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Sean Creech Motorsport Evolving IMSA Program

Second in IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup ahead of Sahlen’s Six Hours

JUPITER, Fla. (11 June 2021) – Sean Creech Motorsport (SCM) today announced that driver Lance Willsey has made the difficult decision to step away from the 2021 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, citing personal and business concerns. The SCM team, led by team principal Sean Creech, moved to IMSA WeatherTech competition for the 2021 season, with Willsey sharing the driving duties with four-time Rolex 24 at Daytona winner João Barbosa in the LMP3 class.

Creech’s successful 30-year history reads like a who’s who of sports car racing, with stints competing in Group C, IMSA GTP, WSC, Grand-Am, SRO World Challenge and IMSA with teams including Dauer Racing, Jim Busby Racing, Mike Colucci Racing, Doran Racing and Extreme Speed Motorsports.

Building on the program from their Jupiter, Florida shop location, the team moved up from the IMSA Prototype Challenge this season, with Willsey and Barbosa combining on board the No. 33 SCM Exelixis Ligier JS P320.

Actively pursuing both sponsorship opportunities and fielding inquiries from interested Silver and Bronze-rated drivers, Creech hopes to secure the necessary budget to compete at the Sahlen’s Six Hours of the Glen in two weeks. The team is in a strong competitive position, holding second in the IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup, and is focused on building on that with strong outings to finish out the season.

“We are grateful to Lance for his hard work and dedication as we formed the team late last year,” said Creech. “We are disappointed that he cannot continue but hope that we can find a driver to compete alongside João for the rest of the 2021 season.

“Our biggest focus right now is to keep the IMSA team going,” said Creech. “We have a great deal of other work going on now in our shop, including an IPC program, as well as restoration and customer testing programs. But IMSA continues to be our primary focus going forward, both for the remainder of this season and looking ahead to 2022. As I said when we joined the WeatherTech series, we’re in this for the long haul so are looking forward to being able to continue moving this part of our program forward.”

The Sahlen’s Six Hours of the Glen takes the green flag Sunday, June 27 at 10:40 a.m. Eastern. The race will be broadcast live in the U.S. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Gold’s TRACKPASS, while international viewers can watch via IMSA.tv. IMSA Radio will also be available at IMSA.com.

What are the most important components to an ATV?

Photo by Thiago Schlemper from Pexels

Do you love the thrill of riding your ATV along the dirt road? ATVs are amazing, and like any other complex machine, they have thousands of components. However, you can now gain access to some parts. If you own or plan on buying an ATV, it is essential to understand the workings of the primary components. Knowing the parts can also help you to do minor repairs and fixes on your own instead of calling your mechanic. The ATV consist of several components, which vary depending on the model. Here are the essential components of an ATV.

  1. Suspension. Most ATVs come with independent suspension for each wheel. Such suspensions help when you negotiate rough terrain and challenging corners. The good thing is that you can easily remove these units if you want to repair or replace them. Suspension units are also adjustable. As such, you can set them to the correct settings depending on the terrain you will negotiate.
  1. Exhaust. The exhaust is usually hidden under the fairing to protect you from the heat that builds up during use. You can quickly locate the exhaust system by removing the panels and maybe the seat. ATVs allow you to change the exhaust system to squeeze a little more horsepower out of the engine. However, this is not necessary unless you compete at a professional level.
  1. Handlebars. Just like in motorcycles, ATVs have handlebars for steering. The handlebars have several controls attached to them to help you control your ATV. The throttle is a twist grip, similar to that in a two-wheeled motorcycle. You will also find the clutch, front brakes, lights, and ignition switches mounted on the handlebar.
  1. Protective Bars. There may be multiple protective bars that protect the ATV in case of a collision. ATVs also come with other protective bars that protect the rider. Manufacturers include a single bar across the front part of the ATV and others on the side to protect the machine and the rider. You will also find a chain guard, which is vital for safety and protection.
  1. Engine. There are two types of engines that power ATVs; two and four-stroke engines. Two-stroke engines are rare, but they offer more power to weight ratio. However, a four-stroke engine is easy to maintain, and it is more reliable than a two-stroke. As such, you will find more four-stroke engines in modern ATVs. Two-stroke engines use a mixture of oil and fuel to make them run. This combination has to be pre-mixed, which is more complex than filling your ATV with fuel as you do in a four-stroke. However, you can look for a two-stroke engine with an oil injector to do the job for you. Engines also come in either one or two-cylinder versions with power between 100 to 800cc. When looking for an ATV, bigger is not always better since riding demands several things, including physical movement and turning bodyweight into bends and corners. Powerful ATV models can be hard to control for inexperienced riders.
  1. Transmission. Modern ATVs come with continuously variable automatic transmission (CVAT), which link to the engine. Since it is automatic, you do not need to worry about changing gears. Automatic transmission is helpful if you are using your ATV for labor purposes. Your ATV will choose the best gear for the job depending on the weight, speed, and amount of effort required for the job. Some ATVs come with a manual transmission, where you use the clutch to shift gears.
  1. Wheels. Wheels are among the critical components of an ATV. ATV’s wheels give it an advantage over other vehicles because they grip the trails and allow you to ride to places other vehicles cannot. Wheels vary in size. Sometimes you may need big wheels while other times you will require smaller ones. Wheels are measured in diameter, width, and offset. However, the measuring can be daunting. A series of numbers correlate to tell you the wheels you need to buy for your ATV. The first measurement is the height or diameter of the wheel. Here, you measure from the center to the bead seat to the opposite edge of the bead seat. Getting the width involves measuring from the outside of the wheel to the inside bead.

If you need any ATV parts, start your search by visiting Tokyomods. Once you know your ATV, you will identify the features in your ATV, locate problems and perform repairs.

RCR Event Preview – Texas Motor Speedway

Richard Childress Racing in the All-Star Race… Richard Childress Racing has won four NASCAR Cup Series All-Star races with drivers Kevin Harvick (2017) and Dale Earnhardt (1987, 1990 and 1993). Earnhardt’s 1987 All-Star victory included the legendary “Pass in the Grass.”

Richard Childress Racing at Texas Motor Speedway… Richard Childress Racing has a storied history at Texas Motor Speedway that includes two NASCAR Cup Series wins with Jeff Burton (1997) and most recently with Austin Dillon (2020). The Welcome, NC organization has earned five NASCAR Xfinity Series wins with Kevin Harvick (2001, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2012) and two NASCAR Truck Series wins with Jay Sauter (1999) and Ty Dillon (2013).

Battle in the Lone Star State… For the first time in history, the Cup Series stars will battle for one million dollars deep in the heart of the Lone Star State at Texas Motor Speedway. With his win at the Fort Worth track last season, Austin Dillon is locked into the All-Star Race. Tyler Reddick will need to race his way in by winning a stage in the All-Star Open in order to secure a spot in the feature event.

Catch the Action… The NASCAR Xfinity Series’ Alsco Uniforms 250 Powered by Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen at Texas Motor Speedway will be televised live Saturday, June 12, beginning at 4 p.m. ET on FS1 and will be broadcast live on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

The NASCAR Cup Series’ All-Star Open at Texas Motor Speedway will be televised live Sunday, June 13, beginning at 6 p.m. ET on FS1 and will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

The NASCAR Cup Series’ All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway will be televised live Sunday, June 13, beginning at 8 p.m. ET on FS1 and will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

Austin Dillon and the No. 3 Andy’s Frozen Custard Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE at Texas Motor Speedway… Austin Dillon, who has made two previous All-Star race starts, punched a ticket to the 2020 NASCAR Playoffs with a win at Texas Motor Speedway last year, crossing the finish line first over his teammate, Tyler Reddick, to produce a 1-2 finish for Richard Childress Racing. Overall, Dillon is an accomplished driver at Texas Motor Speedway with 32 starts spread out across NASCAR’s Cup, Xfinity and Truck Series. He has even competed virtually at the track on iRacing. The Welcome, North Carolina driver has earned pole awards in all three of NASCAR’s national touring series while competing at Texas Motor Speedway and has led laps in four of his 15 Cup races there.

About Andy’s Frozen Custard… Founded in 1986 in Osage Beach, MO by Andy’s parents John and Carol Kuntz, Andy’s Frozen Custard has been providing the freshest frozen custard in the business for 35 years, giving ice cream the “cold shoulder” by scooping, mixing and presenting handcrafted frozen custard treats with speed and a smile. Since the beginning, the family has had one dream: to share what makes them happiest with everyone else, and to warm hearts, one scoop of frozen custard at a time. With a focus on product quality, customer service and community involvement, Andy’s has grown into the nation’s largest frozen custard-only business, with more than 2,000 employees and 94 company-owned and franchised stores across 14 states proudly serving the World’s Finest Frozen Custard. Andy’s also offers the ‘Yum Squad Loyalty Club,’ designed to say “thank you” to loyal customers by earning points to redeem towards a free treat for every dollar spent. For more information or for details about franchising opportunities, visit www.eatandys.com.

AUSTIN DILLON QUOTES:
The All-Star race takes place at Texas Motor Speedway this year. You have to be excited about that…
“I can’t wait. We’re definitely looking forward to getting the chance to run for a million dollars. After winning at Texas Motor Speedway last year, I feel pretty good about having the All-Star race there. It gives us a legitimate shot at locking ourselves into the All-Star race for a long time if we win the race. It’s a crazy format. It’s going to be tough with all of the different stuff we have to do and go through, but man ONE MILLION DOLLARS! Somebody’s going to get it, why not us?”

Do you know the rules for the All-Star race? Are you going to try and learn the rules, or are you just going to tell your crew chief to tell you what to do?
“I haven’t even looked into the rules. I went through my sim session today, just trying to make the car drives as good as possible on the simulator. The one thing I did work on that was different from my normal simulator time is practicing pit road. I know there’s a $100,000 reward for the fastest pit stop, and that includes yellow line to yellow line. So, I have to do my part to help our pit crew have that opportunity, as well.”

“As far as the inversion and all the different starting positions, I think I’ll just leave that up to my crew chief, Justin Alexander, and the guys to help me out with that. I know we’re starting fifth and we’ll just take it from there. I think it’s a 100-lap race and a couple different cautions and resets throughout. So, I guess the most average finishes play into it and speed. We’ll just make it work.”

What did the simulator tell you on how the 510 horsepower will be different than 550?
“I didn’t feel a huge difference. I think everybody’s going to try and run wide-open. It’s going to be hot. It’s 90 degrees and you’re trying to run wide-open. Teams will be trying to trim their car out. I still think we’ll get them where they’re edgy for the speed purpose of things. Turns one and two are not the most ideal corners, so you’re going to be balancing – do you want to be able to easily run wide-open or have more speed trimmed-out and make turns one and two more difficult? Turns three and four are pretty self-explanatory, but one and two can get difficult. I still think there’s going to be handling involved. We’ll be able to adjust that too, I think, with the way the stops are built. The only one you can really lose on is the one at the end, I think.”

“We’ll be able to adjust a little bit. If you start aggressive and you don’t feel like that’s the right direction, you might be able to tighten your car up or do something to make the car drive a little better. Sometimes we don’t want to adjust the car because it slows the pit stops down. We’ll have a little more time to adjust and make the car drive a little different if you’re struggling with the something.”

Tyler Reddick and the No. 8 iCashautos / I Am Second Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE at Texas Motor Speedway… Tyler Reddick is looking to make his debut appearance in the NASCAR All-Star Race this weekend, having finished 10th in the All-Star Open last year at Bristol Motor Speedway. Reddick has two NASCAR Cup Series starts at Texas Motor Speedway, including a Cup Series career-best finish of second (July 2020). He also has five NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at the 1.5-mile speedway, with his best finish of second coming in both October 2018 and March 2019. The driver also has six starts, one pole award and four top-five finishes at the 1.5-mile speedway in the NASCAR Truck Series.

Vote for Tyler… It’s not too late to vote Reddick into the All-Star race as the 2021 Fan Vote! Fans can vote on NASCAR.com/FanVote once a day through Friday, June 11, at 12 p.m. ET for Reddick as their pick for the All-Star race.

Welcome iCashautos.com… The concept for iCashautos formed from a 40+ year friendship between Tim Faith (Owner/operator of multiple new vehicle franchises for over 20 years) and Dale Cardwell (Investigative/consumer reporter for 30+ years and owner of TrustDale.com). The two lifelong friends have created a process where iCashautos gives customers a direct and FREE path to some of the nation’s Best-Automotive dealers, providing those customers with an excellent purchase experience. Allow those dealers to be part of the iCashautos marketing family, which is far less expensive than traditional advertising and marketing for auto dealers. Allowing iCashautos to share the savings with their customers. “Better-Than the Best Price™” ALWAYS saves you money. iCashautos allows you to purchase from one of our approved dealers and save, or use any other online service and simply take their so called lowest or best price to your iCashautos dealer. If the iCashautos dealer can beat or at least match their best price, you get a check from iCashautos, it’s that simple. At iCashautos you get a great buying experience and always: “Better – Than the Best Price”™

About I Am Second… I Am Second is a non-profit that ignites hope and inspires people to live for something greater than themselves. Launched in 2008, the iamsecond.com website features more than 100 powerful short films of athletes, actors, models, musicians, cultural influencers and everyday people who have found hope through a relationship with Jesus. Watch their stories and find out more at iamsecond.com.

TYLER REDDICK QUOTE:
What are your thoughts on Texas Motor Speedway hosting the All-Star race for the first time this weekend?
“I hope it’s a good race at Texas Motor Speedway this weekend, with them hosting the All-Star Race event for the first time. I’ve come close to winning at Texas Motor Speedway a lot in my career, even finishing second behind my teammate Austin Dillon last July, so I’m excited at having another shot there. Getting into the All-Star Race either by racing my way in or with the Fan vote is the first goal, and then from there I know my iCashautos / I Am Second team will do everything we can to win the million-dollar prize. It’s going to be tough though, especially with the horsepower change. It’s already hard to pass in these Cup cars, and this creates another challenge for us. Everyone has learned how to work the air with this package, so you’re going to have to be really smart on how to get up front. It’s a little bit of an unknown going into the weekend with the change in horsepower, but I know my team and I will make the most of it and try to put on a good show for the fans.”

Myatt Snider and the No. 2 TaxSlayer Chevrolet Camaro at Texas Motor Speedway… Myatt Snider has two career NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at Texas Motor Speedway, both of which came one season ago in 2020. The 26-year-old has also competed in four NASCAR Truck Series event at the 1.5-mile speedway.

About TaxSlayer… TaxSlayer makes online tax filing accessible for millions of Americans, with an easy-to-use platform and unlimited support at a fraction of the cost of the competition. Trusted for over 50 years, the Augusta-based tech company successfully completed more than 10 million federal and state e-filed tax returns in 2020 and processed $15 billion in refunds. TaxSlayer achieved a 4.5/5 TrustScore on consumer review site Trustpilot, with 87% of its customers rating the tax filing platform Great or Excellent. For more information, visit www.TaxSlayer.com.

MYATT SNIDER QUOTE:
Texas Motor Speedway is an intermediate track that you’ve raced on a handful of times. What do you expect from Saturday?
“The good thing about Texas Motor Speedway is that I have raced there twice in the Xfinity Series and four times in the Truck Series. Sometimes just having laps under your belt makes you more comfortable on one day shows when we don’t have practice and qualifying. This will be my first race at Texas with my Richard Childress Racing team, but we are looking to get this monkey off our backs and have a solid race from start to finish. The bad luck seems to be following us right now, but I know our TaxSlayer team can turn it around and compete up front on any given weekend. I’m looking forward to the Alsco Uniforms 250 Powered by Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen and hopefully we are the ones wearing cowboy hats at the end of the race.”

JOE GIBBS, TOM LANDRY JR. NAMED GRAND MARSHALS FOR JUNE 13 NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE

Interstate Batteries’ Norm Miller to give the invocation after waving inaugural race’s field of drivers to green

FORT WORTH, Texas (June 11, 2021) – Three-time Super Bowl Champion head coach and five-time NASCAR Cup Series Champion team owner Joe Gibbs along with Tom Landry, Jr., the son of two-time Super Bowl Champion head coach Tom Landry, have been named co-grand marshals for the 37th annual NASCAR All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway on June 13.

Gibbs and the elder Landry were the co-grand marshals for the speedway’s first NASCAR Cup Series race on April 6, 1997. The 2021 NASCAR All-Star Race will be held for the first time at the speedway, which is celebrating its 25th Season of Speed.

Norm Miller, Chairman of the Board of Interstate Batteries, the entitlement sponsor of that first NASCAR race at No Limits, Texas, will provide the invocation prior to the start of the $1 million-to-win All-Star Race. Miller waved the green flag to start the 1997 Interstate Batteries 500.

“I really appreciate everyone at Texas Motor Speedway for the opportunity to give the command to start the engines for this weekend’s All-Star Race with Tom Landry, Jr., said Gibbs, whose Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) organization will field all four of its NASCAR Cup Series entries in the NASCAR All-Star Race. “I had so much respect for his father and it was a great honor to serve as grand marshal with him 25 years ago for the Interstate Batteries 500. What a great way to recognize that moment now, especially as we celebrate not only our 30th anniversary at JGR this season, but also our 30-year partnership with Norm (Miller) and everyone at Interstate Batteries.”

Landry, Jr. currently serves as President and a Director of Dallas-based Landry Investment Group, Inc., an organization involved in various investment activities and sports-related projects. He is a co-owner of an independent oil and gas exploration and production company with operations in Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, Illinois and the Texas Gulf Coast. He received a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Duke University and a Juris Doctorate Degree from the University of Texas School of Law.

“My father considered it a great opportunity to be part of the first NASCAR Cup Series race at Texas Motor Speedway back in 1997 so I’m honored to continue his legacy at the first NASCAR All-Star Race taking place during the speedway’s 25th Season of Speed,” said Landry. “The speedway has been a great community partner over the decades. It will be wonderful to see race fans filling the grandstands again enjoying outdoor activities together while watching some spectacular racing.”

Tom Landry, known for his ever-present fedora hat while on the sidelines, was the head coach of the Dallas Cowboys from its inaugural season in 1960 to 1988. He took the team to five Super Bowls, earning victories in 1971 (defeating the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl VI) and 1977 (defeating the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XII). He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1990 and the Dallas Cowboys Ring of Honor in 1993.

On-track activity for the NASCAR All-Star Race weekend begins June 12 with a doubleheader, opening with the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series SpeedyCash.com 220 (12 p.m. CT on FS1, MRN, and 95.9 The Ranch) followed at 3 p.m. CT by the NASCAR Xfinity Series Alsco Uniforms 250 powered by Cheddar’s (FS1, PRN, 95.9 The Ranch). Then, on Sunday, June 13, is the NASCAR All-Star Open (5 p.m. CT on FS1, MRN and 95.9 The Ranch) followed by the $1 million NASCAR All-Star Race (7 p.m. CT on FS1, MRN and 95.9 The Ranch).

HASH TAGS: #AllStarRace #Alsco250 #SpeedyCash220 #NLTX

TICKETS:
Tickets for Texas Motor Speedway’s 2021 major event season, including the June 13 NASCAR All-Star Race, are on sale now at http://www.texasmotorspeedway.com.

MORE INFO:
Keep track of all of Texas Motor Speedway’s events by following on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Keep up with all the latest news and information on the speedway website and TMS mobile app.

CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES-CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX
STEETS OF BELLE ISLE
TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
JUNE 11,2021

RACES 7-8 OF 2021 NTT INDYCAR SERIES SEASON:

DETROIT (June 9, 2021) – With the challenges of the 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval in their rear-view mirror, Chevrolet drivers turn their attention to a 2.35-mile, 13-turn temporary street circuit for the Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix presented by Lear.

Different configurations and styles of racing. Similar challenges.

Eleven entries powered by Chevrolet’s 2.2-liter, twin-turbocharged, direct-injected V6 engine will compete in the 70-lap Duals on Saturday, June 12, and Sunday, June 13. Both races will have same-day qualifications.

Twin races on the bumpy street circuit, which features hard braking zones and short, speedy straights prime for overtaking, present tests of durability for both drivers and their race cars.
“There’s not a weekend that resembles the other,” said four-time INDYCAR champion Sebastien Bourdais, who will drive the No. 14 ROKiT Chevrolet for A.J. Foyt Racing in the doubleheader. “There are some very, very key moments in the weekend that make it a great or good or a bad or terrible one. I think you just have to be open-minded; you have to get a look at optimizing everything. You know if you don’t execute, then it’s not going to be a fun experience.
“We were lucky enough to put two on the board for Chevy back in ’15 and ’16. Yeah, love to do it again. For us it’s kind of another race, but we know it means a lot more if we get it done.”
Chevrolet has won six of the races on scenic Belle Isle since taking over as title sponsor of the event in 2012 – the same year it returned to NTT INDYCAR SERIES manufacturer competition. The event was not held in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In 2019, Josef Newgarden secured his 12th career Series victory in Dual 1 in his Team Penske Chevrolet. Teammate Will Power is a two-time winner, and four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves completed a Team Chevy sweep with Power in 2014.
Belle Isle has hosted NTT INDYCAR SERIES doubleheader race weekends dating to 2013.
“We got two races, which is fantastic, at one of my favorite tracks. I think it’s a great chance to get points and a great chance to load up the old Chevy Tahoe with trophies and drive it back to Indianapolis,” said Conor Daly, who returns to the No. 20 U.S. Air Force Chevrolet for Ed Carpenter Racing.

NBC will telecast both rounds of the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix live at 2 p.m. ET Saturday, June 12, and noon ET Sunday, June 13. The 70-lap races will also be broadcast live on INDYCAR Radio Network affiliates, Sirius 211, XM 205, Indycar.com, and on the INDYCAR Mobile app powered by NTT DATA. Practice and live qualifications will stream on Peacock Premium.
Chevrolet on display at Belle Isle
In addition to action on the racetrack, the Chevrolet Motorsports Display will be full of Chevrolet vehicles that spectators can learn more about throughout the weekend.
Highlights of the Chevrolet Motorsports Display, which opens at 7:30 a.m. each day in the Fan Zone, include:
• A Corvette Racing C8.R show car and the No. 16 Paretta Autsport Chevrolet that Simona De Silvestro drove in the Indianapolis 500 on May 30.
• A Camaro ZL1, Silverado and Blazer Redline edition.
• An opportunity to receive a 2021 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix special edition T-shirt.
The 2021 Arctic White mid-engine Chevrolet Corvette Stingray will lead the field to the green flag on both Saturday and Sunday.
Team Chevy will be represented by:
A.J. Foyt Enterprises
Dalton Kellett, No. 4 K-Line Insulators AJ Foyt Racing
Sebastien Bourdais, No. 14 ROKiT AJ Foyt Racing
Arrow McLaren SP
Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP
Felix Rosenqvist, No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren SP
Carlin
Max Chilton, No. 59 Gallagher Carlin
Ed Carpenter Racing
Conor Daly, No. 20 U.S. Air Force
Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek
Team Penske
Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske
Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 PPG Team Penske
Will Power, No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske
Simon Pagenaud, No. 22 Menards Team Penske
Chevrolet IndyCar V6 Year-By-Year Results since 2012

2021 ­– 2 wins, 1 pole in 6 races
Wins – Pato O’Ward (Texas2); Rinus VeeKay (Indy RC1). Pole – Pato O’Ward (Barber Motorsports Park).
2020 – 7 wins, 11 poles in 14 races
Wins – Simon Pagenaud (Iowa1); Josef Newgarden (Iowa2, St. Louis2, Indy RC2, St. Petersburg); Will Power (Mid-Ohio1, Indy RC3, St. Petersburg). Poles – Josef Newgarden (Texas, Road America1, Iowa2), Will Power (Indianapolis road course, St. Louis1, Mid-Ohio1, Indy RC3; St. Petersburg), Pato O’Ward (Road America2), Conor Daly (Iowa1), Rinus VeeKay (Indy road course October)
2019 – 9 wins, 9 poles in 17 races
Driver/owner championship (Josef Newgarden/Roger Penske); Indianapolis 500 win (Simon Pagenaud)
2018 – 6 wins, 9 poles in 17 races
Indianapolis 500 win (Will Power)
2017 – 10 wins, 11 poles in 17 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Josef Newgarden/Roger Penske)
2016 – 14 wins, 13 poles in 16 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Simon Pagenaud/Roger Penske)
2015 – 10 wins, 16 poles in 16 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Scott Dixon/Chip Ganassi);
Indianapolis 500 win (Juan Pablo Montoya). First manufacturer to capture all titles since Chevrolet returned to INDYCAR in 2012
2014 – 12 wins, 14 poles in 18 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Will Power/Roger Penske)
2013 – 10 wins, 11 poles in 19 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; Indianapolis 500 win (Tony Kanaan)
2012 – 11 wins, 10 poles in 15 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Ryan Hunter-Reay/Michael Andretti)
Total – 91 wins, 100 earned poles in 155 races

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.

CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX: TEAM CHEVY DRIVER ZOOM CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPTS

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX
STREETS OF BELLE ISLE
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER TRANSCRIPTS
6/11/2021

SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 14 ROKIT AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, CONOR DALY, NO. 20 US ARMY CHEVROLET, FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET AND PATO O’WARD, NO.5 ARR0W MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET MET WITH MEDIA VIA ZOON LEADING INTO THE CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX:

SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS:

THE MODERATOR: Welcome, everyone. After a thrilling Indianapolis 500, the NTT INDYCAR SERIES gets back at it this week for the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear, the doubleheader on the raceway at Belle Isle, the Dual in Detroit. It all begins with practice Friday afternoon.
A gentlemen who have won twice there join us. He’s the four-time INDYCAR SERIES champion, winner of Detroit back in 2015 and 2016, driver of the No. 14 ROKiT Chevrolet for A.J. Foyt Racing. Good to have Sebastien Bourdais with us.
Seb, been a busy start to the season, three straight weekends, the month of May. How badly did you welcome a weekend off?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: No, I mean, it wasn’t bad at all. Actually I kind of like when we get in the rhythm. For sure for the mechanics and everybody involved getting the week off makes the transition after an exhausting month of May, technical teams, a bit easier. As far as I’m concerned, just ready to go. Yeah, looking forward to getting back to Detroit.
Indy wasn’t there last year but I didn’t miss anything because it didn’t happen last year (laughter).
THE MODERATOR: Let’s go ahead and open it up for questions.
Q. You have been through sort of the highs, the lows, the ups and downs. Coming out of Indy, as you get into the rest of the schedule, the meat of the schedule, where do you feel the series is, the momentum, how do you feel coming out of Indy the overall goodwill of the series?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: I think you know obviously we’re all kind of starting to feel like we’re getting some normalcy again in the system, which is great. Having the fans at the Speedway was huge. Thankfully I didn’t have to experience an empty Speedway last year because that looked really, really gloomy. All across the board, it’s one of those things that racing in front of no fans, it’s like why are we even here.
Obviously it was saving grace last year that things can still happen. It can only last for so long. We’re glad things are starting to look up, having that interaction, that emotion connection with the crowd. It’s great that we pretty much going to get the full schedule in, having that again. Really looking forward to it.
I think the series has done a really good job with that. They’ve been juggling through massive hoops left, right and center to get the political sides aligned with the sporting and business side of things. It’s a huge balancing act.
I don’t think we can thank, like Graham was saying, Roger and the entire team on the INDYCAR SERIES side, the Detroit side for putting all the hard work, letting us do our thing, doing it all together.
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: As far as we’re concerned, obviously we kind of started pretty well, Barber and St. Pete. We showed pace, we felt good. There was that dismal weekend at Texas. None of our fault, but that definitely set the tone a little bit for a bit of a more conservative 500. When you’ve pretty much already wiped out your crash budget in a matter of 24 hours, I think we all felt very conservative, maybe a little bit too conservative, in quallie trim and everything.
Yeah, I mean, I guess the race was kind of looking all right, nothing special. There were some very strong cars, but not very, very many. We were kind of in the lot of cars like right there in the middle. I think if you look back at the lap charts and everything else, we probably would have finished anywhere from 15 to top 10. We were fighting the stage basically.
Yeah, I mean, it’s one of those where you can rewrite the story. We went for the fuel strategy. There was no yellow, there was no action. The pack split in two. We ended up being hung out. Rossi for sure did a very good job at stringing us out. That was it. It’s just the way it is. It’s one of those 500s. In ’16 what won the race, in this race it was a bad call.
Strategy with Scott, he limped home and finished 18th. We had to take that at the end and that was it. The team tried. We discussed it. At some point we knew there would probably be a call like that where you have to gamble. Either you go for the crazy one or you accept your midfield maybe a little bit better. I think it was going to be a little better than kind of average, but you just don’t know that till you get to the end. We picked that one option and it didn’t work out.
Looking forward, I think we know we’re going to have some ups and downs, some places where we’re strong, some places where we are not. Seems like our street course package is not bad at all. We just got to try and put pieces together for the road courses.
So, yeah, just looking forward to the next ones, keep our heads down. Obviously we’re still trying to figure things out. It’s a relatively new group kind of all working together and trying to make the best of our situation in a very, very competitive field right now. So we knew going in it was going to be hard. For sure the last month or so has not helped our cause. I wouldn’t say it’s really anything that we’ve done wrong, it’s just kind of circumstantial, so…
You just got to stay focused and try and get it done.
Q. In theory you should look more at Detroit like you looked at St. Pete or Barber?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Yeah, I mean, I don’t want to go into weekends saying, This weekend we’re going to kill it. We don’t know. We obviously hope so, but we can’t know. I haven’t been in Detroit in that car. What that kind of street course philosophy translates into Detroit, I hope it’s going to be great.
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Q. Once we get past the big target on the schedule, the Indy 500, how do you guys and your teams refocus and approach the rest of the year, especially if you don’t get a great result there? Maybe kind of refreshing in any sort of way to have that behind you and be able to focus on individual races without having that big race looming in the distance?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Yeah, for us, there was, like everybody else, a ton of effort going into it, I feel mostly by going to four cars. That was the big piece that obviously added us a huge amount of preparation and work into it.
As far as our particular effort on the 14 car, we did the best we could, but I don’t feel like we extracted every bit of it, nor did we singly just focus on that one race. I think, like we’ve discussed before, we’ve been trying to rebuild kind of a foundation for the team, trying to get setups figured out, whether being road courses, street courses, ovals, superspeedways. On its own that takes a huge amount of work, whether it be at the simulator or with the guys trying to run concepts.
For us, we take every event one at a time, do the best job we can, and try to identify what the weakness is, build on the strengths, and move on, document it and make sure we come back stronger with the team the next time around. That’s kind of where we’re at.
Q. With Helio’s fourth Indy 500, we’ve heard a lot how Indy 500 victories are perceived in the sport at-large or the driver community. How do you feel a 500 is perceived both on your end or in the paddock in general, 500 versus a series championship?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: I don’t know. I don’t think I spent any kind of time trying to figure that out. Been lucky enough to win a couple championships and the 500 is missing.
I think there’s no single biggest target or events than the 500 for us. Nothing really comes even close. How it’s perceived in the paddock, I think we kind of know the answer. Outside, who cares at the end of the day? We kind of do it for the fans, for our teams and for ourselves.
I think it’s a huge accomplishment, it’s a huge task. Like most of us I think, or all of us, I was really super happy for Helio. He’s a great figure of the sport. He’s a super likable guy and a very deserving champion. At the end of the day it’s super fitting that he’s the one that gets a fourth win on that thing.
Yeah, as far as us, I mean, of course we’d take the 500 probably over the championship.
Q. Obviously we go to Detroit this weekend. The first time we’re using the aeroscreen on a street circuit in Detroit. I watched an onboard with you yesterday, Graham. The circuit is bumpy. Is there any way you guys prepare differently going into the track because the track is so bumpy and you’re going to be using the aeroscreen for the first time?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Yeah, no, I think like Graham was saying, setup-wise obviously you adjust the car whichever way. I think the tire evolution is probably just as challenging as the aeroscreen, the way you use the tire. Firestone is coming up with small variations and things, mixing things up because some chemicals get banned, whatever else. At the end of the day there’s not a weekend that resembles the other. That’s why when you look at the gaps, as tight as the field is, a tiny little difference, then it shuffles the whole order. You’re talking about a 10th, two or three maximum, and you’re at the front or the back of the pack and your weekend looks very, very different.
There are some very, very key moments in the weekend that make it a great or good or a bad or terrible one (smiling). I think you just have to be open-minded, you have to get a look at optimizing everything. You know if you don’t execute, then it’s not going to be a fun experience.
The aeroscreen safety-wise, particularly for the ovals and the superspeedways, just a single biggest investment for sure is concerned as far as safety is concerned. For me for sure on the street courses I sometimes wish the screen wasn’t there because I feel like it’s making things extremely difficult and uncomfortable in the car. I think it’s just one very tough compromise, right? You just add that big safety piece on an existing car that really wasn’t designed for anything like this, how you manage the airflow and everything around.
For sure when it gets hot and humid, particularly on street courses, the body temperature inside the 120 degree cockpit gets pretty critical. Yeah, it’s never really a fun last 10, 15 laps of those races. Doing it twice in a weekend, I think that dehydration level is going to be tough. Probably not the best suited for that because I don’t deal super, super well with dehydration.
But it is the challenge, that’s for everybody. We’ll just have to add it to the numerous list that composes Detroit, I guess.
Q. Sebastien, correct me if I’m wrong, I believe we saw some drivers running like a type of an air hose on the front of the helmet. Is that something that we might see drivers use moving forward to help keep them cool?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: No, basically that was a Speedway thing. Some guys instead of having the piping kind of get dangled somewhat in the more turbulent airflow towards the top, you could see the hose down and kept it out of the way so you had that duct that was for some guys just the front duct, which definitely doesn’t cool your head as much, it just gives you air. For some it was also rerouted to the top, so it was front and top. Instead of coming from the top down, it was bottom going up and top. So there were different options.
All of those for the Speedway came out just for aerodynamic and drag concerns. There was no added cooling or benefit to it. It was actually probably a bit of a loss. But when you’re going around at 200 something miles an hour, you don’t have any issues with airflow. The cockpit doesn’t get too hot, unless it’s a hundred something degrees outside.
Q. Seb, with your amount of experience winning championships, races, how do you deal with setbacks or disappointments? Is there anything you do in particular with a new team to help raise the morale?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Yeah, I mean, it’s always tough, right? We had some very positive dynamic. We talked about it. It’s like I was saying, it doesn’t take much to kind of embellish that or drag it down pretty rapidly.
For sure unfortunately the last few weeks between Texas and a not-so-great Indy GP, then a disappointing 500, sets you back no matter which way you look at it and present it.
I think the guys are mostly pretty excited anyways this year to just see some light and be like, We knew going in that it wasn’t going to be easy every weekend, we’re just going to capitalize on the good weekends and enjoy them as much as we can.
Yeah, we had pace. We probably didn’t capitalize on those pace moments as much as we wanted to to turn it into results both at Barber and St. Pete. Really feel like we haven’t put together a weekend yet. Hopefully it’s coming for Detroit.
Q. Obviously we’re heading into Detroit. You mentioned it’s probably going to be pretty hot, the track will be quite physical. How do you deal with the bumps of Detroit? Anything in particular that you actually put into the car to protect the knees and elbows? Anything different you do for Detroit compared for other races?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: I’ll just add something for the people. I think the series and the people don’t always understand how typically difficult the 500 stretch is. We on the team side to keep everybody onboard is extremely challenging. It’s not abnormal to lose a guy during the 500 week, to lose a couple between the 500 and the next one.
Definitely having a little break between the 500 and Detroit I think helps to kind of break that and not feel like you’re running everybody to the ground and lose people. It’s hard to find quality people these days, and you don’t want to lose them.
THE MODERATOR: Forecast for this weekend sunny and temperature in the low 80s in Detroit, for what it’s worth.
Q. Seb, you said after Texas you had to be a little conservative in May. Is that something you guys are going to have to do moving forward or are you going to be able to sort of go a little bit more all out?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: No, I mean, I think it’s very much of a superspeedway concern, right? There is rarely small crashes on speedways. If you go on the trim and you miss, I guess I can speak for that, been there, done that, consequences can be quite high on the body, but certainly on the car. Very easy to throw one in the Dumpster after that. It’s very expensive.
I don’t say we were consciously careful or taking a very conservative approach. But at the end of the day when you look at your trim list, you may take smaller steps just because the doubt sets in a little bit more and you just don’t feel like you want to take any chances with that.
Indy has that weird feel about it. You always feel like you got tons of time and then time runs out. That was on a very straightforward weekend where things were fine, no rain delay or anything like that. I think we just kind of — it just kind of happened.
Going forward, no, I think for road and street courses you just do your thing. Sometimes bad stuff happens. But there’s no particular conservative approach moving forwards.
Q. Knowing how you performed at Barber and St. Pete, what is your mindset for the rest of the season? What do you think you can accomplish with this team?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Nothing really different than going in the season. I think we feel like we will have shots at doing some good things. There clearly are some things we still haven’t figured out. We’re hoping to make a significant step forwards at the GP. Obviously we probably didn’t get the best chance at it having that electrical issue on the first practice, not running a single lap. Obviously there are guys that those things happen to them, too, with Alex, and they bounce back, still had a very solid weekend.
We still don’t quite understand everything and we got some work to do. Yeah, no particular target. Just really try to go through the weekend doing the best we can and feeling that we’re not leaving stuff on the table. That’s the mojo really that we’re in.
Q. Helio is supposed to debut in SRX this week, which is supposed to be a series for retired guys. He won the Indy 500 for the fourth time two weeks ago. Do you think he should be in INDYCAR full-time?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: I think Helio should do whatever Helio wants to do.
Q. Helio wants to be in INDYCAR full-time. He said that.
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: If he wants to go back full-time in INDYCAR, he definitely should. I feel like if anything, obviously I feel like he’s been kind of pushed to kind of end his INDYCAR career.
Still as we speak, obviously he was finishing second in the championship how many times, fighting for poles, fighting for wins, being a dominant force on speedways and superspeedways and qualifying, just putting some massive commitment laps, being like, Hey, I may be aging but I’m still there.
I really feel like that’s the only thing that I I’ve regretted for him, that it didn’t end on his terms. He was definitely not showing a slowing down phase. Yeah, I think if that’s what he wants to do, that’s what he should do.
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Yeah, at the same time ending your career in INDYCAR on a four thing in Indy…
Q. You’re going to be in Detroit this weekend, the Motor City, with the rich automotive tradition. What does it mean to you to win in Detroit and how important do you think racing in Detroit is? How important do you think it is on the INDYCAR schedule to have Detroit on it?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: I think I can answer that on the Chevy side for us. It’s huge. There’s Indy and then there’s Detroit. That’s the list of priorities. For sure everybody gets the message. One of the main reasons why we have the Detroit Grand Prix is thanks obviously to the support of Roger and his team, but also the support they get from Chevy in general.
Yeah, I mean, there’s no denying that this is a clear goal on the corporate side and the manufacturing side. Yeah, we were lucky enough to put two on the board for Chevy back in ’15 and ’16. Yeah, love to do it again. For us it’s kind of another race, but we know it means a lot more if we get it done.
THE MODERATOR: I feel like this was good therapy for you. Am I right on that?
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS: Yeah, talking, getting it out of your system. Thank you!

CONOR DALY:
THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everyone. He received some of the biggest cheers at the Speedway when he took the lead for the first time in the Indianapolis 500. All told he led 40 laps, which ties him with the legendary Jackie Stewart on the all-time laps led list. Jackie did that 1966, so a few years ago. He returns to Detroit this weekend for the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear. One big lead-in for Conor Daly, who joins us this afternoon.
Bouncing back from the 500, did you appreciate a week off, maybe like some others did?
CONOR DALY: Yeah, it was very weird, but it was nice. Nice to have some time off. I got a text from Marco Andretti, he was like, Hey, let’s go to Florida.
I said, Okay, let’s go to Florida for a couple days.
Ended up at with the Bitcoin conference with my team here on Saturday. It was a great experience. Nice to have a bit of time off. Ever since the 500 finished, I was dying to get back in the car, like really badly. I can’t wait to get going. I love Detroit, so I’m excited for it.
THE MODERATOR: Proof again you just never know where life will lead if you’re Conor Daly. End up in Florida.
CONOR DALY: Absolutely.
THE MODERATOR: Heading back to Detroit, you haven’t raced since 2017, certainly had that podium finish in ’16. How well do you like the street course up there?
CONOR DALY: It’s one of my favorite tracks, even 2015 there in the Arrow machine for Hinch after he had the mix-up with the wall at Indy. That was one of my most fun weekends, still to this day. In the rain, leading the race there up against those guys as a complete and utter rookie. I love the track. Love the race weekend. I think it’s done so well.
Especially we’re a Chevy team, so very excited to be in the backyard there, which is really, really cool. It’s weird to think it was so long ago since I raced there. There’s a couple other places we’re going to go this year that are probably the same way.
It’s going to be cool to get back there and let her rip, see what we can do. Hopefully the stuff we learned from the Indy GP, the progress we made with our car carries over to Detroit.
THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up for questions.
Q. What did it feel like to lead (indiscernible).
CONOR DALY: Uh-oh.
THE MODERATOR: We lost you.
CONOR DALY: You must be parked under a bridge.
THE MODERATOR: I’m going to finish that question. I think I may know where she was going with that.
What was it like to lead laps? Now you’re there.
Q. What did it feel like to lead and to hear that crowd?
CONOR DALY: Well, I couldn’t hear anything, so I was just listening to my engineer and my strategist Ben. He’s like, Well, we got to make some fuel now.
I said, All right, here we go.
It was nice. But honestly the coolest thing was seeing all the Internet stuff afterwards. Actually just last night for some reason I hadn’t gone through like the posts that I’d been tagged in on Instagram. I started going through them all. There were a ton of videos from race day. It’s just wild to see.
I’ve been to the Indy 500 before. I’ve cheered for moments like that before where, like, you just — I don’t know, it’s electrifying. That’s kind of like why we do it. You don’t appreciate it at the time. You’re in the car, you’re doing the business, you’re working. It was the coolest thing ever to see that video.
Even when I was in Miami, it’s really funny, people that I knew that I never thought would have watched the race, it’s like, We saw you leading the race on Sunday.
I didn’t even know you knew there was an event happening.
It was like, Marshmallow’s tour manager. Sweet, man. I appreciate that. You know what I mean? Really, really cool to see that. I think this year’s Indy 500 did such a great job reaching so many people. The ratings were fantastic. It was cool. I mean, it still is cool. Can’t think about that any more, we got a race ahead of us.
Q. How do you feel about the series? It goes up and down, the highs and the lows. How do you feel about where the series is right now with the buzz surrounding it?
CONOR DALY: I think it’s awesome. Even down to the Bitcoin conference over the weekend, a lot of energy, a lot of people that came up to us and said, Hey, we watched the Indy 500 for the first time in a long time. We watched the Indy 500 because of you guys. That’s really awesome. A lot of high-energy folks down there. A lot of great stuff going on.
Hopefully the Indy 500, what we just did, all the excitement, the people that were there, the big TikTokers that were there, there was so much coolness that kind of felt like we had missed that for so long because of 2020 and all that stuff. Realistically 2019 was awesome. It’s still the Indy 500. I think after a year like 2020 you kind of needed that massive hype to come back. It did. It was super cool.
We obviously hope that at least a lot of those people realize, Hey, we’re going to have some pretty high-intensity action here at Detroit, too. Our favorite marketing partners Jimmie Johnson and Romain Grosjean will be back in action, as well. Can’t wait for those guys to be back there also.
Q. You got Romain out of his bus. Appears he lives in the infield at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He also has been embraced by this community. How have you found he is enjoying this new American series, his time in Indianapolis, his move to this new form of racing?
CONOR DALY: Well, it’s funny. I think talking to him, the biggest thing that I notice is that he hates watching. He’s like, I can’t wait to get back in it. You know what I mean? I think there was something, the Indy 500 did look pretty cool. I was like, Yeah, man, it’s pretty cool. Maybe you should try it out some time.
Who knows what will happen there. But he’s a good dude. I think he’s enjoying it. He’s embracing it as much as possible, which is really, really cool. Yeah, I mean, I think a guy like that has accomplished a lot. I think he’s a very respectable and talented driver that we know about. Obviously I saw him coming through the ranks when I was younger as well. He’s won a lot of races, been successful. Formula 1 was a tough ride for him at the end.
I truly believe that he’s just excited to be back competing at the front in INDYCAR. INDYCAR is a great place to compete no matter where you come from in your racing background.
Q. How long do you think he can live in the infield at IMS?
CONOR DALY: I don’t know. He asked for Doug’s number last night. I don’t know if he’s trying to rent a spot in there or what. I know he has a key to the place because he’s been using the gym, riding his bike there. That’s the first time I’ve heard a driver being given the key to the racetrack to just live there.
THE MODERATOR: A quick aside. Do you remember the first driver you got up and cheered after he was leading, he or she, maybe the most recent driver that you’re up in the stands watching? It’s got to be weird to know someone out there is now doing that for you.
CONOR DALY: I don’t know. Like, Scott Goodyear maybe back in the day. The old Panther Racing days when Doug Boles was involved with Panther Racing. I always wore my Pennzoil shirt. I had a crew shirt that was seven sizes too big for me. Showed up to Victory Lane with Gil de Ferran still with all my Pennzoil gear on. Something like that.
I was an underdog guy. I don’t know if Alex Barron ever took the lead at Indy, but I always cheered for Alex. I was a big Alex Barron fan when he was doing well. A lot of interesting cheers for sure.
Q. How do you handle this hangover from the three weeks you spent at home? Does it vary between the results that you have in the race, something from 2015 or ’19 with different results? Do you just want to get back in the car right away?
CONOR DALY: I think getting back in the car right away is super. That’s what you want. I think a little bit of time to reset, rest the body a little bit. Our body goes through a lot for those three weeks. It’s something that I think a good reset kind of basically just — we got back into the gym, started grinding it out again, get a little bit of time to work on things for Detroit. It’s super important. Without a doubt it’s going to be the physically most difficult weekend of the year.
I think the week off is going to help all the drivers, going to help everyone. But, yeah, mentally I’m ready to go again, ready to get back right into it. Just, yeah, ready to rock.
Q. Is the physical aspect of Detroit maybe why it kind of suits you a little bit better? A track where you have had some of the better results.
CONOR DALY: You know what, I think it’s just the nature of the track honestly. I love street courses. Always have in the past in my career. I’m just happy to get back there.
It’s an interesting strategic game there, as well, which I think is cool. It’s tough for people. I like places like that.
Q. Two vastly types of tracks, big oval in Indianapolis, then this tight, hard-to-pass street circuit. Can momentum really carry over from one event to the next?
CONOR DALY: I mean, yes, mentally. I think physically, yeah, because we just did a lot of time in the car. Our bodies are ready for this long weekend.
But realistically what I look forward to most is the progress we made at the Indy GP. That’s what I’m most excited about. That is such a short weekend, you get right into oval stuff. We made a lot of progress there. I’m excited to see if we can continue that for another good run at Detroit.
It will be good to just get back out there and start turning right again.
Q. We know how good your team has been on the big ovals. Now it’s up there with Rinus on the street courses and road courses, and yourself. How far away do you see your team from being able to be one of the ones that’s always going to be a constant threat?
CONOR DALY: I think for years I’ve been talking about creating continuity. I think we see right now what continuity is doing for this whole group, both Rinus and I. We get better. Your goal as a driver is to improve constantly, work with your team to just keep building that pyramid up, keep going.
Rinus is doing that. I think I’m doing that. I don’t think we’ve been able to obviously translate to results yet for several things that have been out of our control obviously. But we’re in the fight rather than a lot of the races last year we were nowhere even near the talk of anything. But now we’re putting ourselves up there.
I think it just takes time for me, for sure. I think this car, without a doubt, has been very, very challenging for me to get to grips with with all the new additions from 2020 with the aeroscreen and everything like that. But we are getting there, I think. We want to continue to be able to use that information, continue to be able to work with our engineers here, to be fighting in the top 10 every single weekend, but not only there, fighting for the Fast Six qualifying sports, fighting for wins. Rinus has a win now. I also want to be joining him in that category.
Q. Three races over the next eight-day period. How much does this really test the driver’s physical and mental ability?
CONOR DALY: It’s going to be great. That’s what we do. It’s why we make the moderately sized monies. It’s going to be a lot of fun. I can’t wait for Detroit. I can’t wait for Road America. An incredible race.
Yeah, I mean, it’s summertime. It’s time to get outside and go to some motor racing events. I’m excited to see our fans as well at all these different places.
Q. Back in the 20 this weekend. Much better shape as far as leader circle, team money, positioning. As an entrant does that change the way you approach the race weekend knowing a mistake isn’t going to necessarily cost Ed and the team some money?
CONOR DALY: No, I don’t think so. I mean, still pretty early on for that type of discussion. But, yeah, I mean, I think either way, even when we were thinking about it last year at the final two races or whatever, you still go into it with the same thought process, right? There’s no change in that. We’re just going out to try to be the best we can be.
We want to get trophies. We want to be at the front. I think this team can do it. I think that’s our goal now. I’m excited for it.
Q. You said you struggled with this car in 2020. What has been the hardest thing for you to get used to or adapt to?
CONOR DALY: Yeah, for me, it has been the difference in the balance between the car on the primary tire to the red tire. We’ve spent a lot of time trying to narrow that gap between how the car feels when we change tires and race pace.
I think race pace-wise our car on heavy fuel has been a challenge for me. I think we’ve been narrowing that gap. I think we’ve been getting better in race pace conditions.
But, yeah, the car does a lot of things. Instead of just one problem, there’s three problems handling-wise. As a driver, it becomes difficult. There’s a lot of information coming in when you go through the entry phase of the corner, the center of the corner, the exit of the corner. Instead of having one problem, we have apex understeer, you could be loose in, apex understeer, loose off. You’re like, Well, all right, we got a lot of things to fix.
It’s a matter of just narrowing things down and finding a better window of operation. The car has a very narrow window right now. I think we see that a lot. The entire field is within 8/10ths of a second. That narrow window it’s like 2/10ths or 3/10ths of a second. If you’re on the right side of those two 10ths, that’s the goal.
Yeah, it’s just been tough for us to kind of narrow that window down but I think we’re definitely getting there.
Q. Back to Indy. Could you just give us an idea of what was running through your mind when you hit that wheel, the kind of safety of the car?
CONOR DALY: The funny thing is we were in the office yesterday here at the shop. We were looking at the video. There was also, like, tire smoke. We were trying to figure out…
My engineer thought it hit the front so hard that the rear tires actually spun, but it wasn’t. It was me locking the front tires because I literally — I can see every moment in my brain. All slow motion. Graham is in the wall, I’m going low following the car right in front of me. There’s a lot of smoke. There’s more smoke ground level when you’re in the car driving for several laps, a lot of debris on the screen. I’m like, All right, here we go. Boom. I’m like, Whoa, what the heck was that? Like literally had no sight of it at all.
So, yeah, as soon as it hit, I didn’t even know what I hit, to be honest. Had not a clue. Obviously since it didn’t necessarily rip the left front off the car, I was like, I think we’re okay. I don’t know what it was.
So, yeah, obviously a lot of people have come up to me, Oh, man, if that was two feet higher. You didn’t have the aeroscreen…
I was like, You know what, you’re right.
Yeah, I mean, racing is a game of those situations. There’s a lot of times where people look back, they’re like, Well, if it went like this, it could have happened this way.
You’re like, Hey, it doesn’t matter. We’re all here, all safe. All good.
Our front wing was not safe. It was one of those things I remember every second of it. From then on it just became a decision of do we sacrifice all of our track position that we’ve gained or do we see if this will work. At that point I think the gamble was right. You’re screwed if you do, screwed if you don’t, you know what I mean?
As we saw, there were no more yellows. It would have been really hard to make that jump in strategy. Every situation there’s a hundred different outcomes. I think we tried our best. We kept peeling rear wing out of it because the front adjustor was broken. We tried to do the best we could for the situation we were in. It is what it is. On to the next one.
Q. If we think about the laps you led at Indy, you spoke about the momentum coming up for the next few races, how important do you feel that kind of thing is for your career, kind of building momentum? Is leading that many laps at Indy something you can build into working on your future in INDYCAR?
CONOR DALY: I certainly hope so. All you can do is keep putting stats like that in the stat column. Leading a lot of laps at Indy is great. Leading the most laps at Indy is cool. I was like, Hey, that’s something I guess.
But, yeah, I mean, realistically no one cares about that when you really look at the results, right? We finished 13th. Thankfully you all know. We watched, we participated. People who watched, they know, which is really cool.
Yeah, I think it helps. I think at Indy I’ve struggled for sure in different situations with different just kind of scenarios. I really do enjoy racing there. Like I love the racing atmosphere, the style on track, how you get forward, how you make moves. Now I have that experience up front.
It’s a very different experience if you’re in the top four cars, very, very different. It’s much easier than I expected. But it’s nice because people are thinking, Hey, we want to just be here for the last 20 laps. You know what I mean?
Getting through that center part of the race becomes, I don’t know, more efficient. You’re not being an idiot, you know what I mean? Neither was Rinus, neither was Colton or Pato or Helio. Everyone, they’re thinking. I like that. I like being a part of that group.
Q. We’ve talked this season about the ups and downs you’ve experienced. Now that you’ve had a little bit of time to reflect on being able to lead the most laps among with the unfortunate tire incident from Graham that hurt your race day, what ultimately a week and a half later do you come away from this race thinking about the most? Was it the positives or opportunity you maybe lost from something so flukey?
CONOR DALY: I think honestly I try to look at it pretty positively. Our incredible Indy 500 race car is sitting in the shop. All you got to do is replace the front wing and that thing is going to be ready to go next year. I’m hoping by the end of the year we can just put these pieces back together.
I really enjoy working with this race team. I think they’ve done a great job. We’re in a great spot now. Ed was obviously very fast. Rinus was very fast. Everyone has been fast. That’s something that’s really encouraging.
I just want to come back again next year. Someone said to me last night, they were like, I think you can win this thing now.
You always go into it hoping you can do that, right? We’re not competing to finish eighth, right? To be up there and to kind of have that experience at the front now, you’re like, That’s a part of the experience that I did not have in the past. I had never been leading. I had never been in the top three. I was fifth or fourth in 2019. It’s a little bit different.
You just want to be able to use that. So for me the goal is to continue to execute every weekend, make no mistakes, and when the results come, that’s going to be a product of all of our guys doing the best job that they can do alongside of me doing the best job that I can do.
I think that’s so far we’ve proven to have some speed. We want to obviously make sure that the results and the attention we got from our partner with the U.S. Air Force is strong enough to continue in 2022.
Q. Being in a position where you’re running a full schedule for the second year in a row, weathering the ups and downs from that full schedule, have you gone through maybe what you would characterize learning more about yourself when you’re in the car more often, dealing with all these unique in-race circumstances? Do you feel over the last two months like you’ve learned more about yourself and who you are as a driver that maybe you didn’t already know before the season started?
CONOR DALY: I think really nothing surprises me any more. I would say that would probably be the top thing on the list.
I mean, I’ve learned a lot about myself I guess. I think I’ve also tried to do a lot of work on my own brain, which I think has been helpful because a lot of the stuff, when you look at a year going into it, none of this crazy stuff is going to happen, it’s just going to be great, every race is going to be great.
All this crazy stuff has happened, and you can’t change your attitude. You have to go into Detroit, It’s going to be great, it’s going to be perfect, we’re going to execute.
But the crazy part about racing is there are so many of those factors that are outside your control. I think without a doubt our sport is leaps and bounds above any other sport when it comes to other things that affect the athlete or the pilot of the vehicle, right?
The NBA Finals, if you’re not shooting the ball right, guess what, you’re not going to score points, not going to win the game. If I’m having my best day, get hit by something in the sky, I don’t know, something happens.
We’re just going to keep going at it every weekend, trying to be the best we can be. I feel really good about myself and my team, yeah. That’s the goal, is to just be happy and be ready to execute every weekend.
Q. With Helio winning a fourth 500, we’ve heard a lot of folks comparing how they view winning a 500 versus winning a series championship, how the importance compares to themselves versus how they view someone else who has one 500 versus one series championship. How do you reflect on the value of those two prizes in the series?
CONOR DALY: I mean, that’s an interesting question. I think the 500 will always be the iconic event. I think my own personal view is I would rather win an Indy 500 than the championship, right? I think that’s just something that is for me just of the icon no matter what. Even during the days of the split, right, there was still the Indy 500. You wanted to be there. Everyone wanted to win the Indy 500.
I think something that’s crazy is like Josef Newgarden is a two-time INDYCAR champion. Incredible. How does this guy not have an Indy 500 yet? It’s so hard to win. Josef is so good. I spent a lot of time racing with him in the last stint. You know what, it’s not our day today. It’s tough. He’s been at the front so many times. It was like Tony Kanaan, took him a million times to do it. Tony Kanaan got himself one.
That event is so difficult to win that the championship is a long journey you have to go through to get the championship. The 500, it’s like on that day you got to be the best. That’s I think what makes it so challenging.
Q. You seem to be confident heading into Belle Isle. When is the last time you felt this confident heading into a race weekend?
CONOR DALY: I don’t know. I mean, I always try to be confident. I think there’s a lot higher energy now because of all the kind of good stuff that has been going on with our team, which is really, really cool.
But, yeah, I mean, I would say my confidence level probably 2019 Indy 500, I was like very confident. I was like, Hey, this is going to be a good one. That’s just one race.
2020 was tough for me, for sure. 2020 at Gateway I was pretty confident. We had some tough times there. Yeah, it’s one of those things where I just feel good about our program.
You know what? You never know what could happen this weekend. We got two races, which is fantastic, at one of my favorite tracks. I think it’s a great chance to get points and a great chance to load up the old Chevy Tahoe with trophies and drive it back to Indianapolis.
Q. You’ve driven a lot of different cars. You’ve always out-driven the equipment. Now is there a little extra pressure with a car that you know is more than capable? There’s pressure driving a car that is capable of winning or podiums at least.
CONOR DALY: No. I think the only pressure is just on yourself to continue to fine-tune everything. I think we know that we’ve got some good stuff right now. I think there’s no pressure. You’re just happy, right? You know, We’re going to be able to do the job.
Even Scott Dixon will show up to a race weekend and have — they’re going to have probably a great situation, but Scott Dixon shows up and has to put in a lot of work to get either a race win or get to the front. It’s the same on us.
We’ve got cars, we’ve got great cars. Scott Dixon qualified 17th for the Indy GP. Got a good car, though. That’s the level we’re competing at now. I don’t know what he qualified there. The level we’re competing at now is all of the cars are pretty good. It’s just a matter of fine-tuning them for your driver, for your situation, for the tire, for the day.
Q. Belle Isle has the tight first corner. Is qualifying even more important this weekend knowing how aggressive people can be trying to make up spots?
CONOR DALY: For sure. I think the qualifying format, it’s fun. I think the two sessions or whatever with the Fast 12, it’s going to be cool. I think it’s going to be a good situation. Qualifying is super important. You definitely don’t want to be outside the top 12, I can promise you that. It becomes much harder when you qualify outside of the top 12 and the top six. It challenging are more frivolously presented to you when you start in the back.
THE MODERATOR: So far no mention of the mullet. I think it might be mullet driven. Just a thought.
CONOR DALY: That’s not true (laughter). Boy, is it getting aggressive.
Q. How long is the mullet going to last?
CONOR DALY: It’s selling a lot of merch. If it’s selling merch it’s going to stay. It’s positive.
Q. How difficult has it been this season switching between two teams? What has been the main challenge for yourself, if there are any?
CONOR DALY: Well, I mean, with this year being so few ovals, it’s only going to happen one other time, right? I hope so. Yeah, I mean, like Texas was tough because we didn’t get to test there. Everything happened so fast. We were sad. We were disappointed. We thought we had a really strong run there the year before. I really like working with those guys.
But, yeah, realistically I’m so much more in-house at ECR this year because of the fact there’s only one oval left, sadly. I wish there were about 10 left.
We’ve got this situation where we’ve got a great team here and we’re going to work on it. The teams have been great. Transferring my seat back and forth has been super easy. We’re Team Chevy teams, as well. That’s really, really helpful.
Yes, it is weird. It’s awkward. I would love it to be just one team, one situation. But, hey, we’re making the best of it.
Q. From your perspective, how much progress has been made at ECR from 2020 to 2021?
CONOR DALY: Realistically I think leaps and bounds. Massive, massive amounts of progress. Certainly for me personally because I kind of know, obviously not going to give away everything we’re doing, but I know that Rinus and I drive different cars, very different cars. A lot of the times we just haven’t been able to get what I needed out of it. It’s much easier for Rinus. He’s obviously very, very quick, very, very talented. His operational window I think for getting the best out of the car is a little bit wider than mine. There’s no denying that.
But what we found at the Indy GP, I think we were able to do a great job in executing and qualifying. I think we still have a lot to learn because that was obviously my first Fast Six. I think there’s a way we can improve our running there if we make it there again.
Yeah, obviously we had a great race pace, too. Even after our car, we figured it out, got back on track a million laps down, we were pretty quick honestly. We knew we could compete race pace-wise as well. Now the matter is getting through the first corner. That would be lovely. Then just continuing on from there, seeing what we can do.
Q. Everybody mentions the physical demands of Detroit. How do you go about training for a weekend like this and how different is that training compared to other weekends?
CONOR DALY: I mean, the funny thing is there’s not enough time to do enough training for it, right? We trained last week. We trained this morning, twice a day yesterday. I’m flying to the simulator tonight. We’re on the simulator tomorrow all day, which will be good to get things going there.
Yeah, I think this weekend we try out the cool suit as well, the cool shirt that some guys were wearing in St. Pete which hopefully will help us temperature-wise in the car. Yeah, there’s a lot we got to try this weekend. We’re certainly ready for it.
But I think having the week off, it was definitely important for the body to really cool down after three weeks in a row, and literally the most days in a row in the car that we have all year long.
Q. You mentioned the team continuing to make improvements. What do you feel you need to continue to work on?
CONOR DALY: I think just, like, continuing down the road that we’re going. The road that we’re going is a positive road. I still would like to have a little bit more confidence on full fuel loads when we leave the pits. I think that’s something that we’re continuously improving on.
But other than that, we want to be just consistently improving on our race pace. I think race pace is going to be super important. I think that’s probably the goal.
Q. The experience of driving or racing with all of this new race young guns that we have compared to racing in the same Indianapolis 500 with Helio Castroneves, veterans and rookies, how was that?
CONOR DALY: That’s a great question. It’s really interesting racing with Helio. On the one restart where we restarted third, Helio is sliding up the outside, pushing hard, pulling off moves that you’d expect from a young rookie. That’s kind of a level that we’re at. Everyone is so good. The young guys are really good.
I think Rinus for sure, my teammate, showed a lot of maturity at the front. Colton as well. Those guys we know are very good. Obviously proven winners. Then you look at a guy like Juan Pablo Montoya who really I think had a tough month. On track when we were practicing, Man, that guy is having a tough day. The guy finishes in the top 10, has a solid race.
The experience that they have is so helpful. I’m gaining that experience every year. I can understand now, Here is where you put it into play, here is where it’s helping you. I think every year the field gets tighter, obviously the closest, fastest field in history this year. I think we’re going to keep seeing that because the level of driving right now is very, very high.
THE MODERATOR: Six races, six different winners.
CONOR DALY: Let’s make it seven (laughter).
THE MODERATOR: He could be at a pool right now, on a slip and slide, doing something out in the backyard, he could be doing any number of things right now, but young Asher has joined us to wrap things up. All yours from Asher’s Racing Channel.
ASHER: I’m just coming in to do this then go back out with my friend. It’s been a while since you or anyone has ever been to Belle Isle. This is the first time with the aeroscreen. Do you feel you are kind of starting over learning in Belle Isle since no one has done it with the aeroscreen setup?
CONOR DALY: Great question. I think there will be some elements that might be surprising. We’ve only got one practice. Everyone’s going to be thrashing, absolutely thrashing in that first practice because you got to run the primaries, you got to run the red tires. We’re going to be all over the map on trying to get setup information for not only qualifying but our race setup as well. It’s going to be very, very hectic.
I think there will be some differences. Having run at St. Pete, having run at the Indy GP, having done some testing at Sebring obviously pre-season, we have some information to go off of. Obviously we have the simulator tomorrow, as well. It is something we used very effectively before the Indy GP. I hope it will be just at effective for the Detroit weekend this weekend.
ASHER: Thank you, Conor.
THE MODERATOR: What is the rest of your afternoon holding, from 2:00 on?
ASHER: So I have a little track I made around my neighborhood. Me and my friend Jacob are going to ride around.
THE MODERATOR: Sounds like fun. Thank you, Asher.
ASHER: Welcome.
THE MODERATOR: You could be hanging out with Asher the rest of the day, Conor.
CONOR DALY: I got to go do laundry and go to Charlotte. That’s way more fun (smiling).
THE MODERATOR: Thanks for doing this. Have fun on the sim tomorrow. Look forward to seeing you and the team in Detroit.
CONOR DALY: Thank you so much. I appreciate it.

FELIX ROSENQVIST AND PATO O’WARD:

THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to another NTT INDYCAR SERIES videoconference. Today we are joined by two drivers from Arrow McLaren SP, Pato O’Ward, driver of the No. 5 Chevy, and Felix Rosenqvist, driver of the No. 7 Chevy. Both raced in Detroit in ’19.
Obviously we weren’t there last year, so gentlemen, I’ll just start with a quick one. How excited are you to get back to the Streets of Belle Isle this weekend? Pato, why don’t you go first.
PATO O’WARD: I’m super excited. I think Detroit has a lot of character. It’s a track that I’ve honestly really enjoyed going to in the past. I’ve raced there in prototypes, I raced there in INDYCAR in 2019. I’m looking forward to going back. I think — honestly it’s one of the weeks that I was pretty bummed about missing last year. I know it’s very big for team Chevy, so hopefully we can get them a couple wins there. That would be great.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Yeah, I agree. I really enjoy Detroit. I think street tracks in general is always a favorite for me, so yeah, coming back will be fun. It’s complete opposite from Indy. It’s way more bumpy. Yeah, it’s very different from everything, to be honest. Yeah, I think we have a good shot to swing around the season a little bit after a tough start with a double-header if we have some good momentum on the first day. Hopefully we can get on a bit of a roll there.
THE MODERATOR: We’ll go to Road America after that, so three races in about eight days. Last year at Road America in the second race you guys had a great battle. Felix, you ended up getting your first win in the INDYCAR Series. Talk about go to Road America next week.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Yeah, that’ll be fun. There’s been a lot of talk about that race since me and Pato became teammates. Same there, I think it’s just a lovely track. It’s probably one of the coolest tracks in the world. It’s beautiful scenery. It’s a great track for racing. There’s always good races there, and personally it’s probably the track I’ve been most successful in INDYCAR every time I’ve been there. So yeah, that will be great. Hopefully we’ll have the same showdown as last year with me and Pato.
Q. Obviously we’re going to Detroit for the first time with the aeroscreen. What sort of effect do you think that’s going to have on the performance of the car given the fact that the track is so bumpy?
PATO O’WARD: It’s probably going to plow more than what it used to, plowing meaning just a bunch of understeer. Historically the track just keeps getting bumpier and bumpier and bumpier every year, so I feel like this year will be more of a change than what we have felt from year to year in the past because there’s been two winters on it already from the last time we were there.
I think it’ll be interesting. Not quite sure what to expect based on aeroscreen stuff. Like I said, I just think it’ll probably tend to go a little bit more to understeer. It’ll definitely work the front axle a lot harder. Yeah, I just think that’s something we have to work around with the team and try to really maximize.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: I think tracks like this have been less affected by the aeroscreen. When we came to St. Pete for the first time, it seemed like we were going pretty quick still. It seems like the faster the track and the higher speed corners are really affected worse by aeroscreen than like the long corners, and on a street track you generally just have 90-degree corners and you don’t really load up the car very long anywhere. I don’t think it’s going to be a massive difference to be honest. I think it’s going to be pretty good.
Q. Pato, I think I understand what Juan Pablo said about the problems with — not the problems, the setup on the car, about it’s a little hard to pick up speed and handle in this kind of track, in the conditions you already told us. What do you think we can expect from you this weekend?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, yeah, our car, it’s tended to be very quick in certain places. In other places we got destroyed, not just the No. 5 car but I think we were all just very slow in certain tracks. There’s definitely been just a lot of analysis to try and really see what went wrong because we’ve been strong some places but we’ve been very out of consistency in others, and we need to fix that. It’s such a competitive series where you just can’t have any more of those very tough weekends.
You know, hopefully we’ll expect a good couple races this weekend. I think we all enjoy going to Detroit. It’s a fun track. I think the car has been strong there in the past. I’ve never driven our specific car there, but we have a relatively hard car to drive, not just in qualifying to extract a time but during the races and everything. So I think it’s just up to us to try and maximize what we have and try to make it as consistent as we can. We know what we were missing in St. Pete, which is a street course, so hopefully we have made improvements to be stronger here.
But I’m going into it knowing that we can make some really good stuff happen.
Q. Just looking at the extended weather forecast for Saturday, Sunday, looks like upper 80s, sunny. Anything you guys can do beforehand to prepare for two races in conditions like that? What can you do Saturday night to recover as quickly as possible?
PATO O’WARD: Probably an ice bath on Saturday. I’m assuming the team is taking our ice baths, so for me that’s usually kind of the little extra bit of help that —
Q. Does that just bring your core body temperature down?
PATO O’WARD: Man, it helps you — it kind of like neutralizes your fatigue, and it kind of like brings your muscles back to life a little bit. So yeah, that’s what I do in double-header weekends.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: You need to focus on your nutrition just to not have two long breaks between eating and sleeping, drinking a lot. As Pato said, an ice bath is a pretty good way to recover the body. Tried it in St. Pete for the first time and it was surprising effective actually after warmup. Yeah, at some point it’s going to suck for everyone. It’s going to be warm and tough, as it always is, even on a single race weekend.
But yeah, it’s cool to have a challenge, I think. St. Pete was very tough for a lot of drivers, I think, and this will probably be maybe a little bit worse, I don’t know.
I think a lot of people have played around with different cooling solutions now, as well. There’s some guys that are using cooling suits and you have like this scoop you can put on top of the aeroscreen. Yeah, there’s some different solutions out there now, so we’ll see what people do.
Q. Pato, last year I know Dixon kind of ran away with things but you were still in a championship fight towards the end. Is there anything you learned from that experience last year now that we’re pretty much coming up to the midway point of the season that can help you this year?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, what I learned was that you have to beat the master of consistency at his own game in order to win the championship. I think that’s the best way to put it. We just need to outscore him as much as we can every weekend. I think that’s the best thing we can do in order to have a shot at the championship at Long Beach.
Man, it’s so tight this year that I feel like the field is stacked. It’s full of many very talented drivers. I don’t think it’s ever been harder. I don’t think it’s ever been this competitive from a driver’s standpoint. This is a true driver’s championship. I don’t think there’s anything harder in the world.
Whoever is most consistent and most consistently in the podiums and in the top 5s is going to take it at the end of the year.
Q. It seems like right now you’ve got the two Ganassi guys in front of you and that’s it, and you’ve got a teammate there that was driving that same car last year and teammates with Scott. Is there anything, Felix, you can help Pato, any inside info you can give him? And Pato, do you lean on Felix as we get towards the end of the year now, a little bit of insight inside the Ganassi camp?
PATO O’WARD: I feel like every year is a little bit different. Obviously we can’t plan a championship, but I mean, I feel like Felix and I both know that to win a championship in INDYCAR is just consistency. I don’t think it’s something that’s mysterious or hidden. I don’t know if Felix has any input to it, but I think it’s just about maximizing what you have and trying to maximize points every single weekend and not having crappy weekends. We’ve already had two.
The Ganassi camp has been strong at every single racetrack. They’re bound to have at least one bad weekend, so we need to make sure we capitalize on that.
Q. That’s got to be more like driving style, knowing what Scott likes, knowing where he likes to run, knowing where he doesn’t like to run. Is there anything Felix can help if you’re battling with Scott, anything of that nature? Felix, is there anything you learned from him last year that you can help Pato out with?
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Well, I felt with Scott the thing is pretty much what Pato said. There’s nothing magic. He’s just very good everywhere, and he has a lot of weekends where he finished like seventh or eighth and there’s not really a lot of talk about it. But he will have a problem in the beginning of the race, maybe it’ll be like a lap down or something, and then he’ll end up finishing top 10. I think that’s his strength.
When you have weekends when you win, that’s easy. But those weekends are the important ones for the championship.
I think also he’s good at making a car for himself that is very consistent, and maybe not the fastest car, like he’s not so often on the pole, but he will always have a car that kind of works everywhere. He has a good way of just making it good enough to be up there every weekend.
I think that’s one of his big strengths, as well.
Q. Felix, you were talking about switching teams, how difficult it was to get used to McLaren there. We got some good tracks for you coming up. You won your first race at Road America, almost won your first race at Mid-Ohio. You go back to Indy again on a road course. Is this a stretch you feel like you guys can get used to each other, put it all together and push forward from this point forward?
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Well, I definitely hope so. It’s been a funny year because since I started at INDYCAR my weakness has been the ovals, and this year even if the results hasn’t been there on the ovals, we’ve been so fast and competitive on every oval. Both Texas races we were pretty much in condition tension for the win in both of those, and even in Indy we were — I don’t really think — maybe we had a top 3 car for sure. Yeah, that’s not enough. Obviously you need the results.
But it’s been interesting how the ovals have actually become like my strong suit now, and we still need to find more consistency, more — find the car more to my liking on the road courses. But I think as you say it’s good to come back to places you’re more familiar with, Road America, Mid-Ohio, all those places, and hopefully it can kind of click there and you can end up the season with being strong on both road courses and ovals. That would be a great way to sort of end up the last half of the season.
Q. I wonder if you felt the same issues that Pato had at St. Pete or if there’s a common understanding across the team of what the problem was there or were you feeling something maybe a bit different.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: I think we had a similar feedback. I think Pato was able to get some more speed out of the car in qualifying, and I got a little bit more out of it than the race, but we both struggled with the same stuff. I think we had a lot of deg, we had a lot of understeer in the race. It just wasn’t really fast to be honest. There wasn’t really any point in that race, even in the GP, it was kind of a different story at Indy GP, but it was the same, we weren’t really having like super bad races but we still ended up nowhere because we didn’t have the pace.
Yeah, I think our feedback is — what we — I think Pato is more — he’s able to drive around a loose car very well, but what we actually feel in the car and what we want from the car is kind of similar, to be honest. The feedback is very similar.
Q. How do you kind of reflect on your first part of the season here because I guess we can look back and say that there’s been a few missed opportunities and maybe some bad luck and maybe some guys who probably could have finished a few places higher but you’re third in the championship. How do you reflect on that? Is that a missed opportunity that you’re not higher or is it lucky you’re not further down?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, good point. I feel like we missed an opportunity in Barber. I actually feel that we should have won that race. We had all the pace. I don’t think anybody was faster than us. We just were on the wrong strategy.
I think we saved what we could in terms of what we went with strategy-wise and tire and everything.
But man, we had two road course races where we absolutely got destroyed, and we’ve honestly already used up our kind of jail-free cards of the season of having a bad weekend, and we can’t afford to have any more of those because that really takes a toll in the championship.
If we would have had like solid top 7, top 6 finishes in St. Pete and Indy road course, we should have been in the lead in the championship, but we haven’t capitalized on that, and that is something that — I don’t want to look back at the end of the year and look at those two races and say, oh, this cost us a championship. We just need to work a little bit harder to be extra consistent from now on.
But we’ve had some great races. We had great superspeedway races in both Texas and Indy. We’ve been strong. But we have been weak at road courses, specifically street courses, and we need to find a way to maximize what we have there because that will really hurt us in the end.
Q. I don’t know if you’ve had talks with Sam or Zak about a contract extension for 2022?
PATO O’WARD: So my — I’m actually locked in until 2022. Not sure about Felix.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: I have another year.
Q. The media has compared you with Helio Castroneves. What is your feeling about racing next to him during the Indianapolis 500?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, many people have told me. Man, it’s very humbling, honestly. Helio is a driver that I really admire. I’m a big fan of Helio. What he has accomplished in his career is — it’s in the history books. It’s very special.
I was really, really happy for him to get his fourth win.
Q. You are currently in third place. What do you have to do to make it to the championship?
PATO O’WARD: I need to win more races and be as consistent as I can.
Q. As you might know, back in the days, F1 and INDYCAR used to run on the downtown streets of Detroit. I don’t know if you guys are familiar with that track or have seen old footage of it. If you are, do you guys think, man, I really would have liked to have given that track a go, or are you happy to run on Belle Isle these days?
PATO O’WARD: I did hear that we had, back in the day, downtown Detroit. Honestly, for me I think both is really cool. I haven’t really had a chance to see the circuit layout of downtown Detroit, but I think Belle Isle is cool.
I think honestly any street — kind of like any street characteristic type track is really cool. So yeah, I don’t really have a preference whether it’s there or Belle Isle.
I’m assuming they’re doing it in Belle Isle because of traffic.
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Yeah, I remember my manager actually raced there in F1. I don’t think he raced in INDYCAR — I’ve seen it on TV, and it’s definitely more smooth, more round corners. Belle Isle is very sharp and edgy. Everything. It’s like a very rough track. That one looked way more smoother.
But I think the one we race on is really cool. It’s very unique, and it’s probably the most bumpy track that anyone races on at the moment. I think there were some worse ones back in the day like Baltimore or something like that, with railroad tracks and stuff. But yeah, I think it’s cool. I think that’s what makes INDYCAR what it is, that you have the 500, which is super smooth, and then the next weekend you race, and yeah, you spend more time in the air than on the ground.
Q. Is the team searching for some answers or some clues in order to find a better way to correct the function on your car to find a way to challenge Ganassi?
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Yeah, I mean, obviously when I came over there was a lot of questions what they were doing technically and things like that. I think it’s a dangerous route, though. Obviously we looked at things, and we always tried to improve, and anything you can get from a competitor, it’s obviously a good thing. But the problem is if you copy what someone else is doing, the problem then is that they are going to take a leap. Every year people are getting better and better, so if we would do the same that Ganassi did last year on Detroit or St. Pete or whatever, you’re never going to beat them because they’re going to be better.
I think we have very different philosophies, but I truly believe that our team is super capable. It’s a very good organization, a lot of smart people. INDYCAR is tough because you don’t really have any testing. That’s the big thing. We have a whole season, we have like two, three days of testing, and it’s very hard to actually try anything without guessing.
So pretty much every time you show up to a race weekend you pretty much have to guess and try something, and if it works, you stay with it, and then maybe you have time for one more change and then you’re going into qualifying or the race and then the weekend is over, and then you have to do it the next year.
If you have like a bad track where you have a bad trend going on, it takes a lot of time to turn it around if you don’t have the balls to really make a big swing, but normally the big swings never work because it’s more guessing than actually working from what you come up with as a team.
Yeah, I’m sure as Pato will say, we know these issues, but we should also be very pleased with the pace we had on all the ovals so far. We were super fast in Barber. I think the fastest car by far. And we had two tough weekends, but that happens. I’m sure we’ll turn it around soon.
Q. Felix, I saw you were at raceway park earlier in the kart. I actually do go-karting and that’s where I race. How did that go in the rain?
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Yeah, that’s correct. I’m actually here still right now.
Q. Wait, where are you there?
FELIX ROSENQVIST: There’s a bunch of go-karts here. I just took a break. I’m driving here. It’s fun. It’s quite different to be out driving a go-kart in the wet. I think it’s a good way to kind of shake off the oval a little bit before Detroit, and yeah, just back to the roots of it a little bit. It’s always fun to do go-karting and be in the place where you used to be when I was your age.
Q. For both of you, with only getting one practice for the Detroit race, Belle Isle, how do you go about into re-learning a track like Belle Isle? Do you get into the sim seat a lot, just still remember it every once in a while?
FELIX ROSENQVIST: Yeah, that’s pretty much the only way we can practice. We do the simulator. I did it last week and Pato, as well. We probably spent a day there each, just do laps and try things. It’s not the most accurate thing, but you do what you can do, and it’s kind of enough to get you in the rhythm a little bit of that track.
But for the rest you just have to use the time you have on track really efficiently. You have to make every lap count. You can’t really afford to have any bad runs or mistakes or things like that. You need the practice as much that weekend as qualifying and the race because it’s so limited.
So yeah, we just have to be — we have to nail it when we get there.
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, same from my side. I feel like knowing the track is probably the easiest part, I think what we’re really leaning on is that we have to arrive and we have to be good out of the gates. Whoever is strongest off of the truck is going to be probably in the best position to qualify well and then race well.
Hopefully everything that we have done pre-event will pay off, and yeah, we’ll see. It’s a track that we enjoy, and we’ve been there before, so I don’t think that not being there in two years is going to be much of an issue. I just think if we roll off well, we should be in good shape.
THE MODERATOR: Thanks for joining us today. We appreciate you being here.

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.

No Place better than Texas for Jeremy Clements Racing to introduce new Texas partners, Straitline and Nitro

Spartanburg, SC – Jeremy Clements Racing is pumped to continue growing the JCR family with new partners: the Straitline and Nitro Companies. Along with Cruising Kitchens and AGP Energy Services they all will make their first foray into the NASCAR XFINITY Series this weekend. In the Alsco Uniforms 250 at the Texas Motor Speedway Saturday, June 12th.

“I’m really fortunate to be able to bring more new sponsors on board this weekend in Texas.” Clements said. “This was all made possible by longtime friend of JCR, Jim Sealy. Jim has been a partner of ours in the past and has helped us bring on new sponsors as well. So, I appreciate Jim for making this happen! Now we have to take this slick looking Hot Rod to the front!” Clements also said.

Joining Cruising Kitchens and AGP Energy Services as associate sponsors will be: Whitetail Smokeless, Chalew Performance, ELITE Towing & Recovery LLC, Circle Body Shop, Mechanix Wear, Wix Filters, Carolina Driveline, Cometic and ZMAX

RACE PREVIEW
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
Race: Alsco Uniforms 250
Date: June 12th, 2021
Broadcast Information – TV: 4:00 pm EST on FS1

FAST FACTS:
• Best Start 12th – 11/2019
• Best Finish 11th – 7/2020
• 25th career start at Texas

JCR TEAM
Team: No. 51
Crew Chief: Mark Setzer
Manufacturer: Chevrolet
Engine: Clements Racing Engines
Twitter: @JClement51 @JCR_Clements51
Instagram: @jclements51 @jeremyclementsracing
Facebook: Jeremy Clements Racing

ABOUT THE STRAITLINE & NITRO FAMILY OF COMPANIES

Nitro, founded in 2010 in Nordheim, TX, and Straitline, founded in 2018 in San Antonio, TX, together provide oilfield equipment and services solutions to the American Oil and Gas Industry. Although headquartered in Texas, they can work throughout this great country to provide their expertise. Everyone in their team is family, and that is how they treat their customers. They take pride in the quality of their work and exceeding their customers’ expectations and strive to do so daily. From site construction to multi-well completion services, Straitline and Nitro are the companies you can trust do get the job done.

ABOUT CRUISING KITCHENS

Cruising Kitchens out of San Antonio, TX is the leading custom food truck builder and mobile business fabricator in the world. Specializing in food trucks and trailers, kitchen trucks and trailers, shipping container trailers, multimedia trucks and trailers, mobile office trucks and trailers, and much more. For more information visit, www.cruisingkitchens.com

CHEVY NCS AT TEXAS ALL-STAR: Team Chevy Advance

TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
FORT WORTH, TEXAS
JUNE 13, 2021

NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE: TEXAS
Chevrolet drivers in all three NASCAR national series will converge at Texas Motor Speedway this weekend.

Next up for the NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) is the All-Star Race on Sunday, June 13, where NASCAR’s stars will battle under the lights for the $1 million grand prize. The annual, non-points paying race will make its debut at the 1.5-mile Texas oval for the first time in the event’s history. Of the 36 previous editions of the race, 34 have been held at Charlotte Motor Speedway and one each at Atlanta Motor Speedway (1986) and Bristol Motor Speedway (2020).

Chase Elliott won last year’s NASCAR All-Star Race at Bristol Motor Speedway for the first time, giving Chevrolet its 19th victory in the prestigious All-Star Race. The victory made Chase Elliott and Bill Elliott, who won the 1986 All-Star Race at Atlanta Motor Speedway, just the second father-son duo to win the NASCAR All-Star Race, joining Dale Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Chevrolet and Hendrick Motorsports are coming off their fourth consecutive 1-2 finish, which tied a NASCAR record set in 1956, as Kyle Larson dominated on the Sonoma Raceway road course in the No. 5 Camaro ZL1 1LE. Larson’s teammate, Chase Elliott, was runner-up. Larson has recorded five consecutive top-two finishes. Chevrolet last won four races in a row to close the 2014 season.

Team Chevy NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) drivers, led by Mid-Ohio winner AJ Allmendinger, will compete in the 167-lap/250.5-mile Alsco Uniforms 250 on Saturday, June 12. Allmendinger moved up one spot to second in the Driver Standings. Chevrolet continues to top the NXS Manufacturer Standings.

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) drivers will return to action in the 147-lap/220-mile Speedycash.com 220 on Saturday, June 12. Reigning NCWTS champion Sheldon Creed is fourth in the Driver Standings. Chase Elliott, who has two wins in five NCWTS starts, will make his 2021 debut in the No. 24 Chevrolet Silverado for GMS Racing.

IN THE SHOW
Team Chevy drivers Alex Bowman, Kurt Busch, William Byron, Austin Dillion, Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson are among the 17 drivers locked-in to the NASCAR All-Star Race lineup by virtue of a win in 2020-21 or as a full-time driver who is a previous All-Star winner or past Cup champion. The starting positions for the 100-lap race have been determined by random draw, putting Kyle Larson on the pole to lead the field to the green in his No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 1LE.

Team Chevy NASCAR All-Star Race Starting Lineup:
1st Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 1LE
5th Austin Dillon, No. 3 Andy’s Frozen Custard Camaro ZL1 1LE
6th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1 1LE
8th William Byron, No. 24 Axalta Camaro ZL1 1LE
13th Kurt Busch, No. 1 GEARWRENCH Camaro ZL1 1LE
15th Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1 1LE

Drivers not already qualified will have a chance to join the All-Star field by competing in the NASCAR Open, in which there are 11 Team Chevy entries. Four additional drivers will be added to the NASCAR All-Star Race following the NASCAR Open, including the Open Stage 1 and 2 Winners, Open Race Winner, and the Fan Vote winner.

CHEVROLET TOPS IN STANDINGS
Chevrolet retains the top spot in the NCS Manufacturer Standings. Team Chevy drivers have recorded a field-high seven victories and earned all three poles.

Kyle Larson remained second in the Driver Standings, but closed to 47 points of the lead. Hendrick Motorsports teammates Chase Elliott moved to third and William Byron is fourth, giving the Bowtie Brand three of the top-four in the Driver Standings.

BOWTIE BULLETS
· The victory at Sonoma Raceway was the 802nd for Chevrolet, the most of any manufacturer in NCS history.

· Chevrolet leads all other manufacturers with 19 victories in the prestigious All-Star race.

· Current Chevrolet drivers that have recorded NASCAR All-Star race wins include:
Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1 1LE (2020)
Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 1LE (2019)
Kurt Busch, No. 1 GEARWRENCH Camaro ZL1 1LE (2010)

· Chevrolet has recorded 14 victories, 71 top-five and 167 top-10 finishes in points-paying NCS races at Texas Motor Speedway.

· Career Chevrolet driver Jimmie Johnson is the all-time leader with seven wins at Texas Motor Speedway.

· Hendrick Motorsports leads all other NASCAR Cup Series teams with nine All-Star victories: Jimmie Johnson (4), Jeff Gordon (3), Terry Labonte (1), and Chase Elliott (1).

· Kyle Larson earned maximum stage points in his consecutive victories at Charlotte Motor Speedway and Sonoma Raceway.

· Kurt Busch and Ross Chastain finished in the top-10 at Sonoma Raceway for Chip Ganassi Racing.

TUNE IN
FS1 will telecast every race this weekend from Texas Motor Speedway. The NASCAR All-Star Race will be telecast live at 8 p.m. ET Sunday, June 13, preceded at 6 p.m. by the NASCAR All-Star Open. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90. The NCWTS’ SpeedyCash.com 220 will be telecast at 1 p.m. ET Saturday, June 12, followed by the NXS Alsco Uniforms 250 at 4 p.m.

QUOTABLE QUOTES
KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 2nd IN STANDINGS
LARSON ON STRATEGY FOR THE ALL-STAR RACE:
“I haven’t studied the format yet, but the plan is to get the best possible finish in each segment to give us the best possible starting spot when it matters. It’s a short race, so you have to be aggressive, and you have to be really aggressive on each restart. Our mile-and-a-half program has been solid all year, so I’m really looking forward to this Sunday.”

CLIFF DANIELS, CREW CHIEF, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 1LE
DANIELS ON WHAT HE CAN LEARN IN THE ALL-STAR RACE:
“This is a track that is in the playoffs, so we’ll want to learn as much as we can this weekend. (No. 24 crew chief) Rudy (Fugle) said it best earlier when he said anytime your car is on track you’re learning. We want to take full advantage of this opportunity. One of the best takeaways from this weekend’s format is the way the rounds are set up; you’ve got to be able to pass.”

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 3rd IN STANDINGS
“With this year’s format, there’s obviously a lot going on. I think it’ll be hard to play games to try and set yourself up for the next round, that may end up hurting you more than helping. It’s going to be of those deals where you just have to race as hard as you can the whole time and let the inverts play out on their own. I think it will be entertaining for the fans and hopefully we can put on a good show. I know I’ve said it before, but I am happy to see the All-Star Race moving around to different tracks. I think it’s a race that is meant to change locations.”

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 4th IN STANDINGS
BYRON ON WHAT HE THINKS THE BIGGEST CHALLENGE WILL BE AT THE NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE:
“I think the biggest thing is that you’re going to have the low horsepower, even lower than the horsepower we have currently. It’s going to put us closer together, more nose-to-tail, and probably will be drafting constantly. That’s going to make it tough. You’re going to have to have a good handling car to try drive away from people, but I feel like it’s still going to be hard to really ever get away. We’re focusing on getting the handling right, and I think we’re in the ballpark. We’ll just have to see what happens.”

BYRON ON THE ALL-STAR RACE FORMAT:
“With short segments and low downforce, there’s a good chance you’re going to see constant action. There’s no time to just ride around or save your stuff. It’s going to be about getting up on the wheel and the strategy you use. I don’t know what to tell you about that last segment other than to expect insanity. It’s going to be a lot of aggressive moves and racing in those final laps. I’m excited for it. It’s an All-Star Race, so it’s going to take everything you’ve got.”

RUDY FUGLE, CREW CHIEF, NO. 24 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 1LE
FUGLE ON HIS PREDICTION FOR THE ALL-STAR RACE:
“There’s a lot of unknowns for Sunday’s All-Star Race. I think gaining track position and maintaining it is going to be the biggest key to having a good run and being in contention for the win during that last stage. With the aero package and horsepower we’re running, it may be easy to pull up on someone, but passing them is going to be a different challenge. It helps that we’re already locked into the race though so we can watch the Open and get a general idea of how this package is going to run at Texas seeing as right now it’s all speculation. While there is some strategy involved for this event, you can only guess what the inverts may be. To me, the biggest thing strategy-wise is determining when to use your tires and when to save them. With five stage breaks but only four sets of tires and a mandatory four tire-pit stop during stage five, you have to decide when you’re taking tires and when you’re staying out. We’ll have a general plan going in, but scenarios change so quickly that you have to be ready for anything.”

ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 11th IN STANDINGS
“This weekend’s All-Star race is going to be interesting. It is going to be a big pay day for someone on Sunday and I sure hope it is this No. 48 team. We have been strong at Texas in the past, but I guess the rules in the All-Star race are a bit different. Strategy is going to be key in trying to be out front. Our Ally pit crew has been really fast this year. Hopefully, our pit crew can continue doing what they do best on pit road and maybe even get their own pay day after Round 5!”

GREG IVES, CREW CHIEF, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
“For me, numbers is a fun Rubik’s cube. I like the potential of the numbers and the more intricate that it gets. The invert following the round throws in a lot more details and unpredictability that you can’t really solve in a simple math calculation. Ultimately, our job is to go out there and perform at a high level. I am pretty sure at the end of each round, they are going to figure out what the invert is and we are going to line up and go as fast as we can again. Hopefully have a chance to lead and have a chance at won’t being in traffic. Hopefully we can cross the finish line first at the end of the day. That is really all we can focus on. The uniqueness of the format for this event is what is creating all of the buzz and ultimately it is what it is and hopefully we can have some fun.”

AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 ANDY’S FROZEN CUSTARD CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 12th IN STANDINGS
THE ALL-STAR RACE TAKES PLACE AT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY THIS YEAR. YOU HAVE TO BE EXCITED ABOUT THAT…
“I can’t wait. We’re definitely looking forward to getting the chance to run for a million dollars. After winning at Texas Motor Speedway last year, I feel pretty good about having the All-Star race there. It gives us a legitimate shot at locking ourselves into the All-Star race for a long time if we win the race. It’s a crazy format. It’s going to be tough with all of the different stuff we have to do and go through, but man ONE MILLION DOLLARS! Somebody’s going to get it, why not us?”

TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 ICASHAUTOS / I AM SECOND CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 13th IN STANDINGS
“I hope it’s a good race at Texas Motor Speedway this weekend, with them hosting the All-Star Race event for the first time. I’ve come close to winning at Texas Motor Speedway a lot in my career, even finishing second behind my teammate Austin Dillon last July, so I’m excited at another shot there. Getting into the All-Star Race either by racing my way in or with the Fan vote is the first goal, and then from there I know my iCashautos / I Am Second team will do everything we can to win the million-dollar prize. It’s going to be tough though, especially with the horsepower change. It’s already hard to pass in these Cup cars, and this creates another challenge for us. Everyone has learned how to work the air with this package, so you’re going to have to be really smart on how to get up front. It’s a little bit of an unknown going into the weekend with the change in horsepower, but I know my team and I will make the most of it and try to put on a good show for the fans.”

KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 GEARWRENCH CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 18th IN STANDINGS
“You’re going to see guys taking risks, not giving an inch. There are going to be some wrecks, cause guys will be pushing that hard to go for the million dollars. Texas Motor Speedway is obviously a different track than what we have had in years past for the All-Star Race. It’s the first time for the race to be hosted at TMS and there are things that work at that track that don’t work at others. Everyone will be going in there guns blazing, no pun intended, going for that million-dollar payday!”

DANIEL SUAREZ, NO. 99 COMMSCOPE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 22nd IN STANDINGS
HOW IMPORTANT IS RACING FOR $1 MILLION?
“Money comes and goes, but the trophies don’t. I’m hoping I can get a trophy for Justin Marks, Pitbull and everyone at Trackhouse Racing. This would be a cool first trophy. These guys and most racers don’t race for the money, they do it for the trophies. The All-Star Race is one of the few times in the season when we don’t have to think about points and different things like that. All we really care about is crossing the start-finish line first.”

ERIK JONES, NO. 43 PETTY’S GARAGE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – 25th IN STANDINGS
“I always look forward to the NASCAR All-Star Race. Obviously, Richard Petty Motorsports has to race our way in, but I am excited to get down there and have a shot at it. It is a cool weekend and being at Texas (Motor Speedway), it will be a new experience for all of us. I think it will be a fun one, nonetheless. Just to have the opportunity to go down there, race our way in and try to go out and go for a million dollars is pretty fun every single year.”

Chevrolet NASCAR Cup Series Statistics

Manufacturers Championships:
Total (1949-2020): 39
First title for Chevrolet: 1958
Highest number of consecutive titles: 13 (2003-15)

Years Won: 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015

Drivers Championships:
Total (1949-2020): 32
First Chevrolet champion: Buck Baker (1957)
Highest number of consecutive titles: 7 (2005-11)
Most Recent: Chase Elliott (2020)

Years Won: 1957, 1960, 1961, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2020

Event Victories:
Record for total race wins in single season: 26 (2007)

2021 STATISTICS:
Wins: 7
Poles: 3
Laps Led: 1,792
Top-five finishes: 34
Top-10 finishes: 73

CHEVROLET IN NASCAR CUMULATIVE STATISTICS:
Total Chevrolet race wins: 802 (1949 to date)
Poles won to date: 720
Laps led to date: 238,497
Top-five finishes to date: 4,099
Top-10 finishes to date: 8,475
Stage wins: 13 – Chase Elliott (Daytona RC), William Byron (Homestead), Kyle Larson (Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Atlanta x2, Kansas, Dover x2, Charlotte x3, Sonoma x2)

Total NASCAR Cup wins by corporation, 1949 to date

       General Motors: 1,136
       Chevrolet: 802
       Pontiac: 154
       Oldsmobile: 115
       Buick: 65

       Ford: 808                                                         
       Ford: 708
       Mercury: 96
       Lincoln: 4

       Fiat Chrysler Automobiles: 467
       Dodge: 217
       Plymouth: 191
       Chrysler: 59

       Toyota: 157

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.

ARCA Menards Series Eying Berlin Bullring Return July 17

Zinsser Smart Coat 200 Part of the Sioux Chief Showdown

The stars and cars of the ARCA Menards Series return to the legendary Berlin Raceway, located just west of Grand Rapids in Marne, Michigan, on Saturday night, July 17 in the Zinsser Smart Coat 200. The event marks the return of the nationally touring, nationally televised stock car series to West Michigan after a two-year hiatus.

“Berlin Raceway has a long history of hosting some the biggest short track events in the Midwest and we’re proud to carry on that tradition again with the Zinsser Smart Coat 200,” said Berlin Raceway president and general manager Jeff Striegle. “Our fans are always tuned up for long-distance races, and at 200 laps there’s a lot of racing to be done. It’s a great distance because the drivers have to be patiently aggressive. There’s no time to waste but there’s also an element of strategy. We’re looking forward to a great race in front of a lot of great race fans.”

The Zinsser Smart Coat 200 is the second of four straight Saturday night short track events and promises to be one of the highlights of the summer stretch. The Saturday night event is scheduled for live, flag to flag broadcast on MavTV, and streaming on NBC Sports Gold’s Track Pass digital platform.

Zinsser, a Rust-Oleum brand of primers, sealers, and coatings, was reintroduced to the ARCA Menards Series in 2020 when the company served as the entitlement sponsor at Lebanon I-44 Speedway. Zinsser also served as a team sponsor in the late 1990s, sponsoring ARCA legend Jack Bowsher’s team with driver Bob Strait.

“We are thrilled to be a part of the ARCA Menards Series again,” said Don Muench, Senior Vice President of Sales, at Rust-Oleum. “The ARCA Menards Series has a lot of great up-and-coming drivers and a great fan base. We’re proud to be a part of it.”

The event will also serve as round four of the Sioux Chief Showdown, a ten-race series within the greater ARCA Menards Series. The Sioux Chief Showdown allows drivers under the age of 18 the opportunity to compete for a championship within the ARCA Menards Series. In 2020, seventeen-year-old Sam Mayer won the Sioux Chief Showdown title, propelling him into an opportunity with the JR Motorsports organization in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2021.

Ticket and race information is available at BerlinRaceway.com. The day’s track activity will start at 4:15 pm with a 45-minute practice, followed by General Tire Pole Qualifying at 6 pm ET. The green flag will wave on the Zinsser Smart Coat 200 shortly after 8 pm ET. The race will be televised live flag-to-flag on MAVTV and streamed live on TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold.

About ARCA: The Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA), founded in 1953 by John and Mildred Marcum in Toledo, Ohio and acquired by NASCAR in April 2018, is the leading grassroots stock car sanctioning body in the United States. Bridging the gap between NASCAR’s top three national touring series and weekly racing all across the country, the organization is scheduled to administer more than 100 events in multiple racing series in 2020, including the ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East, ARCA Menards Series West, the ARCA/CRA Super Series, and the ARCA Midwest Tour, plus weekly racing at Toledo and Flat Rock Speedways. For more information about ARCA visit www.arcaracing.com, or follow ARCA on Facebook (@ARCARacing) and Twitter (@ARCA_Racing).

About Menards: A family-owned and run company started in 1958, Menards is recognized as the retail home center leader of the Midwest with 236 stores in 15 states. Menards is truly a one-stop shop for all of your home improvement needs featuring a full-service lumberyard and everything you need to plan a renovation or build a home, garage, cabin, shed, deck, fence or post frame building. You’ll find a large selection of lumber, roofing, siding, construction blocks, trusses, doors and windows, plus cabinets, appliances, countertops, flooring, lighting, paint, plumbing supplies and more. To complete the job, Menards has quality hand tools, power tools, fasteners, electrical tools plus storage options and supplies for everyone from the weekend warrior to the pro!

Menards has what you need to complete your outdoor projects and keep your yard in tip-top shape including mowers, trimmers, blowers, pressure washers and more, plus a beautiful garden center stocked with plants, shrubs, trees, landscaping tools, grass seed, fertilizer options, outdoor décor and patio furniture. Menards also has everyday essentials like health & beauty products, housewares, pet and wildlife supplies, automotive items and even groceries. And at Christmas, an Enchanted Forest display area with impressive trees, lighting, decorations, ornaments, inflatables and more.

Menards is known for friendly Customer Service and as the place to “Save Big Money” with low prices every day, and sales too! For more information, please visit Menards.com to learn about our store locations, offerings and services.

About Rust-Oleum

For nearly a century, Rust-Oleum has been the global leader in manufacturing innovative coatings that empower do-it-yourselfers and professionals alike across categories including small project paints, cleaners, primers, automotive, industrial, high performance coatings and wood care. Its wide breadth of brands and products include such trusted names as Rust-Oleum, Stops Rust®, Painter’s Touch®, Universal®, EpoxyShield®, Varathane®, Zinsser®, Watco®, MultiSpec®, X-I-M®, Krud Kutter®, RockSolid®, Wipe New®, Testors®, Seal-Krete®, Modern Masters®, Moldex®, Whink®, Miracle Sealants®, Roto-Rooter®, Mean Green®, and Gator® Finishing Products. Visit rustoleum.com for more information. Follow Rust-Oleum on LinkedIn, Pinterest, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.