Home Blog Page 933

Connor Mosack Ready for ‘Saturday in the Park’

25-Year-Old Racer To Make First NASCAR Xfinity Series Start of 2024 in The Loop 110 on Streets of Downtown Chicago
Chicago-Based Porter Pipe & Supply Backing Mosack and JR Motorsports in NASCAR’s Second Annual Chicago Street Race Weekend

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (July 1, 2024) – Ever since last year’s inaugural NASCAR race weekend on the streets of downtown Chicago, Connor Mosack has been itching to get back to the temporary 2.2-mile, 12-turn street circuit that surrounds Grant Park.

Despite being a rookie in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Mosack came into last year’s race as the rare driver with previous street-course experience. In the TA2 division of the Trans Am Series, Mosack made two street-course starts in the Music City Grand Prix in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. The Charlotte, North Carolina, native started second and led nine laps before finishing third in the inaugural event in 2021. In his return to Nashville in 2022, Mosack qualified fourth and grabbed the lead on the opening lap. He proceeded to lead the 39-car field for 26 laps before finishing second.

That background, along with Mosack’s overall road-racing history in Trans Am, allowed him to find speed immediately in Chicago. In just his 12th Xfinity Series start, Mosack qualified a career-best fourth. He ran among the top-five for the first 20 laps until a carburetor issue derailed his strong run. When the caution came out for a nearby lightning strike on lap 25, Mosack ducked into the pits for his crew to lift the hood and diagnose the problem. He returned to the track in 35th, but shortly thereafter, the race was postponed for rain. But with a plan to replace the carburetor and seemingly plenty of laps still remaining, Mosack eyed the opportunity to work his way back toward the front when racing resumed. It never happened. Persistent rain forced NASCAR to call the race official after 25 laps, denying Mosack a chance to return to the front.

“Despite the outcome, I thought the Chicago Street Race was an awesome event,” Mosack said. “I’m definitely excited to get back and finish what I started there. The track was a lot of fun to drive with a lot of high-risk, high-reward corners. I think it’ll be just as big, if not bigger, of an event than last year.”

The race is definitely big for Mosack. Even with being a two-time winner in Trans Am and a two-time winner in the ARCA Menards Series, the 25-year-old is still trying to secure a fulltime ride in NASCAR.

While running the entire, 12-race Trans Am schedule, Mosack has only been able to run four ARCA races and four NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series races in 2024. The Loop 110 marks his first Xfinity Series race of the season after making 24 starts in the stepping-stone division to the elite NASCAR Cup Series last year. Nonetheless, Mosack eyes the positives gained from jumping into different racecars in different series.

“I think being able to adapt to a different car and a different track is definitely important,” Mosack said. “Even when you run the same series consistently and see the same racetracks, grip levels are constantly changing. Being able to adapt every lap to the grip the car has at that moment is definitely important for making speed in the race.

“And there are certain things from each car and each series, the guys you race against, that you’re able to learn from. Even though they may not apply directly to a different series, there are a lot of things you can take away from it. There’s a lot of benefit there, and seat time is obviously important.

“Of course, there are some things that you miss not being fulltime in a particular series, just from guys constantly getting better each and every week in that car and learning what they need to build on, and having that chemistry with the crew chief and all the guys on your team. You kind of miss a little bit of that, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have speed each and every weekend you show up.”

Mosack is aided on this front by the team that he is with at Chicago – JR Motorsports, the powerhouse Xfinity Series team owned by NASCAR icon Dale Earnhardt Jr., that has collected 84 Xfinity Series victories and three championships.

“JR Motorsports does a really good job. They’re particular with the details, and this is a detail-oriented sport,” said Mosack, who first drove for JR Motorsports in 2020 when he wheeled a Late Model to the CARS Tour rookie-of-the-year title.

“My crew chief, Andrew Overstreet, is really sharp. I’ve been able to work with him in the simulator and at the shop, getting fitted in the car and ensuring we’re where we need to be before we even unload at Chicago. So, I’m definitely looking forward to it. It’s a great opportunity to have a great run.”

Mosack comes into Chicago with some fresh road-course experience. The Trans Am Series has raced the past two weekends at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington and Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, with Mosack finishing fifth and fourth, respectively, in 30-car fields. Mosack also ran the ARCA race June 21 at Mid-Ohio, winning the pole and leading 13 laps before a restart penalty on the green-white-checkered finish relegated him to 13th.

“All of that recent road-course experience is certainly helpful. Just reps at a road course in general help you in any kind of car you hop into. You kind of get used to what the weight (of the car) feels like on a road course,” Mosack said.

“While the Trans Am car and the Xfinity car do have quite a few differences, they’re also still fairly similar, or at least a lot more similar than a sportscar or an open-wheel car would be. It is fairly adaptable between the two, you just need to be mindful of the extra weight you’re carrying. The car rolls over a little bit more, and the brakes aren’t as strong as they are on the Trans Am car, but a lot of the same principles apply throughout the race.

“The braking is probably the biggest difference between an Xfinity car and an ARCA car, so I feel like it was good to kind of manage my brakes throughout the ARCA race at Mid-Ohio and see how they faded. I feel like that’s going to be the biggest thing to manage going into Chicago. In our eyes, we won that race at Mid-Ohio, and having that confidence helps going into Chicago.”

Confidence is what’s needed to attack Chicago’s 12-turn layout, where drivers speed past some of the city’s most renowned landmarks, from Michigan Avenue to South Lake Shore Drive, with the start-finish line near Buckingham Fountain.

“There are definitely some really challenging corners at Chicago,” Mosack said. “Turn one is a heavy braking zone where you quickly have to set up to get back to turn two, and when you do it right you can make up a little bit of time.

“That leads onto a long straightaway through (turns) three and four, where your exit off two is going to be really important. And then turn four is one of the really challenging corners on the track. It was really rough last year, so it’s a corner you never feel like you get into hard enough, but you also feel like if you go in a little harder, you’re probably going to crash. That’s a spot where maybe late in the race there’s time to be found there, but there’s definitely a risk to go get it.

“That leads to a little tight section into turn five, which is another important corner to get off of well because it leads onto the longest straightaway. And that leads to another heavy braking zone in (turn) six, back into a quick setup into turn seven, which is probably the tightest corner on the track. It’s really easy to get into trouble there with the downhill braking zone.

“And that leads to the fastest cornering section – (turns) eight, nine and 10 – which is probably the most fun part of the track, but it’s also very easy to make a mistake there. The closer you can get to the wall there, the faster you’ll go, but obviously that comes with a risk.

“And then the last two corners are pretty basic, 90-degree, right-hand corners. That section of the track has been repaved, so those corners will have a lot of grip.”

Typical road-course venues have significant run-off areas, whereas street circuits do not. Getting comfortable with those confines can set one’s lap times free.

“The biggest takeaway from those street-course races at Nashville was just getting comfortable running up close to the walls,” Mosack said. “Scott Lagasse, who I drove for in Trans Am, told me that if your car had sideview mirrors on it, you want to scrape it on the outside wall turning in, scrape the inside one at the apex, and then scrape the outside one on exit. It’s about getting comfortable with those last few inches against the wall.

“That’s where the track’s going to have the most grip late in the race, where there’s a little less rubber to slide on. It’s also going to give you the most radius at the corner and allow you to carry the most speed. But, obviously, the more risks you take, the more likely you are to catch the fence at some point. If you catch the outside here and there, it’s probably not going to hurt you too bad, but clipping the inside could definitely send you too hard into the outside wall.”

In addition to street cred, Mosack brings Chicago-based Porter Pipe & Supply to The Loop 110, where he will drive the No. 88 Porter Pipe & Supply Chevrolet Camaro. Porter Pipe & Supply is a third-generation, family-owned and operated wholesale supplier of commercial and industrial pipe, valves, fittings, plumbing supplies, HVAC and refrigeration equipment and mechanical products.

“We’re proud Chicagoans and the NASCAR race weekend brings a tremendous amount of pride,” said Nick Porter, CEO, Porter Pipe & Supply. “It’s an incredibly unique way for us to take care of our customers in our hometown. Seeing the Porter Pipe & Supply car in a NASCAR race will be another milestone moment for our family-owned company.”

Mosack brokered the partnership with Porter Pipe & Supply, putting his degree in business entrepreneurship from High Point (N.C.) University to good use.

“I had the pleasure of being at Porter Pipe & Supply last week for a few hours before I went to Road America,” Mosack said. “I got to meet with a lot of their employees and their customers. They definitely seem to be even more excited than they were last year, and I feel the same way. It was great to see a lot of the same people who were all excited about how things went last year until we had our issue, and I feel like we can do even better for them this year.

“The Porters are a great family. If you talk with any of their employees, they’re all happy to be working there. It’s just a really cool atmosphere that they have there, and it makes you want to perform and do well for them.”

All aspects of the Xfinity Series race take place on Saturday. Mosack and his Xfinity Series counterparts hit the track at 9 a.m. CDT/10 a.m. EDT for a 50-minute practice session before qualifying starts at 10 a.m. CDT/11 a.m. EDT. The Loop 110 gets underway at 2:30 p.m. CDT/3:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by NBC and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Joey Logano to Pilot the No. 15 Ford Mustang for AM Racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series Chicago Street Race

STATESVILLE, N.C.: AM Racing confirmed today that Ford Performance driver Joey Logano will drive the No. 15 AM Racing Ford Mustang for the upcoming NASCAR Xfinity Series race at the Chicago Street Race on Saturday, July 6.

Logano, Sunday’s winner of the NASCAR Cup Series Ally 400 race at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway will fill in for Hailie Deegan, who has piloted the team’s Ford Mustang in the first 17 Xfinity races of the season.

After a rough start to the first half of the Xfinity Series season, the team is looking to channel the two-time NASCAR Cup Series Champion and Sunday’s winner at Nashville Superspeedway to help provide feedback that the team can use to improve on-track competition as the sport heads into the second half of the season.

“The level of competition in the Xfinity Series is as competitive as it’s ever been,” commented AM Racing team president Wade Moore. “It is our goal at AM Racing to field a competitive race team through our technical alliance with Stewart-Haas Racing and provide any of our drivers the best equipment and opportunity to be successful on track each weekend.”

“With that being said, we haven’t had the success on track that we were hoping for in the first half of the season. When the opportunity to have Joey in the car at Chicago became a possibility, we felt we needed to take advantage of the knowledge and feedback that a two-time NASCAR Cup Series Champion could provide to our teams’ growth.”

Added Moore, “We intend to take the feedback and data from the Chicago race weekend and apply it to building better race cars each week so AM Racing can have a stronger second half of the season.”

Team partner Klutch Vodka will support Logano’s return to Xfinity Series competition in the second-annual Loop 110 at the Chicago Street Course.

“We support AM Racing and we’re happy to have Joey Logano behind the wheel of the No. 15 Klutch Vodka Ford Mustang at the Chicago Street Course,” offered Klutch Vodka CEO Anthony S. Quattrochi and his Co-Founder, fiancé Brandy Wong.

“His experience and talent will be a great asset to the AM Racing team this weekend and no doubt will present the opportunity to introduce the Klutch Vodka brand to new race fans as well.”

Logano, a native of Middletown, Connecticut, has delivered many achievements in the Xfinity Series, including 36 poles, 30 wins, 95 top-five and 143 top-10 finishes.

The Team Penske driver did not compete in the inaugural Xfinity Series race last year in Chicago; however, he finished eighth in the first-ever Cup Series Street Course event.

AM Racing at the Chicago Street Course, with driver Brett Moffitt, captured a Xfinity team-best of fourth after starting seventh in the 2023 The Loop 121.

“Racing in the rain on Chicago’s Street Course last year was a challenge within itself. Any extra seat time is always a positive for unique tracks such as this one. Driving the NASCAR Xfinity Series cars are a lot of fun, and I’m looking forward to climbing behind the wheel of the No. 15 AM Racing Ford Mustang, with high hopes to wheel it to the front.”

The Loop 110 at the Chicago Street Race is scheduled for Saturday, July 6th, at 3:30 p.m. Fans can tune in to NBC to see all the action from the Windy City.

About AM Racing:

AM Racing is a multi-tiered, multi-faceted Motorsports program headquartered in Statesville, N.C.

Established in December 2015, AM Racing is prided on faith, honesty and intelligent performance.

The family-owned team will compete in the ARCA Menards Series, the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN® Truck Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and various Dirt Modified events in its eighth year of competition.

Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Racing: Noah Gragson Chicago Street Race Advance

NOAH GRAGSON
Chicago Street Race Advance
No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Event Overview

● Event: Grant Park 165 (Round 20 of 36)
● Time/Date: 4:30 p.m. EDT on Sunday, July 7
● Location: Chicago Street Course
● Layout: 2.2-mile, 12-turn street course
● Laps/Miles: 75 laps/165 miles
● Stage Lengths: Stage 1: 20 laps / Stage 2: 25 laps / Final Stage: 30 laps
● TV/Radio: NBC / MRN / SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Notes of Interest

● The Grant Park 165 Sunday on the streets of downtown Chicago is the third of five road-course races on the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series schedule. Noah Gragson, driver of the No. 10 Bass Pro Shops/Winchester Ford Mustang Dark Horse for Stewart-Haas Racing, finished 34th in the series’ first road-course race of the year March 24 at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas. He then placed 26th in the series’ second road-course stop June 9 at Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway. After Chicago, the next road-course race is Sept. 15 at Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International with the final road-course race coming Oct. 12 at the Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway Roval.

● In last year’s inaugural street race at Chicago, Gragson started 23rd and finished 25th, completing all 78 laps for LEGACY MOTOR CLUB.

● Across the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series, NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, ARCA Menards Series and NASCAR K&N Pro Series, Gragson has made a total of 40 road-course starts – five in Cup, 21 in Xfinity, two in Trucks, two in ARCA and 10 in K&N – amassing four wins, 16 top-fives and 27 top-10s with 167 laps led.

● Gragson’s four road-course wins all came in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series, and three were earned in a one-week stretch in September 2016. Gragson swept a pair of K&N Series West races at the Utah Motorsports Campus in Tooele, beating Todd Gilliland on Sept. 10 and then besting him again on Sept. 11 when Gragson took the lead from Gilliland on the last lap. Six days and 2,219 miles later at New Jersey Motorsports Park in Millville, Gragson scored his third straight road-course win, this time in the K&N Series East where he beat Justin Haley. Gragson’s fourth and most recent road-course win was earned in the 2019 K&N Series West race at Sonoma.

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

What was your impression of the Chicago Street Race after the checkered flag dropped on last year’s inaugural event?

“We fired off really fast in practice. We were in the top-10, but then it seemed like everybody else kept getting faster and we kind of stayed the same. It was tough to race in the rain. I usually like racing in the rain, but I hit the wall four or five times and kind of struggled in the race. But that was last year and this is a new year. I’m going into it open-minded.”

How did your preparation in the simulator match up with the reality of the Chicago Street Race?

“There was a little more grip in certain areas and it was a little rougher in certain areas, but it was pretty good overall. We fired off really good in practice. That tells me the sim gave me good confidence when I got out there.”

Take us through a lap around Chicago. Were there any parts of the track where you enjoyed hustling the car, and what parts turned out to be a challenge?

“The biggest challenge for me was going into turns three and four, at the end of the straightaway on Lakeshore Drive. And then you get that double right-hander, it’s pretty rough through there, and finding a good brake zone and constant flow through there is pretty tough. And then around the fountain was pretty fun. It’s definitely a high-commitment corner. You’re hitting the racetrack and are kind of all over the place. You definitely have to be up on the wheel around that track.”

Can you take anything from your two road-course races this year at COTA and Sonoma and apply them to Chicago?

“Yeah, Chicago is a street course, but the same principles apply. Our stuff wasn’t very good at COTA, but it actually was pretty good at Sonoma. Hopefully, the car has speed like Sonoma instead of COTA, where it was tough to get around the track. The car had more grip at Sonoma and went through the corners better. Turn 10 was a handful at COTA, and every corner you were on the ragged edge, where you could flow better at Sonoma. That gives me some added confidence going to Chicago.”

Talk about what’s going on inside the racecar at Chicago. How much are you thrashing around, grabbing gears, hitting the brakes, smashing the gas? Is it controlled chaos?

“Usually on a road course you’re always swatting flies in there, just kind of all over the place with your hands, and you’re driving one-handed, you’re shifting, trying to focus on your brake pressure and where you brake bias is so you’re not locking the fronts, but you’re also not locking the rears. And getting your downshifts, getting your upshifts, not spinning the tires on exit, having grip, there’s a lot to it.”

With Shane van Gisbergen’s win at Chicago last year, it really shined a spotlight on Australian Supercars drivers. How much did you know about SVG and Supercars prior to his win last year?

“I knew he was super good in Supercars, but he flat-out kicked our ass and made us look kind of silly. To come in and win your first race is a pretty special feat in the Cup Series. He definitely does a good job on the road courses and I definitely admire his skills quite a bit. I never really watched any of the Supercars races, but I’ve always followed those kinds of guys. They have a pretty cool style and it’s always cool when you see guys you’ve followed on Instagram for a couple of years come over and do well. Yeah, they’re pretty good, they’re pretty aggressive, and they drive hard.”

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

Crav’n Flavor brand to Partner with JD Motorsports and driver Ty Dillon for Chicago

Itasca, IL – Race fans are ready for some “serious satisfaction” in Chicago.

JD Motorsports proudly announces that Crav’n Flavor will team up with veteran driver Ty Dillon for The Loop 110 Chicago Street Race on Saturday, July 6. Ty will jump behind the wheel of the No. 4 Crav’n Flavor Chevrolet for the second annual NASCAR Xfinity Series street race through the Windy City.

Crav’n Flavor is one of the leading brands across several food categories, from frozen entrees and pizzas to sweets and savory snacks, and fans have likely seen them in their local grocery stores like Food City, Hy-Vee, Piggly Wiggly, and several other independent retailers throughout the country.

The Chicago Street Race will mark their first official foray into the sport of NASCAR, and driver Ty Dillon couldn’t be happier to help introduce them to the excitement of racing.

“It’s great to have new faces like Crav’n Flavor in the sport,” says Dillon on the partnership. “I’m proud to welcome them into NASCAR. I can’t wait to highlight the brand for shoppers across the country. I’m thankful to Johnny Davis for letting me be the one to introduce Crav’n Flavor to NASCAR fans.”

The No. 4 Crav’n Flavor Chevrolet features a bold orange and black paint scheme to match the bold flavors of the signature Crav’n Flavor line of snacks. The brand is excited for their street race debut in one of the most talked-about NASCAR events of the year.

“We are excited to bring some serious snacking to the NASCAR Chicago Street Race with Crav’n Flavor,” said Kevin Stafford, Vice President of Marketing for K-VA-T Food Stores and Topco member. “We are thrilled to partner with Ty Dillon and his team, and we know our Crav’n Flavor shoppers will be ready to cheer him on this weekend!”

For fans at home, Crav’n Flavor offers a huge selection of race day snacks, ranging from crackers like Crav’n Flavor Cheese Crisps, their signature line of Crav’n Flavor kettle cooked chips, and sweet treats like their Crav’n Flavor fudgy covered cookies, all of which are available at local grocery stores. Fans can head to CravnFlavor.com to find their local stores and stock up for the perfect race day watch party.

Tune in to watch the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at the Chicago Street Course on Saturday, July 6, at 2:30 p.m. The race will be broadcast on USA, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio (Ch. 90).

About Crav’n Flavor

Crav’n Flavor is a brand with a wide variety of craveable meal and snack solutions for on-the-go shoppers. With more than 350 quality and convenient meal and snack solutions ranging from cookies, crackers and salty snacks to frozen appetizers, breakfasts, entrees, desserts and pizza as well as refrigerated cookie dough and beef jerky, Crav’n Flavor has something to satisfy every craving. The brand – developed and managed by Topco Associates, LLC to support member-owners – has products currently available to purchase in thousands of Topco member stores across the country. For more information on Crav’n Flavor or to see where Crav’n Flavor products are available for purchase, visit www.cravnflavor.com.

About Topco Associates, LLC

Topco Associates, LLC is an $18.3 billion, privately held, member-owned company that provides aggregation, innovation and knowledge management solutions for its leading food industry member-owners and customers, including grocery retailers, wholesalers, food service, and pharmacy companies. Topco leverages the collective volume, knowledge, and commitment of these companies to create a competitive advantage in the marketplace by reducing costs and offering winning business-building capabilities. Topco manages 20 brands on behalf of its member owners, including the Crav’n Flavor brand. For more information, please visit www.topco.com.

JD Motorsports

Team Owner Johnny Davis first began fielding the No. 4 car in what is now the Xfinity Series in 1983, with Joe Henry Thurman as the driver. From 1983-1985, Davis and Thurman competed in 41 races and put the JD Motorsports name on the map. Although JDM has seen a sharp rise in on-track performance in the past few years, success is nothing new to this team. Years of good drivers and excellent runs have paved the way for what JDM is today. www.teamjdmotorsports.com

A.E. Engine (Sales and Marketing Partner)

A.E. Engine is a full-service sports sales, marketing, and content creation company. Founded in 2005 by sports publishing and marketing executives, A.E. Engine has earned a reputation for conceiving, creating, and delivering high-quality, premium content and programming for passionate fans. www.ae-engine.com

What went down in the NASCAR Cup Series Ally 400 at Nashville

Photo courtesy of NASCAR Media & Getty Images

Joey Logano​ captured his first win of the season on Sunday in the ​Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway.  This was Logano’s 33rd NASCAR Cup Series​ (NCS) career win, Ford’s first NCS at Nashville, Team Penske’s 96th series win with Ford, and the 732nd series win overall for the manufacturer.

“There wasn’t a drop of fuel to spare, my fuel light came on in turn three, and that was it, we had just enough fuel to spit and sputter across the line,” said Logano, who started the race in the 26th position.

On the fourth overtime restart, Team Penske’s Joey Logano and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase ​Briscoe restarted on the front row.​  Logano’s held them off on the restart, but another crash brought out the caution flag and the final fifth overtime restart of the race.  Logano took the inside lane with Briscoe on his outside, and Logano kept the lead by 0.068 seconds ahead of second-place Zane Smith.

“Tyler (Reddick) had the fastest car at the end, but we were able to stay in front of him. I’ve never been involved in a fuel-mileage race before. This is a big one,” Logano said in victory lane.​

This win also qualifies Logano for the NASCAR Playoffs, which get underway in September.

“It’s been a hard season,” Logano continued, “and being on that cut line, I tell you it sucks. It’s just not fun. It’s hard, and you just want a little bit of relief of the pressure, and with seven weeks to go until the playoffs, it gives us a chance to breathe for a second and start just kind of working on our car a little bit differently and just sleep better, to be honest with you. I’m proud of this team and proud to be here in Victory Lane, for sure.”

Race Notes

  • The average speed of the race winner was 108.298 mph.
  • The race lasted 04:03:54, and the margin of victory was 0.068 seconds.
  • There were 15 caution flags for 79 laps.
  • There were 20 lead changes among nine drivers.
  • This was Ford’s 732nd all-time NCS victory, its fourth of the season, and the first NCS victory at Nashville.
  • 24 of the 38 drivers finished on the lead lap.
  • Kyle Larson remains the series championship leader with a 20-point advantage over second-place teammate Chase Elliott.

What went down behind Logano

Zane Smith finished second, driving the No. 71 Jockey Outdoors by Luke Byran Camaro ZL1.

“It’s been a rough, rough year,” Smith said, “but this is a great momentum booster, a great confidence booster, all of the above. So, hopefully, we can carry this on. It was awesome to kind of sniff your first Cup win. You don’t ever know if you’re going to have a shot at another Cup win, so you just try to execute the best you can.  It just goes to show that everyone is just so dang good in the Cup series.”

23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick had to pit for fuel and restarted fifth on the final green-white-checkered restart. Reddick had the fastest car at the end and got to Logano’s bumper, but he knew that he let one (a win) get away in the end. Reddick finished third and captured his seventh top-five and the 12th top-10 finish of the season.

“We just had a bad restart,” Reddick explained. “I fell back, and I could tell there in the closing laps we were wounded bad. The tires were corded. When the caution came out, we were in a really bad spot. We were going to lose all our track position, but we had to put tires on as I don’t think we were going to be able to hold on during a restart, but it became the very thing that gave us an opportunity to win the race. It was a great call, a gutsy call by the crew chief, Billy Scott.”

Ryan Preece finished fourth and captured his first top-five and second top-10 of the season.

“I’m just really happy with how these guys fought all day. It didn’t look like it was going to be pretty, but another chaotic 10 or 15 laps at the end, and we salvaged a good day. At the end of the day, I will take that result and hopefully, this will help build some morale. We’ve been trending in that direction. Between last week and this week, it’s positive coming into the summer months,” Preece said.

Chris Buescher finsihed fifth.

“I don’t know what in the world happened there at the end; I’ll have to go back and look… We were able to get a top-5 out of it; we just needed laps to pass cars and really just never quite got it there in the last 40 laps of the race. What a day, up and down for us, but everyone regrouped and did a good job at the end.” Buescher said.

The Series points leader, Larson, ran out of fuel but somehow managed to finish eighth.

“I thought my opportunity to give myself a win was to get clean air on the nose,” Larson said. “I just ran in, got tight and drove into Ross. I hate that, for sure. The next restart I just got really out of shape through the gears and, thankfully, didn’t cause a crash on the frontstretch. And then the next one we ran out of fuel and caused that wreck. Hate that for Kyle (Busch). I had no warning.”

Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin had a strong car but had to pit late for fuel and finished 12th.

“We ran out under caution,” Hamlin said. He (Chris Gabehart, crew chief) was monitoring fuel pressure. I let him know what the fuel pressure was. We were fine, just running out of gas and we did under caution. It was the right call. I was going down pitlane there out of gas.”

What’s Next

The NASCAR Cup Series returns to the streets of Chicago, Illinois, for the Grant Park 165 at 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

Crawford overcomes challenges with double-points weekend in Austria

Spielberg (AUT), JUL 27-30 2024 - Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring. Jak CRAWFORD #7 Dams. © 2024 Dutch Photo Agency

SPIELBERG, Austria (1 July 2024) – Fast but unlucky, Jak Crawford had a pair of scintillating drives through the field to score points in both races in the seventh FIA Formula 2 weekend of the season at the Red Bull Ring.

The 19-year-old Texan drove from 14th to an impressive sixth in Saturday’s Sprint Race. On Sunday, he encountered clutch issues and was forced to start in the pits. The DAMS Lucas Oil driver charged from 20th to second position before his mandatory pit stop, and gained three positions in the closing laps to place 10th.

“I felt great in all the sessions this weekend, apart from qualifying, and was delighted with the performance across both races to pick up further points.” said the Aston Martin Development Driver. “I’m happy with the speed we’ve been showing. I just wish I could have enjoyed today’s race a little more.”

Crawford carried his momentum from last week’s Feature Race victory at Barcelona to Friday’s opening practice, where he timed in a close third. Qualifying on the super-soft tire didn’t work out however, as he placed 14th.

“Practice was good, straight-away, and we used the philosophy that worked so well for us at Barcelona, which was good confirmation for us,” said Crawford. “But we struggled to figure out our super-soft tire in qualifying, and we struggled with the car because of that. We have some work to do there. It’s really unfortunate, because I feel our car is ready – it’s just a matter of making the tires work around it.”

Starting 14th in the Sprint Race, Crawford gained two positions on the opening lap, went to 11th on Lap 2, and then rode in 11th position for the next 17 rounds of the 28-lap event. He then began to move, taking three positions in the final two laps. Of his eight positions gained, seven were by passes and one by a competitor’s spin.

“The Sprint Race was a great race,” Crawford said. “It confirmed our speed. I had a good start and was up to 11th by the second lap. Then I just bided my time, was nice and smooth, and very patient compared to the guys around me. The last nine laps or so I went up the field, and managed my tires perfectly.”

Crawford’s Feature Race seemed doomed before it even started, when his car stalled as the field peeled away for the formation lap. That forced him to start from pit road after the remainder of the field sprinted away following lights-out.

He joined the race in 20th, gained two positions, and then moved to eighth by lap 10 as several of the competitors who opted on super-soft tires made their mandatory stops. Crawford was up to third with 11 laps remaining, and then made a pass to take second. He pitted for super-soft tires with six laps remaining, falling to 13th. He gained a position on the final lap, and nearly took another as he crossed the stripe side-by-side with another competitor.

“I had a clutch issue and it was frustrating to stall before the Feature Race, but the pace was excellent again, coming from the pit lane to get into the top-10,” he said. “I obviously had a big gap to catch up to the rest of the field. We were hoping for a safety car to catch us back up, but I had to use my tires a bit more to catch up. In the end, that wasn’t the best for our race. It’s hard to tell how it would have come down, but I think we could have scored a top-five result today.”

Next up, Crawford returns to Silverstone this weekend (July 6-7), where he finished 10th in last year’s feature race.

“I’m really looking forward to Silverstone,” he said. “It’s a track I really like, a high-speed track. I didn’t do amazing there last year, but things are going really well now, and I think the track suits our car, as well. It should be a very positive weekend for us.”

JOEY LOGANO WINS AT NASHVILLE FOLLOWING FIVE OVERTIME RESTARTS

Photo courtesy of NASCAR Media & Getty Images

LEBANON, TN – July 1, 2024 – Joey Logano won Sunday’s Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway, marking his first points win of the season, 33rd of his career, and his first win at Nashville. The win also marked the first NASCAR Cup Series win for Ford at Nashville and 732nd series win overall for the manufacturer.

“Congratulations to Roger, Tim, Paul, Joey and everyone at Team Penske on the race win at Nashville,” said Doug Yates, President and CEO of Roush Yates Engines. “Paul and Joey were able to maximize fuel throughout the end of the race and five overtime restarts to be in the position to win at the end.”

“A lot of teamwork there. You have to give a lot of credit to our fueler, Nick Hensley, our engine department with Roush Yates building obviously some engines that could also manage fuel really well, and some guts,” commented Logano.

Four Ford Performance drivers started Sunday’s race from the top-10: Stewart-Haas Racing’s Josh Berry in P2, RFK Racing’s Brad Keselowski in P5 and Chris Buescher in P9, along with Team Penske’s Austin Cindric in P10. At lap 136, the race was red-flagged for lightning and rain in the area. Following a one hour and 21-minute weather delay, NASCAR brought out the yellow flag and allowed cars to change tires and refuel before the race restarted. The race went green a few minutes later with 159 laps remaining and 45 laps until the end of Stage 2. A caution on lap 218 of the scheduled 300 lap race allowed teams to pit for tires and fuel, which impacted late race strategy. With 20 laps remaining in the race, Denny Hamlin and Ross Chastain batted for the lead until a caution came out with 2 laps to go, extending the race into overtime. Several more cautions pushed the race into its fourth overtime restart, allowing Team Penske’s Joey Logano and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe to restart on the front row. Another crash brought out the caution just before Logano took the white flag, triggering the fifth and final restart. Logano started on the inside of the front row with Chase Briscoe on his outside. Logano perfected the final restart as Chase Briscoe’s car ran out of fuel with 1 lap remaining. Logano finished the race 0.068 seconds ahead of second place Zane Smith.

Five Ford Performance drivers finished in the top 10: Stewart-Haas Racing’s Ryan Preece in P4, RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher in P5, Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney in P6, and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Noah Gragson in P10.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series also raced at Nashville Superspeedway on Saturday. Rette Jones Racing’s Noah Gragson finished in P5 along with Stewart-Haas Racing’s Riley Herbst in P6 and Cole Custer in P9.

The NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series both compete this weekend at the Chicago street course in downtown Chicago, Illinois.
39 CHAMPIONSHIPS – 463 WINS – 432 POLES

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.

ABEL Motorsports heads back to familiar territory at Mid-Ohio

Abel, Sundaramoorthy and Missig have 61 junior formula races between them at the central Ohio circuit

Abel also spent a season as an instructor at The Mid-Ohio School

SPEEDWAY, Ind. (July 1, 2024) – The ABEL Motorsports’ trio of Jacob Abel, Yuven Sundaramoorthy and Jordan Missig head to the INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix of Mid-Ohio this weekend as three of the field’s most experienced drivers on the central Ohio circuit.

All three drivers consider Mid-Ohio one of their “home” tracks, having raced there in each of their junior formula series seasons. Sundaramoorthy (Oconomowoc, Wis.) has 27 races at the central Ohio circuit, with a victory in F1600 in 2017, a win in USF2000 in 2021, seven podiums, and 16 top 10 finishes. Abel (Louisville, Ky.) scored 13 top 10s and two podiums in 23 races, while Missig (Joliet, Ill.) earned a podium and five top 10s in 11 races.

But Abel, currently second in the INDY NXT point standings, has more than just racing miles at Mid-Ohio. Not only has he “driven there in just about everything in my career,” in 2017 a 16-year-old Abel spent a season as an instructor at the The Mid-Ohio School. As a student at the school, he came under the tutelage of former INDYCAR driver Scott Harrington, and the next season, joined the cadre of instructors.

“I got to spend a lot of time at the track, teaching a wide range of people, when I was still quite young,” said Abel. “It was a very cool experience, one that makes Mid-Ohio one of my self-proclaimed home tracks. The instructors teach everything: Defensive Driving (including the teen driving course) and High Performance, which includes racing schools. We taught them how to drive on the racetrack, how to be around other cars and all of that.

“Learning the intricacies of the track and at a very base level like that kind of kept me honest in a way. It made me aware of even the smallest little things that you don’t always think of as a professional race car driver. Like the USF Juniors coaching I do (with VRD Racing, which includes championship points leader Sebastian Wheldon) – the drivers are fast but still have things to learn, so it brings me back to the basics a little bit.”

Sundaramoorthy has also raced at Mid-Ohio in every single racing series in which he has competed. While the recent re-pave reduces the knowledge base slightly, he feels as though familiarity with how to set a pass is key.

“It’s a little more of an even playing field this year, but at Mid-Ohio, it’s all about knowing where to make passes and how to set them up,” said Sundaramoorthy. “That’s the hardest part at Mid-Ohio, just setting yourself up to make a move. There are no hard braking areas, but passes are makeable if you know how to put your car in the right spot. And it’s a relatively short track, so you have opportunities to really work on each corner. And for me now, over the last couple of races, we’ve been able to show our pace. There’s more work to do but it gives me confidence going forward – it’s good to have those results (two fourth place finishes at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca two weeks ago) out of the way.”

Missig tested the ABEL INDY NXT car for the first time at Mid-Ohio back in May, and he found that the repaved surface has significantly upped the grip quotient. He also appreciates that Mid-Ohio figures prominently in most of the “firsts” of his career.

“They say that all roads lead to Indy but in our cases, we have to make our stop at Mid-Ohio first!” said Missig. “I got my start in just about everything there: first open wheel race in FR Americas, first USF Pro race, first INDY NXT test. It would be great to get my first series win here! This weekend will be sort of a reset for this track, since it’s completely repaved now. Times could drop as much as three seconds a lap. Several turns have gained tremendously in terms of grip, and that was one of the things I found valuable at the test, that you can roll much more speed into, say, Turn 4 and the car is able to stick. I think that will create a little bit more passing opportunities and a little bit more side by side racing.”

ABEL Motorsports thanks partners ABEL Construction Company, Advance Ready Mix, Boyd Cat®, S Team Motorsports, Quest Global and OMP for their continued support.

The INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix at Mid-Ohio takes the green flag Sunday, July 7 at 11:15 a.m. ET. The race will be streamed live in the U.S. on Peacock, while international viewers can watch via INDYCARLIVE, with INDYCAR Radio available at indycar.com and on Sirius XM.

About ABEL Motorsports: Team principal Bill Abel began racing motocross in 1972, earning numerous championship titles as he continued the family racing tradition. In 2015, ABEL Motorsports was launched, starting in the USF2000 series and building up the junior open wheel ladder. The team captured the inaugural Formula Regional Americas Championship with driver Kyle Kirkwood in 2018.

ABEL Motorsports currently competes in the INDY NXT by Firestone series, the official development series for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, led by third-generation driver Jacob Abel. The team made its INDYCAR debut in 2023 with driver RC Enerson in the Indianapolis 500. For more information visit the official team website at abelmotorsports.com.

About Abel Construction Company: ABEL Construction is one of the largest general contractors in Kentucky, holding licenses in thirteen states. The company has offices in Lexington, Kentucky and Indianapolis, Indiana, with the corporate office in Louisville. Their expertise spans many areas, including general contracting, construction management, design-build, Integrated Project Delivery (IPD), and facilities maintenance.

Abel Construction has helped build some of the region’s most recognizable landmarks. Their projects cover diverse sectors, including automotive, healthcare, post-secondary education, commercial, food/beverage, tech, and industrial/manufacturing. They prioritize client satisfaction, focusing on efficient project delivery regardless of size or cost. The company’s skilled professionals utilize cutting-edge technology and software to ensure successful outcomes. abelconstruct.com/.

ABEL Motorsports social media

Facebook: ABEL Motorsports
Twitter/X: ABEL Motorsports
Instagram: ABEL Motorsports

Logano Wins Ally 400 Overtime Clash

Joey Logano outlasts field for second career win at Nashville Superspeedway

LEBANON, Tenn. – Joey Logano won a wild Ally 400 NASCAR Cup Series race at Nashville Superspeedway that took a record five overtimes and 31 additional laps to complete.

With his No. 22 Team Penske Ford low on fuel, Logano managed to pull away from the pack in the fifth overtime and as they all charged down the stretch, Logano swerved to block challengers Zane Smith, Tyler Reddick and Ryan Preece at different points on the track and then he led them all across the finish line at the end in dramatic fashion.

“There wasn’t a drop of fuel to spare, my fuel light came on in turn three and that was it, we had just enough fuel to spit and sputter across the line,” said Logano, who started the race in the 26th position. “Tyler (Reddick) had the fastest car at the end, but we were able to stay in front of him. I’ve never been involved in a fuel-mileage race before. This is a big one.”

It was Logano’s first win of the season, first Cup Series win at the 1.33-mile Nashville track and 33rd victory of his career. He said the win qualifies him for the post-season and takes off some of the pressure for he and his team before the NASCAR Playoffs get underway in September.

“It’s been a hard season and being on that cut line, I tell you it sucks,” Logano said. “It’s just not fun. It’s hard and you just want a little bit of relief of the pressure and with seven weeks to go until the playoffs it gives us a chance to breathe for a second and start just kind of working on our car a little bit differently and just sleep better, to be honest with you. I’m proud of this team and proud to be here in victory lane, for sure.”

As the laps winded down in regulation, it appeared that pole-winner Denny Hamlin was going to cruise to victory. He passed then-leader and defending champion Ross Chastain with seven laps to go, and seemed like he was on his way to strumming a Gibson guitar in victory lane.

That’s when all hell broke loose. Noah Gragson and Austin Cindric made slight contact back in the pack sending Cindric’s No. 2 machine into the wall. The field was then bunched up for its first overtime period.

On the first two overtime periods Hamlin also was out front and in position to win but caution flags flew in both after incidents involving Kyle Larson’s No. 5 Chevy that was low on fuel. Hamlin’s No. 11 machine finally ran out of fuel as well, ending his chance to win.

Hamlin said he couldn’t believe his car made it through that many overtimes.

“We were 15 seconds from a win and then we were 10 seconds from a win and then we finished 12th,” Hamlin said with a smile. “That’s just NASCAR Cup Series racing and it’s just part of it.”

Larson said he was racing for the win at the end before his car also ran out of fuel. Remarkably, he was able to get fuel and salvage an eighth place finish.

“I thought my opportunity to give myself a win was to get clean air on the nose,” Larson said. “I just ran in, got tight and drove into Ross. I hate that, for sure. The next restart I just got really out of shape through the gears and, thankfully, didn’t cause a crash on the frontstretch. And then the next one we ran out of fuel and caused that wreck. Hate that for Kyle (Busch). I had no warning.

“Obviously, we knew we were really close on fuel,” Larson continued. “It was going to be a stretch to make it, but I had no low fuel pressure alarm on my dash, so it was a bit surprising. When I went to the throttle, it just never went. I couldn’t really get out of the way either, because we were still to the wall – hadn’t even gotten to the dogleg yet to get out of the way. I’m really, really bummed for (Busch) because he needs the points. Thankfully, we were able to work through the last restarts and get a top 10, but bummed with how it all kind of ended up.”

Second-place finisher Zane Smith nearly became the latest Cup rookie to grab a victory, as he finished second in his No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevy after starting 36th.

“It’s been a rough, rough year, but this is a great momentum booster, a great confidence booster, all of the above,” Smith said. “So, hopefully we can carry this on. It was awesome to kind of sniff your first Cup win. You don’t ever know if you’re going to have a shot at another Cup win, so you just try to execute the best you can … It just goes to show that everyone is just so dang good in the Cup series.”

Third-place finisher Reddick was visibly dejected after the race, saying he knew he let one get away at the end after running up front all day and moving into position at the end.

“We got to the 22’s bumper on the last lap and um, he just kicked my (butt),” Reddick said. “We should have won the race. We just didn’t get the job done. We had better tires, pretty much the race was gifted to us. It takes a toll on you, that’s for sure.”

Ryan Preece was thrilled with another solid finish in his No. 41 machine in as many weeks.

“We just kept moving forward, and we had fresher tires,” Preece said. “I’m just really happy with how these guys fought all day. It didn’t look like it was going to be pretty, but another chaotic 10 or 15 laps at the end, and we salvaged a good day. At the end of the day I will take that result and hopefully this will help build some morale. We’ve been trending in that direction. Between last week and this week, it’s positive coming into the summer months.”

Fifth-place Chris Buescher felt like he was in the Twilight Zone out there in all of the overtime sessions.

“We definitely did have a good car, had the ability to run in the top 10 all night, and got stage points; still just frustrated; it was just chaos there at the end,” Buescher said. “I don’t know what in the world happened there at the end; I’ll have to go back and look… We were able to get a top-5 out of it; we just needed laps to pass cars and really just never quite got it there in the last 40 laps of the race. What a day, up and down for us, but everyone regrouped and did a good job at the end.”

Several front-runners fell out of the race as the result of single car spins, including Christopher Bell, who won stages 1 and 2 and led 132 laps in his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing machine. His car lost traction with 71 laps remaining in the race and received heavy damage after it impacted the wall in turn 2.

Brad Keselowski also ran up front in both of the first two stages but his car slid out underneath him on lap 244, resulting in a 25th place finish. Chase Elliott also suffered a single car slide coming out of a turn when his No. 9 machine got loose and he posted an 18th place finish.

Ryan Blaney, Bubba Wallace, Larson, Daniel Hemric and Gragson completed the top 10. Defending winner Chastain, who was challenging for a top three finish ultimately finished 33rd after being involved in the restart incident in the first overtime.

NASCAR Cup Series Race – Ally 400
Nashville Superspeedway
Nashville, Tennessee

1. (26) Joey Logano, Ford, 331.
2. (36) Zane Smith #, Chevrolet, 331.
3. (6) Tyler Reddick, Toyota, 331.
4. (22) Ryan Preece, Ford, 331.
5. (9) Chris Buescher, Ford, 331.
6. (18) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 331.
7. (24) Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 331.
8. (4) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 331.
9. (37) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 331.
10. (16) Noah Gragson, Ford, 331.   
11. (28) AJ Allmendinger(i), Chevrolet, 331.
12. (1) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 331.
13. (33) Justin Haley, Ford, 331.
14. (12) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 331.
15. (10) Austin Cindric, Ford, 331.
16. (15) Carson Hocevar #, Chevrolet, 331.
17. (32) Todd Gilliland, Ford, 331.
18. (13) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 331.
19. (7) William Byron, Chevrolet, 331.
20. (21) Corey LaJoie, Chevrolet, 331.
21. (19) Chase Briscoe, Ford, 331.
22. (31) Daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, 331.
23. (8) Ty Gibbs, Toyota, 331.
24. (17) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 331.
25. (5) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 330.
26. (2) Josh Berry #, Ford, Accident, 327.
27. (27) Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, Accident, 319.
28. (25) Harrison Burton, Ford, Accident, 312.
29. (29) Corey Heim(i), Toyota, Accident, 312.
30. (23) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet, Accident, 312.
31. (35) John Hunter Nemechek, Toyota, Accident, 306.
32. (11) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, Accident, 305.
33. (20) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, Accident, 304.
34. (34) Erik Jones, Toyota, Suspension, 287.
35. (14) Michael McDowell, Ford, Transmission, 239.
36. (3) Christopher Bell, Toyota, Accident, 227.
37. (30) Riley Herbst(i), Ford, Accident, 201.
38. (38) Chad Finchum(i), Ford, Electrical, 132.

Average Speed of Race Winner: 108.298 mph.
Time of Race: 4 Hrs, 3 Mins, 54 Secs. Margin of Victory: 0.068 Seconds.
Caution Flags: 15 for 79 laps.
Lead Changes: 20 among 9 drivers.

Lap Leaders: D. Hamlin 1-16;C. Bell 17-38;T. Gibbs 39-40;T. Reddick 41-45;M. McDowell 46-76;C. Bell 77-92;D. Hamlin 93-117;C. Bell 118-187;T. Reddick 188;C. Bell 189-208;T. Reddick 209-213;C. Bell 214;T. Reddick 215;C. Bell 216-217;T. Reddick 218-221;R. Blaney 222-233;A. Allmendinger(i) 234;R. Blaney 235-248;R. Chastain 249-293;D. Hamlin 294-322;J. Logano 323-331.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Christopher Bell 6 times for 131 laps; Denny Hamlin 3 times for 70 laps; Ross Chastain 1 time for 45 laps; Michael McDowell 1 time for 31 laps; Ryan Blaney 2 times for 26 laps; Tyler Reddick 5 times for 16 laps; Joey Logano 1 time for 9 laps; Ty Gibbs 1 time for 2 laps; AJ Allmendinger(i) 1 time for 1 lap.

Stage 1 Top Ten: 20,11,45,5,6,54,24,17,19,23

Stage 2 Top Ten: 20,45,5,11,6,9,19,12,17,10

nashvillesuperspeedway.com

Race Schedule and Tickets
Sunday, Sept. 15
NTT IndyCar Series Big Machine Music City Grand Prix
2 p.m. CT, NBC, Peacock, INDYCAR Live, SiriusXM

Call 866.RACE.TIX to discuss your options with an account representative, or visit nashvillesuperspeedway.com.

Follow Us
Keep track of all of Nashville Superspeedway’s events by following on X and Instagram or becoming a Facebook fan.

About Nashville Superspeedway
Nashville Superspeedway, Middle Tennessee’s racing jewel, is a year-round family-friendly destination in one of the fastest-growing regions in the country. The 1.33-mile D-shaped track with 14 degrees of banking has hosted four NASCAR Cup Series races, 25 NASCAR Xfinity Series races, 17 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series events and eight INDYCAR SERIES contests. The largest concrete-only track in NASCAR, Nashville Superspeedway is owned by Speedway Motorsports.

Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Nashville

Ally 400: Nashville Superspeedway
Lebanon, TN – June 30, 2024

AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 DISCOUNT TIRE FORD MUSTANG

START: 10TH STAGE ONE: 17TH STAGE TWO: 25TH FINISH: 15TH POINTS: 20TH

RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric survived a dramatic Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway, overcoming various setbacks and a plethora of late-race cautions to register a 15th-place finish. He fired off from the 10th position and made his first visit to pit road on Lap 38 for four tires, fuel and an adjustment to aid the stability of the car. The Discount Tire Ford Mustang finished Stage 1 in the 17th position and returned to pit road for service. Cindric restarted 20th when the second segment got underway on Lap 98, and just 18 laps in, Cindric informed his team that the handling had improved across the center and on exit. On Lap 136, inclement weather moved in, bringing out the red flag for well over an hour. Once the race resumed, Cindric was forced to restart at the tail of the field due to a penalty. Despite the loss of track position, the former NASCAR Xfinity Series champion climbed back to 25th by the conclusion of Stage 2. Following a four-tire stop, Cindric lined up 23rd for the restart on Lap 193. The Team Penske driver was slowly but steadily moving forward until contact from the No. 71 caused Cindric to fall deep in the field. Fortunately, the Discount Tire Ford was able to withstand a series of late-race cautions to rally to a 15th-place finish.

CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “Yeah, a bit of a frustrating day. We had to go to the back, lost a lot of spots early in the race, and passed a lot of cars today. I thought we had a decent Discount Tire Ford Mustang, we just never held on to any track position that we ever had, whether if it was execution errors or just getting run over there at the end of the race. So, yeah, I’m happy we came home with a decent finish and really happy for everyone on the 22 car — those guys have had a tough go and certainly deserve a win and to be in the playoffs. I’m proud that all three of us will be fighting for a championship later this season.”

RYAN BLANEY No. 12 MENARDS/IDEAL DOOR GARAGE DOORS FORD MUSTANG

START: 18TH STAGE ONE: 14TH STAGE TWO: 8TH FINISH: 6TH POINTS: 8TH

RACE RUNDOWN: Ryan Blaney rallied for a sixth-place finish Sunday at Nashville Superspeedway, marking his third top-10 result in the last four races. The 12-team worked to dial in the balance over the course of the opening 90-lap stage as Blaney battled his way towards the top-10 in the early going before ultimately settling for a 14th-place finish in Stage 1. Following a four tire stop and a round of adjustments at the stage break, Blaney charged to 11th in the running order before the race was red flagged on lap 135 for heavy rainfall in the area. After drivers returned to their cars once track drying was complete, the field took the green with 46 laps remaining in Stage 2 when Blaney raced into the top-10 early in the run. Despite a loose-handling condition that set in late in the run, Blaney managed to come away with an eighth-place result in the second segment. The 12 team gained a pair of positions on pit road under yellow, allowing Blaney to take the green for the final stage from the inside of row three. Blaney powered his way to fourth on the opening lap of the restart before a caution on lap 218 saw varying pit strategies with the fuel window closing in. The 12-team opted to keep Blaney on the track under yellow and assume the lead as he was one of five lead lap cars to stay out with the field lining up to take the green with 75 laps to go. A pair of cautions shortly after forced Blaney to stay out in order to avoid falling to the back of the field, resulting in a scheduled green flag stop on lap 268 that trapped him a lap down. A caution with two laps to go awarded Blaney the free pass to rejoin the lead lap before a Cup Series record five overtime restarts followed – the second of which had Blaney involved in a multi-car incident on the backstretch where he avoided damage despite sliding through the grass. By the time of the fifth and final restart, Blaney lined up 12th to take the green and continued to power forward before ultimately taking the checkered flag sixth.

BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “Really proud of this 12-team for staying with it all day. The strategy we had lined up didn’t fall the way we hoped but this turned into a race where if you can be there at the end, you’ll have a shot and fortunately we were able to gain back a lot of the track position we lost with all the restarts at the end. Happy for all the guys on the 22-team and proud of the effort to get all three Penske cars locked in to run for a championship.”

JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG

START: 26TH STAGE ONE: 21ST STAGE TWO: 21ST FINISH: 1ST POINTS: 14TH

RACE RUNDOWN: Joey Logano prevailed to take the checkered flag Sunday at Nashville Superspeedway after a Cup Series-record five overtime restarts, marking his 33rd-career victory and 20th different track he’s won at on the Cup Series circuit. With the win, Logano has now won at least one Cup Series race in 13-consecutive seasons while also snapping a 49-race winless streak to clinch a playoff spot for the 11th time in the last 16 seasons. Despite finishes of 21st in the opening two stages and a lengthy rain delay in the middle of Stage 2, Logano and the 22-team altered their strategy when the caution flag flew on lap 205 as the fuel window began to close in as crew chief Paul Wolfe made the call for right sides tires and fuel to vault to eighth in the running order for the ensuing restart. Logano raced his way into the top-five before a caution on lap 227 brought the field back together but on the following restart, he was shoved up the track in turn one and ultimately settled into 14th as the laps ticked off. The yellow came out once again with two laps to go and Logano stayed out, allowing him to move up to eighth for the first overtime restart as several of the leaders had concerns about having enough fuel to make it to the end. Logano evaded a pair of multi-car wrecks before the caution on the third overtime saw a few of the leaders make the trip to pit road for fuel, allowing the Shell-Pennzoil Ford to assume the lead for the fourth overtime restart. Logano was able to clear the No. 14 as he was coming to take the white flag, but the yellow was displayed just before he crossed the line to set up a fifth – and ultimately final – overtime restart as the 22-team was committed to stretching the fuel run as far as it would go. From the inside of row one, Logano was able to clear the field coming out of turn two as the No. 45 closed in to challenge for the win coming to the checkered and successfully blocked the run to the high side in turns three and four before edging out the No. 71 at the line to come away with the win in the fuel mileage thriller.

LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “It’s been a hard season and being on that cut line, I tell you it sucks. It’s just not fun. It’s hard and you just want a little bit of relief of the pressure and with seven weeks to go until the playoffs it gives us a chance to breathe for a second and start just kind of working on our car a little bit differently and just sleep better, to be honest with you. I’m proud of this team and proud to be here in Victory Lane, for sure. You have to give a lot of credit to our fueler, Nick Hensley, our engine department with Roush Yates building obviously some engines that could also manage fuel really well, and some guts – a lot of cajones made it happen.”

The NASCAR Cup Series returns to the streets of Chicago for the second-ever street race on Sunday, July 7. Coverage of the Grant Park 165 begins at 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.