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FOUR STRAIGHT WEEKS OF RACING ON TAP FOR JEFF DYER

(May 11, 2021, Yucca Valley, CA) Southern California open wheel racing veteran Jeff Dyer is getting ready for a busy four weeks of racing on May 15th, 22nd, 29th & 30th, and June 5th. It will be the most ambitious part of the 2021 season for the open wheel racer.

Dyer, who calls Yucca Valley, California home, kicks things off this Saturday night, May 15th, in the California Lightning Sprint Car Series on “The West’s Fastest 1/3 Mile High Banked Clay Oval,” the Bakersfield Speedway. In his first two 2021 outings on the Kern County track, the results sheets have been anything but kind to the former United States Army Explosive Ordinance officer. He placed 15th there on May 13th and was 20th on April 10th. However, he is coming off a seventh-place finish at the Merced Speedway on April 17th. Despite the tough luck in two of three CLS races this year, Dyer is seventh in points.

The following week Dyer will be staying a little closer to home when he races in the Amsoil USAC/CRA Sprint Car Series at Perris Auto Speedway on May 22nd. For that race he will wheel longtime friend Cal Smith’s #39 410 sprint car in the annual “Salute To Indy.” That prestigious race first took place more than 70-years ago in the original California Racing Association.

After the Perris race, Dyer and the crew will point the hauler towards Missouri for the May 29th and 30th 3rd Annual POWRi Lightning Sprint Car Nationals at the Central Missouri Speedway. It will be his first ever appearance at the track and his second ever attempt at the race. Two years ago, he contested the Nationals when they were held at Lake Ozark Speedway. In two nights of action, he placed fifth and 13th in the A main events.

When the race is over in the “Show Me State,” Dyer will high tale it back to the west coast to race with the California Lightning Sprint Cars at the Grand Reopening of the Ventura Raceway on June 5th. All told in four weeks, he will drive two different cars in five races, on four separate tracks, with three different sanctioning bodies in two different states.

Fans who would like to see Dyer and the other CLS stars in action at Saturday’s race in Bakersfield can find the track at 5001 N. Chester Ext., in Bakersfield (93308). The track website is http://www.bakersfieldspeedway.com/ and the office phone number is (661) 393-3373. The pits will open at 2:30 p.m. The general admission gate swings open at 4:00 and the first race will hit the track at 6:00.

Throughout the 2021 campaign, Dyer will be racing in memory of his grandfather, Glenn Sels.

Dyer Motorsports would like to thank the following sponsors for making the 2021 racing season possible. John Springstead Racing, T Shirts By Timeless, LDS Investigations, Hair Cuts by Susie and Amsoil. If you would like to be a part of the team in 2021, call or send an E-mail to the contact information at the top of this page.

Jeff Dyer’s 2021 Racing Results

3-12 Kern County Raceway USAC/CRA Sprint Cars 14th A Main

3-13 Bakersfield Speedway California Lightning Sprint Cars 15th A Main

3-26 Mojave Valley Raceway POWRi Southwest Lightning Sprints 8th A Main

3-27 Mojave Valley Raceway POWRi Southwest Lightning Sprints 2nd A Main

4-3 Barona Speedway POWRi Southwest Lightning Sprints 11th A Main

4-10 Bakersfield Speedway California Lightning Sprints 20th A Main

4-17 Merced Speedway California Lightning/BCRA Civil War 7th A Main

Ford Performance NASCAR: Dover Advance

FORD PERFORMANCE NASCAR: DOVER ADVANCE

The NASCAR XFINITY and NASCAR Cup Series will compete this weekend at Dover International Speedway. Unlike last season when the track hosted consecutive doubleheaders for each series in August, there will be only one race for each with the NXS event set for Saturday and Cup on Sunday.

This Week’s Schedule:
Saturday, May 15 – NASCAR XFINITY Series, 1:30 p.m. (FS1)
Sunday, May 16 – NASCAR Cup Series, 2 p.m. (FS1)
FORD IN THE NASCAR CUP SERIES AT DOVER
· Ford has 27 all-time NASCAR Cup Series wins at Dover.
· Ryan Newman, Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick all have series wins at Dover.
· Richard Petty won the inaugural race at Dover while driving a Ford in 1969.

FORD IN THE NASCAR XFINITY SERIES AT DOVER
· Ford has 13 NASCAR XFINITY Series wins at Dover.
· Mark Martin won Ford’s first series event at Dover in 1987.
· Joey Logano won a series-record four straight Dover races from 2012-13.

HARVICK RECORDS FORD’S 700TH CUP WIN

The last NASCAR Cup Series race held at Dover International Speedway resulted in an historic milestone as Kevin Harvick recorded Ford’s 700th all-time series victory. Harvick dominated the second half of the weekend doubleheader, sweeping all three stages and leading 223-of-311 laps to win for the seventh time in 2020. The victory also clinched the regular season championship for Harvick, who went on to lead the series with nine victories.

NEWMAN AND DOVER

Ryan Newman has 18 career NASCAR Cup Series victories and three of those have come at Dover International Speedway (2003-1, 2003-2, 2004-2). That represents a tie for the most wins he has at any track with the other being New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Newman is coming off his third top-10 finish of the season after a 10th-place run at Darlington on Sunday. That’s already one more top-10 effort than he had in 33 starts last year.

ANOTHER FIRST FOR THE KING

Ford won the inaugural NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover International Raceway in 1969 when Richard Petty drove to victory lane on July 6. That marked the only year in which The King drove a Ford and was the fourth of nine wins for him that season, and it came in dominating fashion as he led half of the 300 laps, including the final 109. It was a Ford day all-around as the Blue Oval led every lap in the race with Lee Roy Yarbrough (124) and David Pearson (26) combining to lead the ones Petty didn’t, and had nine of the top 11 finishers.

JUNIE GOES TO VICTORY LANE

Dover proved to be magical for the late Junie Donlavey, who won the only NASCAR Cup Series race of his career at Dover on May 17, 1981 in the Mason-Dixon 500 when driver Jody Ridley took the checkered flag. Ridley had a good car that day, but it was even more reliable and that proved the difference. Neil Bonnett was the dominant driver as he led 404 of the first 459 laps, but he blew an engine that ended his day. Cale Yarborough appeared to be the main beneficiary as he inherited the lead, but the same fate befell him 20 laps from the finish and sent him to the garage. That left Ridley to assume the top spot and he held on from there to register his first and only Cup win. It also ended up being Donlavey’s only trip to victory lane. The Richmond native made 863 starts and fielded strictly Ford products from 1965-2002 in NASCAR’s top series that featured names like LeeRoy Yarbrough, Fred Lorenzen, Harry Gant, Ricky Rudd, Ken Schrader and Dick Trickle.

FROM 500 TO 400

In 1997 Ford swept both Dover events, but it’s remembered for historical reasons because when Ricky Rudd won the spring event on June 1, 1997 it marked the speedway’s final 500-mile event. Rudd took advantage of being in the right place at the right time after leader Ernie Irvan was involved in an accident with 29 laps remaining. Rudd took over the lead and held off Mark Martin over the final few laps to lead a Ford sweep of the top four spots. Martin bounced back a few months later by winning the fall event, which marked the inaugural 400-mile race at the track. That started a streak that saw him win three straight fall events at the Monster Mile.

FORD NASCAR CUP SERIES DOVER WINNERS
1969 – Richard Petty
1978 – Bobby Allison (2)
1980 – Bobby Allison (1)
1981 – Jody Ridley and Neil Bonnett
1985 – Bill Elliott
1986 – Ricky Rudd (2)
1987 – Davey Allison and Ricky Rudd
1988 – Bill Elliott (Sweep)
1990 – Bill Elliott (2)
1994 – Rusty Wallace (Sweep)
1997 – Ricky Rudd and Mark Martin
1998 – Dale Jarrett and Mark Martin
1999 – Mark Martin (2)
2004 – Mark Martin (1)
2005 – Greg Biffle (1)
2006 – Matt Kenseth (1)
2007 – Carl Edwards (2)
2008 – Greg Biffle (2)
2011 – Matt Kenseth (1)
2018 – Kevin Harvick (1)
2020 – Kevin Harvick (2)

FORD NASCAR XFINITY SERIES DOVER WINNERS
1987 – Mark Martin (1)
2001 – Jeff Green (2)
2002 – Greg Biffle (1)
2004 – Greg Biffle (1)
2007 – Carl Edwards (1)
2011 – Carl Edwards (Sweep)
2013 – Joey Logano (Sweep)
2015 – Chris Buescher (1)
2017 – Ryan Blaney (2)
2019 – Cole Custer (2)
2020 – Chase Briscoe (2)

Sean Creech Motorsport Ready for Mid-Ohio Challenge

With two endurance races in the books, SCM prepares for the first IMSA sprint race of the season

JUPITER, Fla. (10 May 2021) – With two of the toughest endurance races on the schedule in its rear-view mirror, Sean Creech Motorsport (SCM) gets ready to tackle the first sprint race of the 2021 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season, the Acura Sports Car Challenge at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (Sunday, NBCSN, 2:30 p.m. Eastern).

With the change of format, SCM wanted to arrive as prepared as possible. Drivers João Barbosa and Lance Willsey tested their No. 33 SCM Exelixis Ligier JS P320 at the twisty and challenging 13-turn, 2.258-mile road course late last month and continued the learning process on their LMP3-class entry. At two hours and 40 minutes, the race might appear to be less of a challenge than the series’ recent 12 and 24-hour events, but both drivers say that’s far from reality.

“We made good progress on handling and setups at the test, which is even more important given the low-grip surface at Mid-Ohio,” said Barbosa, a four-time Rolex 24 at Daytona winner. “Everything happens very quickly there and there’s no room for mistakes, so we’ll focus on having a clean and safe race.”

“People talk about how difficult Sebring is, but I find Mid-Ohio to be a much more physically demanding circuit because you’re always busy,” said Willsey, who will handle double duty this weekend, also driving the No. 24 SCM Ligier in the IMSA Prototype Challenge race, alongside Francesco Melandri. “You’re either exiting a corner or setting up for the next and with four classes on track, there’s a lot of moving parts out there. Pit stops also become a huge part of the strategy, to figure out drive time distribution in such a short amount of time and to execute well. All we can do is control the controllable.

“I go into every race feeling as though I have zero margin for error – though of course, by virtue of the time frame involved, a small mistake can be overcome in a 12 or 24-hour race,” Willsey continued. “But this weekend, given the crowded racetrack and the relatively short race, the opportunity to recover from a mistake is nearly nonexistent. The low-grip surface makes it difficult to race off-line so traffic will definitely be an issue.”

The team has two solid finishes to its credit to start the season – a second place at the Rolex 24 at Daytona and a fifth at the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring, though the result at Sebring did not reflect the caliber of the team’s performance. Team principal Sean Creech has a 30-plus year history in sports car racing, though this is the team’s first season in the WeatherTech series, and in years of racing at Mid-Ohio, Creech knows that staying on top of the rapidly changing racetrack will be key.

“We tried almost everything at the test,” said Creech. “Some things worked, some things didn’t, but that’s the whole point of a test. Yes, we’ve had 36 hours of racing so far this season, but racing doesn’t give you the opportunity to work on a myriad of setup possibilities. A test gives you the time to stop and make changes and you learn as much from what didn’t work as what did. The race weekends have minimal practice time so hopefully we’re narrowed in on where we need to be, we’ll just tune into the track conditions each day. We’ve raced there for many years and we’ve seen every kind of weather possible.”

The team is making its first-ever campaign in IMSA, but from the top of the pit box to the driver seat, the entire team has decades of experience to bring to bear as SCM looks to build momentum through the season.

“We continue to learn more and more about the car itself, how to manage the car,” said Willsey. “Daytona was good, we just had too much downforce so we were down on straight-line speed. Sebring was frustrating because the team gave us a very good car, one of the best I’ve driven, but any luck we had was bad luck. We’re ready to move on now, and I’m looking forward to getting back to work with João. I think it’s fair to say that there is no driver in the LMP3 field that has his breadth of experience. We’re blessed to have him on board: his feedback on the car is always spot-on to get the most out of the car. He’s been instrumental in our success to date.”

The Acura Sports Car Challenge takes the green flag Sunday at 2:40 p.m. Eastern. The race will be broadcast live in the U.S. on NBCSN, while international viewers can watch via IMSA.tv. IMSA Radio will also be available at IMSA.com.

About SCM
Team leader Sean Creech has competed in a multitude of sports car series from 1990 until the present day, including Group C, IMSA GTP, WTSCC, Grand-Am, SRO World Challenge, and IMSA. SCM moves to the WeatherTech Series in 2021 with João Barbosa and Lance Willsey.

Busy Week for Jak Crawford Ahead of Paul Ricard Euroformula Open

Jak Crawford #52 Team Motopark, performs during round one of the Euroformula Open Championship at Portimao Circuit, Portugal on May 2, 2021. Image courtesy Red Bull

LE CASTELLET, France (11 May 2021) – Young American Formula One prospect Jak Crawford takes the next major step in his intensive 2021 program this weekend, competing in his first full weekend in the Euroformula Open Championship at Circuit Paul Ricard.

The Texas resident made his Euroformula Open debut two weeks ago, finishing seventh at Portimao, Portugal on his 16th birthday. He was forced to sit out practice, qualifying and the two Saturday races due to age restrictions.

Since then, he’s made his FIA Formula 3 debut with three races in Barcelona, and was set for two days of midweek F3 testing at Circuito de Jerez in Spain before flying straight to Paul Ricard to rejoin his Motopark squad for the second EFO race of the 2021 season.

“I’m looking forward to this weekend” Crawford said of the 15-turn, 3.630-mile French circuit. “I have to learn the track, and we also go back there in June for an F3 race. It looks like a pretty fun track. Hopefully, with the learning I can still do well and win as many races as possible, and earn back the points I lost by not doing the first two races.”

Crawford isn’t concerned about jumping back and forth between two different types of race cars.

“The F3 car has a bit more power and is quicker overall,” said Crawford of the official FIA category machine. “The Euroformula car is quicker in the corners but compared to F3 is lacking in top speed with a bit more downforce and a little less power. But it’s not too big of a difference. In lap times, the difference is three to five seconds depending on the track, so it’s not too big. It only takes me a few laps to get used to it and get back on it.”

Following this weeks testing and three races on tap for the weekend, Crawford will get a short break before returning to Paul Ricard for F3 competition on the June 4-6 weekend.

Jr III Racing Back in IMSA Action at Mid-Ohio

Lexington, Ohio (11 May 2021) – After having last raced in the category at Sebring in March, Jr III Racing returns to IMSA Prototype Challenge (IPC) competition at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course this weekend with a new driver line up for the No. 3 Jr III Racing Ligier JS P320. Mike Skeen and Terry Olsen will join the team at the 2.4-mile natural terrain road circuit set in rural Ohio.

Sports car veteran Skeen brings years of experience in IMSA competition at Mid-Ohio to the No. 3, including a pole position in IPC in 2019. Skeen will make his 13th start at Mid-Ohio – the most recent coming in 2020 where he scored a podium finish in Trans Am competition on his way to taking the championship.

Skeen is no stranger to the Jr III Racing Ligier. Serving as Jr III Racing’s driver coach, Skeen is an integral part of the shake down and set-up of the car during test sessions ahead of each race weekend. The start at Mid-Ohio in the No. 3 Ligier will mark Skeen’s first race start in the new-for-2021 machine with the team.

With knowledge of the course and car, Skeen is optimistic for the weekend ahead.

“Racing with Billy (Glavin) and this team is something I have always wanted to and I am excited to be able to do it at Mid-Ohio in the Ligier,” said Skeen. “Traveling with the team to tests has allowed me to not only familiarize myself with how the car handles but has given me more seat time to push myself and the car to lay down fast laps. The Jr III Racing team prepares a fantastic car. Terry (Olsen) and I have all the tools to be successful and go for a win.”

Joining Skeen in the No. 3 Jr III Racing Ligier is Terry Olsen. Olsen is familiar with the prototype format having run in Radical Cup North America and winning the 2018 and 2020 Masters Class Championships.

Rising through the sports car ranks, Olsen has utilized Skeen as his driver coach through his career, and is continuing his progression in the sport with the move to the highly capable LMP3 machines in IPC competition. Olsen ran the older generation Ligier at Daytona International Speedway in January but will make his first race start in Ligier JS P320 at Mid-Ohio.

“Moving into Prototype Challenge with Jr III Racing is an amazing step for my racing,” said Olsen. “Billy (Glavin) and his team are class acts that provide and prepare a phenomenal car. Working with Mike Skeen for so long gives me confidence that we will be able to run at the front and get a podium.”

The change in driver line up was initiated by a family health issue for the Palmers, who race as a father and son duo and will look to return to IMSA action later this summer.

“We are all rooting for the Palmers through this challenging time for them-family is the most important thing, and we look forward to having Greg and Eric back whenever they are ready,” said Jr III Racing team owner Billy Glavin. “It seems like it has been a long time since Sebring, but we have been busy with our vintage outings as well as several tests. We are fortunate to have the opportunity to go to Mid-Ohio with Terry and Mike and hopefully can bring home a good result with the No. 3 car this weekend.”

On-track action begins Friday, May 14th with practice before qualifying and race day on Saturday, May 15th. Live streaming of Round Three of the IMSA Prototype Challenge will be available via TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold.

Ford Performance NASCAR: Ryan Blaney Ford Zoom Call Transcript

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Ford Zoom Media Availability | Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Ryan Blaney, driver of the No. 12 Menards Ford Mustang in the NASCAR Cup Series for Team Penske, is coming off an eighth-place finish in Sunday’s race at Darlington Raceway. He spoke about that and a variety of other topics during today’s Ford Zoom call with media members.

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards Ford Mustang — THE MY TRACK CHALLENGE CONTEST YOU’RE INVOLVED IN IS COMING TO A CONCLUSION. HOW HAS THAT GONE? “It’s just really been nice that Advance is wanting to do something like this and for them being a fairly new partner of ours they’ve been amazing to work with. For a company that is so into short track racing as much as they are, I’m just honored to be a part of it. The Advance My Track Challenge has been a lot of fun. To have so many short tracks around the United States and Canada have a chance to win $50,000 to improve their track, whether it’s the fan experience or maybe work on their facility a little bit, it’s all for a good cause. We’ve got the six finalists and we’re gonna be announcing the winner here very shortly, but there are a lot of great tracks. I’ve raced a lot of the tracks that are on their and some tracks I’ve never heard of, so we had a track from Alaska that was in the top six that looks to be amazing, and the background was pretty cool too. It’s just neat that Advance Auto Parts is willing to do that stuff and it’s even better for me because everybody comes from that world. Everyone comes from the short track world. We had a lot of Advance people at Darlington, thankfully, and a lot of people in the garage came up to them and said, ‘Thank you for doing this.’ And I told them, ‘Everyone in this garage has come from short tracks.’ That’s what it is, so I know everyone is very excited for it and I am too, and hopefully this continues for years to come.”

DOVER IS A TOUGH TRACK. WHAT MAKES IT SO TOUGH? “Yeah, it’s a tough racetrack. We run into it at Bristol with the concrete tracks of building up rubber and obviously everyone sees it. As we get running on there the track gets really black and that’s just all the rubber getting put down on it and that makes your car change a lot from a restart to even 10-15 laps on it, and then we pick all of that rubber up under caution and you kind of do it again, so it’s really important to try to keep in mind what do you think the track is going to do as you get laps on it and as the track changes your car is gonna change, but the people and the teams and the drivers that can stay ahead of that are really good, and I thought we had a couple decent runs there last year. I don’t think we’ve been in contention for a win, but I feel like this year we’ve learned a lot of stuff where we can go back and see what we’ve got, so I’m looking forward to this weekend, trying to get another Miles. That’s my Xfinity one (behind him on the desk), so hopefully we can get a Cup one here.”

CAN YOU ADDRESS THE HIGH BANKS AT DOVER AND WHAT THE SENSATION IS LIKE? “I feel like it’s a feeling that you can’t really describe well. We try to describe it to people as like kind of dropping off a cliff getting in the corners and then climbing that same corner on exit. I feel like you drop a couple stories, and everyone’s like, ‘Oh, cool,’ but you can’t feel that unless you’re actually out there in a car or something and going as fast as we are. The sensation of dropping into each corner is pretty amazing. No other racetrack is like that and the amount of g-force and load that you have on your car and your body in the middle of the corner is unlike anywhere else, so it’s definitely a rollercoaster of a racetrack. It makes things go very fast there, so you just try to stay out of trouble, but that’s something we work on a lot is how your car drops into the corner because it’s easy to drop in too hard and your car is all over the racetrack, but then you have to deal with crawling out and your car lifts up and you can kind of get all out of shape, so it’s a very fine line and there are some teams who have really perfected that.”

HOW WELL DO YOU KNOW COTA AS FAR AS BEING SPECIFIC ABOUT EACH OF THE CORNERS? “With the very limited practice we have there, we have a simulator date planned a week before COTA next week, so that will be good. We’ve already run it on the simulator before, kind of earlier in the year just to get an idea, and I think that’s just the best tool you can use nowadays. We only have a very short practice at COTA. It’s nice to get a practice to kind of figure it out, but the sim stuff is really big. We use the heck out of that Ford sim in Concord, just try to get an idea on visual stuff, some braking things, so I think that’s gonna be really helpful for us. We’ll spend four hours in there next week just trying to figure out not only the car setup side, but my side too because there are a lot of different corners around there from what I could see and I’ve heard tons of elevation, a lot of tight, tight corners that will be really slow in our cars, so you’ll have to be able to brake well and then accelerate well out of those corners onto long straightaways, so the Ford sim is really all we’ve got, but it’s nice to have a practice. You’re gonna have to really utilize that, but how short the practice is gonna be you’re only gonna get a few runs by the time you get out of the pits, go all the way around, take the green to make a couple laps and come all the way back to the pits, you don’t get a lot of runs, so you’re gonna have to be on top of your game and make sure the car is ready, which we’re really good at that now. We don’t practice now, so it has to be ready for the race, but it will be very, very vital to be on top of your game and the Ford sim will definitely help that out.”

DO YOU HAVE THE CORNERS FIGURED OUT? “I know the racetrack. If you threw out the numbers, I don’t know like turn whatever. I don’t know if I could really point that out. I know turn one is a very sharp left-hander and then you have some esses and then you have after the esses there’s a left-hander, a right-hander that goes uphill, a left-hander that goes uphill and then you go down to I think turn six I believe it is, a sharp left-hander that leads all the way on the backstretch, so I know all the corners, I don’t know the numbers, but I usually put a little printout on my steering wheel to where I can point out each number of the corner, and all the road courses they have unique names for each corner and I think that’s too much, so I just stick with numbers and figure those out, but I know the racetrack.”

COTA STARTS A STRETCH OF 5 OF THE NEXT 11 RACES BEING ON ROAD COURSES. WHAT WILL THIS STRETCH BE LIKE? “You haven’t seen this many road courses ever on the Cup side and I think it’s good, just going to some new places like COTA, Road America — bringing the Cup cars there. That’s a great racetrack up in Wisconsin. I’ve been there a couple times to run the XFINITY car. Indy road course and Sonoma, obviously we know Sonoma, so there are a few new ones on the schedule that I think it’s just great. It’s good to try new things, bring the Cup Series to new areas of the country that maybe people out there haven’t necessarily seen a Cup race or a NASCAR race in general like COTA. That’s new for NASCAR in general down in Austin, so I think it’s good. I like how NASCAR is expanding to different types of areas and racetracks, but you’re definitely gonna have to step up your road course program. We don’t just have two like it used to be a few years ago. You’ve got a pretty good amount now, so you have to really put an even bigger emphasis on the road courses.”

CAN YOU TALK ABOUT TESTING THE NEW CAR? “I ran it at Texas last week for a couple of days and it was definitely different, just kind of personally with RCR kind of running that deal we don’t have a car in our shop yet. That car was in our shop to kind of get my seat in it and I sat in it to get fitted and that was the first time I ever saw it, so I was really interesting in looking at it and learning about it. I learned a lot about it at the test of how you work on it. We were able to bring some of our guys out there to really kind of get their hands dirty on how you go about this change or how do you go about this change. It’s just different than what we’ve got now and they’ve been working on for years and years, so it’s gonna take everyone a little bit of time to efficiently work on these cars as fast as they can, but driving it I thought it was pretty good. You can definitely feel the differences. It has a lot less sideforce than what we have now. You could feel that kind of when it steps out it’s just a certain kind of degree of yaw where I slipped and you’re like, ‘Whoa.’ This would be really comfortable in the car we’ve got now, but this one it’s a little bit less comfortable, but it was just good to drive it, feel it, try new things on it, what changes worked, what didn’t, what I could feel, what couldn’t I feel. I’ll be really curious just to get around other cars. I think that’s the biggest thing is the car is gonna drive the way it does by itself. It is what it is, but how it drivers and is effective with other cars with dirty air all around it, that’s the biggest thing . We don’t really complain about the way the car drives by themselves no matter what package it is, it’s always dirty air. That’s what everyone talks about always, so that will be the big thing if we can finally get a handful of cars out there and really feel that out. I’m sure we will soon when everyone starts getting their cars and building them, but I thought it was good, just nice to kind of get behind the wheel of it and feel it first hand for a couple days.”

HOW WILL IT BE TO HAVE A CAR THAT YOU CAN BEAT AND BANG ON A BIT MORE? “I wouldn’t necessarily say knock the crap out of it. The performance is gonna go down if you keep beating on it, but I think they’ll definitely be more durable than what we’ve got now. I hit the wall a few times at Darlington. The last time I hit it was pretty hard and it really hurt the car. It’s amazing we didn’t blow a tire, but I think it’s something to where you have to have a little bit of forgiveness. The cars now we always talk about, ‘Man, you barely touch the wall and you get a tire rub and you blow a tire,’ and that’s no good or you barely kind of door somebody on accident and you get a tire rub and blow a tire and it ruins your day, so they’ve got to be a little bit more durable and I think they will be with the way the bodies are on them and what they’re made out of, so I think it will help, but you’ve got to be able to maybe rub a wall a little bit and it doesn’t completely kill the performance of your car. You can’t knock it down and keep on digging, but I think there’s got to be some equal ground and I think this car is gonna help that out a little bit as far as being a little bit more forgiving on if you did touch something, you don’t immediately blow a tire or you lose three-tenths. We’ll see.”

DO YOU AGREE IT WILL PUT DRIVING BACK IN THE COMPETITORS’ HANDS? “I think so from what I’ve heard and learned about it. There’s gonna be a lot of the same parts and pieces on every car coming from the same manufacturer – different areas of the car – so I think it will put a little bit more in the driver’s hands. There’s still gonna be a good amount of stuff that the teams will still set up on the car that is all the team and the best teams are gonna figure that out, but as far as making your own pieces and parts most of that has kind of gone out the window with this thing, which is something different, that’s for sure. I know we take a lot of pride at Penske on making a lot of our parts unique to what we think is the best, but in this day and age you’re trying to bring the fields closer together and that’s what the goal is for this.”

LOOKING AT THE CAR FROM A FAN PERSPECTIVE WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR IN A RACE CAR? “I’m a driver. I’m a fan of racing, but I’m a little skewed on that question because I’m driving, so I think sometimes what drivers think is good racing or what they think is the best product that we put on the racetrack maybe it’s different from what the fans want to see on the racetrack. That’s just me personally. I think a lot of things we agree on as far as fans and drivers of what we think is good racing and stuff, but as far as a fan perspective, I feel like when they see us slipping and sliding and almost wrecking every lap like we did at Darlington with the low downforce stuff, I feel like, to me, that’s awesome to watch and it’s a lot of fun to drive. When we are stuck with a lot of grip running wide-open around each other, but we’re packed up, that looks like good racing, but it can be very frustrating as a driver when you’re kind of packed up and you can’t breakaway and you’re running wide-open, so I might be a little skewed on that, but I just want to see drivers working hard. I think that’s the biggest thing that the fans can see that the drivers are working really hard and we are working super hard in the car the people can appreciate that. Like you saw at Darilngton where everyone was working so hard to get around that joint, to me, that is the best product you can put on the track.”

WHAT ARE YOU AND YOUR TEAM LOOKING TO IMPROVE ON WHEN WE GO BACK TO THESE TRACKS THAT HOST PLAYOFF RACES? “I’ve been very proud of the improvements we’ve made at two racetracks where we haven’t been the best at in the past, or I haven’t, Richmond and Darlington. I feel like we’ve really made a big jump this year on our performance. We ran 11th at Richmond, got stage points there, that’s a pretty good day for me, and then running eighth at Darlington and getting stage points in both stages and kind of running in the top 10 all day that’s really big. That’s two tracks I’ve struggled at in the past a lot and myself and Todd Gordon and everyone in the group has put a huge emphasis on those two tracks just because they’re in the playoffs. That’s a big thing and they’re in the same round, so you can’t just go out there and run 15th-20th all day and not get stage points. That just kicks your butt, so those are two tracks we really put a huge thought on of, ‘OK, what do we have to do to do better here?” And I think we’ve really applied that. We have really good notes to go back there in the fall to these two racetracks and just run better, so I was very proud of the effort, but you’re always wanting to improve and keep improving, so I feel like we took a big step forward at those two tracks for us and I’m looking forward to hopefully taking another bit step forward here come the fall when they’re in the playoffs and it’s very, very important.”

WHAT CAN YOU SAY ABOUT WHERE THE 12 TEAM IS NOW AT THIS POINT IN THE SEASON? “I personally have been really proud of the whole 12 group this year, sitting fifth in points right now. I had a shot to win two or three races already this year. I look at Martinsville and Kansas was a good shot to win and maybe one more we had a good chance to win it and didn’t pull it off. From the start of the year we had, from our first three races from pretty much finishing last at Daytona and not having a good road course and getting wrecked at Homestead, the way we’ve clawed our way back into the top five in points I’m really proud of. I think the biggest thing for us is limiting mistakes. That’s one of the biggest things. I feel like our cars are pretty fast where they need to be. You obviously want to keep improving on that, but, like Martinsville, a pit mistake took us out of contention for that one. I’ve made a couple mistakes along the way, so I feel like just putting a bigger emphasis on that and closing out races. We’ve done a better job at it this year than I feel like we’ve done in the past, but that’s something that is really on our list to try to improve and you sit down and you talk about, ‘Hey, where can we improve? What areas do we need to fix and really put our focus on? And you apply that, and I think we did that in the off-season and it’s worked so far, you’ve just got to keep on that and keep finding ways to perfect those things that really matter a lot when it comes playoff time.”

WHAT HAS SURPRISED YOU THE MOST ABOUT THIS YEAR? “Nothing really has surprised me. I don’t know if I’m very surprised by anything. It’s been a pretty decent year so far. I’d say maybe the pleasantly surprising thing about the season is how many fans we were able to have back at the racetrack. That’s been pleasantly surprising and how many tracks have opened up. Atlanta announced I think last week their full capacity is opening up when we go back and I feel like tracks are coming around to that like Darlington. We were able to have more family in the infield and some fans in the stands, so that has been pleasantly surprising to me just how quickly everything is getting better it seems like as far as healthy and everyone I think things getting safer for people to be around each other and coming to the racetrack again, so that has been nice for sure. You never know when that day is gonna come, thinking last year like, ‘When is the day gonna come where we can get people back coming around and it’s safe enough where everyone is healthy enough to do this and open up stuff and now it seems like it’s finally getting there, so that’s been pleasantly surprising to me that it’s happened this quickly.”

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE COMPETITION LEVEL THIS YEAR AND SOME BIG NAME DRIVERS HAVEN’T WON YET? “I think it just shows the amount of competition in the Cup Series, especially this year for sure. We’ve had a bunch of different winners. What is it? Nine already this year and, like you said, three of those guys that I’d say were probably the top three guys last year haven’t won yet, and you know they’re gonna win eventually here, so I think it just shows how many teams can go out and do it on any given week. The drivers are really good. Obviously, the 19 and Truex has been really fast here lately and he’s kind of separated himself from the field with three wins already, but I just think it’s good for the sport when you have more teams winning. I’m selfish and I want to win every single race, but it’s good for the sport to have more people winning, but you know those guys are gonna win so it just makes the competition that much tougher when you have more cars that can compete for wins every week. You don’t have just seven or eight guys who can do it. You have potentially 20 people who can go out there and win every single weekend.”

DO YOU HAVE ANY SENSE OF WHAT IS GOING TO BE THE MOST DIFFICULT PORTION OF COTA AND THE BEST PASSING ZONE? “I think the difficult thing is just going there and we’re not gonna have much practice. You’re not gonna have a lot of time to run around the race track to kind of as a driver get mental notes on, ‘OK, I’ve got to brake here. I’ve got to turn in here.’ Things like that. Those are huge, especially at road courses and you’re not gonna have a lot of time to kind of perfect that, and I think you’re gonna be using a lot of the race to continue learning about the racetrack. Passing zones, I feel like into one is pretty heavy braking. I feel you can out-brake someone into one. Through the esses I think you’re gonna be pretty single-file. That’s just really tight through there. I think it’s six or eight, the tight left-hander leading onto that long back straightaway you’re gonna have a lot of out-braking zones there, and then into the next left-hander after the long straightaway you’re gonna be able to out-brake someone there, so I feel like there’s gonna be probably five or six passing zones when we get there. A lot of heavy braking zones, a lot of tight corners where there are runs, so five or six I’m sure, but you just try to be prepared as much as you can for it from the sim to utilizing all of practice and then qualifying. It’s nice that we have qualifying, so I think it’ll be a good racetrack. That’s a beautiful facility I’ve heard and I’m looking forward to going down there.’

Spencer Boyd Announces Credit MRI Darlington Throwback with Jack Sprague

Mooresville, NC (May 11, 2021) – Long-time sponsor of Spencer Boyd, Freedom Warranty, will be the primary sponsor for the No. 20 Chevrolet Silverado at the inaugural NASCAR weekend at Circuit of the Americas. This race will be Boyd’s 100th start in all three of NASCAR’s national touring series and will be memorialized with a special edition Lionel Racing diecast.

The 25-year-old driver out of the Young’s Motorsports stable commented on the milestone, “If you asked the 14-year-old me, who somehow convinced his parents to move to Charlotte to chase a racing dream, if I’d be at this point in my career, I might have laughed. Everyone who ever steps into a racecar wants to make it big. I’d like to think that my 100th race is big considering what had to be done to get here, but I’ve got more goals and I intend to be here for a while.”

Spencer Boyd’s first start was at Martinsville Speedway on April 2, 2016 with the late Mike Mittler and fellow St. Louis native. Among 3 NASCAR Cup Series starts, 41 NASCAR Xfinity Series starts and 55 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts, he has one win to his credit coming in the 2019 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Talladega. It was at this race-winning weekend that Freedom Warranty first joined Boyd as an associate sponsor; a relationship that has continued to grow through the years.

Freedom Warranty is unveiling their first unique primary paint scheme for this race. Their previous primary sponsored race was in 2020 with a Todd Bodine throwback at Darlington Raceway. The scheme highlights the different protection plans of their business, Complete, Drive, Vital, and Classic while flying the Red, White, and Blue. The paint scheme will be made into an officially NASCAR licensed diecast by Lionel Racing and will be available at this link: https://www.lionelracing.com/search?keywords=Spencer%20Boyd

The Austin weekend will be jam-packed for Boyd. Practice will be on Friday at COTA leading up to the first ever NASCAR race on Saturday. Later Saturday night, Boyd will join Freedom Warranty at Buck’s Backyard in Buda, TX for a rock and roll concert with Mitch Malloy, lead singer of the band Great White. Then on Sunday, Boyd will be the guest of honor at COTA’s neighbor and associate sponsor, Bob’s Container’s Shake & Bake party where an exotic car show with E1 Motorsports and free samples of Texas Ranger Whiskey will prime fans for the NASCAR Cup Series race.

The Toyota Tundra 250 at Circuit of the Americas will be a double header with the NASCAR Xfinity Series on Saturday, May 22. Television coverage starts at 1:00pm ET on Fox Sports 1 and can be heard on the Motor Racing Network or Sirius XM Radio Channel 90.

About Freedom Warranty
Freedom Warranty is the fastest-growing vehicle service contract administrator in the nation, offering a variety of products sold exclusively through authorized auto dealers, certified repair facilities, established lenders, and accredited insurance agencies in 23 states and the District of Columbia. Their goal is to provide a valuable service to automobile owners who want to protect their investment and shield them from unexpected repairs. By providing superior service to contract holders, they strive to provide dependable coverage with customer care that goes above and beyond.

For tickets to the Mitch Malloy concert visit here.

To RSVP to Bob’s Container’s Shake & Bake Party visit here.

Visit Freedom Warranty at https://www.freedomwarranty.com

Chris Buescher – Dover Advance

Team: No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang
Crew Chief: Luke Lambert
Twitter: @17RoushTeam, @RoushFenway and @Chris_Buescher
Drydene 400 – Sunday, May 16 at 2 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

ADVANCE NOTES

Buescher at Dover International Speedway

  • Buescher makes his 11th Cup start at Dover this weekend. In 10 prior events he has a best finish of 14th, which came in the second race of last season’s doubleheader. He finished 16th in the first 2020 race, and overall has a 22.8 average finish.
  • Buescher is a former winner in the Xfinity Series at ‘The Monster Mile,’ having won in 2015 in the No. 60 entry. He started second and led the final 10 laps en route to one of his two wins that season and the series title.

Luke Lambert at Dover International Speedway

  • Lambert will call his 17th Cup race at Dover on Sunday. In 16 prior events he has an average finish of 16.9 with two top-10s.
  • Lambert’s best finish came in 2017 when he led Ryan Newman to a fourth-place run, and prior to that the duo finished eighth in 2014. Most recently, Lambert guided Buescher to the 16th and 14th-place finishes in 2020.
  • He was also the crew chief for Elliott Sadler in a pair of NXS races in 2012, finishing seventh and fourth.

QUOTE WORTHY
Buescher on racing at Dover:
“I’m really proud of the effort of this team through the first 12 races, and excited about where we stand currently but more excited about what we’re still capable of doing in the weeks to come. Dover starts a stretch of fun race tracks that provide their own sets of challenges, but we’re up for the task at hand and know what we need to do. Momentum is key in this thing, and it’s our intent to keep that rolling come Sunday in our Fastenal Ford at Dover.”

Last Time Out
Buescher piloted his Fifth Third Bank Ford to a ninth-place finish Sunday at Darlington, his second-straight top-10 and third such finish on the season.

Where They Rank
Buescher is 13th in points through 12 events, as the race for the top-16 spots in the standings heats up through the second quarter of the season.

On the Car
Fastenal returns to the fold at Roush Fenway for its 11th season in 2021. They spent three years on the No. 99 before jumping to the No. 17 Cup Series entry, and were the primary partner on the No. 60 Xfinity team that captured the owner’s championship in 2011.

Fastenal will feature top suppliers Honeywell, Ingersoll Rand, Superior Glove, Lista and Metabo on Buescher’s Mustang as he competes this weekend. For more information on these suppliers, visit Fastenal.com, and stay up-do-date on social @FastenalRacing, @Fastenal.

About Fastenal
Fastenal [Nasdaq: FAST] is North America’s largest fastener distributor and a ‘one-stop’ source for hundreds of thousands of OEM, MRO and Construction products. With more than 2,600 stores worldwide, the company supports B2B customers with tailored local inventory and dedicated personnel, who visit regularly, quickly respond to emergency needs, and provide efficient inventory management solutions. Fastenal’s service-oriented business network includes the world’s largest industrial vending program, 14 regional distribution centers, 8 custom manufacturing facilities, thousands of delivery vehicles, and industry-leading sourcing, quality and engineering resources.

Ryan Newman – Dover Advance

Team: No. 6 Guaranteed Rate Ford Mustang
Crew Chief: Scott Graves
Twitter: @Roush6Team, @RoushFenway and @RyanJNewman
Drydene 400 – Sunday, May 16 at 2 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

ADVANCE NOTES

Newman at Dover International Speedway

  • Newman makes his 39th Cup start at Dover on Sunday, where he carries an average finish of 15th in his career.
  • He has three wins all-time at ‘The Monster Mile’ – tied for his most of any track on the circuit, and one of just four tracks where he has multiple wins at (Phoenix, Loudon, Michigan). He swept the 2003 events and led a combined 593 laps in his three wins.
  • During the stretch from 2002 (his first Cup event at Dover) to 2007, Newman started on the pole four times, started inside the top five in 10 of 11 events and finished top five in seven of those races.
  • Most recently, Newman ran 19th and 24th last season in a doubleheader weekend at the one-mile track.
  • Newman also has six Xfinity Series starts at Dover with one win (2005), two poles (2001, 2005), and three top-10s overall.

Scott Graves at Dover International Speedway

  • Graves will be atop the box for his 12th Cup start at Dover this weekend, a place he has an average finish of 13.8, one of his best numbers on the circuit.
  • With four top-10s overall, Graves captured them all from 2017-18 in four-straight events with Daniel Suarez, finishing sixth, eighth, third and 10th.
  • Graves also called six NXS events, winning twice, most recently in 2016. He also went to victory lane with Chris Buescher in 2015, and has five top-10s in six events with an average 5.7 finish.

QUOTE WORTHY
Newman on racing at Dover:
“Dover has historically been a good place for me personally, but the thing I like most about it is all the unique challenges it brings with managing each corner and the brakes. We’re steadily improving as both an organization and within our 6 team, and it’s going to require that same approach as we plug through the second quarter of the season and head into the summer. We’re looking forward to capturing a good run Sunday in our Guaranteed Rate Ford.”

Last Time Out
Newman picked off multiple cars in the closing laps of Sunday’s 400-mile race from Darlington to finish 10th, his third top-10 of the season.

Where They Rank
Newman is 19th in points through 12 races in the 2021 campaign.

On the Car

Guaranteed Rate returns to Newman’s machine for its third points race of 2021.

About Guaranteed Rate

The Guaranteed Rate Companies, which includes Guaranteed Rate, Inc., Guaranteed Rate Affinity, LLC, and Proper Rate, LLC, has more than 9,000 employees in over 750 offices across the United States. Headquartered in Chicago, Guaranteed Rate Companies is one of the largest retail mortgage lenders in the United States, funding over $73 billion in 2020. Founded in 2000 and located in all 50 states and Washington, D.C., Guaranteed Rate Companies has helped homeowners nationwide with home purchase loans and refinances. The company has established itself as an industry leader by introducing innovative technology, offering low rates and delivering unparalleled customer service. 2017 marked the launch of Guaranteed Rate Affinity, LLC, a mortgage origination joint venture between Guaranteed Rate, Inc. and Realogy Holdings Corp. (NYSE: RLGY), a global leader in residential real estate franchising and brokerage. In 2020, the company launched Proper Rate, LLC, a mortgage origination joint venture between Guaranteed Rate, Inc. and @properties, one of the nation’s largest residential brokerage firms. Collectively, the Guaranteed Rate Companies have earned honors and awards including: Top Lender for Online Service for 2018 by U.S. News & World Report; Best Mortgage Lender for Online Loans and Best Mortgage Lender for Refinancing by NerdWallet for 2021; HousingWire’s 2020 Tech100 award for the company’s industry-leading FlashCloseSM technology; No. 3 ranking in Scotsman Guide’s Top Retail Mortgage Lenders 2019; Chicago Agent Magazine’s Lender of the Year for five consecutive years; Chicago Tribune’s Top Workplaces list for seven consecutive years. Visit rate.com for more information.

NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Darlington

Martin Truex Jr., driver of the #19 Auto-Owners Insurance Toyota, celebrates with a burnout after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway on May 09, 2021 in Darlington, South Carolina. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

1. Martin Truex Jr.: Truex swept Stages 1 and 2 at Darlington and held off Kyle Larson in the closing laps of the final stage to take the win, his third of the year.

“I could feel Kyle coming,” Truex said. “Heck, I thought he was going to pass me. When he got to within a second, I said a word that needed to be censored, out of my own frustration.”

2. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin grazed the wall late at Darlington, but held on to post a fifth in the Goodyear 400.

“I’m still winless,” Hamlin said, “and it’s very frustrating. Since I can’t win any, I’m offering ‘bonus points’ to anyone who can tell me how to break this slump.”

3. William Byron: Byron finished fourth at Darlington and is third in the points standings.

“Daytona, Darlington, and Kansas announced that upcoming summer and fall races will be held with fully open grandstands,” Byron said. “And you can best believe the same people that complained about not being able to attend a race will be the same ones complaining that they’re sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with a fellow NASCAR fan.”

4. Kevin Harvick: Harvick finished sixth at Darlington.

“I think all drivers can agree that the ‘higher horsepower-lower downforce’ package is great,” Harvick said. “We all call it the ‘How Tim Richmond Liked His Women.”

5. Kyle Larson: Larson finished second in the Goodyear 400 at Darlington after falling just short of catching Martin Truex Jr. in the final stage.

“I was so close to Truex I could taste it,” Larson said. “But I couldn’t quite get there. Therein lies the difference between me and Truex: ‘I got caught.'”

6. Brad Keselowski: Keselowski started on the pole and finished 24th at Darlington.

“It was true for me on Sunday,” Keselowski said. “Darlington is the track that’s ‘too tough to tame.’ My No. 2 Ford Mustang, at least for the day, was called the car that’s ‘too tough to tame.’ The handling was off all day.”

7. Joey Logano: Logano suffered a pit lane speeding penalty on the final pit stop of the race and finished a disappointing 13th at Darlington.

“The No. 22 Ford’s paint scheme honored Mario Andretti’s first Formula 1 victory in 1971,” Logano said. “But really, I doubt NASCAR fans care at all about Formula 1, or Formula 2, 3, or 4, for that matter. In other words, it’s a matter of ‘zero F’s given.'”

8. Kyle Busch: Busch overcame an early spin to post a third-place result at Darlington.

“My car’s paint scheme celebrated M&M’s 80th anniversary,” Busch said. “M&M’s has been a sponsor of mine for years, and I’m sure having their logo on my car has made them millions. So, they’ve really exploited me and my car for their gain. Talk about ‘milk’ chocolate.”

9. Chase Elliott: Elliott finished seventh at Darlington and is eighth in the points standings.

“My car honored 1992 Cup champion Alan Kulwicki,” Elliott said, “and featured the throwback Hooters paint scheme. Rumor has it that Kulwicki once visited the ‘private back room’ at one particular Hooters, where he allegedly received a ‘Polish victory lap dance.'”

10. Ryan Blaney: Blaney tagged the wall late while running in the top five and settled for an eighth in the Goodyear 400.

“NASCAR just revealed the ‘Next Gen’ car,” Blaney said. “At first glance, it looks really cool, sleek, and futuristic. On second glance, it didn’t pass inspection.”