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RCR NOAPS Race Recap: Circuit of The Americas

Jesse Love and the No. 2 Whelen Chevrolet Team Put Forth Consistent Effort to Earn Top-Five Result at Circuit of The Americas

Finish: 4th
Start: 11th
Points: 2nd

“I felt like Connor Zilisch for the first five laps of a run and thought we were better than Shane (van Gisbergen) on the fire off of Stage 3, but then he just does his witchcraft and doesn’t slow down at all. I kind of lost leverage there on the last restart, but at the end of the day, in these races you can be upset with whoever you want, but you have to put yourself in a position to have that control over their decisions or you don’t. And unfortunately having to restart fourth at the end was probably the worst thing for me and I was opened up to typical stack-ups at the end. I’m a little bummed out with how the day ended because I thought we were good enough to run second or maybe could have beat SVG on a short run or if he slipped up. I’m still really proud of our group. My pit crew overcame some adversity and I’m proud of all the guys on this No. 2 Whelen team. Very few people know how much effort I put into my craft of road racing and to see it almost bear fruit today is exciting for me.” -Jesse Love

Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet Team Capture Stage 1 Win and Runner-Up Finish at Circuit of The Americas

Finish: 2nd
Start: 3rd
Points: 1st

“I honestly had so much fun today. These road courses are a blast, and our Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet was fast all day. I made a lot of mistakes out there but that’s going to happen on these road courses. We were able to get 10 points with the Stage 1 win and then we struggled a little bit in Stage 2 with just trying to figure out what we needed to be better. At the beginning of Stage 3, I didn’t have the greatest restart, but we were able to drive back up to fourth before the caution brought the field back together. On the last restart I did a good job of staying far left. As soon as they all went into Turn 1, I knew they would slide up and I filed in second. Then I had to go to work on SVG. He’s just so good during the first three laps of a run and can get away. I was struggling with front turn for the first two or three laps, which let him get a gap and manage from there. Hats off to those guys. I’ll take a second and move on.” -Austin Hill

Cameo to Curtain Call: Van Gisbergen Wins NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Focused Health 250

Shane van Gisbergen celebrates with his JR Motorsports teammates after winning Saturday’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Focused Health 250 at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas. Photo credit: Harold Hinson Photography.
  • NASCAR Cup Series driver Shane van Gisbergen takes JR Motorsports to Victory Lane for his fifth career O’Reilly Auto Parts Series win and first at NASCAR at COTA.
  • 17-year-old Brent Crews has strong series debut with a sixth-place finish for Joe Gibbs Racing.

AUSTIN, Texas (Feb. 28, 2026) – Shane van Gisbergen made a cameo appearance in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series on Saturday at Circuit of The Americas and turned it into a show-stealing victory.

The fulltime NASCAR Cup Series driver for Trackhouse Racing joined JR Motorsports as a NASCAR at COTA weekend road-course ace and played the part to perfection, dominating the Focused Health 250. Van Gisbergen led a race-high 31 of the 65 laps en route to a 0.780 of a second victory over runner-up Austin Hill of Richard Childress Racing.

Sammy Smith of JR Motorsports, Jesse Love of Richard Childress Racing and Corey Day of Hendrick Motorsports rounded out the top five, respectively. Seventeen-year-old Brent Crews made his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut with Joe Gibbs Racing and turned in a strong performance with a sixth-place finish.

For van Gisbergen, it was his fifth career series victory, all of which have come on road or street courses, and first NASCAR national series win at COTA. Van Gisbergen will look for the weekend sweep when he starts 13th in Sunday’s marquee event, the DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne (2:30 p.m. CT, TV: FOX, Radio: PRN, SiriusXM).

“I learned a lot today and tried some different techniques, and I hope it will help tomorrow,” van Gisbergen said. “I was driving as fast as I could … I think Connor (Zilisch) was definitely faster when he caught me early on and then he kind of went off in the first stage. Yeah, I was experimenting, trying all kinds of stuff, but it was all for a good intention. I wasn’t really playing around, but it’s good when you have a car like that and you’re in a position like that and can experiment and learn a lot.”

Connor Zilisch, his Trackhouse Racing rookie teammate and weekend mate with JR Motorsports, started on the pole and was looking to win the Focused Health 250 for the second consecutive year. Van Gisbergen, who started second, gave notice that he would be one of his primary threats by stealing the point from Zilisch for the opening five laps. Zilisch rebounded to lead the next 12 laps, but it was Hill who would take the first stage while van Gisbergen was 10th.

Sam Mayer of the Haas Factory Team edged out Crews for second-stage honors while van Gisbergen moved into position for the final stint by taking fifth. He shined in that final stage, leading 18 of the 25 laps with the only cause for concern coming on a restart on Lap 61 following a caution.

While the majority of the field pitted, Nick Sanchez of AM Racing and Justin Allgaier of JR Motorsports stayed out and led the field to the restart. Smith, who restarted third, pushed his way into the lead heading into the Turn 1 left-hander, but carried too much speed and was forced to go wide on the exit. Meanwhile, van Gisbergen, who restarted sixth, deftly moved inside and came out of the first turn with the lead and never looked back.

In IMSA action, Wyatt Brichacek of Toney Driver Development dominated the weekend, winning both P3 class races from the pole and leading every lap of both 45-minute timed races. Westin Workman of RAFA Racing duplicated the feat in the GSX class with a pair of poles and wins and leading every lap.

Up Next: The weekend culminates with Sunday’s DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne NASCAR Cup Series race beginning at 2:30 p.m. (TV: FOX, HBO max; Radio: PRN, SiriusXM).

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McLaughlin Starts Penske Rebound With St. Pete Pole

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026) – Scott McLaughlin helped Team Penske put memories of a tough 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season into the rearview mirror Saturday by starting 2026 with the NTT P1 Award for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

New Zealand native McLaughlin earned his 12th career pole and third in the last five years on this 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit, leading the Firestone Fast Six with a best lap of 1 minute, .5426 of a second in the No. 3 DEX Team Penske Chevrolet.

SEE: Qualifying Results

Team Penske underwent a turbulent 2025 season, marked by the dismissal of three team executives after an illegal modification of a part was discovered before the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. The team won just two races, with McLaughlin being shut out of Victory Lane for the first time since his rookie season in 2021.

“Raul (Prados), my new engineer, gave me a great car,” McLaughlin said. “But we have a lot of experience here with a great car, as well.

“Just really pumped. Everybody knows the slog we went through last year, so to start on this note is fantastic. Bloody good, bloody good.”

Another driver on the comeback trail, 2022 Indianapolis 500 winner Marcus Ericsson, will join McLaughlin on the front row of the 100-lap race Sunday (noon ET, FOX, FOX One, FOX Deportes, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio, Powered by OnlyBulls) after his best lap of 1:00.5621 in the No. 28 Delaware Life Honda of Andretti Global. Ericsson has finished 15th and 20th in the standings in his first two seasons, respectively, with Andretti Global after three consecutive sixth-place finishes from 2021-23 with Chip Ganassi Racing.

Rookie Dennis Hauger led arguably one of the best performances in the history of Dale Coyne Racing by qualifying a stunning third, leading both DCR cars in the Firestone Fast Six for the first time since 2022. 2025 INDY NXT by Firestone champion Hauger’s best lap was 1:00.5743 in the No. 19 Ault Block Chain Honda as he became the first driver to make the Firestone Fast Six in their series debut since Christian Lundgaard in 2021.

Reigning and four-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Alex Palou will defend his 2025 St. Petersburg victory from the fourth starting position after a best lap of 1:00.6842 in the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

David Malukas continued a strong debut weekend with Team Penske as one of the team’s two drivers in the Firestone Fast Six. Malukas, who replaced two-time series champion Will Power this offseason at Penske, qualified fifth at 1:00.7638 in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet.

Romain Grosjean marked his return to the NTT INDYCAR SERIES after a one-year hiatus and his return to Dale Coyne Racing after his 2021 series debut with the team by rounding out the top six at 1:01.3462 in the No. 18 BMax Honda.

Last year’s runner-up in the standings, Pato O’Ward, didn’t advance past the second round of qualifying. He will start eighth in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet.

O’Ward wasn’t the only series star to falter before the Firestone Fast Six. Multiple series champions Scott Dixon and Josef Newgarden were eliminated in the first round.

Six-time series champion Dixon will start 16th in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing after a slide at the start of his final qualifying lap of the first session. It’s the first time he was eliminated in the opening round of qualifying at this race since 2013.

Two-time series champ and two-time St. Petersburg winner Newgarden will start 23rd in the 25-car field in the No. 2 Astemo Team Penske Chevrolet.

TOYOTA RACING – NOAPS COTA Post-Race Report – 02.28.26

CREWS, SAWALICH NET TOYOTA TOP-10s AT CIRCUIT OF THE AMERICAS
Crews lead Five Laps; Brings Home Solid Sixth-Place finish in his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut

AUSTIN (February 28, 2026) – Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Brent Crews (sixth) and William Sawalich (seventh) earned top 10 finishes in Saturday’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race at Circuit of the Americas (COTA).

Crews dazzled in his O’Reilly Series debut, taking the lead on an early race restart with an impressive move in turn one and led five total laps in the 65-lap race on Saturday afternoon. With his time in the lead, Crews became the youngest driver to lead laps in the O’Reilly Series since Casey Atwood did so in 1998 at the Nashville Fairgrounds.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series (NOAPS)
Circuit of the Americas
Race 3 of 33 – 156 miles, 65 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Shane Van Gisbergen*
2nd, Austin Hill*
3rd, Sammy Smith*
4th, Jesse Lovel*
5th, Corey Day*
6th, BRENT CREWS
7th, WILLIAM SAWALICH
12th, TAYLOR GRAY
15th, BRANDON JONES
26th,, DEAN THOMPSON
29th, HARRISON BURTON
35th, SAGE KARAM
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

BRENT CREWS, No. 19 Young Life GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 6th

How would you rate your overall performance today?

“Felt like today was just a big learning day. My first start obviously. Overall I just wanted to finish and keep the car in one piece and we did that. There are some things I felt like I could have done better. There at the end not thinking about it, I took the outside. I’ve been here so many times where you gain a row or two rows taking the outside and then they all get wiped out. It was a tough day, it was a long hot day and we survived. I just want to thank everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota, and we were also happy to represent Young Life.”

Tell us about the move you made around SVG (Shane Van Gisbergen) and Connor Zilisch to lead for five laps early in the race?

“It was definitely cool. Today was a great learning day and I just want to thank everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing and Young Life and Toyota for getting us here, first of all. Today was a blast, it’s a day I dreamed of going on 10 years now. Today was a lot of fun getting to race around my friends and people I’ve thought about racing for a lot of years. We definitely struggled this week in practice and we made adjustments to make the car better and almost came out of there with a top-five, so I’m happy.”

How did the day turn out compared to your expectations?

“They were pretty close. I expected to have a pretty good day being a road course kid. Definitely was a bit eye-opening in practice. We really struggled, but got a lot better. So I was happy to almost have a top-five there. Having green flag pit stops, and coming down pit road hot and all of those things are new to me. So I’m just trying to learn.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our nearly 1,500 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 48,000 people in the U.S. who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of more than 35 million cars and trucks at our 11 manufacturing plants. In 2025, Toyota’s plant in North Carolina began to assemble automotive batteries for electrified vehicles.

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

Layne Riggs wins inaugural Truck race at St. Petersburg

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 28: Layne Riggs, driver of the #34 Long John Silver's Ford, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series OnlyBulls Green Flag 150 at Grand Prix of St. Petersburg on February 28, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images).

Layne Riggs erased his difficult start to the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season by winning the inaugural OnlyBulls Green Flag 150 at St. Petersburg on Saturday, February 28.

The 23-year-old Riggs from Bahama, North Carolina, led three times for a race-high 41 of the 80-scheduled laps in an event where he started in 28th place and steadily worked his way up the leaderboard. After outdueling teammate Chandler Smith to lead for the first time on Lap 38, Riggs captured the second stage victory.

Through two cautions and restarts throughout the final stage period, Riggs retained the lead for nearly the entire portion of the period. In the closing laps, Riggs was mired with a trio of challenges: not having enough fuel to finish the event, navigating his way through lapped traffic, and fending off late challenges from Ty Majeski and Ben Rhodes. Amid all challenges, Riggs withstood them all by navigating his way through the 14-turn circuit and even fending off a final-lap dive bomb attempt from Majeski to etch his name as the winner of the Truck Series’ first-ever race at the Streets of St. Petersburg.

The event’s starting lineup was determined using a qualifying metric formula after rain canceled the event’s qualifying and practice sessions that were scheduled to occur on Friday, February 27. As a result, Connor Mosack was awarded the pole position, and he shared the front row with Giovanni Ruggiero.

Prior to the event, rookie Cole Butcher dropped to the rear of the field in a backup truck after he wrecked his primary truck during Friday’s rain-shortened practice session. Rookie Mini Tyrrell also dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments to his entry. During the event’s pace laps, Tyler Reif ended up dropping to the rear of the field due to stalling on the track.

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, Connor Mosack rocketed ahead of the field entering the first turn, while Ben Rhodes, who started in fourth place, made a bold move beneath Giovanni Ruggiero in an attempt to assume the runner-up spot. Ruggiero managed to fend off Rhodes as Mosack drove away through the first three turns. As the field of 36 competitors smoothly navigated through the 14-turn circuit at the Streets of St. Petersburg for the first time ever, Mosack also retained the top spot for a full lap as he led the first lap.

On the second lap, the event’s first caution flew when Justin Haley, who was racing just outside the top-10 mark, was bumped by Stewart Friesen and sent for a spin as he stalled backwards in the first turn. Haley would drop out of the lead lap category as he was unable to re-fire his entry before the field led by Mosack cycled back through the first turn and lapped Haley.

When the event restarted under green on the sixth lap, Mosack and Rhodes dueled entering the first turn before Rhodes muscled ahead and assumed the lead through the first three turns. As the field jostled for early spots through Turns 3 and 4, Rhodes muscled ahead with the lead while Mosack was fending off Ruggiero and Chandler Smith for the runner-up spot. Amid the battles throughout the 14-turn circuit, Rhodes, who built his gap to more than a second, led the next lap.

Through the first 10 scheduled laps, Rhodes was leading by a second over Mosack as Ruggiero, Chandler Smith, and Landen Lewis trailed in the top five, with the latter trailing by five seconds. Behind, Dario Franchitti, who made contact with James Hinchcliffe on the seventh lap in the first turn, was racing in sixth place ahead of Tyler Ankrum and Hinchcliffe while Kaden Honeycutt and Andres Perez De Lara occupied the top-10 spots, respectively. Meanwhile, Adam Andretti, Layne Riggs, Ty Majeski, Stewart Friesen, Kris Wright, Christian Eckes, Jake Garcia, Grant Enfinger, Colin Braun and Ben Maier were racing in the top 20, respectively, while Tyler Reif, Daniel Hemric, Daniel Dye, Brenden Queen and Cole Butcher were mired in the top 25, respectively, ahead of Mini Tyrrell, Dawson Sutton, Tanner Gray, Carter Fartuch and Jackson Lee.

Five laps later, Mosack, who had been reeling in on Rhodes over the previous laps, trailed Rhodes by within three- and four-tenths of a second through every turn and straightaway. Despite being pressured by Mosack, Rhodes retained the lead by four-tenths of a second during the next lap. Rhodes then briefly locked up his tires as he entered the first turn, but he managed to keep his entry straight and at the front. As Tanner Gray wrecked on Lap 17, he managed to keep going without drawing a caution.

When the first stage period concluded on Lap 20, Rhodes, who rebuilt his advantage to more than four seconds, cruised to his first Truck stage victory of the 2026 season. Mosack settled in second place while Landen Lewis, Chandler Smith, Ruggiero, Franchitti, Riggs, Ankrum, Honeycutt, and Perez De Lara were scored in the top 10, respectively. By then, 30 of 36 competitors were scored on the lead lap.

Under the event’s first stage break period, the event was paused for three minutes as the entire field, except for Mosack, parked on pit road, with each competitor parked in their respective pit boxes for service. For the competitors who pitted, all retained their respective spots as they entered pit road before the start of the second-stage period.

The second stage period started on Lap 23 as Mosack and Rhodes occupied the front row. At the start, the field fanned out entering the first turn as both Rhodes and Mosack occupied the front row. Through the first turn, Rhodes, who was racing on fresh tires than Mosack, quickly reassumed the lead. As Rhodes retained the lead from Mosack and Smith through the first three turns, Honeycutt, who was racing in the top 10, overshot Turn 4 and plummeted below the leaderboard as he navigated his truck back on the course. With the rest of the field navigating through the remaining turns smoothly, Rhodes extended his advantage to one-and-a-half seconds as he returned to the start/finish line and led the next lap.

On Lap 25, the caution returned when Adam Andretti, who was racing within the top-20 mark, got bumped by Christian Eckes in Turn 7. The contact sent Andretti spinning and rear-ended the wall, as Eckes also collided with Andretti. As most of the field scattered to avoid the carnage, Daniel Hemric was also involved after he hit Andretti’s damaged entry. At the time of caution, Rhodes was still leading ahead of Smith, Lewis, Riggs, and Ruggiero, while Mosack had dropped to eighth place on his worn tires.

The event’s next restart on Lap 30 featured Rhodes, Smith, and Riggs dueling against one another in a three-wide formation in a battle for the lead. As the trio entered the first turn, Smith, who was pinned in the needle of the three-wide racing, executed a bold crossover move beneath teammate Riggs to overtake him and Rhodes with the lead in the first turn. As the field behind jostled for spots, Smith proceeded to lead the next lap while Riggs, Rhodes, Lewis, and Ruggiero trailed behind.

At the Lap 35 mark, Smith continued to lead by six-tenths of a second over his hard-charging teammate Riggs while Rhodes trailed in third place by one-and-a-half seconds. Meanwhile, Majeski was up into fifth place behind Lewis, and Ruggiero occupied sixth place while Ankrum, Franchitti, Enfinger, and Perez De Lara trailed in the top 10 ahead of Kris Wright, Colin Braun, Ben Maier, Stewart Friesen, and Dawson Sutton.

Two laps later, Riggs, who pressured teammate Smith for the lead, seized an opportunity to get beneath Smith in the first turn. Smith, however, fought off Riggs’ challenge and retained the lead through the first three turns before Riggs tried again to go beneath Smith through a brief straightaway from Turns 3 and 4. Despite racing alongside Smith, Riggs was unable to execute his pass before he then succeeded in overtaking and muscling ahead of Smith from Turns 5 to 8. Riggs proceeded to stretch his advantage to more than a second over the next handful of laps over Smith, while Lewis, Majeski, and Rhodes trailed in the top five, respectively.

When the second stage period concluded on Lap 40, Riggs captured his first Truck stage victory of the 2026 season. Teammate Smith settled in second ahead of Lewis, Majeski and Rhodes while Ruggiero, Ankrum, Franchitti, Enfinger and Perez De Lara were scored in the top 10, respectively. By then, 28 of 36 starters were scored on the lead lap.

Following the event’s second stage break period and after the field non-competitively pitted for service, the event’s third and final stage period commenced with 37 laps remaining. At the start, Riggs jumped ahead of teammate Smith entering the first turn, while Majeski overtook Smith through the first turn to assume the runner-up spot. As the front-runners fanned out and jostled through Turns 3 and 4, Ankrum collided into the rear of Lewis, which resulted in Ankrum sustaining significant front-end damage as the latter still continued racing straight and without drawing a caution. Amid the scrambles within the field, Riggs led the next lap over a hard-charging Majeski and Smith while Rhodes, Lewis, and Ruggiero occupied the top-six spots. Behind, Franchitti was up into seventh place while Enfinger, Ankrum, and Perez De Lara trailed in the top 10, respectively.

With 35 laps remaining, Riggs stretched his advantage to a second over Majeski while Smith, Rhodes, and Lewis continued to trail in the top five. Riggs proceeded to add another second to his lead over the next five laps while Majeski, Smith, Rhodes, and Lewis retained top-five spots ahead of Ruggiero, Franchitti, Enfinger, Perez De Lara, and Honeycutt. During this stretch, there were two on-track incidents that occurred, both of which occurred in Turn 1. The first was when Cole Butcher wheel-hopped and spun in the first turn while battling for a top-20 spot with 33 laps remaining. Then, with 30 laps remaining, Wright, who was also battling within the top 20, locked up the brakes on his entry and slid sideways while barely dodging Sutton. During both incidents, the event remained under green flag conditions.

Following a caution that flew with 29 laps remaining due to Derek White stalling his entry, the event restarted with 25 laps remaining. At the front, Riggs and Majeski dueled for the lead until Riggs fended off Majeski through the first turn to retain the lead. As Riggs proceeded to lead through the next three turns, Majeski, who was racing with a damaged left-front fender, fended off teammate Rhodes to retain the runner-up spot while Smith, Lewis, Ruggiero, Franchitti, Enfinger, Honeycutt and Perez De Lara trailed in the top 10, respectively. Meanwhile, Nathan Nicholson and Mini Tyrrell, both of whom were racing within the mid-pack region, made hard contact against the right-side wall through the first two turns, but both continued to nurse their damaged entries without drawing a caution.

With 24 laps remaining, a pair of on-track incidents occurred. The first was when Ruggiero, who was having a strong run in the top-10 mark, wrecked against the wall in Turn 4. Shortly after, Hinchcliffe, who was racing within the mid-pack region and overshot Turn 10 during the second stage period, made contact with Wright and spun through Turns 5 and 6. During both incidents, the race remained under green-flag conditions, but the caution returned on the next lap after Derek White stalled on the track for a second time, this latest time in Turn 9.

As the event restarted with 19 laps remaining, Majeski used the outside lane and took advantage of Riggs briefly hopping the curb through the first turn to assume the lead. As Majeski led through the next three turns, Riggs fended off doff Rhodes and Smith to retain the runner-up spot while Honeycutt carved his way into the top five in fifth place. Then, as Majeski led through Turn 13, he briefly got loose and overdrove Turn 14. Despite making slight contact with the tire barriers on the left side, he managed to blend back on the circuit in sixth place without drawing a caution while Riggs reassumed the lead and led the next lap.

Down to the final 15 laps of the event, Riggs was leading by nine-tenths of a second over Rhodes while Smith, Honeycutt, Majeski, Lewis, Enfinger, Perez De Lara, Braun and Hemric were racing in the top 10 ahead of Ben Maier, Haley, Jake Garcia, Mosack, Hinchcliffe, Tyler Reif, Daniel Dye, Butcher, Kris Wright and Brenden Queen, respectively. Meanwhile, Franchitti, who was racing in the top-10 mark, dropped to 28th place and lost a lap to the leaders after he pitted under green due to a steering issue, while Eckes was down in 25th place after he was bumped and sent for a spin by Reif in Turn 4 a few laps earlier.

With 10 laps remaining, Riggs extended his lead to more than two seconds over Rhodes while Chandler Smith and Majeski, both of whom battled for third place, trailed by more than four seconds. Honeycutt continued to occupy fifth place while Lewis, Perez De Lara, Braun, Hemric, and Maier were up in the top 10 ahead of Hinchcliffe, Haley, Mosack, Reif, and Garcia. As the laps dwindled, Riggs had his lead shrink to a full second over Rhodes with five laps remaining, but the former continued to lead through every turn and straightaway of the 14-turn circuit.

When the white flag waved, and the final lap started, Riggs remained in the lead by nearly a second ahead of a side-by-side battle between Rhodes and Majeski. Seconds later, Majeski overtook teammate Rhodes, the latter of whom had been reeling in Riggs for the lead in the late stages, for the runner-up spot through the first turn while Riggs, who began to express concerns about fuel shortage, rebuilt a steady gap. Despite weaving his truck back and forth a handful of times through the turns, Riggs led through Turn 13 as Majeski tried to reel in. 

Then, entering Turn 14, Majeski tried to fully reel in his entry to the rear bumper of Riggs’ entry, but he missed his mark and overdrove the turn. With Majeski having to regather his momentum and fend off Rhodes for second place, Riggs was able to cruise through the final turn and final straightaway, and he claimed the checkered flag to win by eight-tenths of a second over Majeski. 

With the victory, Riggs collected his sixth NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series career win in his 57th series start, his first on a road course event and his first since he won at Bristol Motor Speedway in September 2025. Riggs’ St. Petersburg victory was also the second of the 2026 season for the Ford manufacturer and the second for Front Row Motorsports, with the organization having both of its trucks (Nos. 34 and 38) winning at least once this year.

Riggs’ St. Petersburg victory was a huge momentous boost for the driver and team of the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford F-150 entry, as they were ranked in 23rd place in the driver’s standings after finishing 31st and 27th through the first two races (Daytona International Speedway & Atlanta’s EchoPark Speedway). Currently, the St. Petersburg victory has boosted them to fifth place in the standings as they continue their yearlong pursuit of making the Chase and winning the championship. 

top-3
Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images

“[The] First thing I’m gonna say [is] thank you to Joey Hand,” Riggs said in Victory Lane on FOX. “I know he’s watching at home. My road course guy. He’s the man. He helped me so much. We’ve been working on this racetrack in the simulator at Ford Racing since December. I really, really wanted to get my first win on a road course. The short track guy from Bahama, North Carolina, won at St. Pete. Can you believe it? I’ve really been trying to perfect my craft. I feel like I’ve been close on the road courses. Just big shoutout to everybody at Front Row Motorsports…It’s just a dream come true. I literally said this year [that] I just want to win a road course just to show I’m not just that short track guy.”

“[The truck] sputtered with about to eight [laps] to go,” Riggs added. “The [fuel] pickup on these trucks are on the left side, so every time that I would turn to the left, the fuel would slosh away. So the whole time, I was just trying to get it to go, not knowing, trying to manage your gap. Thank you to Ben [Rhodes] and Ty [Majeski]. They ran me pretty clean. I know that last corner, Ty probably could have cleaned me out if he wanted to. We were so close there. What an awesome feeling.”

Ty Majeski settled in second place for his second top-four result of the 2026 season, while Ben Rhodes, who was in striking distance of achieving his first victory in two years, settled in third place for his second consecutive top-four result of the year.

Chandler Smith and Kaden Honeycutt finished in the top five. Landen Lewis, Andres Perez De Lara, Daniel Hemric, Colin Braun, and James Hinchcliffe completed the top 10. Notably, Dario Franchitti settled in 27th place, a lap down, following his late green-flag pit stop.

There were nine lead changes for five different leaders. The event featured six cautions for 17 laps. In addition, 24 of 36 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the third event of the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season, Chandler Smith leads the standings by 34 points over Ben Rhodes, 50 over Ty Majeski, 54 over Giovanni Ruggiero, and 56 over Layne Riggs.

Results:

1. Layne Riggs, 41 laps led, Stage 2 winner

2. Ty Majeski, two laps led
3. Ben Rhodes, 23 laps led, Stage 1 winner
4. Chandler Smith, seven laps led
5. Kaden Honeycutt
6. Landen Lewis
7. Andres Perez De Lara
8. Daniel Hemric
9. Colin Braun
10. James Hinchcliffe
11. Ben Maier
12. Justin Haley
13. Connor Mosack, seven laps led
14. Cole Butcher
15. Christian Eckes
16. Tyler Reif
17. Daniel Dye
18. Jake Garcia
19. Kris Wright
20. Tanner Gray
21. Carter Fartuch
22. Grant Enfinger 
23. Adam Andretti
24. Brenden Queen
25. Giovanni Ruggiero, one lap down
26. Stewart Friesen, one lap down
27. Dario Franchitti, one lap down
28. Mini Tyrrell, three laps down
29. Jackson lee, five laps down
30. Frankie Muniz, six laps down
31. Tyler Ankrum, 10 laps down
32. Timmy Hill, 17 laps down
33. Dawson Sutton – OUT, Accident
34. Nathan Nicholson – OUT, Accident
35. Derek White – OUT, Fuel Pump
36. Wesley Slimp – OUT, Power Steering

Next on the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series schedule is Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina, for the Buckle Up South Carolina 200. The event is scheduled to occur on March 20 and air at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, NASCAR Racing Network and SiriusXM.

Taylor Stays Perfect To Claim First Career Pole in St. Pete

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026) – Max Taylor kept his season-opening weekend in INDY NXT by Firestone perfect by winning the pole Saturday for the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

Taylor’s first career pole was the exclamation point of an event in which he also has led both practice sessions on the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit at the start of his first full season in the INDYCAR development series. He claimed the pole at 1 minute, 4.8887 seconds on his final lap during the second group of qualifying in the No. 28 Susan G. Komen machine that Dennis Hauger drove to the 2025 INDY NXT by Firestone championship last season for Andretti.

Connecticut native Taylor, 18, joined Andretti Global full time this season after making six INDY NXT starts last season amid a full campaign in USF Pro 2000.

“First pole position, so I’m over the moon,” Taylor said. “P1 every session this weekend so far, so I’m just excited to keep attacking. I love this car, love this track, and I love my team.”

Up next is the 45-lap race at 10 a.m. ET Sunday (FS1, FOX One, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio, powered by OnlyBulls).

Rookie Nikita Johnson will start on the front row at his hometown race. Johnson, from St. Petersburg, led the first qualifying group at 1:05.2148 in the No. 21 Cape Motorsports Powered by ECR entry.

Andretti Global dominated qualifying, taking three of the first four spots on the starting grid. Besides Taylor on pole, Seb Murray qualified third at 1:05.3912 in the team’s No. 27 Prosperity car, while Lochie Hughes qualified fourth at 1:05.3105 in the No. 26 Andretti Global machine.

Polish rookie Tymek Kucharczyk will start fifth after a top lap of 1:05.4028 in the No. 71 HMD Motorsports car, while Josh Pierson put four Andretti cars in the top six with his lap of 1:05.5975 in the No. 29 Starchive Andretti entry.

Accidents ended the sessions of two drivers who hoped to qualify near the front.

Enzo Fittipaldi, the grandson of two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Emerson Fittipaldi, clipped the wall with his No. 67 HMD Motorsports entry. He will start last in the 24-car field.

Toward the end of the second group, INDY NXT race winner Matteo Nannini hit the barrier twice in an accident that inflicted heavy damage to the front of his No. 20 Enve Motorsports car fielded by Cape Motorsports Powered by ECR. He will start 23rd.

TOYOTA RACING – NCTS St. Petersburg Post-Race Report – 02.28.26

HONEYCUTT FINISHES TOP FIVE IN FIRST TRUCK SERIES RACE AT ST. PETE
The Toyota Development Driver Scores Fifth-Place Result around the Streets of St. Petersburg

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (February 28, 2026) – TRICON GARAGE driver Kaden Honeycutt finished fifth in Saturday’s NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race at the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. Honeycutt started in the 19th position in the No. 11 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro after qualifying was cancelled on Friday due to inclement weather and worked his way up through the field to earn his first top five result of the 2026 season.

Dario Franchitti ran among the top 10 for most of the race in the TRICON Garage No. 1 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, but damage down the stretch forced him to make a late-race pit stop and he went on to finish 27th.

TOYOTA RACING Post-Race Recap
NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series (NCTS)
Streets of St. Petersburg
Race 3 of 23 – 144 Miles, 80 Laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Lane Riggs*
2nd, Ty Majeski*
3rd, Ben Rhodes*
4th, Chandler Smith*
5th, KADEN HONEYCUTT
20th, TANNER GRAY
23rd, ADAM ANDRETTI
25th, GIO RUGGIERO
26th, STEWART FRIESEN
27th, DARIO FRANCHITTI
32nd, TIMMY HILL
36th, WESLEY SLIMP
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

KADEN HONEYCUTT, No. 11 Safelite Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

Finishing Position: 5th

“Just too many mistakes. We had an awesome Tundra. Thanks to Safelite, Toyota and TRICON Garage — everyone did a great job. I felt like we were okay. I don’t think we were a winning truck. I felt like the front row trucks had a little bit better drive. Just have to come back next year and improve on it. I’m really happy with how the weekend went. Just too many mistakes and had to bounce back from it, but thankfully it was a top five. I want to win. I want to win every week. This group deserves it. I’ve just got to clean it up. We’ve got a couple weeks off and we’ll go to Darlington and hit it hard there.”

DARIO FRANCHITTI, No. 1 Dollar Tree Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

Finishing Position: 27th

What does it mean to you to have the support from Jimmie Johnson to give you this ride and to have Scott Dixon out there cheering you on?

“Jimmie’s (Johnson) — I’ve said this before, Jimmie’s been the architect of this whole thing. I made a suggestion and he called Toyota that night, I think. When we were drinking the wine, it was still daylight in California or Texas — no, it might have been in Charlotte. Anyway, the next morning, he must have sent an email because the next morning he calls me, so he was the architect. He spoke to the folks at Dollar Tree at their Christmas party, and they were like, this is a great idea. Then, Pye-Barker came on with a fireside chat last night, a bunch of people over at Pye-Barker, which was Jimmie’s idea. The support of those guys, Toyota, the TRICON team. The special thing for me is my family are here. My wife, my daughters have never seen me race anything but historic cars and we’ve had a blast doing that. My mom and dad are here, and there’s also my INDYCAR family. Everybody I worked with, everybody I’ve known in the paddock since I was a kid. The fans, all that. That’s what makes this, for me, so, so special. I had a great truck. I really did. I wish I hadn’t done so much damage to it, but that was just my inexperience in the truck, catching me out. I didn’t want to wreck Hinch (James Hinchcliffe), I really didn’t want to wreck Hinch. I didn’t want to wreck anybody, especially the guys going for the championship. When I saw Jimmie he said, ‘was it fun?’ I said it was really fun to start with, then I got probably a little too hot to keep up because the helmet blower stopped working, but I had a blast. It was really good. There were really good points and there were points where it wasn’t. I hate saying good because I made some rookie errors, but, how fortunate am I that, after what I went through in 2013 that I could come back and do this 13 years later. Scott Dixon finished practice, he’s got qualifying, he comes out (to watch me). We did a fireside chat last night, which turned into – it was supposed to be a roast, but the only person that actually roasted me was my wife. So, that was it, really. I think Chip Ganassi will be happy that I’m in one piece. He wasn’t so happy that I did this. He was less happy than my mom. I think because he kind of lived a lot of that situation with me.

Did anything about the experience surprise you?

“One of the odd things for me is you cannot see behind you. You really can’t because of the blade and the mirrors you’re allowed, you can’t see behind you. Or make a clear blade. I didn’t come in here thinking I’m going to smoke these guys. Honestly, kids, but that’s disrespectful. I didn’t think I was going to come in and smoke these drivers. Because I’m aware of the talent level, how hard everybody’s practicing now, and the simulator work they’re doing, and the talent level. And a lot of them have figured it out. You can tell that. I mean, it was a pleasure to share the track with them. That was the biggest — how hard they raced for the first lap was pretty impressive. And then just when it goes wrong, how long it takes to hit something. The Indy car is pretty quick. If you lock a wheel, you’ve got time to recover it, or you hit the wall pretty quick. This thing, when you lock a tire or you get wheel-hop, it takes forever, but you can’t avoid what you’re about to hit.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our nearly 1,500 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 48,000 people in the U.S. who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of more than 35 million cars and trucks at our 11 manufacturing plants. In 2025, Toyota’s plant in North Carolina began to assemble automotive batteries for electrified vehicles.

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

Gossett Masters Tricky St. Pete Conditions for First Mazda MX-5 Cup Win

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Feb. 28, 2026) – On a wet but drying Grand Prix of St. Petersburg street course, Bobby Gossett (No. 44 BSI Racing) displayed a patience beyond his years all the way to the checkered flag on Saturday. Gossett took his first-ever Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin race win ahead of two-time series champion Jared Thomas (No. 96 JTR Motorsports Engineering).

Torrential rain pounded St. Petersburg, Florida Friday night and into early Saturday morning, leaving the 1.8-mile temporary street circuit soaked for the Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup race at 7:30am ET. As a result, the race director declared a wet race and all 40 cars started on rain tires.

Gossett started third but was quickly into second and into the lead by Turn Six. Shortly afterward, the first full-course caution came out. The time under yellow was lengthy due to track repairs, so Gossett continued to rack up laps led behind the safety car. He had 10 laps to plan how he would hold off defending champion Jeremy Fletcher (No. 22 McCumbee McAleer Racing) behind him.

Fletcher was on the attack when the green came back out, but his attempts to get around Gossett only gave Thomas a chance to take over second. A lap later, Fletcher was able to re-take the spot before a full-course caution returned for a stranded car on track.

There were only four minutes left on the clock when green racing resumed, and Thomas knew he had to make his move. He was around Fletcher and into second by Turn 3. Thomas chased down Gossett and when the white flag came out, he was filling Gossett’s mirrors and forcing him into defensive positions.

Thomas ran out of time though, because a full-course caution came out before he could make a pass happen and Gossett got his first race win after 16 Mazda MX-5 Cup starts.

“The conditions were a lot better than I thought they were going to be when we were on the pace lap,” Gossett said. “There was actually a lot more grip than I thought. Going into turn three on the first lap, I even sent it in on Justin [Adakonis] because where he was braking, I thought ‘wow, I’ve got way more than that.’

“I was very nervous for this [race]. To be honest, I wanted to go home, but I didn’t, so that was good! I was getting a little nervous again toward the end, when the track started drying up, because I think my advantage was lessening. I think Jared [Thomas] was definitely better in the dry, or dry-ish conditions, you could say. But overall, it was very fun.”

Thomas was pretty sure if they had another lap, he could have gotten around Gossett.

“Racing in the rain is always tough because you are always trying to find the limit, but if you go over the limit, it can be really detrimental,” Thomas said. “I just tried to ease into it and picked up some spots. I knew I had a good car underneath me from all the guys at JTR Engineering and I just got into a good groove for the last run. I fired off well but just came up a little bit short (for a win).

“It was definitely the right call to start on the rain tires. The Michelin tire will hold up even on a dry race track for a reasonable amount of time. And this track was slick, especially where there was paint, that is something you don’t have as much in other places so the extra soft, grippy Michelin tire in the rain helps a lot with that.”

The Motul Pole Award winner, rookie Matt Novak (No. 11 Advanced Autosports), finished third. He was far from disappointed about a third-place result, his first MX-5 Cup podium.

“I wanted to have an open and conservative mindset, but then obviously people are going to be making passes on you,” Novak said. “Obviously there’s going to be risky moments. I just wanted to run the best race that I can. I mean, I’m completely okay with how it ultimately turned out. It was a good way for me to improve. I’m happy for the risks that I did take, and ultimately being able to pass the cars where it was necessary. I can’t wait to do it again tomorrow, especially when it’s going to be dried out.”

Fletcher ended up fourth at the checkered flag, followed by Frankie Barroso (No. 48 Spark Performance) in fifth.

Out of the two guest drivers participating in the event, Earl Bamber (No. 21 Hendricks Motorsports) finished eighth and Sebastien Bourdais (No. 38 McCumbee McAleer Racing) finished 11th, on his birthday.

Charlotte Traynor (No. 43 Parker DeLong Racing) took home the Highest Place Female Driver award and the Penske Shocking Performance Award was given to Will Robinson (No. 51 McCumbee McAleer Racing) who went from 37th on the grid to 13th at the finish.

Race Two on the streets of St. Petersburg goes green at 4:00pm ET on Sunday, March 1.

About: The Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin is the signature spec series for Mazda Motorsports. The series has been operated by Andersen Promotions since 2017 and is currently sanctioned by IMSA. Mazda-powered grassroots champions can earn Mazda scholarships for this pro-level series. The Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup awards more than $1 million in prizes and scholarships.

Find out more at http://www.mx-5cup.com.

Tyler Reddick scores first Cup pole of 2026 at COTA

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Tyler Reddick scored the Busch Light Pole Award for the DuraMax Texas Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, on Saturday, February 28.

The event’s qualifying format at COTA consisted of the field of 37 being divided into two qualifying groups (Group 1 & 2). During each group’s session, each competitor was given 20 minutes to post the fastest qualifying lap amongst one another. At the conclusion of both group sessions, the fastest competitor among the two groups was awarded the pole position.

Reddick was the 19th-fastest competitor during Saturday’s practice session at COTA after competing in the second qualifying group. He posted his fastest qualifying lap at 88.380 mph in 97.760. The result was enough for Reddick and his No. 45 Chumba Casino/23XI Racing Toyota Camry XSE entry team to secure the top-starting spot for Sunday’s main event.

With the pole, Reddick, who won at COTA in 2023, notched his 12th NASCAR Cup Series career pole position, his first of the 2026 season and his third at COTA. This weekend will mark the second consecutive time that Reddick will lead the field to the start of an event from pole position. He was also awarded the pole last weekend at Atlanta’s EchoPark Speedway based on NASCAR’s qualifying metric formula.

Reddick is coming off two consecutive victories (Daytona 500 & Atlanta) to commence the 2026 Cup Series season. This Sunday at COTA, the Corning, California, native will strive to become the first competitor ever to win three-scheduled events in a row to commence a NASCAR season.

AUSTIN, TEXAS – FEBRUARY 28: Tyler Reddick, driver of the #45 Chumba Casino Toyota, poses for photos after winning the pole award during qualifying for the NASCAR Cup Series DuraMax Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne at Circuit of The Americas on February 28, 2026 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images).

“I, maybe, should have called my shot earlier, but some pressure comes with that,” Reddick said. “I love going fast and road courses are a lot of fun in qualifying. Just proud of everyone’s effort here at 23XI [Racing]. Our Chumba Casino Toyota Camry was fast at Daytona and it seems fast here to start this one off. I don’t know where Shane [van Gisbergen] is starting,” he continued, “but just got to try and get as much of a head start on him as I can and try to stay ahead of him all day.”

Reddick will share the front row at COTA with Ross Chastain, the latter of whom scored his first Cup career victory at COTA in 2022. Chastain posted his fastest qualifying lap at 88.256 mph in 97.897 seconds. Chase Briscoe, Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott will start in the fop five, respectively. 

Michael McDowell was the fastest competitor during Saturday’s practice session and in the first qualifying group. He will line up in sixth place. AJ Allmendinger, Christopher Bell (reigning COTA winner), Ty Gibbs and William Byron completed the top-10 starting grid, respectively.

With 37 competitors vying for 37 starting spots, all made the main event.

COTA – Qualifying position, Best speed, Best time:

1. Tyler Reddick, 88.380 mph, 97.760 seconds

2. Ross Chastain, 88.256 mph, 97.897 seconds

3. Chase Briscoe, 88.242 mph, 97.913 seconds

4. Ryan Blaney, 88.179 mph, 97.982 seconds

5. Chase Elliott, 88.161 mph, 98.002 seconds

6. Michael McDowell, 88.031 mph, 98.147 seconds

7. AJ Allmendinger, 88.027 mph, 98.152 seconds

8. Christopher Bell, 87.980 mph, 98.204 seconds

9. Ty Gibbs, 87.931 mph, 98.259 seconds

10. William Byron, 87.822 mph, 98.381 seconds

11. Zane Smith, 87.798 mph, 98.408 seconds

12. Carson Hocevar, 87.749 mph, 98.463 seconds

13. Shane van Gisbergen, 87.748 mph, 98.464 seconds  

14. Chris Buescher, 87.719 mph, 98.497 seconds

15. Kyle Larson, 87.703 mph, 98.514 seconds

16. Alex Bowman, 87.678 mph, 98.542 seconds

17. Todd Gilliland, 87.661 mph, 98.562 seconds

18. Cole Custer, 87.661 mph, 98.562 seconds

19. Denny Hamlin, 87.612 mph, 98.617 seconds

20. Joey Logano, 87.560 mph, 98.675 seconds

21. Ty Dillon, 87.474 mph, 98.772 seconds

22. Josh Berry, 87.443 mph, 98.807 seconds

23. Daniel Suarez, 87.418 mph, 98.836 seconds

24. Bubba Wallace, 87.416 mph, 98.838 seconds

25. Connor Zilisch, 87.365 mph, 98.895 seconds

26. Brad Keselowski, 87.346 mph, 98.917 seconds

27. Jesse Loe, 87.276 mph, 98.996 seconds

28. Austin Cindric, 87.265 mph, 99.009 seconds

29. Ryan Preece, 87.201 mph, 99.082 seconds

30. Kyle Busch, 87.132 mph, 99.160 seconds

31. John Hunter Nemechek, 87.032 mph, 99.274 seconds

32. Riley Herbst, 86.893 mph, 99.433 seconds

33. Austin Dillon, 86.610 mph, 99.757 seconds

34. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 86.590 mph, 99.781 seconds

35. Noah Gragson, 86.523 mph, 99.858 seconds

36. Erik Jones, 86.450 mph, 99.942 seconds

37. Cody Ware, 86.345 mph, 100.064 seconds

The 2026 DuraMax Texas Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas is scheduled for Sunday, March 1, and air at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM and HBO MAX.

TOYOTA RACING – NCS COTA Quotes – Tyler Reddick – 02.28.26

TOYOTA RACING – Tyler Reddick
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

Austin (February 28, 2026) – 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick was made available to the media on Saturday following his pole winning run for tomorrow’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Circuit of Americas in Austin, Texas.

TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Chumba Casino Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing

What was the difference with what you saw in practice and what you were able to do in qualifying?

“I was more so just trying to understand what the car would be like over the course of the run. I would have liked to have fired on a fast lap, but it wasn’t super high priority in practice for us. Funny enough, I realized that was kind of our approach to practice and we said, we’re sitting there getting ready to go qualify and I was like, man, we haven’t pushed this thing once that hard on fresh tires. I just kind of had to find my marks and somehow I did it without doing a practice run.”

Does this qualifying run help your prospects of winning three straight races to start the season?

“It helps the chances certainly, starting up front is huge. We did the same thing last year. We need to maintain that and hang onto it this time around. It certainly helps, you know? Obviously, I think the run under green and everything is pretty even, but certainly if things kind of get off sequence and pit road gets busy I’m going to have first choice and it’s nice to have in the race. We’ll see how it gets going. Ross (Chastain), Shane (Van Gisbergen), Ryan Blaney, there’s a number of drivers that were really strong in practice today. We’ll just try to understand what all that looks like and make our best decisions on the car overnight going into tomorrow’s race.”

Does winning the pole and starting up front change any strategy for tomorrow?

“It will be something that will be talked about and considered. I think our team does a great job on the preparation side for these races and where we start plays into that. So there will be discussions, I’m sure, that will continue to happen here in a little bit and even into tomorrow morning. I don’t know which way we will go at this moment, but certainly we kind of give ourselves more options starting towards the front, especially if we get off to a good start and as the field spreads out and if we’re leading, it gives us choices.”

How do you manage the tire wear and heat in the tires when you are running up on the curbs all race with a new tire at this track for the first time?

“Honestly, it’s something we do every week. Most of the time we are doing it on ovals, but a lot of these things you have to deal with week in and week out. Yeah, we’re coming here to COTA and it’s a real road course and we ran through those things over the years and expanded on that. For me, tomorrow it’s another race we’ve got to execute and certainly the changes their there, but we’ve had some time in practice and qualifying to kind of understand that. I kind of understand that. This is the first time we ran this tire here. We have all those things to consider as we approach the day tomorrow. We’ll see how that works and see if we have the right approach and if I make it back here at the end of the day.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our nearly 1,500 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 48,000 people in the U.S. who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of more than 35 million cars and trucks at our 11 manufacturing plants. In 2025, Toyota’s plant in North Carolina began to assemble automotive batteries for electrified vehicles.

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