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RCR NXS Race Recap: Texas Motor Speedwa

Jesse Love and the No. 2 Samsara Chevrolet Team Battle for Seventh-Place Result at Texas Motor Speedway

Finish: 7th
Start: 3rd
Points: 4th

“Man, that was a fight. We had a tight balanced No. 2 Samsara Chevrolet, but I’m proud of the speed we showed all day long while racing inside the top 10. Getting caught up in that late-race mess wasn’t ideal. I’m not sure if the No. 00 car came up or the No. 17 went down, but this Richard Childress Racing team never quit. Danny (Stockman) had his work cut out for him today. We made multiple pit stops and the team did a great job with the repairs for us to get back on track. We rallied, kept our heads down, and grabbed another top 10. A seventh-place finish says a lot about the heart of this group. We’re building something strong, and we’ll keep digging.” -Jesse Love

Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet Team Contend for Win and Continue Top-10 Streak at Texas Motor Speedway

Finish: 4th
Start: 1st
Points: 2nd

“Our Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet was good today. I just could not fire on the restarts for the first five laps. I’m not sure what I need to do differently there, but I do know there are areas that I can improve on as a driver to do a better job on the restarts. Over these next two weeks off, I’ll go back and start watching some film to figure out what I can do better. Some of it could be the package that we bring to the track, but some of it is just on me. I can’t thank everyone on the No. 21 team and at RCR and ECR enough though. We were in contention all day. Ran inside the top four and finished fourth. I’m disappointed with fourth, because I thought we had a shot at possibly winning the race. Especially with how the race unfolded at the end, with us staying out on old tires and the No. 88 pitting. I thought it might take a minute for him (No. 88) to get through the field, but we had caution after caution. All in all, it was a solid effort that we will keep building on.” -Austin Hill

Hauger Manages Mixed Conditions Best To Win Pole at Barber

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (Saturday, May 3, 2025) – Dennis Hauger remained perfect this season in INDY NXT by Firestone qualifying, earning the pole for the Grand Prix of Alabama in mixed conditions Saturday at Barber Motorsports Park.

Hauger, from Norway, grabbed the top starting spot for the race Sunday with a best lap of 1 minute, 12.7705 seconds in the No. 28 Rental Group car fielded by Andretti Global. He won the pole and the race in his debut in the INDYCAR development series March 2 at St. Petersburg, Florida.

Qualifying was a tale of two sessions in changing weather conditions. The 20-driver field was split into two groups for qualifying, and the first group of drivers all used Firestone Firehawk rain tires because of damp track conditions. The 17-turn, 2.3-mile natural terrain circuit dried enough for the second group to switch to the faster Firestone slick tires after their warmup lap, creating a big discrepancy in times between the two groups.

But series rules state the grid is set by alternating the quickest times in each group, so Caio Collet will join Hauger on the front row even though his top time of 1:24.8394 in the No. 76 HMD Motorsports car from the wetter first group was more than 12 seconds slower than Hauger’s best.

That trend continued throughout the lineup for the 20-car field, as the starters in the odd-numbered grid spots all came from the drier, faster second group while all even-numbered starters qualified in the wetter, slower first group.

Hauger already was on top when he improved upon his best time on his last lap. Every driver in the second group was given one final flying lap after rookie Max Taylor spun off track late in the session in the No. 18 HMD Motorsports car, losing his two quickest laps for triggering a red flag during qualifying.

“It was looking like it was drying up, but you don’t really know before you go out there,” Hauger said. “After the first lap, I was like, ‘We’ve to pit for a sticker (slicks) run.’ After we did that, I think most people did in the end.

“It was a good run, a good last lap. I managed to maximize it. The Andretti team and 28 crew have had a good weekend so far and are looking forward to starting on pole tomorrow.”

The 35-lap race starts at 11:30 a.m. ET Sunday (FS1, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio Network).

Evagoras Papasavvas will start third in his series debut in the No. 24 HMD Motorsports machine. Papasavvas, 17, turned a top lap of 1:13.3669 in the second group. Lochie Hughes of Andretti Global will join him in the second row after qualifying fourth at 1:25.4437 in the No. 26 McGinley Clinic/USF Pro Championship car of Andretti Global.

Myles Rowe qualified fifth at 1:13.4377 in the No. 99 Abel/Force Indy machine of Abel Motorsports. Bryce Aron will start sixth after his run of 1:25.5923 in the No. 9 Chip Ganassi Racing car.

CHEVROLET IN INDYCAR: SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN PUTS CHEVROLET ON FRONT ROW AT BARBER

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
CHILDREN’S OF ALABAMA INDY GRAND PRIX
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
BARBER MOTORSPORTS PARK
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP
MAY 3, 2025

Scott McLaughlin Puts Chevrolet on Front Row at Barber

  • Scott McLaughlin puts Chevrolet on front row at Barber
  • Third time driver of the No. 3 Good Ranchers Team Penske Chevrolet has scored front row start at Barber
  • Is two-time defending winner at the Alabama road course
  • A total of three Chevrolet powered drivers qualified into the Firestone Fast Six to run for the pole
  • Six of Fast-12 were Team Chevy drivers
  • Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, quailed in his first Fast-12 of the season, moving into the Fast-Six and scoring the fourth starting position
  • Nolan Siegel, No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, made the Fast Six for the first time in his career and will start sixth
  • His previous best start was 11th at St. Pete and Long Beach this year
  • Arrow McLaren drivers have transferred to ten Fast-12 sessions thus far this season
  • Christian Lundgaard has been in all four Fast-12 sessions
  • David Malukas, in the No. 4 A.J. Foyt Racing Chevrolet, led the second NTT INDYCAR SERIES practice at Barber Motorsports Park on Saturday morning, leading seven Team Chevy drivers in the top ten. The action-packed practice featured a drying track early, Pato O’Ward in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, along with several other drivers finding the barriers, and the rain returning for the last ten minutes of practice.
  • With just under 20 minutes remaining in the second practice at a damp Barber Motorsports Park, the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet of Pato O’Ward made contact with the soft barrier at the exit of Turn 17. O’Ward caught oversteer at the entry of the final corner, overcorrecting, bounding through the gravel, grass soaked by overnight storms, going nose first into the barrier. The AMR INDYCAR Safety Team pulled the car onto the asphalt and after refiring the Chevrolet IndyCar V6, O’Ward drove back to pit lane for repairs. The team decided to inspect the No. 5 instead of sending the driver back out.

Tune-In Alert

Sunday

  • NTT INDYCAR SERIES Warm Up – 10am (ET)/9am (CT)/8am (MT)/7am (PT) – FS1/INDYCAR Radio Network/SIRIUSXM 218
  • Children’s Of Alabama Indy Grand Prix (90 laps) – 1:30pm (ET)/12:30pm (CT)/11:30am (MT)/10:30am (PT) – FOX/INDYCAR Radio Network/SIRIUSXM 218

What They’re Saying:

Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 Good Ranchers Team Penske Chevrolet, qualified 2nd: “I just had my eye on the on the timing pylon, and then I saw the No. 10 (Alex Palou) come and I was like, oh, it’s that guy again. But congrats to him. It was a great, great run and I’m just really proud of my Good Ranchers Chevy team. We managed to bring a car that was okay, but we weren’t great. Now it is back to sort of where I like it, and I’m excited for tomorrow’s race. It’s going to be nice and sunny, with a great starting spot and we’ll see where we end up.”

Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, qualified 4th: “Definitely, excited to have my first appearance in the Fast 12, let alone my first (Firestone) Fast Six. We’ve had really strong race days, but that Palou guy makes it hard. I’m really happy to be fourth, we can do something from there. This has actually had more yellows than other tracks. It might seem like a track that you can’t pass, but it might be a bit of a hectic race tomorrow.”

Nolan Siegel, No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, qualified 6th: “I think it was just execution to be honest. Going into this we really expected to be in the Fast Six. We felt that our true pace was top ten and we’ve been in the top ten in every session. Everything went smoothly. We were calm, cool, collected, made small changes, didn’t get ahead of ourselves and executed well. That’s what it takes. Everybody else here is perfect and that’s what it takes. We just executed everything well and it paid off.”

Christian Lundgaard, No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, qualified 7th: “I’m a little disappointed, I will say. We didn’t quite get the tires in the window for the push lap and went slower in Q2 than we did in Q1. I think there are a lot of positives to take from the weekend going into tomorrow’s race. As a team, we’re sixth, seventh and eighth. As long as we all make it through lap one, I believe we’ll all be okay and definitely have some opportunities to bring Arrow McLaren forward in the race.”

Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, qualified 8th: “In P2, I had the mishap in Turn 17, and we didn’t really get a lot of running in, so we were playing a bit of a guessing game going into qualifying. We just missed there by a little bit. Considering we didn’t have a lot of running in, I’m not displeased with it. Obviously, we want to be further up front. I think it’s all to play for tomorrow. Strategy is going to be a big thing like it’s been the last few races. It’s good to see all three cars get into the Fast 12. It’s cool to see Nolan do his first (Firestone) Fast Six, so let’s see what he can do here. We can work from here.”

Post practice incident quote: “I lost the rear and once I got into the grass, I was just a passenger. I don’t know if I touched some paint while opening the radius of the corner. Maybe that’s why I lost the rear, or maybe I just lost it. The damage isn’t as bad as I thought, but the steering column is kind of ahhh. So, we didn’t want to risk it with the high speed corners here. We’ll see what qualifying brings. (after watching the replay). I just lost the rear and obviously it took me to the grass and you’re along for the ride.”

Josef Newgarden, No. 2 PPG Team Penske Chevrolet, qualified 9th: “Qualifying had been an issue for us to start the year so to start solidly inside the top 10 is a step in the right direction for the PPG Chevy team. The MGU issue this morning obviously set our day back a bit; got us behind on our plan for qualifying. The car felt good but there were some things that a little more practice today would have helped us solve. This has been a great track for me in the past so I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”

Santino Ferrucci, No. 14 A.J. Foyt Racing/Sexton Properties Chevrolet, qualified 13th: “It was an okay session. I think our car was pretty good, definitely fast enough to advance. It was really tough to get a gap. Also, the way that everything worked out, we were too heavy on fuel, which is honestly all the lap time that we really needed to advance as well. Or just having a clean out lap before we started our push lap to understand the balance correctly. You’re missing it by five hundreds of a second so it’s the blink of an eye. But these days it’s so tight. We sit good for tomorrow in 13thwith three sets of sticker reds and we’ll come through the field.”

Alexander Rossi, No. 20 Java House ECR Chevrolet, qualified 15th: “I am disappointed with qualifying. I didn’t quite get the lap together, which cost us the transfer. We’ve been fighting to stay on top of conditions all weekend and just came up short. We’ve got a good car and will be pushing very hard tomorrow.”

Callum Ilott, No, 90 PREMA Racing Chevrolet, qualified 16th: “The PREMA team is doing a really good job, and we had a good chance of advancing, and I was really happy with the car. It’s close. It’s close, but this is where we need to be, and it’s just nice to keep working from here. To move forward tomorrow, we need a good strategy, good pit stops, nice tire wear, you know, all all the good stuff. We’ll try our best for it. But, yeah, we’re still we’re still learning, still progressing, but this is a good step.”

Christian Rasmussen, No. 21 Splenda ECR Chevrolet, qualified 17th: “Today’s conditions were tricky for the No. 21 Splenda Chevrolet. This morning in practice was dark, cool and wet while qualifying was dry and warm. It makes things hard in a racing series where every little thing makes a difference! We aren’t starting where we know we could, but we do have a good race car for tomorrow.”

Conor Daly, No. 76 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, qualified 19th: Today we honestly made a really good step forward with our balance. Practice two was good for us. Then we just didn’t get the exact timing for the tires to get in, The second half of lap two was good and so was the first half of lap three. Both laps were similar in time. Just a little bit of a miss on what we needed in qualifying. Happy with the balance. I think we have a lot that we can show tomorrow which is really good. A great step forward for us as a team since we didn’t test here. It’s a positive step forward. I think we will be in good shape tomorrow.

David Malukas, No. 4 A.J. Foyt Racing Chevrolet, qualified 20th: “We finished up qualifying obviously a lot shorter than what we were expecting. Looking at these times, the car was fast enough for it, we had the pace, just unfortunate, unfortunate. Just keep getting very unlucky in all these situations. And in this qualifying session, we just got jam-packed with the timing. Everybody jumped us in pit lane and we didn’t get a clear lap. So this one I think frustrates everybody the most, and it hurts because we knew we had an incredible car and we didn’t even make it out of group one just because of track position. It’s the way the game is. It sucks but we’ll calm down, put our heads down and come up with a good strategy for the race. We know we have a fast car so we’ll be trying to bring it forward tomorrow.”

Sting Ray Robb, No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, qualified 22nd:Qualifying today was not where we wanted to be. We’ve been kind of on the back foot a little bit this weekend, compared to some cars around us. That’s part of the game when it rains in the middle of your practice session. It’s been a very interesting weekend so far. I think the race will be very exciting because of all of the chaos. I think we have a good direction for where we want to go. Conor and I have been working hard to find a package we’re happy with and I think we’re close. The race should be fun and we should be moving forward in the race.

Robert Shwartzman, No. 83 PREMA Racing Chevrolet, qualified 24th: “Unfortunately, qualifying didn’t go well for us today. I was hoping for some rain because in those conditions during Free Practice the car felt quite good. Instead, it become quite windy during qualifying which unbalanced the car and I didn’t feel as confident with it. I didn’t manage to put it altogether for a proper lap, and while I don’t think it would have been top six this time, I think it could have been better. Now we will see what we can do tomorrow in the race.”

Scott McLaughlin

Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: Scott, a lot of attention as you sat and waited for obviously the Firestone Fast Six session to play out before you went out. What was the reasoning behind that?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Keeping laps off our red tires. Didn’t want a false read off blacks. I said to the guys, I’d rather go out and do it one time.

We were prepping a lap anyway. I could feel the track on that lap. Then it was just a matter of putting it down.

First lap wasn’t great. Sounds like Alex had the same thing. Second lap was where it was.

We definitely left a little bit up on the table. A lap around there is a lot of fun. Alex did a great job. From our team, done a really good job just coming back because I feel like we had a bad test here, we sort of went the wrong way a little bit. Fixed it yesterday, massaged it today and got it going.

THE MODERATOR: Do you feel good about the race car for tomorrow?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I do now.

THE MODERATOR: Weather looks good tomorrow, but we’ll see.

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, no, very similar answer to Alex. I think you got to be prepared for anything. As a driver, if it’s going to rain or be dry, you just got to try to do the best you can in those conditions.

I try to keep a pretty neutral thought process before an unpredictable session. Like practice two or even qualifying. Turned out qualifying was pretty dry.

Yeah, you just got to be as prepared as you can be, but fluid at the same time.

Q. Why are you so good here?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: He’s good everywhere (smiling). Yeah, very similar. Reminds me of a track back home, Phillip Island. Just a high-speed motorcycle track as well. I just enjoy these fast, flowing, smooth tracks.

Q. Scott, your girl is hanging from the bridge again this year.

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I’m a girl dad now. My girl hanging from the bridge? I was like, poop.

No, we’re good. Yes, she is. She’s tied up, ready to go. You know what I mean? I got a daughter now.

Q. Scott, they showed the phone booth. Are you going to have to lock him in the phone booth to win tomorrow?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No. I tried a lot of things before Nashville last year.

Look, I’m looking forward to the race. We always have some really good battles every race that we’ve had. Very hard, fair, aggressive racing. So that’s fun. I’m excited for it.

Q. How much of a strategy race is this if we continue the trend? If it were to go caution free, how much of a strategy race is this?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I guess we’ll see. I mean, I think personally it’s going to be very similar to what we’ve seen in the past. But yeah, we’ll see how it plays tomorrow. You can never really sort of predict INDYCAR. You just got to be ready for all sorts of situations at the same time.

Q. This is the first time INDYCAR has come to Barber with the hybrid unit. Has it shown difficulty this weekend? If so, what areas?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I agree with Alex. I think the fun thing now, we’ve been used to the last year or so, has been deploying and doing different strategies, how you use the battery, then regen that battery, how that affects your car balance, trying to figure out what works for you. Not every driver is the same. But you know there’s a quick way of doing it. I’ve really enjoyed studying that and understanding that.

Barber, yeah, it’s been technical. It’s technical already. Adding that, it’s been tough.

Q. Scott, I know you’re drawing the comparisons to Phillip Island. These are really high-commitment corners, aren’t they, sequences of corners? Can you explain to people that don’t know Phillip Island?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think it’s high commitment, but also high load, long duration corners, big Gs. At the same time these corners are leading to slow corners. You’re trying to keep a constant flow around the track. It’s all about momentum. A track like this, as soon as you miss one corner, it affects the next. That’s what makes it really fun.

Phillip Island for me is very much the same that it was in a Super Car. Yeah, like it’s obviously a different animal, different beast to drive the INDYCAR compared to the Super Car, nuances how the track attacks itself between the two cars is very similar.

Q. With this weather, potentially maybe more coming, are we going to see drastic change in the track surface, the grass more slippery now? Is that going to affect track grip or tire strategy?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I don’t know what Alex thinks, but I sort of thought the track got better. It’s a pretty nice surface. Once we got out there and it was fully dry, we could attack it, lay our rubber down. It didn’t take long for the track to hit its stride.

We’ll have a lot of rain tonight. There’s a weather advisory coming. Ultimately, I think tomorrow with the sun, we’ll have warm-up in the morning, then the Indy Lights race as well. There will be a lot of rubber on the track before we head out.

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.

Alex Palou wins pole for Sunday’s race at Barber

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - MAY 3: Alex Palou, driver of the #10 Chip Ganassi Racing Honda, hops into his car during qualifying for the NTT IndyCar Series Children's of Alabama Indy Grand Prix at Barber Motorsports Park on May 3, 2025, in Birmingham, Alabama. Photo: Joe Skibinski/Penske Entertainment

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The forecast called for rain during qualifying, but never showed up. Alex Palou, however, rained on everyone’s parade by winning pole for Sunday’s race.

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES points leader turned the fastest lap in the Firestone Fast Six with a lap of 1:07.291.

“Yeah, it was great,” he said. “It was really close. We didn’t know if it was going to be wet or dry, so we were all I think panicking a little bit. You didn’t want to get caught at the worst moment. Yeah, car has been really good all weekend honestly. Especially at the Fast Six, I got the balance I wanted, the balance we’re looking for. Yeah, really happy with the lap, as well. Got a pole that we don’t really get many, many poles. Feels good to start up front.”

It’s his seventh career pole in 84 career INDYCAR starts.

Scott McLaughlin starts second with a time of 1:07.438.

Colton Herta, Will Power, Rinus VeeKay, and Nolan Siegel rounded out the Firestone Fast Six.

Qualifying report

Firestone Fast Six

Herta opened the final round with a banker lap of 1:08.265. VeeKay immediately usurped him with a lap of 1:08.195. McLaughlin overtook them both with a lap of 1:07.471. Then Herta retook the top spot with a lap of 1:07.457. McLaughlin took the top spot with a lap of 1:07.438. Palou turned the fastest lap at 1:07.291.

Round 2

Siegel started the round with a 1:09 lap on his banker lap. Herta overtook him with a 1:07.629 lap. Power usurped him with the fastest lap of 1:07.234.

Power, Alex Palou, Herta, McLaughlin, VeeKay and Siegel advanced to the Firestone Fast Six.

Round 1

Group 1

McLaughlin started the session by clocking in a lap of 1:12.708. Palou usurped him, but then McLaughlin took it back with a lap of 1:08.250. Then Palou reclaimed it with a lap of 1:08.119. Both drivers set those times on Firestone blacks. Pato O’Ward, on Firestone reds, eclipsed them both with a 1:07 lap. Then Marcus Armstrong took the top spot with a faster 1:07 lap. McLaughlin clocked in his fastest lap of 1:07.243. Then Palou overtook him with the fastest lap of 1:07.167.

Palou, McLaughlin, Armstrong, O’Ward, Siegel and Power advanced to Round 2. Power, with time expired, clocked into the next round with a lap of 1:07.771.

Early in the session, Christian Rasmussen spun out in Turn 15. With five minutes to go, Power went off track and spun out exiting Turn 6.

Group 2

Kyle Kirkwood opened Group 2’s session with a lap of 1:10.904. Herta usurped him with a lap of 1:08.187. Kyffin Simpson took over the top spot with a lap of 1:08.169. With everyone on Firestone reds in the final two minutes, Josef Newgarden topped the chart with a lap of 1:07.398. Herta overtook him with the fastest lap of 1:07.272.

Herta, Newgarden, Christian Lundgaard, Simpson, Rinus VeeKay, and Louis Foster advanced to Round 2.

Scott Dixon went off track in Turn 8 with less than a minute in the round.

Toyota GAZOO Racing NXS Post-Race Recap – Texas – 05.03.25

TAYLOR GRAY FINISHES CAREER-BEST SECOND AT TEXAS
Joe Gibbs Racing places three GR Supras in the top-10

FORT WORTH (May 3, 2025) – Taylor Gray battled back from early race damage and drove back through the field to earn a career-best second-place finish in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday afternoon. It is Gray’s third top-five finish of the season, and second in the last three races.

Cup Series rookie Riley Herbst finished third in his second Xfinity Series start of the year, while Brandon Jones added another Supra in the top-10 with a ninth-place run.

Toyota GAZOO Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS)
Texas Motor Speedway
Race 12 of 33 – 300 miles, 200 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Kyle Larson*
2nd, TAYLOR GRAY
3rd, RILEY HERBST
4th, Austin Hill*
5th, Sam Mayer*
9th, BRANDON JONES
13th, WILLIAM SAWALICH
27th, DEAN THOMPSON
*non-Toyota driver 

TOYOTA QUOTES

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

Finishing Position: 2nd

Looks like that hard work is paying off. How was that finish?
“I can’t thank all of my Joe Gibbs Racing guys enough for bringing me a really fast Operation 300 Toyota GR Supra – as fast as Xfinity Mobile. I tried to ruin our day a few times for us – just with dumb mistakes, towards the beginning and middle of the race – but just kind of shows how tough this number 54 group is, being able to fight back and get a good finish.”

As you look at that second overtime restart, could you have done anything differently?

“No, I don’t think so. First of all, I’m really proud of my guys – they brought me a really fast Operation 300 Toyota GR Supra. I really tried to ruin our day the first half of the race, just making dumb mistakes – but really proud of all of my guys, being able to come back from those mistakes and be able to have a good finish out of it. It sucks to finish second – I want to go win.”

RILEY HERBST, No. 19 Monster Energy Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 3rd

You seemed to have an eventful race this afternoon. Can you tell us about it?

“It was a long day. We started 27th, but drove up into the top-five. We got taken out with some damage there on the restart and had to go all the way to the back and drove from last up to third. I think that was ok, but it was just unfortunate, we wanted to be more dominant. If we could have gotten one more green-white-checkered (Kyle) Larson and I could have raced for the win.”

# # #

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.

Carson Hocevar collects first career Cup Series pole at Texas

Carson Hocevar wins Cup Series Pole Award at Texas Motor Speedway by James Gilbert for Getty Images

Carson Hocevar earned his first NASCAR Cup Series Busch Light Pole Award Saturday afternoon at Texas Motor Speedway. His 191.659 mph qualifying lap in the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet topped William Byron’s lap by 0.014 seconds.

“I’m normally so hard on myself,” Hocevar said, and I still didn’t think I nailed that lap at all. But super proud of this team and proud because I’ve never been the number one pit stall.

“I’ve had a lot of issues with pit road,” he continued. “We’ve had a lot of bad luck, so I finally get the number one pit stall and I’m pumped about that. I’m excited to lead my first-ever Cup race to green.”

Hendrick Motorsport’s William Byron will start beside Hocevar on the front row.

“I felt like I hit (turns) one and two pretty good,” Byron said. “I was just right on the edge of being two tight and then (turns) three and four were wide open. Just appreciate all the guys on the 24. They did a great job today. We’ve been good on the mile-and-a-halfs, obviously, just trying to dial in our race balance and feel like we’re really close.” 

“I felt like I hit (turns) one and two pretty good, I was just right on the edge of being two tight and then (turns) three and four were wide open,” Byron said. “Just appreciate all the guys on the 24. They did a great job today. We’ve been good on the mile-and-a-halfs, obviously, just trying to dial in our race balance and feel like we’re really close.” 

Austin Cindric, coming off the win at Talladega last week, will start third.

“We are in a great spot for tomorrow and should have a good pit stall, so I feel good about where we are at for tomorrow,” Cindric said. “We will try to go get another one.”

Kyle Larson and Michael McDowell round out the top five. Ty Gibbs, Josh Berry, Denny Hamlin, Bubba Wallace and AJ Allmendinger completed the top 10 in the qualifying session.

You can tune into the Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY at 3:30 p.m. ET Sunday afternoon on FS1 with radio coverage provided by FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Texas-lineup-12511_STARTROW

FEELS LIKE THE FIRST TIME: HOCEVAR EARNS INAUGURAL CUP SERIES POLE AT WÜRTH 400 PRESENTED BY LIQUI MOLY

Spire Motorsports driver Carson Hocevar celebrates his first career NASCAR Cup Series pole position for the Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY at Texas Motor Speedway. Photo credit: Getty Images for Texas Motor Speedway.
  • Spire Motorsports driver Carson Hocevar nabs his first pole in 56 career NASCAR Cup Series races and becomes the youngest pole winner in TMS history.

FORT WORTH, Texas (MAY 3, 2025) – Spire Motorsports driver Carson Hocevar captured the first pole position of his young NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) career during Saturday’s qualifying for the Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY at Texas Motor Speedway (TMS).

Hocevar, a 22-year-old Michigan native in his sophomore season, posted a lap of 191.659 miles per hour (28.175 seconds) in the No. 77 Chili’s Ride the ‘Dente Chevrolet to secure his first NCS pole in 56 career races. It also is his third top-five starting position of the season and fourth among the top 10. His previous career-best starting position was second, which came at Darlington Raceway during the 2024 season.

Hocevar also earned the distinction of becoming the youngest NCS polesitter in TMS history, eclipsing then-23-year-old Brian Vickers of Hendrick Motorsports in 2006.

Hocevar will lead the 38-car field to the green flag for Sunday’s Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY beginning at 2:30 p.m. CT (TV: FS1, Radio: PRN, SiriusXM, Lone Star 92.5 FM locally).

“This is the same crew on pit road, off pit road, at the shop, everyone working on the 77 is exactly the same as when I started here at Spire last year,” Hocevar said. “They were a lot of the same guys who were in the thick of it, so it’s just huge what we’ve been able to bring this team. Chili’s coming on board, being able to Ride the Dente, you know, having the cowboy outfit right, what better place to get on a pole.

“I’m normally so hard on myself – and I still didn’t think I nailed that lap at all – but super proud of this team and proud because I’ve never been the number one pit stall. I’ve had a lot of issues with pit road and we’ve had a lot of bad luck, so I finally get the number one pit stall and I’m pumped about that. … I’m excited to lead my first-ever Cup race to green.”

Starting alongside Hocevar on the front row will be Hendrick Motorsports driver William Byron. His qualifying run of 191.564 mph came up .014 of a second shy of the pole but was good enough for his seventh top-10 start in 11 starts.

Team Penske driver Austin Cindric, last week’s winner at Talladega, will start third after his lap of 191.523 mph (28.195 secs.). Rounding out the top five are Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson (191.421 mph, 28.210 secs.) and Hocevar’s Spire Motorsports teammate Michael McDowell (191.333 mph, 28.223 secs.), respectively.

Defending race winner Chase Elliott of Hendrick Motorsports will start 29th with his lap of 188.890 mph (28.588).

Event tickets and camping passes for the 2025 Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY NASCAR tripleheader weekend are on sale now. Click HERE for more information and to buy tickets.

Texas Motor Speedway’s current 2025 events calendar includes Kubota High Limit Racing (May 3 at the TMS Dirt Track), Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY NASCAR tripleheader weekend (May 2-4), C10 Nationals (May 9-10), Holley LS Fest Texas (May 16-17), Bandas y Trocas (May 24), Solar Car Challenge (July 17-23), Goodguys Summit Racing Lone Star Nationals (Sept. 26-28), Texas World Dirt Track Championship (Oct. 3-4 at the TMS Dirt Track), October Truck Madness (Oct. 11), Kubota High Limit Racing All-In Championship (Oct. 17-18 at the TMS Dirt Track), FuelFest (Oct. 25), POWRi Sprint Cars (Nov. 7-8 at the TMS Dirt Track) and Xtreme Xperience (Dec. 11-14).

ABOUT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

Texas Motor Speedway is among the largest sports and entertainment venues in the United States. The speedway has an array of amenities such as Big Hoss, the largest single LED screen of any sports facility in North America, making it one of the premier venues in the world of sports. The 1.5-mile superspeedway located in Fort Worth hosts all three NASCAR national series among its various races and specialty events throughout the year. Texas Motor Speedway is owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports, LLC, a leading marketer and promoter of motorsports entertainment in the United States. For more information, please visit texasmotorspeedway.com.

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Keep track of Texas Motor Speedway’s busy schedule by following on Facebook, X and Instagram. Keep up with all the latest news and information on the Speedway website and TMS mobile app.

CHEVROLET NCS: Hocevar Takes First Career Pole at Texas Motor Speedway

NASCAR CUP SERIES
TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST-QUALIFYING REPORT
MAY 3, 2025

Hocevar Takes First Career Pole at Texas Motor Speedway
Team Chevy Scores Second Front-Row Sweep of 2025

TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 STARTING LINEUP:
POS. DRIVER
1st – Carson Hocevar
2nd – William Byron
4th – Kyle Larson
5th – Michael McDowell
10th – AJ Allmendinger

  • Laying down a blistering lap of 28.175 seconds, at 191.659 mph, Carson Hocevar and the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet team topped the qualifying leaderboard to earn the pole position for tomorrow’s Würth 400 presented by LIQUI MOLY at Texas Motor Speedway. This marks Hocevar’s first career pole win in NASCAR’s premier series, coming in advance of his 56th start in the division.
  • The pole – Chevrolet’s 17th all-time in the division at Texas Motor Speedway – marks the manufacturer’s sixth pole-winning effort of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season, with Hocevar becoming the fourth different driver to contribute to that feat. The Bowtie brand continues to remain undefeated in pole wins on intermediate ovals thus far this season, with Michael McDowell earning the pole at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Alex Bowman’s pole at Homestead-Miami Speedway and William Byron’s pole at Darlington Raceway.
  • For the second time this season, Chevrolet has swept the front-row of the starting lineup, with the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Texas winner, William Byron, landing second on the qualifying speed chart with a lap of 28.189 seconds, at 191.564 mph, in his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. Joining their Team Chevy teammates in the top-10 at the conclusion of the qualifying session included Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson and Spire Motorsports’ Michael McDowell in the fourth and fifth positions, respectively, with Kaulig Racing’s AJ Allmendinger rounding out the top-10.

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

Wins: 18
Poles: 17
Top-Fives: 80
Top-10s: 187

Chevrolet’s season statistics heading into the 12th NASCAR Cup Series race of the season:

Wins: 3
Poles: 6
Top-Fives: 20
Top 10s: 48
Stage Wins: 8

Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet – Pole Win Press Conference Quotes

Carson, your first career pole here for the Cup Series and you’re the youngest to do so here at Texas Motor Speedway. Take us through your lap and how you’re feeling.

“Yeah, ultimately I didn’t think it was great through (turns) one and two. It felt so comfortable and so much grip that I’m like, man, I could have used a little bit more throttle and everything. But it felt super smooth and going through three and four, it felt really good ride quality… obviously easy wide open, cut distance. They said it was P-1 and that’s ultimately where I was like, man, it felt so good, it felt slow. So, yeah, really fortunate, really thankful to have a fast car. Obviously, fastest in practice and you want to do it again in qualifying and be able to back that up.

I think it’s really important for our group to show the strength of being able to go from practice to qualifying adjustments and where we’ve been going and be able to do that for the race, too. Just put together a whole weekend and whole race worth of adjustments, and I think we’re getting a lot closer right now.”

Looking at the ghost car and the comparisons, it looked like you made huge gains coming to the green, actually. But you really had no sense of how fast the lap really was. I mean, second fastest lap in the Next Gen era…

“Yeah, I mean, I had no idea. Normally, you can see lap time on the dash and even that didn’t work right away, so it gave me a little bit of like, I don’t know how good this was. Luckily, they told me pretty quickly and I didn’t have to wait in anticipation or anything.

But obviously, when Michael (McDowell) went out and put in a really good lap time, I felt like we were faster than him in practice. So, it gave me a little bit of confidence that, you know, our stuff was going to be as quick, if not hopefully a little quicker. To be able to back that up and for him to run a good lap, you know, gave me a little bit more confidence in our car, honestly.”

Can you do 267 of those laps tomorrow?

“I mean, the way the tires were in our long run, I hope so. Definitely, it’s going to be a lot more feasible having clean air, right? It shows up being able to run really fast lap times. I think the most important for us is being able to, you know, kind of determine our own fate a little bit more with pit road; how everybody’s going to have different agendas at times of two or none or four or whatever the case may be. Having to go all the way down pit road and having an open out is going to be super important for us of just trying to play that game and knowing that. Hopefully it clogs some other guys up and we can take advantage there.”

Carson, at every level now that we’ve seen you, you’ve just had this sense of speed where, you know, you’re just naturally fast. Where do you think this raw speed comes from? I mean, is that something that is just innate, like ability, or something you’ve had to work out to find? Where is that?

“I mean, I don’t know. It’s not a fun answer to say I don’t know, but I really don’t. There’s a lot of times where I don’t know why I’m fast or why I’m slow at times, right? You know, I feel like I study different than a lot of them. I don’t know everybody’s sense, but I use SMT a lot less. I use real video a lot more. I look at dirt videos more. I think the most footage I watched was about the 2007 to 2010 Texas races just for fun, but also to kind of just get an idea.

I don’t know… I just feel like I have a really good sense of, like, unloading. I feel like that’s why we’re always good at unloading and just getting the limit. And I think that sort of studying helps me and has fit my style of just wanting to be present and learn it as I go. There’s been times where I don’t know where my feet are supposed to be and I don’t know where my hands are supposed to be yet, and I’ll just figure out how to slow my hands down when I get there. A lot of it’s just been kind of trial by fire of not wanting to be slow, really. I’m always trying to search; be creative and never put myself in a box. I think looking at SMT or really getting too focused on the data of it puts me in that box or gets me second guessing myself. So I just know I go a lot off instinct, natural feel and visible, and just use as many senses as I can in the car. And, you know, I try to live my life as confident and as free will as I can just because I know I’m racing off instinct alone basically out there. If I’m confident myself, I feel like I’ll make confident decisions out there.”

(Michael) McDowell said that he’s a big data guy. He’s like the opposite of you, right?

“Yeah, we’re like polar opposites.. (laughs)”

He wants you to convince you that, you know, SMT is the way to go, but he has to beat you first and show that you’re faster first. Do you feel like it would mess you up so much that you just don’t want to go down that road and that’s why you’re going purely off instinct?

“Yeah, I mean, I remember when I first qualified a Cup car ever, I watched Joey Logano’s in-car. I never even worried if he was P1 or P30, he was just the only in car I could find on YouTube, and that’s all I watched. And, you know, I just listened to the visual cues, the throttle and just imagined what I would do in that. I felt like I remember running the lap and I almost had that lap running in my mind. You can’t get that from squiggly lines and fake GPS bars.

Yeah, and two, I feel like I can adapt super well or I’m so visual that I’m always nervous that if I watch someone make a mistake, that I put that in my mind. So I try to avoid even watching guys just because I don’t want to second guess myself, even if it’s wrong. I feel like I’m naturally going to be at my best when I’m just focused on me, honestly.”

How much are you going to be watching and paying attention to the Xfinity Race later today to see how the rubber builds up and how the groove is going to spread out to prepare for Sunday?

“Yeah, I mean, I’m probably going to hang out here as much as I can. I like to do that. You know, I like to just be a race fan and go watch; watch rubber and watch different things. You know, you pick up one or two things, but yeah, I definitely will watch, just to see the trends of it. But a lot of it is just me being a race fan and enjoying racing. If I pick one or two things up, that’s obviously a benefit, but I’ll just probably be a race fan watching.”

Where does this kind of old school mentality come from of listening to those visual cues and that feel and watching people react instead of the newer technology that you were saying with the fake GPS car and whatnot? Where does that kind of old school mentality come from?

“I was a bad student in school (laughs). I don’t know… Yeah, I mean, I just always have been a visual learner. I mean, even when I was like a kid racing quarter midgets, I lived watching racing. When I went home for the week off, I found a disk of quarter midget videos that I remember visibly watching. It’s just how I did it. You didn’t have that back then, right? I mean, it’s such a different world, but it’s just all I’ve ever known. And I haven’t really been slow, so I don’t want to change it. I don’t want to do anything. I know there’ll be a time at some point in my career where I can’t just go off visual or instinct, but I want to take advantage of that while I’ve got it right now.”

About General Motors

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IndyCar updates tire rules for Indianapolis

INDIANAPOLIS - APRIL 24: Firestone tires during the Indianapolis 500 open test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on April 24, 2025, in Indianapolis. Photo: Joe Skibinski/Penske Entertainment

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — New tire rules coming for next weekend’s race at the Brickyard.

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES announced, Saturday, that for the Sonsio Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, next Saturday, teams must use two sets of both Firestone blacks (hard tires) and Firestone reds (soft tires). That’s an increase from one set of each. Teams must complete two laps, one under green, to satisfy the rule.

IndyCar announced that these changes won’t affect Sunday’s race at Barber Motorsports Park, where the current rules of one set each will remain in place. Moreover, IndyCar said it’ll evaluate the new rule for use in future races after the road course race at Indianapolis.

IndyCar said in a release that the changes seek to “ensure an all-out, driving on the limit, thrilling and entertaining product for fans” and create more of a challenge.

“INDYCAR is continually looking into ways to improve an already extraordinary on-track product,” INDYCAR President J. Douglas Boles said. “Firestone is a terrific partner, and their higher degradation alternate tire has given strategists plenty to think about on road and street circuits this year. We expect this update will challenge teams and drivers even more.”

These changes come in the midst of a season where drivers lodged complaints about the combination of the weight of the new hybrid system and the tire degradation at St. Petersburg and Long Beach led teams to abandon the soft tires as quickly as possible.

INDYCAR Announces Race Tire Rule Update for Sonsio Grand Prix

INDIANAPOLIS (Saturday, May 3, 2025) – INDYCAR has announced an update to the race tire usage requirements for the Sonsio Grand Prix on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course on Saturday, May 10.

For the race, teams will be required to use:

  • Two sets of alternate compound tires (one more than previously required)
  • Two sets of primary compound tires (one more than previously required)

There are no requirements in terms of new (sticker) sets of tires used in the race. The two completed laps needed to satisfy the tire requirement rule, where one (1) lap must begin once the Green Flag has been displayed to the Race Leader (Rule 15.3.3.2.3.) for each of the four sets (Rule 15.3.3.2.) remains in effect.

The update strives to ensure an all-out, driving on the limit, thrilling and entertaining product for fans and generate even more strategic challenges for North America’s premier open-wheel racing series. Additionally – working with Firestone – the current, standard event weekend road and street circuit tire allocation that began this season (five sets of primaries and five sets of alternates) was contemplated with this tire requirement format option in mind. The tire allocation for the IMS road course, the only two-day road and street circuit event on the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES schedule, remains unchanged at five sets of primaries and four sets of alternates.

“INDYCAR is continually looking into ways to improve an already extraordinary on-track product,” INDYCAR President J. Douglas Boles said. “Firestone is a terrific partner, and their higher degradation alternate tire has given strategists plenty to think about on road and street circuits this year. We expect this update will challenge teams and drivers even more.”

In an additional move to ensure more robust on-track activity during the Sonsio Grand Prix event, Practice 2 on the IMS road course will be adjusted from a limited green flag guarantee of 45 minutes to 35.

Following the event on the IMS road course, INDYCAR will review both updated procedures and evaluate its use for future races.

Coverage of the Sonsio Grand Prix, round five of the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES championship, begins at 4:30 p.m. ET Saturday, May 10 on FOX, the FOX Sports app and the INDYCAR Radio Network. The first practice of the weekend is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. ET Friday, May 9 and can be seen on FS2.

The next NTT INDYCAR SERIES event is the Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix powered by AmFirst on Sunday, May 4. Coverage begins at 1:30 p.m. ET on FOX, the FOX Sports app and the INDYCAR Radio Network.