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BRANDON JONES CAPTURES XFINITY SERIES VICTORY AT DARLINGTON RACEWAY

First win since 2022 and second career win at Darlington

DARLINGTON, S.C. (April 5, 2025) – Brandon Jones used a premier restart in the final laps Saturday afternoon to propel his No. 20 Toyota GR Supra to victory in the Xfinity Series race at Darlington Raceway. The result is Jones’ first win of the season and first since Martinsville in 2022, also with Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR). Jones, who started second on Saturday, was in the top of the field for most of the afternoon and led the final 12 laps after the late restart to score the victory.

It’s Jones’ sixth career Xfinity Series win and his second at Darlington Raceway, with his other triumph coming in 2020.

Christopher Bell, doing double duty this weekend at Darlington, started his 80th career Xfinity Series race from the pole position on Saturday in the No. 19 GR Supra for JGR. Bell led the opening 27 laps of the race and was in contention in the final stage, when contact with a competitor hampered his shot at victory and resulted in a 25th-place finish.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS)
Darlington Raceway
Race 8 of 33 – 200.8 miles, 147 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, BRANDON JONES
2nd, Chase Elliott*
3rd, Justin Allgaier*
4th, Ross Chastain*
5th, Carson Kvapil *
18th, DEAN THOMPSON
25th, CHRISTOPHER BELL
33rd, TAYLOR GRAY
35th, WILLIAM SAWALICH
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

BRANDON JONES, No. 20 Menards/Turtle Wax Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 1st

Describe your emotions in returning to victory lane.

“This is just one I wanted to make a statement in. Christopher Bell, Chase Elliott; some extremely talented Cup drivers in this field today. Sam McAulay (crew chief), these Joe Gibbs Racing guys, this pit crew, unbelievable! That’s what it takes to win these races. Everyone needs to be bought in, everybody’s got to be at their highest level. I had a restart with some of the best there at the end and knew it was going to be tough on older tires and some of the guys up front. But what an insane couple years it’s been to get back over here; get back mentally to know I’m back in a really good race car to win races again. It feels really good. I have to thank everyone at Turtle Wax, everyone at Menards. John Menard (founder and owner, Menards), everyone over there. They’ve become such good friends to me and family over a 10-year stretch racing Xfinity Series cars. For them to stick with us, it means a lot. I know this win means a lot for Menards and their whole family. I feel like there’s definitely more to come, but all day, we were as fast as Xfinity mobile. I thought our qualifying run was great and that we were the car to beat in practice. It all just worked itself out. What kept me going during those last few laps was, just telling myself, ‘it’s going to work out. There won’t be a caution. It’ll be fine.’ Because how many times have you seen that, where there’s a caution right at the end with a few to go and then you get used up on a restart. Just nice to have it all work out. We fired on all cylinders today. Everybody did. This is huge momentum for us.”

On that last restart, how did you find the right way to maneuver it for the win?

“Best thing for me to do was get by those lap cars and hope to have them race side-by-side, which I’m not sure if that’s exactly how it happened. I was pretty efficient in getting by those cars in front with older tires. I didn’t want to make it three-wide as you need the middle lane to make the pass. I wanted to get Jeb (Burton) out there a little bit, then go to work on him and make quick work of it, which I did. I glanced up in the mirror a few times and had to see the gaps and it continued to open itself up. We, both myself and Sam on the box, made great calls to get our Toyota GR Supra the adjustment it needed to fire off for a couple laps and man, it finally worked out! I don’t think there’s a scratch on the right side of this thing. So, didn’t have to do it on the top or do anything crazy. I thought I did a good job at the end there, searching. I was kind of glued to the bottom in (turns) three and four for a long time and then realized that wasn’t going to work. Realized I was getting passed early on during those restarts, so knew I had to get off that to win the race. So yeah, found some speed, found the grip and made it work!”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 64,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 49 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants. In spring 2025, Toyota’s plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 31 electrified options.

For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Christopher Bell claims Xfinity Series pole at Darlington Raceway

Christopher Bell at Darlington. Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Christopher Bell captured the pole for the Xfinity Series Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 Saturday afternoon at Darlington Raceway. His 164.408 mph lap topped the leaderboard, earning him his 14th career pole in the series.

“I felt pretty good about it through one and two and in three and four. “I felt completely out of control down there,” Bell said. “Looking at the guys that were qualifying after me, they were able to maintain through one and two, and I guess I had a pretty good three and four. Out of control is fast.

His Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, Brandon Jones, will start beside him on the front row after a qualifying lap of 164.386 mph.

Justin Allgaier will start third (164.221 mph), followed by Taylor Gray (163.876 mph) and Sam Mayer (163.702 mph) to round out the top five. Carson Kvapil, Daniel Dye, Chase Elliott, Christian Eckes and Sheldon Creed completed the top 10 qualifiers.

40 drivers were vying for 38 spots. As a result, Austin Green and Dawson Cram did not qualify for the race.

The Xfinity Series Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 will be broadcast on the CW network Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET with radio coverage provided by MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Starting Lineup for the Xfinity Series Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200

Xfinity-lineup-Darrlington-8-nxs-2025-lineup

CHEVROLET NCS: Byron Puts Chevrolet on the Pole at Darlington Raceway

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DARLINGTON RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST-QUALIFYING REPORT
APRIL 5, 2025

Byron Puts Chevrolet on the Pole at Darlington Raceway

 TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 STARTING LINEUP:
POS. DRIVER
1st – William Byron
8th – Kyle Busch
10th – Michael McDowell

  • Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron drove Chevrolet to its now series-leading fourth NASCAR Cup Series pole win of the 2025 season at Darlington Raceway. The 27-year-old Charlotte, North Carolina, native clocked-in a best lap of 28.774 seconds, at 170.904 mph, in his No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet to earn the pole position for tomorrow’s Goodyear 400.
  • The pole – Byron’s second at Darlington Raceway and 15th all-time in NASCAR’s top division – makes Byron the first repeat pole winner of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season.
  • Three Chevrolet organizations will be represented in the top-10 starting lineup for tomorrow’s 400-mile race, with Hendrick Motorsports’ Byron leading Richard Childress Racing’s Kyle Busch with an eighth-place qualifying effort and Spire Motorsports’ Michael McDowell rounding out the top-10.

Chevrolet’s all-time NASCAR Cup Series statistics at Darlington Raceway:

Wins: 44
Poles: 23
Top-Fives: 207
Top-10s: 431

Chevrolet’s season statistics heading into the eighth race of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series Season

Wins: 2
Poles: 4
Top-Fives: 15
Top 10s: 32
Stage Wins: 3

William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet – Pole Win Press Conference Quotes

William, this is your second poll at the track. Too tough to tame. You’ve won at this event before. What did you like out of your car in those laps and how do you feel about your chance to support them all?

“Yeah, I felt good about it today. You know, I felt like we had a good plan going into practice. I feel like we’re always strong here. It’s a really good track for our team and myself. We were just trying to find a decent balance there to start. We were a little bit tighter than we wanted to be, so we pitted and worked on it; got it a lot better and finished practice pretty strong, I felt like. So I had some confidence going into qualifying that we’d have a decent lap, at least. I was just was nervous about going early. I just felt like having a little bit of an earlier draw was not ideal, but it seemed like the track temp was starting to go up as well, so it probably wasn’t the worst thing. Just really hit (turns) one and two well. I felt like I got through the entry to one and up the hill well, and then entry to three was also good. I just felt like I gave up maybe half to three quarters of a tenth off of four.

Luckily it was enough. Just proud of our team. We had a really good week of prep. A couple tough weeks for results, but we’re still running strong.”

You won this event back in 2023. How comfortable do you feel at this racetrack? Just again, sitting on the pole now here. Is this a comfortable track for you to race on, just your confidence going forward?

“Yeah, I think this is maybe my best track. I feel like this is just a place I love coming to. I think that ever since I’ve been here as a driver, I just enjoy coming down here. It’s a tough challenge. It really tests you mentally and physically. Off the track, I had a lot of nostalgia coming here as a kid. It was just the place that I loved seeing on the way to Myrtle Beach as a kid and just dreamed about racing here. I feel like for every driver, that kind of makes it important to you. It doesn’t mean you’re always going to be good here, but it’s always been an important track. I think that history and then parlaying that into having good runs here, it has had a special place in my heart.”

I wanted to ask you how important getting a pole and starting up front really is here at Darlington. Is this a place where that matters a lot?

“It probably matters maybe a fraction more than some other places. Still, it’s a long race, but you don’t want to qualify here in the 20s. It’s a tough place to pass. It can be tricky strategy-wise and you can get stuck back there. This is a place we always try to qualify in the top five or six because having that clean air is a big deal. So yeah, maybe a fraction more than other places, but you can still win from anywhere. We’ve never had the benefit of really having pit stall one here, which is super nice to have. I’m excited for that and I feel like that will help our pit crew. It’s just a nice advantage.”

The rest of your team did not fare quite as well as you today. Are you surprised by that?

“These cars are really finicky, so hitting the lap the way you want it to be can be difficult. I’m not surprised because there’s a lot of parity in the Next Gen era, especially in qualifying. You can be that little bit off. I feel like our team made good notes from last year here qualifying. I think that really helped us.”

You talked about a little bit of a connection to it coming down here. Seeing it from the perspective of not being a driver or not having a family and racing, what does this place mean to you?

“This place is just very special. I feel like it’s always had a lot of meaning. I guess my first race here, I ran Ricky Hendrick’s throwback scheme in Xfinity. That was just really special. We had a good day. I think it’s just kind of continued. I’ve had a lot of great throwback schemes, honestly. That’s always made it fun here in the spring or the fall. I think it’s just that kind of nostalgia that I enjoy.”

When and where is the most difficult part of this racetrack? We spent years talking about how easy it is to get caught up in it. You like this track. What moment, where, what part of the track and what kind of movements make it scattered for you here?

“It’s just a tricky place. It’s changing every year, just that little bit. I feel like when they put the patch down in turn two, that was a big difference maker. Definitely had something new to adjust for. Every time, this is one of those places where when they roll out for practice in Xfinity and I turn on the TV or I look at the racetrack when I come in the tunnel, I’m always looking for little things that are different because it seems to just age like that. It’s a unique place. It seems like there’s some differences this year. I’m intrigued to watch Xfinity and figure out what those differences are.”

Tell the fans what it’s like to lead the field to green here at this particular racetrack. You certainly know you may get a strike, but you don’t want to get the first one…

“Yeah, clean air is nice here, for sure. It doesn’t usually last very long because you catch the back of the field. Somebody is always in traffic here. But getting that clean air is huge here and hopefully we can just keep that control of the race.”

We saw a few weeks ago at Homestead, Kyle Larson was on the wall and sheared the right side of his car off pretty bad. Now we’re at another track where you’re on the wall. Do you see that trend kind of continue where we’re getting more and more bouncing off the wall and really tearing the right sides off? Was that kind of by play from Larson and something that maybe you and him or Hendrick has discussed getting on the wall even more?

“No.. I mean, definitely not discussed it. I feel like this place is way different running the wall than Homestead, although it looks the same, you know, from visually, like you’re touching it sometimes here. It’s very different, like the way the wall is shaped here and just the effect or lack of here.

So it’s a different technique. I mean, you know, Kyle’s been able to run it well both places, but I don’t think there are anything like really.”

It’s been three and a half years since they repaved the exit of turn two. Is there still a grip strip there, or has it lost its usefulness at this point?

“Yeah, it’s still more grip, but, yeah, it’s not like you can just run wide open through there anymore. And there’s some bump content on the exit, which for these cars, is pretty bad.. you know, the way the stops hit in the back. So yeah, there’s still more grip there than the rest of the track, but it’s not as much and I think you’ll just see it. It’s always going to have an advantage, though, because the age of it’s going to just be offset to, you know, the rest of the track.

So, yeah, it’s interesting, but I think it’s continuing to get some character. Hopefully those bumps don’t get any worse.”

Were you happy that it’s unusually hot here for April because it seems like it’s just like it is in May and September?

“I wouldn’t say happy, but I’m okay with it. It’s definitely going to be warm. You know, I think tomorrow is going to be a test mentally, physically. You know, it’s a tough place, and I feel like this weather here just exaggerates. It really just exaggerates the track grip, and I think that we’ve been fortunate a couple times here to run in the spring when it’s like cloudy out, and that really adds a lot of grip to the racetrack. So, yeah, I think it’s just going to be good notes for the fall because it’s going to be a lot more similar weather to what the fall will be like.”

And so on that how much do you view wanting to win, or do you try anything to learn for the fall?

“Yeah, I don’t think — like right now, there’s nothing set in stone to try, but I think if you have a good notebook from this race, it’ll carry over really well for the Southern 500. So that’s what I’ve seen with Darlington. It doesn’t change that much from spring to fall in terms of set-up stuff. So it’s a really important race tomorrow just to get a good notebook for the fall.”

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.

Preece, Cindric and Blaney Qualify Top 10 for Darlington Cup Race

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Goodyear 400 Qualifying — Darlington Raceway
Saturday, April 5, 2025

Ford Qualifying Results:

2nd – Ryan Preece
6th – Austin Cindric
9th – Ryan Blaney
12th – Todd Gilliland
14th – Chris Buescher
16th – Zane Smith
18th – Joey Logano
20th – Brad Keselowski
24th – Josh Berry
26th – Noah Gragson
31st – Cole Custer
35th – Cody Ware

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Freightliner Ford Mustang Dark Horse – A TOP 10 STARTING SPOT FOR TOMORROW. ARE YOU HAPPY WITH HOW QUALIFYING PLAYED OUT? “Yeah, it’s sometimes difficult to tell where you’re at with the two different groups and knowing that I felt like the track was gonna pick up. I thought we had a pretty good lap and we’ll try to work on it for tomorrow.”

ARE YOU MORE CONFIDENT THIS WEEK AFTER THE ISSUES LAST WEEK WITH THE BATTERY? “I think we’re more prepared to handle them. It wasn’t a battery issue, it was the alternator not charging the battery, so being able to identify what those are. There are no part changes or anything that would make us feel like there would be a reason why we would have that, so it’s definitely something you’ve got to look at and important moving forward.”

WHAT HAPPENED IN THE INCIDENT WITH THE 35 LAST WEEK? “It’s kind of an unfortunate deal, especially if you’re Riley because I felt like it kind of got jumbled up there off of turn two and got us all three-wide. I spent the entire front straightaway kind of getting squeezed and I kind of got shoved up into the 35 and spun him out. On my end, there’s nothing. That’s probably the first lap I spent side-by-side with Riley, and I have no issues with Riley either. I hope that’s somewhat clear to see that it was just a bit of a three-wide situation gone wrong and unfortunately I feel like the lesson for me in that is I’m the first one with an opportunity to lift to not make it three-wide. I wasn’t fully alongside everybody, so with as far back as we were running at the point in the race it was probably the right thing to do, especially if I would have known that we weren’t gonna be able to stay three-wide for more than a corner. I think that’s the major takeaway for me and obviously that contact affected Riley’s race and his finish.”

YOU DIDN’T HAVE A LOT OF TIME TO CORRECT. IT LOOKED LIKE YOU GOT UP IN THE MARBLES. “Yeah, there was pretty slight contact from the 16 once we got in entry and into the braking. At that point, you’re braking into the corner and the smallest margins upset cars and it’s unfortunate that it happened.”

DO YOU WORRY BECAUSE OF WHAT HAPPENED EARLIER THIS YEAR THAT PEOPLE WILL THINK YOU RUN INTO PEOPLE ON PURPOSE? “Yeah, I feel like that one is a bit of a stretch to look at and go, ‘Oh, man. He was out to get him,’ especially if you look at what happened and what happened before that even got us three-wide. Other people’s opinions are things that I cannot control, but past that I think the only thing I can control is my relationship with Riley and I feel like from ARCA, Truck, Xfinity and Cup, he and I have always been pretty good. I sent him a text right after the race and thought I had some ownership in that, and that’s about all I can do to move forward. It doesn’t help his finish and at the end of the day my race didn’t even matter because I wasn’t even gonna finish anyway, so it’s just kind of an annoying thing to happen on a day that was already definitely challenging for us.”

Toyota NCS Darlington Quotes – Denny Hamlin – 04.05.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Denny Hamlin
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

DARLINGTON, S.C. (April 5, 2025) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin was made available to the media on Saturday prior to practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway.

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

How has the throwback weekend changed for the teams and doing throwback paint schemes?

“Yeah, I mean I think it sounds good in theory, but you know truthfully, these guys are trying to find a reason to get a return on their investment. So, when you kind of change their logo or maybe change their colors and stuff, it doesn’t really line up with what they want. It’s just a sponsor-driven sport. I mean, I’m watching the Xfinity Series cars and I’m like, ‘they’re awesome!’ Because they don’t have this many sponsors, they can kind of do whatever they want to do. It’s cool to see from their standpoint, but yeah on the Cup side it’s going to be really tough going forward.”

Do you think we’re in a “spec car box” for future plans of race cars?

“I’m not really sure. Yeah, I don’t know where you know the next car goes. As far as I know, there’s no on development on any kind of new car that I’m aware of. Truthfully. I’m not sure I’m not sure where it goes from here.”

What are your expectations going into Bristol next weekend?

“I think that was just kind of an anomaly. We thought it was temperature, we thought it was all kinds of different things, but truthfully, there’s something that was different. Don’t know really what it was, but I would expect that we would have been the normal Bristol where your tires don’t wear that much, if it’s the same tire. Temperatures look to be up, so I would say that we would have kind of the normal Bristol that we’ve had you know most of the time.”

Are you worried about rising costs as a team owner?

“As a team, there’s vendors that are saying they’re going to have to raise their prices. The cost of Next Gen (car) itself has gotten so high in general. I’m sure (pause), it’s going to fall on the teams like you would think.”

What do you think the impact of the upcoming In-Season Tournament will be?

“I hope so. That’s the reason that you create these extra storylines. (For) these more casual race fans, it’s kind of a lull in other sports. You create these one-on-one matchups that the TV and maybe there’s a simulcast that is focused on those matchups and stuff. That really gets your sports bettor, that is again just in the lull of a season, with only MLB going on, it gets them kind of the juice that they’re looking for at that time of the year. You hope that it has the effect that it that everyone’s hoping for. Certainly, I think that it’ll be worth it just in the storylines alone.”

What do you see as the reason(s) for last week in Martinsville? Also, what’s your reaction to the CARS TOUR being on FS1?

“I don’t know, it really just went through a change a decade or so ago. Certainly, I think you know the format had a little bit something to do with it where you can be terrible all season, and just win a race, and all of a sudden, your season is saved. I think that say it a little bit of a role in it. Then there’s other things. The Xfinity Series is primarily made of pay drivers. Without pay drivers, I don’t know if that series truthfully exists. It’s not popular, no one here will like it, but that’s just the reality. This is just where we’re at and then eventually, they make it to Cup (Series) if they’re good enough. I don’t know, it’s just different. A lot of sports are different than it used to be a long time ago, but that’s where we’re at today. As far as the CARS TOUR getting on FS1, it certainly is really good for them. really proud to see what that tour has done and certainly how much growth it’s had over the last couple of years. Certainly, the way they run it, it’s very well organized I wish that it would have been around back in my day of late model racing. We had a kind of a traveling tour, but it was nothing like the CARS TOUR and as well organized as it is and certainly didn’t pay as well. They’re really doing great job to promoting that series.”

How has your approach to driving Darlington changed over time?

“I think that it has changed over time. I think as time has gone on, you’ve seen (pause) everybody’s so good at running the wall now or running close to it that, typically I think you can find good cars and good drivers off the wall. It used to be because not many people ran right on it for such an extended period of time, that if you could just run within a few inches of it, you would get into better asphalt than others. Now, everyone kind of runs so close to the wall that now you’re only getting the aero effect. But here at this track (Darlington Raceway), the speeds aren’t as high, so you don’t get as big of a benefit running right on the wall as you do it somewhere like Homestead (Homestead-Miami Speedway) that has higher corner speeds. I don’t think the wall has as big of an advantage as that used to have, but it is you know typically the fastest lane around here. If have a car that (pause) or a driver that saves his tires a little bit more, you can have enough disparity in speed to make passes elsewhere.”

Do you have like a natural confidence when you come to Darlington and is there a little bit more confidence proof coming off a win last week?

“Certainly. I think you know last week was a great week for the team, no doubt about it. To get a win early, just to start to get some playoff bonus points, that’s always a great thing. When we come here (Darlington), absolutely. I know what I need out of the car. I’ll know within the first few laps of practice whether it’s got the it that it needs to be good and if not, we’ll go to work on it. But the confidence I have is knowing exactly what I need at this track. I know how to enter the corner; I know how to exit it. I know how much gas and brake to apply to make good speed here. It’s just a matter of whether the car’s working directly on that day and if it isn’t, we can get it pretty close usually.”

Does the new partnership between 23XI Racing and RobinHood open up anything potentially with Klutch Sports?

“That’s an agency that RobinHood uses for their deals and certainly, the RobinHood deal is a great one for 23XI (Racing). They’re kind of investing already and Corey Heim and wanting to get you know partnership going with him, along with Bubba Wallace, and so it’s a great brand obviously to bring into the sport. They’ve actually done a lot of things behind the scenes with the sport for quite some time now. I’ve done some appearances for them in the past, so it’s good to really kind of bring them in and really have kind of that leaf now going to be on the hood of a car — it’s fantastic. Just a great brand to bring in and hopefully, we can get them the value they’re looking for.”

With Michael Jordan’s involvement in the team, has that opened the door to any NBA-related sponsors?

“I think that certainly Michael (Jordan, co-owner, 23XI Racing)’s brand and things like that attracts a lot of different companies to be associated with. This one (RobinHood) is not directly you know brought through Michael or his group. That was more of an agency thing, so all came together really nicely. Certainly, any brands that you see kind of promoting (pause). They got a big deal with Memphis on the NBA side. RobinHood does, so they’re just kind of now exploring the NASCAR space.”

Tell us more about the confidence you have and what it brings your team.

“I think it’s always good to question your confidence, because it forces you to look at yourself to figure out did you do everything that you’re capable of doing for the team? Are you constantly working on your craft? You should always second guess yourself I believe if you’re a NASCAR driver, because things evolve and we constantly go through aero changes, tire changes, car changes, track changes. Are you adapting quickly to that? Confidence is a great thing and it’s very beneficial, but there’s times you need to question whether you should do things different or evolve your craft. I think it’s important to getting better.”

Do you feel you have an advantage this weekend having raced at Darlington so much?

“This sport is so week-to-week, it’s hard to say that but you can’t argue with the results I would say that, certainly, it lends itself to the best drivers, best teams, all those things, right? I think it’s a great combination of you got to have everything. You have to have good mechanical grip here; you have to have good aerodynamics and the driver has to be really good with his craft. I talked about just understanding when to push, when to not. Understanding the length of the race is. Even though this is a 400 (mile race), it’s still grueling. I think Darlington is by far one of the most grueling race tracks that you go to simply because it’s going to be a warm one this weekend. It’s going to be mentally-taxing knowing that you’ve have to hit your marks just perfect at this track and then, just knowing the mental side of it, you have 35 other guys out there that’s don’t want to let you win. It’s really hard to navigate that, and it’s a track that you can’t get away from others. Usually other mile-and-a-half tracks, tracks of this size, it’s wide enough to where you want to go get clean air, you can probably go get it. Here, there’s just no escaping it. It’s just it’s really hard to get runs, make passes on people. It just takes its toll, or it has for me, on my body, mind every time I race here. As far as the veteran side, I think that certainly, it seems like those that have you had lots of experience with this track, (pause), I think it goes back to the question earlier, more than likely the guys that have been successful because they know that feel they need to be fast here and they continue to replicate it.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 64,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 49 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants. In spring 2025, Toyota’s plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 31 electrified options.

For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Toyota NCS Darlington Quotes – Chase Briscoe – 04.05.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Chase Briscoe
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

DARLINGTON, S.C. (April 5, 2025) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Chase Briscoe was made available to the media on Saturday prior to practice for the NASCAR Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway.

CHASE BRISCOE, No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

What do you like about coming to Darlington?

“Yeah, I feel like of all the race tracks we go to, this (Darlington Raceway) is definitely one as the driver, you feel like you make a little bit more of a difference. You know, it’s still very car-dependent for sure, but as a driver, I feel like this is one of those tracks that’s kind of similar to Homestead (Homestead-Miami Speedway) where you can carry it multiple positions, because the (pause) what you do inside the race car is constantly changing. Nobody’s car is driving good, there’s just things you can do in the car to find more than a tenth sometimes even two tenths, whereas at another tracks, you’re just very hand-tied by what you’re doing inside the race car. So, this track is definitely one of those tracks where you can do different things in the race car and I feel like this is also track where you see guys that typically run well here their entire career just because there’s little things about this race track. I would say for me the hardest thing is just been trying to understand the balance of the short run versus long run, and how hard to go at the beginning to not burn yourself up at the end. Still definitely don’t have that figured out but I feel like it’s always kind of been my biggest challenge here and felt like that especially in the Xfinity Series, I would be extremely fast on the short run, but I would pay for it in the long run. Just trying to do as much as I can to study you know the guys like Denny Hamlin and other guys that are so good, always here on the long run. So that’s kind of I feel like my biggest challenge at this place, but you know there’s a lot of challenges about this place as well.”

Do you feel the throwback weekend has lost its spark?

“I don’t think so, I mean, there’s less paint schemes as this week than normal. But if you look at the Xfinity Series, there’s probably more than ever. I still think you know there’s a ton of buy in still. I think it’s hard with anything. Anytime you do something for a long time, not like I think it loses its luster, but it’s not as exciting as the first time or the second time. I think was trying to find ways to keep it exciting, you know, it’s hard right? You run out of things to change after you do it for a while. For me, it’s something that I love about this weekend. Every time you come here, there’s that old school feel, but then when you walk in the garage, you seal paint schemes and stuff. It’s a cool part of the whole weekend. Yeah, I don’t have a throwback scheme this weekend. This is the first time I’ve never ran one, but I don’t feel like this weekend has lost its luster. I think the fans still love the paint schemes that are here, and just anytime you come to Darlington, it’s kind of got an old school throwback feel whether we’re (at) a throwback weekend or not.”

What do you think might be making it longer to adapt to your car?

“Yeah, feel like I’m probably two-to-three weeks away from like really having a great understanding of kind of what I need. I still feel like I can go win right now. I just like to really be dialed in with what the car should feel like. Just from a setup standpoint, there’s things that JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) is different from what I’m used to and even just being at a different manufacturer, right? Their motors run a little bit different, their aero is a little bit different. Even though the parts are all the same, the outer shell that are still quite a bit different. Just how it drives into traffic, how it does things, that’s all something I’ve had to learn. That part’s been something that I feel like I’m two or three weeks away. Going to the race track, being at the end of practice and saying, ‘okay, my car is here, if it’s going to be really good tomorrow, this is where I’m going to need it to be.’ That’s where I’ve just really relied on James (Small, crew chief) and the entire team to honestly, just do what you guys think is best because I don’t quite know yet. I can tell you what direction I think we need to go but they have such a better understanding of this race car than I do still. Yeah, I feel like I’m two or three weeks away. The little stuff, I feel like I’ve gotten pretty similar with. At the beginning of the year, it was hard for me just to even turn the car off because it was the ignition was now on the opposite side of what it’s been for me for the last four years, where like all those little things are very normal now. But how the car drives is becoming more and more normal as well. Just feel like I’m probably two or three weeks from really being dialed in with it.”

What did you learn from last year that you’ve carried to this season?

“Yeah, I don’t know honestly. I mean I feel like ever since I came here for the first time in the Xfinity Series, it’s been a track I kind of just understand. I mean, every time I come here, I learn little things. But I feel like even before last year we were always fairly competitive at SHR (Stewart-Haas Racing). We were always 10th to 13th. We always were missing just a little bit setup wise, and I felt like we found that last year was able to (pause) this race (Spring race 2024), we were in fourth or fifth, and then obviously for the Southern 500, we kind of found that little bit extra. So yeah, I mean I don’t I don’t know if that’s going to carry over this weekend just with how different the cars drive, right? But certainly, you know it’s a place where I do have a lot of confidence every time I’ve come here, no matter what the series is, I felt like I can come here and run well and run out front. I feel like that’s half the battle at a lot of places. Definitely feel like this is a track that I understand what I need out of my car, especially after winning last year. I know what a winning car feels like, so hopefully I can have that feeling today and if not, get it there for tomorrow.”

How would you evaluate your performance so far this season?

“I would say we’re, I don’t know, B-minus. I think we knew there was going to take a little bit of time. Truthfully just trying to learn each other and the car’s driving different. I would say that we’ve left a lot of points on the table, whether it’s stage points and even finishes. Like the first four, five weeks of the season, I felt like we were fifth-to-eighth-place car and when you would look at the metrics post-race, it would show that we were fifth-to-eighth-place car, but we would finish you know 17th or 14th or DNF at Phoenix (Phoenix Raceway). We never really got to have the results I felt like that would pair with our speed, where the last two weeks, I feel like we’ve ran where we should around almost every single week — inside the top-10, getting some stage points. I think that’s the encouraging thing for me right now is knowing that we are not firing on all eight cylinders as far as being completely dialed in. I know that I’m still not at 100% from a standpoint of understanding what I need right now, and we’ve still been a fifth-to-eighth-place car fairly easily I feel like. Once we get it tuned in and figured out what we need, I feel like we’re going to be really good. That’s been just the hard part is the beginning part of the season is James (Small) just trying to even understand what is the perfect feeling race car for me. I feel like we’ve really kind of clicked with that, honestly even just this week, we’ve had three or four examples now of the percentage of delta and setup is X percent and it’s been the same three or four times. It’s Homestead, it’s Martinsville, it’s on the simulator this week and it’s very consistent now. So now they can say ‘okay, when we go to Bristol next week you know this is what Martin (Truex Jr.) ran, we probably need to be X percent you know whatever off of that and we should be in a pretty good spot.’ So, I feel really good about the next couple weeks and yeah hopefully we can just continue to get better.”

Do you wear a cool shirt and have you ever experienced a failure with it?

“Yeah, I do. I’m one of the big guys (laughs). Knock on wood, I’ve not had a total failure. Last week I will say, it was definitely hotter than what I’ve had to the previous couple weeks. After the race, typically I can take my cool shirt off and my skin is pretty much ice cold, and last week, it wasn’t that at all. I’ve heard horror stories about it failing and like I said I haven’t had that happen yet, so hopefully it doesn’t happen especially tomorrow. It’s no good whenever something goes wrong. Like I said I’ve never had an issue so it’s hard for me to talk about.”

What are your expectations for next weekend in Bristol?

“I feel like it’ll be like the fall race, probably. Nobody knows what happened the spring race, right? I feel like that was just a one-time thing. I feel like it would be very similar to what we had in the fall. Obviously, it’ll be during the daytime, so it’ll be a little bit different. From a tire standpoint, I think it’ll be same thing we’ve had 99% of the times we’ve gone there. If it isn’t, I would be surprised truthfully.”

What does it mean to come back to Darlington with your family?

“It’s definitely special. This place (Darlington Raceway) was definitely significant part of my life. The win I had (in 2020) was big from a career standpoint, but you know the day before, I mean I was literally in this parking lot right here. I can vividly remember being on FaceTime with my wife and everything. Sitting in the in the motorhome and I can literally just picture the whole thing. To be able to be here you know four years removed (from it) last year and my wife being a couple weeks away from giving birth to twins and then we had Brooks there and then now tomorrow, they’re all becoming here – it’s a special place. For us, it’s kind of our home track. It’s the closest track to our house. Darlington has played a significant part of my life in more ways than one. Obviously, the family side. The emotional day that that was but then even from a career standpoint. Not only the (Xfinity Series) race in 2020, but even last year (Southern 500), what that did for me career wise. It’s definitely a special place to the Briscoe family and yeah, it’s always special every time I come (here) because of that.”

Did you relive any memories from the Southern 500 win when you arrived here this week?

“I mean, honestly, it’s still like a pinch me moment and one of those things that like I find myself every single week being like, ‘man I can’t believe I won that race!’ It’s a major, it’s a crown jewel. I was telling somebody the other week, ‘I look at the names on the trophies and like I just feel like I’m very undeserving. There’s all these Hall of Famers and like icons and legends of the sport, and then it says 2024, Chase Briscoe. Like the heck?’ It’s weird truthfully. Yeah, it’s definitely crazy. I feel like when I came back, like anytime you go when you won somewhere, you just walk in, you’re a little more confident, you feel that difference. But I definitely think this place, it changes your confidence level more than anywhere else just because the respect within the garage and within the NASCAR community whenever you want it at Darlington, there’s just a different level of appreciation for your talent. And that’s something that I didn’t realize until after I won the Southern 500 truthfully. I remember the next week being on pit road at Atlanta and Dale Jarrett and all these guys come over to me just tell me how incredible it was. You just don’t have that at other race tracks after you win a race. It definitely is a place where, when I pull in, especially now being the first time back, it’s definitely brings back a lot memories.”

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Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Brad Keselowski Ready For Darlington Weekend

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Goodyear 400 Media Availability — Darlington Raceway
Saturday, April 5, 2025

Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 6 Castrol Seven Critical Areas Ford Mustang Dark Horse for RFK Racing, has two career NASCAR Cup Series wins at Darlington Raceway. The owner/driver stopped by the infield media center before practice and qualifying to talk about this weekend’s race.

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Castrol Seven Critical Areas Ford Mustang Dark Horse – TARIFFS ARE IN THE NEWS. FROM A TEAM OWNERS PERSPECTIVE IS THIS CONCERNING AND HOW ARE YOU LOOKING AT THIS? “I can’t say I’ve put a ton of thought into it, but a lot of our single source parts come from here in the United States. I don’t know a lot of them that don’t, but that doesn’t mean that they’re not affected, whether that be raw materials or so forth, but at this point in time I don’t see there being a drastic effect for us, but I don’t know what I don’t know.”

WHEN YOU LOOK AT THIS SCENARIO DO YOU FEEL IT COULD BE AN ISSUE FROM AN OEM OR SPONSOR PERSPECTIVE? “It’s hard to say what kind of lagging indicators are out there, but, generally speaking, in the short term everybody has contracts and commitments and all those things. Long term, I can’t really answer much. I know that we’re in a good spot with all of our sponsors and deals that we have. I feel like you’re never immune, but we’re positioned well.”

NONE OF THE RFK CARS ARE RUNNING THROWBACK SCHEMES THIS WEEKEND. HOW HAS THE CALCULUS SHIFTED TO RUN YOUR TRADITIONAL SCHEME VERSUS THE THROWBACK? “It’s just hard. It’s hard to get all the different people to line up to pull it off. For my car this weekend, we have Castrol on it. We did throwbacks the last few times here. It’s kind of like we ran out of a little bit of energy to pull off one that was good enough to make a mark, so to speak. The other thing is, at least for us, is we have global brands on our cars and they have global initiatives and things that are going on and they want to make sure they hit those, so with limited windows to do that it doesn’t always work out. I think from a body of work on the throwback stuff we’ve done a lot and I’m really proud of what we’ve done. Maybe this year wasn’t obviously our greatest for making that happen, but I suspect that will come back around in the years to come.”

IS THE WEEKEND AS A WHOLE STILL WORTH DOING? “I think so. It’s difficult to get all the parties to join in and to participate, but year over year it seems like it has its ebbs and flows, where you have partners who are super excited about it and then the next year you have partners who are kind of just kind of ‘eh’. Ultimately, we need to make them happy.”

HAS THERE BEEN A SPECIFIC STRUGGLE WITH THE 6 TEAM THAT IS HAMPERING YOU GUYS AND DOES THE SPEED OF THE OTHER TWO CARS GIVE YOU OPTIMISM YOU CAN RIGHT THE SHIP? “Yeah, I feel like we’re gonna do all the right things and get where we need to be. We just haven’t gotten the results. We haven’t qualified as well as we’d like to, but neither has particularly the 60 car. In the race, we haven’t been able to put it together – some of it in our control, a lot of it not in our control, so it’s been frustrating, but I kind of have this feeling that we’re getting a lot of the bad luck out of the way very early in the season. That’s kind of the overwhelming sentiment and that if we stay the course, it will come back to us.”

HOW HAS THE TRANSITION BEEN FOR JEREMY? “I think for Jeremy there’s a lot of transition coming to RFK, learning all the tools and trying to understand how to maximize them. I can see him understanding them to a higher level every week and that improves our communication and ability to generate results, so I’m pretty optimistic.”

DO YOU KNOW WHAT TO FIX AND DO YOU FEEL YOU CAN GET CLOSE TO WINNING, OR DO YOU FEEL YOU CAN STILL POINT YOUR WAY IN? “We can definitely still point our way in, but we just don’t want to. We want to win our way in. I look at the next four or five weeks and they’re all tracks that we feel like we can win at, so it’s hard to just turn it around in one week, but I wouldn’t be shocked if we did. We know that we need to qualify better and we know that we need to – even our race execution hasn’t been bad, but if we’d have started further up front, we wouldn’t get caught up in other people’s problems or get caught up in yellow flags during pit cycles and things of that nature. I feel like, yes, we know what we need to be better.”

WHAT MIGHT BE THE IMPACT OF THE RICK WARE LEGAL SITUATION AT THIS POINT ON YOU GUYS? “It’s too early to tell. If you read the court documents, the majority of it was redacted, so not knowing what is said in there I still think it’s too early to tell.”

STEVE PHELPS TALKED ABOUT THE OWNER’S ADVISORY GROUP WITH YOU, HEATHER AND JUSTIN. WHAT DO YOU SEE AS THINGS YOU COULD POTENTIALLY ACCOMPLISH AND HOW MUCH HAVE YOU BEEN AROUND THOSE TWO? “I’ve got a lot of respect for both Heather and Justin, so I’ll answer that part first. Justin is really an outside the box thinker and kind of runs in a different pack, which I appreciate. He brings viewpoints that maybe I wouldn’t have thought of. I can say that. I think that’s good, and Heather, she’s got her family name in this sport. She’s clearly very invested and has a son running in the sport and has a passion for it that I respect and appreciate as well. Altogether, it’s hard to pick one initiative that’s important. There are a lot of important initiatives. If there are two that stand out to me it’s the end of the season and how we continue to make it the best we can for our fans, whether it be the racetracks we go to or the schedule as a whole with respect to when the season ends and when it starts. I think that’s something that I’m really keen to try to bend a few ears on and the group as a whole, and, beyond that, I think what stands out a lot is just the garage personnel and relationships and culture that we have in trying to solidify it as a place to work, whether it be for team members or officials or what not and trying to make it the best place we can. Those two have probably taken the priority for me.”

THERE’S TALK OF THE NFL EXPANDING TO 18 GAMES THE SUPER BOWL MOVING. THAT COULD MAYBE CHANGE SOME THINGS FOR NASCAR AND WHEN THE SEASON STARTS. “Without getting in front of our skis here and everything that is somewhat a proprietary issue to discuss, but I think you’re on the right path. The world is changing around us and we have to continue to adapt to that, whether it be the Super Bowl moving or different opportunities that exist with our broadcast partners that didn’t exist before and just trying to maximize those opportunities and adapt to the world.”

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE CURRENT PACKAGE FOR BRISTOL? “The big guessing game is the tires. We went there last spring and the tires didn’t hold up very well. The dynamics of the race shifted fairly drastically and then we came back in the fall and the tires didn’t wear at all. That was another shift in the dynamics of the race, so trying to understand which one of those is going to be the case is probably the biggest question mark.”

WHAT DO YOU HAVE PLANNED FOR THE OFF WEEK? “A nice Easter celebration with my kids. We haven’t figured out exactly where, but we’re gonna have a good time.”

WHAT DOES THE ADDITION OF PREECE MEAN FOR RFK AND WHAT HAVE YOU SEEN OUT OF HIM? “I think Ryan is doing all the things he needs to do, whether that be on the track with results that are clear to see, or off the track with a lot of things that you don’t see and whether that’s different settings of meetings or his work ethic as a whole has been very high and we’re just trying to make sure that he’s surrounded with the right things to go with his work ethic that they can become potential advantages for him on the racetrack. He’s certainly putting in the effort. He’s highly focused and highly motivated and it’s nice to see him get the results out of that.”

A LOT OF THE PROBLEM WITH THROWBACK SCHEMES IS THAT THEY’RE TRADEMARKED. HOW DIFFICULT IS IT TO GET SOME OF THESE PAINT SCHEMES? “It’s a big lift, without a doubt, for the marketing and partnership teams that are inside all of these organizations to make it happen. There are a lot of conversations and it takes months of planning, maybe even years of planning in some cases to execute. I was having this conversation with Kevin Harvick a few weeks ago when we were talking about when he ran the 29 during the All-Star Race. I know that’s not this, but it’s calls with partners, it’s calls with trademarks and you kind of get to the point where you’re like, ‘I just want to go race.’ But when you do get the project done and you see it on the track or you hear from the fans, whether it be social media or wherever else it might be, when you’ve hit a good one, it’s definitely worth it.”

HAVE YOU EMBRACED AI AT ALL? “I think NASCAR has been pretty heavy in AI for a long time, it just maybe isn’t branded that way. If you took it to the AI world, they would clearly say it is. I think that for no small part of the last decade plus the use of AI and how the race cars are put together and how they’re set up has been gradually becoming more and more of a dominant force in the results that you see on any given weekend – to the point now where, particularly with the Next Gen car, where the race is more and more driven by how you bolt it together rather than component development. Using any type of artificial intelligence, I mean it moves the needle for us and we’re gonna continue to double down on that. We’re seeing more and more interest from AI partners in the sport and I suspect that it’s gonna be a big storyline for our sport for decades to come. It’s kind of like if you go back through the late 80s or early 90s when aerodynamics really came into NASCAR in a really heavy way. You don’t unlearn those things and now I look at artificial intelligence and what NASCAR is doing with it and the teams don’t really talk about it, particularly not publicly. They talk about it a lot within in the OEM circles. They talk about it a lot in the hiring practices in those types of settings, but particularly not within the media does NASCAR really talk about at the team level the importance of AI, but I can tell you every team on the track today is using some level of AI just to purely compete and the ones with the better tools are going to run better.”

YOU VISITED A LOCAL HOSPITAL EARLIER THIS WEEK. HOW DO YOU LIKE GETTING OUT IN THE COMMUNITIES AROUND THE TRACKS, AND WHEN YOU SEE KIDS OR ADULTS FIGHTING FOR YOUR HEALTH DOES IT GIVE YOU AN EXTRA FIRE TO PERFORM WELL? “It’s certainly a reminder of how fortunate we are when you have those opportunities to go to hospitals and see people who aren’t as well off. We get so caught up in our good weekends and our bad weekends and sometimes lose sight of the broader picture of just how fortunate we are just to be here. We probably wouldn’t be very good competitors if we just felt fortunate to be here though, so it’s probably pretty natural. To your point, it’s nice to get out in the community to see our fans, to tell our story. Big credit to NASCAR and their vision for the DAP program. I think it’s really moving the needle and inspiring a lot of people to do things that they wouldn’t have done otherwise. Being more involved in the community, I don’t want to take all the credit. Look at what the other drivers are doing. They’re doing as much or more, and I think you’re seeing that because of NASCAR’s commitment back to the drivers. It’s a great time in the sport. We spend a lot of time talking about what the sport doesn’t get right and very little time talking about what the sport does get right, and I think the drivers being involved in the community and engaging back with our fans is one of the things NASCAR does very well.”

CHEVROLET NCS AT DARLINGTON 1: Chase Elliott Media Availability Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DARLINGTON RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
APRIL 5, 2025

 Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 UniFirst Chevrolet and the No. 17 HENDRICKCARS.COM Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports, met with the media in advance of running double duty in the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series at Darlington Raceway.

Media Availability Quotes:

We’ve heard different drivers kind of speak throughout the week on the Xfinity Series race last week. I’m just curious your perspective on what you saw.

“Yeah, it was terrible. It was really bad. I don’t know what all has been said already, so I don’t want to add to the negativity of the week. But yeah, it wasn’t impressive at all, for sure. It was kind of embarrassing, you know, I think more than anything. We’re better than that and those guys are better than that. You just want to try to set a better example, I guess, on Sunday’s and hope that that gets taken to heart somewhere in there — that not doing things like that is a better route.

It wasn’t just like the last lap thing. It was just the whole race. The whole race was just chaos. They were running over each other with 75 laps to go, it seemed like. But anyways, I’m good on it. I think enough has probably been said.”

At what point in the year, or maybe now, is it when you start assessing who’s strong and who’s kind of legit championship contenders and teams, that kind of thing? Is it this now or is it later in the year?

“I think it’s all year, for sure. It’s still very early. It definitely is early in the season. It’s going to be the same crowd. It’s the same crowd every year.. we don’t have to beat around the bush. It’s going to be the same people that are going to be good in the last 15 weeks of the year. The people that are good right now are just going to get better. That’s just how it is. It will be the same crowd, as always, when we get down to it.”

You’ve been solid here in Cup but not necessarily spectacular compared to some other tracks. Is there something about Darlington perhaps that you’ve struggled to crack the code with here?

“Yeah, for sure. I love Darlington. I just haven’t gotten it to love me back. Maybe this week.. maybe I can talk it into liking me this week.”

What is it about this racetrack that we see even veterans struggle to master that high lane here more than anywhere else? We see the skill of Homestead and other places, but what is it about this track specifically that makes running against the wall so challenging?

“It’s very similar to Homestead in a lot of ways. I think what makes it different here is that Homestead has a very gradual entry. If you enter on the wall, it has this nice radius to the corner. And this place, the wall is kind of choppy and makes it hard to get against it just right at the perfect time. You’ve got the safer barrier that juts out there in (turn) three. All those things kind of play a role.

Obviously, the tire wear throughout a run here is extreme, just like it is at Homestead, too. It’s always a challenge, but I think probably just the radius of the corners makes it a little different.”

Looking back last weekend at Martinsville, I was just curious — some people said it was still kind of hard to pass, even with the tires that were wearing more. What’s your thoughts on the state of short track racing after quite a few now?

“I thought it was better. It seemed like it’s better. You definitely have to be really mindful of how you either take care of your tire or don’t at the beginning of the run. But I think we’re in a better place than we were in the past. When I look at it, I think the tire is a big piece of that. I think I told you all that last week — it seems like it matters quite a lot. It makes sense that that’s what touches the ground, and that’s a big deal. The car plays a role, for sure, and I think it has had improvements. But yeah, I don’t know that it’s where it exactly needs to be, but I’m just not exactly sure how much better we’re going to get it. We can only piece together so much. But look, motorsports is an aerodynamic game, and I think we just all need to understand that that’s just part of it now. We’re not going to run those tails at these places all the time. I don’t care if you’re going 70 mph in the center of the corner or 170 –- like it matters a lot, and clean air is going to be king. You just hope that there’s enough difference and enough challenge behind the wheel that you can do something different early in a run to make a difference in your car late, and I think as long as we achieve that, then we’re doing all we can do. I thought we did more of that in Martinsville. I think we could still have a step more of that. I personally thought the tire felt really good. I thought the tire was in a pretty good place.

We’d just love some more power. I think if you give some more power, you give guys an opportunity to make more mistakes and be harder on the tire. We have a bunch of gears to choose from, so you can downshift or not downshift, and I just think that gives you an opportunity to really screw up bigger, which I think would be good. If you can add to that and just make it to where guys who really are mindful of every aspect of the run would excel or fail.”

Obviously, a few years into this new car, there will be discussions about what’s next for the series. I was curious, now that we are in this spec car box, do you envision that probably being just the standard moving forward into the future generations?

“It seems that way. I don’t have a crystal ball by any means, but I think that we’re pretty deep down the road of the spec parts and the policing of things that way. Yeah, I think that’s the way NASCAR wants to go with it. I think they’ve made that very loud and clear, that this is the direction. I think everybody’s understanding of that.

What’s next? I don’t know. I think it’s in an OK place right now, but whatever changes come down the road, I don’t think it’s going to be much different than what we have now. So with that being said, everyone is just going to continuously get closer and closer and closer every year.

You’ll certainly still have your standouts, don’t get me wrong. There will always be a way to have a small advantage, but that advantage will become even more minute than it is today. We’re going to see more of that as time goes because there are no secrets in that garage. I don’t know if you all know this, but you have guys that leave one team and go to another team the next year.. like there are no secrets in there. Everyone knows everything about everybody all the time — what you’ve got going on with your car, who ran what setup last fall at all these places.. that’s just what it is. That’s just the world we live in. Charlotte is a small area, and the garage is even a smaller group of people. That’s just part of it. It just makes it more difficult to find little advantages here and there. You have to make sure that you’re perfect. You’ve got to be perfect. You’ve got to be really good on Saturday; have a good pit box on Sunday, not lose any spots on pit road. You’re just going to see more and more of that, in my opinion.”

I don’t remember the exact number, but I think it’s around 19 cars this weekend that are not running a throwback paint scheme. I’m sure you’ve seen the talk on social media on that the throwback weekend has lost its luster. I’m curious on where you stand on that. Do you feel like this weekend has lost luster over time?

“I thought I lost it about four or five years ago, so I was way too early to that conversation, I think.

Not to be a downer — I joked about this years ago, but if we kept going down the road, we’re going to be throwing it back to me in 2018. At some point, I think we’ve got to chill on it a little bit. I think we’ve rode the horse to death, and we tend to do that a little bit too much.”

Chase, growing up with your dad around the sport, seeing how drivers race back then, where did the sport go wrong with that? Is it the points format today? Is it the cars being too safe? The guys being so far removed these days from anything happening? Where do you think the sport went wrong with what we’re seeing out there?

“In what way?”

Just what we saw last Saturday in the Xfinity Series, especially with the younger drivers..

“I don’t know how to answer that in a professional manner, so I’m just probably not going to. There’s a lot of reasons and parts and pieces to that, and why I think it has come to that. You’ve got to sit back and kind of look at it from a 1,000 feet view and understand why things are the way they are.. the points, who’s driving and the paths. It’s a little bit of everything, so I don’t think we have time to go into all of it. For me, at the end of the day, we can sit here and talk about how embarrassing it was last week, or we can sit here and try to encourage guys to do better. So let’s just encourage people to do better and try to set a better example on Sunday’s. I really feel like throughout the entirety of this year, the Sunday races have been really good from that perspective. I thought that race at COTA – man, you couldn’t have a better example of how to race. And not just 20-year veterans, but those guys that were racing for the win, you had William (Byron) and Christopher (Bell), guys who were on the younger side of life in the series, that set an incredible example, I thought, for everyone else. I think we just need to watch that stuff and appreciate that more. We don’t have to have side-by-side crashes to the line to have a good race. We can have a good race and it go green to the end, or whatever. I think we need to celebrate some of those other things a little more than we celebrate the chaos, and I think that’s part of the reason why we went wrong.”

60 percent of your finishes at Bristol have been in the top-10. What do you attribute to that consistency?

“ Well I like Bristol.. I think that’s number one. I enjoy going up there. I think Alan (Gustafson) had a really good grasp on that track, really before I got there to work with him. And I think just over time, we have developed a solid base of the feel that I want, and the feel that he knows that I need and want in the car. So I would say a combination of all those things together. I thought we had a really solid race there last fall. I thought we were right in the hunt with Kyle (Larson) and had a shot at it there. I thought that was fun. I hope we can do more of that. I look forward to getting up there and trying to piece together a good day.”

Do you have anything exciting planned for the off-week?

“No, nothing exciting. No races or anything scheduled. I’m going to try to enjoy it. It’s a long road after that all the way to the end this year. I really try to reset; get the batteries recharged and ready to go to the final stretch.”

Chase, do you use the cool shirt? If you do, is there a race in particular that comes to mind where you’re really thankful to have it?

“I’m kind of one of the guys that goes back and forth. Some weeks I use it, some weeks I don’t.

Certainly, as we get to these summer months, you’re going to want it, for sure. I’m trying to think of a good example. This race, honestly. I mean, I feel like this race is always the first hot one of the year, it seems like. Certainly, the 500 mile race in the fall here.. it’s still pretty hot when we get back here. There are a bunch of races that you’re thankful to have that. Some weeks, not necessarily at all. You can kind of get through it. And other weeks, I do think it certainly helps your fatigue level when you get to the end of these things.”

The second thing I wanted to ask was — going back to what you said about trying to get Darlington to love you back, how much of it is circumstance of trying to get a finish the team deserves, or is there something you’re chasing here, balance or feel, that you just haven’t hit on?

“I was just joking, it’s totally me. It’s not the track. It’s me, not you, right? (laugh). It is definitely totally on me. I think just the feel that I need in the car. It’s been a hunt to try and find that and find what I want. I thought we had a nice week of prep this week; have a good game plan, I hope, and just kind of start practice on a high note.

This Xfinity race – it’s been a year since I’ve driven one of those things. Jumping back and forth, I always find it to be a little bit of a challenge. Looking forward to getting going over there. Hopefully those laps will help me just get kind of comfortable with the racetrack; visualize things how I think they need to be. And then when we get out there and in Cup practice, try to get going and get going quick.”

It’s certainly not uncharted waters for you guys at Hendrick to be atop the standings early in the season. All four of you guys are solidly top-10 in points. What do you attribute most to your ability consistently to get off to strong starts this season?

“The company as a whole has done a great job over the winter to build really, really fast race cars. I think there’s some areas that we can be better. I really don’t think we’re at our best, really any of us, honestly. So it’s encouraging to see that. We can pretty confidently say that – hey, these are flaws. These are areas that can certainly have improvement. That’s an exciting place to be, in my opinion, because there’s so much more racing left this year and opportunities to get where we want to be, and I think we can do that. The company’s in a good spot. Everybody’s pulling in the same direction, and we’ve got to keep that up.”

You mentioned how there’s a lot of movement in the garage these days, but your driver lineup, you guys have stayed intact now for half a decade. As the veteran driver in that stable, how would you say building that chemistry year-to-year with your teammates has benefited you guys to get to this point? “I just think we have a really good working relationship. None of us are best friends off the racetrack. You know, we don’t hang out.. not because we don’t like each other, we just kind of run in different circles. But we have a really good working relationship when we show up and we have our meetings. I think everybody’s open and honest and willing to help one another. We show each other a lot of respect on the racetrack, just kind of how it should be. Those guys give me respect. I’m going to give it back at least that much and probably then some.. that’s just how I am. I enjoy being around guys like that who are hungry and want to get the job done for their team, but also kind of have the bigger picture.. the big picture of just the company in mind and are willing to help us all get better together and be stronger as a four-car stable.”

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.

CHEVROLET NCS AT DARLINGTON 1: Austin Hill Media Availability Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DARLINGTON RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
APRIL 5, 2025

 Austin Hill, driver of the No. 33 United Rentals Chevrolet and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing, met with the media in advance of running double duty in the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series at Darlington Raceway.

How would you describe the tone of the meeting with NASCAR?

“I would say the tone of the meeting was firm, but they got their point across and they did it in a really good way. So I think that was good for everyone in the series to hear, you know, the different sides of it with all three that were in there.

A lot of great things were said about what we could do better going forward. I stand strongly on the side of — for whatever reason, when the Xfinity Series go to Martinsville, we just lose our minds. But everywhere else, we’re the best racing in NASCAR and I strongly stand behind that.. that we are the best series in NASCAR. Just when you go to Martinsville, we look like we don’t know what we’re doing.

So we’re going to get through it. We have, whatever it is, seven or eight months before we go back to Martinsville. I’m hoping a lot of things, you know, change between now and then.

I don’t think that just one meeting is going to change the outcome of the playoff race in Martinsville. So, you know, it might be one of those cases where we need to have multiple meetings throughout the year just to reiterate some of the stuff. Even if things aren’t happening on the racetrack, even if it’s just a — say we’re all racing clean and we’re all doing the right things, but I think we got to keep it in everyone’s head that, you know, race the way you want to be raced and race with respect, and I thought that that’s kind of where we ended the conversation today and I thought it was all great.”

As a veteran in the series, what do you see your role in doing this and taking sort of a stance for people that might be in their first year in the series?

“Yeah, so Justin Allgaier and I had a really great conversation outside of the tent. Once he got done talking to you guys and all, we were walking back and I stopped him and we had a really good conversation. I think that him and I can both bring some really great things to the table. You know, Justin’s very respected on the racetrack and but he’s also super aggressive but he does it in a sneaky way. It’s kind of crazy to watch how he does it sometimes. He’s super aggressive but he does it in a good way.. in a sneaky way.

I’m on the other end, where I’m super aggressive and, you know, you push on me, I push on you, that type of thing and it just is what it is. I try to handle my business on the racetrack and after the race is over. I’ve done so many things wrong in my career up until this point and I felt like from, you know, last year into this year, I’ve kind of changed my mind set a little bit on just getting out of the car and talking to the media and just saying random things. Like there’s so many things that I would love to go back and take back that I’ve said throughout my career, but you can’t go back and change it, right? You can just move forward and so that’s what I’m doing.

I’m kind of taking a different role on things that I say outside of the race car versus things that I do inside the race car. In saying all that, I think that Justin and I can bring a lot to the table on trying to lead the Xfinity Series. I think that him and I, both being veterans of the sport, he has different ways of looking at it than what I do but I think that we both can kind of bring our own perspective in a way and kind of reach both, you know, eras of drivers, as far as the super aggressive ones and maybe the ones that race extremely clean, whatever. I think that him and I can give a lot of feedback to the drivers.”

Some people were somewhat critical of the way you drove in that race. Last week you said the one thing you felt bad about was wrecking, the wreck that got Jesse (Love). After looking. did you see anything else that you feel like you need to feel bad about?

“No — so I said this in the meeting, actually. In our meeting that we just had; they opened it to the floor. Justin (Allgaier) spoke first and I spoke second on some of the areas that we need to do a better job of or where we stand or where we feel like we stand. I basically said kind of the same thing I was just saying a second ago — race the way you want to be raced. I said look — if you go in there and you are lifting somebody’s rear tires off the ground four or five different times and you’re not wrecking them but you’re using them as a brake pedal and you’re knocking them out of the way, out of the groove, to get by them and you’re doing it on entry.. if you’re doing it across the middle of the corner, you’re faster than that guy. No one should get mad if that guy kind of gives you a little shot across the middle of the corner. That’s ‘rubbin’ is racing’ at its finest. That’s Martinsville. That’s the ‘bump and run’ type thing. But if you’re just going in there and you’re using that guy as a brake pedal and it’s eight tires are better than four and you’re lifting the rear tires off the ground, and that happens four or five, six times with the same guy, eventually that guy’s going to break and he’s not going to put up with it anymore. I will say this, too, I completely misjudged getting into the back of the No. 16 (Christian Eckes). You can go back and listen to my interview after Martinsville. Right when I got into the No. 16, I got free with the rear tires and I was starting to like wheel hop. So then I got off the brake pedal for a second, I got back to it, and I didn’t realize that the No. 16 was already really tight to the No. 2 (Jesse Love) and the No. 2 was really tight to the No. 1 (Carson Kvapil) and it just caused a chain reaction. So yeah, I felt really bad about the situation and how it went down. Looking back at it, I probably would have waited an extra corner and done things a little differently, but I would have at least gave the No. 16 a little bit of a nudge and shot him up the racetrack into the second or third lane to show like — hey man, you’ve lifted my rear tires off the ground four or five different times now, I’m not going to put up with it. Somebody else on the racetrack might put up with it, but I’m not.

And then other thing — I mean I didn’t really get into, there was no other real contact that really happened between me or anyone else, other than the No. 1 cut across my nose down the front stretch and I went as far left as I wanted to and I finally just straightened up the wheel and I’m like, I’m not turning left no more, and he kind of drove across my nose. I could have lifted in that instance but he had already blocked me three or four different times. So again, if you block me three or four different times, at some point I’m not just going to keep turning left and let you keep that spot. So I stand strongly on how the race went, as far as my part in it. I completely misjudged the No. 16 mishap and I wish I wouldn’t have taken the No. 2 and the No. 1 out. But that was, I mean honestly, that was just a racing error on my part.”

You say that Martinsville is its own kind of animal, but this is your only trip to Darlington this year as opposed to two, so do you think there will be any more urgency here today?

“I don’t think so. Just because of it being a bigger racetrack, you know, it’s a mile and whatever — I think that us having the meeting, the drivers talking amongst themselves.. I mean I’ve had great conversations with everyone at Kaulig Racing. We had a conversation with RCR and Kaulig. We all got together down at Welcome, and we really feel strongly about the ‘One Welcome’ thing. Like it’s a real thing and so we all hashed it out. We talked about it. We had everyone in there talking about the situation, and I thought it was a great conversation to be had. I think it’s going to help us propel forward into being more of that ‘One Welcome’ scenario. And I think that all the other drivers that have talked.. I’ve talked to Justin after the meeting. He said he had a great conversation with all of his JR Motorsports drivers, Sammy Smith and all those guys, and so I think it’s going to calm down a lot more than you think today. We’ll have to wait and see but I think today is going to be a very — we’re all going to be still aggressive and trying to win the race but it’s going to be a very respectful race.”

If last week was over the line, then how is it going to be judged when we go to Martinsville in October, knowing likely that one spot will likely get you into the Championship Four?

“Well, NASCAR made it very, very clear that they don’t want to be in the ‘ball and strike’ business. They don’t want to be making all these calls. So they said for us to help them with that. They also said that if they had to step in and start making calls, black flagging people, parking people and doing all those things, that they’ll do it. So I agree with what NASCAR’s stance is at but I also think that we as the Xfinity Series have to do a better job going forward when we go back to Martinsville and not put it in NASCAR’s hands.

We don’t want NASCAR to get involved and to have to make these ‘ball and strike’ calls. We don’t want that as drivers. We want to be able to race and beat and bang and do all these things but do it in a respectful way. So there’s a lot of things that we all got to look in the mirror, even myself included. We all as drivers have to look in the mirror and figure out what we can do to move forward and not have NASCAR get involved.”

Are you excited about your first start here in Darlington in the Cup Series? I looked at your five race schedule. Chicago Street Course is on there. Why did you pick that particular one?

“A lot of it was sponsor driven. I did make a comment that I wanted to run a road course. I want to run Watkins Glen, honestly, but at the end of the day, United Rentals (Chicago) is just a great venue for them and all that. So Chicago just ended up being the place. I had some really good success at Chicago last year, so being able to go back there for a second time is going to be great. I was able to run the Cup race there, and it was raining, then it stopped raining and it got dry. We were running like 12th or something towards the very end of the race and ended up getting taken out and getting into turn one. I think it’s going to be one of those races that we can do well at. Darlington has been one of these racetracks that I’ve been so close to many times on the Xfinity Series and the Truck Series at winning here and I’ve missed it by one spot multiple times. I really was strongly about wanting to come to Darlington and it ended up just working out.

And then obviously, United Rentals and RCR wanted me to do some superspeedway stuff. The Cup Series is so much different when you’re superspeedway racing versus the Xfinity side, just the way the cars drive and the way the drag is and all those sorts of things. I’ve been wanting to do some type of short track, and so Bristol was one of those places that they picked that they just thought was a good place for us.

So yeah, I think I have a really good schedule for the five races. I’m going to learn a lot. A lot of different racetracks that we go to, so different techniques and everything that have to be shown. I’m excited to get in the Cup car today and see what we can do with our No. 33 United Rentals Chevrolet.”

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.

Hannah Bell Builds Off Solid Late Model Finish, Aims Higher in Return to Hickory Motor Speedway

Driver of the No. 05 Alliance Packaging Chevrolet eyes top-five run in second start of the season this weekend

HICKORY, N.C.: All things considered, Hannah Bell’s return to Late Model racing last weekend at Hickory Motor Speedway (N.C.) was a strong step forward.

Piloting the No. 05 Alliance Packaging Chevrolet for Performance Vehicle Works, Bell showed steady progress — from Friday’s test session through Saturday’s practice and all the way to the checkered flag.

Despite a flat tire during the race, Bell battled back to earn an eighth-place finish in the Paramount Auto Group Limited Late Models “Big 10” Racing Challenge.

Looking ahead, Bell is focused on building momentum from her Hickory performance as she eyes the rest of the season with confidence. With her team at Performance Vehicle Works working hard to dial in the No. 05 machine, Bell is eager to keep improving and competing at a high level.

“We learned a lot last weekend,” Bell said. “Getting back behind the wheel and making steady gains with every session felt really good. Even with the flat tire, we stayed in the fight, and I’m proud of the way the team came together. I’m excited for what’s ahead.”

Since taking the checkered flag on March 29, Bell has been hard at work behind the scenes—reviewing notes, studying video, and using every available resource to better prepare for her second race of the season on April 5.

Her focus and determination haven’t gone unnoticed by the team, who continue to fine-tune the No. 05 Chevrolet to match Bell’s growing confidence behind the wheel.

“She’s all in,” said Performance Vehicle Works program manager Timmy McKichan. “Every time she gets out of the car, she’s asking questions, digging into the data, and doing the work. That kind of commitment is going to pay off.”

“As a driver, there’s always something to improve, and I’ve been taking every bit of feedback to heart,” Bell added. “I want to come into April 5 sharper, smarter, and ready to push even harder. We’ve got a great car, a great team, and I’m more motivated than ever.”

With race day fast approaching, Bell is staying laser-focused on execution—lap by lap and session by session — as she aims to build on the progress made at Hickory.

“It’s important to have another clean weekend,” Bell said. “If we can continue to make strides, we’ll keep inching up the leaderboard. The team worked hard for me throughout the weekend, and I want to do my job to deliver behind the wheel.

“Another top-10 would be great, but if we can finish better and perhaps earn a top-five finish, we’ll be in good shape for our next race.”

Bell’s Limited Late Model schedule will continue to be supported by her long-term partner, Alliance Packaging.

For more on Hannah Bell, please like her on Facebook (Van Alst Motorsports) and follow her on Instagram (@Hgbell) and TikTok (@HannahBell05).

Racing begins at Hickory Motor Speedway on Saturday night, April 5, 2025, beginning at 7:00 p.m. ET with coverage available on FloRacing.com.