. I don’t know what the finished product is going to be, but I know what’s in our simulator and that’s definitely going to be a very key area because there’s a lot of area to be gained by manipulating the curbs and understanding how much you can run over and how much you can’t run over. It’s going to be really interesting to see what the final product is and you’re going to have to pay attention to that because that’s going to be a lot of time gained or lost.”

How much have you leaned on your teammates experience here to prepare?

“Kyle (Busch) is probably our benchmark going into Watkins Glen. You look at the racetracks and Sonoma is probably Martin’s (Truex Jr.) best track and Kyle’s definitely one of the best here at Watkins Glen. I got to race with him as a teammate a couple years ago in the Xfinity Series and he pretty much smoked us. I think he had a DNF that day, but his car was really fast. Really paying attention to his driving style and what he does to get around here. Hopefully I can mimic it.”

Did you talk to Ty Gibbs after his win yesterday?

“I haven’t got to talk to Ty (Gibbs), no.”

BUBBA WALLACE, No. 23 Toyota Toyota Camry, 23XI Racing

How much do you feel like you needed this reset?

“The off-weeks were good. You obviously need that for mental and physical reset. It’s good to be back at the track though. You get kind of used to enjoying the off weeks, being lazy for a little bit, but we’ve got 14 races left. It’s time to really jump start our season here and finish off on a strong note.”

Road courses have kind of been a struggle throughout your career. What kind of work have you put in to making them better?

“I’ve done a lot of sim time, looking over a lot of SMT data, too, data from the sim, watching YouTube videos, just figuring out where everybody is faster. Our main topic when we go into these races is the 9 car (Chase Elliott), just figuring out where he is beating us and a lot of it is the braking zone and carrying speed through the bus stop. It seems like the 19 (Martin Truex Jr.) can hang with him, but the 9 just has an advantage just a little bit to edge him out. Excited about today. I’ve always loved racing at Watkins Glen. The weather looks good. I wish it was raining. It would be a little bit more of an equalizer, but all-in-all, we will go out and utilize everything I’ve learned leading out to this point and see what I can do.”

What does it mean to be back in New York?

“It feels good. It’s been two years since we’ve been here. The track is a lot of fun. Fans are great, so it should be a good day.”

Is it hard to balance out all of the exciting life news with the racing?

“No, I think we obviously know the priorities. The engagement and the house stuff. That’s all-long-term stuff. We know that we have 14 races left. I’m focused. She was trying to have a conversation last night about some house plans and I’m just like ‘yep’ and she sees me watching YouTube videos of the race here. She got it very quickly. It’s all good.”

What do you need to do over these next four races to make the Playoffs?

“Win. Do our best here. We’ve got a lot of ground to make up points wise these next four races. I don’t think we can point our way in anymore with these last two wins from Kurt (Busch) and Aric (Almirola). That really put us behind. That’s the way the sport goes. We really got to win, but do our best here, come out of here on a positive note, come out of Indy in a positive note. I’m really excited for Michigan. Our mile-and-a-half stuff – that package is really good, and I’ve ran really strong there in the past. I’m excited for that, and then Daytona, we know our Toyota Camrys are strong, specifically at Speedweeks this year was really good, so we will just have to give it our all and survive.”

With the NASCAR schedule going to more tracks this year, does not having a second race at tracks hurt new teams?

“Yes and no. We have our notes from last year and what to expect and look at the JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) debriefs before each and every race. We are looking at the new one and learning as much as we can. We are shooting blind the first race, and then you will get it better the second time around. We pick and choose, but sometimes you show up and you hit it right. It’s just a matter of me giving the correct feedback and getting our packages where we want to be. Our mile-and-a-half stuff is really, really good, and it seems like when we show up to Michigan, I think we will have a good baseline, but that is from all of the mile-and-a-halves that we have. We have that package secure and where we want it – get it a little bit better and we will be alright.”

Do you see Daytona as your best chance to win to get into the Playoffs?
“I hate being reminded of the 400. That one still stings, way worse than the 500, three years ago. Daytona is obviously one that is circled and highlighted on the calendar. I know we can go out and do good things, we just have to not overtry and overstep our boundaries and be there at the end.”

How would you grade your season?
“Our progress is continuing to build. It’s really hard. We talked about no practice or showing up to these places for a second time – those are the races that you look forward to the most. It’s an unknown. Those guys are working hard, and I’m giving them the feedback that hey, I like this, I like that from the 43 car, let’s try to build that in there. All of these cars react differently. As similar as they are, they all react differently from driving styles and different drivers too. I’m excited to get to these tracks for a second time, but I’m also just excited to see what we have. The unknown of being excited about that, but I’m excited about our progress. I’m really looking forward to what the years have to come.”

What makes a good superspeedway driver?

“I don’t know. The races all play out so differently. If you go back and watch the 400 from last year, it’s like this happened, this happened, well, that’s not going to happen again. What’s the chances – again, very slim to none. You just have to be there and be smart and put yourself in smart situations to be there at the end. If you are there for the last lap – we always say, if you are there in the last five laps, man, we’ve had 10 cautions in the last five laps, so it’s setting ourselves up, making sure our teammates have some help, creating some allies on the racetrack to go out and execute and get a win. In the last lap at Daytona, I’ve came from 20th to fifth. Driving a little pissed off helps too.”

You’ve become one of the mainstream faces of the sport, does that come with any added pressure?

“If you let it. Obviously, I look different. I kind of act different than other drivers, and I accept that. I’m comfortable with my own skin and being who I am. I still focus on what we need to do on the racetrack, winning races and being competitive, going out and being the best that I can be on the track and letting everything else fall into place.”

About Toyota

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

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

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

Ty Gibbs scores third Xfinity career win at Watkins Glen

WATKINS GLEN, NEW YORK - AUGUST 07: Ty Gibbs, driver of the #54 Monster Energy Toyota, celebrates in the Ruoff Mortgage in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series Skrewball Peanut Butter Whiskey at Watkins Glen International on August 07, 2021 in Watkins Glen, New York. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images).

In a late shootout between a future star and a pair of road-course ringers, rookie Ty Gibbs came out on top after the Charlotte, North Carolina, native fended off late challenges from AJ Allmendinger and Austin Cindric to win the Skrewball Peanut Butter Whiskey 200 at Watkins Glen International on Saturday, August 7. The victory at The Glen was Gibbs’ third of his Xfinity Series career and his third of the season while coming in his 10th series start.

The starting lineup was based on a performance metric formula, weighing the driver’s and owner’s results from a previous Xfinity event, the owner points position and the fastest lap recorded from a previous Xfinity race. With that, Justin Allgaier started on pole position and was joined on the front row with Austin Cindric, winner of the recent Xfinity Glen event in 2019.

Prior to the event, Ryan Sieg and Jesse Little started at the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments to their respective machines.

When the green flag waved and the race commenced, Allgaier and Cindric battled dead even for the lead until Cindric managed to pull ahead through the Esses. Through the backstretch, the Inner Loop, the Bus Stop and the seven-turn, 2.45-mile circuit, Cindric managed to lead the first lap. Behind, Ryan Sieg and David Smith spun in Turn 6, but the field continued to compete under green.

Three laps later and while Cindric continued to lead, the caution flew due to Michael Munley wrecking into the tire barriers in Turn 5.

The race restarted on the eighth lap. At the start, Cindric maintained the lead while AJ Allmendinger moved into second place over Allgaier while teammates Harrison Burton and Daniel Hemric battled in the top five ahead of their other teammate, Ty Gibbs, and the field.

When the competition caution flew on Lap 10, Cindric was still leading. Under the competition caution, some led by Austin Dillon pitted while the rest remained on the track.

On Lap 13, the race restarted with Cindric and Allmendinger leading the field. Behind, the No. 99 Chevrolet of Kyle Tilley was turned and spun past the start/finish line, but the race continued under green.

At the front, Cindric maintained the lead ahead of Allmendinger, Daniel Hemric, Allgaier and Ty Gibbs. Behind, Kris Wright spun near Turn 11, but the race continued under green.

In the closing laps of the first stage, names like Allgaier, rookie Ty Gibbs, Myatt Snider, Brandon Brown, Alex Labbe and Josh Williams pitted under green.

Back at the front, Cindric remained uncontested and was able to win the first stage on Lap 20. Allmendinger settled in second followed by Hemric, Harrison Burton, Jeb Burton, Justin Haley, Gragson, Brandon Jones, Riley Herbst and Sam Mayer.

Under the stage break, some led by Cindric and Allmendinger pitted while the rest led by Harrison Burton remained on the track. By then, Labbe lost an axle.

The second stage started on Lap 24. At the start, Harrison Burton managed to retain the lead until his teammate, Brandon Jones, took it through the Esses. A lap later, Gibbs muscled his way into the lead. Behind, teammate Daniel Hemric spun in Turn 1, but he was able to continue with the race remaining under green.

On Lap 34, the caution flew when Alex Labbe spun and got his car stuck in Turn 1. Under caution, names like Myatt Snider, Jeb Burton, Justin Haley and others pitted while the rest led by Gibbs remained on the track.

When the race restarted on Lap 36, Allmendinger issued a challenge and managed to overtake Gibbs through the Esses.

Despite being pressured by Gibbs, Allmendinger managed to retain the top spot over Gibbs and win the second stage on Lap 40. Settling in third was Cindric followed by Allgaier, Gragson, Herbst, Mayer, Michael Annett, Erik Jones and Hemric.

Under the stage break, several names led by Allmendinger pitted while the rest led by Gibbs remained on the track.

With 41 laps remaining, the final stage commenced. At the start, Gibbs managed to fend off Cindric for the lead while Mayer moved up to third ahead of teammate Gragson and Harrison Burton. Two laps later, Gibbs managed to extend his advantage to more than a second over Cindric and the field.

On Lap 49, the caution flew due to Matt Mills getting into the tire barriers out of the bus stop turn. The incident occurred as Mills was trying to avoid the No. 52 car of David Smith. 

Under caution, few led by Hemric remained on the track while the rest pitted. During the pit stops, Riley Herbst was busted for speeding on pit road and rookie Sam Mayer was penalized for an over-the-wall too soon penalty.

With 32 laps remaining, the race restarted. At the start, Hemric, who did not pit under the last caution, led the field ahead of Bayley Currey and Brandon Jones. 

On Lap 56, Hemric surrendered the lead to teammate Gibbs to pit. By then, Austin Dillon pitted and then took his No. 23 Our Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro to the garage due to a mechanical issue. 

On Lap 59, Jeremy Clements spun following contact from Jeb Burton, but the race continued under green.

Six laps later, Brandon Jones and Allgaier pitted for service. Shortly after, Kris Wright spun following contact with Sam Mayer in the bus stop, but the field continued under green.

Then on Lap 68, the caution flew when Erik Jones, driving the No. 31 Chevrolet Camaro for Jordan Anderson Racing, lost his brakes and wrecked hard in Turn 6, with his damaged car getting stuck in the gravel trap.

Under caution, names like Gibbs, Cindric, Allmendinger, Harrison Burton, Jeb Burton, Brandon Jones, Tommy Joe Martins, Landon Cassill, Kyle Weatherman, Allgaier and Clements remained on the track while the rest pitted.

With 12 laps remaining, the race restarted. At the start, Gibbs was leading until he went wide in Turn 1, which allowed Cindric to muscle ahead. While Gibbs, tried to peak ahead through Turn 7, Cindric maintained the lead. A lap later, though, Gibbs was back in the lead.

Just under the final laps, the caution flew due to Kyle Weatherman stopping on the track in the backstretch and climbing out of his car.

Down to the final four laps of the event, the race restarted. At the start, Allmendinger managed to pull ahead through the Esses. Behind, Hemric spun in Turn 1 again.

A lap later, Gibbs was able to take the lead back from Allmendinger through Turn 6. From there, Gibbs went to work in fending off Allmendinger and Cindric with the top spot. Allgaier settled in fourth behind the three front-runners while Harrison Burton, Brandon Jones and Gragson battled for a spot in the top five.

When the white flag waved to signal the final lap of the race, Gibbs remained ahead of Allmendinger and Cindric.

For a final lap, Gibbs was able to navigate his No. 54 Monster Energy Toyota Supra through the seven-turn course and streak across the finish line in first place for his third checkered flag of the season.

The victory was the 10th of the season for Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 54 Toyota Supra team, three of which came from Gibbs, as Gibbs also collected his second road-course victory of the season.

“I felt like [Cindric] got a really great restart the restart before and he got a little wide,” Gibbs, who led a race-high 43 of 82 laps, said on CNBC. “First of all, I have to say thank you to the man above. That was probably the most fun race I’ve ever been in with AJ and with[Justin Allgaier] and [Cindric], those guys are very experienced veterans in this racing series. To be able to race and beat them just means a lot. I learned a lot from them too. I just can’t thank Monster Energy, [Toyota Racing Development]. My Toyota Racing Supra was super fast today and this is just a dream come true…This is just wonderful – I can’t even believe it.”

Behind Gibbs, Allmendinger and Cindric, two road-course ringers and Xfinity Series full-time competitors whom led a combined 28 of 82 laps and battled for the win at The Glen in 2019, finished in second and third.

“[The 54 car]’s a fast car,” Allmendinger said. “Ty was doing a great job. We weren’t very good a couple years ago, so we went with a completely different setup. The Hyperice Chevy was pretty solid; second-best race car, unfortunately. Gibbs is tough and that No. 54 car, all year, has been tough. Ty did a great job. He was clean, made a great move on me. I couldn’t do really anything to defend it…I’m ready to go win at the Brickyard [next weekend].”

Allgaier came home in fourth while Harrison Burton finished in the top five. Brandon Jones crossed the finish line in sixth followed by Gragson, Jeb Burton, Haley and Sam Mayer.

Michael Annett, who returned following a two-race absence, finished 11th ahead of Brandon Brown, Herbst, Josh Williams and Myatt Snider. Clements and Sieg finished 16th and 18th while Hemric fell back to 22nd following his late spin.

There were 12 lead changes for six different leaders. The race featured eight cautions for 15 laps.

With his 13th top-five result of the season, Austin Cindric continues to lead the regular-season standings by 80 points over AJ Allmendinger.

Results.

1. Ty Gibbs, 43 laps led

2. AJ Allmendinger, six laps led, Stage 2 winner

3. Austin Cindric, 22 laps led, Stage 1 winner

4. Justin Allgaier

5. Harrison Burton, three laps led

6. Brandon Jones, one lap led

7. Noah Gragson

8. Jeb Burton

9. Justin Haley

10. Sam Mayer

11. Michael Annett

12. Brandon Brown

13. Riley Herbst

14. Josh Williams

15. Myatt Snider

16. Jeremy Clements

17. Kris Wright

18. Ryan Sieg

19. Tommy Joe Martins

20. Landon Cassill

21. Jade Buford

22. Daniel Hemric, seven laps led

23. Preston Pardus

24. Josh Bilicki

25. Jeffrey Earnhardt

26. Brett Moffitt

27. Jesse Little

28. Stephen Leicht

29. Timmy Hill, one lap down

30. Joe Graf Jr., one lap down

31. Colby Howard, one lap down

32. Bayley Currey, one lap down

33. Dave Smith, two laps down

34. Kyle Weatherman – OUT, Electrical

35. Michael Munley – OUT, Suspension

36. Erik Jones – OUT, Accident

37. Austin Dillon – OUT, Chassis

38. Matt Mills – OUT, Accident

39. Alex Labbe – OUT, Rear gear

40. Kyle Tilley – OUT, Dvp

Next on the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule is another road course venue as the series will compete at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Saturday, August 14. The event is scheduled to start at 4 p.m. ET on NBCSN.

PEMBELTON SCORES FIRST CAREER LATE MODEL WIN; SELLERS WINS NIGHTCAP AS PAIR SPLIT SATURDAY TWINBILL AT SOUTH BOSTON SPEEDWAY

Peyton Sellers, the current leader in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national standings, accepts the winner’s trophy from Davenport Energy representatives following his win in the second of the pair of 50-lap NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Late Model Stock Car Division races that headlined Saturday night’s Davenport Energy Night event at South Boston Speedway. The win was the sixth victory of the season for Sellers at South Boston Speedway. Photo Courtesy Joe Chandler/South Boston Speedway

By Joe Chandler
Director, Public Relations
South Boston Speedway

SOUTH BOSTON, Va. (Aug.7, 2021) — Sixteen-year-old Landon Pembelton won his first career NASCAR Late Model Stock Car Division race and Peyton Sellers, the current leader in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national standings, picked up a win as they each captured a victory in the pair of 50-lap NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Late Model Stock Car Division races that headlined Saturday night’s Davenport Energy Night event at South Boston Speedway.

Pembelton took the lead from Sellers on a restart with four laps to go in the opening 50-lap race and held on the rest of the way to score his first career Late Model Stock Car Division win. With his win the young Amelia, Virginia resident became the third driver to score his first career Late Model win at South Boston Speedway this season.

“This is a big deal,” Pembelton remarked. “My dad (Brian Pembelton, the 2009 South Boston Speedway Limited Sportsman Division champion) won here at South Boston Speedway. Two generations of our family have won here. It’s a pretty big
deal.”

The young racer said it was special racing Sellers for the win.

“This is a big win, racing against Peyton Sellers,” Pembelton remarked. “We raced tooth-and nail, door-to-door. He used me up a little bit and I tried to pinch him as hard as I could. We raced pretty hard to the end.”

Jacob Borst of Elon, North Carolina finished third with Carter Langley of Zebulon, North Carolina and Trey Crews of Halifax, Virginia rounding out the top five finishers in the 18-car field.

The race was an exciting one, with Pembelton and Sellers swapping the lead three times. Pembelton led twice for a total of 47 laps.

Sellers, from Ringgold, Virginia, controlled the nightcap in earning his sixth win of the season at South Boston Speedway. He rallied from his seventh starting spot to take the lead from Stuart Crews of Long Island, Virginia on the 13th circuit. Once in front Sellers led the rest of the race. Pembelton, who started eighth, sped past Borst to take second place with five laps to go and finished 1.44 seconds behind Sellers.

Borst finished third with Stuart Crews taking fourth place and Trey Crews rounding out the top five finishers.

“It was a really good night,” Sellers said after the win. “Anytime you can go to South Boston Speedway and finish first and second it’s a great night. We lost pretty big in the first race. We were pretty much in left field. H.C. (his brother and crew chief H.C. Sellers) made exactly the right change. When I fired off going into turn one on the first lap, I knew it was going to be a good car.”

Jason Myers Sweeps Limited Sportsman Division Twinbill

Jason Myers of Hurt, Virginia enjoyed the biggest night of his racing career, sweeping the night’s twin 25-lap Limited Sportsman Division races.

Myers scored his first career Limited Sportsman Division race win in the opening 25-lap race and backed it up by winning the nightcap. He became the fifth different winner in the division this season with the sweep of the twinbill.

Myers and Ryan Joyner of Lucama, North Carolina exchanged the lead three times in the opening race with Myers taking the lead for the final time with 11 laps left in the race.

Joyner finished second, one second behind Myers, with J.D. Eversole of North Chesterfield, Virginia taking third place. Drew Dawson of Nathalie, Virginia finished fourth and Brian Obiedzenski of Franklinton, North Carolina completed the top five finishers.

The second 25-lap featured another battle between Myers and Joyner, with Myers getting the upper hand with six laps to go and edging Joyner a second time, this time by a narrow .799-second margin.
Eversole finished third with Dawson and Obiedzenski rounding out the top five finishers.

“I could have never dreamed this,” Myers said with a huge smile. “Four years ago, when I started racing, I wanted to get one win in my career. To get two in one night is really special.”

Nathan Crews Scores Third Win In A Row In The Budweiser Pure Stock Division

Nathan Crews of Long Island, Virginia scored his third win in a row and his ninth win in 10 starts this season at South Boston Speedway with his victory in Saturday night’s 30-lap Budweiser Pure Stock Division race.

Crews edged teammate and former division champion Daniel Shelton of Hurt, Virginia for the win in his toughest battle of the season to date.

Bruce Mayo of Halifax, Virginia finished third, Randy Hupp of Halifax, Virginia finished fourth and Scott Phillips of Halifax, Virginia finished fifth.

Josh Dawson Wins 15-Lap Budweiser Hornets Division Race

Josh Dawson of Halifax, Virginia earned his sixth win of the season Saturday night, driving to victory in the 15-lap Budweiser Hornets Division race.

The victory gives Dawson wins in four of his last five starts. He celebrated his win by asking his girlfriend of four-and-a-half years, Alyssa Spencer of Halifax, Virginia, to marry him in front of family, friends, and the South Boston Speedway fans while in Victory Lane. Of course, he got a “yes” from his totally surprised future wife.

“I was trying to do it (propose) on July 3,” Dawson explained.“I didn’t win that one, so I had to hold it off until the next time I won.”

Former division champion Kevin Currin of Chase City, Virginia took the runner-up spot, with Andrea Ruotolo of South Boston, Virginia finishing third. Dillon Davis of Nathalie, Virginia finished fourth and Jared Dawson of Nathalie, Virginia rounded out the top five finishers.

Next Race At South Boston Speedway

NASCAR racing returns to South Boston Speedway on Saturday night, August 21 with the Italian Delight Family Restaurant Night at the Races presented by Southside Disposal racing program.

Twin 75-lap races for the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Late Model Stock Car Division competitors headline the night’s six-race card. The night’s racing action will also include a 50-lap Limited Sportsman Division race, twin 15-lap races for the Budweiser Pure Stock Division and a 15-lap race for the Budweiser Hornets Division.

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

Advance adult general admission tickets for the August 21 event are priced at $10 each and may be purchased online on South Boston Speedway’s website, www.southbostonspeedway.com, through Friday night, August 20. Adult general admission tickets online and at the gate on race day are priced at $15 each. Kids ages 12 and under will be admitted free when accompanied by a paying adult.

Fans and competitors are urged to visit the South Boston Speedway website and the speedway’s social media channels for the latest news and updates about the speedway and events at “America’s Hometown Track.”

August 7, 2021 Results
Late Model Stock Car No. 1 (50 laps)
1 0 Landon Pembleton 50
2 26 Peyton Sellers 50
3 25 Jacob Borst 50
4 5 Carter Langley 50
5 9 Trey Crews 50
6 01 Camden Gullie 50
7 6 Terry Dease 50
8 29 Stuart Crews 50
9 51 Layne Riggs 50
10 22 Whitney Meggs 50
11 73 Bruce Anderson 50
12 50 Raymond Pittman, III 50
13 04 Larry Barrett 50
14 91 Chris Elliott 45
15 28 Jason Barnes 40
16 2 Chris Denny 34
17 23 Danny Willis, Jr. 3
18 82 Allen Dillard 1

Late Model Stock Car No. 2 (50 laps)
1 26 Peyton Sellers 50
2 0 Landon Pembleton 50
3 25 Jacob Borst 50
4 29 Stuart Crews 50
5 9 Trey Crews 50
6 5 Carter Langley 50
7 01 Camden Gullie 50
8 73 Bruce Anderson 50
9 23 Danny Willis, Jr. 50
10 28 Jason Barnes 50
11 2 Chris Denny 50
12 6 Terry Dease 50
13 04 Larry Barrett 50
14 50 Raymond Pittman, III 37
15 22 Whitney Meggs 16
16 91 Chris Elliott 15
17 51 Layne Riggs 10

Limited Sportsman No. 1 (25 laps)
1 17 Jason Myers 25
2 15 Ryan Joyner 25
3 98 JD Eversole 25
4 8 Drew Dawson 25
5 29 Brian Obiedzenski 25
6 58 Daniel Moss 25
7 36 Andrew Amos 25
8 2 Kenny Daniel 25
9 40 Brian Thomas 25
10 12 Zach Peregoy 25
11 75 Daniel Crews 18

Limited Sportsman No. 2 (25 laps)
1 17 Jason Myers 25
2 15 Ryan Joyner 25
3 98 JD Eversole 25
4 8 Drew Dawson 25
5 29 Brian Obiedzenski 25
6 75 Daniel Crews 25
7 58 Daniel Moss 25
8 36 Andrew Amos 25
9 2 Kenny Daniel 25
10 12 Zach Peregoy 25
11 40 Brian Thomas 18

Budweiser Pure Stock (30 laps)
1 3 Nathan Crews 30
2 13 Daniel Shelton 30
3 0 Bruce Mayo 30
4 12 Randy Hupp 30
5 66 Scott Phillips 30
6 61 Jimmy Wade 30
7 14 Mark McCarly 29
8 2 Jared Milam 9

Budweiser Hornets (15 laps)
1 9 Josh Dawson 15
2 49 Kevin Currin 15
3 12 Andrea Routoli 15
4 63 Dillon Davis 15
5 01 Jared Dawson 15
6 54 Jason DeCarlo 15
7 71 Donald Clay 15
8 62 Ross Mountcasel 15
9 28 Bobby Talbert 15
10 3 Steven Layne 14
11 28 Kendall Milam 9

Riley Dickinson, Efrin Castro Earn Porsche Carrera Cup Podiums for Team Hardpoint EBM at Road America

Photo credit Sideline Sports Photography

Rob Ferriol and Katherine Legge Ready For Sunday’s IMSA WeatherTech Championship Race Following Saturday’s Qualifying

ELKHART LAKE, Wisconsin (August 7, 2021) – Team Hardpoint EBM drivers Riley Dickinson and Efrin Castro each earned Porsche Carrera Cup North America podium finishes on Saturday at Road America, while Rob Ferriol and Katherine Legge will start Sunday’s IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship race on row six at the same track.

With Friday’s qualifying session rained out, the Porsche Carrera Cup grid was set by championship points. That left Dickinson’s No. 53 Porsche Austin/Team Hardpoint EBM Porsche 911 GT3 Cup fifth overall and in the Pro class, with Castro’s No. 65 Fine Fare Supermarkets/GoDominicanRepublic.com Porsche 911 GT3 Cup second in the Pro-Am class.

Dickinson got the jump at the green flag of the 40-minute race, moving immediately to third place and holding off an aggressive challenge through the opening lap when the race’s lone full-course caution came out. Dickinson held the position once again on the restart, keeping third place through the duration of the race to the checkered flag.

The podium finish, his third of the season through seven rounds, moved him unofficially to fourth in the standings. His best lap during the race means he will start third in Sunday’s contest.

“It was an unbelievable race from my perspective,” Dickinson said. “That’s the first time we’ve actually moved forward and held it, so from my standpoint that couldn’t have gone any better. We’re not complacent with third place, we want to get two more steps up on the podium but I’ve very happy with that effort. To me it’s a bounce back from what we had at Watkins Glen, and it’s relieving to say the least. We have a few more things we need to work on with the car, but I can’t thank the Team Hardpoint EBM guys enough for their work this weekend. We were thrown a curveball with qualifying getting canceled but we made the most of it today and are starting third tomorrow.”

Castro started second in the Pro-Am class and, like his teammate, held that position to the finish. Coming on late, Castro finished less than two-seconds behind the leader but was never close enough to post a challenge.

It’s the sixth podium in seven races for Castro, who will start Sunday’s race second in the Pro-Am class.

“Overall, I’m happy today,” Castro said. “The team worked really hard. It’s very sad for me to say this, but I’m kind of disappointed in second place. It took a while to get the car underneath me and I was prepared for a better result. But I can’t complain, it was a lot of fun. These guys are driving the tires off these cars. It’s very competitive and that’s a very good finish.”

Ferriol will start the No. 88 Richard Mille/GridRival Porsche 911 GT3 R 11th in the GT Daytona class in Sunday’s two-hour, 40-minute WeatherTech Championship race on Sunday. His qualifying lap of 2:10.173 (111.979 mph) came on slick tires as the rain began to fall during the 15-minute session. Ferriol turned just two full laps before the track was too wet to continue to improve, likely costing the team a handful of starting positions but leaving them in a strong position for Sunday’s race.

“We felt pretty good going into qualifying and thought we had a good car that was going to put us higher than maybe we’ve been in the past,” Ferriol said. “It’s all part of those incremental gains up the starting order that we continue to work on. Unfortunately, the rain came a little quicker than we expected and the tires weren’t up to pressure yet, so we really didn’t get that peak lap before the rain. But I feel like we’ve got a good race car and looking forward to the race tomorrow.”

Dickinson and Castro return to action on Sunday morning with a second 40-minute race at 9:45 a.m. CDT. That race can be seen live online at IMSA.com/tv. Ferriol and Legge take to the track at 1:40 p.m. CDT in a race that can be seen live via TrackPass on the NBC Sports app, and delayed on NBCSN at 8 p.m. EDT/7 p.m. CDT.

About Team Hardpoint EBM:
Hardpoint Motorsports was founded by Rob Ferriol in 2018 with the vision of combining his experience as a successful entrepreneur with his passion for racing. Team Hardpoint EBM is a joint venture between Team Hardpoint and Earl Bamber Motorsport formed in late 2020 to utilize the resources of EBM and co-owners Earl Bamber and Will Bamber and the early success of Team Hardpoint. Headquartered at VIRginia International Raceway, the team’s 2021 plans include a full-season effort in the IMSA WeatherTech Sports Car Championship in a Porsche 911 GT3 R and a multi-car effort in the IMSA Porsche Carrera Cup North America. More information on Team Hardpoint EBM can be found at www.hardpoint.com or through its strong social media presence on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Lewis qualifies Gilbert Korthoff Mercedes 10th at Road America

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (7 August 2021) – Making his first start at Road America in a GT-type sports car, Gilbert Korthoff Motorsports’ Shane Lewis quickly got up to speed by qualifying 10th for Sunday’s IMSA Sportscar Weekend at Road America.

Lewis turned a lap of 2:09.990-seconds, battling tricky weather conditions on the historic four-mile circuit in the No. 32 Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo co-driven by Guy Cosmo.

“I would have liked to have done better, but I’m happy with P-10 considering everything that’s been going on,” Lewis said. “We got to the grid just in the nick of time. We have been working to get our setup right. We went out there on slick tires, and unfortunately rain came on my hot lap. I managed to get a lap in, and that was good enough for P-10.

With IMSA’s new twin-tier qualifying for the GTD class, Lewis’ lap set the team’s position on the starting grid. Cosmo then went out for a second 15-minute session, which awards points for GTD competitors. Since the team is not racing for the championship, Cosmo recorded a lap of 2:19.128-seconds and parked the Mercedes.

The two-hour, 40-minute race takes the green flag at 1:40 p.m. on Sunday.

The Road America race will be streamed live on NBC Sports Gold Trackpass on Sunday, beginning at 1:40 p.m. The event will be televised that evening on NBCSN, with a three-hour broadcast beginning at 7 p.m.

Monster Energy Racing: Riley Herbst Watkins Glen NXS Race Report

Herbst Finishes 13th at Watkins Glen
Monster Energy Driver Scores 10th Top-15 of Season

Date: August 7, 2021
Event: NASCAR Xfinity Series 200 at The Glen (Round 20 of 33)
Series: NASCAR Xfinity Series
Location: Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International (2.45-mile, seven-turn road course)
Format: 82 laps, broken into three stages (20 laps/20 laps/42 laps)
Start/Finish: 10th / 13th (Running, completed 82 of 82 laps)
Point Standing: 12th (449 points, 400 out of first)
Race Winner: Ty Gibbs of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 1 Winner: Austin Cindric of Team Penske (Ford)
Stage 2 Winner: AJ Allmendinger of Kaulig Racing (Chevrolet)

Overview:

After a roller coaster ride of a race at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International, Riley Herbst and the No. 98 Monster Energy team brought home a 13th-place finish in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series 200 at The Glen. The 22-year-old Herbst started 10th at the 2.45-mile, seven-turn road course and quickly moved his way up to ninth, where he finished Stage 1 to earn two bonus points. After pitting during the stage break for four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment, Herbst restarted Stage 2 in 16th. He worked his way up to 12th by the lap-33 caution. The team stayed out during the caution to gain track position. The strategy paid off, and Herbst finished sixth in Stage 2 to earn an extra five bonus points. In the final stage, the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang restarted 19th and broke into the top-15 by lap 47. Herbst was running 14th when the caution came out on lap 49. Unfortunately, the team was hit with a speeding penalty while making their fuel-only pit stop, forcing Herbst to restart at the back of the field. Herbst was a man on a mission on the lap-51 restart. The Las Vegas native gained 22 spots and made it all the way up to ninth before another yellow flag flew just 17 laps later. Crew chief Richard Boswell made the call to bring his driver down pit road for four fresh tires and fuel for the team’s final stop of the race. Herbst continued to make up lost ground as the laps wound down. On the final restart of the race on lap 79, a spin in front of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang forced Herbst to fall back in the field to 17th. He made up a majority of those lost spots in the final three laps to finish 13th and score his 10th top-15 of the season.

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

“That just wasn’t the day we had hoped for at Watkins Glen. We had a top-10 car but made a mistake that put us back in the pack in the final stage. It’s so hard to pass here, and we just got stuck. We made up some ground in the playoff standings, but we still have work to do. We’ll take what we learned here and move on to Indy.”

Notes:

● Herbst finished ninth in Stage 1 to earn two bonus points and sixth in Stage 2 to earn an additional five bonus points.

● Ty Gibbs won the NASCAR Xfinity Series 200 at The Glen to earn his third career victory, his third of the season and his first at Watkins Glen. His margin over second-place AJ Allmendinger was .948 of a second.

● There were eight caution periods for a total of 15 laps.

● Twenty-eight of the 40 drivers in the NASCAR Xfinity Series 200 at The Glen finished on the lead lap.

● Austin Cindric remains the championship leader after Watkins Glen with an 80-point advantage over second-place AJ Allmendinger.

Next Up:

The next event on the Xfinity Series schedule is the Indianapolis 150 at the Brickyard on Saturday, Aug. 14, on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course. The race starts at 4 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by NBCSN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

2021 GMS Racing Camping World Truck Series Watkins Glen Recap

Sheldon Creed, No. 2 LiftKits4Less Chevrolet Silverado

START: 19th  

FINISH: 3rd

POINTS: 5th

Notes & Quotes:—

  • Sheldon Creed entered Watkins Glen looking to impress. With four Top 5 finishes in four road course starts, Creed was bound to be a contender from the start. Contend he did, driving his No. 2 Silverado to the front right away. Sheldon finished Stage 1 in second place, and backed it up with a fifth place run in Stage 2.
  • Creed led the way for GMS Racing in the rain-shortened race, finishing an impressive 3rd place finish. Momentum is on the side of the 2 team right when it counts most.

Back2Back: Sheldon Creed is headed to the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Playoffs, looking to defend his 2020 championship.

Quote: “Overall, we had a pretty good day at the Glen. I felt that we could have been more of a contender if we had an opportunity to get out in clean air, because aero means so much at this track. My truck handled great for the most part, but we were just a little too tight compared to the front two. I’m glad we got a good finish though, and I’m looking forward to getting the Playoffs started with my No. 2 team.”

Zane Smith, No. 21 Bay Mountain Air Chevrolet Silverado

START: 8th

FINISH: 6th

POINTS: 6th

Notes & Quotes:—

  • Zane Smith competed in his third ever road course race at Watkins Glen International in NCWTS competition. Despite having little road course experience, Smith drove like a veteran on the 2.45-mile track as he fought his way through the field. The No. 21 Silverado played a different strategy than most of the leaders and short pitted in Stage 1, resulting in a 20th place result. In Stage 2, Smith cycled back to the front, holding track position to finish a solid fourth place.
  • Smith was able to lead a total of four laps en route to his best career finish on a road course at Watkins Glen, coming home with a solid sixth place finish. Heading into Gateway, the No. 21 is a real threat to watch out for.

21in21: Zane Smith is headed to the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Playoffs for a second consecutive year. The sophomore driver finished second place in the 2020 championship standings, can this be his year to win it all?

Quote: “Not a bad day, I felt good with our short run speed, but we need to be better on the long runs. I think once we work that out, it will put us more in contention for the final stage. We led some laps and ran up front all day but just needed a little bit more. I am ready to start the playoffs with my GMS Racing No. 21 team for the 2nd time.”

AJ Allmendinger, No. 23 Bama Buggies Chevrolet Silverado

START: 25th

FINISH: 28th

Notes & Quotes:—

  • Road course ace AJ Allmendinger took the reigns of the No. 23 Silverado after its primary driver, Chase Purdy, tested positive for COVID-19 ahead of Saturday’s race at Watkins Glen International.
  • Allmendinger had quite an eventful race, having to start from the rear due to the driver change. From there, the No. 23 was on a tear, slashing through the field and making quick work up to the front of the pack. AJ drove up to sixth by Stage 1, and further improved his running position to third in Stage 2.
  • Unfortunately, a broken component in the right front suspension hindered Allmendinger’s race severely, forcing him to pit on numerous occasions under green and caution periods. He was also involved with an incident near the start of the final stage. Hard work paid off, and the crew fixed his issues, however it was too late as the lightning set in and brought the race to a halt. Allmendinger crossed the line with a disappointing 28th place finish.

Quote: “It was a disappointing finish to the truck race with the issue that we had in the front end. It still had a lot of speed in it after we fixed that issue. I felt like we had the fastest truck by a mile! I think if we didn’t have the issue we did, we could have easily won that race. I’m really thankful to Maury Gallagher and everyone at GMS forgiving me the opportunity. More importantly, I hope Chase has a quick recovery so he can get back to driving for these guys! That No. 23 Chevy was really fast, so I’m disappointed that we didn’t really get to show it.”

Jack Wood, No. 24 Chevy Accessories Chevrolet Silverado

START: 27th

FINISH: 26th

Notes & Quotes:—

  • Jack Wood competed in a double duty weekend at The Glen, driving in both the ARCA Menards Series race on Friday and the NCWTS race on Saturday. With an extra 41 laps of seat time from the ARCA race, Wood was eager to return to the road course for a second time.
  • The rookie went to work early on, improving on his starting position to finish a respectable 13th in Stage 1. In Stage 2, it appeared as if Jack would be in the catbird seat, restarting in the lead for the first time in his career on lap 24. Unfortunately, a speeding penalty under green flag conditions near the end of the stage brought the No. 24 Silverado down pit road to serve a penalty, putting Wood a lap down.
  • Wood gained his lap back by virtue of the wave around at the end of Stage 2, but with not many laps left in the race, he would have to settle for a 26th place finish.

Quote: “I’m pretty frustrated with how the weekend went for myself. I feel that I as a driver never had the speed that I wanted, but at the same time, I. feel like I learned a lot. We will have to keep fighting to get ourselves out of this slump. I’m confident that our No. 24 team will be able to rebound at Gateway.”

Tyler Ankrum, No. 26 LiUNA! Chevrolet Silverado

START: 10th

FINISH: 7th

POINTS: 12th

Notes & Quotes:—

  • Tyler Ankrum arrived to Watkins Glen full of optimism as the No. 26 Silverado had a phenomenal race at the series’ only other road course event earlier this season at Circuit of Americas, where he finished second. This time, however, Ankrum had to scratch and claw his way to the front from the initial drop of the green flag. On lap 2, contact through the bus stop forced an early green flag pit stop with a flat tire, resulting in a 26th place finish in Stage 1.
  • Despite it being an uphill battle early on, the LiUNA! crew never gave up hope, and crew chief Charles Denike made the right calls on adjustments throughout the race. Stage 2 was significantly better for Tyler, where he finished an impressive 6th place.
  • Ankrum was essentially in a “must-win” situation to make the NCWTS Playoffs, and had a fighting chance to take home the win as the race came a to a close. Unfortunately, the No. 26 was on the outside looking in as the weather did not permit the full distance finish. Though the crew’s spirits are dampened, Tyler Ankrum looks to finish out his season on a high note over these final seven races.

Quote: “We had a pretty fast LiUNA! Silverado, and I was happy with our speed. It was just an unfortunate set of events that led to our team not being able to walk away with the finish that they deserved. I think if we would have had the opportunity to finish the race under green, we might have had a great shot at making the Playoffs. Unfortunately we’ll just be stuck wondering what if, but that doesn’t mean that we are done for the year. I’m ready to have some fun and go for some wins near the end of the season!”

ABOUT GMS RACING

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

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What to do if Your Car Gets Scratched

Photo by Brock Wegner on Unsplash

Finding your car has been scratched or dented can be a nightmare. It is often a more complex fix than it first seems, so it is essential to make sure you treat it as a serious situation. It may not be something that bothers everyone, but it can progress to become a more significant issue such as rust. Also, a scratched car can be put off when selling the vehicle later and reduce the value.

Check to see Who Did It.

If the scratch results from someone bumping or knocking into your vehicle, then it will help if we can identify that individual. We can claim the cost of any repairs from them, often through their insurance, if they hit you with the car. Even if they were walking or cycling, you could still hold them legally liable, although it may be more challenging to get them to pay.

Look for CCTV & Witnesses

You should initially look around the area to see if there is any evidence of who scratched your car? If it has just happened, you may be lucky enough to find a witness who saw what happened. Take the contact details of the witness and note down what they saw. If you cannot find an eyewitness, check the area for local businesses with external CCTV. If you ask nicely, most places will allow you to review the footage, although they have no legal responsibility to do so. With this information at hand, you might consider calling the police to get an official report.

Sort the Problem Yourself

If you have no luck finding the guilty party, you may wish to consider sorting the problem yourself to save some cash. Find the best auto paint supply you can, and touching up the affected area can be a relatively simple job depending on the severity of the damage. Make sure any sharp edges are sanded away and, if necessary, apply primer if the metal is showing before adding a paint layer.

Check with Insurance

You should check with your insurance if damage to the bodywork can be claimed against the policy? It may be that it is, but there will be an excess to pay, or it will affect your no claims bonus. You should carefully weigh up the pros and cons of claiming as it may cost you more in the long term with increased premiums over the next few years.

Look for a Bodyshop

Whether you are paying yourself or having an insurer pay for the work, we should look for a competent body shop to conduct any serious repairs. There are usually a variety of choices in most areas. Look for operators with a good reputation; this can be easily done by reading online reviews on platforms such as Google and Facebook. If you have a valuable or rare vehicle, it may be wise to use a body shop specializing in your make or use the official dealership.