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Toyota Racing NXS Post-Race Recap — Texas 6.12.21

KYLE BUSCH CLAIMS 300TH VICTORY FOR JGR AND TOYOTA
Busch Scores 99th Xfinity Series Win and 10th at Texas Motor Speedway

FORT WORTH (June 12, 2021) – Kyle Busch scored his 99th NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) win in Saturday’s race at Texas Motor Speedway. Busch was followed to the checkered flag by Toyota teammates Daniel Hemric (fourth) and Brandon Jones (fifth).

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Texas Motor Speedway
Race 14 of 33 – 250.5 miles, 167 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, KYLE BUSCH
2nd, Justin Allgaier*
3rd, Austin Cindric*
4th, DANIEL HEMRIC
5th, BRANDON JONES
20th, DAVID STARR
23rd, BRANDON GDOVIC
26th, MATT MILLS
27th, MATT JASKOL
30th, HARRISON BURTON
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

KYLE BUSCH, No. 54 Twix Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 1st

How do you win at Texas time and time again?

“Just being with a great group of guys and everybody at Joe Gibbs Racing, it’s pretty awesome to drive these Toyota Supras here in the Xfinity Series. Thank Twix, M&M’s, Rowdy Energy for keeping me hydrated, it’s hot out here. Going to need to get a little more of that here before tomorrow. All in all, just such a good car. I wouldn’t say it was a great car because (Justin) Allgaier was maybe just as good as us if not better. I was just able to think through a few things there on a couple restarts that may or may not have worked. There at the end, it really did. Thanks to Austin Cindric as well too, good teammate kind of today in helping. With this thing you always have to rely on the row behind you and you can’t do it on your own anymore. He had some help for us on those restarts for sure.”

What does it say to you to know you have 99 NXS wins and 10 wins at Texas Motor Speedway?

“10 percent, almost. It feels really good obviously. Driving these Toyota Supras from Joe Gibbs Racing and thanks to Twix and M&M’s, Interstate Batteries – their hometown, Rowdy Energy keeping me hydrated. We’re going to need more of that for later on tonight and tomorrow. Just good stuff. Chris Gayle (crew chief) and the guys did a great job. Pit crew was good today and the car was good, it wasn’t great. The 7 (Justin Allgaier) was really good, he was right there with us and he put up a hell of a fight there at the end through some of those restarts. We were able to get ahead of him there and control the rest of the way. Thanks to the 22 (Austin Cindric), he did a great job of helping me out and you can’t win these things on your own from the front row anymore it seems. You have to rely on what’s behind you and the rows behind you to help you. He did that and got us out front. Just want to say thanks to Rowdy Nation for coming out here, supporting us here today and looking forward to tomorrow, hopefully being able to bring home a million bucks.”

What were some of those restarts like toward the end of the race? Were they nerve-wracking?

“Yeah, a little bit. For as close as the 7 (Justin Allgaier) was, he was too close. Our cars were really equal and he did a good job with what he had. Finally, I was just able to prevail on one of those restarts. I just kept trying to think of things that I could do and it was really hard to do because his car was really good. We were just able to get ahead there and control it the rest of the way.”

Are you still planning to retire after you win your 100th NXS race?

“So here’s the problem, Joe (Gibbs) already sold me for 2022 so I don’t know. We’re going to have to talk about that. I better get a pay raise, that’s for sure. Racing for free ain’t fun no more, I’m just kidding.”

What did you learn from the traction compound today that could be in play tomorrow?

“I don’t know what’s going on with it, but it was getting kind of clumpy out there so it was rubbering up and putting rubber on the surface. Not necessarily using the grip and widening the surface out to go search for more grip. It was putting the rubber on top so you were now shallowing back down and not running in it. I don’t really know what that is for tomorrow. It’s the same tire, the Xfinity cars ran the same tire today that I believe we’re on tomorrow. The Cup cars here last time had a really bad problem of putting that rubber down similar to that and it balling up like that in turns three and four. Not in one and two and today it was worse in three and four, but also in one and two.”

How do you heat train to prepare for these hot conditions?

“Just normal training. Actually, I hate heat training. Some of the guys like (Daniel) Hemric and Harrison (Burton), the Toyota guys, we do have a heat room and they train in the heat room and I’ve never been in that thing. I absolutely can’t bear it. Just normal workouts and getting in better physical health and having the ability to withstand some of those hotter races and then this cool shirt device, I just started wearing it a little bit last year and a little bit more this year. It’s been super helpful on the hot ones and being able to keep you a little bit cooler in the car.”

What does today mean with John Hunter Nemechek winning in your truck earlier in the afternoon?

“It’s awesome, it’s really good. I feel like KBM (Kyle Busch Motorsports) is on the right path and on the right track to be a force to be reckoned with. John Hunter is week in, week out running up front and doing good things, winning stages, leading laps and winning races. That’s awesome. Excited for him and Eric (Phillips, crew chief) and everybody at KBM to showcase what we’ve got. For myself here today, I wasn’t going to say it was easy sailing, but there at one point I was building a lead and I was like, ‘oh well, alright, this is going to be pretty easy.’ Then there at the end, (Justin) Allgaier got there and got to the front and then it was a race. He was kind of hard to hold off there for a few times. Luckily, we got a couple cautions there where I was able to kind of regroup and rethink and do something to try to get by him. We were so equal, I felt like if either of us was out front, barring something happening with lapped traffic, that was going to be who goes on to win.”

What becomes important on late-race restarts, lane choice or who lines up behind you?

“It’s definitely the person pushing you. Why did I take the inside would be the next question. I don’t know. I felt like depending on who was behind you and who was going to push you was kind of how things were going to go. Being in my position, it’s kind of hard to rely on anybody in that stance, but you have to. It just kind of became the 22 (Austin Cindric) car there those last couple. Certainly, he was the car that I needed behind me in order to get the job done. He did a good job. I wouldn’t say, I think he did all he could pushing me. We got loose a couple times. I was spinning my tires kind of on one of those restarts, but we were able to hold it straight so that was good.”

Where did the bow come from and what did you think of John Hunter Nemechek using it in his celebration?

“The bow came from a long, long time ago. I’m obviously from Las Vegas, Nevada and there’s a lot of shows out there and every time a show ends, all the performers come out and give a bow to the crowd kind of like a thank you, thanks for coming, whatever. That’s kind of where it came from and I’ve done it for a long, long time. It can be interpreted in different ways if you want, but that’s where it stemmed from. And John Hunter using it, I don’t know. Was it to me or was it to Chase Elliott who did it to me last year who John Hunter beat today? Didn’t think about that one did you?”

How much does the PJ1 differ from track to track and week to week?

“Yes. I don’t know. Charlotte was super, super slick if you got in it. Today was kind of slick to get in it, but it warmed up a little bit there through the truck race and then in the Xfinity race there, it was really fast through the mid-portion of the race. I ripped off some laps that were super-fast at the end of stage two I think. Then it kind of went away after that. Bristol putting it around the bottom, that’s a completely different feeling running through it with your left sides than it is the rights. It’s hard to say, but I kind of feel like we need to find something different. We need to find something that adds grip. Oh I know what adds grip, softer tires, that’s right. We need to find something that adds grip, that wears out, that you can search for more of it and it gives you what you’re looking for. This one here just kind of clumped up here today. I think it’s the tire combination with whatever is going on out there because it did the same thing last year so I’m sure it’s the same mixture. I don’t know if it’s the same mixture as it is at Charlotte. Charlotte it doesn’t clump up. I don’t know if any of that answers your question, but that’s all I know.”

Has the PJ1 ever actually enhanced the product on the race track?

“That’s a great question. I think it makes it a bit more interesting. I think you can definitely look at, I don’t know from a fan’s perspective, but from a driver’s perspective, you have to think, do you want to use it, do you want to get in it, do you want to get in it all the way, do you want to use it with two tires, do you use it on entry, not on exit. I will say yes, Loudon (NH), Loudon I feel it’s a huge benefit. When we all use it there, I think it’s really exciting on restarts, I think it’s really great when it’s fresh. As it wears out, it kind of becomes more dull to the race you’re putting on. It’s kind of like you need to respray halfway through. That would definitely be hard to do.”

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

Finishing Position: 4th

How was your race overall today?

“Very good Poppy Bank Supra. I think as a group we’ve hit on something with this 18 team in particular where myself and Dave Rogers (crew chief) are building our notebook for when it’s going to matter the most come fall. It’s been a rough probably 30-some days for us as finishing positions go so it’s nice to finally get a decent one on the board. I’m a little disappointed there, we took the lead off of Kyle (Busch), it’s always fun to line up next to him and beat him on a restart. Had another shot at it and I’m not sure if I got in the speedy dry and it slipped, but felt like how big track position was, we were lucky to get back to fourth. I’ll take it. I wish we could have taken another pit stop and had another shot at it, but overall a decent day.”

Would you have had a shot at Kyle Busch had you lined up alongside on the restart?

“By the time, not having another shot to put another set of tires on it and have a little better track position, it’s hard to say. In all reality, the cars come out of the same shop so no reason that if he’s (Kyle Busch) winning why I can’t. Just have to figure out what I need to do to get better.”

BRANDON JONES, No. 19 Menards/PelonisToyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 5th

How was your car today?

“We fired off pretty dang good I thought. We weren’t good enough to lead the race, but we were good enough to stay in the top-three. Little bit tight through the center of the corner and exit. Had a ton of stability. When we came here last year, that was our weakness was stability, that was where we struggled. We fixed that. We just jumped the gun and came down, ended up having a little gash in the tire that got us really loose at one point and lost a ton of track position. For places that you just can’t pass at, it was pretty impressive for us to come back to a top-five. We just have to continue to plug away and get points here. We’re not out of the fight for sure.”

How intense was the heat today?

“I invested in a cool suit this weekend and a lot of other things and still really hot. We do a lot fitness wise and we do a bunch to hydrate. It’s not terrible, but it weighs on your for sure.”

About Toyota

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CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES-CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX – VEEKAY AND O’WARD PODIUM PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX
STEETS OF BELLE ISLE
TEAM CHEVY PODIUM PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 12,2021

RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAS/AUTOGEEK ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET (FINISHED 2ND) AND PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET (FINISHED 3RD) POST RACE PODIUM PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:

THE MODERATOR: Welcome, everyone, to the post race press conference for the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix. We are joined by our third-place finisher, Pato O’Ward, driver of the No. 5 AMSP Chevy. This is his best finish at Belle Isle, his third podium finish of 2020.
Pato, tell us about today’s race. It was crazy.
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, it was good. The main point for me today is Felix is okay. That was a nasty crash. Nothing he could have done there. He was just a passenger, it was out of his control. I’m really happy that he’s okay. He’s getting evaluated further. But he’s good from what we’re seeing.
Yeah, I mean, we started on pole. We’ve never won from pole. We went backwards. I guess that’s a disappointment. If you go back into the first red, we got hosed by that really bad. Everybody in our strategy I don’t even think finished within the top — I can’t remember who was in our strategy. We really had to fight for this podium. Bummer for Will. I feel for him, not starting up the last few laps.
But, yeah, I mean, I think we salvaged a lot of points from where we, like, could have finished, which was further back just considering how hard it was to pass. But the guys did a great job in the pits. I did my job on the track. Made it through. I think we passed like eight people on track, seven people on track, in three or two in the pits. That was fantastic.
We just get to come do it all over again tomorrow. Hopefully we get another pole. Hopefully we actually win it then.
THE MODERATOR: Tell us about the battle with Rinus at the end.
PATO O’WARD: I was nursing a front left flat spot. I have a lot more to lose than they do. I could just tell, whenever they race you and stuff, not that it’s wrong, they’re being smart with their own racing. They know if I’m stupid about it, then I’m the one coming out losing out of it.
I had to give in quite a few times there just battling Sato, Rinus, McLaughlin. I had to be cautious because it’s so tight around here, it just takes one little bump, you go straight into the wall. I didn’t want to do that because the guys I’m fighting for the championship with were behind me. I think it was a job well done today.
THE MODERATOR: We can take questions.
Q. You looked like you were mad at Sato. What was wrong with him?
PATO O’WARD: Well, the guy basically just left his front wing there. If I took the corner, I go into the wall and I spin, and he’s fine, or I let him by. I had to let him by. I know him. He won’t back out of that, so…
Q. How did you handle the heat today? Will was dying in the car.
PATO O’WARD: Was he? I was fine. Honestly we had a lot of breaks today. If it would have been a full green flag race, I think a lot more of us would have been destroyed after it.
Honestly today was kind of easy in terms of what it could have been. Tomorrow is going to be a heavy one.
Q. Did you need a fan in that second restart, second red flag?
PATO O’WARD: Oh, yes. Just imagine like a sauna at maybe 125, 130 degrees inside. And nothing gets in there, only sand and dirt. So, yeah, I needed a fan.
Q. Fun sauna.
PATO O’WARD: Hot Yoga.
Q. What about the long red flag, what did you do then to hydrate and stay cool?
PATO O’WARD: I went to my bus and had avocado toast, get some food in me. I didn’t have a chance to eat a lot before the race because of stuff we were doing. I had to get some more fuel into me. Just drank some water, hydrated a little bit more rather than the hot tea we have inside the car (smiling).
Q. Do you have any idea what happened on Felix’s crash?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, he popped off the brake. I mean, if you see the replays, you hear it out, the engine just goes flat out. I know him. I’m pretty sure that wasn’t him doing that with his own throttle.
Man, I feel for him. It sucks. If you think about it, I mean, if it could have been in like a turn seven, turn three, that’s ugly. I really hope they find what caused it because that can be really bad. It was really ugly.
I’m really happy he’s okay. We’re like brothers. I was definitely asking for updates.
Q. When that happens did you start to have any concern that maybe something happens to your car?
PATO O’WARD: No. You have to block that out. We’re in a business where you just, I mean, see accidents and accidents will happen, they can happen to you at any time. You just hope that they don’t. But if they do, you just try and do everything possible to recover.
These INDYCARS are very safe. The monocoque was intact. The front end of the car was destroyed, but it’s a survivor cell. They’re meant to withstand hits of 230 plus miles an hour. This situation more now is more of the G that your body, like, compresses through when the car just launches up.
But, yeah, I mean, I think the cars are really, really safe.
Q. You talked about your thoughts on restarting the Formula 1 race. Do you think today was okay?
PATO O’WARD: I understand they want to end on green. I bet you if I was Will, I’d be telling you no. I feel for him, man. The guy, I’m pretty sure he was the one leading. I think he would have walked away with it if it didn’t go red. It really sucks.
Yeah, I mean, I wasn’t the one winning the race or anything, so I don’t really care if it was one or the other. For me it was good because I got a couple more (indiscernible).
THE MODERATOR: We’ve been joined by our second-place finisher, Rinus VeeKay, driver of the No. 21 SONAX Chevrolet for Ed Carpenter Racing. This is Rinus’ second podium finish in seven starts.
Tell us about your day.
RINUS VEEKAY: It was very nice day. Pretty crazy race. I think we made a good call on the strategy. I always trust the team with that. Yeah, best Chevy. Two Chevys on the podium. Very happy with that. I think engines are flying. Yeah, everything felt great. The team gave me the material to win.
Yeah, made some pretty cool moves to secure second place. Also got a bit lucky with Will. Of course, I prefer to pass him just on track instead of with him being unlucky.
Anyway, P2, very happy with it. Yeah, it was just a crazy, crazy Detroit race. Definitely a really good start for the first race.
THE MODERATOR: You and Pato had a good battle at the end. We heard his side of it. How about you?
PATO O’WARD: I didn’t think we had a battle. We did? I was waiting for him to make a mistake, but he didn’t make one. I was just chilling.
RINUS VEEKAY: In one part from turn seven till turn 11, you cannot really make a pass.
PATO O’WARD: I do remember now (smiling).
RINUS VEEKAY: I pushed my tires quite hard at the beginning of my stint. At the end for the restart my tires were a little cooked. Yeah, I knew Pato was going to be fast. He’s always aggressive. But so am I. That was good.
Yeah, I made a good move on Takuma, which I was pretty happy about. That felt pretty good. Pato came with me. Yeah, I just had quite a lot of ‘push to pass’. Luckily I could get a little bit of a gap in the last lap.
From turn seven to turn 11, kind of took it a little bit easy. Didn’t want to tap a wall or break anything. I knew he wasn’t going to be able to pass me there. Still it got pretty close.
No, I think it’s quite a cool podium, quite a young one, too.
THE MODERATOR: This is also our seventh different winner in seven races.
PATO O’WARD: Crazy, yeah.
THE MODERATOR: We’ll continue with questions.
Q. Trying to figure out the points, but once again it’s scrambled. I’m sure you guys have moved up since Alex didn’t have the greatest race in the world.
PATO O’WARD: I might be like within five points, I think. I thought I got 35. How far was I back? Palou gets some for 15th.
I should be in the fight. It was a good points day for me.
Q. Both you and Rinus probably gained a lot today. Talk about how it seems like this points race is going to be a dogfight.
PATO O’WARD: Everyone keeps asking me, Would you risk it? I mean, obviously it’s not like it’s one race, double points. There’s two races in two days. You need to maximize those two races. You’re better off having two top fives rather than a win and a DNF.
THE MODERATOR: You got 37 points for the day, and you have 248 currently.
PATO O’WARD: I’m where Palou was. I should be a few points back.
RINUS VEEKAY: I think title fight is pretty good on our side. But I just treat every race the same. Like last year I was 14th. Now I’m probably somewhere in the top five. But, yeah, the season is still like nine more races. We’re not even halfway. So many can still happen. I just treat every race at a time and just, yeah, try to get the best possible result every race, see where I end up.
Q. You two are young. There’s a quick turnaround. It’s 6:00 here, you have to be out there qualifying at 9 a.m.
PATO O’WARD: What time is it now?
THE MODERATOR: 6.
PATO O’WARD: Dinner now at 6? That means I’m off the hook (laughter)?
Q. Quick turnaround, 9 qualifying, 12 race. How do you get as much rest as you can?
PATO O’WARD: I want to get in my ice bath. You have one?
RINUS VEEKAY: I don’t have one. I have a massage. I’m going to be massaged, a full spa treatment (laughter).
PATO O’WARD: Okay, I don’t have my personal spa (smiling).
Q. Rinus, you were one of seven guys who never raced here before. How did you adapt to the track so quickly?
RINUS VEEKAY: Well, I think it’s kind of a track that suits me. You got to be a little bit crazy. If you don’t know the risks, you can’t give it all.
I think for me, I like street courses. I think we also have a great car which helps me get up to speed. We also had a sim day last Wednesday on a sim.
PATO O’WARD: Those don’t do anything to prepare you for Detroit. What are you talking about? Not a chance.
RINUS VEEKAY: No, I felt like it really happened. I did a pace lap with Conor.
Q. He taught you everything?
RINUS VEEKAY: Everything (smiling).
Q. Do you feel since your win you’re driving a lot more confident? Or has that not changed, you’re driving the same way?
RINUS VEEKAY: I actually forgot about my win. I just give it all. I enjoy. I think that’s most important. I enjoy. I’m still pretty bouncy and happy in the team. Like all the spirits are very high, everyone is very motivated. I think that helps.
I think just the whole team, like everyone together, just has made a huge step compared to last year. We have a consistently good-performing car.
Q. Pato, I saw you throw your fist up in frustration at Sato maybe. Rinus, did you have an issue with Sato? Both had problems with the same guy today?
RINUS VEEKAY: I had no real problems. It was just racing hard. I was aware if he made a move and reaction, he would make a block. Yeah, just his mistake. No, Takuma, he’s not an easy guy to race. No attack, no chance is his motto. He’s a little crazy.
But, yeah, I finished in front of him. No attack, no chance today, so it’s been a good race.
PATO O’WARD: I finished in front of him, so I have no complaints (smiling).
Q. On the flipside, the guy who won today, he seems to be a driver that you don’t ever hear anybody complain about the way he drives. How do you feel about seeing him crack into Victory Lane?
PATO O’WARD: I’m happy for him. He was telling me it’s been 10 years since he won. Like for me it was three years and it felt like forever. I can’t imagine 10 years. I’m really, really happy for him.
He’s a great guy to race. He races you hard, but he’s very clean. Yeah, good guy.
RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, I’m also very happy for him. Of course, the first victory is always the most special. I think his first and only podium was here in 2019. Very good track for him. He’s putting a lot of work in just like us. Definitely a great driver. Great that he gets his first win here. Pretty cool way to jump in the fountain and sit on the lion.
Q. You got your first wins this year. We saw another first-time winner. When was the last time we had four first-time winners in seven races? I don’t think that’s happened before.
PATO O’WARD: I got to say, I don’t think the field has ever been this stacked in decades. Like I’m really proud to be part of it, proud to be one of the guys that’s mixing it up in the front. I’m sure Rinus feels the same.
RINUS VEEKAY: I’m proud of it. We of course are the new generation coming up. It’s pretty cool to battle it out. I think, yeah, it’s just great how the young guys kind of take over. Really proud to be a part of it.
Q. Rinus, how was this place? You’re one of seven drivers who came in this place for the very first time. What was it like?
RINUS VEEKAY: It’s definitely crazy. Once you give it 99% one lap, you’re a second off. You got to be on it every lap and push hard.
Yeah, you will touch the wall a few times in the race, which I did. No damage. Definitely very cool. It gives you a lot of adrenaline. Finishing on the podium here is really satisfying.
Q. Pato, back to talking about a championship. Were there any moments today where you were thinking championship first? If so, what were those moments?
PATO O’WARD: Yes, many times. When Sato stuck it inside, when Rossi stuck it in the inside, when I was fighting I think it was McLaughlin. I ended up getting him, so that was good.
Yeah, I mean, there were multiple times in the race where I made the right call backing off. If I didn’t, I’m pretty sure my race would have been ended before the first red flag.
Q. Is it full send tomorrow from the green flag or back to thinking championship?
PATO O’WARD: I need to qualify as high up as I can. We did a good job of that today. Tomorrow we try to do the same. Hopefully no yellows fall down to hose us.
Q. Rinus, your pass on Takuma on the last restart, how aggressive were you on that move?
RINUS VEEKAY: I was quite aggressive. I had a pretty good run from the restart. I knew they didn’t sweep turn one. It was very marble-y off the line. I got a taste of what being off the line is like yesterday in practice. It’s very slick.
I thought once I get my wing there, you know, I can stick it. He’s not going to be able to follow me on the outside. I put my front wheels on his inside. Yeah, then I knew the move was done.
Very happy. Definitely paid off.

About Chevrolet
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Ericsson Earns First Career Victory in Wild Race 1 of Chevrolet Dual in Detroit

DETROIT (Saturday, June 12, 2021) – In one of the most unpredictable NTT INDYCAR SERIES seasons ever, Marcus Ericsson pulled off one of the more improbable victories in recent memory in Race 1 of the Chevrolet Dual at Detroit to earn his first career series victory.

Ericsson held off Rinus VeeKay and Pato O’Ward in a three-lap dash to the checkered flag after the second red flag of the event. Ericsson was in second place in the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Chip Ganassi Racing Honda when cars entered pit road for the red-flag period caused when Romain Grosjean crashed in the No. 51 NURTEC ODT Honda with six laps to go.

But Ericsson took the lead on pit lane when the No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske Chevrolet of leader Will Power would not restart after the red flag period on a humid, sunny day with an air temperature of 80 degrees. That apparent electrical control unit malfunction completed Ericsson’s charge from a disappointing 15th starting position, as the last five laps of the race – including two under caution – were the only circuits Ericsson led all day.

Swedish driver Ericsson pulled away from VeeKay’s No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek Chevrolet over the closing three laps under green of the 70-lap race, winning by 1.7290 seconds at an average speed of 93.509 mph. NTT P1 Award winner O’Ward was third in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet, 1.9105 seconds behind Ericsson.

“For once, things fell my way,” Ericsson said. “It feels really good. For Will, I feel really bad for him with the way it ended for him. He did a tremendous job today. But it was my day today, and it was about time.”

Live coverage of Race 2 of this doubleheader weekend, another 70-lap event, starts at noon (ET) Sunday on NBC and the INDYCAR Radio Network. NTT P1 Award qualifying for Race 2 is set for 9 a.m. and will be broadcast on NBCSN, Peacock and the INDYCAR Radio Network.

Ericsson’s first career win came in his 37th career start over three seasons. His previous best finish was second at this same 14-turn, 2.35-mile temporary street circuit in 2019.

Formula One veteran Ericsson also became the seventh different winner in the first seven races this season, a feat last achieved in 2017 and a milestone reached only in five prior seasons in the series’ century-long history. He is the fourth first-time career winner in 2021, joining Alex Palou, O’Ward and VeeKay.

Takuma Sato finished fourth in the No. 30 Panasonic/Mi-Jack Honda, while Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing teammate Graham Rahal rounded out the top five in the No. 15 Fifth Third Bank Honda.

Power and Ericsson were the dominant drivers in the closing stages of the race. Less than a second separated them once Power took the top spot on Lap 54 when leaders Rahal and RLL teammate Santino Ferrucci – on a different pit stop cycle – pitted on Lap 53.

A hotly anticipated closing duel between 2014 series champion and 39-time INDYCAR SERIES race winner Power and Ericsson vanished when Grosjean hit the wall in Turn 9 on Lap 64. Series officials decided to halt the race under red-flag conditions, with all cars entering the pits. After a break of seven minutes, 29 seconds, the race resumed – without Power at the front of the field.

His ECU apparently malfunctioned, and his Team Penske crew could not start the car. The crew quickly installed a new ECU, and a dejected Power returned to the track and finished 20th, three laps down.

Before the late-race drama, the event quickly unfolded into a strategic duel with two clear paths.

One group of drivers pitted within the first five laps to shed the grippy Firestone alternate “red” tires for the increased durability of the Firestone primary “black” tires, choosing a three-stop strategy. O’Ward and VeeKay were among the drivers to choose this option.

The other group of drivers elected to start and stay on the Firestone reds for as long as possible before switching to their primary tires. Ericsson, Power and Sato were among the drivers who chose this option.

Then there was reigning and six-time series champion Scott Dixon and James Hinchcliffe. They were among just four of the 25 drivers who elected to start on primary tires, and they stayed out as long as possible to stretch fuel and tire wear into a two-stop race.

But that strategy – and those of the drivers who pitted early to make this a three-stop race — sailed into the Detroit River when Felix Rosenqvist crashed heavily in Turn 6 on Lap 25. The throttle on Rosenqvist’s No. 7 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet appeared to stick open, and he made heavy contact with the tire barrier and concrete barrier.

Rosenqvist’s No. 7 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet speared nose-first into the tire wall and concrete barrier in Turn 6, with an apparent stuck throttle. Rosenqvist was removed from the car by the AMR INDYCAR Safety Team, and he was transported to the infield care center for preliminary evaluation and then transported to a local hospital for more detailed evaluation, according to INDYCAR Medical Director Dr. Geoffrey Billows. Rosenqvist was conscious, alert and talking throughout, Billows said.

The heavy impact forced the race to be stopped with a red flag while Rosenqvist was removed from his car and the concrete barrier and tire wall were rebuilt.

Racing resumed after a red-flag delay of one hour, 18 minutes. Dixon and Hinchcliffe had to make their first pit stops for fuel immediately, and many drivers who pitted early to switch to primary tires also dove into the pits under yellow for fuel and tires.

That reshuffling placed Power, Ericsson and Sato into the top three on the restart on Lap 30 after the red flag. VeeKay quickly passed Sato for third and joined Power and Ericsson in a three-way joust for the lead by Lap 36.

It was a tough day for the top two drivers in the standings entering this race, Chip Ganassi Racing teammates Palou and Dixon. Palou finished 15th after starting last in the 25-car field in the No. 10 The American Legion Honda, while Dixon ended up eighth in the No. 9 PNC Bank Grow Up Great Honda.

Palou led Dixon by 36 points entering this event, but that lead was sliced to just 15 over O’Ward, who leaped over Dixon into second. Palou has 263 points, O’Ward 248 and Dixon 237. VeeKay is fourth with 231.

CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES-CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX – RACE RECAP – VEEKAY AND O’WARD GRAB PODIUM FINISHES

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX
STEETS OF BELLE ISLE
TEAM CHEVY POST RACE ONE RECAP
JUNE 12,2021

Chevrolet picks up two spots on podium in Detroit Dual 1
Rinus VeeKay places second, pole winner Pato O’Ward finishes third

DETROIT (June 12, 2021) – Rinus VeeKay, who earned his first NTT INDYCAR SERIES victory in May on a road course, and Pato O’Ward, who claimed his initial win in May on an oval, led the Chevrolet contingent with podium finishes on a temporary street circuit in Dual 1 of the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear.

VeeKay, driving the No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek Chevrolet for Ed Carpenter Racing, finished 1.7 seconds behind race winner Marcus Ericsson in his Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. O’Ward, who earlier in the day recorded his second NTT P1 Award of the season, placed third in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet to move into second in the driver standings.

“It’s an awesome result. I have to thank the team and Chevy power,” said VeeKay, 20, who followed his victory May 15 in the GMR Grand Prix by becoming the youngest front-row starter in Indianapolis 500 history. “Very excited for tomorrow because we were fast.”

VeeKay, O’Ward and nine other drivers powered by Chevrolet’s 2.2-liter, twin-turbocharged V6 engine return Sunday, June 13, to the 2.35-mile, 13-turn temporary street circuit on Belle Isle for Dual 2. Two rounds of knockout qualifying will precede another physically demanding and technically challenging 70-lap race. O’Ward delivered the 101st pole in 156 races for Chevrolet since it returned to NTT INDYCAR SERIES manufacturer competition in 2012.

Will Power, who led a field-high 37 laps in the No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske Chevrolet, appeared to be in the driver’s seat with five laps left to register his 40th career victory. But the second caution of the race brought out the red flag and brought the cars in running order to pit lane. After the incident was cleared, Power’s car failed to restart and INDYCAR officials waived the field around the two-time Detroit winner. The team eventually restarted the car and Power rejoined the race from the rear of the field.

Josef Newgarden added a 10th-place finish in the No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet, while two-time Belle Isle winner Sebastien Bourdais finished 11th in the No. 14 ROKiT Chevrolet for A.J. Foyt Racing, Simon Pagenaud placed 12th in the No. 22 Menards Team Penske Chevrolet, and Conor Daly was 13th in the No. 20 U.S. Air Force Chevrolet for Ed Carpenter Racing.

The first caution involved the No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren Chevrolet driven by Felix Rosenqvist that made heavy contact with the Turn 6 tire barrier on Lap 25. He was awake and alert and transported by ground to a local hospital for evaluation.

Marcus Ericsson (Honda) was the race winner.

Dual 2 qualifications will be telecast live on NBCSN and stream on Peacock Premium at 9 a.m. ET Sunday, June 13, followed by NBC’s telecast of the 70-lap race at noon. The race 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.

TEAM CHEVY FINISHERS with starting position in parentheses:

  1. Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek Ed Carpenter Racing (12)
  2. Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP (1)
  3. Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske (5)
  4. Sebastien Bourdais, No. 14 ROKiT/AJ Foyt Racing (10)
  5. Simon Pagenaud, No. 22 Menards Team Penske (9)
  6. Conor Daly, No. 20 U.S. Air Force Ed Carpenter Racing (17)
  7. Dalton Kellett, No. 4 K-Line Insulators/AJ Foyt Racing (24)
  8. Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 PPG Team Penske (23)
  9. Will Power, No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske (7)
  10. Max Chilton, No. 59 Gallagher Carlin Chevrolet (20)
  11. Felix Rosenqvist, No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren SP (14)
    DRIVER QUOTES:
    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX/AUTOGEEK CHEVROLET – Finished 2nd:
    YOU STARTED 12TH AND WORKED YOUR WAY ALL THE WAY UP TO SECOND. YOU ARE DRENCHED IN SWEAT. THIS WAS A PHYSICAL TEST EVEN GREATER THAN YOU EXPECTED.
    “Yeah, it’s an awesome result. I’m very happy. I have to thank the team, of course, and Chevy power, the best Chevy. So, I’m very happy with that. It’s an awesome track. I enjoy it here. And I like the street courses being a little crazy. That was definitely very awesome and yeah, heat-wise, it was pretty warm. Actually, like physically, it was fine. But I’ve just got a lot of sweat dripping on my face. That was the only thing bothering me. But very good results and good for the points. I’m very excited for tomorrow because we were fast.”

IT TURNED OUT TO BE A STRANGE RACE WITH A COUPLE OF RED FLAGS. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT TOMORROW? DO YOU THINK YOU CAN PUT THE CAR UP FRONT LIKE THIS AGAIN, EVEN IF IT GOES GREEN TO THE END?
“I think we can do better on qualifying. We took a little bit of a risky strategy, so 12th was all we could do. But anyway, we were very fast, and qualifying isn’t that important because it’s a crazy track. We’ve seen what happens. So, definitely good qualifying will help but that’ll come tomorrow.”

PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET – Finished 3rd:
“We started on the pole and went backward which I guess is a disappointment. We really had to fight for this podium. I think we really salvaged a lot of points from where we could have finished, just considering how hard it was to pass. The guys did a great job in the pits and I did my job on the track, passed seven on the track and two or three in the pits so that was fantastic.

“I feel for Will. I think he would have walked away with it if we didn’t go red.”

WILL POWER, NO.12 VERIZON 5G TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, Finished 20th:
“I’m mad at INDYCAR. Because, I’m the first car in and they wait until the last car to come to get a fan on that car and it roasted the ECU (Electronic Control Unit).

“Just going red flag for starters. The guys up there in race control never listen to any drivers. They never listen; they don’t care. We’ve given them so many suggestions and they don’t care.

“I drove my butt off today, to have this to happen!

“I was screaming on the radio, ‘get a fan, get a fan.” (from Lee, it wasn’t for you, it war for the car?). Yeah, because the ECU always overheats. They wait for everyone. These guys (behind me) still had air coming in the car.

“You work your butt off in this sport. So much money goes into it and doesn’t and it has dumb things like that.

“If it’s not a yellow they throw, it’s some stupid idea like this – a red flag. Gah.”

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.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Xfinity Series Post-Race Texas (Cindric Finishes 3rd at Texas)

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Alsco Uniforms 250 | Saturday, June 12, 2021

FORD FINISHING RESULTS
3rd — Austin Cindric
11th — Ryan Sieg
12th — Riley Herbst

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 22 Odyssey Battery Ford Mustang — Finished 3rd

“We faded halfway through the race. We were really good to start with but didn’t quite have the pieces to keep up with the track for the PJ1 fading away. Overall it was a great race and good to get a playoff point. It was a good points day. I am happy to have a lot of people with Odyssey Battery here supporting us in their 25th anniversary. It is funny, the last time I did a suite appearance was the last time we had a normal race in Fontana. I am proud to have them as great partners for us and hopefully, we keep the momentum going.

THAT SERIES OF RESTARTS, YOU WERE REALLY ABLE TO PUSH AND IT LOOKED LIKE YOU WERE TRYING TO MAKE A MOVE “Yeah. I did my job on those. I think we maximized because we didn’t have enough for the 7 or the 54. The best thing you can do is dictate someone else’s destiny. The 54 wasn’t racing for points so that played into my decision there. It was a strong day for us.”

RILEY HERBST, No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang — Finished 12th

“Man, it was hot for sure. We finally got track position there at the end, running fifth and just got loose and fell back to 11th. It was kind of a struggle all day for us to be honest. But there isn’t a scratch on the car, so that is good. We will walk away from here and learn and get better to come back here in the fall.”

Harvey Takes 16th in Detroit Debut

#60: Meyer Shank Racing, Honda, Jack Harvey,

Belle Isle, Mich. (12 June 2021) – Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) driver Jack Harvey made his first-ever race start on the streets of Belle Isle on Saturday, racing his way to 16th in the first of two NTT INDYCAR Series races on the weekend.

Gaining speed and experience with every lap on the 2.35-mile Detroit street course, Harvey continued to show improvement on board the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda.

After being slowed by two red flag periods, the race lasted just over three hours.

MSR has IMSA competition experience at the Belle Isle circuit going back to 2012, but Saturday’s race marked the team’s first-ever INDYCAR race start at the track. Looking to learn as quickly as he could in his debut, Harvey had just 75-minutes of practice on Friday ahead of the busy double-header event weekend to get familiar with the bumpy, high speed circuit.

Qualifying on row 10 for Saturday’s Race 1, Harvey took the green flag as the field made it through the initial laps without issue. With ambient temperatures over 85 degrees, the team made a smart strategy call to pit on lap three to switch over to Firestone alternate tires. Once on the harder compound, Harvey made early progress through the first quarter of the race.

Three laps after Harvey’s lap 25 pit stop the race was red flagged to make repairs to the wall after an impact in Turn 6. With the race on hold for nearly an hour to make proper repairs to the wall, the race was restarted with 42 laps remaining.

The strategy call from the team placed Harvey P7 for the restart where he held the No. 60 Indy Car in the top ten through his final stop on Lap 42. A second red flag set up a final six laps to the finish as Harvey restarted from 15th and came home in 16th.

“I’m not really sure I’ve been a part of a race like that before,” said Harvey. “We struggled a bit on restarts and getting the tires up to temperature, that was disappointing and something we need to look at for tomorrow. I thought we were looking pretty good leading up to all the melee. I think we knew that day 1 was going to be a bit tougher, but hopefully we’ll have a better day tomorrow.”

Sunday will stage Qualifying for Race 2 at 9:15am ET. Race 2 is set to go green at 12:50pm ET with live coverage beginning on NBC at 12:00pm ET. SiriusXM will also provide coverage on SiriusXM Ch. 205.

John Hunter Nemechek nabs fourth win of the 2021 Truck Series season at Texas

Photo by Ron Olds for Speedwaymedia.com

John Hunter Nemechek dominated Texas Motor Speedway on a hot Saturday afternoon in the Lone Star state to take home the victory in Saturday’s Speedycash.com 220. It was his fourth win of the 2021 Truck Series season and his first at Texas Motor Speedway.

Nemechek leads the driver standings with four races remaining in the regular season.

Nemechek started on the pole based on the qualifying metric system, won Stage 1, and cycled out as the leader once again in the final stage with 21 laps remaining to score the victory.

Stages 35-35-77 laps made up the 147-lap event at Texas.

Stage 1: Lap 1 – Lap 35

Three cautions slowed the first stage and two of those cautions came out for the 2020 Truck Series champion Sheldon Creed. Creed brought out the first yellow on Lap 6 when the California native spun in Turn 2 and brushed the wall causing damage to the back end of the No. 2 machine. Then, on Lap 21, he caused the yellow again after spinning the same area.

The final yellow for the stage was caused by the No. 49 of Ray Ciccarelli, who came to a stop off of Turn 2 at Lap 33. With the yellow coming out so late in the stage, Stage 1 would end under yellow and Nemechek grabbed the stage victory. Austin Hill, Ben Rhodes, Chandler Smith, Stewart Friesen, Brennan Poole, Austin Wayne Self, Derek Kraus, Todd Gilliland and Josh Berry rounded out the Top 10 finishers.

Stage 2: Lap 40 – Lap 70

Stage 2 was similar in terms of the number of cautions. On Lap 52, the No. 52 of Friesen was sent spinning sideways into Turn 2 after a bump from the No. 42 of Carson Hocevar. Then, on Lap 59, the No. 10 of Jennifer Jo Cobb came to a stop, and finally, with two to go in the stage (Lap 69), the No. 51 of Drew Dollar crashed in Turn 2 seeing an early end to his day.

Zane Smith took the stage victory as Tanner Gray, Kraus, Poole, Ross Chastain, Berry, Chase Elliott, Chandler Smith, Nemechek and Grant Enfinger completed the Top 10.

Stage 3: Lap 77 – Lap 147

The final stage saw teams using various strategies. On Lap 78, Elliott took the lead from Chastain and led through Lap 108 (39 to go) when Elliott made his final pit stop. Nemechek stayed out longer than others hoping to build a large gap between Elliott and himself.

Nemechek made his final stop 10 laps later than Elliott. He lost the lead briefly during his stop to Zane Smith but Nemechek recycled back to the lead with 21 to go. From there, he held on to a sizable lead over Elliott and won in his sixth track start at Texas Motor Speedway. Elliott, Chastain, and Austin Hill were the top five finishers.

Nemechek led five times for 64 laps en route to victory. There were seven leaders among 15 different lead changes and six cautions for 38 laps.

*Note: Niece Motorsports’ driver, Ross Chastain, who was originally scored with a third-place finish, was disqualified by NASCAR following post-race inspection. It was determined that the No. 45 entry had violated Section 20.6.2.13.a in the NASCAR Rule Book: “The throttle body must be used as supplied by the NT1 engine supplier without modification.”

As a result of the infraction, Chastain was scored with a last-place finish of 36th.

Official Results following the SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway:
  1. John Hunter Nemechek, won Stage 1, led 64 laps
  2. Chase Elliott, led 45 laps
  3. Grant Enfinger
  4. Austin Hill
  5. Chandler Smith
  6. Zane Smith, won Stage 2, led 12 laps
  7. Todd Gilliland, led eight laps
  8. Tyler Ankrum
  9. Tanner Gray, led seven laps
  10. Josh Berry
  11. Carson Hocevar
  12. Johnny Sauter
  13. Derek Kraus, 1 lap down
  14. Brennan Poole, 1 lap down
  15. Austin Wayne Self, 1 lap down
  16. Ryan Truex, 1 lap down
  17. Chase Purdy, 2 laps down
  18. Cory Roper, 2 laps down
  19. Tyler Hill, 2 laps down
  20. Matt Crafton, 3 laps down
  21. Dawson Cram, 3 laps down
  22. Kris Wright, 3 laps down
  23. Howie DiSavino III, 4 laps down
  24. Hailie Deegan, 5 laps down
  25. Tate Fogleman, 5 laps down
  26. Ben Rhodes, 6 laps down
  27. Spencer Boyd, 6 laps down
  28. Jesse Iwuji, 6 laps down
  29. Keith McGee, 7 laps down
  30. Norm Benning, 13 laps down
  31. Jennifer Jo Cobb, 16 laps down
  32. Ray Ciccarelli, OUT, Brakes
  33. Drew Dollar, OUT, Crash
  34. Stewart Friesen, OUT, Crash
  35. Sheldon Creed, OUT, Crash
  36. *Ross Chastain, led five laps – Disqualified, relegated to a last-place finish

Up Next: The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series returns to Nashville Superspeedway for the first time since 2011 on Friday, June 18, live on Fox Sports 1 and MRN Radio at 8 p.m. ET.

DGR NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race Recap: Texas

Saturday, June 12
Track: Texas Motor Speedway, 1.5-mile oval
Race: 11 of 22
Event: SpeedCash.com 220 (147 laps, 220 miles)

Hailie Deegan, No. 1 Toter Ford F-150
Start: 12th
Finish: 25th

  • Deegan started the event from 12th in the Toter Ford F-150. Hot and humid weather conditions made for a very slick racing surface which Deegan battled in the opening laps before the first caution on lap 8 when she was 16th.
  • On lap 21 under cation, she reported her F-150 was a little loose on entry while in the 18th spot.
  • During the lap-31 caution, the California native reported she could use a small adjustment but was feeling more comfortable with the track and was in the 14th spot.
  • On lap 52 under caution, she reported her Ford felt better after the most recent adjustments and was in the 23rd spot.
  • At the end of Stage 2, Deegan was really happy with her truck’s handling and completed it in the 15th spot.
  • Deegan started the final stage from 10th. She remained in the top-10 until she made a scheduled green-flag pit stop on lap 110.
  • Shortly after returning to the track from the scheduled stop, Deegan felt tire chatter and returned to pit road for service. The crew discovered a punctured tire and Deegan returned to the field to complete the remainder of the race. The unscheduled pit stop took her off of the lead lap and she ultimately finished 25th in her first race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth.

Tanner Gray, No. 15 Ford Performance F-150
Start: 20th
Finish: 10th

  • Gray started his third event at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth from the 20th spot.
  • Gray was in the 13th spot when the first caution was displayed on lap 8. He reported his Ford F-150 was snug and didn’t pit. The next caution was displayed on lap 21 while Gray was 12th and he pitted for fuel, four tires and adjustments to help with his snug condition. He restarted 19th on lap 29.
  • Stage 1 ended under caution with Gray scored in the 14th position.
  • The New Mexico native started Stage 2 from the fourth position after not pitting during the stage break. A great restart moved him up to second-place in the opening stage lap.
  • Another caution was displayed on lap 52 and Gray reported his Ford Performance F-150 was little tight in turns 1 and 2. On lap 59, Gray took the lead and remained there until the closing laps on Stage 2 when he was passed for second.
  • Gray started the final stage from the 16th spot after pitting. He reported his truck was a little tight while in the 13th position on lap 90.
  • With 20 laps to go in the 147-lap event, Gray had completed his final pit stop of the race and was in the 11th position.
  • In the closing laps, Gray worked his way up to the 10th spot where he ultimately finished.
  • Gray led a total of seven laps today and scored his first top-10 of the season.

Next event: Rackley Roofing 200 at Nashville Superspeedway in Nashville, Tennessee on June 18 at 8 p.m. ET.

Toyota Racing NCWTS Post-Race Recap — Texas 6.12.21

NEMECHEK SCORES TEXAS VICTORY AT THE HOME OF THE TUNDRA
John Hunter Nemechek claims his fourth victory of the 2021 Truck Series Season

FORT WORTH (June 12, 2021) – John Hunter Nemechek drove to his fourth victory of the season at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday afternoon. It was Kyle Busch Motorsports’ seventh win of the season and Toyota’s 21st series victory at the Fort Worth based facility.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Texas Motor Speedway
Race 11 of 23 – 147 Laps, 220 Miles

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
2nd, Chase Elliott*
3rd, Ross Chastain*
4th, GRANT ENFINGER
5th, AUSTIN HILL
13th, JOHNNY SAUTER
14th, DEREK KRAUS
15th, BRENNAN POOLE
21th, MATT CRAFTON
27th, BEN RHODES
29th, JESSE IWUJI
33rd, RAY CICCARELLI
34th, DREW DOLLAR
35th, STEWART FRIESEN
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 4 ROMCO Toyota Tundra, Kyle Busch Motorsports
Finishing Position: 1st

Are you starting to make a statement with this team right now?

“Yeah, I definitely think so. I feel like we’ve been making a statement all year. I feel like we’re one of the favorites every time that we show up to the race track. I can’t say enough about Eric Phillips (crew chief) and all these guys. Everyone, the pit crew, everyone at KBM (Kyle Busch Motorsports), the fab shop, machine shop, chassis shop. Everyone does so good with building our trucks and I’m just lucky enough to be behind the wheel. It’s amazing to get win number four here. I haven’t won with ROMCO Equipment on board yet in my career so finally we were able to get them a win. There’s 250 of their employees here today so huge shoutout to them as well as the fans.”

How would you describe your race today?

“I feel like we had the dominant truck kind of like we do every single week. I’m just proud to be able to be behind the wheel and blessed to be behind the wheel. Huge shoutout to Kyle (Busch, team owner) and Jack (Irving, TRD) and Tyler (Gibbs, TRD) and David Wilson (president, TRD) and everyone at Toyota for giving me this opportunity. Without them, none of this would be possible. ROMCO Equipment on board, their first win with me so it will be cool to be able to go to victory lane with them. These fans are awesome. We have 250 ROMCO employees here as well today. We just want to keep racking them up. We’re #Here4Wins.”

Are you Playoff ready or what does this team need to work on prior to the Playoffs starting?

“I hope this is only the beginning. I hope that we have a lot more to come. I feel like we have a lot more work to do. These guys work their tails off. I know Eric (Phillips, crew chief) is one of the first guys there and last ones to leave every night. It’s awesome. Win number 41 for him. Win number 10 for me. Just have to keep it going. We’re #Here4Wins.”

GRANT ENFINGER, No. 98 Champion/Curb Records Toyota Tundra, ThorSport Racing
Finishing Position: 4th

How was your race today?

“Overall, just a really solid Toyota Tundra. The guys on this 98 brought us a great truck again. Couldn’t really fire-off very good. I’m not exactly sure why that was, we weren’t bad, but we just kept getting put in bad positions and trying our best not to wreck on those restarts and just started in too big of a hole. Overall, good long run speed. I think we had a second or third-place truck so we’re building momentum.”

AUSTIN HILL, No. 16 AISIN Toyota Tundra, Hattori Racing Enterprises
Finishing Position: 5th

Can you describe how your race unfolded today?

“We were really good all day. Our AISIN Toyota Tundra was fast. Just track position seemed big. Our truck was just way too tight to really march our way up through the field when we pitted and got back in traffic. So trying to work through that and got back up inside the top-three or four and man, these lapped trucks. I don’t know what we can do differently, but the lapped trucks killed us today. Seemed like every time I caught them, they wanted to race me like it was the last lap or soemthing. There’s a few guys that I would like to have a chat with and just try to figure out what the heck was going on there. All in all, solid day for us. We keep racking up these top-fives and these good finishes, the wins will come. We just have to bide our time.”

How did the track evolve today?
“When we started out it was definitely slick and really wanted to go up in it (PJ1) and as the race went on, I started to go up in it and put my right sides in it. At first, it didn’t have much grip and then as we ran in it, it got better and better. I felt like there at the end of the race, our truck was working really well up there. We were still tight running in it, but we could run some really good lap times compared to the 4 (John Hunter Nemechek). It would have been nice to have a little caution to stack us back up to see if we could get something done differently. All in all, great day. Good to see a Toyota Tundra in victory lane with the Toyota’s being built right here in Texas. That makes it nice, but wish we were that Tundra in victory lane instead.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. and North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands. During that time, Toyota has created a tremendous value chain as our teams have contributed to world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 40 million cars and trucks in North America, where we have 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama (10 in the U.S.), and directly employ more than 47,000 people (over 36,000 in the U.S.). Our 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.) sold nearly 2.8 million cars and trucks (nearly 2.4 million in the U.S.) in 2019.

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

CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES-CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX – PATO O’WARD PUTS CHEVY ON POLE IN DETROIT

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX
STEETS OF BELLE ISLE
TEAM CHEVY POLE QUOTE
JUNE 12,2021

PATO O’WARD PUTS CHEVY ON THE POLE FOR RACE ONE ON STREETS OF BELLE ISLE
DRIVER OF NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET WINS 2ND NTT P1 AWARD OF HIS YOUNG CAREER

DETROIT (JUNE 12,2021) – Pato O’Ward put his No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet on the pole for Race One of the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix.

Today’s pole is the second NTT P1 Award for the second-year driver.
PATO O’WARD POLE QUOTE: YOU CAUGHT SOME TRAFFIC THERE, BUT STILL PUT IT ON THE POLE. HOW DID YOU GET IT DONE?
“Yeah, I did. But I wasn’t going to be passed I don’t think. You need to put so much faith into this place. You have to put faith in the car, that it’s going to stick. But when you hit it right, how can I say it? When you nail a lap, you can tell you’ve nailed it.”

TALK ABOUT THE RISK VERSUS REWARD. IT TAKES RISK, BUT THE REWARD IS BIG
“I was actually talking about this with Felix (Rosenqvist, teammate) that even compared to like a St. Pete, the faster you go here and the more you attack, the more grip you have. But when you’re not attacking, and you don’t feel the grip, it’s like well, is it going to give it to me? So, you kind of just have to go, stick please! (laughs). You just have to go for it. Honestly, I’m a little surprised, because I think I nailed a pretty good lap in the first group, and I was way off. But we nailed it the second time.”

Other Team Chevy Drivers qualified for Race One as follows:
Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Hitachi Chevrolet – 5th
Will Power, No. 12 Verizon 5G Chevrolet – 7th
Simon Pagenaud, No. 22 Menards Chevrolet – 9th
Sebastien Bourdais, No.14 ROKIT Chevrolet – 10th
Rinus Veekay, No, 21 Sonax Chevrolet – 12th
Felix Rosenqvist, No, 7 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet – 14th
Conor Daly, No. 20 US Airforce Chevrolet – 17th
Max Chilton, No. 59 Gallagher Carlin Chevrolet – 18th
Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 PPG Chevrolet – 24th
Dalton Kellet, No. 4 K-Line Chevrolet – 25th

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.

About Chevrolet
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