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May Means Motorsports as Charlotte Motor Speedway Welcomes Fans Back for Action-Packed Month of Fun

  • With the long-awaited return of Cars & Coffee Concord, a 44,000-horsepower assault on the senses at zMAX Dragway and the biggest Memorial Day Weekend celebration in the country at the Coca-Cola 600, Charlotte Motor Speedway is poised for an action-packed month
  • Ticket information, event details and more available at charlottemotorspeedway.com

CONCORD, N.C. (May 3, 2021) – As the calendar turns to May, the eyes of the entertainment world turn to Charlotte Motor Speedway, where May means motorsports. With a bevy of entertainment options celebrating all things automotive, America’s Home for Racing is set for an action-packed month with fans returning to the iconic superspeedway for a cornucopia of events from Cars & Coffee and four-wide drag racing to NASCAR’s historic 62nd running of the Coca-Cola 600.

“For all of us at Charlotte Motor Speedway, May is typically the culmination of a year’s worth of work to put on the world-class entertainment events that our fans have come to expect,” said Greg Walter, executive vice president and general manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway. “While this past year has been anything but typical, we are overjoyed to help restore some of that sense of normalcy as fans return to America’s Home for Racing to take in all of the fun and excitement we have in the works.”

May’s schedule includes:

NGK NTK NHRA Four-Wide Nationals

For the first time in 579 days, the fastest accelerating machines on the planet return to the Bellagio of drag strips for a nitro-fueled showcase of speed, May 14-16. A break from traditional side-by-side drag racing, the NGK NTK NHRA Four-Wide Nationals at zMAX Dragway brings 44,000 horsepower roaring to life in a four-wide battle at more than 330mph. And every ticket is a pit pass, giving fans the ultimate access to the stars of the sport – including John Force, Steve Torrence, Antron Brown, Leah Pruett and more.

Single-day tickets start at just $20 for adults, while kids 13 and under get in free.

Cars & Coffee

Fill up the tank with fuel and a mug with coffee and head out to Charlotte Motor Speedway on Saturday, May 15 for Cars & Coffee Concord. The free monthly cruise-in returns from hiatus the third Saturday of each month to celebrate all things automotive from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Located at the speedway’s main entrance, the Fan Zone transforms into a car-lovers paradise as car owners and enthusiasts gather to celebrate their shared passion and showcase their prized classics, customs and hot rods.

The event is free.

North Carolina Education Lottery 200

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series history will be made on Friday, May 28 when the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 kicks off the first of three consecutive nights of white-knuckled action at America’s Home for Racing. For the first time in the 61-year history of the iconic 1.5-mile superspeedway, all three of NASCAR’s top series will battle for the checkers on the same weekend. Can any of the truck series regulars slow the momentum of John Hunter Nemechek or Ben Rhodes, who each have two wins already the season? Can Zane Smith or Sheldon Creed slow down the dominant Toyota Tundras? Who will hit the jackpot and win the North Carolina Education Lottery 200?

Single-day tickets start at just $30 for adults, while kids 13 and under get in free.

Alsco Uniforms 300 and Spectrum Qualifying

Saturday, May 29 will feature a full slate of on-track action, including NASCAR Cup Series drivers setting the starting order for Sunday’s historic Coca-Cola 600 during Spectrum Qualifying. The penultimate night of racing will also showcase the rising stars of the NASCAR Xfinity Series in the Alsco Uniforms 300. In a season that has seen seven different winners through the first eight races, it’s anyone’s guess who will come out on top. The night will wrap up with the ARCA Menards Series General Tire 150.

All that action and tickets start at just $32 for adults. Kids 13 and under get in free.

Coca-Cola 600

Rounding out the weekend and the greatest day in racing is the 62nd running of the toughest test of man and machine, the iconic Coca-Cola 600, on Sunday, May 30. Before the green flag falls, fans will be treated to the country’s biggest Memorial Day Weekend salute to the troops, complete with at-track and virtual military engagements with representation from all five branches of the U.S. Armed Forces. As the day turns to night, NASCAR’s best will battle changing track conditions and a hard-charging field of hungry competition to mark their name in the history books as a Coca-Cola 600 winner. Can Brad Keselowski go back-to-back? Can Kevin Harvick or Martin Truex Jr. win their third Bruton Smith Trophy? Will Denny Hamlin or Joey Logano finally nab their first win at the crown-jewel event?

Tickets to the Coca-Cola 600 start at just $59 for adults, while kids 13 and under get in for just $10.

MORE INFORMATION:

Charlotte Motor Speedway continues to follow state and local guidance with respect to social distancing and safety precautions in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. Tickets for these upcoming events will be limited based on current restrictions. Precautions include digital tickets, cashless souvenir and concession stands, socially distanced seating and more. For all the latest, visit www.charlottemotorspeedway.com.

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Three-Time Indianapolis 500 Winner Bobby Unser Dies at 87

INDIANAPOLIS (Monday, May 3, 2021) – Three-time Indianapolis 500 winner Bobby Unser, one of the most colorful, outspoken and popular drivers in the history of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” died Sunday, May 2 at his New Mexico home. He was 87.

Unser won the Indianapolis 500 in 1968, 1975 and 1981. He is one of just 10 drivers to win the “500” at least three times and is a member of numerous motorsports Halls of Fame, including induction into the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame in 1990. Unser and Rick Mears are the only drivers to win the “500” in three different decades.

He was one of six members of the Unser family to race in the Indianapolis 500. Bobby and his brother Al, a four-time winner, are the only brothers to win the race.

Bobby Unser also was renowned and admired for his work in and out of the cockpit before his Indianapolis 500 and INDYCAR driving career started and after it ended. He dominated the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb before he ever turned a lap at Indianapolis, and he was a popular INDYCAR color analyst on national telecasts in the 1980s and 1990s after retiring as a driver.

Unser was born Feb. 20, 1934 in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the third of four brothers. When he was 1, his family moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico – the city forever associated with the Unser family racing dynasty.

In 1949, Unser started racing at Roswell (New Mexico) Speedway. In 1950, he raced at Speedway Park in Albuquerque and won his first championship in Southwestern Modified Stock Cars. After serving in the U.S. Air Force from 1953-55, Unser and his brothers Jerry and Al decided to pursue racing careers in United States Auto Club (USAC) competition.

Bobby Unser raced successfully in USAC Sprint Car, Midget and Stock Car competition. He earned seven career USAC Sprint Car feature victories and placed third in the standings in 1965 and 1966. He also won six USAC Stock Car races and three USAC Midget features.

Unser’s career in Indy cars started in the end of the 1962 season. He spent three years driving Novi-engined cars for Andy Granatelli, including the No. 6 Hotel Tropicana, Las Vegas Kurtis/Novi roadster in which he qualified 16th and finished 33rd and last as an Indianapolis 500 rookie in 1963. Unser’s day ended after completing just two laps due to an accident.

In fact, Unser’s first two career Indy starts gave no indication of his future success. After completing two laps and finishing last as a rookie in 1963, he completed just one lap in 1964 and was credited with 32nd place in the four-wheel-drive No. 9 Studebaker-STP Ferguson/Novi fielded by Granatelli, getting caught in the multi-car accident that claimed the lives of Dave MacDonald and Eddie Sachs.

Unser earned his first career top-10 finish at Indy by placing eighth after starting 28th in 1966 for Gordon van Liew’s team. In 1967, he moved to Bob Wilke’s Leader Card team for a four-year stint, which resulted in even greater fortune at Indianapolis and on the USAC Championship Trail.

Unser earned his first Indianapolis 500 victory in 1968 in the No. 3 Rislone Eagle/Offy, one of the most iconic and beautiful rear-engine cars in Indianapolis 500 history. His first spot on the Borg-Warner Trophy came after a spirited duel with Joe Leonard in one of Granatelli’s famous STP Lotus cars powered by a Pratt & Whitney helicopter turbine engine. Unser led 118 of the first 191 laps but was running second to Leonard when Leonard’s fuel shaft broke on Lap 192, with Unser powering past for his first “500” victory.

Later that year, Unser won the first of his two USAC National Championships, ending the season with five victories and edging Mario Andretti by a scant 11 points.

In 1972, Unser earned the first of his two Indianapolis 500 poles during his successful five-year partnership with Dan Gurney’s All American Racers. Speeds skyrocketed that year with the legalization of bolt-on wings to chassis, and no one took better advantage than Unser. His four-lap record qualifying average speed of 195.940 mph in the No. 6 Olsonite Eagle was more than 17 mph faster than Peter Revson’s pole speed from the previous year – the largest year-to-year increase in “500” history.

Unser won his second and final USAC National Championship in 1974 after finishing runner-up to Johnny Rutherford in the Indy 500.

In 1975, Unser won the Indianapolis 500 for the second time, driving the No. 48 Jorgensen Eagle fielded by Gurney’s team. Unser led only 11 laps, taking the top spot from Rutherford on Lap 165 and holding it until the race was ended by a downpour on Lap 174 of the 200 schedule laps.

He drove for Fletcher Racing in 1976 and 1977, returning to Gurney’s All American Racers for one season in 1978.

Unser joined Team Penske in 1979 for the start of a three-year stint in which he won 11 races and finished second in the CART standings in 1979 and 1980.

But perhaps his most famous race during his Penske tenure was the 1981 Indianapolis 500, which he won from the pole in one of the most controversial and contentious outcomes in the event’s storied history.

Unser beat Mario Andretti to the finish by 5.18 seconds in the No. 3 Norton Spirit, but USAC officials ruled Unser passed cars illegally while exiting the pit lane during a caution on Lap 149. Unser was penalized one position, with Andretti elevated to the winner.

But after a lengthy protest and appeals process, Unser’s penalty was rescinded, and he was declared the winner of the race Oct. 9, 1981. That victory became the last of Unser’s storied INDYCAR career, as he skipped the 1982 CART season to serve as driver coach for Josele Garza and decided against a planned comeback in 1983 with Patrick Racing.

He finished his career with 35 career INDYCAR victories and two championships among his eight top-three finishes in the season points.

Unser ended his driving career as one of the greatest performers in the history of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

He produced 10 top-10 finishes in 19 career “500” starts. Unser led in 10 races for a total of 440 laps, still 10th on the all-time list.

Unser’s nine front-row starts included poles in 1972 and 1981. His speed in qualifying at the Speedway was exceptional, as he was one of the 12 fastest drivers in 18 of his 19 starts. Fourteen of his 19 starts came from the first three rows.

While those statistics are among the greatest in Indy history, Unser produced even more eye-popping numbers at the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, nicknamed “Unser Mountain” due to his family’s success in the longtime race in Colorado Springs. Unser won 13 class titles at Pikes Peak and earned “King of the Mountain” honors 10 times during his career as the fastest driver overall up the famed mountain, tops among the racing Unser family that dominated this event.

Unser also had a keen engineering mind that always searched for a technical advantage over his rivals. He sometimes would call his crew chief well after midnight with an idea for chassis setup or another technical issue, and his prowess as a test driver was highly regarded because he turned every lap at the car’s limit.

Every angle was pursued by Unser when it came to trying to find the edge against his foes. Team owner Jim Hall’s famous Chaparral chassis – the first Indy car with ground-effects aerodynamics underneath the car – got upside-down when Rutherford crashed in 1980 in the CART season finale at Phoenix. Unser learned of a photographer who took pictures of the closely guarded aero channels and tunnels beneath the car, and he obtained the photos, which were used in the development of Team Penske’s 1981 ground-effects chassis.

After his driving career ended, Unser combined his vast racing experience and considerable skills as an outspoken raconteur to become a popular broadcaster on ABC, NBC and ESPN INDYCAR telecasts and on IMS Radio Network race broadcasts. The booth trio of play-by-play announcer Paul Page and the opinionated Unser and the erudite Sam Posey – with Unser and Posey’s styles and comments almost always contrasting and often clashing — was one of the most entertaining and popular in INDYCAR television history.

Two of Unser’s proudest moments in the TV booth came when he called the finish in 1987 with play-by-play announcer Jim Lampley as his younger brother, Al Unser, earned his record-tying fourth “500” victory and again in 1992 when he and Paul Page called the race when his nephew, Al Unser Jr., won Indy for the first time in the closest “500” finish ever.

Unser also was part of the ABC Sports broadcast team that won an Emmy Award for “Outstanding Live Sports Special” for its coverage of the 1989 Indianapolis 500.

After his TV career ended, Unser continued to visit IMS every Month of May. In 1998 and 1999, he served as driver coach and assisted with race strategy on the radio for his son Robby Unser during his two starts in “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.” Robby finished fifth and eighth, respectively, in those two starts with his father’s help.

Fans always flocked to “Uncle Bobby” to get a picture or autograph, to share their memories or to hear one of Unser’s countless colorful stories about his career and fellow racers. He also savored spending time in the Media Center swapping tales with many veteran journalists every May, as Unser was a tireless ambassador for IMS and the Indianapolis 500 until the end of his life.

Unser is survived by his wife, Lisa; sons Bobby Jr. and Robby; and daughters Cindy and Jeri.

Cody Webb finishes second at Iowan Hard Enduro. Louise Forsley Wins Women’s

Spragueville, IA – The Iowan Hard Enduro made its debut on the Kenda AMA Extreme Off-Road series calendar. The event saw the first setback for FactoryONE Sherco’s Cody Webb as he had to settle for a P2 behind Trystan Hart of FMF KTM. Colton Haaker of Rockstar Husqvarna would round out the men’s podium. FactoryONE Sherco women’s pilot Louise Forsley would take the top step over Shelby Turner and Kristina Smuda, both backed by KTM, and extend her points lead in the championship. 

“I Really wasn’t too happy with how the day went.” Said Cody Webb. “It was a pretty simple course for a hard enduro and the conditions weren’t on our side. In moto one, I got a bad start and just couldn’t get around those guys. I tried a few times, but just couldn’t make it happen and settled for fourth. In the final moto, I rode angry and charged hard. I rode a little tight with the other guys right on my tail for the first half before opening up a nice lead. I then suffered some issues and lost all the time I gained and fell back. I charged hard and was aggressive which allowed me to take back the lead right before the finish and get the win in moto two. I was happy with how I rode overall, just not how I executed that first moto, which ended up costing me.”

The hot lap that set moto one rows saw Sherco pilots Webb, Pat Smage and Nick Fahringer seeded fourth, fifth and sixth respectively. Louise Forsley would edge out Shelby Turner by 3 seconds to land as the top female.

Moto one would feature a rather timid course comparably speaking. The one loop course would see the top riders finishing in under 30 minutes. (Most hard enduros have motos of 60 minutes or more) This didn’t suit the riding styles of Cody Webb or 11-time AMA mototrials champion Pat Smage. With that, Webb would finish 4th, Smage 7th, and Fahringer 8th. Louise Forsley would win moto one and finish a very respectful 21st overall out of more than 100 riders. 

For moto two, race directors added more technical sections to challenge the final 32 riders. With that, Cody Webb was able to charge to a lead early in the race, only to suffer some issues mid race, which allowed for the chasers to close the gap and make it a race. Cody put his head down and charged hard once again, throwing down a blistering pace during the latter half of lap two to take the moto win by 6 seconds over Tyrstan Hart.  Pat Smage would finish sixth in the moto, one place better than Nick Fahringer. Louise Forsley would be the only female to make it into the final 32 finishing 27th overall in the moto.

Women’s Champ Louise Forsley: “Yesterday’s races went really well for me. I stayed patient and was able to make passes when the opportunity was there. Then I just focused on riding a smooth race and making minimal mistakes. Luckily it all came together! “ 

Pat Smage: “I am happy to have gained some valuable experience in Iowa. While I couldn’t run the pace of the top 5, I did get a good feel for it early in moto 1 and even had the lead for a very short time until a course marking caught me of guard. It was fun and impressive to ride behind those guys for a few minutes as they pulled away. There were a few short hard sections in the final race that I really liked but I was not comfortable or willing to risk it on the faster parts of the course. Once again I just tried to find a pace I could manage without pumping up too bad or letting my heart rate get too high. That put me in 6th which I am happy with but I know what I need to work on to be better. “

Nick Fahringer: “My ride was relatively clean on the hot lap Sunday morning. Starting on the front row there was no traffic to contend with but navigating an unestablished track was the challenge. 

I finished 6th, one spot off the front row for moto one. Moto one was a slightly longer and more technical version of the hot lap while moto two was a much more challenging modification, racing for 3 laps.  Moto 1 I scored a 7th place keeping the competition within sight. Off the line in moto 2, I ended up getting squeezed out and had to make some passes. The course was very rideable due to the fair traction, which led to everyone carrying a pace that elevated the intensity. I would finish 7th for my final position on the day. Not the most challenging track on the schedule but an enjoyable race. 

My bike worked flawlessly and I am beginning to find my stride for the year.” 

Men Overall Results:

Trystan Hart – FMF KTM – P1

Cody Webb – FactoryONE Sherco – P2

Colton Haaker – Rockstar Husqvarna – P3

Taylor Robert – FMF KTM – P4

Ryder Leblond – DRT Husqvarna – P5

Pat Smage – FactoryONe Sherco – P6

Nick Fahringer – FactoryONE Sherco – P7

Ezra Prine would win the A class on his Enduro31 Sherco.

Women Pro Podium:

Louise Forsley – FactoryONE Sherco – P1

Shelby Turner – KTM – P2

Kristina Smuda – KTM – P3

Fr8 Auctions Leads Front Row Motorsports Back to 1985

McDowell to Honor Bill Elliott
Alfredo to Celebrate Alan Kulwicki

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (May 3, 2021) – Front Row Motorsports (FRM) and Fr8 Auctions will honor two NASCAR Hall of Fame legends during NASCAR’s Throwback Weekend at the Darlington (S.C.) Raceway. The 2021 Daytona 500 Champion, Michael McDowell, will race the No. 34 Fr8 Auctions Ford Mustang in the famous livery that led Bill Elliott to his first Daytona 500 win. Anthony Alfredo, a Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate, will race the 1985 No. 38 scheme that Alan Kulwicki raced during his first NASCAR Cup Series starts.

Fr8 Auctions will adorn the hoods and sides in the style and colors of the nostalgic 1985 scheme on McDowell’s No. 34. Elliott became a NASCAR superstar in this popular scheme. During the 1985 season, the Georgia-native earned 11 wins, 11 poles, the Winston Million and the Daytona 500 en route to a runner-up position in the championship and one of NASCAR’s most successful seasons.

The scheme was commissioned to SMD Designs to honor the Georgia Hall of Famer. Fr8 Auctions, headquartered in Georgia, is ready to bring the colors back to the track.

“It’s an honor to celebrate the Elliott family,” said Marcus Barela, Owner, Fr8 Auctions. “As a Georgia-based company, we know first-hand the excitement and joy that Bill Elliott brought everyone in the state during his historical run in 1985. The scheme, today, is still one of the most iconic in the sport and the entire Elliott family continues to be great ambassadors for the sport. Bill won his first Daytona 500 in 1985, and with Michael winning his first Daytona 500 this year, it was a ‘gr8’ opportunity to celebrate this scheme. We can’t wait to see the car on the track and we hope the fans enjoy it with us.”

“This is an unbelievable car and a great honor to race the scheme that Bill Elliott made so famous and won his first Daytona 500 in,” said McDowell. “I can only hope to get another Daytona 500 victory and also win at Darlington Raceway like Bill did. But, I have to thank Fr8 Auctions for even allowing us this opportunity. We all want to make them proud this Sunday.”
The No. 38 Ford Mustang will carry the FRM “We Care” campaign on the hood with the support by Fr8 Auctions. The lettering, design and colors will match the No. 38 Ford Thunderbird raced by Alan Kulwicki during three races in 1985. The starts helped launch Kulwicki’s championship career. Now, Alfredo, in his rookie season, will take to the track in a scheme replicating Kulwicki’s No. 38.

The “We Care” campaign was introduced by FRM in 2020 as a marketing initiative aimed at driving awareness for social responsibility for various causes. The “We Care” campaign began with a safe driving campaign in partnership with the National Road and Safety Foundation and continued with support of other organizations such as the Autism Society of America and others.

One organization that the We Care campaign continues to support is the Be Your Hero Foundation #BraveLikeWyatt. The Foundation is to honor Wyatt who was born with Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome and had a heart transplant right before his second birthday. His heart transplant allowed him to live for nine more years. He fought cancer and won in 2019, but shortly after he was declared cancer free, it was found that the chemotherapy medication damaged his donor heart. Wyatt passed away in January of 2020 and is loved and missed every single day.

Since that time, #BraveLikeWyatt was born and the Be Your Own Hero Foundation coordinates donation drives to benefit families who are inpatient at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Past donations have included toys, pantry items and laundry detergent so families can have free snacks and can take care of basic needs like washing their clothes.

The Foundation does even more, and earlier this year FRM, Alfredo and the Georgia Peanut Commission partnered with them to donate over 1,400 jars of peanut butter to Canine Assistants, a non-profit organization, dedicated to educating people and dogs so they may enhance the lives of one another.

“It’s so cool to race an Alan Kulwicki scheme in my first NASCAR Throwback Weekend event,” said Alfredo. “And it’s even more cool that we’re doing it with our ‘We Care’ campaign. I really enjoyed working with Be Your Own Hero #BraveLikeWyatt Foundation earlier this year when we made the peanut butter donation to Canine Assistants. I have ideas, too, how we can further enhance our campaign to other organizations. So, it’s cool to see Fr8 Auctions help us get the campaign going again.”

For more information about Fr8Auctions, visit Fr8Auctions.com and follow Fr8Auctions on social media: Twitter at @fr8auctions and Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Fr8Auctions-165690083576986/

For more information about the Be Your Own Hero Foundation #BraveLikeWyatt, visit www.bravelikewyatt.com.

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS
Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Camping World Truck Series and the 2021 Daytona 500 champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team– from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

Spencer Boyd Announces Credit MRI Darlington Throwback with Jack Sprague

Mooresville, NC (May 3, 2021) – Spencer Boyd and Young’s Motorsports unveiled plans today for their 2021 Darlington Throwback paint scheme honoring three-time NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion, Jack Sprague.  Boyd’s sponsor, Credit MRI, will forego its beloved neon green to pay homage to Sprague’s 2007 No. 60 Con-Way Freight colors.
 
Boyd commented on what throwbacks mean to him, “I take the Darlington weekend very seriously.  I love what NASCAR and Darlington have done with this (throwback) weekend.  It allows me to look back at racing history to find something special to me, our team, or our sport and this year is no different.  Jack Sprague was part of the inaugural year trucks ran back in 1995.  He is a three-time champion.  He paved the way for guys like me so I’m honored he’s letting me run his paint scheme.”
 
Jack Sprague has 29 career wins and 429 races to his credit in NASCAR’s top three touring series dating back to his first start in 1989.  In a span of six years, he won the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Championship three times (1997, 1999, and 2001) while finishing 2nd in points twice.  His record and place in the sport point toward a hall of fame induction in the coming years.
 
The future Hall of Famer spoke to Boyd about his career and this throwback, “I had a really good run in NASCAR.  I’m not sure I knew that what I was doing would have an impact this many years later, but I’ll take it.  Spencer is a good guy and this throwback brings back some of that nostalgia.  In looking at Spencer’s career, he is doing it the “old-fashioned way” by working hard for his sponsors and staying out on the track. I wish there were more Spencer’s in our sport.”
 
Boyd’s major sponsor this year, Credit MRI, known for their bright neon green colors, will be taking on the colors of the Con-Way freight scheme to do their part in NASCAR history.  The paint scheme is a throwback to the 2007 No. 60 truck of Wyler Racing that Jack Sprague drove to victory lane in at Daytona International Speedway.  An interesting point to note is that the designer, Michael Miceli, of the 2007 Con-Way scheme has also done all of Boyd’s designs since his entry to NASCAR in 2016 so this one has a throwback within a throwback.
 
With Jack Sprague in attendance, the actual No. 20 Credit MRI throwback Chevrolet Silverado will be unveiled via social media on the afternoon of Wednesday, May 5, 2021 at Young’ Motorsports. 
 
About Credit MRI
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NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Kansas

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

1. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin led late at Kansas, but tagged the wall, bringing out the caution. Hamlin wound up in 12th, and remained winless on the year.

“I have plenty of top 5’s and top 10’s,” Hamlin said, “but where wins are concerned, I’ve ‘hit a wall.’

“But my goal still is to win the Cup championship. Is the weight of expectations too much to bear? I can’t say for sure. All I know is the weight of expectations and this monkey on my back weigh exactly the same.”

2. Brad Keselowski: Keselowski started on the pole at Kansas and finished third, the only Penske Racing driver to crack the top 15.

“Kyle Busch won the race,” Keselowski said. “As is well documented, I’m not a big fan of Kyle’s. But Sunday was his birthday, and he did win the race, so I’ll give him his due, although I still think he’s an ass. Turns out you can have your cake and ‘eat me’ too.”

3. Martin Truex Jr.: Truex finished sixth at Kansas as Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch took the victory.

“This race was named the ‘Buschy McBusch Race 400,'” Truex said. “Don’t ask me how that name was arrived at. Was it named by a bunch of first-graders? Or was it named by a bunch of NASCAR fans with first-grade educations who were willing to donate $1 to have their incredibly non-creative voices heard?”

4. William Byron: Byron finished ninth at Kansas, recording his ninth consecutive top-10 finish.

“Kansas native Clint Bowyer got to play catch with Patrick Mahomes,” Harvick said. “Mahomes throws a nice spiral, so I’m sure Clint felt quite comfortable with the ‘intentional spin.'”

5. Kevin Harvick: Harvick seized the opportunity on a wild restart late in the race to capture the runner-up spot at Kansas.

“I’m happy with the second place,” Harvick said, “but I’m exhausted. That race took a lot out of me. From the name of the race, to the sponsor on my car, to the actor serving as the grand marshal, to the winner of the race, I’m ‘Busched.'”

6. Joey Logano: Logano finished 17th at Kansas.

“I’m just happy I didn’t get airborne at Kansas like I did at Talladega,” Logano said. “That was a scary feeling. It feels like gravity takes your crotch and sends it up to your chest. And that’s the true meaning of an ‘aero package.'”

7. Kyle Busch: Busch was strong throughout the day in Kansas, and aced two late restarts to win the Buschy McBusch Race 400, his first win of 2021.

“It was my birthday,” Busch said. “I’m no Chase Elliott in popularity, so of course not one driver got me a cake. But that’s probably because they can’t hold a candle to Kyle Busch.”

8. Chase Elliott: Elliott came home fifth in the Buschy McBusch Race 400 at Kansas.

“The ‘NASCAR 2021 Fan Pack’ is coming to Rocket League,” Elliott said. “Rocket League combines racing and soccer and is one of the most popular video games. It’s obviously an attempt by NASCAR to attract a younger audience. And to NASCAR, a ‘younger audience’ is simply an audience below the legal drinking age.”

9. Ryan Blaney: Blaney tangled with Kyle Larson late and fell out of contention, resulting in a 21st-place finish for Blaney.

“Anthony Alfredo was driving a car with the words ‘Dude Wipes’ on it,” Blaney said. “It’s official–NASCAR sponsorship is going down the toilet.”

10. Kyle Larson: Larson led a race-high 132 laps, but botched two late restarts, eventually making contact with Ryan Blaney and spinning out. Larson finished 19th.

“I made mistakes,” Larson said. “But I’m sure I will learn from those mistakes, move on, and become a better person/driver. Again.”

O’Ward Breaks Through for First Career Win in XPEL 375 at Texas

FORT WORTH, Texas (Sunday, May 2, 2021) – Pato O’Ward’s time is now.

O’Ward broke through for his first career NTT INDYCAR SERIES victory in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet, winning the XPEL 375 on Sunday evening at Texas Motor Speedway. O’Ward, who started fourth, passed two-time series champion Josef Newgarden with 24 laps remaining in the 248-lap race and pulled away to a 1.2443-second victory over Newgarden’s No. 2 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet.

The win came after five top-three finishes – including three as runner-up – since O’Ward became a full-time driver in the series in 2019, including third Saturday in the Genesys 300 on the 1.5-mile oval. The site also has significance for Mexican O’Ward, who went to middle and high school and has lived in San Antonio.

“Finally!” O’Ward said. “That was long race, but we had so much pace in the Arrow McLaren SP No. 5. We got the job done today, man. I couldn’t be happier for a group of guys. It’s Texas. It’s very close to my heart. Many Mexicans were out there in the grandstands, so thank you guys so much.”

O’Ward became the first Mexican winner of an INDYCAR SERIES race since Adrian Fernandez in 2004 on the 2-mile oval at Auto Club Speedway. This also was McLaren’s first win in INDYCAR since April 22, 1979, when Johnny Rutherford swept a doubleheader at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Graham Rahal finished third in the No. 15 Fleet Cost & Care Honda. Six-time series champion Scott Dixon, winner of the Genesys 300 on Saturday night, finished fourth after starting from the pole in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

Colton Herta bounced back from an early exit Saturday night due to mechanical failure to finish fifth in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda.

Dixon kept the series points lead. O’Ward jumped to second in the standings, 22 behind.

“Huge congrats to Pato,” Dixon said. “I was watching from back a few spots there, and what he did there at the end was a tremendous drive, especially against one of the best guys in the field.

“Hopefully he calms down a little bit and doesn’t make it too often,” Dixon joked about O’Ward.

While Dixon and teammate Alex Palou were the only leaders Saturday night with three lead changes among them, there were nine leaders and 12 lead changes tonight in a contest that shifted from tactical fuel strategy to all-out speed over the closing laps.

With 100 laps to go, Dixon, Rahal, O’Ward and 2014 series champion Will Power closed to within one second of each other, packing closely to try and save fuel while whittling the number of pit stops needed from four to three.
Dixon and Rahal peeled off for their final pit stop on Lap 186, followed by O’Ward on Lap 187 and Power on Lap 188. Team Penske President Tim Cindric, who serves as Newgarden’s race strategist, decided to keep his driver on track until Lap 189.

It was a deft call by Cindric. Newgarden produced blistering in and out laps around his stop and returned to the track in second behind Takuma Sato in the No. 30 Panasonic Mi-Jack Honda, who had not made his final stop.

Then the last of three caution periods started on Lap 190 when the right rear wheel of the No. 7 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet driven by Felix Rosenqvist worked free from the wheel hub assembly in Turn 3. Rosenqvist returned to his pit box safely for service.

On the ensuing restart on Lap 197, Newgarden was content to let Sato lead for awhile to ensure he had plenty of fuel for an all-out dash to the checkered. Newgarden’s patience ended on Lap 202 when he rocketed past two-time and reigning Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge winner Sato for the lead.

O’Ward then pulled closer and began to stalk Newgarden. On Lap 225, he tried to pass Newgarden for the lead with a daring outside move in Turn 1 but was parried. But O’Ward sealed his powerful deal by diving inside Newgarden for the lead in Turn 3 on the same lap and began to pull away, never trailing thereafter. He averaged 169.360 mph in the victory.

“We were in the catbird seat there, for sure, and just did not have the speed at the end,” Newgarden said. “I don’t know what it was.

“We’ll figure it out. But we did a great job. I was really proud of the team. They stuck to it.”

The complexion of the race changed on Lap 1 before the 24-car field arrived in Turn 1.

Pietro Fittipaldi’s No. 51 Nurtec ODT Honda hit the rear of Sebastien Bourdais’ No. 14 ROKiT/AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet while the back of the pack compressed while approaching the green flag at the start-finish line, triggering a melee that involved seven cars and eliminated six.

Involved in the incident besides Fittipaldi and Bourdais were Conor Daly (No. 59 Carlin Chevrolet), Ed Jones (No. 18 SealMaster Honda), Tony Kanaan (No. 48 The American Legion Honda), Dalton Kellett (No. 4 K-Line Insulators/AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet) and Alexander Rossi (No. 27 AutoNation/NAPA AUTO PARTS Honda). All the drivers in the incident were unhurt, and Kanaan was the only to continue in the race.

Daly took the wildest ride in the crash. He tried to follow James Hinchcliffe in the No. 29 #ShiftToGreen Honda through a hole in the chaos, but that escape route quickly closed. The ensuing contact turned over Daly’s car, and it slid down the track on the roll hoop and revolutionary Aeroscreen, turning right-side-up when it touched the infield grass. Daly climbed from the car without assistance.

“We found the hole,” Daly said. “Hinch got right through it. I tried to follow my pal through there, and the the 4 car (Kellett) looks like they caught whoever else was also crashing on the inside, and the two giant cars came (together), and I was in the middle.

“On our Bingo card of terrible things to have happened to us this year, I don’t know what’s going to be next. I really hope we can just start turning things around. It’s been a rough start. But I’m good. I’m all right.”

The series shifts to Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the next two races. The GMR Grand Prix is scheduled for Saturday, May 15 on the IMS road course, with the 105th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge set for Sunday, May 30 on the Brickyard’s world-famous oval.

CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES: TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY DOUBLEHEADER RACE TWO-PATO O’WARD AND JOSEF NEWGARDEN POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
XPEL 375
TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY, FORT WORTH, TEXAS
POST RACE ZOOM CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
MAY 2, 2021

PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET, WINNER OF TODAY’S RACE AND JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 XPEL TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET WHO FINISHED IN 2ND, MET POST RACE WITH MEDIA VIA ZOOM:

THE MODERATOR: We have been joined by our race winner, Pato O’Ward, his first win in his 26th INDYCAR SERIES start. He made a pass for the lead on lap 225. He is now second in points and Thursday is his 22nd birthday.
Welcome, Pato. How fun was today for you?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, it was very fun today. I feel like we truly earned our win today. I knew we had a very, very quick car. It’s just very, very tough to pass. Everybody kind of got boxing in the same strategy. Everything had to be done out on track. I knew I had to keep the tires under me, attack whenever I had the fuel to do it.
But the Chevy mileage was great. I really have to thank the whole Arrow McLaren SP No. 5 Chevy crew. They gave me a very strong car, something that I could truly attack whenever I had to. It was some great fun. I’m very proud of what we all accomplished as a group today.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll start with questions from the media.
Q. After this weekend, we saw one victory for Honda and one victory for Chevy. How do you see this engine fight looking at the Indianapolis 500?
PATO O’WARD: I think we’re in a good position. Talking about the Chevy, I am in a Chevy, I don’t know what the Honda feels like because I’ve never really driven it. From the looks of it, it looks like everything is very fair. It’s very spaced out. I feel like there’s a very good mix of Chevys and Hondas fighting at the front. Around the middle it’s also very mixed.
I think we’re going to see a very good fight in Indy. I’m not quite sure how it’s going to be. I can’t really tell you because everybody hasn’t really let loose yet. We’ll see on Fast Friday.
I’m confident that Chevy has done some improvements to help us out at this year’s Indy 500. As everybody knows, that’s the crown jewel. Everybody wants to win that race, including us.

Q. Did the first win feel like you thought it would feel?
PATO O’WARD: Very special. Very special for sure. It’s really cool to do it in a place that’s very close to my heart, very close to home. Texas is the closest that I will ever have to racing in Mexico. Hopefully we can change that in the future.
I lived here just four hours south of here in San Antonio for many years. I grew up there a lot of my teenage years. I love coming here.
It’s a tough track. It’s not easy at all. But I think it’s a great place to do it. Lots of my family was here. It’s really cool to share this moment with them. It’s just cool to get it out of the way for the rest of the season, to try and rack up as many more as we can. If we can’t take that, we take a second or a third.
We’re here for the long haul. We want to try to challenge for this championship and want a chance whenever we end up in California at the end of September.

Q. As soon as the race ended Zak tweeted a deal is a deal, see you in Abu Dhabi. I’m wondering if that’s crossed your mind at all, that he owes you, has to pay up?
PATO O’WARD: Yes, he’s going to pay up (laughter).

Q. You’re always very confident entering a race. Today you appeared to be a little more confident than normal. What was it about today where you felt confident that this could be the day?
PATO O’WARD: Man, something about today just felt — I was very calm going into the race. I knew I had a good car under me. I knew that if I was just patient.
In the beginning, it was definitely a struggle because Palou and Dixon were leaving us. It was either try and get by the people, try to catch up, or kind of stay there. Obviously the yellows played into our favor to close everyone back up.
But, yeah, I just feel like everything aligned today. The pit stops were fantastic. The car was very well-balanced. I was able to attack. I didn’t feel like I was in defensive mode. I felt like if I was let loose, I could attack and I could get the job done. Just definitely a lot harder wherever everybody is kind of on the same mileage of tires.
Honestly the best option or the best chance to go forward is in the restarts, as you guys probably saw. Last restart was probably what put me in position to win this race.

Q. Could you go over the race-winning pass in turn three. How much did you time that?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, I was looking at what Josef was doing, so I was able to follow somewhat closely to him. Man, I have so much respect for him because he races me so clean, he’s such a great competitor. He definitely allowed us to have a good battle in the end and not put both of us in the wall. He’s a very smart competitor. He’s a great champion. Probably one of the guys you would wish to be racing for the lead of a race or to win a race, yeah. It’s definitely really cool.

Q. You started off your journey in America in Indy Pro 2000. You were out of open-wheel for an entire year in 2017. Won Indy Lights. Out in 2019. How much more does this win mean to you given where your journey started in America with Team Pelfrey?
PATO O’WARD: It feels well earned. It’s a race win that no one can take away from us by saying, You won it because you were lucky. I truly feel like we earned it based on pace, pit stops, and the job that I did on track. Without the overtakes that we did, we probably wouldn’t have had a chance.
It feels really good that we truly earned this. I couldn’t be happier for the group of guys.

Q. What was the first thing you thought of when you crossed the finish line?
PATO O’WARD: Just like finally (laughter). Man, the last like 15 laps, I was just enjoying, enjoying the ride. Yeah, I mean, I don’t know how else to explain it. My donuts were like not the best, but I really wanted to do donuts (smiling).
But, yeah, I just felt really calm. When we crossed the finish line, I just felt really proud of all the hard work that has gone into this off-season. Many hours go into this, and we’re all here to win. There’s a lot more lows than highs in racing unfortunately. But the highs are very high. We all compete for this moment.
We’re going to take it in. But we’ve got a long way to go in the championship. The month of May is coming up, going to be very busy. We need to be on top of our game. We’re going to try to rack up as many more wins as we can. If we can’t do that, score as many points as we can.

Q. What’s the first thing you’re going to say to Zak Brown when he calls you or you call him?
PATO O’WARD: Where is my F1 test? I want McLaren.

Q. Can you talk us through the lap 225 pass. How serious were you when you tried round the outside at turn one? How did you manage to maintain your momentum into turn three?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, Josef was riding not as low as my car liked to ride. I was just watching what he was doing. I was hanging back because I had to hit a number of fuel. It’s a lot harder whenever you’re in clean air.
Once they let me loose and said, You know what to do, is where I really closed it up. I think it took maybe one or two laps. But he’s someone I can really trust when I’m racing. Around this place, you’re going 210, 220 plus miles an hour, you need someone that can race you hard but clean. Josef is someone that has always raced me very, very clean. It’s someone that I highly respect a lot. Honestly, it was really cool to have the battle of the win with him.

Q. INDYCAR says you’re the first Mexican driver to win in the series since Adrian Fernandez in 2004. What does that mean? Do you know Adrian at all?
PATO O’WARD: Man, I admire Adrian a lot. It’s very special to me to represent my country. I’m the only Mexican driver racing here. I’m a competitive being. I like to win. I like to be at the front. I like to compete. I don’t think there’s anything better than putting your flag as high as you can. I think Dixon will say that about his country, so on.
I’m very proud of what we accomplished and really happy that we got this all together in a way.

Q. Give us a brief background. How long did you live in Texas?
PATO O’WARD: I lived in Mexico for the first 11 years of my life. I went to middle school and high school in San Antonio, Texas. It’s honestly very, very close to Monterrey, Mexico. Just three hours from the border from Mexico. Anyways, I moved there.
I just moved to Indy a year ago to be closer to the team. I enjoy spending time with them. They’re like a second family. San Antonio, Texas, does feel very much like a home to me. That’s basically how I ended up going to San Antonio.

Q. When you get the personal McLaren from Zak, what color are you going to get that car in?
PATO O’WARD: Probably some crazy color. I won’t ask him for a normal one. I want a limited edition.

Q. Do you think this win might help INDYCAR land that race in Mexico that you have been trying to do for a number of years?
PATO O’WARD: I sure hope so. I don’t think just one win will do it. I think if we’re consistently championship contenders, if we win a couple more, I think that will definitely help the chances of a bit more. That’s the goal.
I always tell everybody, If we go back to Mexico, it’s going to be a sold out event and it’s going to be awesome. We just have to get into the process as soon as we can.

Q. Early in your career you were aiming for Formula 1, the Red Bull program didn’t really pan out. After this race you said you love INDYCAR racing. Do you still have a desire to someday go back to F1 or is this your home now?
PATO O’WARD: Man, I mean, like I said, my heart’s with INDYCAR. It’s just great racing and it’s so, so competitive. I think for a driver there is nothing harder in the world. I think many drivers can agree with me that have come from Formula 1 to INDYCAR, back to Formula 1.
You know what, Formula 1 is the peak of technology. Everybody wants to go there. If the opportunity ever came by Zak, he said there’s a seat open, I want you in my team, I’d be pretty dumb not to take it because it would just be a crazy opportunity. They don’t come often.
Right now I’m focused on the job that I have right now in INDYCAR. I want to make the best of it.

Q. How much momentum does this give you going into the month of May given you’re joined by Montoya for the entire month?
PATO O’WARD: I think it’s great momentum to roll into the month of May. Things can go from high to low in a matter of seconds. We need to keep our head in it. If there’s a time to push, it’s now. We just need to be continuing to be consistent, qualify up front. That will make our lives a lot easier during the races.
It’s just so competitive. You guys saw, when someone is dominant or fast in one place, they go to the next place and they might be a bit further back or strong again. You never know. It’s so competitive.
I just think we have to continue with the mentality that we have. When we have the opportunity, we take it. If we don’t, we maximize what we’ve got.

Q. Drivers from Mexico bring their entire country with them as far as fans. You can see that with Daniel Suarez and you. Does that give you any more pride when you get a win like this?
PATO O’WARD: Yeah, I’ve said it in many interviews. I feel like there is nothing better than the Mexican fans. There is so much life and energy, especially for their fellow countrymen. It’s really cool.
We always want to see more. I feel like we have so much potential to grow in the country of Mexico, South America, with all the Latins. I feel like this is obviously a step in the right direction. But nowhere close where I feel like it could be.

Q. Question about the gun salute.)
PATO O’WARD: I shot like one time a rifle, but just once. Whenever they gave me a pistol, it took me a while to clock them or whatever. But it’s cool, man. It was some fun. I think I did it like four times or something.
THE MODERATOR: Thank you so much for joining us today.

THE MODERATOR: Good evening, everyone. Welcome to the post race press conference. We are joined today by the driver of the No. 2 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet, Josef Newgarden, who finished second place in today’s event.
Josef, great finish for you today. Tell us about your race.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, it was a decent day for us. Can’t be too disappointed with the second place. Obviously we were in the catbird seat there at the end. Felt like it was going to be possible to get a win today.
The only thing I was worried about, just seemed like we were lacking some speed for whatever reason. Pato’s Chevy seemed to be performing a little bit better than my Chevy. Regardless, with Chevy in Victory Lane, it’s a good day.
We had great fuel mileage, great reliability, which are always qualities we get from Chevrolet. Pretty proud about that. Happy to have XPEL on the car, with them being the title sponsor.
A lot of good positives, but just short at the end of the day.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll take questions.
Q. How much confidence does this give you going into the month of May, going to the Speedway for the Indy 500?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, we feel pretty good about things. Felt positive coming here. Didn’t have the weekend we could have. But I think at the end we definitely feel pretty positive about what we’re doing. Then Indianapolis, same deal, pretty happy with what we’re going to be bringing there.
Yeah, excited to get to May. It’s finally here. We can settle in now and try to make the most of it.

Q. This result is obviously as a result of some really hard work by the team. How rewarding is it to pick up the podium and have XPEL at the race?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, it was great. I saw them in victory circle when I got to see Pato. They were pretty pumped to have a fun finish to the race. It was definitely more thrilling than it could have been. So excited they were here. Excited they were on our car. I think their support was great. Good second place, couple podiums now. We just got to keep going.

Q. The second-place finish for the championship, how much does this mean for you going forward to try to recover from Barber?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, it’s a good day. Obviously we’re pretty early, so it’s hard to take too much stock into where we’re at now. But we’re definitely — I think everybody in the championship is in the fight. It’s early enough to do anything right now.
Yeah, but I got to have days like this. This is always good.

Q. I know Penske hasn’t won yet, but four runner-ups with the team. Is it getting happy your guys are close or increasingly more frustrating?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Not frustrating yet. I mean, we’re there. We’re definitely in the mix, which is the first step. So I think we stay in the mix, we’re going to get some wins knocked off. We just got to stay focused on that. Feeling good about things so far.

Q. St. Pete last year you were praising Pato about how your battles were together. We have a pair of 21-year-old winners this season. Do you feel like the future of the series is now? Is this the wave the series has been needing?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think it’s definitely a good wave. We seem to get it, I don’t know, I don’t know what’s cycle is, every four, five years. But there’s definitely a good wave at the moment.
I think everybody has been pretty high on Colton and Pato. I’ve been definitely very high on Pato. Not surprised to see him get a win. Both him and McLaren are very strong contenders.
Yeah, you have a little of everything. Guys in the middle, like me, middle of the road. You have some veterans and some really good young blood. It’s a good time. There’s a lot of talent.

Q. What did you think of the aero changes this weekend, the impact it had on the races?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I would agree with Graham. You got to take the positives. Everyone has put a tremendous amount of work into this. Both the series, the track, everybody involved, the teams trying to help out with feedback.
I think it was an improvement from last year, as well. I agree. It was racier. People followed a lot closer, less dropoff. I think it was pretty close to being good. You’re just a little hand tied here with the one-lane track, to be honest. If we could get more lanes, we could get more usage out of the track, I think you’d have a much racier race.
A lot of what happened today was it turned into a fuel mileage situation. There’s not much you can do about that. Whenever it gets to that point, everyone is going to take it up, you saw nearly the whole field trying to fuel. You get into one of those situations with a caution at the beginning that creates it, you just can’t do much about it. Everyone is going to try to race.
I thought at the end when it got racy again, it was definitely a good improvement.

Q. What did you both of you see, what caused the wreck behind you guys? Seemed like the guys involved said it was guys checking up towards the front.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I noticed it. I’m not surprised. There was a small checkup where I was at in sixth. I have a pretty good view of the first and second row.
It doesn’t take much. The smallest checkup can turn into a really big effect down the line. I think that’s what happened today. I noticed just a little bauble. Everyone kind of adjusts, but I think people probably overreacted in the back.
It’s unfortunate. You got to have the thing silky smooth when you’re at the front starting these races. If it’s not 100% smooth the way everyone is brought to the line, it can get really tricky at the back.

Q. Josef, you’ve had some ups and downs over the past four races. What are you taking from all of this heading into the month of May?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think there’s plenty of positives. St. Pete was a strong weekend. I think I would say this weekend was fairly strong. We’ve not been world beaters on either of them, but we’re thoroughly in the fight, in the mix.
We’ve been in position to win races the last two weekends. I said this earlier, but that’s step one. You put yourself in position, you keep doing that. You do that enough times, it all starts falling into place. That’s the theory at least.
I feel positive about where we’re at. I know there’s been a tremendous amount of work from our team to try and up our game at all places. I think we’re feeling some of those effects now.
Indy, we obviously want to have the biggest effect from those efforts. I think we’re all pretty hopeful, excited to get stuck into the month of May and make the most of it.

Q. First time we had back-to-back races on two separate days at Texas Motor Speedway. How did it work out for you physically, with the team? Did you like the concept? Should we move forward with it?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’m indifferent. I don’t know if I like it one way or the other. I like a single-day show here at Texas. You got two this weekend. I don’t feel one way or the other about it. I liked it when it was a solo weekend, and two this weekend. I don’t know how to say much more than that.

Q. Josef, how confident were you that the strategy T.C. had cooked up for you was going to be able to work and get you to Victory Lane?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Strategy was sound. We were saving more fuel than anybody today, just going that little bit longer which enabled us to do what we were doing. We were kind of working towards the back end of this race all day, kind of the boring way to hit it, but it’s effective.
I just didn’t have pace at the end. I had positioning. I for whatever reason didn’t have the pace. I don’t know. I was pretty flat out, but just didn’t have the pace.
Yeah, I was really positive on the approach. I always am. I feel confident in what we’re doing. I always feel big confidence in Tim and the boys on pit lane. They crush it pretty much every time. There’s no lacking of confidence there. We just didn’t have quite enough at the end.
For our side, we learned a lot from Scott and the 3 car, his engineer J.B. In contrast to what Graham is saying, it’s nice to have multiple cars. Three of us were struggling last night. Massive issues all three of us were fighting, Will, Simon, myself. The 3 car looked like they were on an island, pretty happy.
When those situations arise, it’s just copy, paste, simple as that. It goes around sometimes. It was a big improvement for us. Our race car was really good today. Super happy with that. Just lacking speed. I don’t know where the speed was. But the race car felt very good.
Yeah, it’s nice when you have teammates to lean on like that and definitely learn something from the first race going into the second.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll let Josef Newgarden Go.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Thank you.

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Newman Battles Back to 16th in 700th Cup Start

KANSAS CITY (May 2, 2021) – In his 700th NASCAR Cup Series start, Ryan Newman overcame an early penalty and fought his way back to a 16th-place finish Sunday afternoon in the Hy-Vee Ford at Kansas Speedway.

After no natural cautions in the opening two stages, the final stage saw four, including two in the final 15 laps. Newman rolled off 14th in the 267-lap race, his 31st at the 1.5-mile speedway.

The 43-year-old ran 18th at the time of the competition caution at lap 25 as the team began fine-tuning his Ford Mustang. Just after his first pit stop of the afternoon he was assessed a pass-through penalty for body modifications, one that would force him to hit pit road once the race went back green.

Following the penalty he finished the opening stage in 31st as he and the team began the climb back to the lead lap. He was in the lucky dog position midway and near the end of stage two, but a caution never flew as he remained 31st to end the second 80-lap segment.

After staying out in the final stage break, Newman restarted one lap down and would have to pit not long into the final stage. That came at lap 191 when he hit pit road, in a sequence that saw a loose tire get away in another stall and settle in the infield grass. Despite it staying there 25-plus laps, the caution didn’t initially fly, but did later at lap 228.

Newman took the wave around in that sequence and would restart 24th at lap 235, before ultimately being in position for the free pass with 15 to go, when the first of two final yellows was displayed. After getting back on track, he maneuvered through the closing laps to bring the Hy-Vee Ford home in 16th.

NASCAR heads to Darlington Raceway next weekend for its annual Throwback race. Race coverage is set for 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1 and MRN, and coverage can also be heard on SiriusXM Channel 90.

Buescher Leads 13 Laps, Finishes Eighth at Kansas

KANSAS CITY (May 2, 2021) – After leading 13 laps Sunday afternoon at Kansas Speedway, Chris Buescher and the No. 17 AutoTempest Ford team finished eighth to secure their second top-10 of the season.

“It was a good ending for our Autotempest Ford Mustang,” said Buescher. “It was a fight all day and we worked hard at it, everyone did a good job and brought us home a top-10. Really respectful finish from where we started. We kept getting better, kept working on it. Kansas is always fun being able to move around and have options. Those late race restarts were pretty wild, but we came out of it in one piece, the car is clean. Glad to give AutoTempest their first top-10 in NASCAR.”

Buescher rolled off the grid in 16th and maintained track position for the majority of the first stage of racing. The team’s only pit stop of the stage came at lap 25 with the competition caution where they took four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment to tighten up the Ford Mustang. After completing 49 laps of racing, the driver reported that his No. 17 machine needed more security around the top. The team took the green-white checkered for stage one in 17th.

At the stage break, Buescher pitted for four tires, fuel and more adjustments to free up his car. The team restarted 18th on the top lane and toggled between 18th and 19th as he continued battling a tight handling Ford. The Prosper, Texas native finished stage two in 19th and one lap down, but earned the free pass to get his lap back.After pitting for service the team restarted 19th. Buescher maintained track position and steadily worked his way up through the field. With 61 laps to go, he reported that the car’s balance was better.

Green flag pit stops began to cycle through and soon the driver took the lead, holding on to it for 13 laps before pitting with 42 to go, as a caution flew just after. Buescher was running 20th and a lap down at the time of the break, but gained his lap back with the wave around.

The driver restarted 19th with 32 to go and had made his way up to 18th when another caution came out. The team elected to pit for four tires, a track bar adjustment and fuel before heading back on track in 18th.

A few more late-race caution flags waved and the No. 17 team stayed out on track, restarting 11th with two to go. During a crazy two laps, the driver was able to work his way through the field earning three spots to take the green-white checkered flag in eighth. The finish marks Buescher’s second top-10 of the season, the first coming in March at Atlanta.

Buescher and the No. 17 team return to action next Sunday, April 9 at Darlington Raceway at 2:30 p.m. EST on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM Channel 90.