Home Blog Page 791

Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 Ruedebusch Development & Construction Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Martinsville Speedway Competition Notes

 MOORESVILLE, N.C. (October 30, 2024) – The NASCAR Cup Series returns to the Martinsville Speedway for the second-to-last race of the 2024 season. In his return to the famous Virgina short-track, Todd Gilliland will bring a new Ruedebusch Development & Construction scheme to his Ford Mustang Dark Horse.

As the season winds down, Gilliland and the No. 38 Ford Mustang Dark Horse team look to increase their points position. Gilliland and the No. 38 both sit 23rd in driver and owner points. Gilliland finished 13th in the spring race and has had three Cup Series Top-15s at the track, including a 10th-place finish in the fall race last year.

The NASCAR Cup Series will practice & qualify on Saturday, November 2nd at 1:00 PM ET. The 500-lap event is scheduled for Sunday, November 3rd at 2:00 PM ET. Fans can watch the action live on NBC or listen in via the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM channel 90.

No. 38 Ruedebusch Development & Construction Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

DRIVER TODD GILLILAND:

“I like Martinsville. I have a clock in my living room from when I won in the Truck Series, and I would like to add another. There’s still plenty to race for—two more races to win and two more to increase our points position.”

CREW CHIEF RYAN BERGENTY:

“The next two races are big for us. I want to look back on the season and know we didn’t leave anything on the table. We’re bringing a fast Ford Mustang Dark Horse, we just need to focus on executing and minimizing mistakes. If we can do that, it will be a good weekend.”

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. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series team 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.

Stewart-Haas Racing: Martinsville NXS Advance (Cole Custer | Riley Herbst)

COLE CUSTER | RILEY HERBST
Martinsville NASCAR Xfinity Series Advance
NASCAR Xfinity Series Overview

  • Event: National Debt Relief 250 (Round 32 of 33)
  • Date: Saturday, Nov. 2
  • Location: Martinsville (Va.) Speedway
  • Layout: .526-mile oval
  • Time/TV/Radio: 4 p.m. EDT on CW/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Cole Custer Notes of Interest

  • Cole Custer is back in familiar colors this weekend as his iconic No. 00 Haas Automation Ford Mustang Dark Horse paint scheme returns for Saturday’s race at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. He’s coming off a solid second-place result at Homestead-Miami Speedway and hopes to keep the momentum rolling as he looks to claim his spot in next week’s Championship 4 at Phoenix Raceway. After qualifying fourth at the 1.5-mile Homestead oval last weekend, Custer wasted no time taking the lead in the race. He led four times for 67 laps overall en route to finishes of fifth and third, respectively, in the first two stages. While the runner-up finish in the race wasn’t the win he was looking for to lock him into the Championship 4, Custer heads to the Martinsville Round of 8 cutoff race solidly above the top-four cutline with a 28-point advantage over fifth-place Chandler Smith, the first driver on the outside looking in. Last year’s Martinsville race ended in chaotic fashion as Custer crossed the finish line backwards and on fire to earn a 19th-place finish that locked him into the Championship 4 on points. He went on to win his first career NASCAR Xfinity Series championship the following week at Phoenix.
  • Saturday’s National Debt Relief 250 will mark Custer’s fourth Xfinity Series start at Martinsville. His best finish of third was earned in April 2023, when he started on the pole and led five laps. This past April, he finished eighth after starting second. Custer does have a dozen previous Martinsville outings outside of the Xfinity Series – six apiece in the NASCAR Cup Series and Craftsman Truck Series. In the Cup Series, the 26-year-old from Ladera Ranch, California, has a best Martinsville finish of 13th in October 2020, and his most recent outing in October 2022 resulted in a 14th-place finish. Best of Custer’s six Truck Series races at Martinsville from 2014 through 2016 was his fourth-place finish from the pole after leading a race-high 96 of 200 laps in the October 2015 race. That was behind the wheel of the No. 00 JR Motorsports entry, which he also drove to a seventh-place finish from the third starting position in the October 2016 Martinsville race, in which he led 17 laps.
  • Custer arrives at Martinsville fourth in the playoff standings behind AJ Allmendinger and Austin Hill, who already locked themselves into the Championship 4 via their victories at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Homestead, respectively. The remaining two Championship 4 spots are up for grabs between six drivers. Justin Allgaier holds down the third position, seven points ahead of Custer and his 28-point cushion over fifth-place Chandler Smith. Smith is joined below the cutline by Jesse Love, Sam Mayer and Sammy Smith. If one of those four locks himself into the Championship 4 with a win Saturday, that would leave just one remaining Championship 4 spot for Custer, Allgaier and the remaining drivers below the cutline to vie for.

Riley Herbst Notes of Interest

  • Riley Herbst and the No. 98 Monster Energy team head to Saturday’s National Debt Relief 250 looking to continue another strong run to end the season, like he did in 2023. The Las Vegas native is coming off a strong, sixth-place result last Saturday at Homestead-Miami Speedway and arrives at Martinsville after back-to-back top-10s. Herbst entered the Martinsville race last season on a three-race top-10 streak, and he survived the mayhem of that race to bring home a fourth-place finish for the No. 98 Monster Energy team. Entering his final two races with Stewart-Haas Racing, Herbst hopes to end his time in the No. 98 Ford Mustang Dark Horse on a high note after what will be 132 total starts behind the wheel. During that time, Herbst has seen two victories – Oct. 14, 2023 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and July 20 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. In addition, he’s won two poles, scored 64 top-10s, and led 323 laps. Not having to focus on the championship points battle, Herbst and the team have nothing to lose and everything to gain as they look to add another win to the history books for Stewart-Haas before the team closes its doors at the end of the season.
  • Saturday’s National Debt Relief 250 will be Herbst’s ninth at Martinsville in the Xfinity Series. Five of his eight previous starts there resulted in top-10 finishes. Prior to his third-place finish in October 2022, in which he fought valiantly for the win and avoided mayhem in the final laps, he posted a pair of sixth-place finishes there – in October 2020 and April 2022, respectively. He finished the aorementioed fourth last October and 10th in October 2021.
  • Herbst has come to excel on the short tracks in the Xfinity Series, as was evident the previous two seasons. In the four races at tracks less than a mile in length in 2022, Herbst scored three top-fives, starting with his fifth-place run in the April race at Richmond. He finished fifth at the half-mile Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway concrete oval in September and third in November at Martinsville. There was no slowing him down in 2023. Of the four short tracks in 2023, Herbst scored a pair of top-10s during the second-half of the season – eight in September’s Bristol night race and fourth in October’s Martinsville race. This season, Herbst earned two 13th-place finishes – March 30 at Richmond and Sept. 20 at Bristol, in addition to his runner-up finish at the .875-mile Iowa Speedway oval in Newton. Herbst’s Xfinity Series career started on a strong note on short tracks when the Las Vegas native drove to a sixth-place finish in his first career Xfinity Series start in June 2018 at Iowa.

Cole Custer, Driver of the No. 00 Haas Automation Ford Mustang Dark Horse

You’re heading into the final race of the Round of 8 with a 28-point advantage over the top-four cutline and two spots up for grabs in the Championship 4. Do you feel a sense of safety with that significant points gap between you and fifth-place Chandler Smith?

“Martinsville is going to be crazy. No matter what – it is always going to be crazy. We have to bring our best stuff there because you never know who is going to win and that could leave only one spot on points. We just have to go out there and be our best. I think being the team that we are, we’ll be in the fight. The No. 00 Haas Automation team was in this same spot last year, and despite a chaotic ending, we made it to the Championship 4 and went on to win a championship. You can have some comfort in that points advantage, but anything can happen. Those four guys below the cutline are going to be fighting to win and find their way in. I’m nervous heading into this weekend, but I know our team can get it done.”

Martinsville is such a polarizing track for drivers because of how difficult it can be. Both of your starts there last year in the Xfinity Series were strong, with a best finish of third last April. Do you enjoy racing at Martinsville?

“For sure. I really enjoy going to Martinsville. With that said, I’ve never been so nervous for a race as I was heading into that second Martinsville race last year. It was a cutoff race and the nerves were crazy. I have those same feelings this year. Ever since I first went to Martinsville in the Truck Series, I’ve always loved racing there. It’s definitely a place that you will love when everything is going well and hate when it starts going bad – mostly because when it’s bad, it’s really bad. We had a strong car last April to finish third and, honestly, our car in the fall was just as good. There was just so much on the line in that race. Then, to cross the finish line backwards and on fire, it was just one of those crazy Martinsville endings. Even with the nerves, I’m excited to go there and not only race for the iconic grandfather clock trophy, but also a spot in the Championship 4.”

Riley Herbst, Driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang Dark Horse

With only two races left in the 2024 season, reflect on your time at Stewart-Haas Racing as you look ahead to the future.

“Stewart-Haas Racing has been such a good time in my career. This place saw my growth. I’m not the same driver who walked through those doors in 2021. I went from a kid who no one thought deserved a ride to an Xfinity Series winner. My growth may have been slow. There may have been some bumps in the road. But, it’s my journey and I’m proud of it. All of the people I’ve worked with at Stewart-Haas over the years have helped me grow into the driver I am today. I can’t thank the team, the people, Ford Performance, and Monster Energy enough for always believing in me during this time. We’ve had a strong four seasons together, and while it’s bittersweet to see it come to an end with the team closing, I’m grateful for the time I’ve had here and everything that I’ve learned.”

Martinsville has been a strong track for you despite some roller coaster races in your career. On top of that, you’ve finished third and fourth in the past two fall races at Martinsville, respectively. Are you excited to head back there this weekend to race for a grandfather clock?

“Martinsville has always been a tough one for me to tackle, but it’s like that for every driver in the field. You can have the best of days there and the worst. I’ve been on both sides of it but, overall, I really do enjoy going to this track. It’s like the short tracks that we all grew up racing on, so it’s familiar to a lot of guys in the garage. Short-track racing is always fun for me, but Martinsville is where you’re really beating and banging to try and get a win. At the end of the day, it’s about staying out of trouble and being there

Charles Denike replacing Bootie Barker as Bubba Wallace’s Cup crew chief in 2025

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Charles Denike has been named crew chief for Bubba Wallace and the No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota Camry XSE team for the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season.

The news comes as Denike is currently in his second consecutive full-time season as a crew chief for the No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Racing Chevrolet Silverado RST team currently piloted by Christian Eckes in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. Since last season, Denike and Eckes have tallied a total of seven victories and two Playoff appearances, including this season as they contend for a Championship 4 berth.

“I am excited for the 2025 season with the No. 23 team and to work with Bubba [Wallace] and all of 23XI Racing beginning in the offseason,” Denike said in a released statement. “Bubba is a proven winner, and I believe we will bring out the best in each other. Thank you to Michael [Jordan], Denny [Hamlin], and Dave [Rogers, 23XI Racing’s Director of Competition] for the opportunity to join the 23XI family.

“They have built an incredible culture at Airspeed. I am a believer that winning is a process. When you step foot into Airspeed, you see the tools and resources that it takes to win and are surrounded by people with the same vision and mindset. I am looking forward to this next chapter and to be able to contribute to 23XI’s growth and journey to winning championships.”

Denike is a former engineer officer in the U.S. Army who earned both a mechanical engineering degree from the University of Virginia and a Master of Science degree in engineering management from the Missouri University of Science and Technology. From 2012 to 2019, he transcended his way from being a team manager to ARCA Menards Series East crew chief and race engineer between the Truck and Xfinity Series divisions, where he was with Precision Performance Motorsports and GMS Racing.

In 2020, Denike debuted as a crew chief within NASCAR’s top three national touring series for GMS Racing’s No. 24 “all-star” Truck Series program. He earned his first career victory at Charlotte Motor Speedway with Chase Elliott and would rack up another victory with Sam Mayer at Bristol Motor Speedway. Midway into the 2022 Truck season, he transitioned from GMS Racing to McAnally-Hilgemann Racing to work atop the pit box of the team’s No. 19 Chevrolet entry, a role he currently assumes.

Denike’s upcoming role atop the No. 23 pit box for the 2025 season will mark his first season as a crew chief in NASCAR’s premier level: the Cup Series. It also means that veteran Robert “Bootie” Barker, who was hired by 23XI Racing as Bubba Wallace’s crew chief midway into the 2021 season, will call his final two Cup events with Wallace, beginning this weekend at Martinsville Speedway before concluding his crew chief tenure at Phoenix Raceway the following weekend and just as the 2024 season concludes.

“23XI has been good to me, and I hope I have been as good for 23XI,” Barker said. “Loyalty is important to me and I will continue to do all I can in my new role to help everyone here succeed. I was fortunate to be a part of 23XI’s inception, and I look forward to being a part of the team’s continued journey.”

Barker, who notched his first two Cup career victories as a crew chief with Wallace and 23XI Racing, will remain at 23XI Racing as he assumes a role in the competition leadership aspect that will involve strategizing and preparing the organization’s cars at the organization’s headquarters, Airspeed, in Huntersville, North Carolina.

“Since joining 23XI, Bootie has provided Bubba and the No. 23 crew with the leadership and confidence they needed to grow into the team they are today,” Dave Rogers, 23XI Director of Competition, said. “As we began to look ahead to next season, we decided that Bootie’s experience would best serve the organization in a different role based at Airspeed. His input will continue to be an asset to our teams. We’re excited to welcome Charles to the organization and look forward to getting started with him at the end of the season. He will be a terrific addition to the No. 23 team and 23XI as we continue to work to be better.”

“Bootie has meant a lot to me and the No. 23 team,” Wallace added. “We’ve been together for some special moments, and I’m glad he’s still going to be a part of what we’re building at 23XI. I’m excited to work with Charles and see what we can accomplish together.”

Despite missing the 2024 Cup Playoffs amid a two-year winless drought, Barker and Wallace are currently campaigning in their best Cup season statistically with six top-five results, 13 top-10 results and an average-finishing result of 15.4 through 34 of 36 scheduled races. To go along with a pole in the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway, they are currently ranked in 18th place in the driver’s standings and are 11 points behind 17th-place Chris Buescher with two races remaining on the 2024 schedule.

With crew chief Charles Denike’s plans set for the 2025 season, his current campaign in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with McAnally-Hilgemann Racing and Christian Eckes continues for the upcoming Playoff event at Martinsville Speedway that will occur on Saturday, November 1, and air at 6 p.m. ET on FS1.

Bubba Wallace’s 2024 Cup Series season continues at Martinsville Speedway this upcoming Sunday, November 3, as the event’s coverage will air at 2 p.m. ET on NBC.

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Ryan Blaney Martinsville Media Availability

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Media Availability | Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Martinsville Speedway

Ryan Blaney, driver of the No. 12 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse in the NASCAR Cup Series for Team Penske, comes into this weekend’s race at Martinsville Speedway 38 points below the cut line. He’ll be looking to duplicate his victory at the half-mile track from a year ago in the elimination race and clinch a spot in the Championship 4. He spoke with members of the media today on a NASCAR conference call about his situation.

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse – HOW MUCH DOES LAST YEAR’S WIN GIVE YOU CONFIDENCE? “I feel like you’re constantly learning race to race at that track and short tracks and stuff like that. Thinking what we learned from this tire from Wilkesboro and Richmond maybe you apply just little things here and there, but we built off of the November race last year. The fall race last year to the spring race this year and then we built off both of those for this race and then what we’ve also learned from this tire and at other short tracks so you’re always kind of building. I don’t think you can just unload with the same stuff you were successful with there in the past. Even if it was the same tire, I feel like we’d always change some stuff up because it can be a little different and you learn things through the year that might help you. Little pieces and you just hope you hit it right.”

DO YOU GO BACK AND STUDY WHAT HAPPENED AT HOMESTEAD ON THE FINAL LAP? “I worried about it enough Sunday night and Monday morning. I rewatched it when I got home Sunday night. I rewatched the whole race and rewatched the end of it and lost some sleep over the end of that race. I mean, it’s so easy to go back and watch it from the broadcast or re-live it in your head of, ‘Gosh, if I would have just done this different it would have been a different outcome.’ That’s easy to do, but in the moment it’s really hard to make the right decision. You’re making decisions every lap. You’re making a lot of decisions every lap and I look back on that and I talk about in some scenarios, whether it’s speedways or end of these races things, whether you’re leading or second or whatever you’re guessing in some situations on what lane is gonna be better, where the car in front of you is gonna go, where the car behind you is gonna go. You’re guessing and sometimes you guess right and sometimes you guess wrong. In that scenario, I guessed wrong on where he was gonna go. Yeah, I wish I would have done something different the whole last lap. I didn’t get through one and two very good. It started there and then I didn’t get to the right lane in three and four and I just guessed wrong of what he was gonna do and he did a great job of going where I wasn’t and carried just a ton of entry speed to get there and it stuck for him. I didn’t stew on it for too long. I feel like, ‘OK, here are some scenarios maybe you’ll be in in the future and let’s try to change it up,’ but I try not to lose my mind over that stuff. Even though it’s hard and it’s difficult to accept losing a race like that on the last corner, but you just try to put that in the memory bank of if you’re in that scenario again maybe do something different.”

WHAT WERE SOME OF THE KEYS TO YOU BEING SO GOOD AT MARTINSVILLE A YEAR AGO? “I feel like what made us really good last year at that race was we didn’t have great qualifying speed. We didn’t qualify very good, but our race pace was really solid, especially after 20 or so laps. I feel like I could move around where I needed to after 50 laps, but my strong suit was just kind of running where I needed to – kind of low and out of the rubber, but also being able to move around. I passed a handful of guys on the top of the racetrack when they got slowed up in lap traffic or rubbered down on the bottom I could be pretty versatile. I think that versatility in our car really helped out. I was kind of racing the 11, who is really good there, the whole race and kind of seeing where our strengths were compared to his and just being able to kind of move around with our car, where I feel like some guys were maybe a little bit more locked into their lane that they were running. I had the ability to move around and that helped me a lot in traffic, so that’s something I hope we have again. The tire is gonna be interesting. It’s nice to have a longer practice on Saturday. Hopefully, the track gets rubbered in to where the race is gonna be as far as the rubber goes and what it does. Does it lay down? Does it kind of snake up a little bit to where you’re gonna have to be below it or above it? I feel like you’re gonna be able to make both lanes work and it just depends on how you adjust your car and your driving style to make both lanes work, but that versatility, I feel like, was a huge advantage for us.”

IF YOU WERE TO GET TO PHOENIX WITH A CHANCE TO REPEAT, WHAT DID YOU LEARN THERE A YEAR AGO ABOUT HANDLING THE PRESSURE GOES THAT WOULD HELP AGAIN? “Like you said initially, I’m just focused on Martinsville. We’ll figure out Phoenix if it happens for us, but 100 percent of the focus is Martinsville and how do we perform on Sunday to try to win the race and get there, and then we’ll deal with Phoenix after that. I haven’t put any thought into Phoenix because the next task is Martinsville.”

YOU AND JOEY HAD TO GO WITH TWO TIRE STRATEGIES FOR TRACK POSITION IN THE FIRST RACE THIS YEAR AT MARTINSVILLE. WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES OF WHAT THAT WAS LIKE WITH TWO TIRES AND WHAT COULD THIS NEW TIRE DO IN TERMS OF A TWO TIRE STRATEGY? “It was a good call that Jonathan made in the spring after we lost some track position after we had to come down pit road again. I kind of got stuck in the teens or wherever we were, low teens, and the two-tire strategy was good because we didn’t see a ton of fall off in the spring and I don’t know. We’ve talked about all these different scenarios this week and it’s just a lot of unknown with what the tire is gonna be like, how much does it fall off? Those are the decisions you make a little bit after practice, but also through the race. How does it rubber down? Can you go anywhere? If you’re mired back in those positions do you feel like you can move forward? If not, maybe you do throw the tire-tire strategy at it, but a lot of that is just tire fall off. If they fall off a cliff, then maybe that would be like a big home run move, kind of a Hail Mary if you want to put two tires on it. It just depends on where you’re running, so it’s just one of those tough decisions that crew chiefs have to make and drivers have to assess of how competitive you think you are and how much you think tires are worth and where you’re running at the time. That’s why crew chiefs get paid the big bucks to make those decisions and I can just give them all the feedback that I can on that, but Jonathan does a great job of trying to understand what we need to do at the time and how I react to where we’re running. In the spring, I felt like I was pretty good, but I just got stuck where I was running and couldn’t pass anybody, so it was like, ‘Alright, let’s just throw two and see what it does,’ and we were able to hold on and that set us up for the end of the race. Those are live decisions that you have to decide on and he chose right on that one. You never know this weekend what people are gonna come up with.”

EVEN WITH THE SUCCESS THAT YOU’VE HAD, HAVE YOU LEARNED ANYTHING ON HOW TO HANDLE THOSE DISAPPOINTING SITUATIONS AND NOT LETTING IT EAT YOU UP? “I’ve just tried to move on from them quicker. I feel like it gets easier as you get older and you are in those scenarios more. You’re gonna lose races that you feel like you should have won – woulda, shoulda, coulda kind of deals. If it’s a situation like Gateway, we talk about it like, ‘Hey, what could we have done different or what are the mistakes that we made?’ It’s the same as Homestead. What could I have done different? That was purely on me of just making the wrong decisions at the end of that race and how do you learn from it and put it in the back of your head, and then you just move on. What’s the next job? We can’t do anything about it now. I used to stew over that stuff for a long time when I was younger and I’ve just learned to let it go after you’ve learned. You can’t just throw it out the window like, ‘Yeah, whatever.’ You’ve got to learn from that stuff, so I try to do that and then just, ‘OK, what’s our new job?’ And then fully focus on that and I feel like our group does that really well too as the 12 team, so those things sting, but you can’t just tear your mind apart thinking about them over and over, especially when we have a massive race coming up this weekend. I think it’s just something I’ve worked harder on and it’s gotten easier with time, just natural aging, I feel like, helps that out.”

CAN YOU TALK THROUGH LEAVING REDDICK THE HIGH LINE AND BEING WORRIED HE MIGHT DIVE BOMB YOU? WHAT WAS GOING THROUGH YOUR MIND TO MAKE THE DECISION YOU DID? “That’s the difficulty of, and I can only speak on pro sports because I’m part of one and I watch a lot of the others. When I watch a football game I’m like, ‘Why didn’t he just do that?’ I become that person and in the moment when you’re that person and you’re that athlete living in that time, it’s so much harder than being on the outside and watching on TV with all different angles and things like that. When you’re making real-time decisions in the moment, you don’t have any time to process, think about it, go through other options. It’s just boom boom boom. It’s all happening super fast and it’s just a wrong decision that you make. You’re never gonna be batting 1000 for making the right decision or the right call. That’s the difficult of sports is – can you make the right decisions and how often do you make the right decisions, so, honestly, in my mind going down the back in the moment I’m seeing the run that he’s got down the back and the timing of it. I’m like, ‘OK, I think he might pull a slider here.’ That’s what I made my mind up on was that he was gonna pull a slider. I kind of entered where I did and slide up the track and then if he did pull a slider, maybe I can pull under him or where I kind of entered I was like, ‘Well, I’m gonna cut a little distance off the racetrack here to where maybe I can still be on his outside if he did pull a slider and I can drive back around him and it was just the wrong move. He did a good job of countering what I decided of, ‘Oh, there’s a lane and a half up top. I’m gonna send it in here and hopefully it sticks,’ and it did. It’s so easy to be like, ‘He should have done this or he should have done that,’ but it’s so hard in the moment. I guessed wrong. Like I said, I had probably four lanes that I could have chosen between two lanes off the wall, one lane off the wall, the wall or the bottom and I just picked the wrong lane. I had a one in four lanes that I could pick and I just chose the wrong one and he chose the right one, so those things are hard to do in the moment, but when you’re seeing it from the outside or looking back on it it’s like, ‘Well, that should have been easy,’ but I encourage anybody to try to get in those scenarios and make the right decision It’s very very hard to do. It’s just one of those things to where I try to just live in the moment. You just try to make the right calls and I just made the wrong one.”

HOW DO YOU DEAL MENTALLY WITH ISSUES LIKE THAT? “It’s mental and you try not to let it spin you out. When I talked earlier about not festering over things. You could get in a downward spiral pretty quick of just like going over all that stuff, so it’s a lot of just mental toughness and how can you react to these moments that stink. That sucked losing that race like we did and how do you get over it and how do you just prepare your mind for the next job and try to take the good things. We did a great job all day. Those guys were awesome on pit road. They kept us in the game. The car was fantastic. I ran I felt like a really good race and I just didn’t close it out. It’s just a lot of moving on and understanding where you want to be better as a driver. You’re always wanting to get better even if you dominate a race or not, you’re always wanting to get better, so it’s one of those things. It’s not only physically demanding, but I feel like the mental side is the toughest part about our sport especially is just how do you mentally stay in it and how do you adjust to what you need to do week in and week out and in the moment and then for the future, so I try not to dwell on the past too much and just learn from it and move on. It’s funny, I heard people talking like, ‘Oh, Reddick ran the top the whole last run. How did Blaney not know that?’ I’m not watching it on TV. I’m worried about myself. I’m trying to figure out how to pass the 11. I’m not paying attention to where the 45 is running or how he got to be in second or the laps before. I’ve got so much stuff going on behind the wheel that I don’t know. Timmy can only tell me so much of where the 45 has run at the time, so it just goes back to how hard it is in the moment. I don’t have the bird’s-eye view. I have the straight ahead view and I have so much stuff going on behind the wheel that I have to worry about me and that’s just the nature of everything.”

IS THIS A CUTOFF RACE AT MARTINSVILLE THAT IS PROBABLY THE BEST TEST FOR THE DRIVER BECAUSE IT’S NOT REALLY A WILD CARD RACE LIKE TALLADEGA OR THE ROVAL? “I think it’s great when they, I forget what year they made – a handful of years ago – they made Martinsville the final race of the Round of 8. It used to be the first one and I feel like it’s the perfect final race for this round because it’s a grueling 500 laps around that place. It’s really really tough to mentally and the physical side of it – you’re worn out after this thing – so I think it’s a perfect race for it. It always puts on a good show. You’re gonna have contact through the race between a lot of drivers just because the place is so tight and you’re gonna have people be aggressive and then with the hype of that race being your last shot for six other guys to get in, you’re gonna have a lot of intense moments. I feel like that’s what it should be. That’s what the playoffs are for – having these really hard races and a place like Martinsville being the last shot for six guys to do it and have a shot at a championship, it’s the perfect scenario. I love Martinsville. I’ve loved it ever since I was a kid. I went there a lot watching my dad race. It’s one of my favorite race tracks and just to compete there is a pleasure, so I look forward to that. I think people look forward to that pressure of how low you can run at this really hard racetrack and hopefully we can accept that pressure and rise to the occasion.”

WHAT DOES THE PRESSURE FEEL LIKE GOING INTO MARTINSVILLE? “There’s pressure in everything. There’s pressure in everyday life, how you’re gonna live and there’s pressure in your profession. I feel like if anyone asks you in certain moments that they don’t feel any pressure when it comes time to do this, I think they’re not telling you the whole truth because everyone feels it. This is your livelihood and this is what you love to do. There’s a lot of people counting on you that work for you and work for your race team and things like that, that they expect you to perform and it’s how do you handle it? How do you accept all the pressure that is given and how do you rise above it and how do you enjoy pressure? I feel like you have to enjoy that because it’s a privilege that you get to feel that pressure. Guys who aren’t in the playoffs right now and your championship hopes are not there anymore if you’re not in the eight, so all six of us who aren’t locked in, they’re feeling pressure and that’s with everything. It’s just how do you and your team approach the weekend understanding that it’s there and really not let it get to you too much, and how do you use that pressure that can motivate you internally to where I want to be the team and the guy that overcame all that pressure and succeeded and I think we have that mentality like we did last year. There was pressure going into Martinsville last year. Yeah, we were in a better spot on points, but there’s pressure of are we gonna throw away these points that we got and not make it there? So, I think it’s the same kind of situation, honestly, as last year.”

WHAT IS THE SECRET BEHIND DOING WELL AT MARTINSVILLE? “Martinsville used to be a place kind of up until the fall of 2017 that I really struggled at. I just couldn’t really figure it out and just could never get the timing as a driver that I needed to for there, and then in that Fall of ‘17 race with the Wood Brothers it just kind of clicked. It’s like, ‘OK, we ran pretty good here. I think I kind of know now what I need to be competitive here,’ and that’s just gotten better year in and year out. It’s funny when things click at a racetrack where you maybe don’t run great at, like, ‘Oh, this is how I need to feel and how I need to approach it and how I need to drive it,’ and ever since then I feel like we’ve done a good job. As a driver, I feel like I have a decent understanding of what I need through practice and then the race to be good there, and it’s just kind of how you want your car to drive. It’s how you drive the racetrack and how you adjust as the track changes. The track changes a ton through the race and through a single run with the concrete corners, where it kind of gets darker and rubbers down, and I feel like it’s just clicked. It’s one of those places I love going to. We always seem to bring some good stuff and hopefully that continues, but I really enjoy that place. It was a tough few years before that in trucks and my early years of Cup racing, but once I understood you’re like, ‘Oh, OK. I don’t know why I didn’t think of this before,’ and you hope you continue to evolve your skills to adjust for the new tire, or a different car or different situations. It’s been a pretty solid place for us, so hopefully that continues.”

WHAT MADE THAT PLACE SO MEMORABLE WHEN YOU WERE A KID GOING TO MARTINSVILLE? “I think multiple things. I grew up in High Point, so like 45 minutes away from there, so we went there a lot when I was younger. It was a place that we would always go to twice a year as a family, just because it was easy to get to and you’d drive to it, and I just thought the racetrack was incredibly neat, and it reminded me, it’s a really small short track and it reminded me like, ‘Oh, I can kind of relate to this because I’m running Legends cars and Bandoleros,’ and even started my late model career. Like, ‘OK, I can kind of relate to this short track style of racing.’ And I just loved how the cars were so close together and you could see everything as a kid. We’d go sit in the stands and you could watch the whole racetrack and there was always something going on no matter where you looked, and I liked that as a kid. I enjoyed the noise of it as a kid and the smells that were right there, and then I remember watching – I think it was 2011 – fans don’t like it but I think Harvick passed Dale Jr. with like six to go and I was sitting on my dad’s pit box. He was running for Baldwin at the time and I remember watching that race, our pit stall was right off of turn four and I remember watching the cars come off turn four and that was the first time I really understood and could watch them from the inside of the racetrack and really get a good picture of how the cars looked and how they drove and it just intrigued me as a kid. I think it was just a lot of relatability from what I was racing at the time and I just loved how small the track was and you could see every little bit of the racetrack and you could walk around in the infield and go to different parts of the track and see whatever you wanted to see, and it was just a close place. I honestly named that as my home track because I honestly grew up closer to Martinsville than I did to Charlotte from High Point, so it’s just one of those things that just grabs you as a kid and you have these core memories when you were growing up.”

Michael McDowell and the No. 34 Benebone Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Martinsville Speedway Competition Notes

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (October 30, 2024) – Michael McDowell will celebrate his 500th career NASCAR Cup Series start at Martinsville Speedway this weekend for the penultimate race of the 2024 season.

McDowell will become the 47th different driver in series history to make 500 starts or more and is one of six active full-time drivers in the Cup Series to reach the 500 start-plateau joining Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski. The 39-year-old also made is first Cup Series start at Martinsville in 2008 driving for Michael Waltrip Racing. McDowell will be making his 28th start at the Martinsville Speedway, looking to improve on his 21st place result in the spring.

Benebone will be back on the No. 34 FRM Ford Mustang Dark Horse this weekend returning back to the track since Watkins Glen International, where McDowell finished 7th-place.

The NASCAR Cup Series track activity will begin Saturday, November 2nd with practice and qualifying at 1:00 pm ET on the NBC Sports app. The Xfinity 500 will be Sunday, November 3rd at 2:00 pm ET. Fans can watch the action live on NBC or listen via the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM channel 90.

No. 34 Benebone Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

DRIVER MICHAEL MCDOWELL:

“It’s pretty special to be making my 500th career Cup Series start and to achieve such a big milestone in my career. Martinsville was where I got my first ever start back in 2008, so it’s cool that it has come full circle to this weekend. Just want to thank everyone who has been a part of this journey – team owners, sponsors and fans – who have supported me all these years.

“It’s awesome to have Benebone back on the car this weekend. We’ve run well every time they’ve been on our Ford Mustang Dark Horse this season, so we’re going to try to keep the momentum up at Martinsville.”

CREW CHIEF TRAVIS PETERSON:

“For anyone to have raced in this sport for as long as Michael has is pretty remarkable, especially with some of the names he’s included with. It’s an awesome honor to be on the box for his 500th start and I know the team is excited as well to be a part of this milestone.”

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. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series team 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.

Kaulig Racing Weekly Preview | Martinsville Speedway

Race Notes

Martinsville Speedway
XFINITY 500
NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
Sunday, November 3 at 2:00PM EST
NBC | MRN | SiriusXM
Team Notes

  • Kaulig Racing has made 10 NCS starts at Martinsville Speedway.
  • So far in the 2024 season, Kaulig Racing has earned one pole award, one runner-up finish, 11 top 10s, 26 top 20s and led 108 laps.

Shane van Gisbergen, No. 16 Acceptance Insurance Camaro ZL1

  • Shane van Gisbergen will make his 12th NCS start this season, his first at Martinsville Speedway.
  • During his limited schedule in the 2024 NCS season, Van Gisbergen has earned a runner-up finish, two top 10s and led 49 laps with Kaulig Racing. He also earned the team its first NCS pole award.
  • The three-time Supercars Champion will carry the green and blue Acceptance Insurance livery this weekend at Martinsville Speedway. Acceptance Insurance has been helping people save money on their car insurance for more than 50 years. The company specializes in helping drivers with imperfect records find a policy customized to their needs and their budget. Acceptance’s low-cost insurance products also include renters’ insurance, as well as many other insurance options.

“I’m looking forward to racing the Cup car at Martinsville this weekend and getting a feel for how the car races on a short track. It will still be a challenge for me as I continue to learn on the ovals but excited to see how my Acceptance Insurance Chevrolet stacks up with the rest of the field. It’s going to be fun!” – Shane van Gisbergen on Martinsville Speedway

Daniel Hemric, No. 31 High Point Paint Services Camaro ZL1

  • Daniel Hemric has made three starts at Martinsville Speedway, earning two top-20 finishes.
  • Hemric has earned four top 10s, 12 top-20 finishes and led 15 laps in the 2024 season.
  • Hemric has completed 8,879 of 8,932 laps (99.4%), the most of any other driver in the 2024 season.
  • As a part of High Point Paint Services’ sponsorship of Hemricl at Martinsville Speedway, High Point Paint and Sherwin-Williams are donating a total of $30,000 to the Daniel Hemric Be The Change Scholarship at Rowan Cabarrus Community College. This contribution will allow for more scholarships to be granted annually from the endowment fund.

“Few people have supported my racing career longer than Hoyt Demis and High Point Paint Services, so it’s great to see them on the car this weekend. Making it more special is that High Point Paint and Sherwin-Williams are donating $30,000 to our Be The Change Scholarship at Rowan Cabarrus Community College, which will allow us to increase the number of scholarships we award annually. On the competition side of things, there are a lot of variables going into this weekend with the tires. We’re all looking forward to that challenge and maximizing our day at all costs.” – Daniel Hemric on Martinsville Speedway  

Race Details

Martinsville Speedway
National Debt Relief 250
NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS)
Saturday, November 2 at 3:30PM EDT
The CW | MRN | SiriusXM
Team Notes

  • Kaulig Racing has made 24 starts at Martinsville Speedway. The team has earned three top fives and 11 top-10 finishes there.
  • Landon Cassill’s second-place finish at Martinsville in the NXS’ first trip there in 2022 marked Kaulig Racing’s best result at the half-mile track.
  • So far in the 2024 NXS season, Kaulig Racing has earned four wins, 14 top fives, 33 top-10 finishes and 372 laps led.

Josh Williams, No. 11 Alloy Employer Services Chevrolet Camaro

  • Josh Williams has made seven starts and recorded one top 10 in the NXS at Martinsville Speedway.
  • Williams finished 10th at Martinsville in the NXS’ first 2024 race there, his first top 10 of the season. The next day, he drove the No. 16 Camaro ZL1 in the NCS race at Martinsville, finishing two laps down in 27th.
  • Williams sits 17th in the NXS points standings with four top 10s and 14 laps led.

“Winding down the year with Martinsville, another one of my favorite race tracks. I’m a short-track guy, so I’m excited to get going there and hopefully have a good finish and maybe chase a clock.” – Josh Williams on Martinsville Speedway

AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Amarr Chevrolet Camaro

  • AJ Allmendinger has made six NXS starts at Martinsville Speedway. He has led 68 laps and earned one top five and two top-10 finishes.
  • So far in the 2024 NXS season, Allmendinger has earned one win, seven top fives, 17 top-10 finishes and led 258 laps.
  • Allmendinger secured his spot in the Championship 4 after leading 102 laps and winning at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the Round of 8.

“Martinsville has always been one of my favorite racetracks, and this is the first time we are able to go there without having to worry about points. We have the opportunity to just focus on strategy to put ourselves in the best position to win a Martinsville Grandfather Clock.” – AJ Allmendinger on Martinsville Speedway

Shane van Gisbergen, No. 97 Wendy’s Chevrolet Camaro

  • Shane van Gisbergen will make his second-career NXS start at Martinsville Speedway in the No. 97 Wendy’s® Chevrolet.
  • At Martinsville in April, Van Gisbergen was one spot shy of the top 10, recording an 11th-place finish in his first race at the short track.
  • Wendy’s® will serve as the No. 97’s primary sponsor on Saturday. Van Gisbergen’s paint scheme will feature Wendy’s® Frosty and Fries.

“Martinsville [Speedway] is an epic place, and I really enjoyed racing there in the spring. It’s another massive challenge for me and the racing is super intense once the field takes the green flag. Excited to see how much my team can keep improving and hope for another solid result in my Wendy’s Chevrolet on Saturday.” – Shane van Gisbergen on Martinsville 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 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.

Bootie Barker Set to Call Final Race for No. 23 Team at Phoenix

Charles Denike to replace Barker, who will remain with 23XI, following season finale

Huntersville, N.C. (Oct. 30, 2024) – 23XI Racing announced today that veteran crew chief Bootie Barker will call his final race with Bubba Wallace and the No. 23 team at the season finale at Phoenix Raceway. Following the end of the season, Barker will be replaced by Charles Denike, the current crew chief for the No. 19 truck team at McAnally-Hilgemann Racing in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. Barker will remain with 23XI and continue to work with the competition leadership team to prepare cars and strategize for races. His new role will be based at Airspeed.

“23XI has been good to me, and I hope I have been as good for 23XI,” said Bootie Barker. “Loyalty is important to me and I will continue to do all I can in my new role to help everyone here succeed. I was fortunate to be a part of 23XI’s inception, and I look forward to being a part of the team’s continued journey.

“Since joining 23XI, Bootie has provided Bubba and the No. 23 crew with the leadership and confidence they needed to grow into the team they are today,” said Dave Rogers, 23XI Director of Competition. “As we began to look ahead to next season, we decided that Bootie’s experience would best serve the organization in a different role based at Airspeed. His input will continue to be an asset to our teams. We’re excited to welcome Charles to the organization and look forward to getting started with him at the end of the season. He will be a terrific addition to the No. 23 team and 23XI as we continue to work to be better.”

“Bootie has meant a lot to me and the No. 23 team,” said Bubba Wallace, driver of the No. 23 Toyota Camry. “We’ve been together for some special moments, and I’m glad he’s still going to be a part of what we’re building at 23XI. I’m excited to work with Charles and see what we can accomplish together.”

Denike joins 23XI and the No. 23 team after working as a team manager, race engineer, and crew chief in several of NASCAR’s touring series. In 2012, Denike began his racing career with Precision Performance Motorsports as the team manager overseeing their K&N Pro Series East and Xfinity Series teams. While with the team, he oversaw their expansion into the Xfinity Series and served as a crew chief with the K&N team before moving to GMS Racing in 2016. In his first three years at GMS, he worked as a race engineer on the truck and Xfinity programs before moving to the crew chief role in 2020. Denike was crew chief for three trucks at GMS over three seasons, earning two wins, before moving to McAnally-Hilgemann Racing in 2022 to crew chief the No. 19 truck. In 2023, Denike helped earn the company’s first win and first playoff berth, and to date has earned nine wins. The move to 23XI will be Denike’s first experience in the Cup Series.

“I am excited for the 2025 season with the No. 23 team and to work with Bubba and all of 23XI Racing beginning in the offseason,” said Charles Denike, newly named crew chief for the No. 23 team. “Bubba is a proven winner, and I believe we will bring out the best in each other. Thank you to Michael, Denny, and Dave for the opportunity to join the 23XI family. They have built an incredible culture at Airspeed. I am a believer that winning is a process. When you step foot into Airspeed, you see the tools and resources that it takes to win and are surrounded by people with the same vision and mindset. I am looking forward to this next chapter and to be able to contribute to 23XI’s growth and journey to winning championships.”

Before his NASCAR career, Denike served nine years in the US Army as an engineer officer. During his military service, Denike served as an Executive Officer, Plans Officer, Company Commander, and Brigade Engineer on various duty assignments, including underwater searches and inspections, battalion and future operations planning, construction manager, and facilities manager. Denike earned the rank of Major before being honorably discharged from active duty. Denike earned a mechanical engineering degree from the University of Virginia and a Master of Science in engineering management from the Missouri University of Science and Technology.

About 23XI Racing

23XI Racing – pronounced twenty-three eleven – was founded by NBA legend Michael Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin in 2020. With rising NASCAR star Bubba Wallace selected to drive the No. 23 Toyota Camry, the team made its NASCAR Cup Series debut in the 2021 Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway. Wallace made history on October 4, 2021, when he captured his first career Cup Series win, becoming just the second African American to win in the Cup Series, and earning 23XI its first-ever victory. 23XI expanded to a two-car organization in 2022 with Cup Series Champion Kurt Busch driving the No. 45 Toyota Camry. With a win at Kansas Speedway in May of 2022, Busch earned 23XI the team’s first-ever playoff berth. 23XI currently features the lineup of Bubba Wallace in the No. 23 Toyota Camry and Tyler Reddick in the No. 45 Toyota Camry. The team operates out of Airspeed, a state-of-the-art facility in Huntersville, N.C. that opened in January of 2024.

Layne Riggs and the No. 38 Infinity Communications Ford F-150

Martinsville Speedway Competition Notes

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (October 30, 2024) – Layne Riggs returns to his short-track roots as the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series returns to Martinsville Speedway.

With just two races remaining on the schedule, the Bahama, NC native heads to the Southern Virgina short-track looking to further solidify his spot as this year’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year for the Truck Series. So far, Riggs has earned two wins, seven Top-5’s, and eight Top-10’s.

The NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series will practice & qualify on Friday, November 1st at 1:30 PM ET. The 200-lap event is scheduled for later that evening at 6:00 PM ET. Fans can watch the action live on FS1 or listen in via the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM channel 90.

No. 38 Infinity Communications Group Ford F-150:

DRIVER LAYNE RIGGS:

“I love Martinsville, and any short-track really. We had a really good qualifying run there in the Spring, but we didn’t quite execute to get the finish we wanted. I think we have a good shot at it this weekend, though. The team has been on it from an execution standpoint, I just have to go out there and do what I do best to put us in contention.

“It’s great to see Infinity Communications back on our Ford F-150. They have been on the frontlines during these hurricanes, and I couldn’t be more proud of them for all they do. Hopefully I can pay them back with a trip to Victory Lane.”

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. 34 and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 38 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series team 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.

NASCAR reveals Homestead penalty report

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Conner Jones issued a one-race Truck Series Suspension

Conner Jones was issued a one-race suspension for his on-track actions following this past weekend’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Playoff event at Homestead-Miami Speedway on October 26 as part of a triple-header weekend in South Florida.

Jones’s actions occurred on Lap 75 of 134, where he deliberately hit the rear end of Matt Mills’ No. 42 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet Silverado RST entry following an earlier altercation between both competitors. The contact from Jones got Mills loose before he veered to the right across the racetrack and hit the Turn 4 outside wall on the right side hard as Mills’ damaged truck then erupted in flames.

Mills escaped the wreckage with the aid of medical personnel and was transported to a local hospital for further evaluation. Two days later on October 28, he was released and took to social media to express his gratitude for the support he received during his recovery. He has also been medically cleared to race for this upcoming weekend’s event at Martinsville Speedway.

Jones received a two-lap penalty for the incident and finished in 25th place of the 34-truck field. Following the event, he declined to speak to the media but later apologized for his actions through a statement.

Jones, previously set to mark the 13th of 14 planned events on the Truck Series schedule during the upcoming weekend at Martinsville, will miss the race due to the suspension. However, he will return to action for next weekend’s season-finale event at Phoenix Raceway. As a result, former Truck Series champion Johnny Sauter, initially set to compete with Hattori Racing Enterprises, is will pilot Jones’ No. 66 ThorSport Racing Ford F-150 entry at Martinsville, per the qualifying order sheet.

Layne Riggs Truck Series Team Issued L1 Penalty

NASCAR also issued an L1-level penalty to the Craftsman Truck Series No. 38 Front Row Motorsports (FRM) Ford F-150 entry piloted by rookie Layne Riggs due to an improperly mounted ballast that resulted in Riggs starting at the rear of the field for the main event. Riggs would proceed to finish in 22nd place, the final truck scored a lap down, after he ran out of fuel while running in second place on the penultimate lap.

Riggs’ No. 38 FRM Ford team was also docked 10 driver/owner points as a result of the ballast penalty, and crew chief Dylan Cappello was issued a one-race suspension. Amid the points penalty, Riggs remains in 11th place in the driver’s standings.

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Three Xfinity Series crew chiefs fined $5,000 each

Three Xfinity Series crew chiefs were issued fines due to a single lug nut that was not secured on each of their respective entries The crew chiefs penalized include Mardy Lindley, crew chief for Playoff contender Sam Mayer and the No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro team, Andy Street, crew chief for Playoff contender and race winner Austin Hill and the No. 21 Richard Childress Racing (RCR) Chevrolet Camaro team and Joe Williams, crew chief for Kyle Sieg and the No. 39 RSS Racing Ford Mustang team.

The lug nut penalty issued to RCR’s No. 21 team and the fine to Street do not affect Hill’s victory as he is already guaranteed a spot into this year’s Championship 4 round and compete for the 2024 Xfinity Series championship at Phoenix Raceway next Saturday.

NASCAR Cup Series

There were no penalties levied on any Cup Series teams following this past Sunday’s Playoff event at Homestead which was won by Playoff contender Tyler Reddick.

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck, Xfinity and Cup Series divisions return to action this upcoming weekend at Martinsville Speedway for the final Round of 8 events for all three series. The Truck division will commence the weekend on Friday, November 1, at 6 p.m. ET on FS1 while the Xfinity division will occur the following day, November 2, at 4 p.m. ET on the CW Network. The Cup division will conclude the weekend on Sunday, November 3, at 2 p.m. ET on NBC.

Toyota Racing Weekly Preview 10.30.24

This Week in Motorsports: October 28 – November 3, 2024

NCS/NXS/NCTS: Martinsville Speedway – Nov. 1-3
NHRA: The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway – Nov. 1-3

PLANO, Texas (Oct. 30, 2024) – NASCAR and the NHRA both reach their penultimate races this weekend as championship battles intensify. NASCAR’s three national series are in Martinsville for the Round of 8 cutoff race to decide who will race in Phoenix for the championship. NHRA is in Las Vegas for the second time this season as the Countdown to the Championship nears its conclusion.

NASCAR National Series – NCS | NXS | NCTS

Camry XSE drivers fight for chance at a championship … After his monumental victory at Homestead on Sunday, Tyler Reddick has locked himself into the Championship 4 at Phoenix Raceway – the first NCS title race appearance for he and 23XI Racing. His Camry XSE teammates, Christopher Bell and Denny Hamlin have work in front of them to also advance to the championship race. Bell is in a solid position as things currently sit, 29 points above the cutline, while Hamlin will enter Sunday’s race 18 points below.

Toyota continues Championship 4 streak… With Reddick’s victory, Toyota will continue its streak as the only manufacturer to have at least one driver in every Championship 4. Since NASCAR switched to this points system in 2014, Toyota has been represented by Hamlin (2014, 2019, 2020, 2021), Kyle Busch (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019), Carl Edwards (2016), Martin Truex Jr. (2017, 2018, 2019, 2021) and Bell (2022, 2023).

Hamlin back at favorable Martinsville … In racing for a spot in the Championship 4, Hamlin is back at Martinsville Speedway, which has been a strong track for he and the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 team of late. The 43-year-old has three top-five finishes in the last four Martinsville races, and four in the last seven. Hamlin also has five career victories at the half-mile oval (2008, 2009, 2010 – twice and 2015). Adding a sixth Martinsville triumph to his name would secure Hamlin a spot in the Championship 4 for the sixth time in his career and first since 2021.

Toyota seeks to continue pole streak … Following the pole by Reddick last weekend at Homestead, which capped off its 13th-all time national series race weekend pole sweep, Toyota will look to pace the field for the third consecutive weekend. This would be the third time this season Toyota would have three poles in a row and would give the manufacturer its 13th pole of the season, as it already has the most in the Cup Series.

Smith to go all in at Martinsville … Entering Saturday’s race 28 points below the Xfinity Series Playoff cutline, Chandler Smith will be going for victory at Martinsville. The half-mile Virginia oval has been a solid place for the Georgia native, who has two top-10s in his three career Xfinity Series starts, including a third-place finish in the spring.

Bubba Pollard makes GR Supra debut … Georgia native Bubba Pollard will make his second career Xfinity Series start, and Toyota debut, with Sam Hunt Racing this weekend in the No. 26 GR Supra. Pollard, an accomplished late model racer and champion, made his Xfinity Series debut in the spring at Richmond, where he finished an impressive sixth place.

It comes down to Martinsville for Heim and Gray … Friday night’s 200-mile race at Martinsville Speedway offers one last chance for Corey Heim and Taylor Gray to lock themselves into the Truck Series Championship 4. Heim, who seeks his second consecutive appearance in the title race, currently sits a favorable 49 points above the cutline after a fourth-place result last weekend at Homestead, which included his first pole of the 2024 season. For Gray, he is currently 24 points below the cutline following his 10th-place finish at Homestead. He has been strong at Martinsville Speedway so far in his career with top-10 finishes in all three of his starts.

NHRA – Top Fuel | Funny Car

Ashley, Brown lead Toyota title fight contingent … With just two races remaining in the 2024 NHRA season, Toyota continues to hold serve in Top Fuel. Justin Ashley, following his victory at Ennis three weeks ago, holds a 44-point advantage over Toyota teammate, Antron Brown in the Top Fuel points standings heading to Las Vegas this weekend. Following those two is Shawn Langdon in third, 76 points behind and Steve Torrence in fourth, 88 points back. Doug Kalitta is seventh and Billy Torrence is 10th in the current standings. In Funny Car, Ron Capps remained in the fourth points position after a finals appearance at Ennis. J.R. Todd is eighth and Alexis DeJoria is 10th going into Las Vegas.

Toyota looks to continue streaks … After the win by Ashley in Top Fuel and finals appearance by Capps in Funny Car in Ennis, Toyota continued its incredible hot streak in NHRA. Ashley’s triumph made it 16 Top Fuel victories for Toyota in the last 19 races, dating back to Pomona last November. The final appearances by Ashley and Capps marked 41 consecutive NHRA races that Toyota has had at least one finalist.

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 65 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 47 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants. In 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 30 electrified options.

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