Home Blog Page 898

Bass Pro Shops Racing: Martin Truex Jr. Southern 500 at Darlington Advance

Martin Truex Jr.
Southern 500 at Darlington Advance
No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE for Joe Gibbs Racing

Event Overview

● Event: Cook Out Southern 500 (Round 26 of 36)
● Time/Date: 6 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Sept. 1
● Location: Darlington (S.C.) Raceway
● Layout: 1.366-mile, egg-shaped oval
● Laps/Miles: 367 laps/501.32 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 115 laps / Stage 2: 115 laps / Final Stage: 137 laps
● TV/Radio: USA Network / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● Where We Stand: Truex sits ninth in the driver standings with 695 points, 128 behind Tyler Reddick. All four Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) entries are currently inside the top-10 in the standings, with Christopher Bell sixth, Denny Hamlin eighth and Ty Gibbs 10th as the series heads to the final race of the NASCAR Cup Series regular season this weekend at the track “Too Tough to Tame.”

● Playoff Watch: Going into the final race of the regular season, Truex is highest in the standings among drivers without a win so far in 2024. Truex is 13th on the 16-driver playoff grid with a 58-point cushion over 17th place Bubba Wallace. Twelve drivers have locked themselves into the playoffs with wins so far this season. Truex would be locked into the playoffs no matter the result at Darlington if there is not a first-time winner this season in Sunday night’s Cook Out Southern 500.

● Truex has two wins, four top-five finishes and 10 top-10s and has led a total of 914 laps in 24 career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Darlington. Truex’s average Darlington finish is 13.9.

● Truex notched his most recent Darlington win in May 2021, when he dominated the race and led 248 laps en route to his second victory at the 1.366-mile, egg-shaped oval.

● While he doesn’t like to play favorites, Truex certainly excels at tracks with worn-out surfaces, where driver skill is key to managing the tires and the racecar over the course of a long race. At four such tracks – Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, the now defunct 2-mile oval at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, Homestead-Miami Speedway, and Darlington – Truex has six wins, 25 top-five finishes and 47 top-10s, and has led 2,209 laps.

● Looking for 35: Truex’s win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon in July 2023 was his most recent Cup Series win, the 34th of his career, tying him with 2004 champion Kurt Busch for 25th on the all-time Cup Series win list.

● Ahead at this Stage: Truex has accumulated 63 stage wins since the beginning of the stage era in 2017. He is the only driver with 10 or more stage sweeps, with his latest sweep coming at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn in August 2023. Truex scored his third stage win of the season in July at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway, leading the field across the line at the end of Stage 1.

Martin Truex Jr., Driver of the No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE

What’s the challenge of 500 miles at Darlington as opposed to other racetracks, and even the 400-mile race there?

“The challenge is that it’s a long race, a lot of pit stops and a lot of chances for things to go wrong. Track position is obviously really important. To go through 13 sets of tires or whatever it is, and track position and what it means there, and to keep track position, it’s tough to stay up front and be consistently really strong. It’s tough to do there, and we hope we can do that on Sunday night with our Bass Pro Shops Camry XSE.”

Does it take a driver a long time to get used to how to drive Darlington and get used to its nuances?

“I think it just suits some guys, and others it doesn’t. For me, I feel like it’s about how I like to drive my car and the feel I need for the long run. For as long as I remember, I don’t really know what I do differently than everyone else, and I don’t know if my team does, either, it’s just the way that it happens. Even with all the technology today, sometimes you just can’t pinpoint exactly what it is that makes us good there. You can see the SMT and see exactly what a driver is doing, but there’s more to connecting that feel and those inputs than you can imagine. It just suits me, and I really enjoy it. Looking forward to this weekend with our Bass Pro Shops Camry.”

Some drivers say they love Darlington and others say they just can’t get a grasp on it. Is it just tires, or much more, to be good at Darlington?

“It’s very unique, I love it. It’s really hard on tires and hard to get your car working good. For me, I’ve had a lot of really good runs there and have won a bunch of races and have been really strong in the last four years, so I really enjoy it. I had bad cars there years ago and I can see how that could be just miserable if you don’t have a good car. Fun track and a place I really like.”

How technical of a track is Darlington?

“It’s definitely really technical. It’s a track that is really fast but the two ends of the track are completely different, which makes the crew chiefs scratch their heads. It’s hard to get your car working right on both ends, so you have to compromise. It’s never going to be perfect. It’s never going to be comfortable, but you’ve got to figure out a way to be comfortable with it and that’s what I love about Darlington. You are on the ragged edge so much and the tires wear off the car so bad on the long run that you are just on ice. You are sliding and trying to keep the right rear from dragging against the wall and you are just sliding everywhere. I just think it’s so much fun. It’s been a great track for me, I think, just because I like it so much. Hoping we can have a great run there this weekend with our Bass Pro Shops Camry and get back to victory lane there.”

No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Martin Truex Jr.

Hometown: Mayetta, New Jersey

Crew Chief: James Small

Hometown: Melbourne, Australia

Car Chief: Chris Jones

Hometown: Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia

Race Engineer: Jaik Halpainy

Hometown: Blockville, New York

Spotter: Drew Herring

Hometown: Benson, North Carolina

Road Crew Members

Underneath Mechanic: Ryan Martin

Hometown: Mechanicsburg, Virgina

Mechanic: Todd Carmichael

Hometown: Redding, California

Interior/Tire Specialist: Tommy DiBlasi

Hometown: Annapolis, Maryland

Engine Tuner: Beau Morton

Hometown: Lake Havasu City, Arizona

Transporter Driver: Kyle Bazzell

Hometown: Fairbury, Illinois

Transporter Driver: Eddie DeGroot

Hometown: Baldwinsville, New York

Over-The-Wall Crew Members

Gas Man: Matt Tyrrell

Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Jackman: Caleb Dirks

Hometown: Riverside, California

Tire Carrier: CJ Bailey

Hometown: Outer Banks, North Carolina

Front Tire Changer: Thomas Hatcher

Hometown: Middleburg, Florida

Rear Tire Changer: Lee Cunningham

Hometown: Leaf River, Illinois

Four-time Winner at the CTMP, Louis-Philippe Dumoulin Eager to compete in the WeatherTech 200 this Weekend

© Stéphane Gagné / poleposition.ca
EventWeatherTech 200
TrackCanadian Tire Motorsport Park (Bowmanville, Ontario), September 1st, 2024
BroadcastTSN + app (live) | TSN (tape delayed) | RDS (tape delayed) | FloRacing (USA)
Race2:00 PM E.T. – nascar.ca/race-center/

Trois-Rivières (Quebec), August 27th, 2024.- After the ICAR event unfortunately shortened by a mechanical failure last Saturday, Louis-Philippe Dumoulin will be on track this weekend as part of a very important race for the NASCAR Canada series and especially the driver of the #47 WeatherTech Canada | Groupe Bellemare | Omnifab car: the WeatherTech 200 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (CTMP), located northeast of Toronto, in Bowmanville.

The legendary track formerly known as Mosport, which has hosted the Formula 1 Grand Prix of Canada eight times and where Louis-Philippe Dumoulin has won multiple times, including four in the NASCAR Canada series, is hosting another major motorsport event this weekend, featuring the legendary American Trans Am series, where Louis-Philippe Dumoulin has also competed in recent years, and the NASCAR Canada series, which will be the eleventh of thirteen 2024 races.

“Our expectations were high for the race at the Complexe ICAR last Saturday, unfortunately an engine failure put an early end to our race. What more can I say except that it’s part of motorsport? We now have to focus on the WeatherTech 200. I’ve won four times in NASCAR Canada at CTMP and finished on the podium the last two times I’ve raced there, so of course my expectations are high,” said Louis-Philippe Dumoulin. He specifies: “The doubt is the engine change. Will the new engine be as efficient as the one we had in previous races? We obviously hope so. I don’t start a NASCAR Canada race to finish sixth, I always want to win. We are facing a challenge that the entire Dumoulin Compétition team and the people who work on the #47 WeatherTech Canada | Groupe Bellemare | Omnifab car want to resolve brilliantly.”

Third in the season-opening race last May at the CTMP and second in the WeatherTech 200 last year when he had fought a very spectacular battle for victory until the last corner, Dumoulin does not hide his ambitions: “we will do everything to bring the WeatherTech 200 trophy, with the colours of our main sponsor, at home!”

Despite his retirement at ICAR, Louis-Philippe Dumoulin is still in fourth place in the drivers’ championship standings, but the 7-point gap on third place has now increased to 30. Winning a fourth title is now unrealistic, but the hope of winning in the next rounds remains the driver and his team’s motivation.

This Saturday, August 31, free practice will take place at 12:50 p.m. before qualifying session is scheduled for 5:25 p.m. The WeatherTech 200, the final road race of the 2024 NASCAR Canada season, will start on Sunday, September 1 shortly after 2 p.m.

ABOUT PARTNERS

WeatherTech is committed to designing, engineering and manufacturing the finest products possible for your vehicle, home and your pet. From the industry leading FloorLiner to the 100% non-toxic Pet Feeding System, WeatherTech has dedicated itself to exceed customer expectations of quality, craftsmanship and environmental sustainability for over 30 years. To see the full line of automotive, home and pet products that are guaranteed for life, visit weathertech.ca

Groupe Bellemare is a 3rd generation family business that has been serving clients since 1959. Today, the company has more than 500 employees and provides them with an innovative work environment facilitating work-family balance and a healthy and safe quality of life. With over a half century of experience and its sustained R&D efforts, the Company offers high-quality products and services in areas as diverse as concrete, abrasives and minerals, dimensional load transportation, and recycling. Groupe Bellemare is also very involved in its industry and attaches great importance to its social and environmental role as a member of the business community. Groupe Bellemare makes a positive contribution to the quality of life of citizens in the communities it serves by supporting numerous social causes and promoting local purchasing through its responsible procurement practices. For more information, visit groupebellemare.com

Omnifab has joined Dumoulin Compétition in June 2023.In less than twenty years, Omnifab has made its place in the mechanical manufacturing industry in Quebec. They have earned this place by offering a unique turnkey solution to large companies and SMEs that want to modernize their production line or have their industrial equipment repaired. No matter your industry, you can count on Omnifab team to manufacture custom industrial machinery or solve your mechanical problems with great precision, in a timely manner and with quality components, as pledged. Visit omnifab.ca for more information.

Rousseau Metal has been manufacturing high-quality products for 70 years. Over the years the company become known as a leader in storage solutions. The quality, durability and reliability of their products have earned them a reputation as being among the best in the industry. Over the years, the quality of Rousseau products and excellence of the company’s business practices have been recognized through various certifications and membership in industrial and automotive organizations. To learn more about the company and its products, visit rousseau.com

Dumoulin Competition

Jean-François and Louis-Philippe Dumoulin founded the Dumoulin Competition Race Team in 2009. Working with financial, marketing, logistics and sports management experts, they built up a solid business structure. Dumoulin Competition prepares its own race cars in-house since 2016. Their motto: “Passion – Performance – Partnerships” expresses their will to perform on the track and offer their partners maximum visibility and profitability in return for their commitment. Their vision: To become Canada’s leader in motorsports through on-track performance, an entrepreneurial spirit and human values. dumoulincompetition.com

TOP FUEL’S ANTRON BROWN LOOKS TO ADD TO INDY LEGACY AT TOYOTA NHRA U.S. NATIONALS

Three-time world champ seeking third straight win at The Big Go and sixth in his standout career

INDIANAPOLIS (Aug. 26, 2024) – Five wins at the world’s biggest drag race has put Antron Brown on the path to becoming a Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals legend. He’s rolled to back-to-back wins at The Big Go and a third straight victory would continue to build an already impressive legacy at the prestigious event.

Brown gets that opportunity at this weekend’s 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park, as the three-time world champion looks to become the first driver since Tony Schumacher (2007-2009) to pick up three consecutive victories on drag racing’s grandest stage.

His Toyota teammate, Funny Car driver Ron Capps, and Pro Stock Motorcycle’s Matt Smith will also try to do the same in Indy this year, but a sixth Indy victory would put Brown among the sport’s elite. Only six other drivers have won six times at Indy and it’s a class Brown could join with another victory this weekend at The Big Go in his 11,000-horsepower Matco Tools/Toyota dragster.

“I’m super excited for the Toyota U.S. Nationals. It’s so cool to be able to participate in the 70th running of this historic event, especially with it now being a Toyota race,” said Brown, who enjoyed two Indy wins in Pro Stock Motorcycle early in his career. “We’re really striving hard right now. Our team is peaking at the right time and we’d love to pull off the undeniable turkey here, so that’s what we’re going in to do. That’s our game plan.

“We’ve won here the last two years and we’re going to try and continue that streak. The points are really tight and we’re working hard to push to be into that top four going into the Countdown. We’re going to give it all we’ve got and see what we can do. Our Matco Tools Toyota team is ready to go.”

Brown (Top Fuel), Capps (Funny Car), Matt Hartford (Pro Stock) and Smith (Pro Stock Motorcycle) all claimed NHRA U.S. Nationals victories in 2023 and this year’s race will again be broadcast on FOX and FS1, including a special Pep Boys Funny Car All-Star Callout broadcast on FOX at 5 p.m. ET on Sunday and eliminations coverage on FOX beginning at 2 p.m. on Monday. It is the 14th of 20 races during the 2024 campaign and the final race in the regular season, and plenty is on the line at the prestigious race.

Along with the chance at Indy glory, it’s a points-and-a-half race, meaning Brown and the other standouts could make a big move in the standings. He’s currently fifth in points, but only 14 out of fourth and 82 out of third, and a considerable jump could be in place with a stellar weekend.

That’s the goal, but nothing comes in easy in Top Fuel, which features a wealth of talent and 20 overall dragsters in Indy, including points leader and reigning world champion Doug Kalitta, Shawn Langdon, Brainerd winner Justin Ashley, four-time champ Steve Torrence, Clay Millican, motorsports legend and NHRA rookie Tony Stewart, Tony Schumacher, whose 10 Indy victories are the most in NHRA history, and Brittany Force.

But Brown has always performed well when it matters most, evidenced by his back-to-back Indy triumphs. He’s already won three times in 2024 (Chicago, Norwalk and Sonoma) and the 77-time event winner has no plans of slowing down at The Big Go.

“It’s always been a plan in motion to try and peak at the right time, and our car has been running exceptionally well,” Brown said. “That’s a tribute to our team. The U.S. Nationals is our last race to get in the position we need to get in heading into the Countdown.

“We’re trying to get back to that true form and I believe we’re there. What makes the class so different today is now you have 10-12 cars that are good every race and there’s at least 14 cars that can win a race.”

The 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals promises to be one of the biggest in the illustrious history of The Big Go. It features the final Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge of the year and the Pep Boys Funny Car All-Star Callout, as well as the special Sox & Martin Hemi Challenge presented by the McCandless Collection and the Rooftec Comp Cash Clash, along with racing in the Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series, Congruity NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series presented by LearnEV+, NHRA Flexjet Factory Stock Showdown™ and NHRA Holley EFI Factory X, plus:

A special 70th anniversary NHRA U.S. Nationals pennant for the first 8,000 fans in attendance for eliminations on Monday, Sept. 2.
Free parking for all fans and children 12-under admitted free.
An unforgettable Top Eliminator Club experience, including NHRA driver appearances, food and drink, TEC gift bag, starting line seats and much more.
The biggest field in drag racing featuring more than 900 cars.

Capps, a three-time Funny Car world champ, sported an iconic paint scheme last year with his Don Prudhomme Hot Wheels tribute car. He is after his first win of the year against the likes of points leader Austin Prock, three-time 2024 winner Bob Tasca III, reigning champion Matt Hagan, and Gainesville winner J.R. Todd. Jack Beckman, who will be racing for John Force in Indy, will also be making his Indy return.

Hartford won his first NHRA U.S. Nationals last season. The eight-time event winner is looking for his first win of 2024. Leading the Pro Stock points is standout Dallas Glenn followed by multi-time champs Greg Anderson and Erica Enders, with Aaron Stanfield and Jeg Coughlin Jr. also looking for Indy success.

Smith, a six-time NHRA champ, captured his third NHRA U.S. Nationals win last season. Smith won the most recent race in Sonoma and has his sights set on dethroning reigning world champ Gaige Herrera, who has won six of the eight events this season. Also in the mix is former NHRA U.S. Nationals winner John Hall, Richard Gadson, Jianna Evaristo, Angie Smith, Steve Johnson and Seattle winner Chase Van Sant.

Fans will be invited all weekend long to the Nitro Alley Stage, which is the main entertainment hub in the pits, hosting Nitro School, meet and greets, music and much more. Race fans at Indy can enjoy the special pre-race ceremonies that introduce and celebrate each of the drivers racing for the prestigious Wally on Monday and includes the fan favorite SealMaster Track Walk. The final can’t-miss experience of any NHRA event is the winner’s circle celebration on Monday after racing concludes, where fans are invited to congratulate the event winners.

As always, fans get an exclusive pit pass to the most powerful and sensory-filled motorsports attraction on the planet in Indy. Fans get a unique chance to see teams in action and service their hot rods between rounds, get autographs from their favorite NHRA drivers, and more. They can also visit NHRA’s popular Nitro Alley and Manufacturers Midway, an exciting atmosphere that includes interactive displays, merchandise, food and fun for the entire family.

NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series qualifying will feature one round at 6:45 p.m. ET on Friday, Aug. 30, two rounds at 12 and 2:30 p.m. ET on Saturday, Aug. 31 and the final two rounds of qualifying on Sunday, Sept. 1 at 12 and 3:00 p.m. Final eliminations are scheduled for 10:00 a.m. ET on Monday, Sept 2.

The first round of the Pep Boys Funny Car All-Star Callout takes place at 1:05 p.m. ET on Sunday, Sept. 1, with the semifinals at 2:40 p.m. and the final round at 4:30 p.m. A special broadcast of the Callout takes place on FOX at 5 p.m. ET on Sunday.

Television coverage includes qualifying action on FS1 at 1 p.m. ET on Friday and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, and eliminations beginning at 12 p.m. on FS1 on Monday, shifting to FOX at 2 p.m.

To purchase tickets to the 70th annual Toyota NHRA U.S. Nationals, fans can visit www.NHRA.com/tickets. All children 12 and under will be admitted free in the general admission area with a paid adult. For more information about NHRA, visit www.NHRA.com.


About Mission Foods

MISSION®, owned by GRUMA, S.A.B. de C.V., is the world’s leading brand for tortillas and wraps. MISSION® is also globally renowned for flatbreads, dips, salsas and Mexican food products. With presence in over 112 countries, MISSION® products are suited to the lifestyles and the local tastes of each country. With innovation and customer needs in mind, MISSION® focuses on the highest quality, authentic flavors, and providing healthy options that families and friends can enjoy together. For more information, please visit https://www.missionfoods.com/

About NHRA

NHRA is the primary sanctioning body for the sport of drag racing in the United States. NHRA presents 20 national events featuring the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series and NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series, as well as the Congruity NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series presented by LearnEV+, NHRA Flexjet Factory Stock Showdown™, NHRA Holley EFI Factory X and Johnson’s Horsepowered Garage NHRA Mountain Motor Pro Stock at select national events. NHRA provides competition opportunities for drivers of all levels in the NHRA Summit Racing Series and NHRA Street Legal™. NHRA also offers the NHRA Jr. Street® program for teens and the Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League® for youth ages 5 to 17. With 110 Member Tracks, NHRA allows racers to compete at a variety of locations nationally and internationally. NHRA’s Youth and Education Services® (YES) Program reaches over 30,000 students annually to ignite their interest in automotive and racing related careers. NHRA’s streaming service, NHRA.tv®, allows fans to view all NHRA national events as well as exclusive features of the sport. In addition, NHRA owns and operates three racing facilities: Gainesville Raceway in Florida; Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park; and In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip in Southern California. For more information, log on to www.NHRA.com, or visit the official NHRA pages on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

Power Gains Ground on Palou with Portland Victory

PORTLAND, Ore. (Sunday, Aug. 25, 2024) – Will Power and Team Penske made their point Sunday by winning the BITNILE.COM Grand Prix of Portland: The race for the Astor Challenge Cup is far from over.

Power earned his series-leading third victory of the 2024 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season in the No. 12 Verizon Business Team Penske Chevrolet and gained ground on championship leader Alex Palou with three races remaining. He drove to a 9.8267-second victory over the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda of Palou on the 12-turn, 1.964-mile road course at Portland International Raceway.

Two-time series champion Power, who started second, earned the 44th win of his Hall of Fame career on the heels of disappointing consecutive finishes of 12th in July at Toronto and 18th last weekend at World Wide Technology Raceway.

“Very rewarding,” Power said. “I came here determined, so did the whole team. We wanted to get qualifying right and then execute in the race. It’s not a last-ditch effort, but really if Palou finished ahead of us today, it was going to be very difficult.

“We’re going to keep fighting ahead here. A couple of bad races before this, but let’s see if we can get a championship.”

Josef Newgarden completed the podium by finishing third in the No. 2 TireRack.com Team Penske Chevrolet, with Colton Herta fourth in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda of Andretti Global with Curb-Agajanian. Marcus Armstrong rounded out the top five in the No. 11 American Legion Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

Two-time and defending series champion Palou leads Power by 54 points – the maximum number a driver can earn in one race. Herta slipped from second to third, 67 points behind Palou, after finishing fourth in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda of Andretti Global with Curb-Agajanian.

The three remaining races are all on ovals – the Hy-Vee Milwaukee Mile 250s doubleheader Aug. 31-Sept. 1 at the Milwaukee Mile and the Big Machine Music City Grand Prix on Sept. 15 at Nashville Superspeedway. The INDYCAR SERIES hasn’t raced at the Milwaukee Mile since 2015 or Nashville Superspeedway since 2008.

Power has 10 career victories on ovals, including in 2014 at Milwaukee and last month at Iowa Speedway; Palou has none among his 11 career wins.

“We’ve been very, very good on ovals – very solid,” Power said. “Obviously, they’re two ovals that we haven’t raced at in a long time, so it’s anyone’s game. I hope we get it right. We’ll do our best and take the fight to Alex.”

Power wasted no time taking the fight to Palou at the drop of the green flag. He passed NTT P1 Award winner Santino Ferrucci entering Turn 1 on the first lap and was out front and in control for the rest of the 110-lap race except for pit stops. Power led a race-high 101 laps.

Palou passed Ferrucci for second on Lap 8 and, like Power, stayed in that spot for most of the remainder of the race except for pit stops. Ferrucci, who earned AJ Foyt Racing’s emotional first pole since 2014, finished eighth in the No. 14 Phoenix Investors Chevrolet.

Two-time and defending series champion Palou’s best chance to pass Power came on Lap 26 when Pietro Fittipaldi exited the pits in the No. 30 Localiza Rent a Car Honda of Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing directly in front of Power after serving a drive-through penalty. That slowed Power and allowed Palou to pull right up to Power’s gearbox in Turn 7, but Power parried the move and kept the lead.

Quick work by the Team Penske pit crew on Power’s first stop all but sealed the win, especially since there were no caution periods after a first-lap fracas involving Kyle Kirkwood, Scott Dixon and Fittipaldi. Power’s first stop, at the end of Lap 32, lasted 6.9 seconds. Palou made his first stop one lap later, but it took 9.2 seconds.

From there, Palou slipped back as varying tire strategies unfolded over the final two pit stops. Power started on the Firestone Firehawk primary tires and was able to use the quicker Firestone alternate red-sidewall tires in all three pit stops. Palou aggressively used a set of alternate tires in NTT P1 Award qualifying Saturday and was forced to the less-grippy primary tires for his final stint, ensuring Power’s cruise to victory.

“Maybe we were a bit wrong with the strategy there,” Palou said. “Went too aggressive in qualifying yesterday and really didn’t have any good used alternates. It was tough work there on primaries having to catch Will, but the 12 deserved it today. They were very, very fast. Happy with the P2 today.”

The top eight drivers in the standings are still mathematically eligible to win the Astor Challenge Cup as season champion, but it’s looking more and more like a three-driver race for the title between Palou, Power and Herta.

The drive for a seventh title by Dixon probably was derailed when he crashed the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda into the guardrail on Lap 1 after contact from Fittipaldi. Dixon was forced into the dirt earlier in the lap amid tight traffic by the No. 27 AutoNation Honda of Andretti Global’s Kirkwood, and Dixon was hip-checked by Fittipaldi’s car shortly after returning to the racing surface.

Dixon finished last in the 28-car field – his lowest finish since being taken out in a crash and placing 32nd in the 2017 Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. He is fifth in points, 101 behind Palou.

The first race of the Hy-Vee Milwaukee Mile 250s doubleheader is at 6 p.m. ET Saturday, Aug. 31, with live coverage on Peacock and the INDYCAR Radio Network. The second race is at 2:30 p.m. ET Sunday, Sept. 1, with USA Network, Peacock and the INDYCAR Radio Network providing live coverage.

Wood Brothers Reflect on 100th Cup Series Win Heading into Darlington

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Darlington Media Availability
Monday, August 26, 2024

Wood Brothers Racing celebrated its 100th NASCAR Cup Series victory on Saturday night when Harrison Burton won the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway. Team owners Eddie, Len and Jon Wood spoke to members of the media earlier today about that race and the reaction it has received.

EDDIE WOOD, CEO, Wood Brothers Racing – YOU HAD 315 TEXT MESSAGES JUST A FEW HOURS AFTER THE RACE. WHERE ARE YOU AT NOW AS FAR AS THAT GOES? “I think I’ve got about 177 yet to go. I’ve heard from people that I hadn’t heard from since I was in high school and I’m gonna answer every one of them even if it takes me a week. I’m catching up on it. I spent all day yesterday doing it. Most of the time when you send somebody a text after they send you one, or course, they may answer it and then you get into a conversation and it takes a little while, but it’s a really cool thing to be hearing from that many people.”

WHAT HAS IT BEEN LIKE HAVING HARRISON, WHOSE FAMILY HAS RACED, WITH A FAMILY-OWNED TEAM? “I think that’s one thing that makes it easy. He grew up around his dad and his uncle racing. His cousins race. You grow up in a racing family and it’s easier to just do things because you know they understand. If Len or I or Jon or somebody is talking to Harrison about something it’s like, ‘You know what I mean. Your family is the same as ours.’ You grew up with racing being the only topic that was ever talked about at lunch or dinner or in the car – wherever you were it was about racing and I’m sure that’s the way he grew up. I know when Kyle Petty drove for us we spent about the first day, we loaded up to go to Daytona and test in January and we just got to talking about, ‘What do they do at your dinner table? Do you all talk? What do you eat for lunch?’ There were so many things that were the same and it’s no different with Harrison.”

WHAT KIND OF INFLUENCE HAVE YOU SEEN JEFF HAVE ON HARRISON AS A YOUNG MAN TRYING TO FIND HIS WAY IN THIS SPORT? “Jeff, being on the TV side of it, a lot of times he’s not where he can come around the car early. He’s doing his day job, but he always comes by and Jeff always watches the races from up top, whether he’s doing TV or whatever. He’s never around the pit box during the race. He’s always on top of the spotter’s stand or somewhere like that, but I think he gives Harrison enough room. As a dad, my son raced too, you can’t get in too deep with it. You just have to kind of be there when they want something. If you see something that is good or bad or you need to talk about it, usually save that for later. Jeff as well as Kim have been big influences on his life. He’s probably the most polite young man I’ve ever been around in my life.”

JON WOOD, President, Wood Brothers Racing – HOW WILL YOU LOOK AT THE TIME HARRISON HAS BEEN WITH YOUR TEAM NOW VERSUS THREE DAYS AGO? “I’m not gonna go too far on this, but I saw a different Harrison Burton that last three miles or five miles, whatever it was. I don’t know if it was a confidence thing that maybe we’ve been missing because there are times where we’re pretty good and there are times when it’s almost like he hits another gear. That doesn’t mean we have to be running up front. I’ll give you an example. Last week at Michigan, he’s racing around some guy and we’re getting passed and getting passed. The next one in line is Hocevar to make the pass on us and it’s like he would have wrecked before he let Hocevar pass him (laughing). It was crazy, and I don’t know if he knows that or if it’s just like a subconscious thing that he’s not aware of. I guess what I’m trying to get at is that I’m hoping this has given him some kind of a confidence boost because I saw a different Harrison those last two laps. It was a very aggressive, a very willing to risk it all type of race that he ran those last few laps.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT DOES THE WIN MEAN WHEN YOU LOOK BACK ON THIS THREE YEARS WITH HARRISON? “You just remember what just happened. We just never could seem to really find the magic to make it all work and you never know when things are gonna start working. It obviously started Saturday night and, like Jon said, when that restart happened I felt like he was gonna win the race. There’s just so much at stake in these races anymore, but he was willing to risk it all and he did that. To outrun or beat Kyle Busch on a green-white-checker is hard to do. It’s almost unimaginable to some point, and I’d like to say that Kyle, I respect him a lot. He raced those last two laps like the two-time champion that he is. I think he raced with respect. I think Harrison raced with respect and the guys pushing both of them did as well. It was kind of an old school finish right there.”

A GUY CALLED THE RADIO THIS MORNING AND BROKE INTO TEARS BECAUSE OF HOW EMOTIONAL IT WAS TO SEE THE 21 WIN AGAIN. WHAT DOES IT SAY ABOUT YOUR LEGACY IN THIS SPORT TO SEE THAT KIND OF A REACTION? “I was crying as well. Just about everybody in Victory Lane was that way. Just thinking back about it and it’s still there. Sometimes I even get to thinking about Trevor’s win in 2011 and get kind of emotional. Racing is something that you just put everything you’ve got into it and everybody does. If you’re a real racer and probably the older you are the more it means, but I’m just proud of all the team that put it all together and all the people that helped us get here. All of the fans. We’re in Stuart (VA) today and there have been a lot of people in and out of the museum and they’re the same way. They know more about the finish than I do, which is really amazing now and a lot of them are my age. They watched it on TV. They didn’t see it on the phone. They watched every minute of it and it’s just really cool.”

JON WOOD CONTINUED – “I tried to touch on this the other night and I was looking at Lee and I got a little bit choked up, but the thing that stood out to me the most was sitting in that same exact seat in that same media center in Daytona and thinking back to where we were in 2016. We didn’t want to be there. We didn’t want to have to face the music and sit in front of everybody and really almost it wasn’t that we were lying, but when dad said that we’re gonna be OK and everything is gonna be alright, we didn’t know that. We were hoping, but we didn’t know that and it was a really, really, really difficult time, and so to have sat there then and went through that at the lowest of lows, and then to be able to go back and be on one of the highest of highs, it was just really a contrast for me. I got tangled up when I was trying to express that, but I think I can do it now and do a little bit better job.”

LEN WOOD, COO, Wood Brothers Racing – “I think it was me that said we’ll be OK, and we were. I said if we perform like we’re supposed to, we’ll be fine, and I think that year we did, and then the following year with Blaney we did excellent. But we’ve overcome all that. To go back to our fans, winning is hard and it should be. We don’t win a lot, but I think when we do, then the built-up emotions come out when we do win. I’ve had people say that they were laying on their floor crying or jumping up and down crying. For me, I didn’t cry, but I was so happy to see the smile on Harrison’s face and his mom and his dad. That was what was the best part for me.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – “Yeah, I would agree with that. Harrison’s mom, Kim, and his girlfriend usually are on the pit box. Kim is always there. I would imaging that she has been to every race – go-kart, pedal car, whatever it is – she has always been there. Just the happiness with those two and Jeff, that was a big deal. I told Jeff. I said, ‘You know, winning fixes things.’ Things that seem to be such a big deal yesterday or this morning, when you win it just fixes everything. Running well fixes a lot, but winning just makes a wet road dry.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT WAS LEONARD’S REACTION? “He’s telling us everybody that’s called him, from Roger Penske to Ray Evernham to Chip Ganassi. He’s over the moon as well. Like I said, we’re in Virginia now, so he was very happy and actually Uncle Delano and Aunt Crystal – the last three of the original group – were at our shop today and we had a picture taken with a 100 win banner.”

JON WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT WERE YOU THINKING IN THE CLOSING LAPS WITH KYLE BUSCH AND HARRISON GOING AT IT? “I think the way that I look at these speedway races is I count the cars that are running and I look at it from where can we be worst case. That isn’t a direct attack on Harrison, that’s just how these races unfold. So as that race progressed I kept thinking, ‘OK, there are 30 left. The worst we can be is 30th.’ Then there’s 20. Then there’s 15. Then there’s whatever there was on the lead lap, but Harrison is on the front row. On that final restart I’m thinking, ‘As long as he doesn’t get just totally knocked out of the way, we should come out of here with something to not be ashamed of.’ It did not dawn on me until I saw his car on the frontstretch, like right before the start-finish line, that he had a chance to win it. It’s not something that you allow yourself to think about because it’s almost like you’ll jinx it.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – “We were watching on TV in the lounge. We went to the lounge because we could hear better the talk from pit road. It was one of those things where you had to almost had to watch the TV, watch him go by and like, ‘Wait a minute. Did we really do it?’ And once we did, then we’re jumping up and down. You didn’t think going down the backstretch, ‘Well, we’re gonna win this race.’ But, there again, we’ve been so close so many times that you’ve got to get to the start-finish line. It’s just like David Pearson and Richard Petty in ‘76. Well, Richard Petty is gonna win. Well, wait a minute, he stalled. No, he didn’t. Eddie was on the radio with Pearson and he asked where Richard was at and he said, ‘Well, he’s stalled,’ and he said, ‘Well, I’m coming.’ And so it wasn’t over until it was over. It was the same thing as this. It’s not over until the cross that start-finish line, so you never know.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO YOU THAT LEONARD WOOD IS STILL HERE TO HELP CELEBRATE THIS 100TH WIN? “That’s a really big deal to us. I don’t know how many of you have been around Leonard lately, but he works everyday at the museum. Our museum, of course, is our old race shop, so it’s a full machine shop and all that. It’s like a race shop, but he works everyday. A lot of times he works on Saturdays and he’s got projects. He and Benny Belcher, which is another machinist that works there since the mid-eighties, they just work on projects. Right now, he’s building a half-size, half-scale BOSS 429 and it’s made out of aluminum – like pieces of aluminum. There’s nothing made on a CNC machine. It’s all hand done. This morning was the first time I saw him since the race and it was just like he was there. He knew as much about it as if he had been there. He’s just got such an understanding of racing and his mind is just as sharp. In fact, his workmanship now is probably better than it was when he was crew chief in the seventies or eighties. I’m really happy he’s able to enjoy it too. He may get to come to Darlington. He’s talking about coming to Darlington, so that will be cool.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – “He turns 90 in about a month and you wouldn’t know it. As Eddie said, he is at the peak of his craftsmanship right now in making things. It doesn’t matter what we ask. What’s broken that we hand to him, he hands it back fixed or exactly like we asked.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT DOES HE SAY WHEN YOU TELL HIM YOU’RE GOING TO JOSH BERRY NEXT YEAR? DOES HE HAVE ANY SAY IN THAT? “He was aware of it. He’s aware of everything that goes on, but he’s an old crew chief. Crew chiefs know just about everything about everything, and they know how to understand things and they see through things. They’re able to see things that the rest of us don’t sometimes, so he was aware that we were gonna probably make a change for ‘25 and Josh was one of them that he had recommended. He never even met him. He just watched him race, but he’s watched a lot of great drivers and crew chiefed for a lot of great drivers through the years and guys like him, they just know. But he’s over the moon happy for Harrison and Jeff and Kim. We’ve known that family since Jeff, in fact I think Len may remember this, but we were testing in Loudon, New Hampshire one summer and Jeff was up there with at that time was a Busch car, and then about the next year all of a sudden Jeff Burton starts for Jack and starts winning races, so we go back a long ways.”

WOOD BROTHERS RACING HAS NEVER BEEN A TWO-CAR OPERATION. “They raced two cars a couple times, but we never ran all of the races or the full schedule until Kyle Petty came to race for us in ‘85. So, in the mid-sixties one time they took three cars to Riverside, California and one of them was Dan Gurney, who won the race, and Marvin Panch, I think, finished second and Curtis Turner was in the third car and I think he was in the top six. But it was always us as a family team. We didn’t have enough people to do that, but we always had enough support and things from Ford Motor Company. During the eighties, Citgo petroleum was our sponsor and we had Purolator to assist with the Ford stuff in the seventies, but it just never was something that we really pursued. These guys that have four cars now and Jack used to have five. I don’t know how they keep up with it, but he told me one time you just got one car and you multiply by four or five or whatever it is, you just do it that way. But single car stuff has always worked for us.”

JON WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT ARE YOUR EXPECTATIONS FOR 2025? “I would hope that Josh Berry at least performs as well as he is each week now. There’s not gonna be the distraction that is probably taking place inside that shop right now, and I don’t know what level of influence that’s having on their performance, but it’s got to have some. So, I would hope that he at least performs as well as he is each week next year for us and that’s really about all I can say. That’s what I hope.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – DO YOU SEE A POINT WHERE HARRISON COULD POSSIBLY GET TOGETHER AGAIN AT SOME POINT? “I told Harrison several weeks ago, ‘Never say never.’ We had Neil Bonnet twice – two different sessions back in the eighties. It was almost eight or nine years apart, so never say never.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – “This is the only business in the world where I think it’s unpredictable. People that you never thought would work for you or drive for you or whatever. I mean, look at Richard Childress and Kyle Busch. They had a fistfight and now Kyle races for Richard. You can be mad today and you’re over it tomorrow. That’s one thing in racing that you get over being upset or whatever you want to be really quickly because nobody cares. Everybody moves on and racing just kind of overshadows any emotional parts. You’ve got to because the race cars won’t wait and you have to go.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – “There’s no driver that’s driven for us before that doesn’t come around to our hauler or come by to speak. No matter where we see them, all of our relationships are like once you’re part of the family, you’re part of the family.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – IS IT DIFFERENT GOING THROUGH THE EXPERIENCE WITH A FIRST TIME WINNER? WAS THAT PART OF THE EMOTION AS WELL? “I think so. I was thinking about it the other day of the first time winners that we’ve had. It was Trevor, Elliott Sadler, Dale Jarrett, Kyle Petty, Harrison now, Blaney, Tiny Lund in 1963 he won the Daytona 500 the first time out. Winning a first race with someone, a young man like that, that’s just a double win. That’s why it was so important. When I said winning kind of fixes everything, whatever bad races you’ve had or whatever, you forget all that stuff. Winning fixes everything.”

JON WOOD CONTINUED – “And Harrison really is one of those guys that you just want him to do good so bad. He’s just got that personality, that respect, self-respect. He’s just one of those people that you can’t not like, and so for us it’s been double hard with making this change for next year because you just want him to do good so bad, and that applies to whatever ride or whatever car he ends up in next year. You still just want it so bad for him because you can see it in him and you can see it in his eyes and he’s just a good kid.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – “You just want to hug him. I said that the other night. When he walks in a room, you want to walk on over there and hug him. That’s just the way it is.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – WHAT WILL THE FEELING BE LIKE AT DARLINGTON BECAUSE YOU’RE ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR LAST RACE? “I think the first race last year we finished sixth. There was an accident near the end and we were hoping to restart third and they lined us up sixth, so you never know until they cross that start-finish line at the end.”

EDDIE WOOD CONTINUED – “The way I look at it is we were fortunate enough to win a race Saturday night and you get to enjoy that until you get to Darlington. When they start unloading the cars, ‘OK, that race is over.’ You’re back like everybody else. Everybody is looking to win the next week and you get to enjoy it that long, though.”

LEN WOOD CONTINUED – “And we actually had a Sunday extra there. We had one more day.”

Austin Dillon denied final overturn of Richmond penalties, faces “must-win” scenario to make 2024 Cup Playoffs at Darlington

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Austin Dillon and Richard Childress Racing have lost their second and final appeal process in overturning Dillon’s penalty of having his NASCAR Cup Series victory at Richmond Raceway stripped from Playoff eligibility during a ruling made by Bill Mullis, NASCAR’s Final Appeal Officer, on Monday, August 26.

The news comes 12 days after Dillon’s 2024 Cup Series Playoff eligibility was revoked by NASCAR due to actions the Welcome, North Carolina native made four days earlier on August 11 at Richmond. During the event, he wrecked both Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin on the final lap and final turn during an overtime shootout to win the race and leapfrog a majority of the competition in the regular-season standings to clinch a Playoff berth. The actions Dillon made were a last resort to secure a spot in the 2024 Cup Series Playoffs, with the driver, owner Richard Childress and crew chief Justin Alexander defending Dillon’s actions.

Following the first announcement of his Playoff eligibility being revoked and Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet team being docked 25 driver/owner points, Richard Childress Racing released a statement that cited the team’s intentions to appeal the penalties.

The saga then continued this past Wednesday, August 21, when the National Motorsports Appeals Panel denied the team’s first appeal attempt and upheld the points deduction and revoked Playoff berth, but reduced Brandon Benesch’s, Dillon’s spotter who encouraged Dillon to wreck Hamlin approaching the finish line, suspension from three races to one. Richard Childress Racing, however, cited intentions to appeal the penalties to the Final Appeal Officer.

Following the decision to deny Dillon and Richard Childress Racing’s final attempt to overturn the penalties, Mullis released a statement that explained his final ruling and supported the initial ruling made by the National Motorsports Appeals Panel:

“The data presented today from SMT and IDAS systems indicate that more likely than not a rule violation did occur at Richmond Raceway on 8-11-24 by the No. 3 RCR car on the last lap of the race. [Rule 12.3.2.1.B Eligibility, race finishes must be unencumbered by violations of the NASCAR rules or other actions detrimental to stock car auto racing or NASCAR as determined in the sole discretion of NASCAR.]”

With all appeal processes used and denied, Dillon, who is currently ranked in 29th place in the 2024 regular-season standings and has finished no higher than 17th in the two races following the Richmond victory, faces a “must-win” scenario ahead of this upcoming weekend’s regular-season finale at Darlington Raceway to race his way back into the 2024 Cup Series Playoff picture. Currently, he is 298 points below the top-16 cutline in the Playoffs standings.

Dillon is one of several competitors who are currently below the top-16 cutline ahead of the regular-season finale at Darlington, a list that includes teammate Kyle Busch, Bubba Wallace, Ross Chastain, Chase Briscoe, Todd Gilliland, Carson Hocevar, Michael McDowell, Josh Berry, Noah Gragson, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Erik Jones, Ryan Preece, Daniel Hemric, Justin Haley, John Hunter Nemechek, Corey LaJoie and Zane Smith.

With 13 of 16 Playoff spots filled by regular-season winners, including this past weekend’s winner Harrison Burton, the remaining three vacant spots are currently occupied by Martin Truex Jr., Ty Gibbs and Chris Buescher on points, with the latter retaining the final transfer spot by 21 points over Bubba Wallace, 27 over Ross Chastain and 106 over Kyle Busch.

Austin Dillon’s final attempt to make the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs on the track continues this upcoming Sunday, September 1, at Darlington Raceway for the Cook Out Southern 500 and for the 2024 regular-season finale. The event’s broadcast time is slated to occur at 6 p.m. ET on USA Network.

Korthoff Preston Motorsports Breaks Through for First IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar GTD Victory Sunday at VIR

DANVILLE, Virginia – Mercedes-AMG Motorsport Customer Racing team Korthoff Preston Motorsports (KPM) broke through for its first victory in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship’s competitive GT Daytona (GTD) class Sunday with a convincing win by team co-drivers Mikael Grenier and Kenton Koch in the No. 32 Korthoff Preston Motorsports Mercedes-AMG GT3 in the Michelin GT Challenge at VIRginia International Raceway (VIR). The No. 32’s maiden win came just over three years after the team made its IMSA GTD debut in July of 2021 at Watkins Glen International. The triumph follows KPM’s IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup GTD team and driver championships last year and several near-miss shots at a race win over the course of the team’s full-season campaigns, which began in 2022.

After qualifying on the outside front row – KPM’s second stout qualifying performance in a row after Grenier won the pole earlier this month at Road America – Koch pounced from his second place starting position to grab the GTD lead on the first lap of the race. Koch then maintained a close but comfortable gap on the field while doing his best to save fuel in what turned out to be a double stint to open the race.

Grenier took the wheel after the KPM team executed its second flawless pit stop and picked right up where Koch left off. The KPM team led a GTD class-high 82 of the race’s 86 laps, losing the top spot only twice for two laps each time when the field cycled through a pair of green-flag pit stops. With a GTD Pro competitor in between him and the second place GTD challenger, Grenier took the checkered flag for the milestone win by 0.897 of a second.

Meanwhile, season-long GTD class championship leaders Winward Racing and team co-drivers Russell Ward and Philip Ellis secured a solid race result to improve their points margin with a late charge to a fourth-place finish. After Ward kept the No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 in the lead pack and out of trouble in his race-opening stint, a good stop by the Winward crew just before the race’s 45-minute mark put Ellis back in the race in the top 10.

Driving almost the final two hours over the course of two stints, Ellis kept the championship in mind as he chose his battles and looked for the right chances to improve race positions. The best opportunities came in the final 10 minutes of the race when Ellis took advantage of being in the middle of a GTD Pro class battle and the typical frenzied fight to the finish that always occurs at the end of IMSA races.

Ellis found a way by Winward’s closest championship competitor to take the checkered flag in a race-high fourth place and one spot ahead of their title rival.

With two endurance races remaining on 2024’s schedule next month at Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS) and in October at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, the No. 57 team and drivers have a 284-point lead in the WeatherTech GTD standings, 2,698 – 2,414, over the nearest competitor.

Sunday’s KPM win also gave Mercedes-AMG another major boost in the GTD manufacturer championship with the Silver Star’s series-leading fifth victory of the season following Winward’s four race wins in the first half of the year. Now with 2,882 points, a season-high 507 clear of the closest competitor, Mercedes-AMG heads to next month’s race in Indianapolis with a chance to clinch the title one race before the end of the season.

Grenier and the KPM team also improved their stakes in the GTD team and driver championship standings with Sunday’s win. The No. 32 KPM squad is third in the GTD team championship with 2,178 points while Grenier moved into third in the driver championship rankings for the first time this season with the same number of points.

Next up for Mercedes-AMG Motorsport Customer Racing teams is the Battle on the Bricks six-hour race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, September 19 – 22. Longtime KPM driver Mike Skeen returns to the No. 32 with Grenier and Koch at Indy while Indy Dontje resumes his familiar endurance roll with Winward to co-drive the No. 57 with Ward and Ellis.

Mikael Grenier, Driver – No. 32 Korthoff Preston Motorsports Mercedes-AMG GT3: “I’m happy, especially for Herb Korthoff and the entire Korthoff Preston Motorsports team. All of the mechanics, they have been working so hard, but we have just had some bad luck. We should have won three or four races over the last few years, but you can never stop trying, so it is good to get a victory. We started off Friday really off, we were almost the last car, and it was really hard to drive, but we made a good change overnight with good feedback from my teammate. We had good track position after Kenton’s great qualifying and we knew we had to keep it. I think it is hard to overtake for everyone here. Kenton took the lead and did a good job with fuel saving, so it gave us a short pit stop. In the end, I was just managing a bit and keeping them behind me. Every win is important, but this one is very special, extra special because I am happy for the team, I know that they wanted this, and I am also happy for Kenton.”

Kenton Koch, Driver – No. 32 Korthoff Preston Motorsports Mercedes-AMG GT3: “Having the track position here is really important, so once we were where we needed to be I was kind of managing it from there, just making it to each pit stop with as much fuel in the tank so we would have the shortest stop as possible. We did that, the crew nailed the stops like they always do, and then we’re able to maintain track position. My first win in GTD and for the team as well. Everyone has worked really hard to get to this point, to finally have the planets align. They knew it was coming eventually as we’ve always had opportunities to win, but something has always gotten in our way. Not this time! It feels good, and it definitely feels good to be piloting one of these Mercedes-AMG GT3 cars. It’s only my second time here in a Mercedes-AMG GT3, and first in GTD, but we have wins now two years in a row. Obviously, the car is quite nice to drive. I’m very fortunate to be a part of this program.”

Philip Ellis, Driver – No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3: “Finishing ahead of our main competitor is helpful but I wouldn’t say it makes it easier. I think it’s going to be the same mentality going into the final races of keeping out of trouble and making sure we finish. Increasing the points gap a little bit again is nice but this was more of a statement, I would say, to them that we will also give them a good fight, a good run for their money. It was a good fight, and I tried to pick the right battles along the way with the right cars, choosing who I let by, who I would fight, and try to wiggle our way back to the front that way. It worked out perfectly. Of course, it would have been a little bit nicer to be an extra step or two up on the podium, but from where we started the weekend, and how it was going with the safety car and with the GTD Pro cars in between battling, I think it was a very good race for us.”

UPPER DECK ANNOUNCES AGREEMENT WITH 23XI RACING

Global sports collectibles company announces first-ever NASCAR memorabilia collection with stars Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace of 23XI Racing.   

CARLSBAD, CA (August 26, 2024) – Upper Deck, the worldwide leader in sports and entertainment collectibles, today announced the launch of its new agreement with NASCAR Cup Series team 23XI Racing. The collection will feature authenticated memorabilia and trading cards of NASCAR stars Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace.

The collaboration will debut with the season’s current no. 1 ranked driver, Tyler Reddick, racing in the No. 45 Upper Deck Toyota Camry XSE on Sunday, Sept. 1, in the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina. The paint scheme features 23XI Racing co-owner Michael Jordan alongside Tiger Woods and Wayne Gretzky, who are exclusive Spokespeople for Upper Deck Authenticated memorabilia and collectibles. To start their collection, race fans can download a free promotional digital trading card featuring Tyler Reddick’s Upper Deck race car today on e-Pack.

“This collection is monumental for Upper Deck as it reintroduces racing into our diverse lineup of premium authenticated memorabilia,” said Upper Deck President Jason Masherah. “Just as 23XI burst onto the NASCAR scene with speed and determination, we’re bringing racing to our portfolio with the same energy. We’re thrilled to celebrate iconic moments from this fan-centric sport.”

Wallace, 23XI’s first driver and one of the most recognizable names in NASCAR, and Reddick, a two-time winner this season and two-time Xfinity Series champion, will be the first racing additions to Upper Deck’s roster in over 20 years. Among the memorabilia collection, fans can find race-worn suits, autographed artwork, and more.

Steve Lauletta, President of 23XI Racing, shared, “This partnership is great for our team and our fans. By entering the exciting world of collectibles, our supporters now have another unique opportunity to celebrate and commemorate 23XI’s successes. Through this collaboration, we’re able to seamlessly integrate two fandoms into one remarkable experience to be cherished.”

Upper Deck’s 23XI Racing memorabilia collection will be available later through the Upper Deck Store and Upper Deck Certified Diamond Dealer hobby shops.

About Upper Deck

Upper Deck is a global entertainment company creating trading cards, memorabilia, collectibles, games, and online platforms that deliver the experiences collectors crave. Upper Deck has set the unmatched industry standard for quality, authenticity, and innovation and continues to bring generations of fans closer to their favorite athletes and characters with unique and authentic sports and entertainment product offerings, as well as its digital trading ecosystem. The company prides itself on creating collectibles that produce invaluable experiences for sports and entertainment’s most dedicated and loyal fans, with a goal to deliver excellence to the community across the most coveted properties as a means to develop memorable moments for collectors of all kinds.

Find more information at http://www.upperdeck.comwww.UpperDeckBlog.com or follow us on Facebook (/UpperDeck), Instagram (UpperDeckSports), Twitter (UpperDeckSports), and YouTube (UDvids). 

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. In 2023, both Wallace and Reddick earned spots in the NASCAR Playoffs. The team operates out of Airspeed, a state-of-the-art facility in Huntersville, N.C. that opened in January of 2024.

Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Racing: Noah Gragson Darlington Advance

NOAH GRAGSON
Darlington Advance
No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Event Overview

● Event: Cook Out Southern 500 (Round 26 of 36)
● Time/Date: 6 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Sept. 1
● Location: Darlington (S.C.) Raceway
● Layout: 1.366-mile oval
● Laps/Miles: 367 laps/501.32 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 115 laps / Stage 2: 115 laps / Final Stage: 137 laps
● TV/Radio: USA / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● The Cook Out Southern 500 will mark Noah Gragson’s third career NASCAR Cup Series start at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, but his first in the Southern 500. Both of Gragson’s previous Cup Series starts at the 1.366-mile oval have come in May during the Goodyear 400. Gragson finished 26th in last year’s Goodyear 400 and improved on that number this year when he finished 14th.

● Gragson’s lack of NASCAR Cup Series experience at Darlington does not mean he’s lacking experience at the egg-shaped oval. In fact, Gragson has seven NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at the “Track Too Tough To Tame,” and he seemed to tame Darlington by scoring an average finish of fourth. His worst finish was eighth, and in his last three Xfinity Series starts at Darlington, Gragson scored two wins and earned one second-place finish. The Las Vegas native has a 100 percent lap-completion rate at Darlington and he led a total of 253 laps, nearly 25 percent of the 1,035 laps available.

● Gragson’s first NASCAR Xfinity Series victory at Darlington came on Sept. 4, 2021, when he started eighth and led five times for 40 laps, including the final 10, to take the win by .219 of a second over runner-up Harrison Burton.

● Gragson’s second NASCAR Xfinity Series win at Darlington came in his final Xfinity Series start at the track on Sept. 3, 2022. He started second and took the lead on the fourth lap of the 147-lap race. He wound up leading four times for a race-high 82 laps, winning with a .794-of-a-second advantage over his nearest pursuer, Sheldon Creed.

● Gragson will make his eighth career NASCAR Xfinity Series start at Darlington on Saturday. The 25-year-old will pull double duty this Labor Day weekend by driving the No. 30 Ford Mustang for Rette-Jones Racing in the Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help a Hero 200 before piloting his signature No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse in Sunday’s Southern 500. It will be Gragson’s fourth Xfinity Series start of the year and he will be going for a fourth straight top-10. Gragson wheeled a Rette-Jones Racing-prepared Mustang to a 10th-place finish May 25 at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway, a fifth-place result June 29 at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway, and a sixth-place effort Aug. 17 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn.

Noah Gragson, Driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

How do you feel about Darlington serving as the regular-season finale and the last chance for drivers to earn a playoff berth?

“It’s a fun, challenging racetrack, especially with the Southern 500. It’s a long race. It wears you out emotionally and mentally, and you’ve got to stay focused for 500 miles around that track. It’s a tough place. I personally enjoy that track a ton. It’s a lot of fun, and I’m super excited for it.”

You’ve said that you feel like Darlington is one of your better tracks. Why?

“I just feel like I know every bump and crack around that track. If my car’s driving one way, I can move around the track and help my car’s balance just by switching up my line. I just have a really good understanding of, if I position my car one way or another, how it’s going to affect the balance of it.”

You finished a respectable 14th in your first visit to Darlington earlier this year. How did that race unfold for you and are there any takeaways from it that you can apply to your return trip to Darlington this Labor Day weekend?

“We just kind of struggled the whole weekend getting the car where we wanted, and then I hit the wall in qualifying in turn one trying something that I normally wouldn’t do. Going back there, I’m taking the approach that I’m just going to drive that track the way I want to drive it. It was earlier in the season and we were still trying to figure each other out between me and my crew chief. I think we’ve gotten to a good place now where I feel like we can have some more success there.”

The Southern 500 is 100 miles longer (74 additional laps) than your first race at Darlington was back in May. Is a race at Darlington akin to the Coca-Cola 600, where it’s a test of stamina as much of a test of skill?

“The Southern 500 will definitely mentally drain you and you have to stay focused. It’s a long one, so you’ve got to focus in, and you’re thinking and using your full potential, from the green flag to the checkered. It’s a tough track to get around by yourself in practice, and then when you get out there with other racecars trying to pass them and stuff, you’re definitely draining your mental capacity battery pretty quick.”

Darlington is known as the track “Too Tough To Tame.” When you went there for your first and only NASCAR Cup Series start last year, did it live up to its billing?

“I feel like I really had a good handle on Darlington when I raced in Xfinity – I’ve won a couple of Xfinity races there. We didn’t really have great speed in the Cup car there last year, which was disappointing because I had higher hopes. It’s a track that gives you different options. You can run the bottom, you can run the top, and the (two ends of the track) are shaped differently. I think the biggest part is just not overdoing it and getting into the wall, but I like running right up against that wall, so it comes a little bit more naturally to me.”

In the NASCAR Xfinity Series, you got along with the “Lady in Black.” Seven career starts and seven top-10 finishes, with two wins, including your last Xfinity Series start there. You had command of Darlington in the Xfinity Series. How?

“I just loved running the top at Darlington. There are only a handful of guys who can really run the top efficiently, building up that precision and accuracy, and it takes a lot of focus to run up there. Just getting comfortable doing it at all the tracks – Vegas, Homestead, Kansas, Darlington – those are all places where you run the wall. So all those tracks are really good practice on how to get comfortable and how to run it, and I feel like I’m one of the better guys at running the wall. We had really good runs there, and if we didn’t finish first, we were always second, third, fourth – we always had a shot to win, and we led a lot of laps there. It’s one of my favorite tracks, for sure.”

How much can you rip the wall at Darlington before you rip your car into pieces?

“You don’t want to hit the wall. You want to be as close as you can get, but you don’t want to hit the wall. I actually don’t even go up to the top lane in (turns) one and two. You see a lot of guys drive the bottom of the racetrack on entry, slide up in the center and then turn back down. I kind of just run the middle of the corner through there. I’ve just never gotten a good handle on doing that diamond in (turns) one and two. But (turns) three and four, I’m pretty committed to the fence. Just being smart and not overdoing it. Obviously, the tires wear out and that’s where you see guys bite themselves. They start to get comfortable up there and they gain their confidence by running the wall, but their tires are also wearing out. You think, ‘Man, I could push it just a little more because I have a little more confidence, I’ve worked up to it,’ but you also have less grip, so that’s where you see that place bite you.”

You’re in a NextGen car. You wear a full-face, state-of-the-art helmet, combined with a state-of-the-art firesuit and shoes, and a six-way seatbelt system keeps you secure in a custom-molded seat. Do you ever wonder how a guy like Richard Petty ran 500 miles at Darlington in overalls and whatever helmet he could find, in a car not far removed from what was on the dealership floor?

“That’s all they knew back then. It sounds crazy for us now, but back in the day they still ran it how they ran it because that’s all they knew, right? You know, 20 years from now, we’re going to be looking at today and saying, ‘I can’t believe those guys in 2024 were doing stuff like this. It’s nuts.’ Stuff evolves and you grow and you learn more.”

No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Team Roster

Primary Team Members

Driver: Noah Gragson

Hometown: Las Vegas

Crew Chief: Drew Blickensderfer

Hometown: Decatur, Illinois

Car Chief: Jerry Cook

Hometown: Toledo, Ohio

Engineer: James Kimbrough

Hometown: Pensacola, Florida

Spotter: Andy Houston

Hometown: Hickory, North Carolina

Over-The-Wall Members

Front Tire Changer: Ryan Mulder

Hometown: Sioux Center, Iowa

Rear Tire Changer: Trevor White

Hometown: Arlington, Texas

Tire Carrier: Tyler Bullard

Hometown: King, North Carolina

Jack Man: Sean Cotten

Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Fuel Man: James “Ace” Keener

Hometown: Fortuna, California

Road Crew Members

Mechanic: Chris Trickett

Hometown: Grafton, West Virginia

Mechanic: Beau Whitley

Hometown: Carmel, Indiana

Tire Specialist: Jacob Cooksey

Hometown: Westbrookville, New York

Engine Tuner: Matt Moeller

Hometown: Monroe, New York

Transporter Co-Driver: Steve Casper

Hometown: Salisbury, North Carolina

Transporter Co-Driver: Matt Murphy

Hometown: Augusta, Georgia

HARRISON BURTON SCORES 100TH WIN FOR WOOD BROTHERS RACING AFTER OVERTIME FINISH IN DAYTONA

DAYTONA, FL – August 26, 2024 – Harrison Burton won the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, marking his first win in the NASCAR Cup Series and 100th win for Wood Brothers Racing.

“Congratulations to Leonard, Len, Eddie, Jon, Jeremy, Harrison, and everyone at Wood Brothers Racing on the race win at Daytona,” said Doug Yates, President and CEO of Roush Yates Engines. “Reaching 100 wins in the Cup Series is a monumental achievement for the Wood Brothers and a reflection of the passion, dedication, and talent this family has brought to our sport. It’s an honor to be a part of their journey and to see them reach such a significant milestone.”

“I cried for the whole cool down lap. It’s just been the hardest three years of my life. There’s no denying. It’s just been rough and these guys have rallied behind me when it matters the most. Going to every single race with the same mentality of trying to win because we could get number 100. We kept saying that in our meetings that we had a chance to get No. 100 for the Wood Brothers and that’s something that you can’t take lightly. We as a group have that place in history now forever for the 100th win for the Wood Brothers and, to me, that just means the world,” commented Burton.

“This is beyond words,” remarked Eddie Wood, CEO and co-owner of Wood Brothers Racing. “This has been such a long time coming, the hundredth win. We’ve been with Motorcraft Quick Lane and Ford Performance for over twenty years and you just can’t put that into words. Edsel Ford, all his family, Jim Farley – there’s just so many people in our world to make this happen. It’s just unbelievable.”

“Ford and Motorcraft Quick Lane have stuck behind us for over twenty years now,” said Len Wood, COO and co-owner of Wood Brothers Racing. “To get our 100th win is so special, and we couldn’t do it without those people. It’s great to get a win here at Daytona. This is the place you want to be, right here.”

“The Wood Brothers are family to us at Ford and to see them get their 100th win means so much to all of us who have followed them through the years,” said Mark Rushbrook, Global Director, Ford Performance Motorsports. “When you think of Ford and its NASCAR program, you think of the Wood Brothers. Their loyalty to us for the last 74 years is unmatched and we couldn’t be prouder.”

Seven Ford Performance drivers started Saturday night’s race from the top-10 with Front Row Motorsports teammates Michael McDowell and Todd Gilliland sweeping the front row, Team Penske’s Joey Logano in 3rd, Stewart-Haas Racing teammates Ryan Preece in 4th, Josh Berry in 5th, and Chase Briscoe in 6th, along with Team Penske’s Austin Cindric in 8th. The field remained 3-wide for the entire first stage with several drivers swapping the lead back and forth. Stewart-Haas Racing’s Josh Berry won Stage 1, earning his first stage win of the season. After pit stops during the stage break, Team Penske’s Joey Logano took the lead and didn’t look back, winning Stage 2. After several late-race cautions, the race went into overtime. Harrison Burton started on the outside of the front row alongside Kyle Busch. Burton was able to make the race-winning pass on the last lap, finishing 0.047 seconds ahead of second place Kyle Busch.

Four Ford Performance drivers finished in the top 10: Rick Ware Racing’s Cody Ware in P4, Roush Fenway Keselowski (RFK) Racing’s Brad Keselowski in P8, and teammate Chris Buescher in P10.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series also raced at Daytona on Friday. Stewart-Haas Racing’s Riley Herbst finished in P4 and RSS Racing’s Ryan Sieg finished in P5.

The NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series both compete this weekend at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, SC.

About Roush Yates Engines
Roush Yates Engines is a leading-edge engine development company based in Mooresville, NC consisting of two state-of-the-art facilities – Roush Yates Engines and Roush Yates Manufacturing Solutions, a world class AS9100 Rev D/ISO 13485 certified CNC manufacturing facility. The company’s core business includes designing, building and testing purpose-built race engines.

Ford Performance in partnership with Roush Yates Engines is the exclusive engine builder of the NASCAR FR9 Ford V8 engine.

With an unparalleled culture of winning and steeped in rich racing history, Roush Yates Engines continues to follow the company’s vision to lead performance engine innovation and staying true to the company’s mission, provide race winning engines through demonstrated power and performance.