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The Impact of Car Accidents in Motorsports: Safety Innovations and Lessons Learned

Motorsports, by nature, come with high-speed thrills, intense competition, and the risk of accidents. Whether it’s Formula 1, NASCAR, or other racing events, car accidents in these sports are inevitable due to the extreme speeds, complex tracks, and fierce rivalries. In motorsports, even a minor mistake can have catastrophic consequences, both for drivers and crew members. This risk factor is intrinsic to the sport, making safety a paramount concern for teams, organizers, and regulators. The risk isn’t just about crashes but also the potential for life-threatening injuries.

However, the increasing number of accidents has pushed the motorsport industry to focus more on improving driver safety. Accidents are no longer seen as an unavoidable part of racing but as a trigger for innovation in safety technologies. Over time, the collective experiences and lessons from these incidents have shaped the way racing vehicles and race tracks are designed to protect those involved. Despite the risks, the efforts to reduce the severity of car accidents have led to safer racing environments.

The Role of Technology in Improving Safety

According to Seva Law Firm, over the years, technology has played a crucial role in enhancing the safety of motorsports. From the introduction of head and neck support (HANS) devices to the development of the Halo cockpit protection system, technological innovations have transformed the landscape of racing safety. These innovations are designed to reduce the impact of crashes on drivers and mitigate the effects of collisions. The use of carbon fiber in the construction of race cars has also contributed to significantly improving the structural integrity of vehicles.

In addition to vehicle safety advancements, the development of advanced crash detection systems and real-time data monitoring has allowed race teams and organizers to assess accident severity immediately. This immediate access to data helps medical teams respond faster and more effectively to on-site injuries, providing a more efficient rescue operation and potentially saving lives. With each new technology introduced, the motorsports industry moves closer to its goal of minimizing the risks involved in racing.

The Influence of Car Accidents on Racing Regulations

Car accidents in motorsports often act as a catalyst for changes in regulations. After major accidents or incidents, racing authorities are quick to review the causes and make adjustments to safety protocols. For example, following a high-profile accident like Ayrton Senna’s fatal crash in 1994, Formula 1 introduced several key safety changes. These included improvements in cockpit design, stricter regulations on car construction, and the introduction of mandatory use of seatbelts and HANS devices.

These regulatory changes are designed not only to prevent accidents but also to improve the overall safety of the driver in the event of a crash. The sport’s governing bodies often consult with engineers, medical professionals, and former drivers to develop new standards that ensure the well-being of all participants. This ongoing evolution of safety regulations has made racing considerably safer today than it was a few decades ago, but it is clear that each accident still leaves an indelible mark on the sport’s safety progress.

The Psychological Impact of Car Accidents on Drivers

While the physical impact of car accidents in motorsports is widely discussed, the psychological toll on drivers is just as significant. Surviving a high-speed crash can leave drivers with lasting emotional and mental health challenges. Anxiety, PTSD, and fear of future accidents can all play a role in a driver’s mental state following a crash. In some cases, these mental hurdles may be more difficult to overcome than the physical recovery.

The support systems in place for drivers, including mental health professionals, play a vital role in helping them recover from traumatic experiences. Drivers who have survived major accidents often seek counseling or psychological support to process their emotions and return to the track. Motorsport teams and organizations are increasingly aware of the psychological aspect of recovery, working to provide both mental and physical care to their drivers. This holistic approach to recovery ensures that drivers are prepared to return to competition safely, both in body and mind.

Learning from Accidents: Key Safety Improvements

Each car accident in motorsports provides valuable lessons that lead to significant safety improvements. One of the most notable improvements has been the introduction of safer race car designs. For example, the concept of the “survival cell,” which is a reinforced cockpit structure, was developed to protect drivers in the event of a crash. Additionally, the use of fire-resistant suits, helmets, and gloves has been made mandatory, significantly reducing the risk of burns and other severe injuries in the event of a fire.

Track design has also evolved over the years, with many tracks now incorporating safety features like safer barriers, runoff zones, and improved crash barriers. These innovations help reduce the risk of injury during high-speed collisions. For instance, the addition of a “soft wall” barrier, which compresses upon impact, dissipates energy more effectively and reduces the force of the crash. These changes have made motorsports much safer today than in the past, and the lessons learned from each accident continue to shape the safety standards of the sport.

Conclusion: Continuing the Push for Safety in Motorsports

In conclusion, car accidents in motorsports will always be a part of the sport’s high-speed nature, but the constant drive for innovation and safety has made racing significantly safer over the years. From advanced technologies to stringent regulations and psychological support for drivers, the motorsport industry continues to evolve in its approach to safety. While no technology or regulation can eliminate the risks entirely, the lessons learned from past accidents have paved the way for a safer future for all participants. Moving forward, motorsports organizations will likely continue to push for even higher safety standards, ensuring that accidents are met with immediate responses and the best possible outcomes.

The drive for safety is an ongoing journey in motorsports. With each new development, from vehicle designs to race track modifications, the sport continues to become safer for drivers, teams, and spectators alike. By learning from the past and adapting to new challenges, the motorsports community remains committed to reducing the risks associated with racing and making the sport as safe as possible.

Carson Hocevar scores dramatic Truck victory at Kansas

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Carson Hocevar survived a final-lap challenge and on-track contact with Layne Riggs to win the Heart of Health Care 250 at Kansas Speedway on Saturday, May 10.

The 2024 Cup Series Rookie-of-the-Year recipient from Portage, Michigan, led three times for a race-high 75 of 134 scheduled laps. He started the event in fourth place and raced up front for most of the event. Hocevar settled in fourth place at the conclusion of the first stage period. He led for the first time on Lap 54, outdueling Layne Riggs and Grant Enfinger, capturing the second stage victory.

He restarted in the lead at the start of the final stage period with 67 laps remaining. Hocevar, who retained the lead prior to pitting under green with 39 laps remaining, would cycle back into the lead during a late caution with 38 laps remaining and resulted with some, including teammate William Byron pitting. After retaining the top spot through two late-race restarts, including the final one with 20 laps remaining, Hocevar then managed to fend off a final-lap charge from Riggs, which included contact and a scrape to the backstretch’s wall, to muscle to his first Craftsman Truck Series victory in nearly two years.

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring on Saturday, Jake Garcia notched his second Truck pole position of the 2025 season and of his career with a pole-winning lap at 175.655 mph in 30.742 seconds. Joining Garcia on the front row is Corey Heim, winner of last weekend’s event at Texas Motor Speedway who posted his best qualifying lap at 175.080 mph in 30.843 seconds.

Prior to the event, William Byron and Nathan Byrd dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments made to their respective entries.

Green Flag

When the green flag waved and the race started, pole-sitter Jake Garcia, who started on the inside lane, dipped his No. 13 Quanta Services Ford F-150 entry below the apron after he struggled to launch at the start. This caused his teammate Ty Majeski to run into the rear of him. Amid the contact, Garcia dueled with Corey Heim through the frontstretch for the lead as the field fanned out amid the brief stack-up from the front.

Then through the first two turns, Majeski and Carson Hocevar made contact, which caused Majeski to lose his momentum. In the process, Tyler Ankrum, who ran into the rear of Dawson Sutton, scrapped the outside wall. As a result, Majeski lost a bevy of spots. With the field jumbled up, Heim continued to duel with Garcia through the backstretch before using the outside lane to rocket ahead and lead the first lap. As Heim led, Majeski, who was falling off the pace after the opening lap contact, made an unscheduled pit stop under green with a flat right-front tire while Dawson Sutton, who was racing in the top 10, had a left-rear tire rub.

Then on the third lap, Sutton, who was falling off the pace, spun his No. 26 Rackley Roofing Chevrolet Silverado RST entry towards the entrance of pit road after he had damage to his left rear and was trying to limp his truck back to his pit stall. Not long after, Sutton was issued a two-lap penalty for intentionally causing the caution. Despite receiving the free pass, Majeski would be issued a one-lap penalty for having his entry fueled twice under caution.

During the event’s first caution period, some including Hocevar, Ankrum, Frankie Muniz and Matt Mills pitted while the rest led by Heim remained on the track.

The start of the following restart on the eighth lap featured Heim retaining the lead from Chandler Smith and the field that had fanned out to multiple lanes through the first two turns. With Caruth dropping to sixth place despite starting on the front row, Heim led the following lap. He would lead at the Lap 10 mark while Smith, Kaden Honeycutt, Grant Enfinger and Tanner Gray followed suit.

Just past the Lap 15 mark, Heim stretched his advantage to nearly a second over Smith. Honeycutt, Enfinger and Caruth were racing in the top five. Behind, Layne Riggs was in sixth place ahead of Tanner Gray, Bayley Currey, rookie Giovanni Ruggiero and Garcia while Daniel Hemric, William Byron, Stewart Friesen, Hocevar and Ben Rhodes pursued in the top 15.

Two laps later, the caution flew when Luke Baldwin blew a right-front tire and made hard contact against the first two turns. During the caution period, nearly the entire field led by Heim pitted while the rest that included Ankrum, Nathan Byrd, Cody Dennison, Spencer Boyd and Frankie Muniz pitted. Those who remained on the track led by Ankrum would then pit over the following laps, which allowed Heim to cycle back into the lead.

With two laps remaining in the first stage period, the event restarted under green. At the start, the field fanned out through the frontstretch. Heim managed to retain the lead through the first two turns. The field continued to fan out to multiple lanes through the backstretch as Caruth, Enfinger, Smith, Hocevar and Honeycutt all pursued Heim prior to the final lap of the first stage period.

When the first stage period concluded on Lap 30, Heim captured his sixth Truck stage victory of the 2025 season. Caruth settled in second ahead of Enfinger, Hocevar and Smith while Riggs, Hemric, Honeycutt, Gray and Currey were scored in the top 10, respectively.

Stage 2

The second stage period started on Lap 36 as Heim and Caruth occupied the front row. At the start, Hocevar made a move on teammate Caruth’s right side and the field quickly fanned out to four lanes entering the first two turns. As Heim used the inside lane to muscle away with the lead, Caruth dropped out of the top-five category and Hocevar also did not gain any spots forward while Smith, Riggs and Enfinger all moved up the leaderboard. Hocevar would carve his No. 7 Delaware Life Chevrolet Silverado RST entry up to the runner-up spot and the trio of Smith, Enfinger and Riggs remained in the top five while Heim led to the Lap 40 mark.

Then on Lap 42, Hocevar, who spent the previous four laps reeling in on Heim, attempted to make a move beneath Heim for the lead in Turns 3 and 4. Hocevar got loose underneath Heim, which allowed the latter to rocket back ahead and retain the lead. With Hocevar keeping Heim within his sights, Heim continued to lead by the Lap 45 mark.

Within the Lap 50 mark, the caution flew due to Cody Dennison spinning in Turn 1 after he had a flat left-rear tire to his No. 2 TIMCAST Ford F-150 entry. During the caution period, nearly the entire lead lap field pitted. Jack Wood, Muniz, Boyd and Morgen Baird remained on the track. The latter three would eventually pit and allow Hocevar to cycle into the lead. Amid the pit stops, Heim endured a slow pit service due to an issue with changing the left rear tire.

The event restarted with five laps remaining in the second stage period. Hocevar dueled with Enfinger for the lead through the first two turns and the backstretch. As Caruth got sideways through Turns 3 and 4, Enfinger cleared Hocevar for the lead during the following lap. Hocevar then reassumed the lead from Enfinger through the first two turns with three laps remaining. By then, Riggs reeled in the two leaders as Enfinger tried to re-challenge Hocevar for the lead.

As the second stage period concluded on Lap 60, Hocevar fended off the field, winning his first Truck stage of the year. Riggs followed suit in second ahead of Enfinger, Byron and Hemric while Gray, Ankrum, Rhodes, Honeycutt and Caruth were scored in the top 10.

Final Stage

With 67 laps remaining, the final stage period commenced as Hocevar and Riggs occupied the front row. At the start, the field fanned out to multiple lanes through the first two turns. Hemric, who restarted in the top five, got loose, but managed to keep his truck straight. As the field scrambled behind, Hocevar retained the lead from Enfinger for the following lap while Riggs and Byron battled for third place.

Down to the final 60 laps of the event, Hocevar stretched his lead to seven-tenths of a second over Enfinger while Riggs, Byron and Honeycutt pursued in the top five. Hocevar proceeded to extend his lead to more than a second over the following five laps. Byron, Ankrum, Hemric, Brandon Jones and Smith trailed in the top 10 along with Garcia, Caruth, Rhodes, Connor Mosack and Gray.

With 45 laps remaining, Hocevar, who nearly lost the lead to Enfinger amid Enfinger’s massive ground a lap earlier, retained the lead by a tenth of a second over Enfinger. Behind, Riggs, Heim and Honeycutt were racing in the top five before Riggs engaged in a side-by-side battle with Enfinger with 43 laps remaining. Riggs would prevail in his battle with Enfinger a lap later and he would pursue Hocevar while the latter led by six-tenths of a second.

Then with nearly 40 laps remaining, a late cycle of green flag pit stops commenced. Smith pitted his No. 38 Long John Silver’s Ford F-150 entry. Riggs, Enfinger, Caruth and Heim also made pit stops within the final 40-lap mark along with Honeycutt, Hemric and Jones. Hocevar surrendered the lead to pit with 39 laps remaining.

The caution returned with 38 laps remaining when Muniz spun his No. 33 Levrack Ford F-150 through the frontstretch grass. By then, Byron, who has yet to pit, was leading ahead of Friesen, Gray, Ruggiero and Majeski while notables that included Enfinger and Heim were scored a lap down. During the caution period, some led by Byron pitted while Hocevar cycled back into the lead. In addition, Enfinger and Heim would be among two of 11 competitors to take the wave around and cycle back on the lead lap.

The start of the next restart with 32 laps remaining featured teammates Hocevar and Byron on the front row. Hocevar retained the lead while Friesen challenged Byron for the runner-up spot. As the field fanned out, Rhodes and Ruggiero were up in the top five as Hocevar led the following lap. Meanwhile, teammates Heim and Toni Breidinger were issued pass-through penalties for changing lanes during the previous restart.

The caution then returned with 25 laps remaining due to Mosack and Currey spinning in the backstretch. During the caution period, select names that included Majeski pitted while the rest led by Hocevar remained on the track.

Down to the final 20 laps, teammates Hocevar and Byron dueled for the lead through the first two turns. Byron used the momentum and a push from Ruggiero to challenge Hocevar for the top spot. Gray then gained a massive draft through the backstretch and was about to veer to the left to go underneath both Hocevar and Byron for the lead. Hocevar, however, was swift to move in front of Gray. The move allowed Hocevar to slide up the track in front of Byron entering the frontstretch to lead the following lap.

With less than 15 laps remaining, Hocevar maintained the lead by two-tenths of a second over teammate Byron. Gray, Riggs and Ruggiero were in the top five. Meanwhile, Heim, who was trying to recover from his late restart penalty, was up to ninth place behind Friesen, Sutton and Rhodes. Heim moved up to seventh place with 10 laps remaining but trailed the lead by five seconds. Hocevar continued to lead by nine-tenths over Byron.

With five laps remaining, Hocevar extended his lead to more than a second over a hard-charging Riggs, who overtook Byron for the runner-up spot two laps earlier. By then, Heim carved up to fourth place, but he trailed the lead by seven seconds. Ruggiero and Friesen occupied the top six spots ahead of Jones, Garcia, Rhodes and Sutton.

Over the next three laps, Gray’s late strong run in racing at the front evaporated due to a power issue. But he was able to steer off the track without drawing a caution. Meanwhile, Riggs cut his deficit to four-tenths of a second behind Hocevar.

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Hocevar remained in the lead by 0.081 seconds. Riggs got to Hocevar’s rear bumper but was blocked by Hocevar through the frontstretch. He then tried to seize an opportunity to get beneath Hocevar’s left-rear quarter panel. Riggs then started to drift up the track and they made contact. Despite both getting sideways and brushing the outside wall entering the backstretch, they kept racing straight as Hocevar maintained the lead.

Riggs tried to mount another final-lap charge to Hocevar through Turns 3 and 4 but it was not enough. Hocevar crossed the finish line by two-tenths of a second over Riggs, claiming his first checkered flag of the 2025 season.

Victory

The victory was Hocevar’s fifth career win in the Craftsman Truck Series division. It was also his first since he won at Homestead-Miami Speedway in October 2023. The victory was the eighth overall in the series for Spire Motorsports and the second of the year for Spire’s No. 7 Chevrolet entry led by veteran crew chief Brian Pattie.

Hocevar’s dramatic victory at Kansas occurred in his second of four-scheduled Truck Series starts to the 2025 season. He will return to pilot Spire’s No. 7 entry at Michigan International Speedway and at Pocono Raceway, respectively, in June.

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

“I just thought I’d make it entertaining. Were you [fans] all entertained?” Hocevar said on the frontstretch on FS1. “[Riggs] was super, super good. This [No. 7] truck was really, really good on the short runs. I didn’t think he would get to us for how far back he was. He was super good. It’s been a while since I’ve been in a finish like that where it was just all out there, so credit to [Riggs]. I know he’s going for everything there. I’m shocked. I thought [I] threw it away. It doesn’t look that bad [on the replay], but I figured I killed it right here [on the backstretch].”

Riggs, who has yet to record his first Truck victory of the 2025 season, settled in the runner-up spot for a second time this year. Despite the disappointment of falling short of a victory, Riggs was still pleased with his late battle against Hocevar for a Truck victory.

“Man, I gave it my all,” Riggs said. “[I] Had to come from 16th all the way under that green flag run to get all the way back to [Hocevar]. Last lap, I got to him. [I] Got into him a little bit. We both hit the wall. He won the race. I think he was mad at me. I think he flipped me off all the way down the frontstretch coming to the checkered, but happy to be mad when you win the race, right? It’s all good. It’s great to race with the Cup guys. I think that just proves that I’m gonna be there one day.”

Following the post-race inspection process, however, Riggs was disqualified due to his truck violating Rule 14.4.9.A.3 from the NASCAR Rule Book, which states that the bed cover material must be strong enough to prevent the cover from deflecting or sagging and must be sealed around the perimeter of all bed panels while the vehicle is in compeition. As a result, Riggs was demoted to the tail end of the final running order in 31st place.

Due to Riggs’ disqualification, William Byron, who was selected to drive the No. 07 Chevrolet entry for the injured Connor Zilisch at the beginning of this week, was promoted to a runner-up result. Corey Heim, who made a late, bold charge back to the front following his late on-track penalty, was promoted to a third-place result while teammate Giovanni Ruggerio and Stewart Friesen ended up in the top five.

Brandon Jones, Jake Garcia, Kaden Honeycutt, Grant Enfinger and Daniel Hemric completed the top 10 in the final running order.

Notably, Ty Majeski settled in 14th place behind Daniel Hemric, Ben Rhodes and Matt Mills while Tyler Ankrum ended up in 16th place. Chandler Smith dropped to 17th place, rookie Dawson Sutton rallied from his two-lap penalty to finish in 15th place and Rajah Caruth ended up in 21st place.

There were eight lead changes for five different leaders. The race featured seven cautions for 33 laps. In addition, 21 of 31 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the ninth event of the 2025 Craftsman Truck Series season, Corey Heim leads the regular-season standings by 64 points over Chandler Smith, 85 over Daniel Hemric, 100 over Tyler Ankrum and 117 over Grant Enfinger.

Results:

1. Carson Hocevar, 75 laps led, Stage 2 winner
2. William Byron, four laps led
3. Corey Heim, 52 laps led, Stage 1 winner
4. Giovanni Ruggerio
5. Stewart Friesen
6. Brandon Jones
7. Jake Garcia
8. Kaden Honeycutt
9. Grant Enfinger, two laps led
10. Daniel Hemric
11. Ben Rhodes
12. Matt Mills
13. Matt Crafton
14. Ty Majeski
15. Dawson Sutton
16. Tyler Ankrum
17. Chandler Smith
18. Connor Mosack
19. Andres Perez de Lara
20. Toni Breidinger
21. Rajah Caruth, one lap down
22. Cody Dennison, one lap down
23. Spencer Boyd, two laps down
24. Jack Wood, two laps down
25. Morgen Baird, three laps down
26. Bayley Currey, four laps down
27. Tanner Gray – OUT, Electrical
28. Frankie Muniz – OUT, Handling, one lap led
29. Nathan Byrd – OUT, Overheating
30. Luke Baldwin – OUT, Accident
31. Layne Riggs – Disqualified

Next on the 2025 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season is North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, for the Window World 250. The event is scheduled to occur next Saturday, May 17, and air at 1:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

Kyle Larson sets pace to claim Cup Series Pole at Kansas

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Kyle Larson topped NASCAR Cup Series qualifying Saturday afternoon at Kansas Speedway with a 183.730 mph lap. It’s his first pole this season and the 22nd of his Cup Series career.

Larson described his lap, saying, “Yeah, the qualifying lap felt really good. You’re watching SMT and you can see the drivers are starting to hold it easy wide open in (turns) one and two. In three and four, some guys were getting tight and (Chris) Buescher was able to run a good three and four.

“I kind of had a plan on the line,” Larson continued, “that I wanted to run and just try to match it with the throttle. Thankfully, everything went great. My balance felt really good. I felt like I hit my marks and came up to speed through three and four good. It was a perfect feeling lap.”

Front Row

Chris Buescher will start beside Larson on the front row for Sunday’s AdventHealth 400. The front-row pairing opens up the possibility of a similar finish to last year’s race as Buescher finished second behind Larson by a mere margin of 0.001 seconds.

“I mean, it’s definitely ironic and really cool,” Larson said. “I think it adds to the storyline of what happened last year. You’ll probably build some anticipation for the race tomorrow. But yeah, I won’t be thinking about it, I guess, when we’re rolling around under caution. But yeah, it’s just ironic, funny and cool all at the same time.”

Buescher also commented on starting beside Larson for Sunday’s race.

“We could have manufactured a better story if we tried, could we? That was a really awesome lap for this Ford Mustang,” Buescher said. “I’m proud of this group. Practice was really solid and Texas last week was awesome so we came into here with a lot of high hopes and it’s really showing up already. Missed it by that much, but we’re in a good spot and that will put us in clean air for the start of this race at a track we’ve been really good at.”

Christopher Bell will start third, followed by Tyler Reddick and Joey Logano to complete the top five. Ty Gibbs, William Byron, Daniel Suárez, Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney rounded out the top 10 fastest drivers in the qualifying session.

Sunday’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway will air at 3 p.m. ET on FS1 with radio coverage provided by MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Results

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Alex Palou capitalizes for fourth IndyCar victory of 2025 in Sonsio Grand Prix

Photo by Simon Scoggins for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Alex Palou commenced the Month of May by extending his dominant run into the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season and winning the Sonsio Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Saturday, May 10.

The reigning three-time IndyCar champion from Barcelona, Spain, led 29 of 85 scheduled laps. He started on pole position, but quickly lost the lead entering the first turn on the first lap to Graham Rahal. After spending the majority of the event trailing Rahal. But managing through two green-flag pit sequences and tire strategies, Palou capitalized on Rahal losing rear tire grip. He finally overtook him for the lead with 28 laps remaining.

His advantage of more than 10 seconds was erased due to David Malukas stalling off the course with 16 laps remaining. Palou, however, maintained the top spot from Pato O’Ward and the field during the following restart with 13 laps remaining. From there, Palou cruised to win an unprecedented fourth time through the first five scheduled events of the 2025 campaign. It was also his third consecutive time at the Indianapolis Road Course event.

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring Friday, May 9, Alex Palou notched his second NTT P1 Award of the 2025 season with a pole-winning time in one minute, 9.3417 seconds at 126.625 mph. Joining Palou on the front row was Graham Rahal, the latter of whom clocked in his best qualifying time in one minute, 9.7516 seconds at 125.881 mph.

During the pace laps, Kyffin Simpson was unable to roll off the grid due to a gearbox issue to his No. 8 Journie Rewards/Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara-Honda entry, an issue that would prevent him from turning in a single lap. In addition, Josef Newgarden made an unscheduled pit stop to address a radio issue. Despite blending back on the track, he was forced to surrender his sixth-starting spot and start the event at the rear of the field.

Green Flag

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, the field fanned out to multiple lanes through the frontstretch as Graham Rahal drew a side-by-side challenge on pole-sitter Alex Palou for the lead. With a strong move to Palou’s left side, Rahal used the first turn to rocket his No. 15 Fifth Third Bank/Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara-Honda entry ahead with the lead.

As the field behind jostled for early spots, Rahal retained the lead through the remaining 13 turns and he would return to the frontstretch to lead a lap over Palou while Devlin DeFrancesco, rookie Louis Foster, Scott McLaughlin and Pato O’Ward followed suit in the top six.

Behind the field and during the first lap, Callum Ilott and Conor Daly spun in Turn 12 amid contact with one another in the midfield area. In addition, Herta, who had his front wing damaged amid on-track contact, pitted to have his front wing changed along with four fresh tires and fuel inserted to his No. 26 Gainbridge/Andretti Global Dallara-Honda entry. By the time Herta returned to the track, he dropped out of the lead lap category as Rahal retained the lead over Palou by the third lap.

Through the fifth lap, Rahal was leading by more than a second over Palou while DeFrancesco, Foster and McLaughlin were racing in the top five. Behind, O’Ward retained sixth place ahead of Will Power, Alexnader Rossi, Felix Rosenqvist and Santino Ferrucci while Christian Lundgaard, Scott Dixon, Marcus Armstrong, Christian Rasmussen and Nolan Siegel occupied the top-15 spots ahead of Kyle Kirkwood, Rinus VeeKay, Marcus Ericsson, Sting Ray Robb and Newgarden.

A lap later, Ericsson spun in Turn 12 amid contact with David Malukas. Despite limping his No. 28 Fresh Connect Central/Andretti Global Dallara-Honda entry, Ericsson spent multiple laps on oit road due to a mechanical issue. Eventually, his entry would be pushed back to the garage and Ericsson would retire from further competition.

By Lap 10, Rahal extended his lead to more than two seconds over Palou. DeFrancesco, Foster and McLaughlin continued to race in the top five ahead of O’Ward, Power, Rosenqvist, Rossi and Lundgaard. Meanwhile, Dixon trailed in 11th place ahead of Armstrong, Rasmussen, Siegel and Kirkwood while Ferrucci and Newgarden were mired in 16th and 18th, respectively.

On Lap 17 and with the field mired within a first pit window, Palou surrendered the runner-up spot to pit for black, hard tires. By then, select names that included VeeKay and Lundgaard pitted a few laps earlier. Amid the pit stops, Rahal continued to lead while more names that included O’Ward and DeFrancesco pitted their respective entries. Rahal would then pit from the lead for hard tires on Lap 20. By the time Rahal exited pit road, he managed to blend back on the track ahead of Palou. Meanwhile, Marcus Armstrong, who has yet to pit, cycled into the lead.

Just past the Lap 25 mark, Rahal, who cycled back into the lead, retained the top spot by over a hard-charging Palou while McLaughlin, DeFrancesco and O’Ward were in the top five. Earlier, Rosenqvist spun amid light contact with VeeKay in Turn 7, but he proceeded without drawing a caution. As Rahal continued to lead through Lap 30, Palou trailed by six-tenths of a second in the runner-up spot over McLaughin, DeFrancesco and O’Ward while Power, Foster, Lundgaard, Rossi and Dixon trailed in the top 10.

On Lap 41, both Rahal and Palou pitted their respective entries simultaneously under green. Following the pit stops, Rahal, who pitted for the red, soft tires, managed to exit pit road ahead of Palou, the latter of whom pitted for black, hard tires. Both also managed to blend back on the track ahead of McLaughlin, who pitted earlier than the two leaders for hard tires while Herta, who pitted earlier than the trio for soft tires, quickly overtook McLaughlin through the first turn.

On Lap 45, Armstrong pitted from the lead, which allowed Rahal to cycle back into the lead on his red, soft tires. Not long after, Herta un-lapped himself from Rahal while the latter retained the lead by more than a second over Palou. Meanwhile, McLaughlin trailed in third place by more than four seconds while O’Ward fended off Power and Kirkwood to retain fourth place.

The Final Laps

Down to the final 35 laps of the event, Rahal continued to lead by seven-tenths of a second over Palou while McLaughlin, O’Ward and Power remained in the top five. As Kirkwood, Dixon, Armstrong, Foster and rossi trailed in the top 10, respectively, Rahal maintained the lead with 30 laps remaining.

Then with 28 laps remaining, Palou gained a huge draft on Rahal for the lead through the frontstretch. Despite Palou’s efforts to crossover on Rahal through the first two turns, the latter would just fend off the former to retain the top spot. Palou would then gain another draft on Rahal through the infield straightaway just past Turn 6 to get beneath Rahal and assume the lead in Turn 7. As Palou led the following lap while lapping Herta in the process, he would extend his advantage to more than two seconds over the next two laps while Rahal, who radioed a loss of rear grip, retained the runner-up spot.

With 23 laps remaining, Rahal, who was being pursued by McLaughlin, pitted for black, hard tires from the runner-up spot and he would endure a slow pit service as he avoided making contact with Kirkwood, the latter of whom was entering his pit stall in front of Rahal. As both O’Ward and McLaughlin pitted a lap later for soft tires, Palou, who has yet to pit, maintained a large advantage before he pitted for soft tires with 20 laps remaining.  

Following Palou’s pit stop, Palou was able to blend back onto the track with a large advantage. By the following lap, his advantage stood at eight seconds over O’Ward while Power, who pitted with Palou, was up into third place. Meanwhile, Rahal was mired back in fifth place while McLaughlin was scored in fourth place.

Then with 16 laps remaining, the caution flew when David Malukas pulled his No. 4 AJ Foyt Racing Dallara-Chevrolet entry off the course and stalled just past Turns 8 and 9. The caution all but erased Palou’s advantage of more than 10 seconds over O’Ward while Power, McLaughlin and Rahal were scored in the top five. The caution also snapped a 408 green-flag streak that extends to this year’s season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

The start of the next restart with 13 laps remaining featured Palou fending off O’Ward and the field to retain the lead through the first three turns. Palou would proceed to lead through the infield road course turns and the remaining 10 turns within the circuit before he cycled back to the frontstretch and led the following lap. As O’Ward trailed in the runner-up spot in his No. 5 Arrow McLaren Dallara-Chevrolet entry, Power maintained third place ahead of McLaughlin and Dixon while Rahal dropped to sixth place.

Down to the final 10 laps of the event, Palou continued to lead by more than two seconds over O’Ward while third-place Power trailed by more than three seconds. Behind, McLaughlin and Dixon maintained their respective top-five spots of fourth and fifth over sixth-place Rahal while Kirkwood, Armstrong, Rinus VeeKay and Foster were in the top 10 ahead of Nolan Siegel, Newgarden, Rosenqvist, Rossi and Lundgaard.

With five laps remaining, Palou stabilized his large advantage of more than four seconds over runner-up O’Ward and by more than five seconds over third-place Power. Behind, McLaughlin and Dixon trailed by seven and nine seconds, respectively, while sixth-place Rahal trailed by 13 seconds.

White Flag

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Palou remained in the lead with a comfortable advantage over O’Ward. Having a large lead to his advantage, Palou was able to smoothly navigate his No. 10 DHL/Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara-Honda entry around the Indianapolis Road Course for a final time before he cycled back to the frontstretch to claim the checkered flag by more than five seconds over O’Ward.

With the victory, Palou became the first competitor to win four of the first five events on an IndyCar schedule since Sébastien Bourdais made the previous accomplishment in 2006. The Spaniard also notched his 15th career win in the IndyCar circuit in his 86th series start and his sixth from pole position.

With a third victory on Indy’s Road Course venue, Palou sets his sights on winning the Indianapolis 500 for a first time in his career this upcoming Memorial Day weekend.

Photo by Simon Scoggins for SpeedwayMedia.com.

“I cannot describe the amazing season we have so far,” Palou said in Victory Lane on FS1. “I owe everything to the team, Chip Ganassi Racing, my teammates. Everybody that is working behind the scenes to make me look so fast on the track. It’s amazing, it’s unbelievable. Hopefully, we get to stay here [in Victory Lane] again in a couple of weeks for the biggest race of the year.”

Pato O’Ward followed suit in second place for his second podium result of the year. Meanwhile, Will Power, who is coming off back-to-back fifth-place results, recorded his first podium result of the year by finishing in third place.

Photo by Simon Scoggins for SpeedwayMedia.com.

“We fought hard today,” O’Ward said in the Dex Imaging Media Center. “Hopefully, today was a bit more eventful than the ones in the past. [I] Got to do something to stop [Palou]. They’re just on it. They don’t make a mistake. It’s pretty impressive.”

“It was just a solid day,” Power added. “[I] Didn’t pass anyone on [the] track. [I] Just spent the whole day in a [day where we had] good pit stop strategy and speed and some overcut there at the end, got us a couple of positions. It was a very uneventful day. It was eventful in the car driving hard the whole day. “

Scott McLaughlin settled in fourth place while Scott Dixon claimed fifth place. Graham Rahal, who led a race-high, ended up in sixth place while Marcus Armstrong, Kyle Kirkwood, Rinus VeeKay and Felix Rosenqvist completed the top 10 in the final running order.

Notably, Josef Newgarden rallied from dropping at the rear of the field prior to the start of the event to finish 12th behind rookie Louis Foster while Devlin DeFrancesco fell back to 17th place behind Christian Lundgaard. In addition, Colton Herta, who retired with less than 20 laps remaining due to a mechanical issue, ended up in 25th place in the final running order.

There were seven lead changes for four different leaders. The event featured two cautions for three laps. In addition, 21 of 27 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the fifth event of the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season, Alex Palou leads the championship standings by 97 points over Kyle Kirkwood, 98 over Christian Lundgaard, 100 over Pato O’Ward and 111 over Scott McLaughlin.

Results:

1. Alex Palou, 29 laps led

2. Pato O’Ward

3. Will Power

4. Scott McLaughlin

5. Scott Dixon

6. Graham Rahal, 49 laps led

7. Marcus Armstrong, six laps led

8. Kyle Kirkwood

9. Rinus VeeKay

10. Felix Rosenqvist

11. Louis Foster

12. Josef Newgarden

13. Nolan Siegel

14. Alexander Rossi

15. Conor Daly

16. Christian Lundgaard

17. Devlin DeFrancesco, one lap led

18. Robert Shwartzman

19. Christian Rasmussen

20. Santino Ferrucci

21. Sting Ray Robb

22. Callum Ilott, six laps down

23. David Malukas – OUT, Mechanical

24. Jacob Abel – OUT, Mechanical

25. Colton Herta – OUT, Mechanical

26. Marcus Ericsson – OUT, Mechanical

27. Kyffin Simpson – OUT, Mechanical

Next on the 2025 NTT INDYCAR Series schedule is the 109th running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The event’s two-day qualifying sessions will occur on May 17-18. The event’s race day is scheduled to occur on May 25 with pre-race coverage to commence at 10 a.m. ET on FOX. The event’s race time start is slated to occur at noon ET.

CHEVROLET NCS: Larson Takes First Pole Win of the Season at Kansas Speedway

NASCAR CUP SERIES
KANSAS SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST-QUALIFYING REPORT
MAY 10, 2025

Larson Takes First Pole Win of the Season at Kansas Speedway

TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 STARTING LINEUP:
POS. DRIVER
1st – Kyle Larson
7th – William Byron
8th – Daniel Suarez
9th – Chase Elliott

  • For the first time this season and 22nd time in his NASCAR Cup Series career, Kyle Larson will lead the NASCAR Cup Series to the green flag in tomorrow’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway. Concluding practice with the best 10 consecutive lap average, the 32-year-old, Elk Grove, California, native backed up the performance with a qualifying lap of 29.391 seconds, at 183.730 mph, in his No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet to earn the pole position.
  • The pole marks Chevrolet’s 14th all-time at Kansas Speedway and seventh thus far this season in NASCAR’s top division – both of which are series-leading feats. Kyle Larson has kept Chevrolet undefeated in pole wins on non-drafting intermediate ovals, with the 2021 Champion delivering the manufacturer its fifth pole triumph on the configuration – joining the list of Michael McDowell’s pole win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Alex Bowman’s Homestead-Miami Speedway pole, William Byron’s Darlington Raceway pole and Carson Hocevar’s Texas Motor Speedway pole.

Chevrolet’s all-time NASCAR Cup Series statistics at Kansas Speedway:

Wins: 15
Poles: 14
Top-Fives: 75
Top-10s: 165

Chevrolet’s season statistics in advance of the 12th NASCAR Cup Series race:

Wins: 3
Poles: 7
Top-Fives: 22
Top 10s: 53
Stage Wins: 9

Kyle Larson, No. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet – Pole Winner Quotes

Kyle, you finally won a pole here at Kansas Speedway after winning the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series’ history at this racetrack one year ago. Walk us through your qualifying lap.

“Yeah, the qualifying lap felt really good. You’re watching SMT and you can see the drivers are starting to hold it easy wide open in (turns) one and two. In three and four, some guys were getting tight and (Chris) Buescher was able to run a good three and four. I kind of had a plan on the line that I wanted to run and just try to match it with the throttle.

Thankfully, everything went great. My balance felt really good. I felt like I hit my marks and came up to speed through three and four good. It was a perfect feeling lap.”

Ironic or weird or what about the fact that you’re starting right beside Chris Buescher? Will it bring back memories or thoughts of last year?

“I mean, it’s definitely ironic and really cool. I think it adds to the storyline of what happened last year. You’ll probably build some anticipation for the race tomorrow. But yeah, I won’t be thinking about it, I guess, when we’re rolling around under caution. But yeah, it’s just ironic, funny and cool all at the same time.”

Have you seen the butterfly effect storyline out there? Basically, if Chris Buescher beat you, then Joey Logano wouldn’t have won the championship. Because Buescher would have had enough playoff points to be the one that got in when Bowman got DQ’d. So you helped Joey Logano win the championship..

“(Laughs) That’s crazy. I wish my bank account could use some bonus money from Joey (Logano).

That’s crazy, that’s crazy. But it’s racing, so… wow. If I had won a couple more times, I would have been in the Final Four, too (laughs)”.

About General Motors

General Motors (NYSE:GM) is driving the future of transportation, leveraging advanced technology to build safer, smarter, and lower emission cars, trucks, and SUVs. GM’s Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC brands offer a broad portfolio of innovative gasoline-powered vehicles and the industry’s widest range of EVs, as we move to an all-electric future. Learn more at GM.com.

Jake Garcia Claims Truck Series Pole at Kansas Speedway

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

ThorSport Racing’s Jake Garcia earned his second career Craftsman Truck Series pole Saturday afternoon at Kansas Speedway. He will lead the field to green this evening in the Heart of Health Care 200.

Garcia claimed his first pole this year at Rockingham Speedway and finished second.

“This is a really good Truck.” He continued, “It’s been good for us every time we’ve raced it this year. I’m excited for tonight’s race. I wasn’t really quite happy with our Truck in practice. I feel like we still got some work to do.”  

“Corey Heim, who won both Kansas races in 2024, will start beside Garcia on the front row, but it’s interesting to note that 10 different drivers won the 10 races prior to 2024.”

NASCAR Cup Series driver, William Byron, will participate in the Truck Series event for Spire Motorsports in the No. 07 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports this weekend at Kansas, starting in 11th place.

Other notables include Tyler Ankrum (12th), Chandler Smith (13th), Grant Enfinger (15th), Layne Riggs (16th), Stewart Friesen (19th), Connor Mosack (20th), Daniel Hemric (22nd), Brandon Jones (24th), and Matt Crafton (25th).

Ty Majeski, Carson Hocevar and Ben Rhodes rounded out the top five in the qualifying session. Rajah Caruth, Kaden Honeycutt, Dawson Sutton, Tanner Gray and Gio Ruggiero completed the top 10. 

You can tune into the Heart of America 200 at Kansas Speedway at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1 with radio coverage provided by SiriusXM NASCAR Radio and MRN.

Truck Series Starting Lineup at Kansas:

32509_STARTROW

CHEVROLET NCS AT KANSAS 1: Kyle Larson Media Availability Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
KANSAS SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
MAY 10, 2025

 Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Camaro ZL1, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series’ practice and qualifying session at Kansas Speedway.

Media Availability Quotes:

What are you looking to learn when you get done with the practice session? What would make it a good session for you and your guys?

“Yeah, I think for Kansas, and every track really, you kind of just want to have that short run speed. So you want to be up there on the charts a little bit, but also kind of have good long run speed and a good balance throughout the run. This place can get kind of tricky off of turn two or off of turn four, so you hope that your car is kind of finishing the corner well at those ends so you can do a good job of staying wound up with your speed. I feel like some drivers can run the middle of three and four pretty well, so hopefully my car will operate off of the top lane decently. So yeah, I think we’ll be in a good spot. It’s just trying to get a little bit better every time.”

I feel like we’ve talked about this the last couple of years when we’ve come to Kansas, but the quality of racing here is really widely praised. What is it from your perspective on the racetrack that allows this place to produce that kind of racing? And do you have as much fun on the track as it seems like fans have watching this place?

“Yeah, I enjoy Kansas a lot. It’s probably my third favorite track behind Homestead and Bristol. I just think what makes any track good is progressive banking, and this place has that.

You look at Homestead, it has it. Bristol fans hate it, but it’s got progressive banking. I feel like when you have progressive banking, it just allows more options, I think. So yeah, I think that’s why it helps the racing here because you can catch somebody and move to a different lane; get inside of them, work them over and pass them. Where you go to other tracks and do all this work to get to them, and they’re still running the same line that you have to run, and you can’t pass. So yeah, I think the progressive banking helps out a lot of these tracks.”

Obviously when we think of the championship moving to Homestead, we think of you and Tyler Reddick being pretty happy about that, but what is your reaction to that, and what is your reaction to the championship rotation in general?

“Yeah, I think ultimately I’m just happy to hear that it is going to rotate, I guess. Did they announce what tracks it’s rotating through? I imagine Phoenix, Vegas, Homestead, probably.

But yeah, I don’t know. Everybody’s good everywhere, so it doesn’t matter a whole lot. But yeah, my past history would say that I would be a lot better at Homestead than Phoenix, so I like that. But still you have to get there, and that’s really challenging to do in our format. We’ll see. And there’s other guys that are just as good or better than me at Homestead. I feel like (Ryan) Blaney’s quietly extremely good, as he is at Phoenix. At Homestead and Vegas, if he could ever get through practice, he’d probably be dominant there, too.

It’s cool that they’re rotating it.”

What about here? Would you like to see this as a championship track?

“I would love to see this place host a championship race. But yeah, you don’t really know what to expect, I would think, in November. You might have beautiful weather, or it could be freezing or snowing or whatever. I think it probably needs to stay at tracks where you can count on the weather being favorable. So yeah, I don’t know. Just with a big weekend like that, you wouldn’t want any delays.”

Was last night’s wreck any scarier or anything from other sprint car wrecks? It just looked a little strange…

“Yeah, I mean, it’s just part of racing. They got together, and I was already committed to the top and kind of had nowhere to go. Thankfully, everything held up right, and nothing got in the cockpit or anything like that.”

Do you even let yourself start to get excited about Indianapolis yet, or does that just start on Tuesday? “Yeah, I think it starts Sunday night after the race here. I really haven’t thought about it much at all. I’ve just been kind of excited about these upcoming races and tracks that we can run good at. I think once the checkered flag flies here at Kansas, I’ll get excited about Indy because I’ll be heading to Indy.

And I know I have the sprint car race on Monday, but I think still just being in Indianapolis, you think about the IndyCar, so I’ll be ready for it then.”

How much do drivers pay attention to the criticism about the Next Gen car and the racing that it does at certain tracks?

“I don’t know. I would say everybody’s probably different in what they’ve got going on in their weeks. I don’t read the media a whole lot, but I would say us drivers were part of the controversy because we were complaining about it just as much as everybody else.

I don’t know… it’s weird. Racing could totally flip this weekend. We could have the next three to five races be really exciting, and everybody’s forgotten about the boring races we’ve had before then. I’m not sure, but I think we all would love to see better racing at every track and all that. We’re all greedy people. We’re humans. But yeah, just finding that solution, I think, is always tough.”

You kind of touched on it earlier about Indianapolis next week, and I know you’re focused on this weekend, but could you just walk us through the preparations that you go through for each race? Just talk about how you balance it all out..

“Yeah, it’s been a bit busy for me here throughout this season just with a lot of the racing I’ve done and all that. And everybody preps a little differently. I feel like with our 5 team, we do a good job with our prep and being pretty into our procedure and how we do things.

When I run a one-off Xfinity race, I don’t look at any data necessarily, but you try to watch some film. And usually the tracks I’m going to are tracks I’m familiar with and have a good understanding of what it takes, feel-wise, in the car or lines and stuff. So it doesn’t make the studying super in-depth.

And then yeah, with Indy, I haven’t done a whole lot, but there’s not really much you can do studying-wise. You can watch film, which I will, and all that. But yeah, I think for Indy, you have a lot of time, really. So I think once you get in the car and kind of get an understanding of your balance of your car, then you can really kind of pick apart studying; where your strengths are, where your weaknesses are, how to make all that better and be better prepared for the race.”

So what do you feel like will be the biggest gain this year in the Indianapolis 500 that you have learned from last year?

“I’m not sure. I think our car was really good last year. I felt like the race was going really smooth up until we had the brake issue and sped on pit road. So I’m not sure. I felt really prepared last year, and I would say come race time this year, if our balance is good, I’ll feel prepared again. So there wasn’t really anything too surprising, I thought, last year.”

Kyle, there was a graphic earlier in the week that showed you’ve led 1,395 laps on 1.5 mile tracks in the Next Gen car, which is more than double the second place. Is it just simply a matter of your team through setups that have allowed you guys to be as dominant as you guys are on these types of tracks, or are there other factors at play?

“I think everything factors in… car, team, driver. I’ve always excelled at mile-and-a-halves. It kind of really feels similar to winged sprint car racing to me. And then, yeah, I mean, when the Next Gen car, you can kind of — when you’re in the lead, it’s hard to pass somebody, especially when they’re doing a good job at defending. So I feel like I’ve led enough laps, I’ve gotten better at defending. All those laps I’ve led, I’ve not been the best car at every single lap, but I’ve done a good job of blocking or just making things difficult on guys behind me.

But to get to the lead – yes, it takes a good driver, good car, good pit stops, good restarts, like everything factors into it. It is a cool stat to see that we’ve led that much, and hopefully we can continue to grow it, but also grow it on other style tracks.”

There’s been talk about a horsepower increase of 750, and recently Tony Stewart has had some blaring comments on the current state of decision-making in the sport and overall how the Cup car is. If you’re aware of those comments and what he said, how much do you agree with Tony’s statement, and or what would be the one thing you’d change on the current generation of car?

“Yeah, I didn’t see anything that he said, so I’m not really sure. But I don’t know… I think we would be all for trying something new. I don’t know if it’s going to change the racing drastically or anything. It’s a decent size increase, but it’s not massive.

I don’t know… I’d be open for it. I know we all are. I think it’s gotten a little bit stale.. the racing obviously, the product and all that. So I think we’re in need of a change, a drastic change, to try and help. But yeah, I don’t know, I think it would help. It would be a good to start there.”

About General Motors

General Motors (NYSE:GM) is driving the future of transportation, leveraging advanced technology to build safer, smarter, and lower emission cars, trucks, and SUVs. GM’s Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC brands offer a broad portfolio of innovative gasoline-powered vehicles and the industry’s widest range of EVs, as we move to an all-electric future. Learn more at GM.com.

Hauger Returns to Winning Ways in Indianapolis GP Race 2

Indianapolis, IN- during the Indycar 2025 Sonsio Grand Prix in Indianapolis, IN (Photo by Travis Hinkle | IMS Photo)

INDIANAPOLIS (Saturday, May 10, 2025) – Dennis Hauger earned his third victory in four INDY NXT by Firestone races this season, passing Andretti Global teammate Lochie Hughes early and powering to victory in the second race of the Indianapolis Grand Prix doubleheader Saturday on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.

Hauger drove his No. 28 Rental Group car to a 4.7739-second victory over the No. 26 McGinley Clinic/USF Pro Championship machine of pole sitter Hughes, who earned his first career victory in the INDYCAR development series Friday evening in Race 1. Myles Rowe finished a career-best third for the second consecutive race in the No. 99 Abel/Force Indy entry.

“It’s been a great start to the season,” Hauger said. “Yesterday wasn’t great, but we were able to come back and get a win today. Super-happy about that, and in a place like this, it’s awesome.”

Salvador de Alba climbed one spot from his Friday finish to place fourth in the No. 27 Grupo Indi car as the third Andretti Global entry to finish in the top four today on the 14-turn, 2.439-mile circuit. Caio Collet rounded out the top five in the No. 76 HMD Motorsports car.

Norwegian driver Hauger became the first driver to win three of the first four INDY NXT by Firestone races of the season since current NTT INDYCAR SERIES star Pato O’Ward achieved the feat in 2018.

Hauger’s path to victory was created when he survived the first turn of the 35-lap race without contact, unlike Race 1. He was bumped off track in Turn 1 on the first lap Friday, falling to last in the 21-car field before recovering to finish eighth.

Hughes once again led into Turn 1 today, this time with fellow rookie teammate Hauger in pursuit. Hughes built a gap of 1.7 seconds by Lap 3 when the only caution period of the race was triggered when Jack William Miller in the No. 40 Abel/Miller/Vinatieri Motorsports car and Nolan Allaer in the No. 11 HMD Motorsports machine made side-by-side contact in Turn 1, forcing both cars to a stop in the grass.

On the restart at the end of Lap 5, Hughes and Hauger raced side by side toward Turn 1, with Hauger on the left and Hughes on the right at the start of Lap 6. Hauger edged ahead approaching Turn 2, with his left wheels on the dirt adjacent to the asphalt, and completed the pass for the lead in that corner.

Hauger never trailed thereafter, but Hughes stayed close for a while. Hauger’s lead stayed around one second until about 10 laps to go, when he started to pull away. He padded his gap to 2.6718 seconds by Lap 29 and continued to drive away until the checkered flag.

“Yesterday was tough,” Hauger said. “I think we really didn’t have the balance, either, going through the field. But today we really nailed it. It was a warm day, and you had to judge it nicely with the rear tires.

“We managed well, and we had really good pace today. That’s a good way to bounce back.”

Hauger took a 15-point lead over Hughes in the series standings after four of 14 races this season. The next race is the INDY NXT by Firestone Detroit Grand Prix on Sunday, June 1 on the streets of downtown Detroit (10:30 a.m. ET, FS1, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio Network).

CHEVROLET NCS AT KANSAS 1: Carson Hocevar Media Availability Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
KANSAS SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
MAY 10, 2025

Carson Hocevar, driver of the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Camaro ZL1 and the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Silverado RST, met with the media in advance of running double duty in the NASCAR Cup and Craftsman Truck Series at Kansas Speedway.

Media Availability Quotes:

So I heard you mention a couple weeks ago that you prefer the old school way of learning versus using the SMT data points and other things. I was just wondering from your standpoint, how does being in the broadcast booth for some races help with that and help you learn, and how much does it help you on Sunday’s?

“I don’t think it hurts because I’m watching the race, right? You’re seeing in-car footage. You’re seeing a bunch of footage, right? You’re seeing the different camera angles. You get to be in the booth and look out and watch TV, right? Normally when I watch races, I’m in the grandstands and I don’t get to see all the really close things and everything. So I don’t know if it 100% helps, but it doesn’t hurt of being here at the track and watching it in person, but also seeing the TV and getting both. Yeah, I don’t think it hurts.”

Just curious if you had a conversation with Ryan Preece at all over the last week, and if so, how did it go?

“Yeah, we did. I thought it was very productive. I thought he heard my point of view and I heard his, right? I think we have a really good understanding to go forward. I just kind of explained my positioning of it — I just passed the 17 and I really didn’t expect the 60 to be a factor in the equation. I started unwinding the wheel to get out of the 34’s wake and try to be on offense. I found myself on defense, in the wake; crossing, tied and now he’s on my door. It just shocked me.

I just explained that, of I wasn’t trying to put him in a bad spot and be aggressive. I tried to unwind the wheel and track out to the wall, and I didn’t expect a car to be there. That’s on me for not predicting it and not expecting it — expectations being different and the grip level being a different thing. I think he was very understanding of it.

Obviously, we both wrecked and it wasn’t good for either of us. We’re both around the same point situation. He’s having a good year. I feel like we’re faster than expected. I think we just both have the understanding that we don’t want to ruin the momentum we each have moving forward.”

You had the pole last weekend at Texas. Michael (McDowell) had the pole in Vegas, as well. Spire has had speed on the intermediate tracks and has been strong to start the season. Do you expect that to continue this weekend at Kansas? How do you guys capitalize on that, if so, with results?

“Yeah, I do… or, I mean, at least I hope we do, right? Yeah, I think our cars are fast. I think our car, or my car specifically, has been really fast in the race, too. Last year was if we qualified good, we were for some reason not very good in the race. If we didn’t qualify good, for some reason, we were good in the race. Being able to translate that, I think, is really important.

It obviously helps with our friends over at Hendrick Motorsports on the engine side and everything. It’s helped leading into it. It’s not a secret of that. But our cars are getting better, and our people are getting better. We’re getting smarter at being able to translate that now. Starting up front is a lot better with pit selection and so many different things, obviously, besides clean air. But just pit selection, momentum and feeling good about the day. You can just ride that wave. Even if you’re kind of off a little bit, you can kind of maintain and play defense a little bit and still be ahead.

Ultimately, I think that was super important for us this year, to qualify better and get stage points. I think we have 50 stage points. That’s really saving our year so far, honestly.”

Obviously, you guys have had that speed, but from the organizational standpoint, does it get a little bit frustrating not getting consistent results knowing that you guys have been there every week? What do you also feel maybe you guys are missing to get that consistent result?

“Yeah, I mean, it’s not good. I mean, if you were to pick your poison, I’d much rather be fast and have bad luck or misfortune or something happen than be slow and have to bank on other people’s misfortune, right? It’s more sustainable to be fast and have that happen because it normally fixes a lot of problems. Right now, it is fixing a lot of our problems, and we’re 17th in points. I think my average finish is like 29th at this rate.

Yeah, I mean, just a multitude of different things have happened. We’ve had fuel pumps, motors, pit issues and everything. I think that’s more just we’re doing different parts than we’re not used to using. So there’s some gremlins we were finding out at the start of the year, right? Last year, we had the same parts all year, and it went fine. This year, it’s like — oh, this burns this up or this does this or this does that. Yeah, you can’t get through a whole race, and you unfortunately learn that by trial by fire.

So yeah, I mean, ultimately, it’s just we need to do everything in our power not to take ourselves out or put ourselves in a bad spot because the universe right now is already doing that for us. We just have to not compound those or get too aggressive and make a mistake when we get put back there or something happens. Yeah, I think we’re all fighting through that and being able to handle that adversity even better.”

How fun has it been for you having the opportunity to get back in the Truck Series knowing that you didn’t get to do any racing down last year in your rookie campaign?

“Yeah, it’s definitely fun, and it was good for me. I thought I tricked the universe into getting the bad luck out on Friday and not on a Sunday. But yeah, it was fun to go run up front and go have fun. And doing it with no practice or qualifying was kind of fun of starting 19th and driving through the field. And yeah, it’s just fun to go back there and do it with Tyler Green, obviously, and do it with (Brian) Pattie.

And it’s rewarding for me to run good, too, because Jeff Dickerson and Spire have expressed how they felt like they should have put me in some truck races last year, but rookie year, they wanted me full focus on that. So it’s rewarding for me for them start to let me do some more because it feels to me like I’m doing everything right, knowing the goal is Sunday, and when things are going good, they’ll pull back their reins a little bit and let me go have fun.”

I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but it feels like you have pretty thick skin, or you take criticism with a grain of salt a lot of times. But then when incidents happen, like with Ryan Preece, it’s like he’s going to have his day, he doesn’t respect his equipment, you lump it into these other veteran guys, like (Ryan) Blaney and Kyle Busch. How do you process all this coming your way? Do you think — okay, well, I’m fast, I have speed, I’m young, so this is the nature of it? Or do you think — oh, they have a point, is it a mix of both? How do you absorb all that?

“Yeah, I mean, there’s a multitude of things, right? I mean, there’s certain things that are said in the heat of the moment, and then when you go talk to them, it’s a different conversation, right? And I think that’s a lot of times what happens is you get the radio transmission, or you see the talks after the race, or interviews and everything, and then when I have that conversation, it’s just different. It’s heat of the moment. I mean, there’s so many times where I feel like drivers will say something on the radio and they don’t even remember they said it, right? I mean, you saw it with teammates before, right? So there’s so many different things, and it’s just balancing that and knowing, for me, the intent of it, right? I was full on offense, and I didn’t know I had to be on defense, and I was. I wasn’t looking in my mirror when I felt like I should have been. Knowing if you were to rewind the clock, if I knew the result, I would do something different. But at the time, I felt like I knew the situation, and I would probably do the same thing again. But knowing the result, I get in that spot again, you’re going to be more cognizant and aware of that.

I feel like I drive a lot off instinct, and so if I’m not focused on something, you can just be tunnel vision and miss it. I think for me, it’s just being able to balance that. And then also to explain that and make sure they know there was an intent of the move, and the intent wasn’t to put them in a bad spot, put me in a bad spot, or jump that line where it’s dirty, aggressive or over-aggressive.”

What kind of influence has Luke Lambert had on you because he feels like you’re right on the verge of just being a weekly contender, and I wonder how has he kind of helped mold you to get there? Because obviously, the raw talent’s there, it’s just a matter of putting all the pieces together.

“Yeah, I think Luke’s (Lambert) just super, super good, and I was the one that, the second we were racing with Legacy, we almost wished we could keep going. Just the working relationship, right? Maybe not in that building, but just keep going. I was like — man, I wish the year wasn’t over, and for me, that was really special because I knew these guys just spent 36 weeks away from their families, and normally everybody’s just happy to be done for the year. And for them, it felt like we’re just getting going, and now we’re going to break up, right? Now we’re going to go away. So the second I knew he was available, I was really hoping we could get him, and obviously that worked out really well.

He’s just a really, really good team leader. Not even just for me, but just really good at being a team leader for the guys; the crew guys, people in the shop, running the direction of our car and helping the direction of our company, basically.

There’s not a crew chief that can come in anymore, and you’re hiring him for the four shocks he’s got in his briefcase. You’re hiring them for the processes, the people skills and everything. I think for him, that’s why there wasn’t a change. In my entire tenure at Spire on the 77 car, we haven’t let anybody go or brought anybody in. It stayed the same on the pit crew side that’s employed by HMS. They fought to continue to be on our car for Luke’s leadership and how he treats his people. And the same can go for obviously the spotters and everybody that works on the car; the hauler drivers, everybody. He just does a super good job of that. And then to me, just helps me and him keep each other kind of level-headed of this is a journey. We’re not walking into a Hendrick Motorsports where they’ve won championships and have all these trophies on the wall. We’re trying to get there and build that, and we don’t want to get too far ahead of ourselves. So I keep him on the straight and narrow, and he does me probably a little bit more, for sure. But I think we have a really, really good balance of that.”

How much do drivers pay attention to criticism about this car and the type of racing it produces?

“I mean, if you’re Kyle Larson and you led 493 laps, you don’t care… you like it, right? I don’t know. I mean, for drivers, it’s obviously going to be frustrating if you’re faster and you can’t pass and everything. But I feel like it’s irrelevant for us if we’re going to complain and don’t have true solutions that are proven, right? And I think that’s where a lot of us are. We complain, but we only complain to a certain extent because we don’t have a solution. So if you’re really complaining, then if you don’t have a solution, what do you expect to change if you don’t have the solution? So I think all of us are hoping the higher-ups and smarter ones can continue to develop the product because ultimately, we want to have fun racing and racing each other, and not roll around and be difficult to pass and everything. But at the same time, too, I mean, they don’t make any mistakes. The Xfinity race are obviously super good, but I don’t know if you’d 100% see how good the racing is if you put all the Cup guys in there. There’s a lot of times that mistakes create really good racing, and I think that’s why you see Cup guys, especially Kyle (Larson) lately, go to the Xfinity Series and just dominate or run really, really good. He doesn’t make mistakes, or he makes a lot less compared to the guys around him.”

With that said, is coming to Kansas a little bit of a breath of fresh air, considering the racing we have seen here the past three years with this car?

“I mean, maybe.

Yeah, I mean, I think it’s just more fun as a driver, in the sense that you can move around and do different things and run the top. That’s just fun, in general.

But yeah, I mean, I don’t think any of us are 100% walking in and our fun levels peaked or not, whether it’s going to be a good race or not. It’s more if it’s just going to be fun to drive, which, I mean, is kind of the same. But yeah, I mean, but this one could be a snoozer, too, right? So you just never know when a really good race is going to happen or not. But definitely the trend of Kansas has been pretty good lately.”

Through these questions, you’ve mentioned the universe multiple times as if it’s working against you in some form. So I’m curious, does it currently feel like you’re maybe like pushing a boulder up a mountain right now?

“I mean, I feel like we’re getting it out of the way, right? Either misfortune or you can’t predict when someone’s going to spin, let’s say when you come off pit road on a green flag cycle. So there’s that. But also, too, there’s plenty of things that are self-inflicted, when they drop the jack or the motor breaks because of a part failure. The fuel pump breaks because of a part failure. Ultimately, you just kind of have to get those out of the way. So you just have your processes in place. You eliminate potential issues and everything.

Yeah, I mean, do I think we’re getting closer? Yes. Do I think there’s a race where I can be confident saying there’s going to be a race where we’re the dominant car that we’re going to be up front? Probably not yet. I don’t think we’re there. I think it’ll be a shock if we do dominate a race, so far. I think we still need to continue to get better and build a notebook.

But as you saw with Michael (McDowell) up front there at the end, you don’t have to be anywhere near the fastest car and you almost get it handed to you or given an opportunity to go steal one or take one. I probably think that’s probably where we’ll be. But we’re getting faster and we’re running the top five more often. It’s more likely to kind of land in your lap there as long as you’re there and continue. But I think we’re still a little bit far away from, you know, just flat out dominating races.”

Corey Heim was in here earlier talking about how the Trucks and the Cup cars are so much more similar than the Xfinity cars. Is that your experience, too?

“Yeah, for sure. You know, the power to downforce ratio, the on-throttle time, kind of what you do is, yeah, really similar or way more similar than the Xfinity car, obviously. I felt really comfortable the first time I got in a Cup car. And the first time I got in a Xfinity car, it took me kind of all race to get really used to it. So, yeah, I mean, it’s just different. But, you know, I kind of always thought of the truck as you have this really big right-rear quarter panel.

In the Cup car, you just take that quarter panel, you put it underneath. That’s basically the diffuser. So that’s kind of how I pictured it and thought about driving it; how it would feel and how you have to — you go from loading up the right-rear to loading up just the rear, in general, with the diffuser. And that kind of philosophy, you know, kind of somewhat worked when I first got in it.”

Going from Trucks to Cup wasn’t common, but you’ve done it. Zane’s (Smith) done it. If all the cars stay the same in all three series, do you feel that the Truck Series is going to become that developmental series for Cup?

“I mean, no. I don’t think that’s going to be, like, the move. I just think it’s so — like, Xfinity’s so expensive and so tough that, you know, I’m sure there’s kids right now in Xfinity that if they had a spot, the team paying for them or sponsoring them or working would just much rather than having them in the Cup car because it’s not too much different in cost. And you might as well just have them thrown to the wolves and just learn a year in a Cup car.

So, no, I think it’s more likely to happen, but I still think it is going to be rare that you jump from Truck to Cup without any Xfinity experience or anything. It just all depends on the level of the team’s faith in you and everything. But I think it’s definitely — it’s just not going to be as shocking when it happens. I think it’s still possible, but I think you have to, you know, go dominate Trucks or be really, really good. Or do a lot of things behind the scenes that they see value, whether it’s driving a Cup car or, you know, you get a Cup opportunity like I did, where I got to drive a Cup car one time and it was like — okay, well, you drive a Cup car, we’ll just throw you in there and let you learn for a year and see how long it takes you to figure it out. So, yeah, I just think it just opens up a lot more avenues where you can go Cruck to cup or now Xfinity to Cup.”

About General Motors

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Toyota GAZOO Racing – NCS/NCTS Kansas Quotes – Corey Heim – 05.10.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Corey Heim
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

KANSAS CITY (May 10, 2025) – 23XI Racing and TRICON Garage driver Corey Heim was made available to the media on Saturday prior to practice for the NASCAR race weekend at Kansas Speedway.

COREY HEIM, No. 67 Robinhood Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI RacingNo. 11 Safelite + Foster Love Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

How excited are to you run both races this weekend?

“I’m definitely really excited. This is actually my favorite track, so to be back here is awesome. To run double duty and have a chance at three straight wins in the Truck Series tonight is a special opportunity, and for Sunday, really excited to be running with 23XI Racing in robin neon Robinhood scheme. Such a cool opportunity to have a company like Robinhood on our Camry. A lot of Robinhood users are young, and early in their investing career like me, so really cool, full circle moment for myself and 23XI Racing. I really can’t wait.”

Did you get to pick this one?

“Yeah, I don’t think I really had a pick for my races for this year, but I was able to sit down with 23XI Racing and kind of discuss what makes sense. With this being my opening Cup race on the 2025 campaign for myself, being able to run it in 2024 was a big reason why I was able to knock the rust off a little bit. The last time I raced a Cup car was pretty close to a year ago – I think it was in June of last year. It was probably important for me to come out and not look like a fish out of water the first time back and be able to lean on some prior experience and come back to Kansas. I had a little bit of say myself, but I think it just made sense on both sides.”

What do you need to get out of these races?

“That is a good question. I don’t think personally, I set rock solid goals or standards for any of these races. I think a lot of it is just preparing to the best of my ability and executing to the best of my ability. Looking back at the Kansas race when I filled in for Erik Jones last year, there was a lot of things that stood out to improve on, I think that is the first step – just go the right direction and progress the right way. Those specific things are what I want to get better at, but I think with the resources that 23XI Racing has been able to give to me over the last couple of months to prepare for this race, I feel like I’ve got a good opportunity to come in and perform very well, so I think at this point, it is just about executing on the things I’ve learned this year with 23XI and definitely super excited. I just have a lot of resources and opportunities being a part of this organization. Don’t have rock solid goals personally, but I think just going out and executing on the things I studied for is the main thing.”

What makes Kansas your favorite track?

“I think I feel really comfortable when I come here, and I think that is just the prior experience I had here. I’ve got probably six or more ARCA races here and six or more Truck races here. Just that experience alone makes me feel comfortable and very prepared coming into this race. I feel like there is not so many things that I’m having to soak up during the week and prepare on, like for instance, Dover last year – my first Cup race ever. I had been there once in an ARCA car, I think, before that race – just the extra stress it took to prepare for that race and be ready before and all of those things that I was learning about the race track, added on to being in a Cup car for the first time was really tough. Kansas is a place that I have a lot of laps, and I think that helps with my comfort.”

What was the opportunity like to throw out the first pitch for the Royals game last night? Is it good to have a crossover between two sport organizations?

“It was a cool experience. I learned about it for the first time about a week and a half to two weeks ago. I didn’t hesitate that I wanted to be there, and I wanted to be a part of it. Honestly, I’m not super educated about it or the MLB, but I learned a lot about it last night just being a part of it. The first pitch made me pretty nervous to be honest. I was probably more nervous about that than I will be tonight or Sunday. I feel like it went pretty well. I think the crossover between those two organizations is pretty important just to kind of broaden everyone’s horizons. I actually saw some NASCAR fans at the game last night that will hopefully be at the game this weekend, and it seems like Kansas City has a lot of good, supportive fans in all accounts – the Chiefs, the Royals and NASCAR, so I feel like bringing those fans to NASCAR races and vice versa is very important.”

I also noticed you threw it from the mound.

“Yeah, I did. I was just talking about that earlier. Someone was telling me that Kurt Busch told them that you have to throw it from the mound, so I decided to go throw it from up there.”

Did you get a strike?

“No, no. I was close. I think it was a ball. I was telling the people that were at the game with me last night that if it was a lefty batter, I probably would have taken their ankles out (laughter), but I got pretty close.”

How does Kansas translate to the other mile-and-a-half tracks?

“It is definitely good experience being here. I feel like a lot of people kind of overlook how different they all are. For example, the preparation for Texas this last week is night and day from the preparation for Kansas from the overall race strategy and track position matters a lot more at certain race tracks. I feel like here, you can pass a lot easier, for lack of a better word, than most intermediates, so the preparation and the strategy is a good bit different, but really regardless of the track type or where we are running, any laps in a Cup car is huge just because how different these things are than a Truck and a Xfinity car – what I’m used to. Yes, going to intermediates help going to other intermediates, but I think just laps in general are huge. I was fortunate to be a part of the wheel force test with TRD this year, which was big for me as well. That was a good warmup. That was a couple of weeks ago, so a good warmup for this weekend. Regardless of what track, I think laps are really big in this car.”

You have this and Chicago lined up, but the number for 23XI can go up, right?

“Yeah, that is the goal for sure. This track and Chicago for sure, and then in between will be Nashville.”

Is Nashville also custom made for you to have success in the Cup Series?

“Yeah, I think Nashville being a race that I’ve run last year. I ran with 23XI last year, my only start to this date with that team. So to be able to go back and dive in with the exact team that I raced for and then go back and try to improve on that is a really cool opportunity – just to be able to sit down with those guys that developed me at 23XI and hopefully, improve on that going into that race, but once again, it just goes back to experience. Any place that you have laps at and you can go back and study and try to improve on that is really big, especially with this car. So yeah, have a lot of starts there with the Truck races and that Cup race last year, so it all helps for sure.”

Who are you specifically working with at 23XI?

“For the most part, I’ve worked with the analytics department and the sim department, if you will. They have a static simulator at the shop that I work on, a couple of hours a week. I sit in the weekly analytics meetings to try a learn a thing or two and I feel like I always do. It certainly pays off.”

Who heads the analytic and sim teams?

“The analytics team is John Vining (Data Analytics Engineer). He is actually an engineer on my team this week. I believe he was with the 45 team last year and got off the road. Now he is just traveling with the 67 and is full time in the analytics department. Then I work with Keegan Leahy (Performance Consultant) – former pro driver, that now works with 23XI full time on the sim stuff. He is kind of the main guy that I work over there for sure.”

Would you like to see more intermediates spread out on the Truck Series schedule?

“I think I pride myself in the last couple of years on being good on all kinds of different race track. The intermediates have been very kind to me in the Truck Series for sure, but I felt like earlier in my career, I was one dimensional on the short tracks and I broadened my horizons and developed and got a lot better at the intermediates and the road courses, even some superspeedway stuff. I feel like for myself, and where I’m at in my career, any opportunities, especially on those tracks we don’t see very often – for example the superspeedways in the Truck Series, we don’t get a lot of opportunities – bettering myself on the tracks that I might be uncomfortable on right now is a big deal for me, even though it is intimidating for me when you haven’t been on them a lot. It is definitely necessary for me to develop and be really good on a full time Cup campaign in the future. That is my main priority.”

How would you describe your progression in your Cup Series starts last season?

“A lot of it was just being more comfortable with myself. The last thing you want to do as a rookie in the Cup Series is go out and do something stupid and make yourself look bad. I think I did a decent job of that in my first three Cup starts. I feel like I progressively was able to get more comfortable and be more aggressive without feeling like I was going to do something stupid if that makes sense. My first couple of restarts at Dover, I remember I was just trying to stay in line and not look out of place, by the end of Nashville, I was trying to get three wide on guys and barrel it off in there and do everything I can to get track position. I feel like when I was a rookie in the Truck Series, it took me a lot longer to find that comfort, but I think with the resources at 23XI, and being able to work with those guys on bettering myself and being more comfortable and being more comfortable being aggressive, that has really helped me a lot and gone a long way. I think just the main thing is to be able to put yourself out there and put yourself in the limit without doing something wrong or something stupid.”

If you could pick one track to race on the Next Gen car on, what would it be?
“I think Kansas would probably be a good one.”

Any track?

“No, I think that is it. Kansas is the one (laughter). It goes back to the laps I have here. It just pays off so much going into the race and being able to prepare and execute on things that I’ve researched and studied for, but I think if I was equally as prepared on all tracks, I would love to race the Daytona 500. I think that would be really cool too.”

What do you make of that when you hear people talking about you being Cup ready?

“I don’t really let that get to me too much. I just focus on the current opportunities that I have at hand. I definitely feel like I’m ready to make Cup starts – I don’t know if I’m ready to be a full time Cup driver, that is what I’m learning as I go. I certainly feel like I am, but it is going out and proving that. I’m really happy with the opportunities that Toyota and 23XI have given me the past couple of years. I’m very happy with my 11 crew on the Truck side, and the 67 guys on the Cup side. I think I have a lot of things going for me in the right direction, and I’m very happy with my opportunities.”

How do you not get impatient?

“I think a lot of it comes back to how good our 11 team is in the Truck side right now. When you are winning races and competing very consistently it’s fun and you are having a good time. It is rewarding. I feel like if maybe I was struggling more on the Truck side or maybe seeking other opportunities, I feel like it would be different, but I’m really happy with my opportunities in the Truck Series. We are competitive every week, and it is really fun. It is rewarding – that is the main thing.”

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