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TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Helio Castroneves Quotes

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

 Helio Castroneves, driver of the No. 91 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Q. Can you give us a timeline on what you were first contacted, how long it took you to make a decision to do this? A month? Two months? A week?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: We’ve been kind of, like, seeing each other, me, Justin and Don Hawk for quite some time.

It wasn’t just six months ago, it was probably like a year and a half ago. We had an opportunity to come here with a team, Conor Daly ended up driving. We didn’t think it was going to be a good opportunity, so we decided not to do it.

Because of the whole scenario that Don was working with Justin, finally came through the whole deal with Project 91 and Wendy’s. We just follow through.

It was interesting. It wasn’t like that. I’m glad it did. The program, as you guys noticed, I’m not the only one doing this. It’s been very well-made, it takes a lot of, a lot of effort from a lot of people. I’m glad that everything fit perfect.

To be in the biggest race, one of the biggest races of the world obviously, Indy 500 and Daytona 500 are the biggest. What an opportunity to be here and do that.

Q. Do you race tomorrow or do you sit back knowing you’re already in?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: No, I need practice. I need to run. I don’t have any experience at all. Today is my second time in the car, so…

I think every moment that I’m actually jump in the car, I will learn something. And I need it. I’ll be honest with you, it’s a different beast. It’s an amazing car. It’s completely different rules.

I think the competition also different around what I’m used to. Every time in the car, I’m going to learn. No matter what happen, I’ll be running.

Q. You’ve been a part of a lot of big races. How are the emotions coming here to the Daytona 500 compare to your first Indy 500?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Right. It’s interesting. I don’t know what to expect because this is the first time for everything. Definitely the butterflies in the stomach are flying right now.

Information… I trust my guys. I’m seeing a lot of good friends, old friends, from over the years give me some tips. Some give me a hard time, which is okay. I can take it (laughter).

Look, this is incredible. This is an amazing opportunity. I believe only two guys in the planet were able to win the Daytona 500 and Indy 500. I know it’s very hard. I know it’s tough, like I said, different style racing that I’m used to.

You’ve got to be there. Whatever it is, at the end of the day it could be great. As of right now, I’m taking step by steps so I get every time more familiar and better.

Today I’m not even knew how to get out of the garage. Normally with INDYCAR, you just go to the pits and that’s it. Every step has been a learning process.

Q. You did the ARCA test.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Yeah, but it was in a different building. I’m finding roads here in Daytona that I’ve never been to.

Q. You were on the track?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: On the track I was, yes. Only five laps until people start crashing (laughter). I didn’t have much of a time of practicing in the pack.

It’s okay. Like I said, I’ll have plenty of time.

Q. What do you remember about IROC racing?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: A lot. Oh, my God. Special racing with those incredible drivers, Jimmie Johnson, Mark Martin, Ryan Newman. It was incredible to race with all those.

I learned a lot, to be honest. I don’t know if it will be familiar. I don’t know yet. I’ll tell you after the first race.

Q. You don’t make the rules. There’s controversy that you’re locked in. Guys like Jimmie Johnson are not. Have you heard about that?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Yeah, I didn’t hear much about it except last night one comment.

I said, Look, in the end of the day, I understand. I didn’t write the rules, by the way. I didn’t know actually these rules exist.

When we accepted this opportunity, we accept to go and race, race to race. However, obviously if whatever happens in the Duel, whatever happens there, if I have to take it, I’ll take it.

You’ve got to remember, Indy 500 is the same similarity rules: you have to race for it, but you have a week to adapt to the car, understanding, get into it. Here, I only have 50 minutes.

At the end of the day I didn’t know the rules exist. If I have to take it, I won’t deny that I will take it.

Q. You’re new to NASCAR. Why do you never correct people when they call your name wrong?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: They call me Julio, Hello. As long as they call my name, it’s okay. It’s definitely unique, I’ll get used to it.

Q. Four Indy 500s, Dancing with the Stars, personally blessed by a Pope. What is left on your bucket list?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Hopefully we’ll be celebrating the Daytona 500 win (laughter).

I know it’s a tough deal, don’t get me wrong. Obviously if I didn’t trust the people behind me, obviously the team… My team, I have experienced guys that know what to do and they give me the right rules. I got to go with the mentality like I’ve always been to a race.

What left? I don’t know. As long as I still have the fire like I have right now, I going to keep it going?

Q. (Question about the ARCA race.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Great question. I don’t know. It will be a unique. From the practice, I see it’s going to be very interesting.

Speaking with drivers that did the experience between the NASCAR and the ARCA, the Cup and the ARCA, they seem to be very different.

I will learn a lot.

Q. You have a bright personality. When it comes to racing, you take this very seriously. Talk about what your preparation has been.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I’ve been watching a lot of in-car cameras, a lot of the rules to understand the rules. I been in touch with the guys, as well, to make sure that we are on the same…

The lingo is different. Face it, when you come out of the pits, in INDYCAR they say, Go, go, go. Here it’s, Dig, dig, dig. I know it sounds interesting or different. It’s completely the opposite that I’m used to. I have to adapt. Pit stops here, for example, you have to stop a little bit away from the wall because you have to have the jack guy have space for them to raise the car. INDYCAR you get close so the fuel gets as quick as possible.

All these little details, even it’s a race car, it’s very different. To be in a big race like this, every detail matters. That’s why I’m trying to study all of these details to make sure that at least I’ll take out of the way and know what to do.

Looking forward, for sure. Every time I said I’m in the car, I’m going to take the learning.

Q. Have you gotten any advice from Juan?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Not Juan. Dale Jr., we spoke quite a lot. I got to find my friend Jimmie Johnson. Not sure he’s going to give me any tips, but I’m definitely going to talk with him about.

I talk with Austin Cindric, Blaney, Joey Logano. I’ve known those guys for a long time. Now I’m in their world. I would have done the same thing if they were in my world.

Q. Does 195 feel slow compared to what you’re used to?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: In terms of speed you’re talking about?

Q. Yes.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: You don’t see it. Even 240 and 190 or 200. You only see when things go bad. I don’t want to see that.

Q. There’s going to be a lot of eyeballs watching from around the world. Very few international drivers have had the opportunity to run Daytona. What would it mean to you knowing there’s going to be a lot of people walking, the second Brazilian to ever compete in the Daytona 500?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: This is a great exposure. This is one of the biggest race in the world. You want to have as much exposure as possible.

It’s very smart that Trackhouse are doing that. Not many people able to see it. When I was testing Talladega, people in Talladega were exciting. I’ll be watching for you, I’ll be cheering for you. It gives opportunity for foreign people, Brazilian people, people from other series to watch it. I’m just happy to help this scenario.

But in the end of the day, I’m not here just to call attention. I want to do everything I can to do a good job.

Q. (Question about helmet.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: You should see. The helmet, I think the camera cannot see the smile behind my helmet. It was so cool. I’m like, Oh, man, this is tough. Oh, no, I actually got this stuff. Here we go.

It was really fun. Yeah, super, super excited. Can’t wait to go back out there again.

Q. What other road course drivers would you suggest do this? Give us three or four names.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Oh, my God. That’s a great one.

From friends that I know, Scott Dixon is one of the guys that in my time, it’s incredible driver. Montoya already did that, so… I check that out of the list.

Q. Any Formula 1 guys?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I think Formula 1, Lewis tried once. Was it Hamilton?

Q. Kimi.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Who drove in Watkins Glen?

Q. Jensen.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Was it Jensen? Okay. Fernando Alonso would be great. I think he would like it.

Q. You said Cup drivers have been giving you some inside tips. If the shoe was on the other foot, if they were coming over, how much would you divulge to those guys?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I would have done the same, even more. I know how difficult when you go to a different series to another, how tough it is. I just don’t want to be on the way.

You don’t want that, as well. Sometimes you see it takes time to adapt. These guys been doing this for years. You jump in the first time, it takes a little time. Some drivers are quicker learners than the other. I’m probably slower. I’m getting there.

My team, the Project 91, are experienced people. They’ve done this before. They really give me the right tools to adapt fast.

Q. Did you bring any Indy 500 rings?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: It’s in my shoes in my locker right now.

Q. (No microphone.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I think it’s great. First of all, Jay Frye has been incredible for the series. Doug also has been doing an amazing job with the speedway. I feel the speedway automatically is going to be on autopilot. So many years, running in an incredible way, he has a lot to offer. Great job for INDYCAR to also have someone that knows the sport, knows the racing, and can bring a lot to elevate the series.

Q. Were you surprised at the change?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I was. Nobody mentioned anything the last year. A little bit was surprised.

Q. Do you have a place in your mind that you’d like to qualify, where you might like to start the race?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I would love to be in the top 15. That would be great. Able to do speed-wise, that’s great. Give me at least understanding I’m not so much farther back. I understand if you lose the draft here, it’s a big deal.

Yeah, that’s the goal. Nothing’s going to change if that doesn’t happen. That will be my goal.

Q. Have you spoken to Justin Marks about driving any additional entries?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I think one step at a time. A lot’s going to be determined after this race. Yeah, we have all our focus on the big one.

Q. (No microphone.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I have not. I heard about it. I want to see him (laughter). Love to meet him, for sure.

Q. How important was practice today?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I mean, huge. I mean, just my first out hitting a little bit of the limiter, things like that. If you’re thinking about it, that would hurt the lap time in qualifying. So all of these details, it’s important for you to get out of the way, learn what it is.

Honestly, even if the guys are here for many years, they were happy to have practice, which you should. You can’t just go out there and go straight. Those cars are fine machines, they got to be on top of it.

Q. (Question about the differences in cars.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: The stock car moves a little bit different. You have a power steering wheel. The car, when it turns, it’s a little delay. Speed difference, you don’t feel it.

INDYCAR, because of no power steering wheel, it turns a little quicker. It’s heavier, you feel more everything into the steering wheel.

Now, when you’re talking about AJ Foyt and Mario Andretti, you’re talking about the gods of racing, right? Wow, in this time of era, winning both, it would mean a lot to history in racing. I would be very blessed to be in this position.

Q. Do you have a little bit of race fan in you when you walk through this garage and see some of these names?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I mean, Jimmie Johnson is one of them. We became friends.

Q. You raced against him.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: But Jeff Gordon is another one. He’s not as a driver anymore, but he’s a team owner or president.

I mean, I raced with Kyle Busch at SRX, which was super cool. Kevin Harvick is not here anymore.

You’re talking about old-timers here. There’s so young guys now. They probably looking at me… I was actually talking to Byron, and he’s 27. I’m like, Man, you were probably five years old. Not even, thank you (laughter).

Look, in the end of the day, it’s super cool to be in this environment. My teammates are great. Daniel Suarez and Ross and Shane. Shane actually I raced a long time ago in V8 Supercar in Australia. He still gave me great tips. I’ll follow him because his tips seem to be working, not only for him but for me, too.

Q. There is something to be said for people that feel comfortable racing with you, and you feel comfortable racing with them.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Right.

Q. How do you develop that? How do you earn the trust of somebody?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: You got four hours to trust. I’m sure I’m going to be dropped down if I’m pushing someone, helping them, which is part of this game I guess. Until I prove that I can run with everyone and gain their trust, nothing that I can do.

I’m sure I will get there. That will be the time for me to take advantage of it.

Q. Do you have to race Thursday to prove to them you can race?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Absolutely. And I will race as of right now, I need experience. I need to run. I haven’t run with anybody in the pack. I understand it’s a big difference. So that’s why I’m doing ARCA, too. Different cars. At least give me a little bit more knowledge when I come to the Sunday what to do.

Q. You belong to a professional driving club. How fast do you go on an interstate?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I respect the rules (laughter). Let’s put it this way.

Q. Are you saying that or are you doing that?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I am saying that (laughter).

Q. Do you get adrenaline when you go out?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Absolutely, absolutely. Unless I’m a little late (laughter). Did I say that out loud?

Q. Are race car drivers athletes?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Absolutely. I don’t care what kind of car you do, it takes a lot of effort to turn the car. The speeds that we go, especially the time that we stay. They are.

Q. Open-wheel guys…

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Still practice a lot. Still train a lot, very hard. In the ovals not so much because you have the headrest. In the road course, huge.

Q. What did you think about the Daytona 500 having watched it but never been in it? What were your thoughts about it?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: It’s a big race. It’s an historic race, right? Just to be in it…

I had the opportunity because when I used to work with Team Penske, when I drove for IROC, I had opportunity to see the race. I’m like, I wish I be there. Unfortunately RP never allow me to do it, which is okay. I understand wasn’t my time.

I’m so glad that this opportunity right now, it’s just came through because this is huge. Probably is the right time for me, too. I’m more experienced driver, so I understand what I need to be.

Yeah, this is huge.

Q. NASCAR asked you or told you what you think you need to learn or what they want you to learn or do or show? Do you know exactly what you have to show?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: No, they never told me what to do. We did have meeting before so I understand the rules. They don’t want me to get caught in very simple rules, crossing over the yellow line, the back straight, things like that.

All those details, I mean, look, I feel that everybody wants me to do well, right? Again, it’s a big race. It’s a lot of attention from everybody. I want to do well, too.

I can’t thank enough for everyone with arms wide open to receive me. I’ll do everything I can to own that.

Q. (No microphone.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: They’re innovating. This project, I would say I don’t think a Team Penske or MSR or any other big team would be able to do it. They are thinking outside the box, which I like that.

In terms of organization, the people that Justin also have the past and hire, wow, it’s incredible. As I said, my crew chief is a Daytona 500 winner. It’s not like a B team when you’re thinking about. This is a real deal and I’m glad they put this group together.

Q. What do you think of Justin? He’s a big-picture guy?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: You said it, a big-picture guy, thinking of the future. Sort of like I would say, it’s not his style, but I feel the team is more like this new upcoming TikTok guys that push forward. Not TikTok, but you know what I mean. Social media, you know?

Q. Influencers.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Thank you. And they are. And they are. And I like it. Not only that, they’re getting the results and I’m so glad to be part of it.

Q. If you have a good experience, if you enjoy this, if it goes well, is there the desire to not have this be a one-and-done sort of thing?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I’ll let you know after the last lap (smiling).

Q. You’re running the other 500, too?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Yes. I’m running both 500s.

Q. That’s a big deal.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: It’s huge. In fact, the helmet I’m using will be the same colors from here to there. I want to create both 500s in the same year, which is unique.

Q. Did you steal that design from Rahal?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I had nothing to do with the marketing with Wendy’s. But I tell you what, it works.

Q. He had the bowtie.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: The little bowtie. I agree with you (laughter).

Q. (No microphone.)

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Very close. We text each other. Nothing big ’cause the car changed anyway. Different style. As well, the racing.

I feel right now it’s a much closer pack than when Christian 20 years ago ran.

In the end of the day I’m having a great group behind me from Trackhouse and Project 91 to give me the right tools to adapt as quick as I can.

Q. What do you think of your teammate over here from New Zealand?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: I know, he’s pretty darn good, I telling you. Like I said, takes a lot of advice. He went through this last year. He was able to give me a great picture of what’s happening.

Not to talk about, like I said, I met him a long, long time ago, 15 years ago, when I did the V8 Supercars. It’s cool to see him doing well.

Q. He won his first race.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: All right. He put me in the spot now. No pressure. I’ll do everything I can to repeat what I did (laughter).

Q. And Scottie Rutherford.

HELIO CASTRONEVES: See, that’s great. I’m just having an amazing opportunity here to do something huge.

Q. You’re here as a driver, but what has it been like since you stepped into the ownership waters?

HELIO CASTRONEVES: Look, it’s been amazing. Mike and Jim, I’m learning so much with them on the other side of the helmet, the cockpit I would call. They’re able to really show me a lot of things that I never understood ’cause when you’re a driver, you’re focusing obviously go fast, whatever it takes to be in that number one spot.

Here, the performance, the employees, the sponsor, the whole dynamic, it’s been just absolutely incredible. I’m just glad I was able to help, just switch from Andretti technical alliance to Ganassi. Yeah, we looking forward to the beginning of the season, for sure.

Q. The first time in the ARCA car, first time in the Cup car…

HELIO CASTRONEVES: It’s fun. It was awesome. The car’s different. The braking is much better on the Cup car. I feel that the driving, as well. The car seems to be responding a little bit quicker than the ARCA car. I’m not sure if it’s style, the tires, what it was.

Wind was a similar scenario. Same push I had before, which is great. Now I can read a little bit better for what the car is doing.

It’s much more comfortable. You’re shifting the sequential gearbox rather than an H pattern.

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: Anthony Alfredo Quotes

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

 Anthony Alfredo, driver of the No. 62 Beard Motorsports Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

YOU HAVE BEEN HERE BEFORE, BUT WHAT ARE YOUR FEELINGS IN COMING BACK HERE AGAIN BECAUSE THESE OPPORTUNITIES CAN BE SO FLEETING?

“Obviously just being here at Daytona and having a shot to run in the Great American Race is a blessing. I have been talking to a few people today about how many people would do anything to have an opportunity to be here and just say that they attempted it, let alone race. I have been blessed enough to run the race twice now and hope that third time is a charm. But its going to be pretty intense tonight and tomorrow, either way, but I look forward to it because its going to be that much more rewarding qualifying into the race just knowing the field of open cars that are here this time around.”

DO YOU VIEW THESE OPPORTUNITIES AS SORT OF A PROVE IT SITUATION TO SEE YOURSELF IN THE CUP SERIES?

“One hundred percent. Making this race isn’t just about being in it, to me it’s about winning it because that could be career defining. And I am a young driver trying to make my way and I have been very fortunate to make it this far, but my ultimate goal would be to be the Cup Series champion one day. Maximizing the most out of these limited starts and a partial schedule is really important for that. So, I am just really thankful to have these opportunities because of Beard Motorsports, our partners Fortified Building Solutions. Quite honestly, it has gone really well. The cars are really fast and we had a sixth place finish last year, and we are the fastest open car qualifying here for the Daytona 500. So, there are just a lot of great things to build on from last season and that momentum should help us execute at a higher level this year.”

HOW MUCH DOES THE SPEED FROM LAST YEAR EASE THE MIND FOR TONIGHT?

“That is a great question and honestly, I feel very confident because of it and I think we are even better than we were last year, but so does everybody else and there are a few more open cars than there were last year. More competitive ones at that. It’s going to be tougher and its going to be really tight. So, we will just do all we can as far as putting the speed in the car and its going to be up to me behind the wheel. After that, it’s superspeedway qualifying and once you are up to speed you just have to hang on and hope the thing runs. We have got a good power plant from ECR Engines and everyone at Beard Motorsports has done a great job in preparing the car. This is the same car we brought here last year. It didn’t run any of the other three races that we did, so this is our Daytona 500 piece, and our pride and joy. So, I hope it pays off.”

IT’S AN EVEN BUSIER WEEK FOR YOU BECAUSE IN ADDITION TO ALL THE DAYTONA 500 OBLIGATIONS, YOU DO HAVE A FULL TIME XFINITY SEAT WITH TYLER YOUNG AND HIS FAMILY. DOES THE EXTRA TRACK TIME IN THE XFINITY CAR KEEP YOU SHARP?

“I am really excited about it and Tyler Young is an awesome guy and everyone on his team takes a lot of pride in what they do. I think the small teams deserve respect, especially for how long he has been in the sport, whether the Truck Series and now the Xfinity Series. They have a vision that I want to help realize and that is to be in victory lane this season with that 42 car. My goal is to win the season opener at Daytona and make the Playoffs. Maybe another regular season win would be great. That seems like a tall order to most, but that is what my mindset is on. I think not only is running the Cup race giving me confidence, but like you said, just being in and out of the car this week has given me some experience, especially racing on Saturday and trying to learn some things for Sunday. It’s kind of weird. I had practice today, qualifying tonight, the Duels tomorrow night, so I will have a lot more seat time in the Cup car than anything and I think that is going to help me more with the Xfinity car than the Cup car will the Xfinity car if that makes sense.”

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: Kyle Busch Quotes

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

 Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Is this the year for your Daytona 500 win?

“You’d certainly like to hope so. Twenty years of trying. There was another storied racer of the past that won on his 20th try and that was a pretty big deal. He was a former RCR driver as well so it’d certainly be nice to win that race and do it with RCR in the No. 8 Zone Chevrolet. So that would be pretty cool.”

You’ve been good on superspeedways since you got to RCR. How has that changed your mindset preparing for the 500?

“We’ve had really good speed being down here. These guys build great restrictor-plate program racecars, so when we go to Daytona, Atlanta, Talladega, we feel like those places are really good for us. We’ve got really good speed. I just told someone that it’s 80 percent luck/20 percent skill race. Others would disagree but I feel like you have to have a lot of things go your way and you have to have the stars align. Being able to lead off the final pit stop is certainly going to put yourself in a really good position.”

Does the 2015 crash in this race still impact your mentality?

“I don’t feel like it does anything. You have to go out there, race and run hard, and try as best you can to make the best decisions. It’s a lot like a chess match in trying to make sure you put yourself in the right positions to get yourself up front when it matters most. Two years ago we led mile-marker 500 but unfortunately we were coming to the yellow. Been there, been right and there and been close… finished second, finished third, finished fourth and all the top-five spots. So there’s definitely some angst over trying to win this one.”

There was great improvement in the RCR after the summer break last year and you added new people in the offseason. How effective will that be for 2025?

“Certainly any time you add more people or new people, you hope it’s for the betterment of your team and organization. I’m excited for it and looking forward to it. I wouldn’t say revamping but definitely changing some personnel in some places and being able to put some better cars on the racetrack. For myself and Austin Dillon, we want to go out and win races for RCR, for RC, ECR and of course Team Chevy. We have some great partners and some people there that get us to the racetrack each and every week. It’s all about winning, and the time is now to get that done.”

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

“It’s really important. The biggest thing is that I always love it when we are able to start strong and have good strong starts to the year. It helps your mojo a little bit, helps you build a foundation and gets you a good points start. But you have to keep that momentum going also. Two years ago when I joined RCR in ’23, we had a really good first 16 races. I think we won three of the first 16 but then kind of (fell off) after that. You’ve got to keep that strength all year long. You can’t blunder, fumble, whatever it is. That’s when these other guys will take advantage of you, and obviously stage points in this era are very important.”

When do you get a feel for that with the first two races being speedways and then a road course…

“I feel like Daytona and Atlanta are some really good shots for us to win races. So the first two weeks are good with our RCR speedway program. From there I enjoy the road-course stuff. Of course being able to get back out to Vegas… we ran strong there last year and we were probably one of the only cars that could keep up with the 5 car in that race. It’d be nice to get that momentum rolling at the start of the season and really try to run stronger each week and score those stage points, get ourselves in running sixth to 10th each week, pick up some spots on pit road and put ourselves in position to get good finishes.”

As a veteran, what’s it like to have practice and qualifying back again, and did it help your team out?

“Here I think it’s nice to get out there and shake it down. There were a couple of other guys that had oil leaks and whatnot, so certainly they benefited from it and were able to get on the racetrack… I don’t think that’s a bad thing. Just a short 20 to 30-minute thing to shake your car down. Here it’s good for qualifying for later, and at Atlanta I feel like it’s important to get a couple of laps in because the balance at that place is going to change the most over the next few races because of the asphalt wearing and whatnot. As you get into the races, it doesn’t really matter where you start. It’s a matter of how you get through traffic.”

That 80/20 ratio, is that consistent or was it different years ago?

“I feel it’s probably more 80/20 now than what it was. I feel like it’s gotten more luck-induced. We’re all dealing with the same Legos. You see it sometimes when you get later in the going when you’re in the middle of the race or early in the race and you’re fuel-mileage racing and you can run three-wide and you’re side-by-side. But then when it gets down to the end and the bottom picks up and everybody is running wide-open, that top lane just falls. You can’t keep up up there so you have to be in those first two lanes to make sure you’re toward the front. Trying to make a move and you’re trying to hang somebody out… that’s just a part of what we’ve got right now. It’s tough to make headway.”

On contending at Atlanta this year after a close finish last year.

“You have to be in position. I felt like we were pretty fast there both races last year. I had a big run down the backstretch and knew I needed to make it three-wide. I should have cut my speed going into Three when I was three-wide because I told myself before the race do not be leading getting into Three coming to the checkered. I messed that up. When I saw that hole, I jumped to the middle and my momentum carried me through to the lead. Those two cars side-by-side will just pull you back through the middle. So messed up on that a little bit but all in all, it’s circumstantial. You have to be right all the time.”

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 GAZOO Racing – Daytona 500 Media Day Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 02.12.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Tyler Reddick
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 12, 2025) – 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick was made available to the media on Wednesday prior to the Daytona 500.

TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Nasty Beast Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

Does your win at Talladega last year make it fun to come to superspeedway races?

“I think we’ve done a better job of understanding what the keys are to running well and having that shot to win the race. It’s only happened one and a half times I guess if you count the Duel here. We know what we need to do, but to have all of these things fall into place in one race and not have any mistakes – it’s a difficult thing to do. Certainly, it feels more fun from that aspect like we know what we need to do. It’s still just a hard thing to do over the course of 500 miles to have that perfect day if you will where everything goes to plan so you can have the track position at the end.”

Do you have anything different circled going into this year compared to the past after running for the Cup championship last year?

“It’s not crazy different. I think the things that we needed to improve last year were the right things to focus on. I don’t feel like our keys to being good this year have really changed too much. It feels like we’ve gotta keep just working on the same things that we prioritized a lot and improved last year. We’ve got to just keep going further in those same areas.”

How big of a year was last year for you to have in just your fifth year in the Cup Series?

“It was a good year. We did a lot of things right in the summer. We had to overcome a lot of incidents, a lot of blockades if you will that could’ve kept us from advancing and could’ve kept us from getting to Phoenix with a chance to compete. We did a good job of overcoming that each step of the way and it was a pretty rocky road that we had to take in the Playoffs. To be able to overcome that was good especially when you look at how everything just kind of fell our way in the regular season. When things finally didn’t go our way, we didn’t fold up, we welcomed the pressure. It was a really good year for me as a driver. We won a number of races, we let some get away for sure. The wins were great, but I think the days outside of the wins were more of what made that season be as great as it was. Just the consistency we showed over long periods of the season.”

How do changes on your pit crew change your mindset as a driver?

“I don’t know if it changes my mindset to be honest. What I need to do getting into the box and out of the box to tie all that together remains the same. Certainly, as we get the in-race reps if you will, I think some of each individual’s tendencies might be a little bit different of what they’re wanting to see me do with my car coming into the box might be a little different. With time, that will just tell. As of now, how I get into the box and out of the box, car placement and all that sort of stuff I don’t really feel like has changed. I’m excited to see how the new members do. The entire group seems like they’re gelling well, so we’ll see how the performance is.”

What do you see in Riley Herbst coming into his first year in the Cup Series?

“I can remember racing against him (Riley Herbst) when I was on the tail end of my Xfinity career. It just seemed like really this past year in particular the light switch went off, things started to click for him. His crew chief Davin (Restivo), I worked with him back in my Xfinity days. He was my engineer on the 42 with Chip Ganassi Racing. I knew that he got a good one there so to see their relationship growing and getting to the point where they were winning races and performing really, really well it seemed like things were starting good for him. It seems like him and Davin’s relationship is in a really good place. I never worked with Riley as a teammate. We had a relationship through Monster Energy as Monster Energy athletes. Getting to work with him in-house this year has been cool and getting to understand his approach and his involvement. I felt like I was at the shop a lot, but I think Riley’s got me beat there. He’s definitely around and clued into what’s going on.”

Do you feel more confident coming into this race with more Toyota’s running in the Daytona 500?

“Yeah, certainly. All the manufacturers work with their own. Just the more numbers we have is going to help that. It’s just going to allow us to hopefully do what we want to do more so rather than just respond to what’s happening around us. So, we’ll see how that all plays out. Obviously, it would be great if all the Toyota’s can make the race, but there’s a lot that’s going to happen tonight and tomorrow night.”

What are the things you can control at a superspeedway race?

“I think if you have a plan and a strategy, you just stick to it. Obviously, we’ll try to pick the one that has the highest probability of working out and we’ll just try to stick to our game plan throughout the race and hopefully it’s a good game plan and gets us to the front.”

How much emphasis has been on starting the season out strong in points?

“I think every year I’ve ran Cup we’ve gotten past race two or three and been in the high 20s or low 30s in points. A lot of that has been because I can’t seemingly finish a race here on the lead lap in the (Daytona) 500. And, now that we have Atlanta, I think Atlanta last year we wrecked on lap 2 there too. We just have a tendency to not get out of the first few races with a lot of points and it kind of gets us behind. It’s only three races, but when you get down 160 to 100 points in the first couple races to some of the guys, you’re going to be competing against all year long it can take eight or nine races to close that margin back up. I think a small little objective of ours is going to be to have a good start to the year. That would be great to not start in a hole. That way it’s not such a looming task and we don’t have to spend so much time over the summer trying to close that gap back up.”

What makes your crew chief Billy Scott so successful?

“There’s a lot of things. I think for our relationship, it’s how he structures things. He’s an organized individual. He does a good job of balancing the work and his home life as well. I think all around he’s a good individual. It takes someone like that to be a leader and set a good example for the rest of the individuals on our team. Those are ones that come to mind. And just as we spend more time together, he understands what I say even if he can’t picture perfect, crystal clear understand the words. That just comes with time. All around, he puts in the effort, he works really hard, and I think that along with all of the other reasons is why he’s very successful.”

What is the challenge of moving on from a year like last year where you ran for the championship?

“I think I handled that well last year. For us, we didn’t have the clean start to the weekend that we wanted, but I felt like we pretty much got everything we could out of our car by the race end and we still just didn’t quite have enough. That means we’ve got to bring a better all-around car that just runs longer into the run as good as the Penske cars do. I feel like all in all, we walked away from it and didn’t get the result we wanted, but we felt like we did everything we could with our day. Obviously, we have some things that we know we can improve, we know we have to get better. On the Xfinity side, right, I had to switch teams and figure it all out again, so I wouldn’t say it was a whole lot different than what that was like. We’ll just take advantage of the race we have in the spring, see if we can learn some stuff at the test and hopefully, we have a good sense of direction on what we need to improve when we return at the end of the year.”

About Toyota

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

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

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

TEAM CHEVY NASCAR DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Carson Hocevar Quotes

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

 Carson Hocevar, driver of the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

REGARDING MICHAEL MCDOWELL JOINING THE TEAM AND HIS IMPACT

“I think he has been big, especially for here. That is the biggest thing, especially for the race because he runs good. I think Travis has played more of a role personally because he knows what was on the cars. I like to do my own thing, and my strategy was to always ride in the back at superspeedways anyway. We haven’t really got enough races for me to pick Michael’s brain or him to pick mine. I normally like to go out there and just run and don’t like to talk about anything anyways. I like to just go see if I am any good or not. But having Michael just adds depth and adds to our allotment that if I struggle, or if I can lean on him if he is running good, and that type deal. He is going to fill our gaps and as a team owner, you are trying to run first-second-third. But if your cars struggle and they have their strong suits, like Michael’s is superspeedways and road courses is hopefully where he is going to elevate our program.”

SO WHEN YOU ARE GOING MORE OFF THE FEEL OF THE TRACK THAN THE DATA, DOES THAT PLAY AT OTHER TRACKS MORE THAN LIKE DAYTONA?

“Yeah, for me I almost look at these two, especially more now, that I look at them more as an off week. Just hang out and be like, ‘man, I am just going to enjoy the week’. There is not a whole lot more you can prepare for….the last couple of years it was super draggy, but now we are trying to be fast everywhere. I think we are a lot closer to the Hendrick cars based on the lap time there with the single car alone. It was like a second difference from last year to this year, so I am super pumped about that. So, the biggest thing they want to do right is to try and get my head ready if we are up front and give me all the info that we have. But yes, for me it is like so much more laid back. There are about two instances that I study for here and I just hang out the rest of the time. I have an iRacing rig on my hauler so you probably won’t see me much until race time and I will be driving on superspeedways and World of Outlaws Sprint Cars.

HOW MUCH CAN IRACING HELP YOU IN REACTIONARY MOVES AND MAKING THE RIGHT MOVES AT THE RIGHT TIME?

“I think iRacing on superspeedways is more 1 to 1 and is light years ahead of any other (track). I don’t learn a lot doing anything else, but for superspeedways its huge. I had to leave the race with five to go, I was leading, and had to go practice. All my guys were having fun. We were maintaining lanes in a truck, manipulating lanes and its fun. But yeah, I am going to take advantage of it before the Duel and try a bunch of stuff, hit people, have them hit me, and change lanes. I am more than happy to wreck over there than out here.”

REGARDING GETTING ANOTHER SHOT AT THIS RACE AFTER WHAT HAPPENED LAST YEAR

“I mean I am not a superspeedway guy, and I don’t want to say I have been so anxious, but it would be cool to finish, right? But we ran good and we finished 11th in July. So at least I finished. Regarding last year, I haven’t got it out of my system, but I kind of want to finish all the laps and be there at the end. I am excited to go, but at the same time I do not love these superspeedways, so I don’t get too excited. You know what I mean? If I win the race and we figure out how to maintain lanes and we run really good, then I am going to be really excited to come back next year. But for me, I need a little bit more superspeedway racing to get excited.”

HOW ARE THE EMOTIONS COMING BACK FOR YOUR SECOND YEAR AS OPPOSED TO YOUR FIRST LAST YEAR?

“I think its more about being more confident and being a lot more decisive about the decisions you are making and decisive on how our cars are being developed. I think it adds……there’s not really any pressure and as Dan Campbell said one time, there is no weight, he just felt the wind underneath him. That is the motto we have been going with.”

HOW ABOUT THE CONFIDENCE IN HAVING JUSTIN AND MICHAEL OUT THERE?

“Yeah, it definitely helps to have friends out there for sure. But I don’t know. I will let you know after the Duels and Daytona 500 go for sure. At the same time, we have a lot of Chevy friends that hopefully we will work closely with. So, there is a lot of depth out there already.”

WHAT HAS THE TEAM ENVIRONMENT BEEN LIKE THIS YEAR AND HOW BIG ITS GOING TO BE?

“It’s been good and all the teams have been working very closely and there is a lot of depth. For me, there are more researches than excuses in my mind. There is a lot more brainpower, there is a lot more depth, and I think the biggest hire we got was Matt McCall. I think it’s super important that we are racing with him and not racing against him. We have two crew chiefs that are super talented sitting on the sideline too.”

A BIG STORY LAST YEAR WAS THAT YOU WERE OUTPERFORMING YOUR SPIRE TEAMMATES. DOES THAT ADD PRESSURE GOING INTO THIS YEAR?

“No, not really. I don’t know why we were so good last year, I just drive. I don’t know why I was good in the 42 car when I first got in it, and I don’t know why I was good in the 7 when I first got in it. I just drive and we were either fast or we were slow. For me, it was about less excuses and more brain power. We were fast in The Clash, which I didn’t expect to be in the Clash. Just because that is not our forte and I thought we would be like, ‘let’s get through the Clash and we will be okay’. I thought we would make it, but I didn’t think we would be the third fastest car on lap times. We were super-fast which makes me excited to go to places like Martinsville and other places where we struggled. The Clash was the race for me that told me we were headed in the right direction.”

HAVE YOU SEEN A DIFFERENCE IN SPIRE SINCE RODNEY CAME OVER?

“Well, when Rodney walked in, so did four other crew chiefs too. So, I think it’s just the combination and everybody. I mean Rodney is great, but for me it’s Matt McCall, Travis Peterson, Nick Case and Ryan Sparks getting off the box. In my mind, we have five crew chiefs for three cars that are super talented. We have way more smarter people for their specific roles to make these cars go fast. You know, Mr. H and Hendrick Motorsports continue to help us through their programs. With Jeff Dickerson and that whole group, they are just rocking. I think it’s just the whirlwind of people that came in and not anyone specific. That is why I think we are going to be successful, and Spire is going to be successful. We are not relying on one person, we are relying on the whole group. I think that is what is really cool, they work super well together.”

HOW HIGH HAVE YOU SET YOUR GOALS THIS YEAR?

“Well, our boss wants all three of us in the Playoffs this year and I know how high that one is. But you have to have tip top goals. For me it’s that I want to run good, and I want to run top 15 every race and if you keep doing that, you are going to win a race.”

WHAT IS THE CRAZINESS FACTOR IN GOING FROM SOMEWHERE LIKE DAYTONA TO ATLANTA NEXT WEEK?

“I think this place is more unpredictable in my mind because the wrecks don’t happen from back blocks anymore, they happen from back pushes. At Atlanta, you are more chaotic, and you can see wrecks happening but here you are just sitting in line and saving fuel and then somebody wants to hit somebody a little too hard and they spin. For me, I think its more unpredictable for something to happen here.”

DOES IT GIVE YOU ANYMORE CONFIDENCE THAT YOU ARE GOING INTO YOUR SECOND FULL TIME SEASON WITH HOW COMPETITIVE THE CUP SERIES IS AND YOU ARE GOING IN WITH A GROWING TEAM?

“For me, I like to finish well. I like to maximize my finish. So, for me, I don’t have a lofty goal like let’s go make the Playoffs. Theoretically you can be third in points and miss it, right? So, it worked well for me saying last year our goal was 20th in points and my goal for this year is 15th in points. You might be close in points, you might not be, depending on who wins and who doesn’t. But if we can be there and finish around 15th every race, then we are going to be exactly where we want to be.”

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: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Quotes

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

 Ricky Stenhouse Jr., driver of the No. 47 Hyak Motorsports Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Talk about your emotions coming into this week after winning in 2023…

“You definitely walk in with more confidence. I walked in in 2023 with confidence as well. In 2022, we took the lead with five or six to go, and Brad bump drafted us and spun us off of Turn 4 there. But we were battling for the lead. Obviously, we won in 2023, and then we took the lead with 14 to go in the race last year as well. I’ve got a lot of confidence coming to the (Daytona) 500, and it helps having a Harley J. Earl trophy at home that you walk by every day. Always good to be back.”

With the team rebrand, with the same people on the inside, does it help or feel any different with preparation in the offseason?

“No, our guys have been working really hard. Obviously, trying to switch logos on everything, order new apparel, all of that good stuff. We’ve actually added some additional competition guys that I think hopefully improve our performance. Mike and the guys have been working really hard on just trying to get our stuff better which has been nice. It’s not like we’ve had to shift everything that we’re doing. We’re not learning anything new. Everybody is working hard.”

How do you spend this lead up to Speedweeks?

“I came down about Tuesday of last week. My wife ran the half marathon in Naples. Since Stetson was born, she’s been training for that. Went down there and hung out there with her family and just enjoyed good weather. Ate a lot of food, enjoyed some friends, going out on the boat, then came over and went to Disney yesterday. Took the family there, so that was fun. I miss coming down here for The Clash. I miss coming and being down here for almost two weeks. Heck, I pulled into the motorhome lot on Monday and I felt like half the field was already here. I feel like we all share that same mindset of getting down here and enjoying the weather.”

With the car entering its fourth season, and you’ve driven the last two generation cars at Cup level, where do you stand by handling at Daytona?

“I think the handling, everybody’s handles pretty well. I do think some cars take bump drafts better than others. I feel really confident about ours. I feel like I can take a shot from just about anybody. I feel comfortable with that. That’s the biggest thing. We’re still fighting some of the things we fought with other cars as far as getting tight off of Turn 4 in the draft, especially late on the tires. But I think all of us will still take tires and take the track position.”

Your buddies (Christopher) Bell and (Kyle) Larson have already been down here for a week racing at Volusia. You own an Outlaws car that ran at Volusia with Sheldon (Haudenschild). Is there any consideration for you going back and racing there?

“Yeah, for sure. My dad and I have a car just like Sheldon. We just don’t have everything prepped. It’s just dad working on my car, so hopefully, within a month of two, we’ll get back out there and run some sprint car races.”

Do you think it keeps you sharp when you get to do that?

“Yeah, I think anytime you can be in the car, it doesn’t matter what car it is, I think you’re more prepared. Definitely was thankful to get in the car today and get a couple of practice sessions down here to get reacclimated.”

Was The Clash the best indicator in how the car will perform, especially at Daytona?

“I enjoyed having The Clash down here, and obviously, you had to qualify for it. Not everybody got to run it. That was something you always shot for throughout the season is qualifying for The Clash. Getting down here, watching the race, you would say “Hey, it could be more expensive,” but I saw a bit of tore up stuff last week at The Clash at Bowman Gray. I don’t know if it really saves much, but I’ve always enjoyed coming down here for the The Clash for sure.”

On winning in July…

“Obviously, that was on Fourth of July, and now that’s my son’s birthday and one of my favorite holidays. It definitely as a fun race to win. I had a massive team party after that at my house for Fourth of July. It was a really cool win.”

Does entering this year feel any different with the rebrand?

“It definitely does. Even though there’s not a lot that has changed in the shop and the guys I’m working with, but a rebrand is definitely different. You have totally different people in the front office going out, and people that I’ve dealt with on the Kroger side of things, now I’ve still got Sunny D and NOS Energy Drink, but we’re going out and actively getting new ones. We’ve got Martin’s Potato Rolls for Atlanta next week that I’m super excited about. It’s a family-owned company, and they’re excited about it. We’ve got some cool things coming down the pipeline later in the season with them. I’m sure for the front office, it’s stressful, like going out and selling sponsorship is always a difficult thing to do. I definitely don’t think I’d be very good at it, so I’m just going to drive the race car and worry about the competition side. Things are definitely different, but it’s a little more simplified right now because we are just a smaller team than we were then as far as head personnel and things like that. Everybody is working hard and trying to get our performance better and program better.”

Does that side of it worry you at all?

“No, it doesn’t worry me at all. Gordon Smith is very dedicated. He’s been in this sport for eight, nine, 10 years, and just super dedicated to this program, especially now that it has his name on it, right? He wants to see it succeed. He’s been a successful business guy his whole life and loves motorsports. Loves dirt bike riding. Loves just being involved. He’s made the commitment to me and our whole team that he’s committed to this thing for the long haul. We’ve got a great relationship with Hendrick Motorsports that goes for a while as well. I feel really good about where we’re at. Our guys are just working to make sure the sponsors that we do have fit our program and fit the vision of where we want to go as well.”

How different does it feel now a couple of years removed from your win at Daytona?

“Just like this Daytona 500 media day that we’ve always done, for 12 years I walked by that trophy without my name on it and now it’s there the last two years with it on there. Just looking at that trophy is very special. I feel like I’m more excited when I get here and like I’ve said before, you’re definitely more confident.”

Adding to that, even before you were a Daytona 500 winner, was it cool coming to these superspeedway tracks?

“I look back at my career and when I was in the Xfinity Series, I hated coming to the superspeedways because I felt like, for one I wasn’t confident. I had never won on a superspeedway. I had some good runs, but I wouldn’t say I was ever spectacular. We always had way better opportunities to win at mile-and-a-halfs and short tracks. I felt like mile-and-a-halfs in 2012, we won six mile-and-a-half racetracks and loved them. But until I won in 2017, I was never very confident coming to a superspeedway, but now it is our best opportunity to win until we get our cars to where we need them to be at other racetracks. There are other racetracks we’ve circled outside of superspeedways that we can win, but we do put a lot of emphasis on winning one of these superspeedway races. Luckily, we’ve done that the last two years. First time for me and the team to win in back-to-back seasons. Looking to add a third.”

What is it to save fuel and the science in that and trying to run up front?

“Saving fuel at the superspeedways has been very difficult. I think running my street vehicle low on gas my whole life since I was a kid and saving fuel trying to make it to the gas station may have helped a little bit on that. It’s frustrating at points, but it’s still an art. I think we saved the second most fuel last year in Talladega which still kept our track position, gave our guys more wiggle room to not have to nail that last pit stop because we didn’t have to have as much gas. So, it’s a full team effort. Your guys are doing the calculations, you’re saving the most you can, you’re trying to get that track position. It definitely makes it more dimensional trying to win these races. There’s way more factors that come into it versus just ‘hey, I’m just going to go out here and try to lead the race, win the race,’ right? So now, you’ve got to think about that last pit stop, you’ve got to think about that fuel and try and keep your track position all at the same time. It can be frustrating at times. You want to go up and lead, but ultimately to win the race, that’s not the best move.”

Talk about the potential of having more Toyotas and cars in the field…

“Us being a single-car team, I found myself kind of in the mix with Denny (Hamlin) and those guys, and working with some of them just because sometimes we’re the odd man out, right? We’re kind of sometimes on our own island as far as teammates go, and sometimes they needed more numbers. Like you said, when it was the (Daytona) 500 last year when the crash when they pitted, they tend to do their own thing and tend to come up with their own strategy. The more cars you have, the better off your strategy can work. I definitely see them being stronger. You’ve got your Fords, you’ve got your Chevys who we generally have two groups because we have so many. So, if you lose some, you kind of restack them and they’ll have that opportunity now. It’ll be interesting to see how they all play together. I’m sure they’ll have their ducks aligned for sure.”

Has Gordon or anyone at the team outlined a trajectory for what the year will be?

“We just take it week by week. Obviously, this season is odd. We start off with two superspeedways and then a road course, then finally we hit Vegas and Phoenix. We’ve hired some people to try and help us in that department, so time will tell. It’s all about this car hasn’t changed a ton. We’ve been fast on a lot of racetracks since we’ve gone to this car. We were really good at Gateway, we’ve been good at Indy, we’ve been good at Charlotte and Kansas, and you name it. We’ve ran top-10 at Martinsville a couple of times with this car. There’s been highlights of us being competitive with it, we just have got to figure out how to recreate that week in and week out. Hopefully, we’ll do that. We look more about where we are in points at the end of the season. Last year, obviously was nothing that we had planned after 2023. Obviously, we won the (Daytona) 500 to make the Playoffs, but we ran good enough and our average finish was good enough to make the Playoffs whether we had that win or not. We just didn’t have that performance last year week in and week out. We still had some highlighted moments where we had a good run, or our car was doing what we needed it to there. It’s just trying to do that week in and week out is very difficult in this sport. Even though the car is not changing year after year, these other teams are getting better at their setups and they’re constantly working on that. We’ve got to do the same, it’s just we have one data point every weekend. We don’t have multiple data points every weekend, and that can be difficult.”

You’ve had several fastest laps, so how excited are you about the Xfinity Fastest Lap bonus?

“I think it was maybe Talladega, (Carson) Hocevar and I were in the back, and we qualified back there, so we were trying to see who could get the fastest lap. He would lay back a little bit and try to get a run. It’s a point out there for the taking. Definitely will be paying attention to that, but you don’t want to risk too much and lose the draft for a point. If we get into a position to try and lay down a fastest lap, we’ll definitely do that at the superspeedways. I definitely know what I need to do that.”

Have you gone out to look at your footprint and handprint in the concrete at Daytona?

“I have. I went and looked at it last year, then had some friends here last week. Their kids had some stuff down here, and he sent me a picture of his son doing a handstand with his hands in my handprint out there. That was pretty cool. That’s part of winning the Daytona 500, right? It’s all the cool things that come along with it, and that’s definitely one of them.”

Do you feel late in the race physically things change in the cockpit?

“Oh yeah. It gets intense. The blocks are later. The pushes are harder. The side drafting is more aggressive. Working your way to the front is more difficult. You have to pick a lap to say ‘Hey, I want to be in top-10, top-five. I want to take the lead around this number.’ We did that in 2022, we took the lead within 10 to go. Got spun by the No. 6 there with five laps to go, I think it was, battling for the lead. We won in 2023. Last year, we took the lead with 14 to go, I made a bad move that got me out of the lead and shuffled me back a little bit because of big runs and big moves. I thought I could make a move and it still be a little bit calm enough to make that move, and it wasn’t, right? I got shuffled out. I would say within 20 to go, it’s pretty intense.”

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: Ross Chastain Quotes

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

 Ross Chastain, driver of the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

With this particular car, what is the strategy to survive the draft coming from behind or get the lead being in the draft from behind?

“I live and believe that you are safest out front. We were living proof of that last year in that we got clipped in the rear bumper but it didn’t spin us. There were a lot of cars behind us that got taken out in that final wreck before I spun. I think the safest spot is up front but I can’t figure out how to live up front in the beginning of the stage and end of the stage. At some point you have to be in the pack.”

With four drivers from a diverse set of backgrounds on the team, does it make it harder to coordinate how you work the draft?

“Not with Daniel (Suarez) and Shane (van Gisbergen) because we’ve been around each other now for… Daniel for a couple of years and Shane for a little over a year. A couple of months of knowing we would be doing this together, us three, all year. Shane and I made some big steps through last summer for our preparation, and Daniel is part of that now, as well. Helio (Castroneves) is a bit of an anomaly. This is it for him that I know of. It was hard to talk to him about drafting when he hadn’t even driven the car. Now we can talk ahead of the Duals. But the Duals will be where he’s going to learn the most. Whatever I can talk to him now about, I’ll be able to talk to him 10 times more after he feels tight, loose, side drafting, getting pushes… we can talk through the real granular details of what it takes to be successful or successful in moving our line forward. Not saying we can’t talk about how to win. We think we can but how to move the line forward.”

What do you think about his personality?

“He’s a hero, first of all, of mine. I’ve almost watched him my entire life race professionally. He won the first (Indy) 500 in 2001 and I was born in ’92. I was still waddling around with a four-wheeler in the yard. It’s incredible. I got to meet him at Homestead last year, so that was cool. He blended right in with the team. I didn’t even know why he was there at the time, and they told us right after. So that was cool to have that experience of shaking his hand and getting to know him, not knowing why he was there. He used a lot of my seat and cockpit stuff… parts and pieces inside. We’re similar size and build so I was happy to lend him some stuff.”

How do you think SVG has progressed on ovals?

“With the Clash and All-Star, he’s got 38 at-bats to show up at the racetrack and prepare. The way we do it at Trackhouse we’ve evolved. The 1 and 99 used to do it a certain way but now with three teams every week we’ve evolved that, and I like it a lot better. It’s more driver-focused. Shane and I are literally from opposite sides of the world, but we think about things in a similar way but we’re just different enough where he can all me out on my issues and I can call him out on his. The early-morning sim sessions together is the name of the game for us. I don’t know what the end results will be each week. It’s easy to look at and see it – he’s helping on road courses and I hope to help him on ovals.”

More on the diverse background on the four Trackhouse drivers.

“It’s a cool thing that we’re all from our different countries. That’s what Justin (Marks) wanted when he did this. He wanted to be different. This is a way to do that. Just look worldwide and see what’s out there. Helio was in Miami, so America is home for him. South Florida guy so we have that in common. How to look at it from a bigger picture – that will probably hit me on Sunday when I realize that little old Trackhouse that I remember was a one-car team. I remember when Justin was just a driver – not just – but when he was a driver and an owner. Then when he hired me to be the second driver, I remember how big of a deal that felt. And now we’ve doubled that size. It’s going to be a cool moment on Sunday.”

With NASCAR racing in Mexico City and being exposed to the international side, is there any other place you’d be interested in racing?

“Take us back to Road America. Worldwide, I don’t know. I don’t know tracks anywhere else. I’ve never flown east or west of North America.”

On the Daytona 500 vibe.

“It’s never felt the same. I remember the first time that I crossed from the grandstand side across the fence, that was on a bicycle and I was sneaking across. The first time I drove through it was I believe for a New Smyrna banquet. Then I remember first time I came through as a competitor, being around the Truck Series in 2012. Every time it’s a great feeling. Yesterday we landed and went straight over to the hauler parade coming in at One Daytona, so I got to see Mike Helton and Frank Kelleher, the track president, and talked to them a little bit and see some friends. The biggest thing I took away from it is that the 22 was pulled up to the front of the line. That’s one of those little motivating things… that I want the 1 truck to pull up front. I want the 1 truck to be the first one to pull into the garage for the Daytona 500 the next year. That means you did something really special the last year. That’s the goal and what I took away from it. Then I drove around into the infield after that… incorrectly! I went to the wrong spot to be honest. Drove through the Turn Four tunnel, and that’s a special feeling. It’s something I think to myself driving through and hope that special feeling never goes away.”

How much are you a different driver than when you first came here?

“The way all these media days and production days, they’ve definitely evolved. The pre-Daytona 500 weekend kind of was a chance for Trucks and Xfinity drivers to be in front of media used to be something that my team never signed us up for. We didn’t know. I’d come down early for it, and there would be Xfinity drivers in it – this is the Daytona 500 media day now, so it’s a different thing – but I’d walk into the production day but I’d put my suit on and walk in and tell the girl at the front table that I was driving the 4 car all years. She’d look down and I’d ask where do you want me to go first and she’d point me in a direction and I’d hit the whole room. Now I don’t have to sneak in any more. Yes, I’ve definitely changed and I’m not the same driver I was last year, let alone 10 years ago.”

Is the track as rough and bumpy as it looked on your on-board camera?

“Our car is rough. Our Busch Light Chevy is finding all the bumps. It’s a fine line here having the car as low as you can. We’re dealing with thousandths of an inch to get it down on the rear stops and shocks, and get the spoiler out of the air and all that and still have it drive OK. We’re going to raise it up for qualifying. We can’t be that rough. I can drive it but only by myself, and I don’t think it’s as fast when it’s bouncing like that. The track’s not where it was when I watched back to pre-repave, which I think was in 2011. So I’ve only driven on the repave. It’s not that rough. When I watch it back and understanding how those cars were built and setup, the track was a lot rougher. By now means is it what it was in 2010 and before. So this was a one-car special.”

On fastest race lap getting an extra point in 2025.

“If it’s there for us to take, we’ll take it. You can’t give up a position to do it, but if you can’t gain or lose positions, we’ll go for it. We’ll do it on the road course and here if you’re playing the game where you’re a lap down you’ll play the game at the back of the end trying to time it right and get big runs. Do I think it’s necessary? No I don’t think it’s necessary. But hey… if Xfinity’s happy then I’m happy.”

It’s been four years in the Gen-Seven car. General thoughts on the first three years?

“So much progress. Coming into it, we didn’t know what we didn’t know. It was like the wild west. You saw us spinning out and crashing. I don’t think that’s always a terrible thing, to be honest. Some of those early practice sessions and early races were just crazy to watch. Nobody could keep up with it because there was so much happening. You had champions the year before and race-winners in the back at the beginning of ’22. You’ve definitely seen them figured it out, and we all figured it out. I’m glad I got to be a part of that because that’s a time in my career in the sport that I’ll always look back on and remember.”

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: William Byron Quotes

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

 William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet – DAYTONA 500 Media Day Quotes

Is the drive to win the Daytona 500 the same motivation, same desire now that you already have one?

“Yeah, I do. I have more joy coming down here than I did before. I have more passion and excitement for this race than I did before. I feel like having experienced it the way it was last year really changed my perspective on the race as a whole in a good way, obviously. I feel that’s created some more motivation to get another one. This race, it’s a lifetime achievement. It’s something people reference everywhere you go. It’s something that the first time in my career I’ve had something like that. It makes it cool, it makes it more special, because you can tell people care about the race.”

What are the things at Daytona as a driver you can control?

“I think there is so many aspects. The way that you position yourself at the end of the race. It starts tonight. You can get yourself on the front row, and that gives you a great opportunity to not have to stress about the Duels. And then if you’re not locked in on the front row, you have to race the Duels and understand what your car has and try to keep it in one piece. It’s a process throughout the week, then obviously, Sunday is about positioning yourself as the stages go along and really like the last 20 laps of the race essentially. It’s just a process. You really can’t think too far ahead. I’m not thinking about Sunday at all yet. Just trying to get through tonight and check the boxes that I need to to have a good qualifying lap.”

As the track surface gets older, has handling become more of a premium since you started at the Cup level?

“Yes and no. This car has a lot of drag, so with that comes lower speeds and more downforce. This car doesn’t really require as much handling, but it’s still going to matter. If we were back on the old surface or with the old Gen 6 car, yeah, we’d be slipping around quite a bit. This car is pretty stuck to the track here. It’s all relative, though. I think that the cars are going to get more and more trimmed out as the teams get smarter, so we’re probably going to have something a bit more unique here than we’ve seen in years past with the way it handles.”

How does the lack of practice here affect you?

“It doesn’t affect us at all. Practice here is like such a façade, really. You’re not around enough cars There’s not enough energy in the pack to really know what the car is going to do. The Duels are your best practice. That’s when everyone is at ten-tenths. The thing about practice at a speedway is like, especially if you’re going out drafting, guys are pulling on and off the track, so the energy is changing every lap. That’s not really conducive to what the race is like. The Duels are our best chance to learn, and then really like maybe some laps on Friday, you might learn here or there. But you’re going to learn mostly in the Duels and obviously, in the race on Sunday.”

Is it kind of cool to race against a four-time Indy 500 champion (in Helio Castroneves)?

“It is sweet. The funniest thing about that is I look over next to my bus right when I got back from practice, and it’s Helio’s bus. I didn’t even realize that when I got here, but that’s pretty neat to have an Indy 500 champion like that next to you in the bus lot, and then obviously, racing on the racetrack. Yeah, it’s awesome.”

Talk about the entry list and the wide variety of drivers…

“Yeah, it shows kind of the momentum of the sport really. We went through a dip where we didn’t really have a lot of open drivers or people trying to make the race, and now we’re back to having a few more. It’s awesome. It’s good that it’s quality cars, and I’ll be excited to look and see what’s going on. I’ve got to understand the system and how it all works, because apparently one guy is locked in but I’ve got to understand who is on the bubble to watch that race when I’m not racing myself.”

Depending on where you qualifying, how much will you be aware of other open cars trying to qualify?

“I don’t have any awareness of that. For me, if I’m on the racetrack, I’m just going to try and win. If they’re racing in the other Duel or if I get out of the car, I’ll look at it.”

Having such a marathon week to start the season, does that help with the suddenness of the grueling schedule?

“It does. I honestly look forward to this week. It’s kind of like a little bit of a Spring Break. You’re down here forever, and you have obviously a lot of obligations, but I enjoy it because it’s a nice lead in versus The Clash. It’s so sudden, and you’re in such a different environment. You don’t have the garages or your hauler. This race gives you a chance to kind of settle in, get all of your stuff acclimated, and then you hit the road after that.”

Is there anything cool you get now rather than before you won the Daytona 500?

“I think just the trophy itself is probably the coolest thing. The side effect I always thought about was all the media you had to do and what that would feel like, but it’s honestly been great. It’s not bad, but just the trophy itself is such a historic trophy and it’s unlike any other one I’ve had.”

Is there anything you can learn from this race and take to Atlanta?

“I don’t know. I don’t feel like the answer for me is no because I feel like here, you really have to… it’s a totally different positioning race. Atlanta has that hybrid effect where you have a little bit of drafting but you also have lifting, and it’s kind of that five-fifty style mile-and-a-half race.”

Does your confidence go up on speedways after winning this race?

“Not exactly, no. I feel like for me, it was honestly the success we had after that throughout the year on drafting tracks where I felt like we were constantly up to the front. It wasn’t instant, perse, but as soon as we continued to have a good year on drafting tracks, I felt like that built some confidence.”

Talk about the case of NASCAR athletes being athletes…

“That’s a great question. I think with the way tech is now, like having my Whoop band on when I’m in the racecar, it’s one of the hardest workouts that I do throughout my week. Your heartrate is elevated, you’re in this kind of iso-position, which nowadays with yoga and everything people are doing, they understand how difficult that is to kind of fight the g-forces and hold yourself in that position. You’re making micro-adjustments all the time. I think that ten years ago, it was ‘Oh, drivers aren’t athletes,’ but if you’re not an athlete nowadays, you’re going to have a tough time. It’s just the nature of these cars and how rigid they’ve got, and how close the racing gets.”

What does it feel like coming back here after August?

“I feel like in the summer, it’s just kind of weird because you’re so in the middle of your season, you’re focused on that. Coming back here, being back for the (Daytona) 500 definitely feels special. Just have that excitement and genuine joy for the race. I think I’m just excited for the week.”

How much has the racing changed in the last three years here at Daytona?

“The racing has just got really tight and competitive, and everybody is sort of in a really tight gridlock. So it’s really hard to make moves. Three-wide is tough to make. I feel like you’ve got to be up towards the front. Track position is really important, and you have to be towards the front side coming down to the end. I think in the past, that was the case, but you could see a guy win from 10th on the last lap. I just don’t think that’ll happen in this package anymore.”

How do you approach the “Big One?”

“It’s just the nature of the race. I think, for me, I don’t really focus on that aspect. It’s just the nature of the event and I feel like it makes it exciting.”

With being close to the championship the past few years, how big of a deal is it to you to get started off right?

“It’s not a huge deal. I think that this season is really long. I would like for us to continue to improve. I think that’s the biggest thing. Yeah, you want to get a win in early. It takes some pressure off from the outside, but really you continue to strive for more. Sometimes you don’t see the champion get really hot until the second half of the year. Not saying that’s the right formula, but I’m just saying you’ve got to be consistent throughout the year and try to win every week. That’s our goal. We’re not really thinking about trying to make a statement or anything like that, it’s just trying to go out there and execute every week.”

How much does a really good paint scheme affect you walking up to your car? Does it affect your psyche?

“It does. You know when you’re stepping into a really nice looking racecar and something that you’re proud of. Also, the attention and the craft with my guys and how much effort they put into the racecar. It does. For me personally, it affects how I feel getting into the racecar. Obviously, once I put the helmet on, it is what it is, but I think having a good-looking racecar, having a car that your guys have put a lot of effort into, that means a lot.”

Have you thought about what a back-to-back Daytona 500 would mean to you?

“No, I don’t really think about the history. There are so many things, so many boxes to check as this week goes. Obviously, that’d be a great footnote after the race is over, but right now, there are so many things to get to that point. It’s just thinking about all of my processes to get to the end on Sunday.”

One more win gives Hendrick Motorsports the most all time. You’re known to win some big races. Where would that factor in if winning another one?

“Hendrick Motorsports has so much history as it is, and I feel like they just add in another win would be more to that. I’m excited for the week. I’m really ready to get going. I feel like all of our teams are really prepared and we’re just ready to go.”

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 GAZOO Racing – NCS Daytona 500 Media Day Quotes – Christopher Bell – 02.12.25

Toyota GAZOO Racing – Christopher Bell
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

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

CHRISTOPHER BELL, No. 20 DeWalt/Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

Can you talk about the practice session?

“It was definitely an awkward practice session.”

How so?
“It is just so laid back. I don’t know. Everyone was on different agendas. I don’t even really know what to think of it. It was kind of like – why are we doing this?”

Was it good to get on track to confirm that the car doesn’t have any gremlins?

“My team did. The mechanics joked around about not running practice today, but Adam (Stevens, crew chief), of course, being the leader that he is, was like we have to do this. We have to dot our i’s and cross our t’s, but for me, I had no concern. I knew that it would be completely fine.”

What does getting back on pavement last night for 200 laps do to help get your body into a rhythm?
“Well, I didn’t expect it to be long, but it ended up being a freaking Cup race length (laughter), but I mean, I think the conditioning is good. Whenever you get into June, July – you’ve been doing these races – it feels normal and it feels, I don’t want to say easier, but you know what to expect. The start of the year, certainly, Daytona is a speedway, Atlanta is a speedway now too. By the time you get to COTA, Phoenix – those are races that get your attention, so the Clash was a good acclimator and yes, last night was too.”

Can you see yourself doing any more of those short track races?

“I don’t know. It is all going to depend on the schedule. I was really excited about yesterday, being just a one-day show, being able to not spend multiple days there practicing – that was one thing I didn’t care about late model racing as a kid was just how long the events were. If the schedule works out, I would.”

What is it like to race whatever you want again?

“It is weird. (laughter). I’m taking it all in though, that is for sure.”

What is it like being able to race whatever you want again?

“I hope it keeps me sharper – the more that you race – we don’t really have any practice. There is very little seat time compared to what I’m used to, so hopefully being in the seat will help me perform on Sundays. That is what it is all about.”

What is the mindset coming into the Daytona 500?

“The Daytona 500 is a huge event. It is a huge race. Running all of my other races that I’ve got to do, everyone talks about this race. It is all about Daytona. I’m honored, and I’m thrilled, and I’m blessed to be in this opportunity to compete in another Daytona 500, but with that being said, the race itself is a lot of luck. We’ve come out on the good end of it the last couple of years now, and we will go roll the dice again. The racing has kind of homed in on the fuel conservation and strategy of how the green flag cycle works – that is going to be super important. Hopefully, we are on the winning side of it, and we are going to try to do our best to control what we can control and miss the wrecks and be away from the wrecks. It is going to be an exciting one – it always is.”

So you are okay if when we come back we don’t have practice before qualifying?

“Absolutely. I told them that this practice was just really weird because nobody – it just didn’t feel necessary. It kind of just felt like we were out there spinning our wheels a little bit.”

How do you feel about having more Toyotas to draft with?

“(speaking about Chase Briscoe) Yeah, and then he comes over here and we are going to have the most we’ve ever had. It’s not going to be a fair shake for (Chase) Briscoe. We’ve been telling him about how bad speedway racing is on the Toyota side, and now we almost have a third of the field, so that is really good. Hopefully, it means that this race will look different for us. We’ve always kind of blamed it on numbers, and now we don’t have that excuse – we are going have the numbers.”

Can you talk about your car having a little bit of a mix of sponsorship?

“Yeah, it has been good. Last year was the first year we had Interstate and DeWalt – the co-brand – we did it at Daytona and Phoenix last year, and I think this year is the same way. We will have Interstate and DeWalt at Daytona and to close the season at Phoenix. It is a really good partnership. With DeWalt and Interstate, you have to have – electric tools, you have to have batteries with it, so I’m sure they are working together to get something going.”

Can you talk about the commercial that you are in?

“I made a cameo in a commercial – big time actor over here (laughter).”

Is there some joy that you’ve been able to have being back racing other forms of cars?

“It has been refreshing. The dirt racing is so raw, and it feels like the driver makes a difference – more so on asphalt. I’ve enjoyed that, because you go asphalt racing and you feel like your hands are tied to the equipment, to the car, and dirt racing, you are able to overcome that. The good drivers usually shine.”

Do you feel any extra pressure coming to Daytona?

“I mean, not any more pressure than what it is. The Daytona 500 is the granddaddy of them all. I’m well aware of that, and I’m excited about the opportunity. We all know how this race goes, so we try to take it with a grain of salt once it is over, and certainly, preparing for it, we know that it is a big deal.”

What has it been like integrating Chase Briscoe into Joe Gibbs Racing?

“It has been awesome. Chase (Briscoe) has been a huge – I don’t know what the right word is. It has been different having Chase around and completing the four of us. Martin (Truex Jr.) – just wasn’t around very much the last couple of years. It has been fun to hear his feedback, especially after Bowman Gray. It ended up being a really good test session for him because the tendencies that we fought there, it really related towards Martinsville. I thought he brought some good insight into what our cars did well and what they did worse than his previous ride. I’m excited to see that trend continue through the year.”

How does it feel to have so many years with Joe Gibbs Racing?

“It is a dream come true. I’m so, so blessed to be in this position, driving the no. 20 car. It truly is a dream come true, and hopefully I will be in Denny’s (Hamlin) spot in a few years.”

What would it mean to you to bring a Daytona 500 win to Toyota and Joe Gibbs?

“You hit it big there. Toyota winning the Daytona 500 is a big deal. I just go back to 2016, when they ran 1,2,3 – they were in position to run 1,2,3,4 on the white flag lap. That is what we are striving to get back to. The Next Gen car has definitely changed the way that Daytona is, and the way that it races. Toyota frankly, we haven’t been performing on the superspeedways, so we are putting a big effort in trying to improve our superspeedway performance.”

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.

THRILLING 2025 NHRA SUMMIT RACING SERIES SEASON LEADS TO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP IN LAS VEGAS

INDIANAPOLIS (Feb. 12, 2025) – The standout competitors in the NHRA Summit Racing Series, the world’s largest motorsports program when it comes to racer participation, will now have the opportunity to race for a world championship in Las Vegas, as the 2025 Summit Racing E.T. Series schedule was announced today.

For the first time, winners in the Eastern Canada Division will advance for the chance to compete for a world championship in 2025. An Eastern Canada E.T. Finals took place for the first time a year ago, and now winners will advance to the NHRA Summit Racing Series World Championship, which takes place Oct. 30-Nov. 2 as part of the NHRA Nevada Nationals at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

It also adds an eighth official division to the thrilling Summit E.T. Series, as drivers will in Super Pro, Pro, Sportsman and Motorcycle will compete at NHRA member tracks across North America for a chance at a world championship. The Street Legal EV Finals will be contested at the eight divisional championships in 2025. Super Pro will move from 1/4-mile to 1/8-mile at the world championship to stay more in line with most common style of racing in the category at NHRA member tracks.

With the addition of the eighth division, there will also be no wild card entry to fill the eighth spot in each category. Winners from the eight Summit Racing E.T. Finals will make up the 32 world championship contenders racing for a chance at glory, a huge purse and prizes in Las Vegas.

On the “Road to Vegas,” tens of thousands of drivers will compete for event wins and divisional titles. The eight Summit Racing E.T. Finals begin on Aug. 28-31 in Division 6 at Mission Raceway Park in Mission, British Colombia and continuing throughout September with Division 2 on Sept. 9-12 at Gainesville Raceway, Division 3 at Summit Motorsports Park in Norwalk, Ohio, on Sept. 11-13, Division 5 on Sept. 12-14 at Tri-State Raceway in Earlville, Iowa, Division 1 Canada on Sept. 18-20 at Luskville Dragway in Québec and Division 1 on Sept. 19-21 at Numidia Dragway in Numidia, Pa.

The action at the E.T. Finals wraps up in October, with Division 4 taking place on Oct. 3-4 at Texas Motorplex in Dallas and Division 7 racing Oct. 3-5 at Firebird Motorsports Park in Phoenix. From there, the eight winners in Super Pro, Pro, Sportsman and Motorcycle will advance to Las Vegas with a world championship on the line.

Summit Racing Equipment, an industry leader in the distribution of auto racing parts and equipment through catalogs and the Internet, remains a huge supporter of the program, boasting a partnership of more than 20 years.

“We’re thrilled with the continued growth of the NHRA Summit Racing Series. It’s exciting to see an eighth Summit Racing E.T. Finals take place in Eastern Canada as this program continues to expand and provide great opportunities to the amazing racers across North America,” said Jim Greenleaf, Summit Racing Equipment Motorsports & Events Manager.

“There are so many talented competitors in the series that just winning a divisional championship is a huge accomplishment. We’re honored to present a unique opportunity to those racers to compete for a world championship. It’s always an exciting weekend in Las Vegas and we can’t wait to crown world champions this year.”

National champions in 2024 included Zach Meziere (Division 6) in Super Pro, Alvie Merrill (Division 4) in Pro, C.W. Hoefer (Division ) in Sportsman, James Paulson (Division ) in Motorcycle and Omar Leon (Division 7) in Street Legal EV.

The eight E.T. Finals winners in the NHRA Summit Series receive an impressive prize package, including a Wally trophy, jacket, and purse, along with bonus travel money to attend the world championship in Las Vegas. At the national event, each championship contender can enjoy a memorable experience that includes a champions’ welcome dinner, an introduction during the pre-race ceremonies at the NHRA national event and a huge spotlight all weekend as they compete for a world championship in front of a huge Las Vegas crowd.

The championship competitors will compete for a huge purse that is paid out to the 32 competitors attending the finals, plus contingency bonuses, a national championship Wally trophy, a championship jacket, and more.

“Anytime we can expand opportunities for our racers in North America, it’s a big deal, and today’s announcement is no different,” said Jason Galvin, NHRA Sportsman Racing Manager. “The addition of Canada as a participant in the ET Championships has been years in the making, and the support of Summit Racing Equipment is the only reason this is possible. We have eight great ET Finals events on tap, all leading into what has become a banner weekend for bracket racers in Las Vegas. Our goal in Las Vegas is to make that event unique and make those 32 drivers feel like the superstars we know they are. Last year was a big step, and this year will be even bigger.”

For more information on the NHRA Summit Racing Series, visit www.nhra.com/sportsman. For more information on NHRA, including the 2025 schedule, visit www.NHRA.com.

2025 NHRA Summit Racing Series E.T. Finals Schedule

Division 1 Canada – Luskville Dragway, Luskville, Québec, Sept. 18-20
Division 1 – Numidia Dragway, Numidia, Pa., Sept. 19-21
Division 2 – Gainesville Raceway, Gainesville, Fla., Sept. 9-12
Division 3 – Summit Motorsports Park, Norwalk, Ohio, Sept. 11-13
Division 4 – Texas Motorplex, Dallas, Oct. 3-4
Division 5 – Tri-State Raceway, Earlville, Iowa, Sept. 12-14
Division 6 – Mission Raceway Park, Mission, British Colombia, Aug. 28-Aug. 31
Division 7 – Firebird Motorsports Park, Phoenix, Oct. 3-5

NHRA Summit Racing Series World Championship

The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, Oct. 30-Nov. 2
(as part of the NHRA Nevada Nationals)


About Summit Racing Equipment

Summit Racing Equipment has been the World’s Speed Shop® for over 50 years! Summit Racing is the world’s largest e-commerce, mail order, and retailer of performance automotive parts and accessories. Summit Racing offers a huge selection of parts in stock from over 1,500 manufacturers for all forms of racing, street performance, off-roading, restoration, tools, and yes, diesel. It also offers fast ground service shipping to most areas of the country and same-day shipping on in-stock items. Summit Racing has the industry’s top-rated customer service and a full-time technical department to answer your questions. With headquarters in Tallmadge, Ohio, Summit operates distribution and retail stores in Tallmadge, Sparks, NV, McDonough, GA, and Arlington, TX.

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www.summitracing.com
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About NHRA

NHRA is the primary sanctioning body for the sport of drag racing in the United States. NHRA presents 20 national events featuring the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series and NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series, as well as the Congruity NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series, NHRA Flexjet Factory Stock Showdown™, NHRA Holley EFI Factory X and Johnson’s Horsepowered Garage NHRA Mountain Motor Pro Stock at select national events. NHRA provides competition opportunities for drivers of all levels in the NHRA Summit Racing Series and NHRA Street Legal™. NHRA also offers the NHRA Jr. Street® program for teens and the Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League® for youth ages 5 to 17. With more than 100 Member Tracks, NHRA allows racers to compete at a variety of locations nationally and internationally. NHRA’s Youth and Education Services® (YES) Program reaches over 30,000 students annually to ignite their interest in automotive and racing related careers. NHRA’s streaming service, NHRA.tv®, allows fans to view all NHRA national events as well as exclusive features of the sport. In addition, NHRA owns and operates three racing facilities: Gainesville Raceway in Florida; Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park; and In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip in Southern California. For more information, log on to www.NHRA.com, or visit the official NHRA pages on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.