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TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Justin Haley Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
FEBRUARY 12, 2025

 Justin Haley, driver of the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Do you feel any extra pressure coming to the Daytona 500?

“Because you know it is possible and you know you can do it; you have that pressure of it’s a great opportunity and it’s a strength of ours. It’s a strength of mine and I know that. You feel that extra pressure coming here because you know you’ll be in the mix, and you’ll have a legitimate shot. So, it’s a bit of a mix. The confidence comes with it, but the pressure comes with it, too. I’m very fortunate to feel that pressure coming here. Every year is new challenges and new obstacles and new opportunities, and that’s what is exciting about kicking off the year. There are tremendous opportunities in front of us and the biggest opportunity of all being right here at the Daytona 500.”

Can you explain the mindset of not going out for practice this morning?

“It was planned. There’s not a tremendous amount that you can do to the cars, especially pre-qualifying to find more speed. You can go out there and leak check and all those things, which we would have liked to have done. But with inspection being very close to practice and the process, we took that extra time to run through LIS a few more times and just make sure we had everything where we needed it. Minimizing risk is one small variable of it, but it’s not the biggest variable of it. We felt we’ve had a process of unloading for qualifying and doing our deal and we kind of know where those targets are, so we didn’t want to confuse it much with race trim versus Q trim, draft, go bath, go forward. It was kind of a group decision, and we’ll see how it all plays out.”

What have been the differences to you with this team?

“Any time you walk into a new building, a new situation, there’s so much to take in from personnel and processes. All those things are different, but what is nice is these racecars are fairly common across the board. There are some nuances with manufacturers and how teams do things specifically. But, for the most part, all the parts and pieces are the same and you’re just trying to put them in the right location. I think the biggest thing is just getting in the routine and getting into the process because you just don’t jump in day one and everything is going smooth. And everyone does things a little differently and you’re trying to learn how everyone works, and just for me trying to learn the tools and trying to figure out some of those things I can do before hitting the racetrack. Once we get through the West Coast swing, things are going to be much more clear on what the difference are, what we need to work on, improvements we need to make, how I need to adapt, how our tools adapt. But right now, you don’t have a whole lot to go off of other than optimism and a lot of hours and hard work. But when we get back from the West Coast, we’ll know what we need do moving forward. Coming in, for me, a new team, new manufacturer, a lot of new, you add in all new personnel with that race team and it becomes very difficult because now you’re working on chemistry, you’re working on communication, you’re’ working on where everybody’s feelings are at – and I mean that not jokingly of how people communicate and how they respond and how you extract the most out of them and how they extract the most out of you. It takes time and having a lot of that core group stay with us is a big deal.”

What’s it like at this stage of your career having to make that transition?

“It’s nerve-racking and it’s exciting all at the same time. It’s a brand-new opportunity and there’s so much in front of you that is new. It feels that way and you feel that optimism and you feel that energy of we’re doing big things though we haven’t done anything yet. So that makes you nervous that we have to go perform now. It’s been fun to go through the process of how they do things and how they see things and learn people’s names and learn what they do. It takes time. You can’t walk in day one and be clicking with everyone. The good thing is that there are a lot of familiar faces at Spire that I’ve worked with over my career at some point. It wasn’t totally daunting because I had those 10 or 20 faces that are familiar, and it’s cool to reconnect with people and have another shot at doing big things.”

Is there any trepidation that you’re jumping into something new?

“I haven’t been in this exact situation, but when I got let go in the 95, we were running pretty good. Good enough to get Kasey Kahne to come drive it. And I thought to myself we were finally running good and it’s all going to come together and then that happened. I was thinking there’s no way I’m going to land anything and there’s no way I can get back to where I am now. And that wasn’t winning, that was running decent. And I landed at Front Row and you fast forward and winning the Brickyard and you wouldn’t be able to convince anyone that year that it would be a possibility that Front Row would do that. So, I’ve seen it play out and I know it’s possible, so that’s why I have so much optimism coming into this because they’re so much further ahead of where we start. And that’s not a dig at Front Row. It’s just where we were. And the people we were able to get and the people they already have, we have the recipe to be very good. But it’s all got to click and that takes time. We’ll see if that’s five weeks, 10 weeks, 38 weeks, 50 weeks. Nobody can predict that, but we have the potential and the people in the building to do it.”

What makes you excited for starting over now?

“The same thing as timing. Nobody wants to start over and rebuild. It’s only exciting if you know the potential. The excitement comes from I’m thankful. I’m thankful to have a job. I’m thankful to be one of 40 that gets to start on Sunday, and I know that’s a tremendous privilege. That also comes with the pressure and the expectation of getting everything I can out of every area to make sure I do what I was hired to do.”

What does the Daytona 500 mean to you?

“The Daytona 500 to me is so much more than just a race. It is the biggest race. I don’t want to discredit that, but to me it was more of the 358 races that it took to get there. If you look at my rookie season, not that it went bad, but my trajectory of getting fired and getting replaced by Marcus Ambrose and being sort of an unknown in this sport – I went straight from ARCA to Cup – to be here to win 357 races later was miraculous. So, when I think about that win, I think about the 16 years and 357 starts that were an absolute grind. And hanging on for dear life to stay in the sport. That’s what makes it special.”

How does that win fill your heart to cap your amazing story?

“It really is amazing. The 500, there is nothing that will top that. I wish I had a better way of phrasing it, but the Brickyard was more – meaningful is not the right word – it was more rewarding. Personally, professionally the Brickyard. The reason is because of what we did as a team. We dominated the day, we led the most laps, we executed on pit road, it’s not a superspeedway, nobody can say it’s flukey. I went head-to-head with Chase Elliott for 30 laps and, to me, that is so awesome to get a win like that. Where Daytona there is a big crash, Brad and Joey, and I don’t find it controversial at all. It doesn’t take away from how I feel about winning the 500 because a lot of those races end like that. But the reward of that race of we did something really special today the Brickyard was one of those days.”

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.

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Justin Allgaier Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
FEBRUARY 12, 2025

 Justin Allgaier, driver of the No. 40 JR Motorsports Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Q. What has the first part of this experience been like so far?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: It’s been amazing. When you look at JR Motorsports as a whole, what they’ve accomplished in this sport, then to see Dale Jr. in the garage this morning at 6 a.m. with a smile on his face, I think it puts it into perspective how big of a moment this was, not only for Dale and Kelley and LW, but for our company as a whole.

I think even furthermore, when I look at the men and women we’ve assembled to be here and be a part of this team, see their smiles today, most of which have never worked in a Cup Series garage or worked on a Cup Series car in their lives, get the opportunity to come here to the biggest race of the year and to have an opportunity to try to qualify, it’s a big deal.

I think for me, there’s a lot of stress, a lot of pressure that goes along with that. I’ve put in a lot of sleepless nights to try to get ready for this and understand what I can do to be my best, at the same time also being very proud of what we’ve accomplished in building a beautiful race car.

Chris Stapleton, Traveller Whiskey, how excited they are. Just the whole process, it’s been really, really special and surreal to even get to this point, regardless of how the rest of the weekend goes.

Q. How do you approach getting into the race? You have a crew chief who is brilliant at qualifying.

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: I think obviously if you can qualify in and make speed today, it makes life a lot easier.

On the other side of that, the experience that I have, the experience that Greg has, my spotter Joey, what he was able to do on top of the spotter stand, those are things I think are very important.

As Chevrolet, we got a lot of cars in the field that are Chevys. You cannot do this alone. There is no way to superspeedway race by yourself.

We’re hopeful that that all plays into our favor, but we also know that this is arguably one of the toughest open fields of the last couple years. We picked a heck of a year to try to make this attempt.

There’s a lot that goes into it. I would say that as the Next Gen car has kind of come in, you focus on things a little bit differently for qualifying than maybe what you would have in the past. I don’t know that there’s any magic, per se, but at the same time I know we’ve prepared a really, really nice race car. If that helps in any way, we’re going to qualify great this evening.

But we’re going to do what we can regardless and have the best opportunity we can to lock our way into the field.

Q. How have you been dealing with the stress and pressure?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: I mean, I think that’s part of the sport, right? I think we wouldn’t do this if weirdly we didn’t all enjoy the stress of this a little bit.

I think for me, I definitely operate on those feelings. I’m at my best when the pressure is the highest. Last year we went on this pressure makes diamonds. It’s really true. If it didn’t mean anything, there would be no pressure, right?

If you could go through life, there was no meaning, you would just kind of live every day and just kind of be bland. I think sometimes the peaks and the valleys define how we feel, who we are, how we operate.

I’ve been blessed to be around great people and great opportunities. This is just another addition to what I’ve been able to accomplish through my career.

Knowing all of these people around me are wanting to complete this task and be a part of it, it makes me just proud to even have my name as a part of it.

It’s a way bigger experience than just me driving the race car, that’s for sure.

Q. (No microphone.)

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Reddit feels the same way, just so you know.

Q. Did you ever anticipate making another Daytona 500 start? What are the emotions that come along with that?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Let me start by saying I don’t know that I’ve — hard to explain how I’m going to say this.

I’ve never not wanted to be in the Cup Series. Still to this day, if the opportunity was there to go Cup racing at a high level, I would still have a lot of interest in that.

With that being said, though, I think you have to be in the right situation, the right opportunity with the right team and the right car.

I don’t want to just go to the Cup level just to go compete, right? I want to be able to go out and run good and run up front.

I think last year running the 5 car for Kyle Larson and the whole team made me know how much I really enjoy the Cup side knowing we were able to go up there and be successful.

Adversely, too, I have a great team, a great group of people that are around me. I have an opportunity to go win the Xfinity Series championship as we did last year and have another great shot at doing again this year.

I’m at two points where both are fantastic. I love what I do. I wouldn’t change that side of it for the world. Would I love to be Cup racing again? Absolutely. You’re always fighting that internal battle.

What I will say is it’s allowed me to do things being in the Xfinity Series that I never would have gotten to do had I been in the Cup Series.

Right, wrong, indifferent, I know there’s a lot of difference of opinion on what that looks like. Winning a championship last year was probably one of the most meaningful moments of my career. Had I not gone back down to the Xfinity Series, I don’t know if I ever would have experienced that.

I feel like it’s definitely been the right choice. I’m having a fun being able to be a part of a really cool experience with JR Motorsports that in my wildest dreams I never saw coming to fruition.

Q. (Question about Dale.)

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Dale is the same Dale. I think it put a lot of things in perspective for me this morning watching his excitement, watching him be in the garage, overseeing kind of all of this.

The amount of effort and time he’s put into this program, understanding the car, what it needs to do to be fast, checking in on the progress daily. I mean, we’re not talking about somebody that’s just, Hey, how’s the car doing once a week or once a month. It’s daily looking at the car, making sure that he’s understanding where we’re going with everything. Those are big steps for our race team.

I also equally think it’s good for our sport. Dale is an icon of the sport. He has amassed a fan base that goes well beyond the walls of the racetrack. He’s done it because he’s Dale, right? His persona and who he is, that’s Dale, right? We all know Dale Jr. He’s the same outside the car as he was inside the car. He’s accomplished a lot of great things on the racetrack.

But as a sport, to see Dale’s excitement for this, I think it makes me excited for it. Whether I’m involved in it or not, it makes my excited for it seeing his excitement. I think that’s bled through into all of our employees. It’s really bled into the garage.

There’s a lot of employees from other race teams that have come over, drivers that have texted myself or Dale personally, that have been super pumped on this. That says a lot in my mind about what that truly means, how special this really is.

Q. So no pressure to make it?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: None, zero (laughter).

Listen, I have seen a lot of social media that I’m pretty confident that I need not to show my face ever again if we don’t make the field. I will do my best job that I possibly can.

But I think that this exercise of getting here has been significant of what it takes, the time, the energy, the financial side of it. Whether this is the first and only or first of many, I couldn’t tell you. Five years ago, I would have said that this day would never come. It finally came. It’s everything that I thought it would be and then some.

I think that everybody at our shop feels the same way. So I’m excited to see the speed we can have tonight, but I’m excited to see how the rest of the weekend goes. I’m very hopeful.

Anything can and will happen in the Duels. We’ve seen it all time and time again. You can have the fastest race car here and it winds up in a box of parts or you can sneak your way in on the last lap. I think Jimmie got in on one of the last laps of the Duels. You never know what to expect.

I’m proud of the effort just to get to this point. We’re going to do everything we can to make it into the 500.

Q. Given Hendrick’s front rows, is the front row something for you?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Listen, if we qualify on the front row, I’ll do backflips. I don’t know that I can, but I’ll at least attempt it.

I don’t know. I think the one thing about this is while Hendrick has had a lot of success here, when you look at the, like I said earlier, employees that are down there working on this race car, a lot of them have never been on the Cup side. Just the understanding of going through tech, getting the car into pit road, all of that, there’s all these new experiences, right?

While there’s no magic, per se, just understanding the processes. Sometimes you have to focus on little things that you maybe could put that time or energy into the car that now you’re focusing on just kind of learning it and growing it. Those are efforts that probably hinder us a little bit in this qualifying effort.

I wouldn’t change that. We could have assembled a group of people, got a bunch of people from another race team, had them come and be a part of it. That’s not what this has been about. This has been about JR Motorsports going Cup racing and we’ve done that.

I think for me, watching their effort, regardless of what happens, I just want to lay down the best lap I can for them to see it make them happy and proud.

Q. What was the challenge with practice today?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Time. Challenge at practice is getting a clean lap. We focused on a clean lap, what it would take to do that.

When you have the chartered cars able to go out there and really focus, a lot of them drafted, some guys just went out and made long runs, just making sure everything got up to temperature.

For us, while that would be great, we would love to do that, we needed to go out and get clean laps and understand what is our car going to do this evening, what do we have to do to go the fastest we can for a lap.

I saw a bunch of open cars, I don’t know if it was working with different spotters, maybe a different thought process, but a lot of the open cars were able to go out there. I saw one was literally on the bumper on the car in front of them making laps. I don’t know if I quite understand that if you’re trying to qualify your way into the Daytona 500.

There’s a lot of schools of thought when it comes to qualifying here. Greg did a great job of coming up with a game plan. If we had more time, you make more qualifying attempts. For what we needed to do, today was everything we needed to do and then some.

Q. When you’ve been at place for 10 years, you’re going to bond with people. Certainly there’s been a bond with Dale. How has the relationship with him developed over the years?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: It’s funny because, again, Dale has accomplished everything you want to accomplish in the sport. He doesn’t need me, right? Let’s be honest, he doesn’t need me. But it’s been fun to watch his excitement for what I’ve accomplished on the racetrack.

Look, I’ve been at JR Motorsports longer than any other part of my career of any other race team. There’s a good reason for that, right? I love where I’m at. I love the people that I’m around.

Dale has been somebody that I look up to and I aspire to be, not only on the racetrack but off the racetrack, right? What he’s like as a dad, how he’s a husband. I mean, the guy is involved in everything, and he still somehow manages to handle all of it and do it well. Those are all things that I think for me are important. I’ve leaned on Dale a lot.

We had a moment three years ago when we didn’t win the championship that was probably the turning point in he and I’s relationship. We couldn’t explain it. I felt like I let everybody down. We didn’t win a championship. He felt the same way on the other side of it as a team.

Probably the coolest thing for me is I’ve been at JR Motorsports long enough to have watched Dale go from full-time Cup Series driver to TV personality to car owner to all these different things and facets of his career. The Dale Jr. of today is not the Dale Jr. of five years ago, especially not the Dale Jr. of 10 years ago.

As he’s gotten older and has had kids, has stepped back from the driving seat, it’s been amazing to watch his sentimental side of this sport and what it means to him. I think that’s where this has been the coolest moment, is seeing him being sentimental about the sport. It’s drawn us closer together.

I think regardless of how the outcome is, these are the moments that I’m enjoying, right? These are the moments that are going to go down in my mind as we go on as the coolest moments.

Q. (No microphone.)

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: He’s given Dale Jr. a championship in the Xfinity Series, right? Really, I mean, he’s been a guy that has done a lot for our team.

That’s amazing and it’s really, really cool, but it’s a lot of pressure. Dale Jr. is not going to accomplish a lot of things more in his career. He’s done it all. He’s seen it all. He’s been a part of all of it.

I wish I could explain the pressure to you because it’s a different pressure than I’ve ever felt. It’s not a harder pressure, it’s just a different pressure than I’ve ever felt.

It’s not even coming from Dale. That’s the funniest part of this, it’s not directed from Dale. Dale has become family. You don’t ever want to let family down, right? That’s where this whole process has kind of come into play.

You are relying on so many people in these moments. Greg feels the weight of all of this pressure. I feel the weight of all of this pressure. All the men and women that are part of this organization, they all feel the weight of this pressure. They all still are equally excited and joyful of this moment. It’s been a lot.

But I’m going to tell you, if we can qualify our way into the Daytona 500, the weight of the world will be lifted off the shoulders, will be of massive proportions, right? Whether that’s in single car or in the Duels, it will be a lift of massive proportions.

I’ve been in this race, qualified for this race. It’s a surreal experience. On the other side of it, I’ve also watched many, many men and women that should have had the cars, had the teams to do this, walk out of this racetrack with their heads held low because they didn’t qualify.

I look at the list of cars that are attempting this year. I go, Man, there’s some guys and gals that are going to be really sad when they walk out of here. I just hope we’re not one of them.

Q. How do negotiations work with it comes to running the Daytona 500? Is that you?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: No, that was me sitting in a meeting, them telling me what their plan was, and somehow me thinking that they were just telling me what their plan was.

I didn’t expect them to tell me where they’re going to dinner tonight. I don’t know why they would tell me their plans without me being involved. They asked if I would drive. My only thing was being family, I said, I need to discuss this with my wife, right?

I called my wife. We had the discussion on the phone. About five minutes later I called back and said, Yeah, I’m in.

There really weren’t a lot of discussions. This is what we’re attempting, what we are planning, what we want to do. Are you (indiscernible)? I think the easy answer is yes.

This is a big moment. This is a big play. Not only for myself, not only for Chris Stapleton, JR Motorsports, this is a big deal for what we’re trying to accomplish in this sport. It’s been really, really cool.

Q. You have had the opportunity the last couple years, again this year, to take your dirt model bike down the road and race the week before Daytona. What is about that that you have continued to enjoy? How do you feel it benefits you keeping your skills sharp?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Christopher and Kyle did a lot better than I did. I got crashed, spent all week trying to chop, cut, rebuild (smiling).

Dirt racing for me has and always and will always be where I grew up, how I grew up, what I grew up doing.

I love this sport, right? This sport as a whole is just so cool, whether you’re at Volusia, New Smyrna, any one of the hundreds of short tracks around the country. There’s so many racers that you just go, Man, if they ever would have had the right opportunity, they could be Cup Series champions because they’re that good.

Some don’t aspire to that. You know what, I can respect that wholeheartedly. For me, I do it because, number one, it keeps me sharp. It gives you that hand-eye coordination, skills.

Number two, I just enjoy being around the people, the fans. I’m an extrovert. I love being around people. Going to the racetrack and being a part of it, it’s really, really cool.

Volusia does a great job. It’s right down the road. If there was ever a year that I shouldn’t have gone dirt racing, it was this year because it put me behind schedule by a lot. At the same time I wouldn’t trade it. It’s pretty special.

Q. Is the stress higher than you had thought last week?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Yeah, way higher. I was secretly thinking for practice, I think I was hoping we’d maybe go a second faster than the rest of the field, I wouldn’t have to worry about qualifying this evening.

The pressure is high. 99.9% of that pressure that is being high is self-induced, right? It’s me wanting something that I really have no control over. I think that’s the hardest part, right? I do have control. I guess I can go out there and make a mistake qualifying, not put ourselves in position.

If I go out and do my job, it’s going to be difficult, but it’s going to be rewarding when we hopefully go faster than all the rest of them. That’s just what we have to go try and accomplish. If we do that, I think we’re in great shape.

Q. Dissecting single-car speed in practice, how did you feel?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: I don’t know. I mean, there’s four or five us that are really, really, really, really, really close on speed.

You look at, Did that person have a tow? Maybe. Did they leave a little early on pit road to get a little extra speed? Maybe. Did they maybe not abide by the line they were supposed to run for qualifying practice? Maybe. Those are all things that you go, Man, does it account for this much or for a lot?

I don’t know. This team has put a lot of effort into it. I would say as the Next Gen era has come around, everybody’s in the same box, right? Used to be with the Gen-6 car, you could manipulate the bodies around where the tolerances would allow you to have a bigger window of where things could be at. The manufacturers were probably a little bit more apart on the aero, the target box, right? There were more discrepancies there. Even without bending the rules, right, you could have a significantly driving race car from two different manufacturers or two different teams. I think there was magic there, right?

Now, with the parity we have in the sport, in the cars, anybody can show up at Daytona and have pretty good speed, right?

It’s just a matter of all the little details, making sure as a driver you do all the right things. As a team the air pressure is so much more important. Hendrick engine shop is a class act. They have given me everything they can give me. When you’re building multiple engines that are going to the racetrack on any given weekend, you are putting the best in all of them to make sure you have the highest probability of winning.

A lot of my friends are in Chevrolets which helps significantly. That doesn’t fix anything. That doesn’t give you guarantees. We just have to go out there, manage the day the best as possible, and hopefully we do the best job of anybody.

Q. Do you let your mind wander what it’s going to be like on Sunday with this team?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Yes, I have, because I have the confidence in our program to know that I have a lot of confidence that we’re going to be able to go do that.

Now, if we don’t, it will be really, really disappointing because I think when you allow yourself to kind of think about what the future could hold, you sometimes make that pain even bigger and greater, right?

That being said, Dale and Chris, the excitement that they’ve already had, I can’t even imagine what Sunday would be like. It would be really, really special.

But at the same time I’m going to do what I got to do and go out there and race hard. My only goal is to make them proud. Sometimes making them proud doesn’t necessarily mean making the race. Making them proud means you left it all out on the table. When I walk out of here Thursday night, I will know 100% was given. If I am lucky enough to race on Sunday, I will walk out of here on Sunday night knowing that I gave 100%. That’s all you can give.

Q. There’s been a lot of different broadcast partners this year. You’re at the front of it with The CW with the Xfinity Series. Are there any changes that you’ve noticed significantly from The CW so far? Stuff you want to see more as a driver?

JUSTIN ALLGAIER: Yeah, I mean, I think it’s been very interesting, right? This sport has evolved over the last 10, 15 years significantly, right? We’ve had so many great broadcast partners through the years. The personalities that come through, to be part of those broadcast partners, we’re very lucky in how they promote our sport both on and off the racetrack.

It becomes very unique, right? When you have a broadcast partner change a lot of times you have a talent change. We’re seeing more crossover than we’ve ever seen.

I was excited last year that The CW was able to get in and really be a part of the Playoffs for us, understand the challenges that they were going to see, right? Understand the challenges our fans were going to endure. We had some. It wasn’t an easy transition, right?

But what I loved about it was they put their head down and they went to work, tried to understand everything better. Look at the talent they’ve brought on for 2025 not only in the booth but at the track. I’m excited for that.

I think the one thing that our sport is unique in is how difficult the sport is to live out daily. I don’t know that’s always portrayed sometimes from the broadcast side because you’re in that moment, that race, that day, how it’s going.

If I could have one thing that I would love to see is just being down in the trenches of what goes on day to day and how it operates.

But I’m really excited about The CW, what they’re coming in with. Basically every home that has a TV in America will have access to our Xfinity Series races. That’s a big deal, right? You look at the Cup Series side. They’ve changed that around significantly. It’s a lot of streaming-based things that are going on.

There’s a lot of things that really are differing now between the different series, the Trucks, Xfinity and Cup. I’m excited to see where this lands, where it goes, what it comes into.

Look, racing as a whole has a lot of momentum, INDYCAR, NASCAR, road racing, we are all doing a fantastic job of trying to be better and get better for our fans. That just means there’s more competition. We have to go out and work harder for it.

I think the sport has done that. We’re going to keep pushing, trying. Whatever happens, happens. I’m proud of the effort that The CW has put in, really all of the broadcast partners, what that looks like.

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.

Toyota NCS Daytona Media Day Quotes – John Hunter Nemechek – 02.12.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – John Hunter Nemechek
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 12, 2025) – LEGACY MOTOR CLUB driver John Hunter Nemechek was made available to the media on Wednesday prior to the Daytona 500.

JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 42 Dollar Tree Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB

What’s your outlook heading into this weekend?

“I’m excited for the weekend. The (Daytona) 500 has been really good to me for the two times I’ve ran it so far. Really looking forward to getting down here, getting our year kicked off. 2025 looks to be an exciting year for not only myself but LEGACY MOTOR CLUB in general. A lot of new hires, a lot of great hires over the offseason. A lot of hard work has gone into this. I’m excited to see it going again to see where we end up.”

How different will this be compared to your first Daytona 500?

“Well, I expect it to kind of be the same to be honest with you. It’s probably going be the same insane energy and a lot of people. Kind of madness around the whole vibe. (I’m) excited for this weekend. Hopefully we can etch our name in one of the plaques on the Harley J. Earl Trophy.”

How does the Daytona 500 race week build up for you?

“It does. I will say nothing like your first Daytona 500 and that feeling. But being able to soak in the energy from the one last year, (I) really enjoyed the moment. Kind of understanding that as I’ve gotten older over the last few years and really understanding what the 500 is all about. The history and the energy that goes into it, the whole vibe. I’m excited just to get going here running another Daytona 500 and seeing where we stack up.”

What does the trust and faith from Jimmie Johnson mean to you?

“It means a lot. Jimmie (Johnson)’s been great over the offseason, over the last year, trying to get us to keep our head in the game and keep fighting no matter what the circumstances may be. I feel good about the direction that LEGACY MOTOR CLUB is heading in, but it feels good to have a boss and a mentor, and I’d like to call Jimmie a friend as well, that has our back and has the vision of where he wants LEGACY MOTOR CLUB to go. I haven’t found anything except for maybe free throws that Jimmie absolutely stinks at (laughs). So definitely looking forward to him being a great team owner and hopefully driving for him for a long time.”

What does the Daytona 500 mean to you?

“You know through a kid’s lens, let’s say, you don’t really understand how big this race is. You don’t really understand the history behind it. You know it’s big because you’re down here for a week, right? And at the start of the year, it’s kind of like the Super Bowl for us, right? So, when it comes down to it, it’s just a matter of seeing it through an adult perspective rather than the kid’s lens. I don’t know if it necessarily means more, but it’s really neat to have your world kind of turn and it come full 360 (now driving in the race).”

Do you feel like LEGACY MOTOR CLUB has turned the corner?

“Yeah, I sure hope so. I mean, there were a lot of new hires over the offseason; there’s been a ton of hard work that has gone in. It’s going to be interesting to see how it all ends up, right? So, I can tell you right now, we’re better than we were last year at this point. How much better is the unknown.”

When will you know how much improvement you and the team have made?

“After (Las) Vegas, in my opinion. You have get through the first three (races). But how much? I’m not 100% sure. So, I feel like when it comes down to it, Phoenix and (Las) Vegas are going to be telltale signs of kind of where you stack up, at least for the offseason progress.”

About Toyota

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

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

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

Toyota NCS Daytona Media Day Quotes – Chase Briscoe – 02.12.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Chase Briscoe
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 12, 2025) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Chase Briscoe was made available to the media on Wednesday prior to the Daytona 500.

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

Are there any new things with your new OEM vs what you’ve been used to in the past coming into a superspeedway race?

“Yeah, like, you know, every manufacturer is kind of the same plan, right? The plan is stay together, work together. Try to keep the other manufacturer from getting up front. So, from that standpoint, you know, it’s relatively the same. The drivers are different, just being able to work with those guys. Their techniques and tendencies, how the cars are going to draft will be way different. And then just the number side I think is probably the biggest thing for me. There’s so many Fords this year. And fortunately, there’s a lot of Toyotas as well. That’s something that’s kind of new I think there’s 11 or 12 Toyotas (that could be) in the field, where typically there’s only like six or seven. So, it won’t be as big of adjustment for me just since there’s more Toyotas this year. But I’d say it’s relatively the same. It’s always the same goal, same kind of way of doing it. It’s just the approach; the people you’re doing it with it is a little different.”

Will the higher number of Toyotas in this race influence how you drive the car? How does it help that approach?

“Yeah, I never really felt like I was racing the Toyotas when I was at another manufacturer. It wasn’t really any different. You just knew that when they got together, they were probably going to stick together a little more religiously than the other manufacturers because they had to due to their numbers. But I didn’t feel like (pause), you definitely didn’t race them any different, you just kind of knew that in the back of your mind like if one Toyota made a move, all four or five of them are going probably do it together. From a strategy standpoint, I think probably for the crew chiefs it’s a little bit more just because they could kind of do more with having less people. I don’t know, honestly. I think it’s going be the same for my standpoint. But definitely the characters are different, right? Like, you know Denny (Hamlin) races plate races very different than how Joey Logano does it. So, just learning their tendencies is going to be a little bit different. Honestly, I want to say it was Talladega last year the year before, I got kind of spit out of the Ford pack and had pit with the Toyotas and ran like 60 laps with them, just the Toyotas. So, I feel like I have a little bit of an understanding, so it’s nice to at least have that experience for sure going into this week.”

Is it good to have someone like Christopher Bell on your team to measure yourself by?

“Yeah, I think so. I think Christopher (Bell) honestly is probably the guy I’ve measured myself off of more than anybody in my entire career. We’re a day apart in age. Grew up doing the same type of racing. He raced a lot more growing up than I did. But we come from the exact same background. So, what he’s been able to do on the NASCAR side certainly kind of model my results off of. Judging off somebody else that doesn’t have the same background as me is harder to do. Christopher is as close as it gets to my background with age and everything, experience level. Definitely somebody that I’ll judge myself off of a lot especially now that we’re in the same car.”

How hard is it to go to a new team?

“It’s a lot. I did not think it would be that different, truthfully. I figured it would be pretty simple to just switch, and yeah, I was definitely wrong. There’s just so much more going on. The amount of data to look at; working with James (Small, crew chief, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Camry XSE). The other day, I was like 15 minutes late for this meeting that we had, and I’m not used to pre-event meetings. We’ve never done those before in my career, so there’s a lot different. Just everything that’s going on and the resources, data, analytics. There’s just so much that, honestly, has really opened my eyes up to this how vastly different is. It’s kind of crazy to think that’s what we’ve raced against my entire Cup career. I’m definitely excited to get going, I told Christopher, ‘you don’t realize how good you’ve had it your entire career. Having all this at your disposal.’ It’s definitely been very eye-opening for sure.”

Anything specific in changing engine manufacturers?

“Yeah, it’s hard to say. So far, here (Daytona), you’re just kind of running wide open and it’s hard to really get a true read, especially not in the draft yet. And then, Bowman Gray (The Clash) was so small, it’s hard to really tell anything. I’m sure there’s going to be differences. You know, every manufacturer kind of has their own little things that make them unique. I’ll be able to have a better read, I would say, once we leave the West Coast swing but there’s going to be things different. For me, I’m going to have to adjust to that, especially being at one manufacturer as I have, there’s going to be things that are way different I’m just going to have to be used to. And I also think there’s things that I can bring to the table, just different perspective. ‘Hey, I think maybe we could try this different,’ or whatever. So yeah, it’s going to take a couple of weeks and then once we get a little more of a baseline, I think I’ll be able to know.”

How important is it to have a member of your previous team come with you to Joe Gibbs Racing?

“I think it’s super important. To have at least one familiar face and you know, even me and him (JD Frey, car chief, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Camry XSE). I’ve called him sometimes when I leave the shop or we leave at the same time, just talk on the way home like ‘man, it’s crazy like they do it this way or you know maybe we could bring this to the table,’ from what we did. It’s nice to have somebody there that you can just bounce stuff off of. Honestly, and then even for myself, there’s a lot of things that you know are specific to me like cockpit-wise. I don’t know what they were, I don’t know how they did it. Having, JD there, I can go to him and say, ‘hey were my pedals this is much higher than what the other guys ran?’ And he’s like, ‘yeah you know we had to put half-inch spacers, where if we didn’t have somebody like that, we would be lost. It took us three months just to get my seat right. It’s definitely nice to have somebody that’s a familiar face and you know I’ve known JD for almost 10 years now. Nice to kind of have that one staple.”

What’s been the biggest eye-opening thing at Joe Gibbs Racing for you?

“Honestly, the biggest difference is just Coach (Joe Gibbs, owner and founder, Joe Gibbs Racing.) Nothing against Gene (Haas) or Tony (Stewart) but they ran other businesses where like Coach, this is his business. This is what he eats, sleeps and breathes every single day. He’s there every single day. I was even telling my wife that the other day that if we run bad one weekend, it’s going to weird seeing the boss on Monday be like ‘why did we run so bad?’ I’ve just not had that, so that that part’s been the biggest difference. From the top down, how intuitive (he) is. But then, also, the data side I would say has been very eye-opening. They’ve tracked stuff on, I literally told my wife this too, I said like it’s kind of crazy that they picked me because of all the data and analytics that have on me. It’s just nuts like how much in depth they are with the whole field where each guy stacks up from their passing grade, restart grade. All of this stuff that I didn’t think anybody even paid attention to and they definitely have the data for it. It’s been very eye-opening for that.”

What have you found or gained since joining Joe Gibbs Racing?

“For me, I don’t really know where I fit in quite yet. It’s definitely vastly different from what I’m used to. Even from a teammate standpoint too, I had Kevin (Harvick) so that that was a good baseline to judge off of but outside of Kevin, like I’ve always been kind of the higher-tenured driver and having more experience (than my teammates). So now coming into a place where you know Christopher has a year more than me, obviously Ty (Gibbs) has less, and Denny is very similar to Kevin. Being able to see the behind the scenes of what made Kevin so successful, now being able to see what makes Denny and Christopher so successful. Being able to be there like every single day and kind of see behind the scenes has been nice I’m glad I guess if they feel like I’m filling out a void. I feel like in the competition meeting we had, I didn’t really know where my place was yet, right? I didn’t know how much talk, what to talk about so I tried to just kind of model it off Denny, Christopher, and Ty and try to kind of fit that same mold. Truthfully, I think me being there hopefully has made a difference and hopefully we can continue to do that. I know that at least with Christopher like me and him are so close and have known each other for so long, I think it’s just to have somebody’s familiar with instead of a newbie come in. But yeah, hopefully I can just continue to you know elevate the program and you know give insight where I feel like I can make it better and I don’t feel like I’m really that guy to make it better but I do have a very you know unique perspective compared to what they’re used to. I even told Christopher that, ‘you don’t know how good you’ve had it your whole career.’ Like with all the data and the stuff that they have at their disposal. So, for me I think that is where I can you know feel a little bit of a void. I have a different perspective than what all the JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) people are used to because I’ve seen it from the other side.”

Do you feel any pressure with this opportunity at JGR?

“Yeah, I don’t feel pressure. I feel like the expectations are high, so just naturally like the pressure is there to perform. That’s the I would say the biggest difference for me is it’s not even pressure it’s just the fact that like you’re expected to run well. There’s no reason you shouldn’t run well. So that part of it is different. I was telling my wife a few weeks ago that this is the first time I’ve ever felt like I could legitimately win a Cup championship. At SHR (Stewart-Haas Racing), I told myself I could, but that was probably not going to happen. Where like here (JGR), I can legitimately see myself getting to Phoenix and being a contender, which I’ve never really felt that way before. From that standpoint, I don’t know if it’s really pressure, it’s just the expectation is now much higher.”

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.

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Ty Dillon Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
FEBRUARY 12, 2025

 Ty Dillon, driver of the No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

REGARDING GETTING INTO IT WITH BROTHER AUSTIN DILLON AT BOWMAN GRAY

“There was a lot made of that on Monday and Tuesday and a lot of people were talking about it. He and I saw each other Monday and never even talked about it. I called him on Wednesday and I was like, ‘dude, do we have a problem?’. He said, ‘no it was fine and we were just racing hard’. It was just racing and he and I have an understanding with each other, a respect for each other, we are brothers and we understand what racing is. I think if you go back and break that down, it was just a couple of things, and we are racing at Bowman Gray and there is no room. He is trying to do his job, and I am trying to do my job. It’s an exhibition race. Now if we are at Vegas, a bigger track, or something like that, then that would not be acceptable and neither one of us would want that. If you go back over time, he and I have respectively raced each other probably cleaner than anybody in this sport. People made a lot of comments about that and I think people want to egg on the Dillon brother feud, but its not a thing. So, we trust each other and we work together and we also respect each other. But we have a job to do and winning races and that night our job was to finish in the top two. I knew that was what he was trying to do and I was too.”

WHAT DOES IT MEAN WHEN AS A DRIVER YOU FEEL THE TEAM IS BEHIND YOU FULLY, TOP TO BOTTOM?

“Its everything. Confidence in the driver it is everything and you build that confidence with trust. I feel like I have gone into places where you feel like, you know, I bring my own confidence in this. But when you know a team owner, a team president, a crew chief, a technical director….when everyone is giving you that authentic confidence, and they are not just pumping your head full of things, but they are being honest with you. I think transparency is the best way to build confidence in each other. And that is what I felt ever since the few races I ran last year with Kaulig and in the offseason. No one is afraid to say what you need to work on, but they are also not afraid to say what you have done good and excel on. That is what you crave as a person, and you just want transparency within that. I have been to places where they don’t say anything to you. You don’t know whether you had a good day or a bad day. I am a pretty active brain person, and I can drive myself in a tizzy when nobody talks to me and those are the dark places to be in. And you want to be in a place where communication is clear and honest. It has been very apparent from the offseason to the start of the season and now so to speak that the bullets are beginning to fly, we will see how that continues, and I believe it will and that is what is going to make us a good team.”

WHAT IS IT LIKE TO KIND OF BE BACK IN YOUR OWN WORLD AS TO SAY?

“I saw that on Dale’s (Junior) podcast and was pretty perplexed. It wasn’t that I left to do my own thing. Sometimes in life there are no more doors to open and you have to open your own doors. It’s not like I left to try and figure it out on my own, I had to. If I wanted to provide for my family and continue the career that I have wanted my whole life, then I had to go find something. There was nothing there for me and I am lucky that things have come back together in my career, and I have worked very hard. I know it just now seems like I have come back to the fold at RCR, and I wish they had expounded on that more but for the last two and a half years I have been with my grandfather sitting in meeting not only at RCR but at his other businesses and being right beside him and its been some of the greatest moments of my life being just to see how he operates and works. He is such a special businessperson and I am also getting to have those special moments with him as a grandson. But my career and my life, I wouldn’t change the fact that I had to go out and fight for what I wanted. It has made me a better person and its made me have more gratitude and appreciation for the opportunity that I have today to be with Kaulig Racing and to be back associated with RCR with our technical alliance. It wasn’t that I left, but that I had to fight for what I wanted and had to go out and find it. Sometimes the path comes back home to where you belong.”

A LOT OF PERSONALITY IN THAT BUILDING. HOW HAVE YOU FOUND THAT YOUR OWN PERSONALITY BLENDS IN THERE?

“I have always found that just being me is enough. If I am me consistently, then everybody will understand me for that. We have some awesome personalities like you mentioned and AJ (Allmendinger) is one of the most determined people you can know, and you can use those personalities to make yourself better. I am so excited to work with AJ this year and I love his fight that he has had not only in the race car but for his career. Then you have Chris Rice who is a gregarious guy and always having fun, but there is always this underlying that he wants to win. And that is no B.S. and that runs through Kaulig and everyone wants to win. Matt Kaulig is a winner and he has won in everything that he has done away from the racing and he expects nothing less from us at the track. So, I love that man. I love being around the team, I love being around the guys which is important. It’s all about racing and winning races and we are going to do what it takes to make that happen.”

ARE THERE HARD FEELINGS STILL THERE?

“For the other teams?”

YES

“I have a unique perspective as a driver and my grandfather is an owner in NASCAR. So, I understand there are certain needs that need to be fulfilled than others. And there are certain things that have to play out and that is just business. And sometimes it is just business whether it works or not and you have to make the best decision as an owner for your company. And I know in some of those situations, I just got caught up in those decisions and you just can’t have hard feelings. I don’t have hard feelings towards anybody in my career. I have taken those ups and downs and was it a disappointment? Absolutely. Nobody wants to be let go from a job and moved on from. But you just take what you learn, and you don’t have a bad attitude about it. I don’t think I lost any friends over it at places I have left from or not been at. So, you just take what you learn, and you bring it to your next opportunity. If I were still bitter about that, I wouldn’t be able to perform here.”

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.

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Daniel Suarez Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
FEBRUARY 12, 2025

 Daniel Suarez, driver of the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Q. Four of you representing four different countries. What has that been like, the diversity of teammates? What language do you speak?

DANIEL SUAREZ: So far English. So far we speak in English (laughter).

Actually I have a lot of people don’t know this, but I have a very hard time understanding Shane. His English, I don’t know. I don’t know if you guys do the same or not, but my English clearly is way more limited than most of you guys. Every time he’s talking to me, I really have to pay attention. 80% of the time I have to have him repeat something because his accent is just way different than what I’m used to, I guess.

Q. Does he understand you?

DANIEL SUAREZ: I hope. He hasn’t complained. I hope (laughter).

No, it’s been great. Obviously Trackhouse has been known for the last several years to do things like this. So I’m not surprised having a teammate from New Zealand and another one from Brazil and myself. I guess Ross is the outlier right now.

It’s been a lot of fun. Hopefully we can translate that to good results on Sunday.

Q. What has it been like having Helio around this program? What advice have you given to him?

DANIEL SUAREZ: I mean, Helio, he doesn’t have experience in NASCAR, but he has so much experience in life and in racing in general. Really I’ve been talking to him quite a bit about the car, what to expect on the car, what to do, what not to do.

When it comes to the racing stuff, it’s no different than learning anything else new. Like, he’s been in these situations in the past. He’s a world-class driver. He’s going to get it. I’m not concerned about if he’s going to get it, the question is when. Is that going to happen on Thursday or on Sunday?

He’s going to be fine. He’s going to become a fast learner when we get to the draft.

Q. Can you take me through the final laps of your win in Atlanta. Kyle and Blaney were second-guessing what they should have done. What gave you the confidence to do what you did?

DANIEL SUAREZ: Honestly, I didn’t have many options because Austin Cindric was the driver that was behind me. He was lifting a lot, just trying not to help me. Obviously his teammate was leading the race at that time. My options were very limited when it comes to the second lane, trying to create a run.

The 47 of Ricky, he was being very aggressive on the rear bumper of the 2. Even with that, I can see it, I can feel it. I was able to see it on Monday on SMT. He was doing everything possible not to help me, which is okay, right? That’s part of the game.

I knew the run was not going to come from me, it was going to come from the inside. My job at that point was to try to slow down the 8 as much as possible for the 23 to get to him – it’s a chess match a chess game – to get to him and build the run. Hopefully I was going to be right there to take advantage of that run. Luckily it work out like that. The timing of things…

Any of us could have won that race. It was a matter of inches. It was just a matter of timing. Fortunately the timing work out good for me.

Q. Is it good to sit down with those other guys and rewatch this recently? Was it fun?

DANIEL SUAREZ: It was a lot of fun. It was a lot of fun. Even more fun for me, right, because I was the one that won the race. Probably wouldn’t have been that much fun if I finished second or third.

In general it was a lot of fun because it was the first time we got to sit down and actually see it together and talk about it, talk about what was on Blaney’s mind, what was in Busch’s mind, in my mind. Obviously everyone had a different mindset of what to do, what not to do.

Blaney, he said, Man, I should have covered the middle. I covered the bottom. That create two of you instead of one of you.

A lot of the ‘I should have, I should have done that, I should have done that.’ Yeah, at the same time probably I really wanted to be on the outside. Once I got in front of the 19 and I passed the 19, I said, Man, I’m in the perfect spot here. I realized the 2 was behind me. I was like, Dammit, he’s not going to help me.

It’s kind of tricky. Is not very easy to plan everything perfectly because things change very quickly.

Q. Where do you feel the team is at right now knowing there’s a lot of eyeballs with Helio and Shane? What is going to be key this season to get to the next step?

DANIEL SUAREZ: We have to be realistic, right? Shane, he has a long way to go when it comes to ovals. We know that. He has a lot of things that he has to learn and to continue to get better at in ovals. He’s going to rely on Ross and myself a lot when it comes to that.

Helio, he’s just trying to learn as much as quickly as possible because this is his opportunity, right? This is his opportunity to have a good day, to have a strong race. I mean, if he finish somewhere close to the top 10, that would be like a win for him. That would be amazing for Project 91.

Ross and myself, we want to continue to grow from everything we built from last year. There were a lot of internal changes within Trackhouse. We are hoping that we see more consistent results throughout the year.

Q. (Question about future racing contracts.)

DANIEL SUAREZ: No, I mean, at the time when we made this deal, there were a lot of unknowns on performance mainly. There were a lot of things that I was not happy about. There were a lot of things, a lot of question marks.

I feel like right now we are a little bit in a different position. I feel like right now we have a little better direction. I feel good about it honestly. I’m not too concerned about it.

I mean, my main thing is to continue to perform. I have to continue to get better because I have said this in the past, I’m going to say it again: My goal is not to win one race a year. If this is what the goal is going to be, we’re in two different agendas.

I wanted to make sure we were all on the same page that, Okay, how can we bring Trackhouse to the next level? How can we bring Trackhouse to give a real fight to Penske, to Hendrick, to Joe Gibbs Racing, to the big teams that they are every single year up front? How can we do that?

I feel like 2022 we were right there. 2023 we did one step down. 2024, another step down. We need to change something. We went to work. Hopefully we can see something reflected in all the off-season work that we did for 2025.

Q. Trackhouse has a lot of drivers signed. Do you ever worry that your job is in jeopardy, your seat is on the line?

DANIEL SUAREZ: No, because there is a lot of things. There is a lot of things involved. It’s not just the perform thing. There’s a lot of things that we have to do to be able to perform.

It not only depends on me. Yes, I’m a very important factor of it. But we have to continue to get better as group. I think Trackhouse does an amazing job with Project 91, getting this driver young, do all these different things.

At the end of the day I’m only worried about myself. I’m worried about how can I bring myself to have the best opportunity to win multiple races a year? That’s my main goal.

Really Trackhouse has been nothing but great to me. We’ve been working together very hard to be able to bring Trackhouse to the next level. That has been my goal.

I would say a year ago right now it was a little cloudy. We didn’t really know where we were going. In the off-season we really made a lot of progress to what I think heading into the direction that we believe is the best.

We see. We see how things play out. But yeah, I hope that we are heading in the right direction.

Q. Are drivers athletes?

DANIEL SUAREZ: I don’t know. You tell me.

Q. I think you are. What is special about your training or skill or strength that separates you?

DANIEL SUAREZ: The thing is that this is the part that is very difficult. Anyone here, anyone has play soccer. Anyone has play baseball. Anyone has played basketball. Anyone can go to the park and do it. It is very easy. In any park, anyone can play all these sports.

Racing is way more complicated. Racing, it requires a track. It requires tires, an engine, a car, all these things. It’s expensive. Unfortunately not a lot of people has the opportunity to actually experience what racing is.

But if you look at the heart rate monitors, if you look at the physical activity we’re having when we are driving these cars. The temperature? Right now, the day is nice, but in June, July, it’s a completely different game.

If you’re looking to all these things is when you actually realize all the wear and tear that we have inside the car.

But the problem is that not a lot of people knows or understand that because they don’t have an experience in racing. They do have an experience in soccer, baseball, basketball, everything else.

Yeah, in my opinion we’re high-performance athletes, especially because of the heat. The heat is something personally I train on the heat a lot to be 100% in the summer races.

So yeah, but I just wish every single person out there had an opportunity to drive a car and to feel what we feel so they understand and we don’t have to explain to everyone what it is.

Q. From a marketing perspective, what could the sport or NASCAR do to make the drivers look like superheroes but also recognize the stars on the rise compared to nostalgia-centric?

DANIEL SUAREZ: That’s a great question, man. I don’t know if I have the perfect answer for that.

I think that every time that I think about a race car driver, I think about this person that works very hard and has this good leadership within his race team or her race team. This role model is this hero, right? It’s like this warrior that is ready to battle. That’s great. I enjoy that.

I wish we can show racing drivers that way, show the personality, but show them as heroes, as warriors out there ready to battle.

I don’t know. Sometimes I feel like we look more funny than the cool factor and the warrior factor. I don’t know. I think a lot has changed.

I don’t really know. I don’t think I have the right answer. I just wish it was more of a cool hero factor than just the funny factor.

Q. You aren’t afraid of speed. What are you afraid of?

DANIEL SUAREZ: I don’t know, man. I don’t know. I don’t know what is the fear. I don’t know what is the fear, man. I don’t know, man. Honestly I’m trying to think. That’s a great question. Something I have fear of?

I don’t know. I don’t want to say that I’m fearless because that’s not. But I don’t know what I have fear of, honestly.

Like, I work very hard to be the best version of myself and try to bring my A game every single day on everything I do. On the racetrack, going fast is amazing, I love that.

You don’t think about wrecks. You don’t think about accidents. You don’t think about getting hurt. You don’t think about those things. Those things happen sometimes. You don’t think about it.

I can tell you something. The day that I feel like I start thinking too much about it, maybe is the day that I have to decide to do something else because maybe I’m going to start attracting those things.

But today, I don’t think about it. I just do what I love to do.

Q. When you look at superspeedways, Daytona, the numbers you’ve struggled, but Atlanta next week, really good.

DANIEL SUAREZ: I don’t know.

Q. What are the differences there?

DANIEL SUAREZ: I don’t know. Daytona is tricky, man. Man, it’s just very tricky. I have made a lot of mistakes myself here in Daytona. I’m telling you, man, 80% of the time I’ve been caught in wrecks, I’m not doing anything wrong. It just happens. Last time we were here I wrecked being maybe in the top five, so… You are just caught in those situations.

Yes, there is a few things I can do different, I can do better, but that’s not the reason why I wrecked.

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.

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Austin Dillon Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
FEBRUARY 12, 2025

 Austin Dillon, driver of the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

How important is it to get off to a good start this year?

“I think it’s huge. For the 3 team, we have struggled the last two years getting off to a start. We had to dig ourselves out of holes and it just put us behind and we’re always playing catch-up. We were able to have some good runs, but they don’t amount to the points gain when we have them. So, for me, it’s huge to get off to a good start and that’s something we’re putting more focus on. These first two races, you can be a hole pretty quick with the way everything lines up. Just trying to get out there and run all the laps and put ourselves in good positions to hopefully win because you have to look at every race as an opportunity.”

Richard and other management on board, how has that been for you?

“The attention to detail that I see from our group as a whole is more focused that the last couple years. He’s very meticulous, the way he talks about things is going to really benefit us in the 3 team. He leaves no stone unturned, which is really good. I feel like the last couple years some stuff has been thrown on my shoulders and it’s kind of nice that I feel like I got somebody I can lean on more. We’ve made some great changes in the off-season bringing in some really good racers from other organizations and also keeping the guys that we have had and propping them up and giving them opportunities. I think that’s key for our organization going forward is giving guys opportunities. We’re all focused on this year and getting off to a fast start. When you get in the meat and potatoes of the season we’ll see where we stack up.”

Are you getting a sense of the focus of the organization and how that relates to on-track?

“I think the biggest thing I’ve noticed is the attention to detail, the aggressiveness not to turn over every stone. Sometimes you look at things and is that really worth the squeeze? I think the group that we have right now is squeezing everything they can. So, that’s a confidence-builder for me and I’m really excited about what we’ve got going on.”

How important is it when you didn’t have the season you wanted to get off to a good start?

“We’ve had two seasons that we haven’t gotten off in the direction we want. We had to battle the whole season to have some highlights, and you can never recover from a points standpoint. We’ve got to start off the season clean, get some finishes under our belt and sometimes you have to be happy with a 20th-place finish to get to the next week with a clean car because you get so far behind if you have wrecks. We want no wrecks to start the season would be nice, some clean races and go from there.”

Is it part of your DNA that when you’re in the moment you can pull the trigger?

“I want to pride myself on being clutch or having clutch moments and the times you get those opportunities being able to deliver for people because you know there’s a lot of effort and time put into it. I never want to go home saying I wish I wouldn’t have done this. I did it one time in my career, I finished second, and I was kind of gentle about it and looking back 10-15 years from now no one cares if I was gentle or not. It was more of the fact that the guy who won name is on the trophy and mine is not. Do what you can when you get those opportunities, and I think you got to be aggressive when those opportunities arise.”

What are the emotions and experiences been like coming back here since you were the Daytona 500 champion versus what they were before you won the race?

“I was close in ’21; we were third and had a dominant car that weekend. I thought for sure that was our race to win and it just ended a little before the start-finish line. I also thought that when. Kyle Busch and I were first and second and we were coming to the white that no one was going to get around the two of us and it was going to be a good shot that Kyle wins that one. And the 99 spins and everything breaks loose after that. I’ve had opportunities and would love to capitalize on those.”

Does it take the pressure off once you win this race or add pressure to win again?

“I think it takes some pressure off. You look at Kyle who has had 20 opportunities and he’s won everything he can. I know this race is what he wants more than everything. I know that having that feather in the cap definitely helped and it gives you a little confidence. And when you make a move late in the race you don’t feel as bad about it if it burns you.”

If you don’t win this race Sunday, would there be almost as much satisfaction from a team standpoint if you could push Kyle to the win?

“For sure. There’s only two people – my brother and Kyle.”

What do you think of Atlanta now?

“It’s definitely sped up. It used to be a place where you really had to control your right foot and take care of your tires. I really enjoyed that portion and this one it’s just a totally different animal. It’s a beast and you have to put yourself in some similar positions you do at speedways but is starting to lose some grip which is nice. It hasn’t been a great place for us. It has it’s spurts but never from a finish standpoint.”

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.

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: AJ Allmendinger Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
FEBRUARY 12, 2025

 AJ Allmendinger, driver of the No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

The Indy 500 and the Daytona 500. What is the difference between the two of them?

“Where do you start? When it comes to the Daytona 500, just that pack racing. You’re constantly side by side. The Indy 500, the year I ran it, the way the aero was you’d make big runs and stuff, but you’re not side by side constantly. So, I think that to me is the bigger difference of the way you race those races. To me, you still have to be pinpoint accurate in either car. The consequences are really high in both cars if you make a mistake. I think the stress to a certain degree of not having to be side by side at the Indy 500 constantly is a little bit easier. But you’re also running 50 mph quicker.”

Is the atmosphere similar?

“It is. To me, we all love motorsports but there are a handful of races that you can say to somebody that’s not a motorsports person they know exactly what it is. These two races you could argue the four biggest races in the world you can put up Monaco, you could put up Le Mans maybe. The energy of this race is you build up to it and as you walk out and they announce you, at least for me, is the same emotion.”

Were you Helio’s teammate?

“I was.”

How do you think he’s going to do here?

“Helio is all time, right? He’s a legend. I know it’s bene a long time ago, but it’s not like he hasn’t done this before in IROC cars. I think the biggest thing is he’ll have to get used to the draft in the sense of how these cars move around, the runs you get, just trying to get up to speed in that sense. But driving around the racetrack and all that he’s completely fine. But you’re not going to really know that until you get in the Duel and especially in the 500 when you get 40-41 cars together.”

Are you annoyed he’s shown up and you’re going head-to-head for best hair?

“I can just tell you mine is not colored, so I don’t know who has more product in it but mine’s got less coloring in it.”

What’s something that you’ve seen the team doing to try to rebound and get back to race-winning form?

“There were certain reasons last year the Cup program had to take a step back. I don’t say that in the sense that we didn’t care about it or didn’t try. Everybody was still working as hard as they could, but there weren’t as many resources being put into to. The biggest difficulty I thought was for Daniel because he didn’t have a constant teammate every weekend. We were switching guys in the car, so it really hurt Daniel and that’s what I was most disappointed in to not be in the car. I felt that every time I got in the car, he ran a lot better, and we were able to work well off each other. More resources being put into it, Mike Cook is our technical director. It’s the first time we’ve had the competition technical director not be a crew chief. Just adding resources and Ty being here, I think it’s his best opportunity. He brings a lot of experience. I think it allows us to work with RCR even closer, which as a group – not just on our end but on RCR’s end – we have to do that to go against the big teams. We’ll find out 10 races in if it helps, but it’s definitely the most effort and most prepared I’ve seen our Cup program be.”

Was that part of the agreement you got to bring resources to be running full time in a Cup car?

“I’ve said it from day one, whatever Matt and Chris want me to do that’s what I’m going to do. I made it clear last year I wanted to be in the Cup car full time, but they wanted me in the Xfinity side of it. I said if we’re doing this, we’re doing this real and Matt and Chris have done a lot. The effort’s there, the resources, everything. We still have a lot of work to do. The ultimate goal is you’re going out to win every race, but I think there are certain racetracks that running inside the top 20 is a good run for us. You just have to make more good races than bad. I have to be better to keep making us better. It’s a group effort but I take pride in the sense of like Phoenix in the Xfinity race last year. I was so disappointed in myself because I didn’t know what to do to make us better, so I’m always going to put it on me.”

How important is it to get off to a good start?

“I think it’s important, but here and Atlanta are somewhat out of your control. I’m still in the racecar making the decisions of being aggressive, not be aggressive, things like that. You can get through the first races inside the top 10, top five in points, win a race. But with that said, even if you do well it doesn’t mean your season is going to be great. If it goes bad and you get caught up in wrecks, it doesn’t mean the rest of your season is going to go bad or you’re going to run bad every race. It’s the nature of the way the season starts off with two superspeedway races in a row.”

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.

Toyota NCS Daytona Media Day Quotes – Erik Jones – 02.12.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Erik Jones
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 12, 2025) – LEGACY MOTOR CLUB driver Erik Jones was made available to the media on Wednesday prior to the Daytona 500.

ERIK JONES, No. 43 AdventHealth Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB

What are you most looking forward to this season?

“Well, I think just trying to get into a better place as a group, an organization. 2024 was just challenging for us in a lot of ways. Getting performance to where we expect it and where we want it to be is important in 2025 for us for a lot of reasons. Just hopefully getting to that place.”

Before getting your first win at Daytona, did you ever question your enjoyment of superspeedway races?

“Yeah, coming into the sport, I don’t know someone that necessarily enjoys it (superspeedway racing). Probably because you’re not used to running a race where things are so out of your control, and honestly, there’s no one that comes into it and is good at it off the bat. It’s something you have to learn and kind of figure out. Yeah, I don’t think I was a fan at first but finally came to the point that you can control what’s in your control and let the rest of it kind of play out. After that, I’ve just had fun with it. I don’t think it was the win (at Daytona in 2018) that changed my mind of it, but just the kind of changing my mindset helped a lot.”

What are your thoughts on the new additions to LEGACY MOTOR CLUB?

“It’s a lot of good people. I know Jacob Cantor (director of competition, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Toyota Camry XSE) and have known him for a really long time. I didn’t know Brian Campe (technical director, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB) much before, but he’s done a good job coming in and those have been our two bigger hires. Chad Johnston (manager, race engineering, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB) coming in. I didn’t know Chad but have gotten to know him. I think there’s a lot of smart people in the room and obviously, you need that. But one thing we can’t hire or buy is time. We’re competing against time right now to build out our sim program and that side of things. Build out our aero program and car builds. That’s just a process that’s going to take time and experience. Along with that, these guys are very sharp but are in new roles. New roles that are more involved than what they’ve done in the past. Not to take anything away from them, just bigger roles so it’ll take some time as well.”

How far into the season do you feel it’ll take before you know where the team is at?

“I think you have to give it three months. Those first four races (Daytona 500, Atlanta, COTA and Phoenix) are sort of odd balls, it’s hard to judge. We need to get some normal races in, so I’d say the first three months are a good barometer.”

How has it been getting a full offseason with your crew chief?

“Yeah, it’s been good. I haven’t gone through a lot of crew chiefs in my career, so it’s always kind of a challenge and it’s never fun. I’ve worked with Dave (Elenz, former crew chief, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB) for a long time and had success with him, so it’s never fun nor an easy change to make. But I’ve gotten to know Ben (Beshore, crew chief, No. 43 LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Toyota Camry XSE) a little bit better through the offseason. Ben’s a really quiet guy, so takes a little more time, but he’s really sharp and we’ve worked alongside each other for a few years in different areas, just not with each other. I like the way he thinks about things; it just takes time at the race track to get to know each other more and more and know what we need from each other.”

What are the biggest challenges in building that communication?

“Think the biggest thing is terminology. What I want to hear from him during the race, what he wants to hear from me. And know what I’m trying to get across as my point. That’s the hardest thing, just building that communication up and what we need from each other and it’s not something you can just talk about, have to be out there and doing it.”

How does having the same teammate as last year streamline things this season for the team?

“Yeah, it’s just different (than what I’m used to). It’s changed a bunch since I joined the No. 43 team. From the first year when we were Petty GMS Racing, and known as LEGACY MOTOR CLUB, it’s just different. I’m really thankful for what Maury (Gallagher, minority owner and team ambassador, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB) and the Pettys have done for me as it’s gotten me to this point. Now, it’s Jimmie (Johnson, majority owner, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB)’s turn to take over and steer the ship where he wants it to go. Yeah, I mean it’s more streamlined in some ways and different in some ways. I feel it’s a bigger organization than what it’s been and people in different places so it’s just different is the best way to put it.”

Does the faith of the team in you give you something to lean on?

“Yeah, they’ve been great to me. I know Jimmie (Johnson) wants to run well. It’s not ever a question in my mind. And I think it’s just been a learning process for everyone involved. To get involved on the ownership side and learn more and more about how to build a stronger team. I definitely have a home where I’m at. I don’t think that’s ever been a question for me. At this point, I’m here to ride it out and see it to the end. I’m at what should be really good years in my Cup career and Jimmie knows that as well and is trying to put together a program over the next decade or so I can hopefully run well with.”

Do you feel the team is turning the corner?

“I think we are. There were times last year where we were probably working to get to the track and not necessarily bringing a fast race car to the track. This year, I think we’re in a better position to build a fast race car to bring to the track and we hope that shows up. I definitely think we’re in a better spot than we were one year ago today. Whether that pays off or not, we’ll find out, but we’re definitely doing better things right now.”

What benefits does your late model racing bring you?

“More time in the seat, that’s number one. On top of that, it’s fun that organizing a team. It’s my own guys, my own group, so it’s been fun putting that together. It’s good for me to see that side, structure of things. And number three, just being involved and working on the cars. Staying up to date on what’s going on in the racing world. Not everything is going to transfer from a late model to a Cup car, but just staying up to date and being involved on the set up and the process of it is very beneficial for me.”

How similar or different is being back with Toyota now vs when you were at Joe Gibbs Racing?

“Yeah, in some ways it is (the same) and some ways it isn’t. The first time around (with Toyota), I was certainly in a different position, certainly younger and early in my Cup career, so just in a different spot with how that goes. Also, was with JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) and that was a big machine in itself. I was kind of a bit in the sea at that point. Now, I’m in a much different spot in my career, farther down the line in years wise. The support side is different. JGR, we did a lot on our own and independently. Currently at LEGACY MOTOR CLUB, we’re working with TRD (Toyota Racing Development) to build more support and taking some time to build that out.”

Any stories of Carl Edwards?

“Yeah, one I have with Carl (Edwards) is, one time, I had to fill in for Denny (Hamlin) and Bristol (2015). I flew in and I’ve never ran a Cup car. And I remember getting out after the race, my shoulders were on fire for multiple reasons. The seat didn’t fit and the steering was a lot heavier than what I was used to. I felt bad that I thought I wasn’t in shape, but I went to their (JGR) meeting on Tuesday and Carl was in there. And Carl was in really good shape and always has been, and was talking about how tired his shoulders were. So, I was feeling better after that. I didn’t get to know him super well as he left the year before I got to Cup, but he was a great driver and did a lot of things in a short amount of time. I think that’s more impressive than anything, so, was cool to see him go into the Hall of Fame.”

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.

ROUSH YATES ENGINES GETS READY TO KICK OFF THE 2025 SEASON AT DAYTONA

It’s time to fire up the engines and kick off another exciting season of racing! The 2025 NASCAR season is here, and all eyes are on Daytona International Speedway for the Daytona 500 on Sunday, February 16th. Cited as one of Nielsen’s top-10 “can’t miss” American sporting events along with the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals and the Olympics, the Daytona 500 is an iconic and distinctly different race that brings together millions of fans from all over the globe.

The 2025 NASCAR schedule is set to explore both new and familiar territories, highlighted by the Cup Series’ return to Mexico City at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez on June 15th, marking the first international points race since 1958. For the first time in over a decade, the NASCAR Xfinity Series is making its highly anticipated return to Rockingham Speedway, bringing back the thrill of high-speed competition to one of NASCAR’s most iconic tracks. Known for its rich history and unique one-mile oval racing surface, “The Rock” has long been a favorite among drivers and fans alike.

Among the exciting changes this year, the schedule introduces a five-race streaming-only package on Prime Video, while TNT Sports makes its return to NASCAR coverage. FOX Sports and NBC Sports will continue to carry the majority of NASCAR Cup Series races with 14 events each. The FOX Sports portion of the Cup Series schedule kicks off the season while the NBC Sports’ coverage of the Cup Series will encompass the final 14 events of the season, including the Playoffs and Championship race. Both networks will feature a mix of broadcast and cable events, with five Cup events airing on FOX and four on NBC annually. The remaining events will air on FS1 and USA Network, respectively. In addition, the CW will provide network coverage for the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

inaugural in-season tournament

This season, the Cup Series will see its inaugural in-season tournament — a new five-race, 32-driver contest with $1 million up for grabs. The tournament begins on June 28th at Atlanta Motor Speedway and concludes on July 27th at Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s Brickyard 400, with stops at the Chicago Street Course, Sonoma Raceway and Dover Motor Speedway. Drivers will compete head-to-head throughout the tournament, with the field narrowing from 32 to 16, then eight, four, and finally two drivers battling for the grand prize.
Below are the NASCAR Cup Series teams that Roush Yates Engines is powering this season:

  • RFK Racing
  • Team Penske
  • Wood Brothers
  • Haas Factory Team
  • Front Row Motorsports
  • Rick Ware Racing

Below are the NASCAR Xfinity Series teams that Roush Yates Engines is powering this season:

  • Haas Factory Team
  • RSS Racing
  • AM Racing

Below is the full-time driver lineup for this season:

Cup full-time driver lineup for this season
Afinity full-time driver lineup for this season

At Roush Yates Engines, we’ve spent the off-season maximizing power, performance, and reliability. The competition will be fierce, but we’re ready to take on the challenge and chase another Championship!

The green flag is about to drop, and we want YOU to be part of the excitement. We invite you to tune in as the green flag drops at Daytona on Saturday, February 15th for the Xfinity Series’ United Rentals 300 and on Sunday, February 16th for the Cup Series’ Daytona 500. Let’s make this season one to remember!

About Roush Yates Engines
Roush Yates Engines is a leading-edge engine development company based in Mooresville, NC consisting of two state-of-the-art facilities – Roush Yates Engines and Roush Yates Manufacturing Solutions. The company’s core business includes designing, building and testing purpose-built race engines for Ford Performance.

Ford Performance in partnership with Roush Yates Engines is the exclusive engine builder of the NASCAR FR9 Ford V8 engine in the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series. Since 2024, Roush Yates Engines and Ford Performance have won over 475 races in the NASCAR Cup, Xfinity, and Truck as well as IMSA, and WEC racing series.