FOUR TOYOTAS IN THE TOP-FIVE FINISHERS AT DAYTONA Camry drivers crossed the line in positions two through five in the season opener
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 16, 2025) – Tyler Reddick (second), Jimmie Johnson (third), Chase Briscoe (fourth) and John Hunter Nemechek (fifth) gave Toyota four of the top-five finishers in the rain delayed season-opening Daytona 500 on Sunday evening.
Denny Hamlin nearly added to his incredible history at Daytona International Speedway as the Virginia-native was leading on the final lap, when he was taken out battling for his fourth Daytona 500 win.
For Reddick, last season’s Championship 4 finalist, it matches his best Daytona finish and his best-ever Daytona 500 result. Johnson scored his best finish in the Next Gen car, and his best finish since the fall Dover race in 2020. Briscoe, who earned Toyota their first ever Daytona 500 pole earlier in the week, earned his second Daytona 500 top-five in his official Joe Gibbs Racing debut, while Nemechek earned his first Cup Series top-five finish. With Johnson and Nemechek both earning top-five runs, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB placed two Camrys in the top-five for the first time.
Toyota Post-Race Recap NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) Daytona International Speedway Race 1 of 36 – 500 miles, 200 laps
TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, William Byron*
2nd, TYLER REDDICK
3rd, JIMMIE JOHNSON
4th, CHASE BRISCOE
5th, JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
12th, ERIK JONES
16th, TY GIBBS
17th, RILEY HERBST
24th, DENNY HAMLIN
29th, BUBBA WALLACE
31st, CHRISTOPHER BELL
38th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
*non-Toyota driver
TOYOTA QUOTES
TYLER REDDICK, No. 45 Nasty Beast Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing
Finishing Position: 2nd
How were you able to finish second?
“Yeah, with that restart with 15 to go, we kind of checked up in the middle and ended up further back than we wanted to be. We didn’t really want to, but we ducked out of it hoping for the caution and we got it. But we were still lined up 16th there on the green-white-checkered. When they started to spin on the dogleg, I kind of jumped out of line thinking that was going to be it, and we just kept going. I knew that me and the 24 (William Byron) had a good run and they were throwing big blocks, and when they started spinning on the inside and I had a run on the 24, I thought, man, if I can just make it through on the 11 (Denny Hamlin) and not scrub my speed, I would have had at least an opportunity to do something. All in all, I never really finished a race here unless it was 40 laps down, so I’ll take second. We wanted to get a good start to the year, and we scored a lot of points today. So, I’m really happy with everyone’s effort on this No. 45 Nasty Beast Toyota Camry.”
JIMMIE JOHNSON, No. 84 Carvana Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB
Finishing Position: 3rd
How were you able to get up to the front?
“What an experience. We tried to play it smart. Chad (Johnston, crew chief) had a great strategy for the third segment. Unfortunately, on one of the pit stops we got blocked in and lost our track position. Still had a good car and a straight car and there at the end I was able to make my way through the crash in the back. I was in a good position and here we are. This is great.”
What does it mean to get two LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Camrys in the top five?
“Yeah, two in the top five. I hate it that Erik (Jones) had some trouble. Shaq, I hope you’re listening. We got your car on the podium. Just an incredible experience. Thank you to Carvana, Toyota, Dollar Tree, AdventHealth. There are so many partners part of this program that are helping us grow as an organization and I thought we had a good night.”
How good does this one feel for you?
“This feels incredible. I have emotions that I didn’t expect to have. I’ve never been in this position as an owner, and it’s really opened up a different set of emotions, and the pride that I have in this result and the pride that I have in this company, now that we’re trying to achieve and the journey we’re on – I am so satisfied, so happy right now. Excited that we have two cars in the top five. I hope Shaq is watching. Thank you, buddy. We got your car in the top-three. A big thanks to Carvana and their continued support, Mobil 1, AdventHealth, Family Dollar, Dollar Tree. It’s been an interesting couple of years and to have our cars come out and be this strong, this Toyota was rocket ship fast. I’m just smiling inside and out.”
CHASE BRISCOE, No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing
Finishing Position: 4th
Can you take us through that final restart?
“Man, it was crazy. We restarted I think eighth and the seas kind of just kept parting for me. Everything honestly went my way up until the very end there down the back straightaway. They all split off kind of three-wide and the 11 (Denny Hamlin) car was just sitting there for me, and I was like, ‘I’m going to push Denny to the win. JGR is going to win with my first race here. When I hit him, we all came together – I haven’t seen it yet – and somehow I was able to keep it straight and obviously move forward. A great way for us to start the year. Obviously, would’ve loved to win the race, but for us to come here and run in the top five is really cool for our first race. Hopefully this is what we’ll be doing all year long.”
JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 42 Dollar Tree Toyota Camry XSE, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB
Finishing Position: 5th
Can you describe the chaos in the final laps?
“It’s a green-white-checkered at Daytona. I wouldn’t really expect anything less. I don’t really know what happened on the back straightaway there. I know everyone was pushing hard and the next thing I knew there was smoke. I got hit in the left side door, right side door and managed to keep it straight. Jimmie (Johnson) blew my doors off. I don’t think he ever lifted for it. Strong run by LEGACY MOTOR CLUB. Erik (Jones) in the Duels and then up front for the majority of the day. Then, Jimmie came home third and myself fifth so a solid day. A solid week I would say and Speedweeks for the LEGACY MOTOR CLUB group. Excited to see what this year has. We already know that we’re better than last year, it’s just how much better is unknown.”
How big is it to get off to this start?
“Well, Daytona really won’t make your season – unless you win it – but I feel like coming out of Daytona wrecked and in a hole, isn’t very good either, so that definitely sucks, when you are deep in a hole like that and you have to crawl your way out of a points deal, but having a solid run like we did, coming home fifth was a really solid day, a really solid effort, really solid Speedweeks from the whole LEGACY MOTOR CLUB group. Excited to see where 2025 goes – we already know we are better than 2024, just how much is the question. We hired a lot of good people in the offseason, so looking forward to seeing what all of the hard work, processes, procedures, personnel, everything that went into the offseason – see what it does for us in 2025.”
DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 National Debt Relief Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing
Finishing Position: 24th
What were your thoughts on what transpired there?
“Yeah, I thought we were in a great spot many times in the last 10 laps. Appreciate National Debt Relief coming on our Toyota and we gave them a great ride. We had the caution on the front straightaway spin – I measured up the 2 (Austin Cindric), and got a run on him. I stayed with him long enough where I could kind of control which side I wanted to pass him on, and then we had pulled away from the pack slightly so I knew a run was going to come. The 41 (Cole Custer) had a run, and I chose not to block him because these races, you have to live to make it off of turn four, and we just didn’t. I thought the 41 came down. I’m pushing the 2 down as low as I can to give him all of the space, and not stopping his run, and I thought he, not hung a left, but steered left and was trying to crowd it. I understand what he was trying to go for – he’s going for it – all of us are, but you know, in those situations, you’ve gotta do it off of (turn) four – then we can we do this, but we never made it – and someone else won. I don’t even know where he was running.”
CHRISTOPHER BELL, No. 20 DeWalt/Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing
Finishing Position: 31st
What happened in that wreck that took you out of the race?
“Just Superspeedway racing. That’s how it goes. It takes pushes. You’ve got to be pushing otherwise you’re going backwards. I don’t know. I was in position and that’s all you can ask for.”
Did that push you got cause the accident?
“I had my hands full for a while. It’s Daytona. You have to be doing that otherwise you’re not going to be going forward. It’s a product of the racing that we have here.”
MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 56 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE, TRICON Garage
Finishing Position: 38th
Are you disappointed to be out of the Daytona 500 early?
“It’s always disappointing when you don’t finish no matter what situation especially in a race like this when it’s probably our only shot this year. Thanks to Bass Pro, TRICON and everybody that helped us put this together. It was fun while it lasted, but unfortunately, we were just wrong place, wrong time there.”
What happened out there?
“I’m not sure – a big stack up – and by the time they got to me, it was really aggressive – I guess you would call it. Just no time to react and knocked the nose off of the thing. Just unfortunate for all of our guys. We had a fun week down here, making the race. Thank you to Bass Pro, TRICON Garage, Toyota, TRD – everybody that helped us put this together. We were hoping to have a lot more fun than that. We were just biding our time, and just in a bad place on the restart there.”
Are we going to see you again?
“Yeah – just don’t know when or where or what. We will see.”
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.
Ford Performance Notes and Quotes NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 | Sunday, February 16, 2025
FORD FINISHING RESULTS (UNOFFICIAL)
7th – Ryan Blaney
8th – Austin Cindric
10th – Chris Buescher
21st – Cole Custer
22nd – Corey LaJoie
25th – Cody Ware
26th – Brad Keselowski
27th – Todd Gilliland
28th – Noah Gragson
32nd – Ryan Preece
35th – Joey Logano
36th – Zane Smith
37th – Josh Berry
AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 8th) – WHAT HAPPENED AT THE END AND HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE RESULT? “I’m clearly disappointed. I mean, you take the white and you’re in the lead. I wish we had a better chance to bring that home for everyone at Discount Tire and Team Penske and Ford Performance. It was just an exceptional effort all the way through Speedweeks. There’s definitely a lot to review there, trying to figure out when I need to actually be leading, so just frustrating to be that close.”
FORD AND TEAM PENSKE LED A LOT OF LAPS AND STAYED UP FRONT. WHAT DOES THAT SAY ABOUT YOUR SUPERSPEEDWAY PROGRAM? “It says the same things it’s said about our program the last year and a half to two years and it’s a shame we don’t have enough wins to show for it. I feel like there’s an opportunity to make the playoffs for all three of us tonight. I know it’s super early in the season, but it’s super critical and it’s a big race to try and win. To be that close it definitely stinks.”
WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU PROVED TO THE FANS WITH BEING SO CLOSE TO WINNING AGAIN? “That I want to do it again, that’s for sure.”
WHAT ARE THE EMOTIONS RIGHT NOW? “Frustration. You’re taking the white as the leader. I felt like I executed all the restarts the right way and really that whole third stage. I didn’t get wrecked out of the lead this time, so that was cool, but it still doesn’t make it feel any better. Obviously, I don’t even know where we finished, but it was still a decent points weekend and an incredible showing by our team for the entirety of Speedweeks. It’s just a shame we couldn’t get this Discount Tire Ford Mustang in Victory Lane.”
WHAT HAPPENED ON THE FINAL LAP? “I’m not sure. We had one wreck when I took the white and then Denny wanted to take his run right away and I still got a good shot from the 01 and whoever was pushing Denny clearly wrecked him. There was just a ton of momentum with the field getting broken up. I didn’t really know what point of the lap I needed to actually be the leader, it’s just frustrating to be that close.”
RYAN PREECE, No. 60 BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 32nd) –“We had a really good car. Honestly, I don’t even know what happened in front of me. I haven’t seen the replay. I was in line, pushing, and when you get down to the end of these races, we are all just really aggressive because you have to be aggressive. It is just the position we are in. We had a really fast BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang, and it is just frustrating when you can’t do anything with it.”
RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Peak Ford Mustang Dark Horse – (Finished 7th)
“Honestly, we did a good job fixing it after we got turned on the backstretch off of Turn 2 there and fixed it the best they could. We rode around and missed the first big wreck and kind of went racing the second one, and I went to the bottom, and kind of got to the apron and was able to miss a lot of that junk and wound up seventh. It was a good recovery. We did a really good job today just got hit in the right rear there and spun around and hurt us a little bit. It was a good finish at least.”
YOU HAD SPEED ALL DAY. IF IT WASN’T FOR THE CHAOS AT THE END DO YOU FEEL YOU AND AUSTIN (CINDRIC) HAD A CHANCE AT THIS THING? “Yeah, I thought Austin and I were in a good position. We had control of the race for awhile. The middle kind of came a little bit but I felt like we were still going to have a shot. It was just people pushing hard at the end of this thing and sometimes it just doesn’t work. Unfortunately we were part of the wreck but fortunate that we didn’t have night-ending damage. Austin and I did a good job. I thought we timed the strategy perfect of he and I being out front together the last run of the race and just lost a couple of us there.”
COREY LAJOIE, No. 01 Take 5 Oil Change/DuraMax Ford Mustang Dark Horse – (Finished 22nd)
“Here, for what we are trying to do, it doesn’t matter if you don’t win. Certainly, there is a lot of money involved from potentially finishing third to 22nd or wherever we finished. Nonetheless, I think we had a great showing this week, making it into the Duels and bringing Take Five and Duramax to the front at Daytona with 10 laps to go was a pretty special experience. I just hate that we couldn’t finish where we should have.”
CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang Dark Horse – (Finished 10th)
“It was just a race that didn’t play out like we needed it to. We practiced a lot of things as a group and got really efficient at it in practice. We had cautions at all the times to where we didn’t have a single green flag stop, which we were prepared for. The cars handled great. We went into a night race with the rain delay. Everybody’s handling was just fine. Everything just kind of piled on top of us, but we had a ton of potential in this race if it would have started the right time and had played out a little bit different. You can’t control that, but we had a ton of potential in the day with our Fastenal Mustang and we didn’t really get to realize it.”
JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 35th) – “From my perspective, I felt like to win the race I had to get to the second row in my line there. I was in third and needed to get to second. I saw the opportunity to drop down and get underneath the [number] 47 and have the [number] 4, another Ford, behind me. Then the 47 threw a late block there. I checked up for it and it looked like he was going to go back up and grab the top lane so I went back in to try and close the gap again but he kept coming down. I am checking up but at that point the checkup has already happened behind me and everybody is all over each other. I can’t get out of it and then we made contact. It is unfortunate. We had a good Shell Pennzoil Mustang. We had a good car but just couldn’t get it done.”
COLE CUSTER, No. 41 HaasTooling.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 21st) – “Everybody was just pushing hard and side drafting hard. Everybody is going for it. This is the biggest race of our lives here in Daytona. It’s the pinnacle of our sport. I had a huge run on the 11. I wish I waited one more corner, but it was such a big run that I just felt like I had to take it. The 19 went with the 11 and then we were kind of hung out and it just didn’t work out there at the end, but I can’t say enough about our team. To have a shot at the win there it definitely says a lot about our team with how hard they had to work on this car fixing it from the Duels. We’ll move on to Atlanta and see what we can do.”
YOU WERE PUSHING CINDRIC ON THE OUTSIDE, BUT WHAT HAPPENED AFTER THAT? “There was a lot going on. There was a lot of pushing and a lot of shoving. I wish we could have stayed hooked together with Austin, but just with how it worked out with people blocking and everything, it didn’t work out. Everybody was just going for it.”
CODY WARE, No. 51 Parts Plus/Jacob Construction Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Finished 25th) – “We did everything we could. We slipped our way through it. We were on the bottom and making our way through and just got clipped at the last second. Super frustrating because the RWR cars were fast. I was just hanging back and playing my normal strategy. The 01 also showed pace and was running up front all day. To have two top-fives taken away from us on the last lap is pretty frustrating. Definitely been a long week between issues in qualifying, getting wrecked it the Duels and then wrecking out again today. This is one to reset and move on to Atlanta next weekend. Thankful we had fast Ford Performance Ford Mustang Dark Horses on the race track and know that we will have two more fast cars at Atlanta next weekend.”
The Detroit Supercross delivered thrilling and unpredictable racing to a packed stadium at Ford Field. Both the 450SX and 250SX Class Main Events came down to the final laps with multiple late-race lead changes.
Levi Kitchen Comes Out On Top of 250SX Main Event Shake-Up
Detroit, Mich., (February 15, 2025) Monster Energy Yamaha Star Racing’s Cooper Webb grabbed the win in a thrilling Detroit Supercross at Ford Field. Webb’s first win of the season put the two-time champion into a point tie for the title just six races into the 17-round Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship.
Progressive Insurance ECSTAR Suzuki’s Ken Roczen jumped into the lead on the first lap and led the field for most of the 20-minute plus one lap Main Event. He defended several attacks by Webb throughout the race but gave up the top spot in the final minutes. Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Chase Sexton got stuck in the starting gate then crashed on the opening lap, but from there he put in blistering laps and passed his way up to a third-place finish. Sexton retains the red plate but now stands in a point tie with Cooper Webb in both the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and the SMX World Championship™. In round two of the Eastern Divisional 250SX Class, Monster Energy Pro Circuit Kawasaki’s Levi Kitchen nabbed the win after a late-race re-start tightened up the field.
First place 450SX Class
“I really liked where I was by lap three, when I got around Aaron [Plessinger] and was with Kenny. I knew he was riding well today so it was going to be a good pace, and we had some good laps… He felt the pressure and rode well all through the Main Event. I was trying hard, and he picked up on some of my lines. It was a tough Main Event… I’ve been in that position before and it felt great. I’m stoked to get that first win, get the red plate. It just felt awesome.” – Cooper Webb, when asked at what point he felt he had the win.
Second place 450SX Class
“It was a really fun race… I kept my cool the whole time even though he was revving behind me. I didn’t let anything faze me. I know the stigma of when we go to battle and him getting me toward the end, but I just tried to do what I could; it’s honest work… I’m happy with a podium, I really am, even though we only got two points closer [to the points lead], I’m doing whatever I can out there and we’re executing our plans that we have coming into the [racing].” – Ken Roczen
Third place 450SX Class
“I was dead last, and I was like, ‘Well, time to send it!’ I felt like I rode really well; probably the best ride of the season, but it’s obviously not the result we wanted. But I made the most of a bad situation… I was smashing the whoops and that’s more like it for me. I’m looking forward to keeping this season going; that ride was fun.” – Chase Sexton (#4 in photo above)
The 250SX Class created excitement of its own when a red flag came out late in the race. Levi Kitchen, running seven seconds behind the leader in second place, used incredible sprint speed to take over the lead just two laps before the checkered flag came out. Prior to the re-start, last weekend’s winner, Monster Energy Yamaha Star Racing’s Max Anstie, grabbed the lead early and pulled out a comfortable gap. After several side-by-side racing moments with Kitchen in the final laps, Anstie eventually settled for second. Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire fought into third place, even recovering from a fall. Hampshire tried to capitalize on the staggered-start re-start but wasn’t able to better his spot.
Note: The AMA’s re-start procedure after a red flag was updated prior to the 2024 season. The rule states that if the leader has completed at least three laps, and if there is any time remaining on the race clock, the riders line up in a staggered-position on the start straight. A green flag re-starts the race, and the remaining race duration will be, at minimum, three laps.
First place 250SX Class
“Max rode so good in the beginning of that event… then the red flag came out and I was like, ‘It’s time to reset and I can capitalize on this.’ I took a few deep breaths and just treated it like I was doing a two-lap sprint at Sandbox [Training Facility]. I sent it, made a pretty aggressive pass, and was able to get that [triple jump] out of the turn and got a little gap. We’ll take that. I had to bounce back after last weekend… [After the re-start] I knew it was [going to be] green flag, white flag, checkers, so I tried to plan to get a pass and get some room, and that’s what I did.” – Levi Kitchen
Second place 250SX Class
“That red flag threw a bit of a spanner into the plan there. I was in a tough spot, because I knew Levi was fast, and the track was quite open. There were a lot of places to send it down the inside, and I would have done the same thing… I had it in the bag. I was literally cruising around the last two laps, and then the red flag [came out]. It is what it is. Big picture: I’m solid, I feel really good, I’m fast, I’m comfy where I’m at so, yeah, what a bummer.” – Max Anstie
Third place 250SX Class
“We needed a podium so bad after last weekend. There was no one that pulled a worse card than me last weekend [getting the bike stuck on a track marker]… We came up with a pretty good setting for that Main Event and that’s the best I felt all day. We’ll take it. If you noticed, on the re-start I was hanging back a little bit. I didn’t want to throw it away for no reason.” – RJ Hampshire
Bidding has opened for two golf-foursome spots in the 2nd Annual Love Moto Stop Cancer Golf Tournament. Winners will golf with Supercross racers, legends, and industry professionals then receive a VIP treatment experience at the Supercross season Final in Salt Lake City, Utah on May 10th. For information, to bid, and to learn more about St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, please go to SupercrossLIVE.com/st-jude.
Nothing beats attending a Monster Energy AMA Supercross in person, but live viewing is also available everywhere across the globe. Each event streams live and on-demand on Peacock. Additionally, select events can be viewed on NBC, CNBC, USA Network, and NBC Sports digital platforms. CNBC airs an encore presentation of each round on the Monday following the race at 1:00p.m. ET. A live Spanish-language presentation is available for every round on Telemundo Deportes’ Facebook and YouTube channels. Live International coverage can be accessed through the SuperMotocross Video Pass (supermotocross.tv) in English, Spanish and French language broadcasts. Races can also be heard live on NBC Sports Audio on SiriusXM Channel 85.
AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas hosts Round 7 next Saturday night, February 22nd. The Military Appreciation-themed event will bring back the Western Divisional 250SX Class Championship for its fifth round, and both the 450SX and 250SX Class racers will face their second Triple Crown-formatted event of the year. Like each Supercross race, the event will pay championship points toward both the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship as well as the SMX World Championship series. Tickets are available now for the Arlington Supercross and each remaining round of the championships, including FanFest and camping options for the post-season SMX World Championship events. For video highlights, race schedules, results, news, and to purchase tickets please go to SupercrossLIVE.com.
Feld Motor Sports, Inc. is the worldwide leader in producing and presenting specialized arena and stadium-based motorsports entertainment. Properties include Monster Jam®, Monster Energy AMA Supercross, and the SMX World ChampionshipTM. Feld Motor Sports, Inc. is a subsidiary of Feld Entertainment, Inc. Visit monsterjam.com, SupercrossLIVE.com, and feldentertainment.com for more information.
About Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship:
Monster Energy AMA Supercross is the most competitive and highest-profile off-road motorcycle racing championship on the planet. Founded in America and sanctioned by the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) since 1974. Over 17 weeks, Supercross attracts some of the largest and most impressive crowds inside the most recognizable and prestigious stadiums in North America to race in front of nearly one million live fans and broadcast to millions more worldwide. For more information, visit SupercrossLIVE.com.
About the SMX World Championship:
The SMX World Championship™ is the premier off-road motorcycle racing series in the world that combines the technical precision of stadium racing with the all-out speed and endurance of outdoor racing. Created in 2022, the SMX World Championship Series combines the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and the AMA Pro Motocross Championship into a 28-round regular season that culminates with the season-ending SMX World Championship Playoffs. Visit SuperMotocross.com for more information.
About the American Motorcyclist Association:
Founded in 1924, the AMA is a not-for-profit member-based association whose mission is to promote the motorcycle lifestyle and protect the future of motorcycling. As the world’s largest motorcycling rights and event sanctioning organization, the AMA advocates for riders’ interests at all levels of government and sanctions thousands of competition and recreational events every year. The AMA also provides money-saving discounts on products and services for its members. Through the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in Pickerington, Ohio, the AMA honors the heroes and heritage of motorcycling. For more information, visit americanmotorcyclist.com.
Jesse Love and the No. 2 Whelen Chevrolet Team Claim Season-Opening Victory at Daytona International Speedway
Finish: 1st Start: 9th Points: 2nd
“I’m at a loss for words. It’s Daytona International Speedway. This place is so special to me and to finally get the red-and-white Whelen Chevrolet in Victory Lane is a dream. There have been so many people who have helped me get to this point. Everyone back in Welcome at Richard Childress Racing and ECR Engines deserve a ton of credit. I’m not sure what happened to the No. 21, but he (Austin Hill) was really dominant tonight. We are working on changing our culture here at RCR though. We are winners and we know we are. We all want to win a championship for Richard Childress. Sometimes it takes me a little while to get up front in these races. I’m trying to play chess nowadays and not checkers, especially here at Daytona. It all worked out tonight and I couldn’t be prouder of this No. 2 team.” -Jesse Love
Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Win Opening Stages Before Mechanical Failure Ends Strong Run at Daytona International Speedway
Finish: 33rd Start: 4th Points: 17th
“Such a bummer. We had a fast Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet tonight at Daytona International Speedway. Everyone at Richard Childress Racing and ECR Engines did a great job building this race car. We showed that we were the dominant team again by getting both stage wins. I just wish we could have lost this race on our own terms, and it not be a mechanical failure. I almost would rather get turned on the backstretch on the white flag lap than end up like this. This one is going to sting for a little bit, but I feel like we are going to be good at Atlanta Motor Speedway next week and all of 2025 for that matter. Can’t say enough good things about Chad (Haney, crew chief) and our No. 21 team. Everyone is beating themselves up right now, but these things happen. This is why it’s so hard to win at this level. Winning three in a row here is a testament to the hard work that everyone at RCR puts in each and every day, and we had a shot at a fourth. We will hold our heads up and keep digging.” -Austin Hill
Eckes, who raced the first 20 laps of the race in the top 10, sustained nose damage on a restart with five laps remaining in the opening stage. Throughout the second stage, the team utilized cautions to repair the nose of the No. 16 Celsius Chevy, managing to stay on the lead lap. During the final stage, the field began making green-flag pit stops. As Eckes pitted, a timely caution came out, allowing him to pit for fuel only and rejoin the field in ninth place with the track position he needed with 25 laps remaining. An overtime-inducing caution collected Eckes, along with many others, who had nowhere to go. Eckes was able to pit for tires and repairs to restart 22nd for the first overtime attempt. As chaos ensued when the white flag waved, the race was official, and Eckes was scored 12th.
“Not the way we hoped our debut would go. The guys did a great job fixing the nose damage from early in the race, and we finally got some track position back towards the end. Unfortunately we just couldn’t avoid the chaos coming to the line. A lot of fight from the No. 16 team, and I’m excited for what’s to come this season.” – Christian Eckes
Josh Williams’ race was relatively tame up until the closing laps. After the conclusion of Stage 1, he restarted in sixth due to a strategy decision to short pit, and he made his way into the top five before being shuffled to the rear of the lead group. Williams pitted during the second stage break for tires and fuel, restarting in 17th. During an extended run under green, he came down pit road for his final scheduled start before a caution came out mid-cycle, putting the No. 11 Alloy Employer Services Chevy on the back foot with 33 laps remaining. Williams’ mid-pack restart led to stagnation until the race’s closing laps. He restarted after a late caution in 15th with three laps to go. Williams fired off for overtime from ninth place, but a last-lap melee took away a potential top-five finish from the No. 11 Alloy Employer Services Chevy.
“I wanted to run the race in a way that put ourselves in position to have a good finish. Sometimes, you just get right-reared, and there’s nothing you can do about it. It’s time to go to Atlanta and try it again. I can’t believe we made it that long until the big one. That was impressive.” – Josh Williams
No. 10 Champion Container Chevrolet
Start: 12th Stage 1 Finish: 38th Stage 2 Finish: 38th Finish: 38th During the fifth lap of the race, an early wreck collected Dye with nowhere to go from the top lane. He was relegated to a 38th-place finish
About Kaulig Racing
Kaulig Racing™ is a full-time, multi-car NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) and NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) team, owned by award winning entrepreneur, Matt Kaulig. Established in 2016, Kaulig Racing™ has earned 23 NXS wins, made the NXS Playoffs consecutively each season since the playoff system started, and won two regular-season championships. In 2021, the team competed in select NCS events, before expanding to a two-car, full-time NCS team in 2022 and adding a third, part-time entry during the 2023 season. Since its first NCS start in 2021, the team has earned two wins. Kaulig Racing is currently fielding two full-time entries in the NCS and continues to field three full-time NXS entries, with a part-time fourth entry at select events. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.
There’s nothing more frustrating than getting into your car, turning the key (or pressing the start button), and realizing it won’t start.
Whether you’re in a rush or just trying to get from point A to point B, dealing with a car that won’t start can quickly ruin your day. The good news? Many common starting issues can be diagnosed with a little patience and some basic troubleshooting.
If your car refuses to start, don’t panic just yet. In this guide, we’ll walk you through the most common reasons why your vehicle might not be starting and what you can do about it.
And if you find yourself stuck with a car that just won’t cooperate, professional auto repair Cincinnati services can help get you back on the road quickly.
Step 1: Check the Battery
A dead or weak battery is one of the most common reasons a car won’t start. If your car makes a clicking noise when you turn the key or if the dashboard lights flicker but the engine doesn’t turn over, your battery is likely the issue.
What to Do:
Try turning on your headlights. If they’re dim or don’t turn on at all, your battery might be dead.
Use jumper cables to jump-start your car. If it starts after a jump, your battery likely needs to be replaced or charged.
Check the battery terminals for corrosion. If you see white or greenish buildup, clean it off with a wire brush and baking soda solution.
Step 2: Listen for the Starter Motor
If your battery is fine but the car still won’t start, the issue could be the starter motor. The starter is responsible for cranking the engine, and if it fails, your car won’t start no matter how much power your battery has.
Signs of a Bad Starter:
A clicking sound when you turn the key.
The engine doesn’t turn over at all.
The dashboard lights come on, but nothing happens when you try to start the car.
What to Do:
Try tapping the starter motor with a wrench or hammer. Sometimes, this can temporarily get it working.
If tapping doesn’t work, the starter might need to be replaced.
Step 3: Check the Fuel System
Your car needs fuel to start and run, so if there’s an issue with fuel delivery, your engine won’t fire up.
What to Look For:
Is there fuel in the tank? It sounds obvious, but running out of gas happens more often than you’d think.
A clogged fuel filter can prevent fuel from reaching the engine.
A faulty fuel pump can also keep your car from starting.
What to Do:
If your car has a fuel pump priming sound when you turn the key to “ON,” listen for it. No sound could mean a fuel pump issue.
If your fuel filter hasn’t been replaced in a while, it may need to be changed.
Adding a fuel system cleaner to your gas tank can sometimes help clear minor blockages.
Step 4: Inspect the Ignition System
The ignition system is what sparks the fuel-air mixture in your engine. If there’s a problem with the ignition, your car won’t start.
Signs of Ignition Problems:
The engine cranks but doesn’t start.
There’s no spark reaching the spark plugs.
The check engine light may be on.
What to Do:
Check for loose or damaged spark plug wires.
Inspect the ignition coil for signs of wear or damage.
If you have a spare key, try using it. Sometimes, a faulty key fob or immobilizer system can prevent starting.
Step 5: Verify the Engine Sensors and Computer System
Modern cars rely on sensors and computers to function properly. A faulty sensor, such as a crankshaft position sensor, can prevent the engine from starting.
What to Do:
Use an OBD-II scanner to check for trouble codes.
If your car is frequently stalling or struggling to start, an issue with the engine control module (ECM) may be at fault.
Resetting the car’s computer by disconnecting the battery for a few minutes can sometimes resolve minor sensor-related issues.
Final Thoughts
If your car won’t start, working through these troubleshooting steps can help you identify the problem and possibly fix it yourself. However, if you’ve checked everything and your car still won’t cooperate, it’s best to seek professional help.
For expert diagnosis and repair, auto repair Cincinnati services can get to the root of the issue and ensure your car is running smoothly again. Don’t let a dead car battery or a failing starter ruin your day—get professional help when needed and keep your car in top shape!
Jesse Love roared out of the gates in style and commenced a new season of NASCAR Xfinity Series competition by winning the United Rentals 300 at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, February 15, amid an overtime shootout.
The 2023 ARCA Menards Series champion from Menlo Park, California, led three times for 30 of 126 over-scheduled laps in an event where he started in ninth place and rallied from causing an early multi-car wreck on the fourth lap to preserve his No. 2 Whelen/Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet entry through the event’s first two stage periods.
After teammate Austin Hill dropped out in the closing laps due to a mechanical issue amid a dominant performance, Love challenged and assumed the lead for the first time within the final 25-lap mark. Despite enduring two restarts amid two multi-car wrecks, the latter of which that sent the event into overtime, Love, who was in defensive mode, maintained the top spot for the final 18 laps. He then managed to start the final lap just before another multi-car wreck on the frontstretch officially concluded the event, which handed the victory to the Californian as he won for the second time in his Xfinity career.
The starting lineup for the event was determined through the 2024 owner’s standings after on-track qualifying that was scheduled for Saturday was canceled due to inclement weather. As a result, Justin Allgaier, the reigning Xfinity Series champion, started on pole position and he shared the front row with rookie Taylor Gray.
Before the event, the following names that included Anthony Alfredo, Parker Retzlaff and Ryan Truex dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments made to their respective entries.
When the 2025 Xfinity Series season commenced under green, Justin Allgaier, who opted to start on the outside lane, muscled his No. 7 BRANDT Chevrolet entry ahead through the first two turns as he had Chevrolet teammate Austin Hill drafting help. Through the backstretch, a majority of the field migrated to the outside lane that was led by Allgaier while Gray tried to challenge Allgaier for the top spot while leading the inside lane. As the field that was stacked in two-packed lanes returned to the frontstretch, Allgaier led the first lap.
Over the next four laps, Allgaier and Gray dueled one another for the lead in front of two-stacked lanes. By the fifth lap mark, Hill, who had been drafting Allgaier early in the event, made his move beneath Allgaier through the frontstretch as he then moved his No. 21 Bennett Transportation Chevrolet entry into the lead entering the first two turns. With Allgaier transitioning to the inside lane in front of Gray, Hill then blocked a charge by Sheldon Creed on the outside lane through the first two turns to maintain the top spot.
Then in the backstretch, the event’s first caution flew when Brandon Jones, who was the fourth competitor in line on the inside lane and was racing in the top-10 mark, got bumped by Jesse Love amid a brief stack-up and he clipped rookie Carson Kvapil before he hit the outside wall head-on. Jones’ incident triggered a multi-car wreck that involved rookies Daniel Dye and Connor Zilisch along with Harrison Burton, Garrett Smithley and Brennan Poole. In the process, Jones and Dye were both eliminated from further competition in the event.
The start of the next restart period on Lap 11 featured Hill and Allgaier dueling for the lead in front of two-stacked lanes as Hill had Creed drafting him while Allgaier was being drafted by rookie Christian Eckes. Through the backstretch, Creed drafted Hill clear of Allgaier and into the lead entering Turns 3 and 4. With Allgaier falling back to battling Gray for third place, Hill led the following ahead of Creed as rookies William Sawalich and Nick Sanchez along with Sam Mayer, Justin Bonsignore and Jesse Love followed suit in the top 10.
Through the first 15 scheduled laps, Hill retained the lead over Creed and two stacked rows of competitors that were led by Gray and Allgaier. By then, the top 14 competitors were separated by within one second of one another while the top 22 competitors were separated by two seconds. Shortly after, a majority of the field migrated to the outside lane that was led by Hill while Allgaier, who was flirting for eighth place, was the lead competitor on the inside lane.
Four laps later, Hill led a long line of competitors racing towards the outside wall as he was pursued by Creed, Gray, Sawalich, Sanchez, Bonsignore, Jeb Burton, Anthony Alfredo, Love and Ryan Sieg respectively. Meanwhile, Allgaier had drifted back to 15th place after he received no drafting help from the inside lane.
Just then, the event’s second caution flew when Poole, who was multiple laps down after he was involved in the first carnage, had his hood blown up on his front windshield as he dropped debris entering the frontstretch. During the caution period, some led by Josh Williams and including Eckes, Allgaier, Sam Mayer, Love and Harrison Burton pitted their respective entries while the rest led by Hill remained on the track.
With five laps remaining in the first stage period, the field restarted under green. At the start, Hill and Gray, both of whom occupied the front row, battled dead even for the lead in front of two-stacked lanes through the tri-oval and the first two turns. Hill would use the momentum from the outside lane to muscle ahead as he then went into defensive mode to block both Gray and Creed through the backstretch. As the field began to fan out to three lanes, Hill led the following lap.
Over the next two laps, Hill led a long line of competitors toward the outside wall as Hill led Creed, Sanchez, Jeb Burton and Alfredo, respectively. In third place, Sanchez repeatedly gave Creed bumps in the rear bumper through the straightaways and corners, but they both remained in line behind Hill. Meanwhile, Leland Honeyman was trying to mount a charge as the lead competitor from the inside lane.
During the final lap of the first stage period, Hill retained the lead over Creed, Sanchez and the field through the first two turns and the first half of the backstretch. Then through the backstretch, Creed tried to make a move beneath Hill, but the latter blocked the former while Sanchez also almost got sideways through the straightaway. In the process, Jeb Burton moved to the inside lane and he moved into third place.
With Creed being drafted by Burton, Sanchez then tried to make a move from the outside lane as the field fanned out entering the frontstretch. The runs, however, were not enough to dethrone Hill from the top spot as the latter captured the first stage victory on Lap 30. Creed settled in second place ahead of Sanchez, Jeb Burton and Alfredo while Honeyman, Allgaier, rookie Dean Thompson, Love and Gray were scored in the top 10.
Under the stage break, a majority of the field led by Hill pitted their respective entries while the rest led by Allgaier remained on the track. Earlier, Eckes pitted his No. 16 Celsius Chevrolet entry while pit road was closed to have his entry inspected for any damage. Eckes would make multiple trips to pit road to have his entry assessed and repaired.
The second stage period started on Lap 36 as Allgaier and Burton, both of whom were among five competitors who remained on the track during the first stage’s break period, occupied the front row. At the start, Allgaier and Burton dueled in front of two-stacked lanes for a full lap as neither had an advantage over the another. Allgaier would lead the following lap, but he could not muscle ahead of Burton as Connor Zilisch was shuffled out of the draft through the backstretch.
During the next lap, Sammy Smith made a bold three-wide move beneath Burton and Allgaier. This resulted in Smith challenging teammate Allgaier for the top spot while Burton, who led two turns earlier, was shuffled back behind Smith. As Harrison Burton, Mayer, Jeb Burton and Hill were all up in the top six, JR Motorsports’ Sammy Smith and Allgaier continued to duel at the Lap 40 mark.
Prior to the following lap, Smith would barely move up in front of Allgaier from the outside lane and Hill would shove Mayer out of the draft. Meanwhile, Jeb Burton muscled his No. 27 Golden Corral Chevrolet entry into the lead from the inside lane. Despite being placed in defensive mode towards the Lap 45 mark, Burton retained the lead before Hill rocketed back into the lead. Hill would proceed to launch ahead of Ryan Sieg, Sanchez, Zilisch, Ryan Truex and a three-wide stacked field through the frontstretch while Burton was trying to regain ground from inside the top 10.
At the Lap 50 mark, Hill led a long line of competitors racing on the inside lane as Ryan Sieg, Sanchez, Zilisch and Truex continued to follow suit respectively. Shortly after, Love mounted a charge while leading the outside lane in the backstretch. Sanchez, Sieg, and Hill, however, would transition up to the outside lane through Turns 3 and 4 to stall Love’s momentum, which resulted in Love settling in the inside lane while the leaders remained atop the outside lane. By then, a majority of the field also transitioned up the track as Hill continued to lead on Lap 53.
By Lap 55, the top 10 competitors were separated by under a second as Hill led Sieg, Sanchez, Jeb Burton and Allgaier, respectively, while Creed, Thompson, Gray, Alfredo and Sawalich followed suit in the top 10. Meanwhile, Love, Hill’s teammate at Richard Childress Racing, drifted back to 15th place.
Over the next three laps, Hill went into defensive mode as he transitioned between the outside and inside lanes to stall any momentum generated from within the pack through the corners and straightaways. Behind, Ryan Sieg and Sanchez remained in the top three, respectively, as Allgaier moved up to fourth place. Meanwhile, Jeb Burton, who was trying to draft his way to the front, settled in fifth.
Then with two laps remaining in the second stage period, the caution flew when Sanchez, who was racing in third place, got bumped and turned into the outside wall by Creed, who was being drafted by Allgaier, exiting the backstretch. Despite keeping his car straight to avoid being collided into by the field, Sanchez sustained a significant amount of right-side damage to his No. 48 Spiked Coolers Chevrolet entry and was eliminated from further contention.
Sanchez’s incident was enough for the second stage period scheduled to conclude on Lap 60 to officially conclude under caution as Hill notched his second Xfinity stage victory of the event. By then, Ryan Sieg, Creed, Allgaier, Thompson, Jeb Burton, Gray, Sawalich, Alfredo and Harrison Burton were scored in the top 10, respectively, as the event also reached its halfway mark.
During the stage break, the lead lap field led by Hill returned to pit road for service. Following the pit stops, Hill managed to beat Creed off of pit road first as they were followed by Gray, Allgaier, Sieg, Truex, Thompson, Sawalich, Love and Harrison Burton, respectively.
With 55 laps remaining, the final stage period commenced as Hill and Gray occupied the front row. At the start, both dueled in front of two-stacked lanes through the first two turns before the field started to fan out to three lanes through the backstretch. After Gray received a slight advantage from the inside lane, Hill fought back from the outside lane and they remained dead even at the start/finish line to complete the following lap.
Then with 53 laps remaining, Creed, who had been drafting Hill, received drafting help from Ford teammate Sieg to duel with Hill and lead the next lap period in his No. 00 Friends of Jaclyn Ford Mustang entry. Not long after, Sieg took his shot to the front as he went beneath Creed and led a lap for himself. Sieg and Creed would both duel against one another over the next three laps before Hill, who had drafted Sieg clear of Creed, reassumed the lead as he led with 49 laps remaining.
With less than 45 laps remaining, Sieg and Hill battled for the lead as Allgaier, Creed, Jeb Burton, Love, Gray, Thompson, Harrison Burton and Truex followed suit ahead of Sawalich, Mayer, Blaine Perkins, Leland Honeyman, Justin Bonsignore and Zilisch. As the field continued to remain in two-wide formation and stacked up through every turn and corner, Sieg would receive a draft from Allgaier to muscle ahead of Hill and lead with 40 laps remaining.
Then with 39 laps remaining, a total of eight competitors, primarily Chevrolet competitors led by Allgaier and including Hill, peeled off the racetrack to pit under green. Hill then spent extra time in his pit stall as his car had a mechanical issue. The issue would drop Hill off of the lead lap category as his hopes of winning the Daytona opener for a fourth consecutive year were spoiled.
With Hill out of contention, another wave of competitors led by Sammy Smith pitted. Amid the pit stops, Garrett Smithley slid into Patrick Emerling’s pit box as the latter was trying to enter his, which resulted in the former having to swerve into his pit stall.
Back on the track, Sieg, who was among many who had yet to pit, retained the lead with 35 laps remaining as Creed, Jeb Burton, Gray and Love followed suit in the top five. By then, Allgaier, who endured a slow pit service during his green-flag pit stop, was lapped.
Sieg would then lead a wave of competitors to pit road under green with 34 laps remaining. By then, however, the caution flew when Kris Wright, who was trying to enter pit road, was unable to reduce his speed as he T-boned into the rear of Josh Bilicki, which got Bilicki’s car briefly airborne and sideways on pit road while Wright blew the hood up on his entry as he parked his damaged car on pit road. Meanwhile, Hill, who tried to limp his car around the track, took his car to the garage as he officially retired with his mechanical issue.
“It’s either a rear hub or gear or combination of both,” Hill said in the garage. “It’s such a bummer. We had such a fast Bennett Chevrolet. Everybody at [Richard Childress Racing] and ECR [Engines] have done a great job building this race car. We showed that we were the dominant team again. I was able to get the stage wins there. I just wish that we could’ve lost this race on our own terms and it not be from a mechanical failure. This one’s gonna sting for a little bit, but we have Atlanta next week.”
Following the caution period and various pit strategies, the race restarted under green flag conditions with 25 laps remaining as Creed and Love occupied the front row in front of Harrison Burton, Mayer, Ryan Sieg and Gray. At the start, Creed and Love had respective drafting help from Mayer and Burton, respectively, through the first two turns. Love then received an extra push from Burton to shoot his No. 2 Whelen Chevrolet entry out to the lead from the inside lane. He would then be placed in defensive mode through the frontstretch as he led the next lap.
Down to the final 20 laps of the event, Love maintained a steady lead over Burton, Creed, Mayer, Ryan Sieg, Gray, Ryan Ellis, Sawalich, Zilisch and Bonsignore while Josh Williams, Eckes, Jordan Anderson, Sammy Smith, Thompson, Jeb Burton, Allgaier, Alfredo, Kvapil and Greg Van Alst followed suit in the top 20, respectively. With the top-20 competitors separated by within one second, Burton side-drafted and dueled with Love for the lead from the inside lane. Burton, however, would be edged by Love during the following lap as the former remained in front of Sieg from the inside lane while Love was being drafted by Creed.
With 15 laps remaining, Love, who reassumed the lead from Creed two laps earlier and went back into defensive mode, was leading ahead of Creed, Zilisch, Mayer and Sammy Smith while Gray, Allgaier, Sawalich, Kvapil and Bonsignore were scored in the top 10. Love would then have two stacked rows of competitors trailing him through the corners and straightaways while Zilisch and Creed dueled fiercely in front of Mayer, Gray, Sammy Smith, Gray and Allgaier for the runner-up spot.
Amid Love’s defensive mode and transitioning between all lanes, Zilisch made his move beneath Love for the lead with 13 laps remaining, which the former would lead a lap for himself as he had teammates Sammy Smith, Allgaier and Kvapil all in line on the inside lane. Shortly after, Kvapil shoved teammate Allgaier out of the lead draft as Love retained the lead over Zilisch and Creed during the following lap.
Down to the final 10 laps of the event, Love kept Creed in front of him with the lead as Mayer and Gray followed suit. With all four remaining in single-line formation, the outside lane started to gain more advantage over the inside lane led by Zilisch as Sawalich and Bonsignore powered up to sixth place. Creed then darted back and forth behind Love before he went underneath the latter entering the frontstretch. With the leaders navigating past the lapped competitor of Poole, Creed and Love dueled for the top spot during the next lap period.
Then with eight laps remaining, the caution flew when Bonsignore, who was in eighth place, got turned by Allgaier as Allgaier tried to split in between Bonsignore and teammate Sammy Smith through the first two turns. Bonsignore then collided with the side of Sammy Smith’s No. 8 TMC Chevrolet entry as Smith went up the track and clipped Alfredo. The contact caused Alfredo to lose his left rear tire and Bonsignore rear-ending his No. 19 M3 Technology Toyota Supra entry back into the outside wall while the rest of the field scattered to avoid the carnage. At the moment of caution, Love had maintained the lead over Creed, Mayer, Gray and Zilisch.
With the field restarting under green with three laps remaining, Love received a strong push from Gray to muscle ahead of Creed as the former two transitioned to the inside lane entering the first two turns. Through the backstretch, Creed would regain his momentum and shove Gray’s No. 54 Operation 300 Toyota Supra entry out of the draft as he closed back in on Love with drafting help from Zilisch. As Gray and Zilisch led two-stacked lanes, Love moved up the track to block an attempted move by Creed as he led the next lap.
Then through the backstretch with two laps remaining, the caution returned after Zilisch, who was mounting a charge from the middle lane before he got blocked by Creed, got bumped and turned by teammate Allgaier as he hit the outside wall head-on. As Allgaier skidded into the side of teammate Kvapil while trying to keep his car straight, Zilisch was hit by Sawalich while more names that included Eckes, Parker Retzlaff, Greg Van Alst and Ryan Ellis all wrecked in the backstretch. The carnage sent the field into overtime as Love maintained the lead.
The start of the first overtime attempt featured Love transitioning from the outside to the inside lane as he barely moved in front of Mayer’s No. 41 Audibel Ford Mustang entry with the lead entering the first two turns. With Love leading Mayer, Creed and Kvapil in tight formation on the inside lane, Gray tried to mount a charge from the outside lane. With the field fanning out and scattering through the backstretch, Love continued to lead through Turns 3 and 4 before Gray got to Love’s rear bumper entering the frontstretch.
Then as Love approached the start/finish line to take the white flag and start the final lap, a multi-car wreck ensued as Allgaier got turned sideways and clipped Josh Williams, where the latter shot up the track and clipped Jeb Burton before he hit the outside wall head-on. Amid the carnage, multiple names including Ryan Sieg, Leland Honeyman, Josh Bilicki, Jordan Anderson and Ryan Ellis were involved.
By then, NASCAR declared that Love had managed to start the final lap of the event before the caution was displayed. As a result, Love cycled back to the frontstretch to claim the checkered flag under caution as he emerged victorious for the first time at Daytona.
With the victory, Love notched his second career victory in the Xfinity Series division, all of which have occurred on superspeedway events, and his first since he notched his first career win at Talladega Superspeedway in April 2024. As an added bonus, Love notched the 98th Xfinity Series career victory and the 10th at Daytona in the series for Richard Childress Racing. In addition, he delivered the first Xfinity victory to his veteran crew chief Danny Stockman Jr. since the latter won at Auto Club Speedway with Austin Dillon in March 2016.
Having claimed the 2024 Xfinity Series’ Rookie-of-the-Year title, Love, who credited his spotter Brandon Benesch for navigating him with the moves to maintain the lead, including the final one in front of Mayer during the overtime attempt, sets his sights on contending the first ever Xfinity title for himself and the first for team owner Richard Childress in six years.
“I just listened to the guy up [at the spotter’s stand], Brandon Benesch,” Love said on the frontstretch on the CW Network. “I am so out of breath. Man, [I am] just so thankful to the good Lord above, for putting me in this position. So many people have helped me get to this point. We’re working on changing our culture here at [Richard Childress Racing]. We’re winners, we know we are. We all want to win a championship for Richard Childress. I’m ready to go get to Atlanta, I think, now. It’s awesome.”
“It takes me a little bit to get up front sometimes,” Love added. “I’m trying to play chess nowadays and not checkers at Daytona. Man, I’m lost for words. It’s Daytona. I always cry here when we do the national anthem. I’m starstruck. I love Florida. Thank everybody for coming out tonight. This place is super special to me and you guys are as good as Talladega fans now…We finally got a win for the Whelen car. That’s makes it even more special.”
As Love emerged victorious in first place, Sam Mayer settled in second place in his first event driving for the newly formed Haas Factory Team. Sheldon Creed, Mayer’s teammate, came home in third place while rookies Carson Kvapil and Taylor Gray finished in the top five.
Harrison Burton, Jordan Anderson, Dean Thompson, Jeremy Clements and Patrick Emerling completed the top 10 in the final running order.
Notably, Justin Allgaier, who was involved in the final lap multi-car melee mayhem, limped his damaged race car in 18th place while Ryan Sieg, Josh Williams, Leland Honeyman and Anthony Alfredo, all of whom were also involved and were unable to complete the final lap, finished 19th through 22nd, respectively. In addition, Sammy Smith, Justin Bonsignore, Connor Zilisch and William Sawalich settled in 24th, 25th, 27th and 28th, respectively, amid their respective late-race incidents while Hill was placed in 33rd place and with a DNF following his mechanical issue.
There were 24 lead changes for 11 different leaders. The race featured eight cautions for 39 laps. In addition, 18 of 38 starters finished on the lead lap.
Following the first event of the 2025 Xfinity Series season, Sheldon Creed leads the regular-season standings by nine points over Jesse Love, 13 over rookie Dean Thompson, 14 over rookie Taylor Gray and 16 over teammate Sam Mayer.
Results:
1. Jesse Love, 30 laps led
2. Sam Mayer
3. Sheldon Creed, seven laps led
4. Carson Kvapil
5. Taylor Gray, one lap led
6. Harrison Burton, one lap led
7. Jordan Anderson
8. Dean Thompson
9. Jeremy Clements
10. Patrick Emerling
11. Matt DiBenedetto
12. Christian Eckes
13. Caesar Bacarella, four laps led
14. Josh Bilicki
15. Joey Gase
16. Jeb Burton, four laps led
17. Ryan Truex
18. Justin Allgaier, 11 laps led
19. Ryan Sieg – OUT, Accident, 10 laps led
20. Josh Williams – OUT, Accident
21. Leland Honeyman – OUT, Accident
22. Anthony Alfredo – OUT, Accident
23. Ryan Ellis, one lap down
24. Sammy Smith, one lap down, one lap led
25. Justin Bonsignore, three laps down
26. Greg Van Alst – OUT, Accident
27. Connor Zilisch – OUT, Accident, one lap led
28. William Sawalich – OUT, Accident
29. Parker Retzlaff – OUT, Accident
30. Brennan Poole, 20 laps down
31. Garrett Smithley – OUT, Electrical
32. Kris Wright – OUT, Accident
33. Austin Hill – OUT, Rear End, 56 laps led, Stages 1 & 2 winner
34. Blaine Perkins – OUT, Power Steering
35. Nick Sanchez – OUT, Accident
36. Kyle Sieg – OUT, Rear End
37. Brandon Jones – OUT, Accident
38. Daniel Dye – OUT, Accident
With the 2025 NASCAR Xfinity Series season underway, the next event on the schedule is Atlanta Motor Speedway for the Bennett Transportation & Logistics 250. The event is scheduled to occur next Saturday, February 22, and air at 5 p.m. ET on the CW Network.
GRAY, THOMPSON START THE SEASON WITH SOLID RUNS AT DAYTONA Dean Thompson earns first top-10 finish in just his third Xfinity Series start
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 14, 2025) – Toyota rookie drivers Taylor Gray (fifth) and Dean Thompson (eighth) kicked off the season with strong top-10 finishes in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Daytona International Speedway.
Gray drove the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota GR Supra to his third career top-five finish, while Thompson earned his first top-10 finish in his third start in the series. He also matched Sam Hunt Racing’s best ever finish in Daytona with his eighth-place run.
Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) Daytona International Speedway Race 1 of 33 – 300 miles, 120 laps
TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, Jesse Love* 2nd, Sam Mayer* 3rd, Sheldon Creed* 4th, Carson Kvapil* 5th, TAYLOR GRAY 8th, DEAN THOMPSON 17th, RYAN TRUEX 25th, JUSTIN BONSIGNORE 28th, WILLIAM SAWALICH 37th, BRANDON JONES *non-Toyota driver
TOYOTA QUOTES
TAYLOR GRAY, No. 54 Operation 300 Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing
Finishing Position: 5th
Can you walk us through your lane choice on the final restart?
“I just feel like the restart lanes kind of have a lot of diversity in terms of which one works, and which one didn’t. I felt like the top lane was the way to be at the time just with the 2 (Jesse Love) up there. I felt like he was the best car. Honestly, launched really well and gave him a good push. I just pushed him too far out there for him to be able to get clear of the bottom and kind of got myself in a little bit of a trap. Then, I was able to pick up some good help behind me in search for it there. I can’t thank all my Joe Gibbs Racing guys enough. They brought me a really fast Operation 300 GR Supra. I’d say it was probably as fast as Xfinity Mobile. Just got to keep going, keep working, building momentum. It’s a long year.”
DEAN THOMPSON, No. 26 Thompson Pipe Group Toyota GR Supra, Sam Hunt Racing
Finishing Position: 8th
What does it mean to finish with a clean race car and a top-10 finish to start your season?
“It means a lot. I’ve never finished Daytona before in three years of trucks. It’s always a really big emphasis for me for this race to start the year off right. You can really dig yourself in a hole wrecking early and then you’ve got to claw your way back. I’m glad we finished, got good points with our Thompson Pipe Group Toyota and finished in the top-10. It was a good effort by everyone at Sam Hunt Racing.”
BRANDON JONES, No. 20 Menards/Swiffer Toyota GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing
Finishing Position: 37th
What happened out there?
“Yeah, it is unfortunate. It is way too early to be out of this race. There’s a lot of cars in line there and I had two teammates in front of me – and so I thought we were in a pretty good situation. The momentum kind of got choked up there in the bottom lane, and I avoided getting into our teammates, I was trying to pull that lane back a little bit. That’s not the place to get pushed, coming off of the corner – so I don’t know. I’ll go back. I’ll look at it. Always try to figure out how to get better at this craft, at this type of racing. But it looks to me right now there is nothing I could have done. That’s not how we wanted to begin our quest to go get a championship. I’ll get my guys rallied back around. I’m happy to be back at Joe Gibbs Racing in the No. 20, and have Menards and Swiffer on our race car this weekend. It was a big deal for me. There were a lot of people from Menards here, so pretty, pretty mad to be taken out here.”
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.
Brenden “Butterbean” Queen (No. 28 bestrepair.net Chevrolet) won the Ride the ‘Dente 200 at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, leading the final ten laps to score his first career ARCA Menards Series victory in his second career series start. His only other previous ARCA Menards Series start was in the 2019 race at Daytona; he finished 29th due to a crash after 49 laps.
Queen’s victory is the seventh ARCA Menards Series victory for team owner Mark Webb’s Pinnacle Racing Group team. The organization has scored wins with Luke Fenhaus in 2023 and with Connor Mosack and Connor Zilisch in 2024.
Two-time ARCA Menards Series East champion William Sawalich (No. 18 Starkey Toyota) finished second in his first ARCA Menards Series start on a superspeedway. Sawalich led twice for 29 laps, the most of any driver in the race.
Jason Kitzmiller (No. 97 A.L.L. Construction Chevrolet) finished third, his career best ARCA Menards Series finish.
Lavar Scott (No. 6 Max Siegel Inc. Chevrolet) finished fourth, the second time in three starts at Daytona International Speedway that he has finished in the fourth position.
Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves (No. 82 Wendy’s Chevrolet) finished fifth in his first ARCA Menards Series start. Castroneves, in a team car to race winner Brenden Queen, rallied from involvement in two separate on-track incidents to battle for the lead late in the race before setting for fifth.
Kole Raz (No. 76 Cyclum Renewable Truck Stops Ford) finished sixth in his first career ARCA Menards Series start. Raz won the ARCA Menards Series West race at Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway last April.
A.J. Moyer (No. 88 River’s Edge Cottages & RV Park Chevrolet) earned his best career series finish in seventh. Moyer is the son of 1981 ARCA Menards Series champion Larry Moyer.
Andy Jankowiak (No. 73 KLAS Motorsports Ford) rallied from involvement in the first incident of the race to finish eighth. Jankowiak was able to race up into the top five late in the race despite damage to nearly every side of his racecar.
Ryan Roulette (No. 67 VFW Ford) earned his second career top-ten finish with his ninth-place finish. Roulette, who is an active member of the United States Air Force, recovered from mechanical issues that forced him to miss the drop of the green flag and left him a lap down by lap two. He received the free pass on the first caution at lap three.
Bryce Haugeberg (No. 06 North Dakota State University Toyota) finished tenth, his first top-ten finish since he finished tenth at Salem Speedway in 2022. All three of Haugeberg’s top-ten results are tenth-place finishes.
Queen unofficially leads the ARCA Menards Series championship point standings by three points over Sawalich and by six points over Kitzmiller and Scott who are tied for third.
There were seven caution flags for 33 laps, holding the average speed to 96.450 miles per hour.
There were six lead changes among six drivers; Sawalich led 29 laps, Lawless Alan (No. 20 AUTOParkit Toyota) led 26, Scott and Queen 10 each; Haugeberg 4, and Scott Melton (No. 68 Melton-McFadden Insurance Agency Ford) 1.
Queen’s margin of victory was 0.094 seconds.
The next race for the ARCA Menards Series is at Phoenix Raceway on Friday, March 7, a combination race with the ARCA Menards Series West. The race will be televised live on FS1 at 8 pm ET/5 pm PT. The race will also be broadcast live on select affiliates of the MRN Radio network nationwide. Live timing and scoring data for all on-track activity is available at ARCARacing.com and up-to-the-minute updates are available by follow @ARCA_Racing on X (formerly known as Twitter).
About ARCA
The Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA), founded in 1953 by John and Mildred Marcum in Toledo, Ohio, and acquired by NASCAR in April 2018, is the leading grassroots stock car sanctioning body in the United States. Bridging the gap between NASCAR’s top three national touring series and weekly and regional tour racing all across the country, the organization sanctions over 100 races per year in the ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East, ARCA Menards Series West, ASA STARS National Tour, ASA CRA Super Series, ASA Midwest Tour, ASA Southern Super Series plus weekly racing at Toledo and Flat Rock Speedways. For more information about ARCA visit www.arcaracing.com, or follow ARCA on Facebook (@ARCARacing) and Twitter (@ARCA_Racing).
About Menards
A family-owned and run company started in 1958, Menards is recognized as the retail home center leader of the Midwest with 236 stores in 15 states. Menards is truly a one-stop shop for all of your home improvement needs featuring a full-service lumberyard and everything you need to plan a renovation or build a home, garage, cabin, shed, deck, fence or post frame building. You’ll find a large selection of lumber, roofing, siding, construction blocks, trusses, doors and windows, plus cabinets, appliances, countertops, flooring, lighting, paint, plumbing supplies and more. To complete the job, Menards has quality hand tools, power tools, fasteners, electrical tools plus storage options and supplies for everyone from the weekend warrior to the pro!
Menards has what you need to complete your outdoor projects and keep your yard in tip-top shape including mowers, trimmers, blowers, pressure washers and more, plus a beautiful garden center stocked with plants, shrubs, trees, landscaping tools, grass seed, fertilizer options, outdoor décor and patio furniture. Menards also has everyday essentials like health & beauty products, housewares, pet and wildlife supplies, automotive items and even groceries. And at Christmas, an Enchanted Forest display area with impressive trees, lighting, decorations, ornaments, inflatables and more.
Menards is known for friendly Customer Service and as the place to “Save Big Money” with low prices every day, and sales too! For more information, please visit Menards.com to learn about our store locations, offerings and services.
Brenden “Butterbean” Queen etched his name as a first-time winner in the ARCA Menards Series division by winning a crash-filled, Ride the ‘Dente 200 at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, February 15.
Queen, the reigning CARS Late Model Stock Car Tour champion from Chesapeake, Virginia, led the final 10 of 80-scheduled laps in an event that was mired with seven caution periods as a majority of the field were swept up in on-track carnages. After he drafted Lavar Scott to a brief lead over William Sawalich through the backstretch with 10 laps remaining, Queen would then make his move on Scott and receive a draft from teammate Helio Castroneves to shoot himself into the lead through the frontstretch. With the lead in his possession, Queen would maintain the top spot for the remainder of the event and fend off a final-lap charge from Sawalich to commence his first full-time ARCA campaign by winning at the World Center of Racing.
The starting lineup for the event was determined by the 2024 ARCA Menards Series’ owner’s standings per the series’ rulebook. This was due to the event’s scheduled practice session for this past Thursday being canceled due to inclement weather.
Based on the rulebook, William Sawalich, driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Camry entry that finished in first place in the 2024 ARCA owner’s standings, was awarded the pole position. He shared the front row with Lawless Alan, driver of the No. 20 Venturini Motorsports Toyota Camry entry that finished in second place in the 2024 ARCA owner’s standings.
When the 2025 ARCA Menards Series season commenced under green, Sawalich and Alan dueled for the lead in front of two-packed lanes through the first two turns. Through the backstretch, Alan received a draft from teammate Isabella Robusto to gain a slight advantage from the outside lane entering Turns 3 and 4. With the field cycling back to the start/finish line, Alan led the first lap as both he and Robusto transitioned in front of Sawalich to the inside lane.
Over the next two laps, Alan led a four-car breakaway from the rest of the field from the lead. With teammate Robusto, Sawalich and Kole Raz following Alan in a single-line formation, Lavar Scott led the rest of the field from fifth place while Jake Finch and Brenden “Butterbean” Queen were trying to gain ground of Scott for position.
Then on the third lap, the event’s first caution flew when Cody Dennison, who was racing behind Scott and Jake Finch on the outside lane and inside the top-10 mark, got loose off of Turn 4 and pounded the outside wall hard. Dennison’s incident triggered a multi-car wreck that involved numerous names, among which included Thad Moffitt, Corey Day, Dale Quarterley, Sean Corr, Caleb Costner, Eric Caudell, Michael Maples, Andy Jankowiak, Willie Mullins, Ed Pompa, Tim Richmond, Katherine Legge, Nolan Wilson, Amber Balcaen and Helio Castroneves. The carnage was enough for the event to be placed in red flag period for more than six minutes.
When the red flag lifted and the field proceeded under green flag conditions on the ninth lap, Alan, who restarted from the outside lane, quickly darted to the inside lane to regain a draft from teammate Robusto entering the first two turns. With Alan having drafting help from both Robusto and Sawalich through the first two turns, Raz received a draft from Queen from the backstretch to draw even with Alan and challenge for the lead. Amid the side-by-side battle, Alan surged ahead from the inside lane to lead the Lap 10 mark. He along with Robusto and Sawalich would surge ahead of the pack by the next lap while Scott challenged Raz for fourth place.
On Lap 11, the event’s second caution flew when Amber Balcaen, who was battling for a top-10 spot, slipped up the track in Turn 4 and clipped Garrett Mitchell (a.k.a: Cleetus McFarland). The contact sent both spinning as Kyle Steckly, who got sideways to avoid the carnage, spun to the bottom of the track and pounded the inside wall hard. Amid the carnage, AJ Moyer and Scott Melton weaved their way and escaped without sustaining any significant damage to their respective entries.
The start of the next restart period on Lap 17 featured Alan transitioning from the outside to the inside lane for a second time, where he regained the draft from teammate Robusto through the frontstretch. Both Alan and Robusto would then muscle away from the field through the first two turns and maintain their momentum through the backstretch. Behind, Sawalich lined up in third place while Raz and Scott dueled in front of two-packed lanes for fourth place.
During the following lap, the caution would quickly return as a vicious multi-car wreck ensued in Turn 2. The carnage started when Balcaen, who was racing towards the rear of the field and trying to rally from her previous incident, got sideways through the first two turns and spun as she had smoke coming out of the left side of her entry. During her spin, she was clipped by Mitchell, the latter of whom collided with Takuma Koga against the outside wall, before she was hit by an oncoming Becca Monopoli, who in turn was hit by Craig Bracken.
Amid the carnage, Bracken took a vicious hit into the inside wall on the driver’s left side before his damaged car shot back to the right and collided into the damaged car of Monopoli. In the process, Bracken proceeded to hit the inside SAFER barriers head-on before he came to a rest. Amid the carnage, all competitors, including Bracken and Monopoli, emerged from their wrecked race cars, though Bracken would be transported to a local hospital for further evaluation.
The start of the ensuing restart on Lap 24 did not last long due to an incident that involved Brayton Laster entering the first turn. During the caution period, a majority of the field led by Alan pitted for service while the rest led by Bryce Haugeberg remained on the track.
As the field restarted under green on Lap 30, Haugeberg and Queen dueled for the lead as the field fanned out to three-packed lanes through the first two turns. Through the backstretch, Queen began to surge ahead with drafting help from the middle lane and Haugeberg remained on the inside lane while Sawalich was trying to charge from the outside lane. Queen then got shoved out of the lead and the middle lane by Scott Melton as the latter dueled with Sawalich entering Turn 3. With Alan surging his way back towards the front and drafting Melton, the latter led the next lap ahead of Sawalich. Melton and Sawalich would continue to duel for the lead in front of Alan, Robusto and two-stacked lanes during the following lap before Sawalich surged ahead from the outside lane.
On Lap 34, the event’s fifth caution flew when Melton, who earlier lost the lead and was mired as the third car in line on the inside lane, got sideways while being drafted by Alan in Turn 1. As the lead group scattered to avoid Melton, the latter, who was trying to straighten his car through the degree banking turn, clipped Castroneves and sent him up towards the outside wall and back down to the apron hard.
With the field restarting under green for a one-lap dash before the event’s halfway period on Lap 40, Sawalich briefly rocketed ahead of Scott and the field exiting the frontstretch before he navigated his way through the first two turns. Sawalich would then receive drafting help from Raz through the backstretch to remain in the lead as Scott tried to mount a charge entering Turns 3 and 4. As the field fanned out entering the frontstretch, Scott, who was racing from the outside lane, used the momentum and a draft from Robusto to lead the event’s halfway mark on Lap 40 over Sawalich.
Scott would proceed to transition from the outside lane to the inside lane during the following lap as he had Sawalich drafting him. By then, Robusto was the lead competitor from the outside lane as she was in line ahead of Jeff Scofield, Alan and Jake Finch while Scott, who remained on the inside lane, led the next lap.
Then with 36 laps remaining, the caution returned when Robusto, who was racing in the top five and leading the outside lane, received a bump from Scofield that sent her No. 55 Venturini Motorsports Toyota entry into the backstretch’s outside wall. She then veered back across the track and collided into both Scofield and Corey Day while Scofield veered back to the right and was hit by Alan, which left the pole winner with significant damage to his No. 20 Venturini Motorsports Toyota entry and knocked him out of contention.
Down to the final 30 laps, the field restarted under green. At the start, Sawalich transitioned from the outside to the inside lane to lead Scott, Finch and the field through the first two turns. Sawalich continued to lead a long line of competitors racing in the inside lane from the backstretch and back to the frontstretch. With Sawalich leading the next lap, Scott and Finch continued to occupy the top-three spots while Tim Richmond and Queen were in the top five.
With 25 laps remaining, the top-10 competitors racing in the lead group were lined up in single-line formation as Sawalich maintained the lead ahead of Scott, Finch, Richmond and Queen. Behind, Jason Kitzmiller occupied sixth place as he was pursued by Bryce Haugeberg, Castroneves, Andy Jankowiak and Ryan Roulette. Sawalich would continue to lead with 20 laps remaining as the top-10 competitors were separated within one second of one another.
Shortly after, the field started to fan out to two-packed lanes as Raz and Moyer joined the lead pack. With names that included Castroneves, Richmond and Raz migrating to gain a run from the outside lane, Sawalich maintained the lead from the inside lane while Finch, Scott, Queen and Kitzmiller were in the top five. Richmond, who was slipping towards the back of the lead group, would then draw a late caution with 17 laps remaining when he got loose in Turn 4 and spun towards the infield. At the same time, Finch, who was in second place, got sideways off the front nose of Scott as the former spun and backed his No. 25 Venturini Motorsports Toyota entry into the inside wall.
Down to the final 12 laps, the field led by Sawalich and Scott restarted under green. During the start, Sawalich rocketed ahead with the lead as Scott transitioned to the inside lane behind Sawalich entering the first two turns. The latter would maintain the lead in front of Scott and Queen while Castroneves made his way into fourth place in front of Jankowiak and Kitzmiller. Moyer would also carve his way towards the top-six mark and Castroneves would settle behind Queen while Sawalich led Scott with 10 laps remaining.
Then through the backstretch, Scott made a move to the outside lane and received a draft from Chevrolet teammates Queen and Castroneves to rocket past Sawalich with the lead. After Scott led through Turns 3 and 4, Queen would then duel with Scott and lead the following lap as he was drafted by teammate Castroneves. Queen would proceed to muscle his No. 28 Pinnacle Racing Group Chevrolet entry ahead of the field as Castroneves and Scott led a side-by-side charge in front of the stacked field through the backstretch.
With five laps remaining, Queen maintained the lead in front of Castroneves, Scott, Jankowiak and Sawalich as Kitzmiller, AJ Moyer, Raz, Haugeberg and Ryan Roulette, all of whom were racing within one second of one another, trailed in the top 10 and amid two stacks of pack racing. Jankowiak then tried to mount a charge from the outside lane, but he could not gain enough draft to get close to Queen and Castroneves. Jankowiak would then get shoved out of the draft amid a three-wide action over the next lap as Kitzmiller and Raz tried to overtake him. Amid the action, Queen and Castroneves maintained the top-two spots ahead of Scott, Sawalich and Moyer.
When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Queen remained in the lead ahead of Castroneves, Sawalich, Kitzmiller, Scott and Moyer. Through the first two turns, Sawalich received drafting help from Kitzmiller to rocket past Castroneves. With Castroneves losing ground, Sawalich drove right to Queen’s rear bumper as Scott tried to mount a charge with drafting help from Raz. With Sawalich and the rest of the competitors in the lead group unable to gain a last-corner momentum through Turns 3 and 4, Queen maintained the top spot entering the frontstretch and claimed the checkered flag for the victory.
With the victory, Queen, who is driving the No. 28 Chevrolet entry for Pinnacle Racing Group on a full-time basis and for the series’ championship, notched his first ARCA career win in his second series start. His lone previous start in the ARCA division occurred at Daytona in 2019, where he finished in 29th place while driving for Vizion Motorsports. As a result, Queen, who competed in three NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series events with TRICON Garage in 2024, joined Corey Heim and Greg Van Alst as competitors to claim a first career ARCA victory at Daytona over the previous five seasons.
As added bonuses, Queen recorded the 21st ARCA victory at Daytona for the Chevrolet nameplate and the first Daytona victory for Pinnacle Racing Group, a team that achieved six ARCA victories between Connor Zilisch and Connor Mosack in 2024.
Photo by Patrick Sue-Chan for SpeedwayMedia.com.
“Oh my Lord! Bean nation, baby!” Queen, who celebrated with the American flag on the frontstretch, said on FOX. “We brought the mullet to the ARCA Series, baby. I’m just a late model guy that worked hard to get this shot. I didn’t think [Daytona] would be where the first win came, but we’re going to take it. This [Pinnacle Racing] group right here, they deserve this, baby. I knew I had tough shoes to fill taking over from [Connor] Zilisch, but I hope this makes [the team] happy that they signed me and I hope that this is the first of many. We’re going to the Waffle House and we’re going to party it up with some chocolate milk.”
William Sawalich, the reigning two-time ARCA Menards Series East champion who led a race-high 29 laps from pole position, settled in second place to commence his part-time campaign in the ARCA division this season. Sawalich is scheduled to compete as a full-time NASCAR Xfinity Series competitor for Joe Gibbs Racing this season.
“I definitely didn’t anticipate [the event] being that long,” Sawalich said. “That was a pretty long time in the car. I just wish we had a little bit more there. [I’m] Just learning all I could.”
Jason Kitzmiller and Lavar Scott finished third and fourth, respectively. Meanwhile, Castroneves ended up in fifth place in his ARCA debut and just before he was involved in a post-race wreck with sixth-place finisher Kole Raz.
AJ Moyer, Jankowiak, Roulette and Bryce Haugeberg completed the top 10 in the final running order.
There were seven lead changes for six different leaders. The event featured seven cautions for 33 laps. Overall, only 13 of 40 starters finished on the lead lap.
Results:
1. Brenden Queen
2. William Sawalich
3. Jason Kitzmiller
4. Lavar Scott
5. Helio Castroneves
6. Kole Raz
7. AJ Moyer
8. Andy Jankowiak
9. Ryan Roulette
10. Bryce Haugeberg
11. Hunter Deshautelle
12. Jason White
13. Ed Pompa
14. Jeff Scofield, three laps down
15. Jake Finch, five laps down
16. Alex Cubb, six laps down
17. Tim Richmond – OUT, Mechanical
18. Lawless Alan, 28 laps down
19. Tim Viens, 29 laps down
20. Bryan Dauzat – OUT, Mechanical
21. Isabella Robusto – OUT, Mechanical
22. Corey Day – OUT, Accident
23. Scott Melton – OUT, Mechanical
24. Brayton Laster – OUT, Accident
25. Takuma Koga – OUT, Accident
26. Becca Monopoli – OUT, Accident
27. Craig Bracken – OUT, Accident
28. Nolan Wilson – OUT, Mechanical
29. Amber Balcaen – OUT, Accident
30. Garrett Mitchell – OUT, Accident
31. Michael Maples – OUT, Accident
32. Kyle Steckly – OUT, Accident
33. Dale Quarterley – OUT, Accident
34. Cody Dennison – OUT, Accident
35. Willie Mullins – OUT, Accident
36. Sean Corr – OUT, Accident
37. Thad Moffitt – OUT, Accident
38. Caleb Costner – OUT, Accident
39. Katherine Legge – OUT, Accident
40. Eric Caudell – OUT, Accident
With the 2025 ARCA Menards Series season underway, the next event on the schedule is Phoenix Raceway for the General Tire 150. The event is scheduled to occur on March 7 and air at 8 p.m. ET on FS1.