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LANGDON EXTENDS TOP FUEL POINTS LEAD AFTER SEMIFINALS RUN AT POMONA

POMONA, Calif. (March 30, 2025) – Shawn Langdon advanced the farthest of Team Toyota in Sunday afternoon’s NHRA Winternationals at In-N-Out Pomona Dragstrip, making the semifinals in Top Fuel. Langdon, who won the Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty Challenge on Saturday, had two solid runs to begin eliminations, including a 3.668 elapsed time in round one, before falling to Tony Stewart in the semifinals. Langdon’s effort on Sunday helped him extend his Top Fuel points lead heading to Las Vegas in two weeks.

Doug Kalitta was the other Toyota Top Fuel Dragster to advance out of the first round, running a career-best speed in round one of 338.34 mph.

The Toyota GR Supra Funny Cars of Ron Capps, J.R. Todd and Bobby Bode were eliminated in round one on Sunday.

The NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series returns to action in two weeks at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for the Four-Wide Nationals.

Toyota Post-Race Recap
NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series
In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip
NHRA Winternationals
Race 3 of 20

TOYOTA TOP FUEL FINISHING POSITIONS 

NameCarFinal ResultRound-by-Round
Shawn LangdonKalitta Air Careers Toyota Top Fuel DragsterSemifinalsW (3.668) v. I. Zetterstrom (3.806) W (3.691) v. J. Hart (11.965) L (3.835) v. T. Stewart (3.723)
Doug KalittaMac Tools Toyota Top Fuel DragsterSecond RoundW (3.660) v. S. Palmer (3.852) L (4.456) v. T. Stewart (3.702)
Steve TorrenceCAPCO Contractors Toyota Top Fuel DragsterFirst RoundL (Red light violation) v. J. Salinas (3.716)
Justin AshleySCAG Power Equipment Toyota Top Fuel DragsterFirst RoundL (4.536) v. J. Hart (3.675)
Antron BrownMatco Tools Toyota Top Fuel DragsterFirst RoundL (5.253) v. T. Stewart (3.713)

TOYOTA FUNNY CAR FINISHING POSITIONS 

NameCarFinal ResultRound-by-Round
J.R. ToddDHL Toyota GR Supra Funny CarFirst RoundL (4.621) v. D. Wilkerson (4. 165)
Ron CappsNAPA Auto Care Toyota GR Supra Funny CarFirst RoundL (4.989) v. S. Hyde (3.886)
Bobby BodeDC Motorsports Toyota GR Supra Funny CarFirst RoundL (3.883) v. P. Lee (3.842)

*= Non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

SHAWN LANGDON, Kalitta Air Careers Toyota Top Fuel Dragster, Kalitta Motorsports

TF Final Result: Semifinals

How would you assess your day today at Pomona?

“We had high expectations of winning today, but obviously, all in all, it was a great weekend for Kalitta Air, DAYCO, Revchem, SealMaster and Toyota. We made it to the semifinals, had back-to-back Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty challenge wins and Doug (Kalitta) won the Callout (Top Fuel All-Star Callout). Team Kalitta leaves Pomona first and second in (the) points, so we have no complaints. We had a little bit of misfortune there in the semifinals dropping the cylinder at the step, but we’ll get that fixed and head to (Las) Vegas. It’s a great time to be at Kalitta Motorsports, and we’re ready to go to Las Vegas.”

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.

Preece Posts Third Straight Top 10 Run to Lead Ford at Martinsville

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Cook Out 400 — Martinsville Speedway
Sunday, March 30, 2025

Ford Unofficial Finishing Results

7th – Ryan Preece
8th – Joey Logano
10th – Todd Gilliland
11th – Ryan Blaney
16th – Zane Smith
25th – Chris Buescher
27th – Brad Keselowski
30th – Noah Gragson
31st – Cody Ware
33rd – Josh Berry
34th – Cole Custer
36th – Casey Mears
38th – Austin Cindric

RYAN PREECE, No. 60 Fastenal Ford Mustang Dark Horse – THIRD STRAIGHT TOP 10 FINISH. HOW DOES THAT FEEL? “I didn’t expect that one. Honestly, it all started with me messing up in qualifying and putting us back there. Ultimately, we got some great stage points and some great calls and great adjustments on the box and we got this Fastenal Ford Mustang where it needed to be. We’ve got some work to do to be able to drive through like some other cars do, but I think we’ve got some good ideas and obviously a little luck went our way today. I’m proud of everybody on this Fastenal Ford Mustang and everybody at RFK. We’ve just got to keep working and keep grinding.”

YOU HAD OVER A 100 LAP RUN TO END THE RACE, WHICH SHOWS SOME STRENGTH. “Absolutely. All of our Ford Mustangs are really good. Honestly, they made the right adjustment when it mattered. There are some guys that hit it early and then they fell off. For us, we were at our best there at the end, so I’m just proud of everybody. I’m happy. We’re getting on a roll. At first, this is a place I wanted to take advantage of for points because I felt like Martinsville is in my wheelhouse, so I’m happy we did. I hate talking about points, but every bit matters.”

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – A LONG TYPICAL DAY AT MARTINSVILLE. “It seems like it’s been a typical 2025. A pretty solid car and then something happens. Overall, I feel the guys gave me a really fast Shell/Pennzoil Mustang, one that was possible to win with if we got the track position. We went for that stage win early in the race in Stage 1. I think that was the right call. We got ourselves back in the ballpark there and the long haul was pretty good. It was just kind of like a pick them off one at a time kind of thing and then Ross just sticking it in a tight spot. He did it to me on the restart before. I can’t even blame Briscoe for shipping him. I think he got himself in a bind trying to ship him. He just races like a jackass every week and I keep paying the price. I’m sick of paying the price.”

IS THERE ANYTHING TO SAY TO HIM? “Not at the moment. Nothing good.”

TODD GILLILAND, No. 34 Colortech Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “I felt like my team did a really good job. We didn’t make any mistakes all day and capitalized on others mistakes and just kind of chipped away at it and made our way forward. We struggled with our balance a little bit and just overall grip, and then that last run my guys did a really good job getting our car a lot better and I was able to pick off one or two guys on all those restarts and then kind of settle in there in ninth. It was tougher to pass once you started getting to go, but I was happy with it. We managed our stuff well and managed our whole race well.”

YOU WERE ABLE TO HOLD ON THAT LAST LONG RUN AND MAINTAIN A SPOT IN THE TOP 10. DO YOU FEEL YOUR TEAM IS ON THE RIGHT TRACK? “Absolutely. It’s nice to get on the right track after the last couple of weeks we’ve had. I wrecked our car at Vegas and finished 30th and then last week we ran 30th pretty much all day, so I’m just super proud of my guys. We knew this was gonna be a good one and I feel super confident when we come to Martinsville in myself, so we did a good job of executing all week. My pit crew did a really good job because they kept us in the game all day. It was a full team effort.”

Rick Ware Racing Scores First Victories of 2025

RWR Riders Briar Bauman and Chase Saathoff Sweep
American Flat Track SuperTwins and Singles Races in Georgia

SENOIA, Ga. (March 30, 2025) – Rick Ware Racing (RWR) scored its first victories of 2025 by sweeping the slate of Progressive American Flat Track races Saturday night at the Senoia Short Track in Georgia.

Briar Bauman won the Mission AFT SuperTwins race by taking the lead on the penultimate lap after coming from ninth on the starting grid, riding his No. 3 RWR/Parts Plus/Latus Motors Harley-Davidson XG750R to victory by .265 of a second ahead of fellow Harley-Davidson rider Brandon Robinson. It gave the manufacturer an emphatic 1-2 finish, and it was Harley-Davidson’s first win with the XG750R since its original debut in 2016.

The 29-year-old Bauman earned his 27th career SuperTwins win and his fifth with RWR, as the two-time Grand National Champion came to RWR in 2023.

In a prelude to Bauman’s win, Chase Saathoff took the victory in AFT Singles presented by KICKER. The rider of the No. 88 RWR/Parts Plus Honda CRF450R also started ninth, and Saathoff used the high line around the .25-mile dirt oval to take the lead less than two minutes into the race. Despite constant pressure from Yamaha rider Tom Drane, Saathoff held the top spot, taking the checkered flag by .312 of a second.

The victory was Saathoff’s first win with RWR and the fourth of his career. The 19-year-old joined RWR this year after spending 2022-2024 as an independent AFT Singles rider.

“Each race was extremely exciting. They both came down to the last lap. It was really hard fought,” said team owner Rick Ware.

“Both of these teams have a lot of new people, and we’ve got different bikes, and we’re all building this together. To have this kind of success so early in the season is critical.

“In the first two races of the season at Daytona, we learned some things and now we’re fine tuning. We’re at the beginning of growing this platform. To get Harley-Davidson in victory lane and to have both Briar and Chase racing for wins and running for a championship in their respective classes is really important.

“We’re committed to AFT and committed to racing, and success like what we had last night at Senoia is great for our partners and all that we’re trying to do.”

FS1 will recap all of the action from the Senoia Short Track on Sunday, April 6 at 10 a.m. EDT.

Progressive American Flat Track returns to action on Saturday, April 26 at the Ventura Short Track in Ventura, California. Bauman comes into the event second in the Mission AFT SuperTwins championship standings, one point behind leader Dallas Daniels. Saathoff also holds second in AFT Singles presented by KICKER. He is seven points behind leader Drane.

About Rick Ware Racing:

Rick Ware has been a motorsports mainstay for more than 40 years. It began at age 6 when the third-generation racer began his driving career and has since spanned four wheels and two wheels on both asphalt and dirt. Competing in the SCCA Trans Am Series and other road-racing divisions led Ware to NASCAR in the early 1980s, where he finished third in his NASCAR debut – the 1983 Warner W. Hodgdon 300 NASCAR Grand American race at Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway. More than a decade later, injuries would force Ware out of the driver’s seat and into fulltime team ownership. In 1995, Rick Ware Racing was formed, and with wife Lisa by his side, Ware has since built his eponymous organization into an entity that competes fulltime in the elite NASCAR Cup Series while simultaneously campaigning successful teams in the Top Fuel class of the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series, Progressive American Flat Track and FIM World Supercross Championship (WSX).

GMG Racing Wins SRO McLaren Trophy America Series Debut Race Saturday at Sonoma Raceway

SONOMA, California (March 30, 2025) – The majority of key moments in history happen only once, and GMG Racing and its pair of new McLaren Artura Trophy teams made the most of a milestone motorsports opportunity Saturday at Sonoma Raceway with a double-pole and race-winning performance in the inaugural series race of the new SRO McLaren Trophy America championship.

John Capestro-Dubets and co-driver Andrew Chinnici, in his professional competition debut, drove the No. 4 GMG Racing McLaren Trophy Evo to a convincing overall and Pro-Am-class victory from the pole.

The winners were joined on the overall victory lane podium by GMG Racing driver and team founder and principal James Sofronas, who finished second in the Am division and fifth overall in the No. 14 GMG Racing McLaren Trophy Evo.

“Getting the first overall win was certainly special, because there’s only one opportunity to do that,” Sofronas said. “I’m incredibly proud of the team for their efforts and the long nights that definitely took place leading up to today. Despite zero testing on these cars after receiving them a week ago, the GMG boys – with a lot of support from McLaren Newport Beach – hustled hard to get them ready. I didn’t have a doubt in my mind that we would have strong cars.”

The pole-winning No. 4 took advantage of a fast and trouble-free run up front with both Chinnici and Capestro-Dubets at the wheel. In the team’s mandatory pit stop, “JCD” took the No. 4 over from Chinnici and charged back to the front with just under 10 minutes remaining to retake a lead he would hold until the checkered flag. The No. 4 crossed the finish line with a 2.498 seconds margin of victory.

It’s definitely feeling really good right now,” Capestro-Dubets said. “Andrew put me in a great spot to bring it home, so I’m just very thankful that it ended the way it did. He worked really hard to be here, I’ve worked really hard to be here, and we wouldn’t be here without our car owner Kevin King making all of this possible. This win is for him. I’m so grateful to be part of the debut victory and be a part of this brand new series. It’s just an incredible experience, and I can’t say thank you enough to the GMG Racing family.”

Chinnici has been impressive throughout what is incredibly his first major race weekend. Prior to Sonoma, he has only raced sporadically the last few years in SCCA and Skip Barber competition, but is well familiar with GMG as one of the team’s driver coaches at its headquarters operation at The Thermal Club.

“Andrew is one of our driver coaches and does a lot of work at the Porsche Experience Center, so his car control is incredibly impressive,” Sofronas said. “His teaching techniques work well with our clientele, many of whom are jumping into motorsports for the first time. We knew he would be up to this challenge.”

Coming home a winner in a debut weekend he was expecting to be a learning process amazed even Chinnici.

“It’s incredible,” Chinnici said. “It’s amazing. Leading up to the weekend, you hear stories from people saying ‘hey, don’t do that, it’s too short notice,’ but this has just been incredible. It’s blown my expectations out of the water and is super impressive by GMG Racing. I have not raced a lot. This is actually my first professional race. I’m a big fan, have done a lot of SIM racing, and I have some natural talent. Thankfully, I also have had a lot of really supportive mentors that have made me better and better.”

Chinnici prevailed in a hard-fought battle for the first-ever McLaren Trophy pole earlier on Saturday with a top time of 1:38.752 (86.929 mph) on his final flying lap of the session. He edged Sofronas by a scant 0.069 of a second for the all-GMG Racing front row.

Sofronas won the pole in the Am class, turning the second fastest overall time in qualifying, to join an impressive Chinnici for a GMG Racing front row lockout. The twin GMG McLarens led their respective classes in the race’s opening minutes before Sofronas dashed into the pits early to serve the required mandatory stop.

Unfortunately, Sofronas lost valuable time after a pit stop delay due to timing technical miscue. He returned to the race out of the Am lead and in sixth overall. Keeping the pressure on, Sofronas moved to second in Am and cracked the overall top-five before the checkered flag.

“It was a little unfortunate about my situation,” Sofronas said. “But for the most part, we had the pace but we had a technical error with our timer in the pits and we were in there way too long. You live and learn, and these things happen, but it won’t happen again today to end the first McLaren Trophy weekend on a high note. What I love about the McLaren Series is that the manufacturer is amazing. They put on a great event for all the drivers and guests last night, they do a great job with hospitality, they are very committed to motorsports, and the team and the managerial staff have been very supportive. We look forward to running these cars the rest of the season and building our program.”

The pair of McLarens at Sonoma are the first of five Arturas that GMG Racing takes delivery in the coming weeks. King, owner and the main “Am” driver of No. 4, missed the Sonoma opener to tend to a personal matter.

“Kevin now has the first-ever North American McLaren trophy-winning car,” Sofronas said. “We expect to see him for the next race at COTA, but this was nice for Andrew and JCD to deliver the win for Kevin. It always makes it a little more special when your car shows performance and takes the overall win. We’re looking forward to having Kevin back and developing these cars even more. I think we’ll get them even faster.”

Sunday’s second and final McLaren Trophy America 50-minute race of the Sonoma weekend is scheduled to start at 10:25 a.m. PDT.

All of the Sonoma weekend’s race can be viewed live on MAVTV and the GTWorld YouTube channel. at youtube.com/GTWorld.

About GMG Racing: Founded in 2001,GMGRacing quickly established itself as North America’s premier performance tuning facility. What began as a small 1,200 sq. ft. shop, maintaining two race cars, has grown into a state-of-the-art performance tuning, racing and service facility relocated last year to The Thermal Club and a 28,000 sq. ft. trackside motorsports facility. The staff, attention to detail and passion are what make GMG the choice of professionals and enthusiasts worldwide. GMG, in its early years, was located directly across the street from Porsche Motorsport North America (PMNA). This close proximity allowed GMG to build a strong relationship with the legendary racing brand which has helped the company support its customers to the highest level possible. From club racing to Sebring, Daytona, Montreal, COTA and The Thermal Club, GMG can take you as far as you want to go. More information can be found at www.gmgracing.com.

Austin Hill steals Xfinity victory at Martinsville in thrilling overtime shootout

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Austin Hill capped off a race-long event mired with a series of on-track carnages and contacts by weaving his way through a final-lap carnage to score an upset NASCAR Xfinity Series victory in the US Marine Corps 250 at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday, March 29.

The 30-year-old Hill from Winston, Georgia, led only the final lap of 256 over-scheduled laps in an event where he started in third place and kept his No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet Camaro entry intact. Through 14 caution periods that spanned over 100 laps while a bevy of competitors were involved in carnages, Hill, who rallied from igniting a late-race incident that involved his teammate Jesse Love, restarted in seventh place during the event’s lone overtime shootout.

Then, after navigating his way up to sixth place at the start of the final lap, he capitalized on a final-lap run-in involving Taylor Gray and Sammy Smith to rub his way past Justin Allgaier and grab the lead on the final corner. With carnage ensuing behind, Hill would proceed to motor to his second Xfinity victory of the 2025 season and cash in on both his first Dash 4 Cash bonus and a centennial victory for Richard Childress Racing.

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring on Friday, March 28, rookie Connor Zilisch notched his second Xfinity pole position of the 2025 season and his first on a short-track venue with a pole-winning lap at 95.213 mph in 19.888 seconds. Joining Zilisch on the front row was teammate Carson Kvapil, the latter of whom posted his best qualifying lap at 95.089 mph in 19.914 seconds.

Prior to the event, the following names that included Jesse Love, Thomas Annunziata, Myatt Snider, Greg Van Alst, Carson Ware and Jeb Burton started at the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments made to their respective entries.

When the green flag waved and the race started, Connor Zilisch muscled his No. 88 Carolina Carports Chevrolet Camaro entry ahead with a strong launch from the inside lane. Zilisch would proceed to lead through the first two turns and the backstretch while Austin Hill battled Carson Kvapil for the runner-up spot. As the field behind battled amid two-stacked lanes, Zilisch led the first lap.

Over the next four laps, Zilisch extended his lead to more than a second while teammate Kvapil fended off Hill to claim sole possession of the runner-up spot. Behind, Justin Allgaier and Brandon Jones trailed in the top five while Harrison Burton, Sammy Smith, rookie William Sawalich, newcomer Corey Day and Sam Mayer pursued in the top 10. Amid a series of battles that was ensuing within the mid-pack region, Zilisch retained the lead by more than one-and-a-half seconds at the Lap 10 mark.

Through the first 20 scheduled laps, Zilisch was leading by nearly two seconds over teammate Kvapil while Jones, Allgaier and Hill trailed in the top five. By then, Harrison Burton, Sawalich, Taylor Gray, Sammy Smith, and Aric Almirola were racing in the top 10. As Zilisch proceeded to lead by Lap 30, Almirola was up to eighth place ahead of Sawalich and Sammy Smith while Gray moved up to sixth place. Meanwhile, Corey Day, Sam Mayer, Ryan Sieg, rookie Christian Eckes and rookie Dean Thompson trailed in the top 15 ahead of rookie Daniel Dye, Sheldon Creed, Anthony Alfredo, Josh Williams and rookie Nick Sanchez.

Just past the Lap 30 mark, Zilisch stabilized his lead to more than a second over teammate Kvapil while Jones, Allgaier and Gray raced in the top five ahead of Austin Hill, Almirola, Harrison Burton, Sawalich and Sammy Smith. Another 15 laps later, Zilisch continued to lead by more than a second over teammate Kvapil and he retained the advantage at the Lap 50 mark.

On Lap 53, the event’s first caution flew when Corey Day, who was making a move beneath Harrison Burton for eighth place, got sideways entering the first turn and made contact with Burton. As a result, both went up the track and made contact with the wall. Despite sustaining damage to their respective entries, both Day and Burton managed to continue. The caution for the duo’s incident was enough for the first stage period scheduled to conclude on Lap 60 to officially conclude under caution as Zilisch claimed his first Xfinity stage victory of the 2025 campaign. Kvapil settled in second ahead of Jones, Allgaier and Almirola while Gray, Hill, Sammy Smith, Christian Eckes and Dean Thompson followed suit in the top 10, respectively.

Under the stage break, the lead lap field peeled off the track to pit road for a first round of pit service. Following the pit stops, Brandon Jones exited pit road first ahead of Allgaier and Zilisch while Kvapil, Gray, Almirola, Sammy Smith, Eckes, Hill and Sawalich followed suit, respectively.

The second stage period started on Lap 67 as Jones and Allgaier occupied the front row. At the start, Jones used the inside lane to rocket ahead of Allgaier through the first two turns. Jones would proceed to lead through the backstretch and the final set of turns before he then led the following lap. Behind Jones, Zilisch battled teammate Allgaier for second and Gray followed suit while Almirola, Kvapil, Eckes and Sammy Smith battled in front of a stacked field for a top-five spot. With the field still stacked in two lanes, Jones led through the Lap 70 mark.

Through Lap 75 and with a series of on-track battles ensuing within the field, Jones was leading by two-tenths of a second over Zilisch while Gray, Allgaier and Almirola pursued in the top five. Amid Zilisch’s challenge to reclaim the top spot, Jones maintained the lead over the next five laps.

Then on Lap 80, the caution flew when Garrett Smithley, who was racing towards the tail end of the field, spun on the frontstretch as he was narrowly dodged by the leaders Jones and Zilisch, but the latter two would end up making contact. During the caution period, Jones surrendered the lead to pit his No. 20 Menards Toyota Supra entry for repairs to the left-rear entry, which was damaged after he was hit by Zilisch while both were trying to dodge Smithley spinning. Despite sustaining right-front damage, Zilisch remained on track and he re-inherited the lead.

As the event restarted under green on Lap 88, teammates Zilisch and Allgaier dueled for the lead through the first two turns and the backstretch. Both continued to duel as Allgaier barely led the following lap from the outside lane. After dueling with Zilisch, Allgaier, who was racing from the outside lane, would then rocket his No. 7 BRANDT Chevrolet Camaro entry into the lead while exiting the backstretch on Lap 90. As Allgaier led, a flurry of two- and three-wide action ensued within the field.

On Lap 93, however, Zilisch reassumed the lead from Allgaier through Turns 3 and 4. Seconds later, the caution returned when rookie Dean Thompson, who was racing in the top-20 mark, spun in Turn 1. During the caution period, some led by Allgaier pitted their respective entries while the rest led by Zilisch remained on the track.

The start of the following restart on Lap 101 featured Zilisch rocketing away from Hill, Kvapil and the field through the first two turns and the backstretch. With Zilisch leading the following lap, Kvapil and Hill fiercely dueled for second until the former rocketed ahead with the spot. Behind, rookie Daniel Dye trailed in fourth ahead of Sawalich and Sanchez while Zilisch proceeded to lead at the Lap 105 mark.

By Lap 110, Zilisch was out in front by more than a second over teammate Kvapil while Dye, Sawalich and Sanchez pursued in the top five. Behind Hill, Josh Williams, Blaine Perkins, Brennan Poole and Almirola were in the top 10 ahead of Brad Perez, Kris Wright and Jeb Burton, while Allgaier was mired back in 14th.

When the second stage period concluded on Lap 120, Zilisch claimed his second consecutive stage victory of the event. Kvapil followed suit in second ahead of Sawalich, Dye and Sanchez while Almirola, Josh Williams, Allgaier, Gray and Blaine Perkins were scored in the top 10, respectively.

During the stage break, some led by Zilisch pitted while the rest led by Almirola and Allgaier, who pitted during the previous caution period, remained on the track.

With 118 laps remaining, the final stage period commenced as Almirola and Allgaier occupied the front row. At the start, Almirola launched his No. 19 Young Life Toyota Supra entry ahead from the inside lane while Allgaier briefly stumbled to launch from the outside lane. Amid Allgaier’s stumble that briefly caused the field to both stack and fan out, Almirola muscled ahead through the first two turns and the backstretch. In the process, Gray assumed second place while Allgaier was being pressured by Creed for third place.

Then, with 116 laps remaining, Gray made his move beneath teammate Almirola and overtook him for the lead entering the backstretch. As Gray led, Creed, Allgaier and Sammy Smith raced in the top five while Zilisch, who sustained front nose damage, was strapped in 12th place and mired in heavy traffic.

Five laps later, Harrison Burton spun in Turn 2 amid contact with Thomas Annunziata, then Burton got hit by Thomas Annunziata on the side while sideways. Despite both driver sustaining damage to their respective entries, both continued as the caution flew.

During the following restart with 104 laps remaining, Gray and Creed dueled for the lead in front of Almirola, Allgaier and the field for a full lap as Gray barely led the following lap. Both Gray and Creed would continue to duel for the top spot with 100 laps remaining before Gray cleared Creed from the inside lane two laps later. A lap later, however, the caution returned when Kvapil hit the frontstretch’s inside wall after making contact with Mayer while both were fiercely battling with Zilisch just outside the top-10 mark. During the caution period, some led by Gray pitted while the rest led by Eckes remained on track. After the pit stops, Gray beat Creed off of pit road first while Almirola, Sammy Smith, Allgaier, Jones, Hill, Clements, Zilisch and Thompson exited in the top 10, respectively.

The start of the ensuing restart, with 90 laps remaining, featured Eckes and Snider occupying the front row. At the start, Eckes muscled the No. 16 LeafFilter Chevrolet Camaro entry ahead from the inside lane while Snider retained second place in front of Sawalich, Poole and Dye. In front of a stacked field, Eckes led the following lap while Gray carved his way to ninth place on fresh tires. With more battles ensuing around the field between those who pitted versus those who did not, Gray moved up to eighth place, Creed was in 10th place and Allgaier pursued in 11th place while Eckes continued to lead with 85 laps remaining.

Then, with 75 laps remaining, the event’s seventh caution flew when Zilisch, who was racing in the top-20 mark, got sideways entering Turn 1 after he locked up the front tires. He then made slight contact with Thompson before he spun in Turns 1 and 2. Amid Zilisch’s spin, he was dodged by the oncoming field and continued. By then, Eckes retained the lead over Sawalich while Gray was up to third place. In addition, Allgaier was in sixth place behind Creed, while Hill was in ninth place. During the caution period, some led by Eckes pitted while the rest led by Sawalich and Gray remained on the track.

With the event restarting with 67 laps remaining, Sawalich and Gray dueled for the lead in front of two-stacked lanes through the first two turns and the backstretch. Then in Turns 3 and 4, Gray and Sawalich made slight contact that got Gray briefly loose. Amid the process, Creed then made contact with Sawalich while trying to get beneath him. Amid a brief three-wide action, Gray muscled his No. 54 Operation 300 Toyota Supra entry ahead from the outside lane and led the following lap. Behind, Creed and Sawalich battled for second place in front of Allgaier, Sammy Smith and Jones. Creed would then muscle ahead to claim second and Sammy Smith would follow suit over Sawalich while Gray leads with 64 laps remaining.

With 60 laps remaining, the caution returned for an eighth time when Carson Ware spun in Turn 2. By then, Gray was leading by more than a second over Sammy Smith while Creed, Sawalich and Jones were in the top five. During caution, Sawalich pitted from fourth place while the rest of the front-runners, led by Gray, remained on the track.

The start of the next restart with 53 laps remaining only lasted three laps before the caution returned as Harrison Burton, who was racing in the top 20, spun in Turn 4. During the caution period, Almirola and Snider pitted their respective entries while the rest, led by Gray, remained on the track.

Following an extensive caution period due to Greg Van Alst stalling on the frontstretch, the race restarted under green with 42 laps remaining. At the start, Gray muscled away from Sammy Smith, Allgaier and the field as he led the following lap. By then, however, the caution returned when Thompson spun in Turn 2 for a second time. Thompson’s latest incident occurred when he got sideways in front of Mayer entering the first turn, though he was dodged by the field.

The start of the next restart, with 35 laps remaining,g only lasted a lap when Hill, who was in ninth place, bumped Eckes into Love, which carried forth into Kvapil as Kvapil spun through the first two turns. As Kvapil slid backwards into the outside wall, he was then hit in the front nose by Love, which left both pinned against one another towards the wall and with damage to their entries. They then rammed into one another before they both proceeded, with Love parking his car in his pit lane after it was leaving a trail of fluid on the track and to the pit road.

When the race restarted under green with 22 laps, Gray fended off Allgaier through the first two turns to retain the lead. As Gray pulled away, teammates Allgaier and Sammy Smith battled for second in front of Creed, Jones, Hill and Eckes. With the field stacked in two lanes, Gray led with 20 laps remaining. By then, Sammy Smith muscled his No. 8 Pilot Chevrolet Camaro entry ahead of Allgaier to take sole possession of second while Jones and Creed followed suit ahead of Hill, Eckes, Dye, Mayer and Poole.

The caution would then return with 19 laps remaining when Mayer, who was racing in the top 10, got Eckes sideways and Eckes was then hit by teammate Daniel Dye entering the backstretch. The carnage for Eckes did not stop as he then spun and was hit on the right side by Nick Sanchez before both slid down the track and collided into the inside wall along with Josh Williams. As the field scattered to avoid the carnage, Kyle Sieg T-boned into the rear of Snider while Harrison Burton also sustained damage. The incident was enough for the event to be placed in a red flag period for more than 11 minutes.

When the red flag was lifted and the field led by Gray proceeded under a cautious pace, the race then restarted under green with 12 laps remaining. At the start, Gray launched ahead with a strong start from the inside lane. He would proceed to lead through the first two turns and the backstretch while Sammy Smith battled with teammate Allgaier for the runner-up spot. With Creed and Jones pursuing in the top five, Gray led the following lap. As both Almirola and Ryan Sieg ignited smoke on their entries due to tire rubs and on-track contact from within the field, Gray led with 10 laps remaining while Hill battled Creed for fifth place.

With nine laps remaining, the caution flew for a 13th time when Zilisch, who was racing in the top 15, got bumped by Sawalich, which sent Zilisch spinning in Turn 4, where he then made contact with Sawalich before he veered back up the track. In the process, Jeremy Clements hit the outside wall entering the frontstretch while slamming on the brakes to avoid hitting Zilisch.

Down to the final two laps of the event, Sammy Smith, who restarted behind Gray in the second row on the inside lane, shoved Gray ahead of Allgaier at the restart’s launch. Smith then kept pushing Gray into Turn 1. As a result, Gray got loose and slipped up the track. This allowed Smith to navigate his way into the lead from the inside lane. Then, as Smith led through the backstretch, he was starting to be intimidated by Gray and Jones through Turns 3 and 4 when the caution returned due to Matt DiBenedetto spinning in Turn 2. At the moment of caution, Sammy Smith was scored the leader and all four Dash 4 Cash competitors (Allgaier, Hill, Creed and Mayer) were racing fourth to seventh, respectively, as the event was sent into overtime.

At the start of overtime, Gray, who opted to restart behind Sammy Smith in the inside lane from the second row, returned the favor to Smith by shoving him up the track and getting beneath him entering the backstretch. With Jones, who restarted on the front row, getting shoved back to a duel with Allgaier for third place, Gray and Smith dueled for the top spot through the backstretch until Gray gained a slight advantage from the inside lane entering Turns 3 and 4.

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Gray held a narrow lead over Smith across the start/finish line while Jones, Allgaier and the rest of the field pursued. After being drawn back into a brief duel with Smith entering the first two turns, Gray then used the turns to muscle ahead and clear Smith with the lead through the backstretch.

Then entering Turns 3 and 4, Smith rammed into the rear end of Gray at full speed. The contact got Gray sliding up the track and spinning backwards towards the outside wall. As Smith tried to proceed, he then made contact with teammate Allgaier, which allowed Austin Hill to sneak past both from the inside lane as he assumed the lead entering the frontstretch. With a multi-car wreck ensuing that involved Jones and Smith, Hill proceeded to claim the checkered flag and steal the victory in an upset fashion.

With the victory amid an unexpected turn of events, Hill notched his 12th career win in the Xfinity Series division, his first at Martinsville and his first since he won at Atlanta Motor Speedway in late February. As added bonuses, Hill claimed the second Dash 4 Cash bonus of $100,000, which was a first for himself, and he recorded the 100th Xfinity career victory for Richard Childress Racing.

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

“I chose [the] bottom [lane] just because of how rough everybody was on restarts,” Hill said on the frontstretch on the CW Network. “I had to do what I had to do there on the last lap. [I] Cant’ thank everybody on this Bennett Chevrolet. We didn’t have the fastest car. It wasn’t as fast as Xfinity Mobile, but that restart, it just got wild. [The leaders]’re leaning on each other and I knew that getting into [Turn] 3, they were all going to get beating and banging. I just drove it as deep as I could. They all got to hitting each other and I hit [Allgaier] a little bit, shoved him up and then, got on the apron a little bit right there and came on with the win.”

“Man, I’m in disbelief that we’re in Victory Lane right now,” Hill added. “It is unbelievable. I actually said during the race that I hated this place because of all the beating and banging that was going on. To top [the win], off, we won [$100,000]! This is awesome! I got a perfect place for the grandfather clock.”

As Hill celebrated on the frontstretch, both Gray and Sammy Smith were left dejected and livid towards one another amid their last-lap carnage and late run-ins. Both would be seen exchanging words in the infield care center while separated by NASCAR security. While Gray minced his perspective of the incident, Smith did not.

“I mean, it sucks, right?” Gray, who ended up 29th, said. “I felt like we had the best car all day. It’s unfortunate, man. That’s the same story I’ve lived here for two Martinsvilles in a row. Sucks, but it is what it is. Long year.”

“Absolutely, [my move] was egregious,” Smith, who finished 10th, said. “I’m not proud of that, but I mean if roles reversed, [Gray] would have done the same thing. He’s got no respect for me. I didn’t move him those first prior restarts. He was flipping me off on the red flag [period], swerving at me. It’s definitely uncalled for and I’m not proud of it, but he would have done the exact same thing. That’s what I told him. We’ll see what happens after that. If you’re not the one doing it, someone’s going to do it to you. Everyone’s going to dog on me. I’m not proud of that, but at the end of the day, it’s what you got to do.”

Amid the carnage, Sheldon Creed crossed the finish line in the runner-up spot behind Hill while Justin Allgaier, Brennan Poole and Sam Mayer managed to finish in the top five.

Overall, Hill, Creed, Allgaier and Poole will contend for the third Dash 4 Cash bonus of the 2025 campaign at Bristol Motor Speedway on April 12.

Rookie Dean Thompson finished in sixth place while rookie Daniel Dye, Ryan Sieg, Kris Wright and Sammy Smith completed the top 10 in the final running order.

There were 14 lead changes for 10 different leaders. The race featured 14 cautions for 104 laps. In addition, 29 of 38 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the seventh event of the 2025 Xfinity Series season, Justin Allgaier leads the regular-season standings by 41 points over Sam Mayer, 47 over Austin Hill, 71 over Sheldon Creed, 74 over Jesse Love and 78 over Sammy Smith.

Race Results:

1. Austin Hill, one lap led
2. Sheldon Creed, two laps led
3. Justin Allgaier, five laps led
4. Brennan Poole
5. Sam Mayer
6. Dean Thompson
7. Daniel Dye
8. Ryan Sieg
9. Kris Wright
10. Sammy Smith, six laps led
11. Jeb Burton
12. Parker Retzlaff
13. Aric Almirola, seven laps led
14. Jeremy Clements
15. Garrett Smithley
16. Patrick Staropoli
17. Josh Williams
18. Ryan Ellis
19. Blaine Perkins
20. Carson Kvapil
21. Corey Day
22. Brandon Jones, 22 laps led
23. Brad Perez
24. Harrison Burton
25. Mason Maggio
26. Matt DiBenedetto
27. William Sawalich, four laps led
28. Connor Zilisch, 100 laps led, Stages 1 & 2 winner
29. Taylor Gray, 87 laps led
30. Carson Ware, two laps down
31. Thomas Annunziata, four laps down
32. Nick Sanchez – OUT, Accident
33. Myatt Snider – OUT, Accident
34. Christian Eckes – OUT, Accident, 22 laps led
35. Kyle Sieg – OUT, Accident
36. Greg Van Alst, 27 laps down
37. Jesse Love – OUT, Accident
38. Anthony Alfredo – OUT, Engine

Next on the 2025 NASCAR Xfinity Series season is Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina, for the Sports Clips Haircuts VFW Help a Hero 200. The event is scheduled to occur next Saturday, April 5, and air at 3:30 p.m. ET on the CW Network.

BECKMAN, LANGDON AND HARTFORD WIN MISSION #2FAST2TASTY CHALLENGE IN POMONA

B. Force, Prock and Anderson pick up No. 1 qualifiers at 65th annual Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals

POMONA, Calif. (March 29, 2025) – Defending world champion Austin Prock and his John Force Racing teammate Jack Beckman dominated the Funny Car ranks on Saturday at In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip, as Prock powered to the No. 1 qualifier position at the 65th annual Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals and Jack Beckman won the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge specialty race.

Shawn Langdon (Top Fuel) and Matt Hartford (Pro Stock) also won the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge, while Brittany Force (Top Fuel) and Greg Anderson (Pro Stock) qualified No. 1 at the third of 20 races during the 2025 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series season.

Beckman went 3.831-seconds at 330.72 seconds in his 11,000-horsepower PEAK Chevrolet Camaro SS, defeating Paul Lee in the final round of the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge and claiming his first win in the specialty race.

“Paul Lee’s car is an A-level competitive car and when we went 3.83 in round one, we were feeling pretty spicy and then they go 3.82 and got lane choice, but we knew it didn’t matter,” Beckman said.

“These conditions are A-plus-plus, as good as it gets out there. The issue when the track gets as good as the crew chiefs don’t have much data on this. We know what to do when the track gets good, but when the track gets great, you can count on one hand, typically, the number of runs a year you get when the track is phenomenal. In all likelihood, all the runs tomorrow are going to be in those type of conditions.”

Prock, who clinched the world title in Pomona last season and set a Funny Car record with 15 No. 1 qualifiers in 2024, went a blistering 3.816-seconds at 338.26 mph in his 11,000-horsepower Cornwell Tools Chevrolet Camaro SS to take the No. 1 position into raceday for the 20th time in his career. Prock will open eliminations against Blake Alexander as he looks for his first victory of 2025.

“Our race car hasn’t run bad all year long, it’s just things haven’t been really going our way like they did last year,” Prock said. “We’ve been trying to do that all weekend long and just been tickling the thing. I’m really proud of how diligent everybody’s been working and making progress each run and just getting it A to B.

“The boys were high-fiving before we even got in the water box, like they knew, it was either going to be hero or zero, and we ended up on the good end of it. I’m really proud of John Force Racing and John Force is so proud right now of the whole team.”

Lee is qualified second with a 3.829 at 331.45 and Ron Capps is third after going 3.830 at 328.94.

In Top Fuel, Shawn Langdon kept Kalitta Motorsports rolling and continued his recent dominance as well, beating teammate Doug Kalitta in the final round with a run of 3.662 at a near-record 338.68 in his 11,000-horsepower Kalitta Air Careers dragster. It denied Kalitta a chance at a perfect weekend, but Langdon kept rolling along, capturing his second straight Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty Challenge victory.

Langdon also won the event in Phoenix last weekend as the car continues to perform at an extremely high level. The run in the Challenge final was his best of the weekend and puts him third heading into eliminations, while the speed marked the second-fastest run in Top Fuel history. The points leader will now have a chance to double-up for the second straight race in his red-hot early-season start.

“Honestly, it’s a great feeling to come back from the run and see the smile on Connie’s [Kalitta] face and see the smiles on the team’s faces. All their hard work, everything’s paying off,” Kalitta said. “The cars are running good, which is great. They’re responding well to what the crew chiefs have been doing.

“It’s obviously a great feeling when everything’s clicking, and the biggest thing now is we got a good, fast, consistent race car. Now it’s just a matter of maintaining it and trying to see if we can kick off a couple wins along the way and get ready for the Countdown at the end of the year.”

Brittany Force earned her first top qualifier of the year on the strength of Friday’s 3.646 at 334.82 in her 11,000-horsepower Monster Energy dragster. She’ll open eliminations against Steve Chrisman as she looks for her first career Winternationals win. She added a 53rd career No. 1 qualifier to her accomplishments on Saturday, but a victory at her home track – and a chance for JFR double-up – would make the weekend even better.

“We’ve had some really strong performance on track,” Force said. “We earned a No. 1 qualifier. We went 3.64 twice, and then a 3.69 today. We want to turn on four win lights tomorrow. Looking at our ladder, we could have a bye second round, which is awesome for us. I love this place. It’s just home for me. I grew up out of here at this racetrack and in the stands. You just have that good feeling coming out here and we want to do well. My whole family’s out here, I’ve had all my friends this weekend, popping in and out, and it’s just our home race track, so we want to finish strong.”

Kalitta qualified second with a 3.657 at 335.15.

In Pro Stock, Matt Hartford defeated Greg Anderson in the final round of the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge, going 6.496 at 210.67 in his GETTRX/Total Seal Camaro to get his second win in the specialty race. The first came two years in Pomona as the veteran continued his strong performance at the historic facility. Next up on Hartford’s list is an event win, which would be his first since the 2023 campaign.

“This is as good a car as I’ve ever had. It’s hateful,” Hartford said. “Over the winter, we made a very easy decision to make sure that we continued in our older chassis and to try to reinvent the wheel every run or make changes that we don’t know. Let’s use facts and work off data.

“A win is the next thing for us, but you’ve got to get through first round and take it one round at a time. When you look at the qualifying sheet, I can promise you of the 16 cars, none of them you want to race first round because they’re all good. The conditions tomorrow are going to be hateful. If you think the runs that you’ve seen over the last four runs were good, wait until tomorrow. The cars are all going to pick up tomorrow.”

Anderson held on to his second No. 1 spot this season, improving to a 6.490 at 210.77 on Saturday in his HendrickCars.com Camaro, handing the defending world champion his 134th career top qualifier. Anderson made two more runs in the 6.40s on Saturday, which could bode well as he seeks his second straight win and his 16th overall at In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip.

“Running 6.40s seems to be the price of poker out here this weekend,” Anderson said. “You better run 6.40 or you’re probably going to go home. Unfortunately, there’s a lot of cars that can do it. I think only two of them didn’t today, but there’s a lot of them that can do it and you’re going to see more of it tomorrow. I’m looking forward to it. It should be a hell of a race.

“You kind of need to have a lot of luck because there’s too many good cars, too many good drivers and too many good race teams. You better not only have a fast race car, but you also better have some luck.”

Hartford qualified second with a 6.490 at 210.67 and Deric Kramer is third after going 6.511 at 210.80.

Eliminations for the 65th annual Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals begin at 11 a.m. PT on Sunday at In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip.


POMONA, Calif. — Sunday’s first-round pairings for eliminations for the 65th annual Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals at In-N-Out Pomona Dragstrip, the third of 20 events in the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series. Pairings based on results in qualifying, which ended Saturday. DNQs listed below pairings.

Top Fuel — 1. Brittany Force, 3.646 seconds, 338.34 mph vs. 14. Steven Chrisman, 5.362, 131.05; 2. Doug Kalitta, 3.657, 335.15 vs. 13. Scott Palmer, 3.818, 313.80; 3. Shawn Langdon, 3.662, 338.68 vs. 12. Ida Zetterstrom, 3.741, 334.24; 4. Steve Torrence, 3.665, 337.50 vs. 11. Jasmine Salinas, 3.700, 324.83; 5. Clay Millican, 3.674, 332.59 vs. 10. Shawn Reed, 3.698, 333.91; 6. Josh Hart, 3.675, 332.34 vs. 9. Justin Ashley, 3.695, 333.66; 7. Antron Brown, 3.695, 337.16 vs. 8. Tony Stewart, 3.695, 329.75.

Funny Car — 1. Austin Prock, Chevy Camaro, 3.816, 338.26 vs. 16. Blake Alexander, Dodge Charger, 4.011, 324.98; 2. Paul Lee, Charger, 3.829, 331.45 vs. 15. Bobby Bode, Toyota GR Supra, 3.978, 323.12; 3. Ron Capps, GR Supra, 3.830, 330.47 vs. 14. Spencer Hyde, Ford Mustang, 3.971, 271.08; 4. Jack Beckman, Camaro, 3.831, 332.59 vs. 13. Jeff Diehl, Toyota Camry, 3.963, 296.70; 5. Chad Green, Mustang, 3.885, 331.77 vs. 12. Dave Richards, Mustang, 3.954, 320.97; 6. Cruz Pedregon, Charger, 3.886, 328.78 vs. 11. Steven Densham, Mustang, 3.942, 317.79; 7. J.R. Todd, GR Supra, 3.896, 333.99 vs. 10. Daniel Wilkerson, Mustang, 3.924, 324.28; 8. Matt Hagan, Charger, 3.903, 328.78 vs. 9. Alexis DeJoria, Charger, 3.921, 324.75.

Did Not Qualify: 17. Bob Tasca III, 4.057, 271.13; 18. Jason Rupert, 4.104, 253.80; 19. Buddy Hull, 4.340, 280.31.

Pro Stock — 1. Greg Anderson, Chevy Camaro, 6.490, 211.26 vs. 16. Mason McGaha, Camaro, 6.554, 209.79; 2. Matt Hartford, Camaro, 6.490, 210.67 vs. 15. Troy Coughlin Jr., Camaro, 6.553, 210.57; 3. Deric Kramer, Camaro, 6.511, 210.80 vs. 14. Cody Coughlin, Camaro, 6.546, 210.34; 4. Aaron Stanfield, Camaro, 6.515, 210.80 vs. 13. Brandon Foster, Camaro, 6.538, 209.82; 5. Cory Reed, Camaro, 6.516, 210.93 vs. 12. Greg Stanfield, Camaro, 6.537, 210.54; 6. Eric Latino, Camaro, 6.517, 209.82 vs. 11. Matt Latino, Camaro, 6.537, 210.41; 7. Dallas Glenn, Camaro, 6.519, 211.10 vs. 10. Erica Enders, Camaro, 6.532, 210.11; 8. Jeg Coughlin, Camaro, 6.530, 210.97 vs. 9. Stephen Bell, Camaro, 6.531, 209.33.

Did Not Qualify: 17. Chris McGaha, 6.586, 208.91; 18. Kenny Delco, 6.594, 208.81; 19. Joey Grose, 6.652, 207.40.

THOMPSON’S CAREER-BEST FINISH LEADS TOYOTA IN WILD FINISH AT MARTINSVILLE

Taylor Gray leads 87 laps before being involved in a last lap accident

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (March 29, 2025) – Dean Thompson earned stage points and finished a career-best sixth in a caution-filled NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday evening. Thompson, the top-finishing rookie driver, bested an eighth-place finish in the season opener at Daytona to score a best-ever finish for Sam Hunt Racing (SHR) at the track. SHR had a solid day overall with Patrick Staropoli finishing 16th in his series debut in a second GR Supra entry for the team.

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Taylor Gray led 87 laps, and had the lead going into the final corner before the second-place driver made contact with the Toyota Development Driver, causing Gray to spin and a large accident ensued. In the final finishing order, Gray was scored 29th.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS)
Martinsville Speedway
Race 7 of 33 – 131.5 miles, 250 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Austin Hill*
2nd, Sheldon Creed*
3rd, Justin Allgaier*
4th, Brennan Poole*
5th, Sam Mayer*
6th, DEAN THOMPSON
12th, ARIC ALMIROLA
16th, PATRICK STAROPOLI
22nd, BRANDON JONES
27th, WILLIAM SAWALICH
29th, TAYLOR GRAY

*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

DEAN THOMPSON, No. 26 Thompson Pipe Group Toyota GR Supra, Sam Hunt Racing

Finishing Position: 6th

Stage points and another career-best run. How was your race?

“I’ve got a great group of guys at Sam Hunt Racing. We came into this race knowing we were going to have a good car. Practice and qualified really well and brought the car back in good shape. That is kind of what it is all about here – keeping it in one piece and making it to the end. I knew if we made it to the end, we would be fine. Just learning all day – my first time here in these kind of cars. I’m lucky to have spun – it sounds weird, but I’m lucky to have spun and not hit anything because I learn the limit. I’m pretty lucky to get out of there unscathed and get a good finish out of it. I’m really proud of my guys. We made good adjustments. We spun that last time, and we came and put a set of scuffs on it and I didn’t know if that was the right move, but obviously it was at the end. I’m really proud of my guys. My Thompson Pipe Group Toyota GR Supra was very fast.”

TAYLOR GRAY, No. 54 Operation 300 Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 29th

What happened from your perspective?

“I feel like we had the best car all day. I can’t thank everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing enough. We brought a really fast Operation 300 Toyota GR Supra. Just unfortunate – it’s the same story I’ve lived here for the past two Martinsville race in a row. It sucks, but it is what it is. Long year.”

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.

TOYOTA, KALITTA MOTORSPORTS SWEEP TOP FUEL CHALLENGES AT POMONA

Kalitta wins Top-Fuel Callout; Langdon wins #2Fast2Tasty Challenge

POMONA, Calif. (March 29, 2025) – Though they did not claim the top qualifying spot for the NHRA Winternationals at In-N-Out Pomona Dragstrip, Team Toyota had a very successful two days of qualifying in Top Fuel. Both days had high stakes involved with the postponed All-Star Callout on Friday and Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty Challenge on Saturday. In the callout, Doug Kalitta captured victory and the bonus money that comes with it, posting a 3.657 elapsed time in the finals, which also gave him the No. 2 seed for tomorrow’s eliminations.

On Saturday, it was Shawn Langdon’s turn to contribute as he defeated Kalitta in the finals of the #2Fast2Tasty Challenge, his second consecutive challenge win after also being triumphant in Phoenix. Langdon posted a 3.662 time and 338.68 mph speed – the fastest of the weekend – to earn the No. 3 seed for tomorrow. Langdon goes for his second straight victory after winning the Arizona Nationals last weekend in Phoenix.

A week after walking away from an on-track accident, Ron Capps powered his NAPA Auto Care Toyota GR Supra to the No. 3 qualifier in Funny Car. Capps had an excellent two sessions on Friday, including a 3.830 elapsed time in the evening. His Toyota teammates, J.R. Todd and Bobby Bode will be the seventh and 15th seeds for tomorrow’s eliminations.

The NHRA Winternationals from In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip begin at 2 p.m. EST with live TV coverage beginning at 6:30 p.m. EST on FS1.

Toyota Post-Qualifying Recap
NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series
In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip
NHRA Winternationals
Race 3 of 20

TOYOTA TOP FUEL QUALIFYING POSITIONS

NameCarQualifying PositionFirst Round Opponent
Brittany Force*Monster Energy Chevrolet Top Fuel Dragster1st*S. Chrisman
Doug KalittaMac Tools Toyota Top Fuel Dragster2ndS. Palmer
Shawn LangdonKalitta Air Careers Toyota Top Fuel Dragster3rdI. Zetterstrom
Steve TorrenceCAPCO Contractors Toyota Top Fuel Dragster 4thJ. Salinas
Antron BrownMatco Tools Toyota Top Fuel Dragster7thT. Stewart
Justin AshleySCAG Power Equipment Toyota Top Fuel Dragster9thJ. Hart

TOYOTA FUNNY CAR QUALIFYING POSITIONS 

NameCarQualifying PositionFirst Round Opponent
Austin Prock*Cornwell Tools Chevrolet Funny Car1st*B. Alexander
Ron CappsNAPA Auto Care Toyota GR Supra Funny Car3rdS. Hyde
J.R. ToddDHL Toyota GR Supra Funny Car7thD. Wilkerson
Bobby BodeDC Motorsports Toyota GR Supra Funny Car15thP. Lee

*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

DOUG KALITTA, Mac Tools Toyota Top Fuel Dragster, Kalitta Motorsports

TF Qualifying Result: 2nd

Where did you and the team find that performance to win the All-Star callout?

“The guys gave me a great car – to be able to run that 3.65 after watching Brittany (Force) run the 3.64 a couple times was big. I knew we had that run in us, and I’m glad we were able to do it. I’m pretty fortunate for sure to have Alan (Johnson, crew chief), Mac Tools, Future Energy Solutions, SealMaster, Toyota and all the guys that help us with what we’re doing. We tried to run this event (the Callout) in Gainesville, but there’s no better place to bring it to than here (Pomona). I love running this place, and we’re just glad to get by Brittney, Antron (Brown) and Clay (Millican) – it was a fun day for sure. It’s been a while since we’ve raced on a Friday, so that was pretty cool with all the guys that were in it.”

SHAWN LANGDON, Kalitta Air Careers Toyota Top Fuel Dragster, Kalitta Motorsports

TF Qualifying Result: 3rd

With this challenge win, why does everything seem to be clicking for your team right now?

“This Kalitta Air Careers Toyota team is just rolling right now. The way this car was running in Phoenix carried right over to this weekend. It’s honestly a great feeling to come back from a run and see the smile on Connie’s (Kalitta, team owner) face and the smiles on the guy’s faces. All their hard work is paying off. We had a rough couple of years, brought Brian (Husen, crew chief) on board last year, and started to see some good results initially. And then we were in the thick of it for majority of the year but kind of just missed the championship. We came out this year on fire again, and it feels like – between Doug’s (Kalitta) team and our team, one or the other’s getting there, right? It’s a great time to be a part of Team Kalitta.”

RON CAPPS, NAPA Auto Care Toyota GR Supra Funny Car, Ron Capps Motorsports

FC Qualifying Result: 3rd

How would you assess these first two days and for race day tomorrow?

“Oh my gosh! If you wouldn’t have known what happened last weekend (accident in Phoenix), it would seem like a normal weekend for our NAPA Auto Care Toyota GR Supra team. It’s a strange situation as there’s so much drama in rebuilding cars and the guys barely got any sleep all week to put together two great race cars – one being three-years-old (Capps’ 2022 Funny Car world championship car) that unloaded and went to No. 1 and stayed there, and we had a good chance at stealing it back (on Saturday). Ended up P3 with a great race car, in Pomona, one of the most historic race tracks and really, being one of the big ones to win (at). I feel like we have a really good race car. We always do, but, again, if you didn’t know what happened last week, you wouldn’t even know. I’m proud of the guys. It’s going to be a lot of fun tomorrow. Going to be cool conditions, overcast and probably quicker times than what we saw in qualifying which is insane to think. It’s going to be a lot of fun!”

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.

Front Row Motorsports: Martinsville Speedway NCTS Race Report- Layne Riggs / Chandler Smith

Layne Riggs | Chandler Smith
Martinsville Speedway NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race Report
Boys and Girls Club of the Blue Ridge 200
Date: Friday, March 28, 2025
Event: Race 5 of 25
Series: NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series
Location: Martinsville Speedway (0.526-miles)
Length of Race: One hour, 50 minutes, two seconds

FRM Finish:

● Layne Riggs (Started 7th, Finished 11th / Running, completed 200 of 200 laps)
● Chandler Smith (Started 4th, Finished 4th / Running, completed 200 of 200 laps)

FRM Points Standings:

Chandler Smith (3rd)
Layne Riggs (8th)

Layne Riggs Key Takeaways

Stage One: 20th / Stage Two: 13th / Race Result: 11th

The NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series made their first stop to the Martinsville Speedway last night for the series’ fifth race of the season and first race on a short track. Friday nights race also marked Infinity Communications Group debut on the No. 34 Ford F-150.

Layne Riggs posted his second top-10 qualifying result of the season during Friday afternoon’s practice & qualifying session, starting seventh for the 200-lap event. Throughout Stage One, Riggs fought with dirty air and the handling of his Ford F-150. The battle continued when Riggs was involved in an incident with the No. 81 on lap 24, resulting in Riggs spinning out. With no damage, Riggs pitted for tires and a chassis adjustment under caution. Back out on track, Riggs made his way back into the top-20, finishing Stage One in 20th. In Stage Two, Riggs picked up spots to put himself with in the top-15 to finish the stage in 13th. In a chaotic final stage, Riggs beat and banged his way into the top-five but was shuffled back to the top-12, crossing the start / finish line in 11th. Riggs is now eighth in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Driver Championship points standings.

“Overall, just a really frustrating day,” said Riggs. “We qualified well but just got used up all night. I thought we had a top-10 but got shuffled to the back with just a few laps to go. Still really proud of this group though. We fought a lot of adversity and still managed to come out of here with a top-15. A big “thank you” to Infinity Communications and Jeff Coffey for hoping on board and showing up in full support.”

Chandler Smith’s Key Takeaways

Stage One: 6th / Stage Two: 6th / Race Result: 4th

Chandler Smith earned his fifth straight top-10 finish last night, finishing fourth in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race at the Martinsville Speedway. Qualifying fourth for the event, Smith finished sixth in both Stage One and Two, earning valuable stage points. Smith finished the 200-lap race in fourth to hold third in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Driver Championship points standings.

“It was definitely a hard-fought top-five for us today,” said Smith. We ran within the top-five and top-10 all day with a solid No. 38 Quicktie Ford F-150. We were a lot better on the long run but the cautions didn’t fall our way.”

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Craftsman Truck Series. The team is the 2021 Daytona 500 and 2022 Craftsman Truck Series champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 4, No. 34, and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 34 and No. 38 Craftsman Truck Series teams from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @teamfrm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

Christopher Bell speeds to first Cup pole of 2025 at Martinsville

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Christopher Bell claimed his first Busch Light Pole Award of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season for the Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday, March 29.

The event’s starting lineup was determined through a standard practice and qualifying procedure. The field was split into two 25-minute practice sessions. Next, they joined forces to participate in a two-lap qualifying session (impound). The groups and qualifying order were determined by metrics that included 70% based on previous race finish by owner and 30% based on owner points standings, with the best scoring competitors placed in the second group.

Bell was the second-fastest competitor behind Toyota teammate Bubba Wallace in the event’s lone practice session earlier on Saturday. During the qualifying session, he clocked in a pole-winning lap at 96.034 mph in 19.718 seconds during his two-lap session. Bell’s lap, where he was the lone competitor to post a speed at 96 mph, was enough to claim the top-starting spot over Chase Elliott by 0.017 seconds.

Bell, a three-time race winner in 2025, achieved his first series pole at Martinsville Speedway, his first Cup Series pole of the 2025 campaign, and his 14th in NASCAR’s premier series. The pole award was the second of the year for Joe Gibbs Racing and the third for Toyota.

Amid the excitement of leading the field to the start of Sunday’s main event, Bell will contend for his second series’ victory at Martinsville Speedway. He also highlighted the importance of using the spring event to gain extra momentum before the series’ return to the track in late October for the Playoffs.

“I was, kind of, down in the dumps after practice, but that was definitely the best qualifying session I’ve ever felt out of my car here at Martinsville,” Bell said on Prime Video. “It was just easy. I don’t know. I’ve been really good at qualifying in the 20s and I went out there and the car had so much grip.

“It cut a really good lap. Really proud of everyone on this No. 20 team. They’ve been working hard to improve our Martinsville package. We’ll see what happens tomorrow, but regardless, starting upfront is gonna be a huge help…We’re just doing everything that we can to make sure that we’re ready whenever it comes fall time [for the Playoffs].”

Chase Elliott, who clocked in his best qualifying lap at 95.951 mph in 19.735 seconds, will start alongside Bell on the front row for Sunday’s main event at Martinsville. This marks the first time in the 2025 campaign where Elliott will start on the front row in a Cup Series event.

“I thought our NAPA Chevy was close,” Elliott said. He continued, “I felt like most guys went fastest on the first one, which told me that I left some out there. I felt like my balance was really good to go fast. I think we might need a little bit for the race, but I thought we had a solid day, overall, and really proud of the effort coming into the weekend. A great car, great prep. Good starting spot. A lot of work to do tomorrow and long ways to go, so we’re ready to get it.”

Alex Bowman and Kyle Larson, teammates to Elliott at Hendrick Motorsports, will occupy the second row in the third- and fourth-starting spots. Denny Hamlin, a five-time Martinsville winner, will start in fifth place.

Chris Buescher, Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick and William Byron, the latter of whom is the reigning spring Martinsville winner, completed the top-10 starting grid.

In addition, the following names that included Chase Briscoe, Kyle Busch, Josh Berry, Michael McDowell, Ross Chastain, Austin Dillon, Austin Cindric, Ryan Preece, Noah Gragson, Daniel Suarez, Brad Keselowski, Carson Hocevar, Erik Jones, Ryan Blaney, rookie Shane van Gisbergen, rookie Riley Herbst, Casey Mears and Burt Myers qualified 11th, 12th, 14th, 15th, 17th, 18th, 20th, 21st, 24th, 26th, 27th, 29th, 31st, 32nd, 33rd, 35th, 37th and 38th, respectively. Notably, Justin Haley, who managed to qualify despite having the hood of his car fly up during Saturday’s practice session, qualified in 30th place.

With 38 competitors vying for 38 starting spots, all of the competitors made the main event.

Qualifying position, best speed, best time:

1. Christopher Bell, 96.034 mph, 19.718 seconds

2. Chase Elliott, 95.951 mph, 19.735 seconds

3. Alex Bowman, 95.937 mph, 19.738 seconds

4. Kyle Larson, 95.854 mph, 19.755 seconds

5. Denny Hamlin, 95.840 mph, 19.758 seconds

6. Chris Buescher, 95.840 mph, 19.758 seconds

7. Joey Logano, 95.820 mph, 19.762 seconds

8. Bubba Wallace, 95.801 mph, 19.766 seconds

9. Tyler Reddick, 95.733 mph, 19.780 seconds

10. William Byron, 95.723 mph, 19.782 seconds

11. Chase Briscoe, 95.612 mph, 19.805 seconds

12. Kyle Busch, 95.583 mph, 19.811 seconds

13. Ty Gibbs, 95.554 mph, 19.817 seconds

14. Josh Berry, 95.545 mph, 19.819 seconds

15. Michael McDowell, 95.477 mph, 19.833 seconds

16. John Hunter Nemechek, 95.424 mph, 19.844 seconds

17. Ross Chastain, 95.395 mph, 19.850 seconds

18. Austin Dillon, 95.357 mph, 19.858 seconds

19. Zane Smith, 95.319 mph, 19.866 seconds

20. Austin Cindric, 95.295 mph, 19.871 seconds

21. Ryan Preece, 95.232 mph, 19.884 seconds

22. Cole Custer, 95.204 mph, 19.890 seconds

23. AJ Allmendinger, 95.189 mph, 19.893 seconds

24. Noah Gragson, 95.175 mph, 19.896 seconds

25. Todd Gilliland, 95.137 mph, 19.904 seconds

26. Daniel Suarez, 95.065 mph, 19.919 seconds

27. Brad Keselowski, 94.941 mph, 19.945 seconds

28. Ty Dillon, 94.794 mph, 19.976 seconds

29. Carson Hocevar, 94.770 mph, 19.981 seconds

30. Justin Haley, 94.723 mph, 19.991 seconds

31. Erik Jones, 94.708 mph, 19.994 seconds

32. Ryan Blaney, 94.590 mph, 20.019 seconds

33. Shane van Gisbergen, 94.256 mph, 20.090 seconds

34. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 94.167 mph, 20.109 seconds

35. Riley Herbst, 94.125 mph, 20.118 seconds

36. Cody Ware, 93.428 mph, 20.268 seconds

37. Casey Mears, 91.998 mph, 20.583 seconds

38. Burt Myers, 91.864 mph, 20.613 seconds

The 2025 Cook Out 400 at Martinsville Speedway is set to occur on Sunday, March 30, and air at 3 p.m. ET on FS1.