Home Blog Page 721

Richard Childress Racing and Bank OZK Announce a Multi-Year, Multi-Race Partnership

The Top-Performing Bank Will Be Featured as Primary Sponsor on the No. 8 Chevrolet for Select NASCAR Cup Series Races and Serve as RCR’s Corporate Banking Partner

WELCOME, N.C. (January 28, 2025) – Richard Childress Racing announced today a multi-year partnership with Bank OZK (Nasdaq: OZK), a nationally recognized leader in the financial services industry. The bank will serve as a primary partner of Kyle Busch and the No. 8 Chevrolet for multiple races throughout the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season, beginning at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Sunday, March 23.

“We are excited to partner with Richard Childress Racing on their business and on the racetrack,” said George Gleason, Bank OZK Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “We look forward to cheering on Kyle Busch and team this season.”

With a heritage dating back to 1903, Bank OZK will leverage the RCR partnership to increase their brand exposure with over 75 million loyal NASCAR fans.

In addition to on-car branding, Bank OZK will become RCR’s official banking partner and provide the organization with a comprehensive suite of financial services.

“We’re proud to partner with a true leader in the banking industry,” said Torrey Galida, President of Richard Childress Racing. “Much like everyone here at Richard Childress Racing, Bank OZK has a drive to be the best, to champion teamwork, and to relentlessly pursue excellence. We look forward to welcoming them as a business partner and representing their brand on and off the track this season.”

For more information, please visit rcrracing.com.

About Bank OZK:

Bank OZK (Nasdaq: OZK) is a regional bank providing innovative financial solutions delivered by expert bankers with a relentless pursuit of excellence. Established in 1903, Bank OZK conducts banking operations in more than 240 offices in nine states including Arkansas, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, Texas, Tennessee, New York, California and Mississippi and had $38.26 billion in total assets as of December 31, 2024. For more information, visit www.ozk.com.

About Richard Childress Racing:

Richard Childress Racing (www.rcrracing.com) is a renowned, performance-driven racing, marketing and manufacturing organization. Incorporated in 1969, RCR has celebrated over 50 years of racing and earned more than 200 victories and 16 championships, including six in the NASCAR Cup Series with the legendary Dale Earnhardt. RCR was the first organization to win championships in the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Truck Series and is a three-time winner of the Daytona 500 (1998, 2007, 2018). Its 2025 NASCAR Cup Series lineup includes two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch (No. 8 Chevrolet) and 2017 Coca-Cola 600 winner and 2018 Daytona 500 champion Austin Dillon (No. 3 Chevrolet). RCR fields a full-time NASCAR Xfinity Series program with Jesse Love (No. 2 Chevrolet) and Austin Hill (No. 21 Chevrolet).

1991 Mazda RX-7 GTO and 1985 Lola Corvette GTP Win Inaugural Historic Sportscar Racing IMSA Classic at the Rolex 24 At Daytona

  • Tom Long Wins GT and Overall in the Four-Rotor Mazda Heritage Collection RX-7
  • Scooter Gabel First in GTP and Second Overall in Alegra Motorsports Chevy-V8 Powered Lola Corvette GTP

DAYTONA BEACH, Florida (January 28, 2025) – From the unmistakable shrill howl of the four-rotor 1991 Mazda RX-7-001 GTO to the thundering Chevrolet V-8 growl of a 1985 Lola Corvette GTP, the winners of the inaugural Historic Sportscar Racing (HSR) IMSA Classic Saturday morning at the 63rd Rolex 24 At Daytona truly offered race fans and competitors alike a period-correct cross section of IMSA’s vast motorsports heritage and competition history.

Tom Long drove the Mazda Heritage Collection 1991 Mazda RX-7 GTO to the overall and GT class victories while Scooter Gabel wheeled the Alegra Motorsports prepared Chevy-powered Lola Corvette GTP to second overall and first in the Prototype category to become the first winners of what is a new tradition at each year’s IMSA season-opening Rolex 24 At Daytona.

Fitting right in, third overall Saturday went to Jim Norman in his mighty twin-turbocharged 1980 Interscope Porsche 935 K3, which brought the familiar Porsche flat-six turbo whistling roar to the race as an icon of IMSA’s GTX era.

Announced just this past December, the HSR IMSA Classic is an invitational race that will annually showcase the sanctioning body’s more than 50-year history at the Rolex 24. The inaugural IMSA Classic this past weekend featured cars from the first three decades of IMSA sports car racing from 1973 through 1993. A rotation of other significant IMSA eras will be showcased each year in future editions of the IMSA Classic.

Holding some Daytona history as noteworthy as the legendary machines they drove in the IMSA Classic, all three drivers on the overall podium have earned Rolex 24 podium finishes in their careers, including class wins for Gabel (2007 – GT) and Norman (2013 – GX) and a third-place GT podium showing for Long in 2011 in a Dempsey Racing Mazda RX-8. Among Long’s co-drivers that year was Dempsey Racing owner and driver Patrick Dempsey.

“It’s always special to get to victory lane at Daytona, especially to do it with Mazda,” Long said. “When I was on the podium here in the Rolex 24 it was with Mazda, and here we are again. It’s just exhilarating to be back here again at Daytona. The Rolex 24 is such a special race to me. It is one all racers look forward to internationally all year, to come to Daytona here in January and kick-off the season. And now to do it on this beautiful sunny day in the morning in a Mazda RX-7 and make a little history winning the inaugural IMSA Classic, I couldn’t think of a better way to start the Rolex 24 weekend.”

In addition to their respective Rolex 24 class victories, Norman and Gabel also co-drove the 935 K3 prepared by Alegra to a Run Group win just this past November in the 10th running of the HSR Classic Daytona 24 Hour presented by Mission Foods.

“It’s always amazing to make it to the podium at Daytona,” Gabel said. “This a cool event, it’s neat to be at the first one, and I am fortunate to have won the Rolex 24 and the Classic 24 a couple of times. So it’s nice to be in victory lane again for another new race at Daytona. As time wears on, it will be really cool to say you did the first IMSA Classic because this event is going to get huge.”

A full three-day race event on Rolex 24 weekend, the IMSA Classic started with opening practice Thursday afternoon, qualifying Friday morning and a qualifying race that evening. The main event Saturday morning was a 30-minute IMSA Classic feature race that set the stage for the 63rd Rolex 24 as the last on-track activity prior to the twice-around-the-clock WeatherTech Championship season opener.

Next up on the 2025 HSR schedule is the opening event of this year’s championship schedule with the first March running of the HSR Sebring Classic 12 Hour Presented by Mission Foods, March 7 – 9, at Sebring International Raceway. The Classic 12 Hour is the debut event in the inaugural full season of the HSR Classic Endurance Championship Presented by Mission Foods, the first major endurance race championship in the U.S. for vintage and historic sports cars.

The Sebring weekend also includes the HSR Sebring Historics that begin 2025’s full schedule of points paying sprint, endurance and feature race series championships.

For more information, please visit www.HSRRace.com.

About HSR: An International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) property, Historic Sportscar Racing (HSR) was formed in the mid-1970s with an event at Road Atlanta. There was one goal then and it remains true today: to celebrate the racing cars from the past. As a “time machine” of sights and sounds, HSR provides a venue for competitors and spectators alike to share in the wonderful history and excitement created by the cars that competed at race tracks around the world. HSR currently sanctions eight vintage and historic racing events at some of the world’s most renowned race tracks, including Road Atlanta, Sebring International Raceway, Daytona International Speedway and more. The complete schedule and full event information can be found on HSR’s website at www.HSRRace.com. Look for the HSR Channel on YouTube and follow HSR on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/HSRrace/ and on Twitter X at @HSR_race and Instagram @HistoricSportscarRacing.

RAPPER BIG BOI NAMED AMBETTER HEALTH 400 PACE CAR OFFICIAL

HAMPTON, Ga. (Jan. 28, 2025) – Diamond-selling recording artist, rapper, songwriter, producer, actor, and philanthropist Big Boi will lead NASCAR’s stars to the green flag at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Feb. 23.

Well known as one half of Outkast and the Dungeon Family’s foremost wordsmith, Big Boi will serve as the Honorary Pace Car Official during the Ambetter Health 400.

Big Boi’s career has been prolific, achieving stardom as a member of the hip hop duo Outkast and topping the charts with hits like “Ms. Jackson”, “So Fresh, So Clean”, and “The Way You Move”. The legendary duo sold over 25 million albums and garnered seven GRAMMY Awards, becoming the first and only hip hop artist to win the Grammy for album of the year.

In 2010, Big Boi made his proper introduction as a solo artist with Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty. A modern classic, it captured #3 on the Billboard Top 200 and landed on Pitchfork’s “100 Best Albums of the Decade So Far’.” Following a succession of high-profile album releases, Big Boi released his Boomiverse in 2017. The smash single “All Night” soundtracked a high-profile Apple Animoji commercial, blew up radio, and clocked 40 million streams within a year. In addition to his music career, Big Boi has made several appearances in film and television, including a starring role in the 2007 film “Who’s Your Caddy?” as well as his own RV renovation-based show on Hulu called “Big RV Remix”

As the Pace Car Official for the Ambetter Health 400, Big Boi will guide the NASCAR Cup Series grid through the opening pace laps and set them loose for 400 miles of action on Atlanta’s high banks.

The Ambetter Health 400 is the main event of Atlanta’s spring NASCAR weekend, which features races across all three of the sanctioning body’s national touring series. The NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series hits the 28-degree high banks first for the Fr8 Racing 208 at 2 p.m. ET on Saturday, Feb. 22, followed by the second leg of Atlanta’s NASCAR Doubleheader: the Bennett Transportation and Logistics 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series event at 5 p.m. ET. NASCAR’s Cup Series stars duel for 400 miles on Sunday, Feb. 23, at 3 p.m. in the Ambetter Health 400.

Tickets and camping accommodations for the Feb. 21-23 Ambetter Health 400 NASCAR weekend are available at www.AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com.

About the Ambetter Health 400 weekend:

Atlanta’s spring NASCAR weekend is headlined by the Ambetter Health 400 on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025, with intense, superspeedway pack racing that challenges NASCAR’s best and dazzles fans.

The race weekend also features the 11th year of Atlanta’s same-day NASCAR doubleheader on Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025. The thrills of the Fr8 208 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race and the Bennett Transportation and Logistics 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series race all happen in one action-packed day.

More information on the Feb. 21-23, 2025, Ambetter Health 400 weekend and ticket availability can be found online at AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com.

Follow Atlanta Motor Speedway:

Keep track of all of Atlanta Motor Speedway’s events by following on Twitter, Instagram, and become a Facebook fan. Keep up with all the latest news and information with the Atlanta Motor Speedway mobile app.

Sea Best Returns to Kaulig Racing and Ty Dillon for 2025 Season

Sea Best Will Serve As a Primary Partner for the No. 10 Chevrolet for 20 Races

Welcome, N.C. (January 28, 2025) – Kaulig Racing announced today, Sea Best returns to the organization as a primary partner for Ty Dillon and the No. 10 Chevrolet for 20 races during the 2025 season starting with the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium on February 2.

“This year is shaping up to be a great one,” said Dillon. “Sea Best joined our team for a race last season, and to have them back in a larger role for 2025 is exciting. As a trusted retail seafood brand from a family-owned company dedicated to delivering high-quality products, Sea Best is the perfect match for NASCAR fans. Their seafood lineup provides endless options for experienced home chefs like my wife, Haley, or the beginner in the kitchen. I look forward to representing their brand on and off the track, and there’s no better place to start the season together than at the return to Bowman Gray Stadium.”

Returning to NASCAR for its second season with Kaulig Racing and Dillon, Sea Best proudly serves as the flagship brand of Beaver Street Fisheries, a family-owned and operated company based in Jacksonville, Florida. As one of the nation’s largest importers, manufacturers, and distributors of seafood and meat, the Sea Best brand is synonymous with premium-quality seafood. Its product lineup includes a wide range of frozen fish fillets—such as ahi tuna, mahi-mahi, cod, and catfish—along with shrimp, scallops, and lobster.

With options to suit every taste, Sea Best ensures there’s something for every seafood lover. Sea Best products are available in grocery stores across the United States, U.S. Territories, and several international markets, including Anguilla, Barbados, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, and the Dominican Republic.

“We are thrilled to continue our partnership with Kaulig Racing and Dillon for a second season,” said Mark Frisch, Executive Vice President of Beaver Street Fisheries. “As a family-owned brand committed to quality and excellence, aligning with NASCAR’s passionate fanbase allows us to connect with loyal consumers who share our values. We’re proud to be part of this incredible journey and look forward to an exciting season ahead.”

The 2025 season kicks off at the historical Bowman Gray Stadium on Sunday, February 2, at 8 p.m. ET with coverage live on FOX and the Motor Racing Network (MRN).

Sea Best 2025 Primary Races:

  • February 2: Bowman Gray Stadium
  • February 23: Atlanta Motor Speedway
  • March 24: Circuit of the Americas
  • March 16: Las Vegas Motor Speedway
  • March 23: Homestead-Miami Speedway
  • April 6: Darlington Raceway
  • April 27: Talladega Superspeedway
  • May 11: Kansas Speedway
  • June 8: Michigan International Speedway
  • June 22: Pocono Raceway
  • July 6: Chicago Street Race
  • July 13: Sonoma Raceway
  • July 20: Dover Motor Speedway
  • July 27: Indianapolis Motor Speedway
  • August 3: Iowa Speedway
  • August 16: Richmond International Raceway
  • August 23: Daytona International Speedway
  • September 21: New Hampshire Motor Speedway
  • October 5: Charlotte Motor Speedway
  • November 2: Phoenix International Speedway  


    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 27 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. To learn more about the team, visit kauligracing.com.

About Sea Best®

Sea Best® is the flagship brand of Beaver Street Fisheries Inc., a family-owned and operated company founded in 1950 in Jacksonville, FL. The seafood brand is sold in retailers nationwide. Sea Best offers a complete line of frozen fish fillets including premium varieties (ahi tuna, mahi, grouper, snapper), value varieties (cod, catfish, whiting), value-added and breaded seafood (stuffed clams, shrimp, calamari, scallops) and shellfish (lobster, crab). For more information, visit seabest.com.

About Beaver Street Fisheries

Beaver Street Fisheries™ is a leading importer, manufacturer and distributor of quality seafood and meat from the USA and worldwide. For more than 70 years, the Jacksonville-based company has provided premium products to the foodservice industry and retail markets. The company’s flagship brand, Sea Best®, is sold in retailers nationwide. For more information, visit www.beaverstreetfisheries.com.

Ryan Preece Ready for RFK Debut This Weekend at The Clash

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Clash at Bowman Gray Media Availability | Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Ryan Preece, driver of the No. 60 RFK Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse, will be making his debut with the team this weekend during the Clash at Bowman Gray. Preece took part in a media question and answer session earlier today and discussed how the transition has gone over the offseason.

RYAN PREECE, Driver, No. 60 RFK Ford Mustang Dark Horse – YOU’VE MOVED TO RFK FOR THIS SEASON. CAN YOU GIVE US AN OVERVIEW OF WHAT YOUR OFFSEASON WAS LIKE? “I definitely feel like the offseason, as many of you guys have kind of felt, it’s gone. It went quicker than it came, so, for me, as soon as we landed from Phoenix I was at RFK that next day and really, outside of the week that my wife and my daughter and I went to Connecticut to visit family and friends, it’s been there. So, there’s a lot to really soak up and really take in, just the whole process and really still learning all of that. I’m excited about it and, obviously, having all of the different partners and seeing how they service all of those different partners as well as having the opportunity to be back with Kroger and all the different brands that Kroger brings and BAM Marketing and everybody there with Tad. I’m excited about it. I’m definitely grateful for this opportunity and definitely looking forward to the Cook Out Clash this weekend. As much as it is an exhibition race, anybody that says they don’t want to win at Bowman Gray is lying, so I’m ready to get there and do double duty and get this season going because, that’s another thing, when you’re talking about it and people are asking questions, you just feel like you’re answering those same questions over and over and you’re just ready to get going to the racetrack and start doing what you’ve done all your life.”

CAN YOU EXPAND ON WHY YOU FEEL SO STRONGLY ABOUT BOWMAN GRAY BEING SUCH A PRESTIGIOUS PLACE A DRIVER WANTS TO WIN AT? “Winning in general you want to do, right? But, Bowman Gray and the history that’s behind it, you look back at some of the names and adding your name to that list of the Cup Series going and winning at Bowman Gray, that’s where NASCAR was pretty much born, so it would be pretty special to go and do that, and what better way than to kick it off here in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. That’s number one is to try and get through this weekend and it’s a great way to really start the season. One of my strengths is certainly short track racing and we’ve made the Clash three out of three years and it would be a great way to get this team up and going. It’s a good opportunity to build momentum.”

HOW DO YOU VIEW THIS OPPORTUNITY WITH RFK? IS IT THE BEST ONE YOU’VE HAD SO FAR IN THE CUP SERIES? “I feel like every opportunity has had a lot of different life lessons and certain things that I feel like have helped me get ready for this moment. I had a great time with Stewart-Haas and Tony and Chad and all those guys over there. There were some challenges, but there was also some points that were good, so all lessons that I’m bringing here to RFK and certainly you look at what Brad, Jack and the Fenway Group – what they’ve done over the past three years – it’s pretty impressive and being teammates with Chris in the past and seeing what he’s accomplished over the past three years in winning races, so, yeah, my expectations are high. They’ve always been high. I don’t ever set a bar low. I always want to set it really high and winning races is the goal. I didn’t move down here and do the sacrifices and put my family through what I’ve done to come down here and just be a part of the show. That’s not who I am as a racer. I’m somebody that wants to win races. It doesn’t matter if I’m at my local short track or racing Cup on Sunday. The goal is to win.”

THE CLASH WAS ALWAYS AT DAYTONA AND NOW THIS IS THE FOURTH STRAIGHT YEAR IT’S IN A DIFFERENT PLACE. DO YOU LIKE THE FACT NASCAR IS WILLING TO EXPERIMENT AND MOVE THIS EVENT AROUND? “I think change is sometimes a good thing. I definitely applaud them. We went to L.A. and really dabbled over there and now they’re bringing it to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, which we’ve already touched on the history of Bowman Gray, but that’s a city that gets behind racing. That’s a city that gets behind Bowman Gray Stadium. For anybody that’s never been to that racetrack on their typical weekly show, the place is jammed. It’s packed. It’s a wanted racetrack in the community, so anytime that you can go to a place that loves racing and supports the racetrack, that’s awesome because, to be honest with you, for the twenty-plus drivers that start that race on Sunday, the energy that they’re gonna see from that community and people that are there, even though it’s probably gonna be 42 degrees or whatever it is, it’s gonna be packed and it’s gonna be awesome.”

ARE THERE OTHER TRACKS OR CITIES THAT WOULD HAVE THE SAME ENERGY THAT WOULD BE DESERVING TO MAYBE HOST A RACE LIKE THIS? “It’s really tough because there are different little pockets in the United States that are really passionate about racing. The challenge of it is it’s February, but, if I was gonna say there’s somewhere that would be really cool to kick off Speedweeks or basically Speed Month when it comes to racing in February all the way through, is New Smyrna. If they weren’t gonna be able to go to Bowman Gray Stadium and they were looking for another venue, New Smyrna, to me, seems like such a perfect fit when it comes to the racing, the way to kick off Speedweeks for the super late models or tour type modifieds and with all the dirt racing going on 45 minutes down the road, that, to me, would be the track that would make the most sense, but, obviously, certainly I’m excited about going to Bowman Gray and giving the opportunity to Winston-Salem to host this historic event.”

TIM BROWN AND BURT MYERS ARE COMPETING THIS WEEKEND. WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO YOU TO SEE THOSE GUYS HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO RACE AT THIS LEVEL? “I’m really happy for those guys. I’ve actually raced against Tim and Burt, here and there. Me being from Connecticut, I’ve known them and raced against them since I was 15 years old, so it’s almost 20 years. So, to see Tim, who works on these cars, have the opportunity to race one at his home track, where he’s won, I don’t know, 10 championships. Don’t quote me on how many that may be, I just know it’s a lot and winning a lot of races, as well as Burt. Those are two of the hometown guys having the opportunity to do it at the highest level and they’re gonna be good. I think Tim and Burt, they have a lot of experience. That’s one thing. I grew up racing quarter miles. That’s where at L.A. and some of my strengths, that’s what I enjoyed about going to L.A. and obviously Bowman Gray, and now I feel like I’ve got two other guys that have raced against me on quarter miles and kind of know my ins and outs of it all, so certainly excited for those guys in the dirty south as Burt calls it and racing with them in their modified class on Saturday.”

WHAT’S IT LIKE TO SEE SOMEONE LIKE TIM, WHO WORKS ON CARS AT THIS LEVEL AND WORKING ON HIS OWN CAR FOR THIS EVENT, GET THIS OPPORTUNITY? “I don’t want to take away from Burt because I’ve seen pictures and videos of him working on his and he’s probably just getting a crash course with it all, but, for me, there’s different types of racers. There are guys that just show up and race. I did that when I was younger and I just chose to go down this path. I enjoy the process and the setup stuff and all that. This is just who I want to be as a race car driver, so I guess for the style of driver that I am and seeing Tim and seeing Burt and really getting their hands in there and doing it, they’re gonna see the differences of what we call in the modified fives and twos. Your as basic setup as you can get. This is just a totally different world that Burt or Tim has dealt with for a while now, so he sees it, but now he’s gonna feel it and it just opens up your eyes to how many different ways there are to set a race car up and make speed doing it.”

SOME PEOPLE FROM YOUR PART OF THE COUNTRY LIKE GOING DOWN SOUTH TO RACE AND SOME DETEST IT. YOU’VE ALWAYS SUPPORTED IT, SO WHAT IS THE CLASH YOU HAVE AS TO WHY YOU LIKE IT AND SOME OF YOUR NEW ENGLAND COMPETITORS DON’T? “What I did is I ran a true Bowman Gray modified race one time. I actually races the Whelan Southern Modified Tour, which is traditional wide tire car, probably I think three times. So, there are some differences. The Bowman Gray style modified, it’s not a spooled rear end, the motors are a little different as well as a narrow tire. So, there are some little differences, but at the end of the day, from what I understand, their weekly show it’s exactly that, it’s a show. As much as it is racing, you’re there to entertain fans and sometimes, as much as I want to go and win by a lap and lap people, part of racing is entertaining and that’s something that they definitely still do, which sometimes comes at the detriment of their race cars, which that’s expensive. I don’t necessarily support that at all, but it’s different and obviously they pack that place every single week, so there’s a lot of passionate fans and I think the madhouse TV show that was on, I can’t remember what channel it was, but that brought a lot of attention to it. There are a lot of personalities and they certainly know how to put a show on, but, certainly, guys like us up north, some of the quarter miles that we have, just a different style of racing. You can definitely get your knuckles a little bloody if you know how to race rough, but you just don’t take it to the extent sometimes that it seems like it gets to there.”

TWO YEARS AGO AT THE CLASH YOU WERE MIXING IT UP AND RACING FOR THE WIN THERE. HOW MUCH DO YOU THINK ABOUT THAT RACE? WHAT THAT ONE THAT GOT AWAY? “That was one that would have been nice just from a momentum side. That could have really helped, so, yeah, it would have been great just to win – not that it was a points paying event or anything like that – but it doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter if you’re racing a micro, a modified or whatever it is, you still want to win. Certainly, I still think about it and wish that what happened didn’t happen, but you can’t change that and you look forward to that next race, but going to Bowman Gray it’s kind of like resetting. A lot of these guys haven’t been there in a long time, if they have, or they haven’t been there at all, so it’s just right back to everybody is on an even playing field. I really, to be honest with you, do not think that Bowman Gray is similar to L.A. Yeah, it’s a quarter mile, but the straightaways are different. The way you’ve got to brake into the corner is gonna be different. Passing is gonna be way tougher, so how physical do you want to get with that? I think it’s just basically taking a white board, grabbing an eraser, starting fresh and feeling like you and your team, your organization did a good job preparing for what they thought was best for a good setup for the racetrack and going to war.”

DO YOU THINK YOU’LL HAVE A BETTER CAR THIS YEAR THAN YOU DID LAST YEAR AT STEWART-HAAS? AND HOW MUCH WILL THAT MATTER AT A PLACE LIKE BOWMAN GRAY? “Having a good car always matters, but last year in L.A. I thought we had a really good car and then we just struggled. We had something going on and couldn’t quite figure it out and that’s what stopped us, but the initial speed was there. I do feel like going into Bowman Gray, I feel like we’re gonna have a strong car. I feel like everybody at RFK, Brad, Chris, myself, we’re gonna have strong cars and be contenders for making the race, but also running really well. I feel pretty confident in that, so anytime we show up to a short track, I feel like there’s an opportunity there to win, and especially it being a quarter mile it fits right into my wheelhouse, so, yeah, I feel like our car is gonna have good speed. There are a lot of things that I feel like we all took over from what we had last year to this year and made some adjustments. Everybody, that was a nice thing, everybody that showed up brought something to the table and I feel like that’s gonna make the package that much better. I’m excited for Saturday to practice, qualify and have our heat races and hopefully lock ourselves in for the race on Sunday, and go fight for one.”

YOU TALKED ABOUT BLOODY KNUCKLES. WHAT KIND OF RACING DO YOU THINK WE’LL SEE THIS WEEKEND? “The hope is you don’t want it to get brutal, but the reality is that if it starts to get brutal, you need to be willing to do that, and not in a fighting manner. What I mean is in a racing manner, and I think anybody who races at quarter miles and three-eighths mile racetracks understand that, so it’s not necessarily the way you want to initiate, but sometimes it can be a product of that style of racing. I’m not looking to be the one that initiates it, but I’m certainly not afraid to give what’s taken.”

LAST YEAR YOU COULD RUN WAY BELOW THE LINE AND CREATE A LOWER GROOVE, BUT AT BOWMAN GRAY IT WILL BE GRASS. HOW DO YOU WORK AROUND THAT? “Yeah, you could basically say it’s like Daytona and Talladega, or superspeedways. It’s the same thing, but it’s really not. They’re different. L.A., just the trajectory of how you can exit that corner and, to your point, how you could cut into the paint, added grip, get under somebody and try not to necessarily knock into them. Bowman Gray is not gonna have that luxury. They’ve got those drainage things, whatever they are down there, just less room to really get under somebody, so you’re gonna have to have a car that’s – one thing for me is I always look for maneuverability in my race car, not necessarily just trying to wrap the line. There’s so much to it. Those are just some of the little details when it comes to that style of racing.”

RFK Advance | The Clash

Date: Sunday, February 2
Time: 8 p.m. ET
Series: NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Format: See Below
TV: FOX
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Channel 90)

RFK Historically in the Clash
Cup Wins: 1 (Mark Martin, 1999)

NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin has Jack Roush’s lone win in the Clash event, winning back in 1999. He started from the 13th position and went on to lead the final 16 laps, topping Ken Schrader and Bobby Labonte on the podium for the victory.
In addition, RFK co-owner Brad Keselowski led 43 laps and won the event from the 17th position in 2018 while driving for Penske.

Weekend Schedule:
Saturday: 6:10 p.m. ET, Practice (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
Saturday: 8:30 p.m. ET, Heat Races Begin (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
Sunday: 6 p.m. ET, Last Chance Race (FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
Sunday: 8 p.m. ET, Clash (FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Pace Laps:

  • The 2025 season unofficially begins this weekend as the Clash at Bowman Gray takes place Sunday in Winston-Salem.
  • This is the first year of the Clash taking place at Bowman Gray Stadium, marking the Cup Series’ first return to the historic Bowman Gray Stadium since 1971.
  • The format for the Clash remains similar to the 2024 edition held at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as 23 cars overall will make the main event.
  • Saturday features three practice sessions with entrants split into three groups. The fastest lap time in each car’s final session will determine the starting lineup for the four heat races, meaning no separate qualifying session will take place.
  • The 25-lap heat races will feature up to 10 cars per race, with only green-flag laps counting in each heat with no overtime allotment.
  • The top five finishers in each heat will automatically advance to Sunday night’s main event, while the drivers that finish below fifth will advance to Sunday’s last chance qualifier (LCQ). Starting positions for that race will be determined by the finishing order in the heats. The top two finishers in the LCQ will advance to the Clash and start 21st and 22nd, respectively.
  • The 23rd and final position in the Clash is reserved for the driver who finished highest in the 2024 season points standings that did not otherwise transfer via the heat races or LCQ.
  • The Clash will be 200 laps and feature those 23 cars.

6 Team Info:
Crew Chief: Jeremy Bullins
Partner: BuildSubmarines.com

17 Team Info:
Crew Chief: Scott Graves
Partner: Kroger

60 Team Info:
Crew Chief: Derrick Finley
Partner: Fastenal

Keselowski in the Clash
Starts: 9
Wins: 1 (2018)
Top-10s: 5
Poles: 1

Keselowski is aiming for his 10th appearance in the annual preseason, exhibition event. He is the 2018 winner of the Clash and has five top-10 finishes in the event. He ran fourth in his first-ever Clash in 2012 in his Championship season, and followed that up with a runner-up result in 2014.

Buescher in the Clash
Starts: 2
Wins: —
Top-10s: 1
Poles: —

Buescher has two starts in the annual Clash event with a best finish of ninth back in 2017. He finished 16th in 2021 in Daytona.
Preece in the Clash
Starts: 3
Wins: —
Top-10s: 1
Poles: —

Preece looks for his fourth straight appearance in the preseason main event after advancing in each of the past three seasons.
He led 43 laps at the Clash at the Coliseum in 2023, recording his lone top-10 finish at the Clash in that race.

Noah Gragson and the No. 4 TrueTimber Ford Mustang Dark Horse Team

Clash at Bowman Gray Competition Notes

Clash at Bowman Gray
Date: Sunday, February 2, 2025
Event: Race 1 of 38
Series: NASCAR Cup Series
Location: Bowman Gray Stadium (0.25-miles)
# of Laps: 200
Time/TV/Radio: 8:00 PM ET on FOX/MRN/SiriusXM channel 90

Noah Gragson Notes

TrueTimber returns with Noah Gragson, making their NASCAR Cup Series debut in the premier stock car series’ return to the Bowman Gray Stadium. TrueTimber will showcase their Strata camo on Gragson’s No. 4 Ford Mustang Dark Horse for the 200-lap event at the historic venue.

“While we take pride in our ability to blend in, this is a fun opportunity to stand out and we look forward to seeing our Strata camo on Noah’s car this weekend,” said TrueTimber CEO Rusty Sellars. “We wish him and the rest of the team the best of luck and hope to see the No. 4 car running at the front of the pack.”

In 2022, TrueTimber appeared in Victory Lane with Gragson eight times throughout the season before finishing second in the NASCAR Xfinity Series points standings.

Bowman Gray will kick off Gragson’s second full season in the NASCAR Cup Series. Gragson and crew chief Drew Blickensderfer look to hit the ground running to start the season strong and improve on 2024’s 24th-place points finish.

“It’s an incredible honor to race at Bowman Gray Stadium. The track has such deep NASCAR history in the sport, and to have the opportunity to compete here is truly special, said Gragson, “Kicking off the season with TrueTimber on board makes it even more meaningful, and I’m excited to be a part of this storied venue’s legacy.”
Road Crew

Driver: Noah Gragson

Hometown: Las Vegas

Crew Chief: Drew Blickensderfer

Hometown: Decatur, Illinois

Car Chief: Joey Forgette

Hometown: Iron Mountain, Michigan

Engineer: Dillon Silverman

Hometown: Chico, California

Engineer: Scott Bingham

Hometown: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Spotter: Nick Del Campo

Hometown: Blauvelt, New York

Mechanic: Chris Trickett

Hometown: Grafton, West Virginia

Mechanic: Tony Infinger

Hometown: Fort Valley, Georgia

Tire Specialist: Chris Aunspaw

Hometown: Zelienople, Pennsylvania

Engine Tuner: Matt Moeller

Hometown: Monroe, New York

Transporter Co-Driver: Nate “Cookie” Eller

Hometown: Granite Falls, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Matt Murphy

Hometown: Augusta, Georgia

ABOUT TRUETIMBER:

Founded in 2005, TrueTimber is based in Inman, South Carolina and is the most realistic, performance-driven camouflage brand in the industry. TrueTimber offers a wide variety of clothing items and accessories, featuring a variety of distinct camo patterns that perfectly blend with their surroundings. The company spends countless hours researching, testing and seeking new technology to produce the most effective and lifelike camouflage patterns possible. TrueTimber products can be found in retailers across the United States and Canada, and it continues to be the World’s Best-Selling Camo. For more information about TrueTimber, visit TrueTimber.com.

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Craftsman Truck Series. The team is the 2021 Daytona 500 and 2022 Craftsman Truck Series champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 4, No. 34, and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 34 and No. 38 Craftsman Truck Series teams from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @team_frm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.

FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES TO BE FEATURED ABOARD JUSTIN HALEY’S NO. 7 CHEVROLET IN COOK OUT CLASH AT BOWMAN GRAY STADIUM

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (January 28, 2025) – Today, Fraternal Order of Eagles (F.O.E.) and Spire Motorsports announced a partnership featuring the international non-profit organization as the primary sponsor of Justin Haley’s No. 7 Chevrolet ZL1 in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out Clash pre-season race at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, N.C.

Haley’s relationship with F.O.E. is rooted in loyalty, dating back to his time in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. F.O.E. was featured on his No. 24 Chevrolet Silverado in 36 events from 2017 to 2020 and all three of the Indiana native’s CRAFTSMAN Truck Series victories.

The prominent black and yellow colors have been featured on Haley’s NASCAR Cup Series rides 13 times, eight of which on a Spire Motorsports-prepared Chevrolet. These starts are underscored by Haley’s Cup Series victory in the 2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway, an upset of practically unprecedented proportions for the then 18-year-old Haley and newly-formed Spire Motorsports. F.O.E. stands as a testament to the mutual loyalty and shared success between Haley and the brand.

“I’m looking forward to continuing my 10-year relationship with the Fraternal Order of Eagles,” said Haley. “They have been with me through every step of my career and I’m excited for them to help us kick off the 2025 season. I can’t wait to hit the track at Bowman Gray for an incredible event.”

The 25-year-old has collected four NASCAR Xfinity Series checkered flags and three CRAFTSMAN Truck Series wins, making him one of just 41 drivers in history to have earned wins across all three of NASCAR’s National Touring Series. He is a veteran of 144 Cup Series starts and has notched one win, five top fives, 15 top 10s and led 98 laps in NASCAR’s premier division.

The Cookout Clash at Bowman Gray will kick off racing festivities for the 2025 season and will be televised live on FOX, Sunday, Feb. 2 beginning at 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. NASCAR’s annual pre-season exhibition race will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

About Fraternal Order of Eagles:
The Fraternal Order of Eagles is an international non-profit organization uniting fraternally in the spirit of liberty, truth, justice and equality, to make human life more desirable by lessening its ills and promoting peace, prosperity, gladness and hope. The F.O.E. donates more than $10 million a year to local communities, fundraisers, charities and more. As part of its philosophy, the F.O.E. gives back 100 percent of monies raised in the form of grants. Fundraisers are conducted for eight major charities, including kidney, heart, diabetes, cancer and spinal cord injury funds, a children’s fund, memorial foundation and the Golden Eagle Fund.

About Spire Motorsports …
Spire Motorsports earned its inaugural NASCAR Cup Series victory in its first full season of competition when Justin Haley took the checkered flag in the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway on July 7, 2019. Less than three years later, William Byron drove Spire Motorsports’ No. 7 Chevrolet Silverado to its inaugural NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series win on April 7, 2022 at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. The team’s most recent win came on April 12, 2024, when Kyle Busch took the checkered flag in the SpeedyCash.com 250 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth.

In 2025, Spire Motorsports will campaign the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet ZL1s in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team will also field the Nos. 07, 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Silverados full time in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series.

Ford Performance NASCAR – 2025 Clash Advance

CLASH AT BOWMAN GRAY STADIUM
Sunday, February 2, 8 p.m. ET (FOX)

The NASCAR Cup Series will return to Bowman Gray Stadium for the first time since 1971 when the season-opening Clash takes place Sunday night in Winston-Salem, NC. After a successful three-year run at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, NASCAR is going back to its roots as Bowman Gray hosted its first series event in 1958.

LOOKING AT THE 2025 FORD CUP LINEUP

There have been a few changes to the Ford lineup since the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season ended. RFK Racing and Front Row Motorsports have both expanded to three teams while the newly-branded Haas Factory Team has one entry after the Stewart-Haas organization closed its doors. Here’s a look at this weekend’s roster.

Driver – Car Number (Team)
Austin Cindric – No. 2 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Team Penske)
Noah Gragson – No. 4 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Front Row Motorsports)
Brad Keselowski – No. 6 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (RFK Racing)
Ryan Blaney – No. 12 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Team Penske)
Tim Brown – No. 15 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Rick Ware Racing)
Chris Buescher – No. 17 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (RFK Racing)
Josh Berry – No. 21 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Wood Brothers Racing)
Joey Logano – No. 22 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Team Penske)
Todd Gilliland – No. 34 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Front Row Motorsports)
Zane Smith – No. 38 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Front Row Motorsports)
Cole Custer – No. 41 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Haas Factory Team)
Cody Ware – No. 51 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (Rick Ware Racing)
Ryan Preece – No. 60 Ford Mustang Dark Horse (RFK Racing)

FORD’S CLASH HISTORY

The Clash has been held in some form since 1979 and Ford has won it 10 times by seven different drivers. The best stretch in the event for Ford undoubtedly came during a three-year winning streak in which Rusty Wallace, Mark Martin and Dale Jarrett all reached Victory Lane from 1998-2000. Jarrett owns three of Ford’s 10 victories (1996, 2000, 2004) in the event and on two of those occasions (1996 and 2000) he went on to win the Daytona 500.

FORD’S HISTORY AT BOWMAN GRAY

Ford has won more NASCAR Cup Series races at Bowman Gray Stadium than any other manufacturer. In the 29 races held at the quarter-mile track, Ford has 12 victories. The list of Ford winners is a virtual Hall of Fame lineup that includes Glenn Wood, who leads the way with four, including three straight during the 1960 season. Junior Johnson is next on the list with three while David Pearson, Richard Petty and Bobby Allison have one Ford win each. NASCAR officially recognized Allison’s win in 1971 last October, upping his career win total to 85 and moving him into fourth on the all-time list. That also represents the first official series victory for Mustang.

LOGANO WINS INAUGURAL CLASH AT THE COLISEUM

For the first time in NASCAR history, the Clash was held at a place other than the Daytona International Speedway as the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum hosted the event on February 6, 2022. The specially-made quarter-mile asphalt track delivered in the main event as Logano, who won his heat race, passed Kyle Busch on lap 116 and led the final 35 to become only the second Ford driver to win the Clash more than once. Logano, who also captured the event in 2017, joined Dale Jarrett (three-time winner) with multiple Ford victories.

ELLIOTT CLAIMS FORD’S FIRST CLASH VICTORY AT DAYTONA

Bill Elliott became the first Ford driver to win a non-points event in the NASCAR Cup Series on February 8, 1987 when he captured the Busch Clash. The format that year was a single 20-lap run (50 miles) with no pit stop required. Elliott, who started on the pole in his No. 9 Coors Thunderbird after a blind draw, fell back to sixth on the start after Terry Labone and Ricky Rudd were involved in an accident on the first lap. On the ensuing restart, Elliott steadily reeled in leader Darrell Waltrip and passed him on lap eight. Elliott led the final 13 laps and won with an average speed of 197.802 mph, a record that still stands for the event. A week later, Elliott won his second Daytona 500.

LOGANO BREAKS CLASH DROUGHT

Joey Logano snapped a 13-year Ford winless drought when he won The Clash in 2017, making him the manufacturer’s first victor since Dale Jarrett in 2004. Logano found himself in the right place at the right time, taking the lead after Denny Hamlin and Brad Keselowski made contact on the final lap. Keselowski had a run and was trying to pass Hamlin, whose attempt at blocking came too late and resulted in both cars colliding. That enabled Logano to get through and win the Clash for the first time in his career. Four Ford drivers finished in the top six spots as Danica Patrick was fourth, Kevin Harvick fifth and Keselowski sixth.

KESELOWSKI PREVIEWS 2018 SEASON WITH CLASH WIN

In a foreshadowing of what the 2018 NASCAR Cup Series would look like, Brad Keselowski took Ford to victory lane in the Advance Auto Parts Clash at Daytona International Speedway. Keselowski led a Ford sweep of the top four finishing positions as he took the lead on lap 39 of the 75-lap feature and never looked back, holding off Joey Logano, Kurt Busch and Ryan Blaney, respectively. It marked the second straight Clash win for Ford and served as a springboard that saw the Blue Oval lead the series with 19 wins and capture the drivers’ and manufacturers’ championships.

FORD CUP WINNERS AT BOWMAN GRAY

Jim Reed – March 30, 1959
Glenn Wood – April 18, 1960
Glenn Wood – June 25, 1960
Glenn Wood – August 23, 1960
Glenn Wood – July 13, 1963
Marvin Panch – March 30, 1964
Junior Johnson – August 22, 1964
Junior Johnson – May 15, 1965
Junior Johnson – August 28, 1965
David Pearson – August 10, 1968
Richard Petty – August 22, 1969
Bobby Allison – August 6, 1971

FORD’S CLASH WINNERS

1987 – Bill Elliott
1992 – Geoffrey Bodine
1996 – Dale Jarrett
1998 – Rusty Wallace
1999 – Mark Martin
2000 – Dale Jarrett
2004 – Dale Jarrett
2017 – Joey Logano
2018 – Brad Keselowski
2022 – Joey Logano

Depth Perception: Rick Ware Racing Brings Deep Driver Roster to Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (Jan. 28, 2025) – In theory, the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray provides a level playing field for NASCAR Cup Series drivers and teams. NASCAR’s premier series hasn’t competed at the quarter-mile, asphalt oval in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, since the Nixon administration, so there is no past data to benchmark. Instead, it’s an educated guess thanks to the brave new world of simulation.

But it’s not computers that will be driving these 3,400-pound racecars with 670 horsepower this weekend at Bowman Gray. It’s people, and at Rick Ware Racing (RWR), its driver lineup of Tim Brown and Cody Ware is the most experienced at the country’s longest-running weekly racetrack.

Brown is the all-time winningest driver at Bowman Gray with 101 victories. The 53-year-old from Yadkinville, North Carolina, competes in the track’s Tour Type Modified division, where he has set just about every record imaginable. Beyond having the most wins, he has the most poles (146), the most championships (12), and he owns the fastest lap ever recorded at Bowman Gray (12.965 seconds on April 30, 2016).

Ware also brings past experience to Bowman Gray. The 29-year-old from nearby Greensboro, North Carolina, spent 2013-2014 running Modifieds prepared by Brown and his brother, Ben.

Tying this on-track experience together with the current-generation Cup car is Brown, who works fulltime at RWR as the team’s suspension and drivetrain specialist. He is the rare driver who will help build the car he will race in the Clash.

“I’ve been involved in Cup racing for almost 35 years now, and I don’t know that you’ll find a Cup driver who actually gets to build his own Cup car from the ground up, chassis dyno it, and then go race it,” said Brown, whose first career Cup Series start will come via the Clash. “These guys that work here at RWR, they’re my buddies and they’re all racers, and we get to do this as a group effort.”

For Ware, Brown’s presence in the shop and as a teammate at Bowman Gray is an incredible asset.

“Tim has been a longtime family friend, not just to me, but my father, as well. Tim actually made his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut for my dad at Martinsville way back in 2009. And then about 12 years ago, I got the chance to race with Tim and Ben Brown, his brother, at Bowman Gray,” Ware said.

“So to be able to work and race with Tim over the last 10 years, where he’s also an employee at Rick Ware Racing and is in the shop every day building our racecars, I really couldn’t ask for a better teammate going into the first Cup race at Bowman Gray in 50-something years. To be able to lean on a 12-time champion and learn from his success, a guy familiar with the intensity of the place and what it takes to not only run up front, but to stay up front and not let other people’s aggression put you at the back of the pack, is crucial.”

Brown will build on his unparalleled level of experience at Bowman Gray when he drives his Modified in the undercard Cook Out Madhouse Classic on Saturday before the headlining Clash on Sunday.

“That time in the Modified will be very helpful,” Brown said. “NASCAR has done some updates to the stadium with soft walls and things like that. It’s changed the line of the racetrack. It’s made it smaller. The line we’ve typically run, you’re not able to run anymore. Just getting some track time before we climb in the Cup car will be very helpful.”

That being said, the Modified and the Cup car are two very different racecars.

“It’s one thing to make laps there in a Modified, but I think the Cup car is going to be a whole other animal because we’ve seen how difficult it has been over the last few years to get that car to turn through such a tight racetrack, like last year’s Clash at the L.A. Coliseum,” Ware said.

Ware and Brown will benefit from there being no single-lap qualifying. Instead, each driver’s fastest lap from their final practice session will determine their starting spot in their heat race. This way, they have multiple opportunities to set a fast lap. With the top-five from each of the four heat races advancing to the Clash, starting up front is crucial.

“Having all of final practice to set a fast time gives us a better chance to start up front in our heat race and, hopefully, not have to go through the Last Chance Qualifier, where only the top two transfer,” Ware said. “The first year we ran the Clash, I was top 10 or 11 in final practice and then had a really rough qualifying session where I struggled to get heat in the tires, and I think that will again be an issue at Bowman Gray because we expect it to be cold. So that, alongside the fact that I missed the first Clash by just one spot in the LCQ, I feel like having a better starting position in the heat race will give me a much better shot to get that last little push I need to comfortably lock into the Clash. Not only would that be great for myself as I head back into another season of fulltime competition, but also for Tim. He has just as much of a shot to make it into the main event as I do.”

Ware and Brown progressing to the Clash would be another example of the overall progress RWR has made these last few seasons.

“Here at RWR, we’ve turned a corner from being just a race team that shows up every week to being a team that wants to contend and race in the top-15 weekly. That’s huge for Rick and Lisa Ware and the whole Ware family. It’s also huge for all the people who work here,” Brown said.

“We had some really solid runs last year with Justin Haley, and we showed speed with Kaz Grala and Corey LaJoie, too. That shows you Rick’s doing the right thing, and all the people at RWR are doing the right thing. We’re all pulling the rope in the same direction, and it’s showing on the racetrack. It’s a really, really cool place to work and I couldn’t be more blessed to be here.”

The Clash weekend begins at 1:30 p.m. EST on Saturday with the Cook Out Madhouse Classic, the 125-lap Modified race where Brown will race his signature orange and blue No. 83 machine. After the checkered flag drops on the Madhouse Classic, on-track activity for the Cup Series begins with practice at 6 p.m. before the heat races start at 8:30 p.m. FloRacing will stream the Madhouse Classic while FS1 will broadcast Cup action. Sunday’s 75-lap Last Chance Qualifying (LCQ) race goes green at 6 p.m. to set the final lineup for the 200-lap Cook Out Clash. FOX will broadcast the LCQ, transition to its NASCAR RaceDay studio show at 7:30 p.m., and then cover the Clash, which goes green at 8 p.m. SiriusXM NASCAR Radio will also provide live coverage throughout the event.

About Rick Ware Racing:

Rick Ware has been a motorsports mainstay for more than 40 years. It began at age 6 when the third-generation racer began his driving career and has since spanned four wheels and two wheels on both asphalt and dirt. Competing in the SCCA Trans Am Series and other road-racing divisions led Ware to NASCAR in the early 1980s, where he finished third in his NASCAR debut – the 1983 Warner W. Hodgdon 300 NASCAR Grand American race at Riverside (Calif.) International Raceway. More than a decade later, injuries would force Ware out of the driver’s seat and into full-time team ownership. In 1995, Rick Ware Racing was formed, and with his wife Lisa by his side, Ware has since built his eponymous organization into an entity that competes full-time in the elite NASCAR Cup Series while simultaneously campaigning successful teams in the Top Fuel class of the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series, Progressive American Flat Track and FIM World Supercross Championship (WSX).