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Rock Lights for Trucks: Everything You Need to Know

Off-roading is not just a hobby; it’s a lifestyle for many truck enthusiasts. The thrill of navigating rugged terrains, conquering obstacles, and exploring the great outdoors is unmatched. However, for those who venture off the beaten path, having the right gear is essential. 

One such crucial accessory is rock lights for trucks. These lights not only enhance the aesthetic appeal of your truck but also improve visibility during nighttime off-roading. In this comprehensive guide, we’ll explore everything you need to know about rock lights for trucks, from what makes the best LED rock lights to detailed reviews of popular options like Black Oak Rock Lights.

What Makes the Best LED Rock Lights?

When it comes to choosing the best LED rock lights for your truck, several factors come into play. Here are the key elements that you should consider:

1. Brightness and Color Options

The primary function of rock lights is to provide adequate illumination. Therefore, brightness is a critical factor. High-quality LED rock lights should offer a strong lumen output to light up the terrain beneath and around your truck. Additionally, having multiple color options can add a personalized touch to your vehicle, making it stand out.

2. Durability and Weather Resistance

Off-roading often involves harsh conditions, including mud, water, and extreme temperatures. The best LED rock lights are built to withstand these elements. Look for lights that are waterproof, dustproof, and resistant to shock and vibrations. Durable housing materials, such as aluminum or high-quality plastic, can significantly extend the lifespan of your lights.

3. Easy Installation

Nobody wants to spend hours figuring out how to install their new lights. The best rock lights for trucks come with straightforward installation instructions and all necessary hardware. Many options also feature a plug-and-play design, making the setup process quick and hassle-free.

3 Things to Plan When You Add Rock Lights to Off-Road Vehicles

Adding rock lights to your off-road vehicle is an exciting upgrade, but it’s essential to plan accordingly to ensure a seamless installation and optimal performance. Here are three things to consider:

1. Placement and Coverage

The placement of your rock lights will determine the quality of illumination. Strategically place the lights to cover critical areas, such as the wheel wells, undercarriage, and bumpers. This setup not only enhances visibility but also highlights the rugged features of your truck.

2. Power Source and Wiring

Consider how you will power your rock lights. Most LED rock lights are designed to connect to your truck’s battery, but it’s crucial to plan the wiring route to avoid interference with other components. Use quality wiring and connectors to ensure a reliable and safe connection.

3. Control and Customization

Modern rock lights often come with remote controls or mobile app compatibility, allowing you to adjust brightness, color, and lighting patterns. Plan where you will mount the control module for easy access and decide if you want additional features like music synchronization or preset lighting modes.

Why Choose Black Oak Rock Lights?

When it comes to premium rock lights for trucks, Black Oak is a brand that stands out. Here’s why:

Superior Quality and Performance

Black Oak Rock Lights are known for their exceptional build quality and performance. They use high-grade LEDs that provide brilliant illumination, ensuring you have clear visibility during your off-road adventures. The lights are encased in durable, weather-resistant housings that can withstand the harshest conditions.

Innovative Features

Black Oak integrates innovative features into their rock lights, such as customizable lighting modes and advanced heat management systems. These features enhance both functionality and longevity, making Black Oak Rock Lights a smart investment for any off-road enthusiast.

Ease of Installation

Black Oak Rock Lights are designed with the user in mind. They come with comprehensive installation kits and detailed instructions, making it easy even for beginners to set them up. The plug-and-play design minimizes the need for complex wiring, allowing you to enjoy your new lights sooner.

Black Oak Rock Lights: A Closer Look

Black Oak offers a range of rock lights, each tailored to different needs and preferences. Here’s a closer look at some of their popular models:

Black Oak LED Rock Light Pods

The LED Rock Light Pods from Black Oak are a favorite among off-roaders. These pods deliver intense brightness and are available in multiple colors, allowing you to customize your truck’s appearance. The pods are built with durable aluminum housings and are fully waterproof, making them ideal for all-weather conditions.

Black Oak RGB Rock Lights

For those who want to add a splash of color to their off-road experience, Black Oak’s RGB Rock Lights are an excellent choice. These lights offer a full spectrum of colors and can be controlled via a remote or smartphone app. You can choose from various lighting modes, including strobe, fade, and music sync, to match your mood or the terrain.

Black Oak White Rock Lights

If you prefer a classic look, Black Oak’s White Rock Lights provide a clean, crisp illumination that enhances visibility without being overly flashy. These lights are perfect for off-roaders who prioritize function over form but still want a high-quality lighting solution.

LED Off-Road Rock Lights: Enhancing Your Off-Road Experience

LED off-road rock lights are more than just a visual upgrade; they play a crucial role in enhancing your overall off-road experience. Here’s how:

Improved Visibility

Navigating through rough terrains at night can be challenging and dangerous. LED rock lights illuminate the path around and beneath your truck, helping you spot obstacles and avoid potential hazards.

Aesthetic Appeal

Rock lights add a distinctive look to your truck, making it stand out in any setting. Whether you’re at an off-road event or just cruising through town, your vehicle will turn heads with its vibrant underglow.

Increased Safety

Enhanced visibility means improved safety. Rock lights help you see and be seen, reducing the risk of accidents during nighttime off-roading. They also make it easier for fellow off-roaders to spot your vehicle in low-light conditions.

Black Oak LED Dimmer Controller: Customizing Your Lighting Experience

One of the standout features of Black Oak Rock Lights is their compatibility with the Black Oak LED Dimmer Controller. This device allows you to fine-tune your lighting setup to match your preferences and needs.

Adjustable Brightness

The dimmer controller lets you adjust the brightness of your rock lights, providing the perfect amount of illumination for any situation. Whether you need full brightness for a challenging trail or a subtle glow for a casual drive, the controller gives you complete control.

Easy Operation

The Black Oak LED Dimmer Controller is user-friendly and easy to operate. It features simple controls that allow you to adjust your lights on the fly, ensuring you have the right lighting at all times.

Enhanced Versatility

With the dimmer controller, you can customize your rock lights to suit different environments and moods. Whether you’re hitting the trails, attending an off-road event, or just showing off your truck, the controller provides the flexibility you need.

FAQs

What are rock lights for trucks?

Rock lights are small, high-intensity LED lights installed on the undercarriage of trucks and other off-road vehicles. They are designed to illuminate the ground beneath and around the vehicle, improving visibility and adding a stylish touch.

How do I install rock lights on my truck?

Installing rock lights typically involves mounting the lights to the desired locations, routing the wiring to the truck’s battery or a power source, and securing the connections. Many rock lights come with detailed installation instructions and necessary hardware.

Are rock lights legal?

The legality of rock lights varies by location. In some areas, using rock lights on public roads may be restricted or prohibited. It’s essential to check local laws and regulations before installing and using rock lights on your truck.

Can I use rock lights in any weather?

Yes, high-quality rock lights, such as those from Black Oak, are designed to be weather-resistant. They can withstand various environmental conditions, including rain, mud, and extreme temperatures.

How long do rock lights last?

The lifespan of rock lights depends on the quality of the LEDs and the overall construction. Premium rock lights like those from Black Oak are built to last for several years with proper care and maintenance.

Conclusion

Rock lights for trucks are a must-have accessory for any off-road enthusiast. They enhance visibility, improve safety, and add a personalized touch to your vehicle. When choosing rock lights, consider factors such as brightness, durability, and ease of installation. Brands like Black Oak offer high-quality options that cater to various preferences and needs. With the right rock lights and accessories, you can take your off-road experience to the next level.

Carson Hocevar fined, docked by NASCAR for wrecking Harrison Burton under caution at Nashville

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Carson Hocevar has been fined $50,000 and docked 25 points in the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series driver’s standings for violating the sport’s Member Code of Conduct Penalty Options and Guidelines sections from the NASCAR Rule Book after he sent Harrison Burton for a spin under caution during this past weekend’s Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway.

The incident involving Hocevar’s actions at Nashville occurred with 58 laps remaining when the caution flew due to Austin Dillon hitting and sending Brad Keselowski backward against the outside wall in Turn 2, eliminating Keselowski from contention. Then just ahead of Keselowski’s carnage and with the field reducing pace under the caution period, Hocevar bumped and clipped the right-rear quarter panel of Burton’s No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford Mustang Dark Horse entry and sent Burton for a spin through the backstretch while Hocevar, who barely made contact with Todd Gilliland’s No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford Mustang Dark Horse entry, proceeded. Hocevar, who is campaigning in his first full-time season in the NASCAR Cup Series for Spire Motorsports, finished in 16th place, one spot ahead of Gilliland. Burton would end up in 28th place after he was eliminated in a multi-car wreck during the event’s second of a record five overtime attempts.

With his docked points, Hocevar, who was ranked in 22nd place in the driver’s standings, drops to 24th place in the standings. Currently, the 21-year-old Hocevar from Portage, Michigan, and is competing for the Rookie-of-the-Year title, trails the top-16 cutline to make the 2024 Cup Series Playoffs by 181 points with seven regular-season events remaining on the schedule.

Additional penalties levied from this past weekend’s triple-header weekend at Nashville involved two Craftsman Truck Series crew chiefs who were fined $2,500 for a single unsecured lug nut discovered on their respective entries. The fined penalties involved Jon Leonard, crew chief for the No. 42 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet Silverado RST entry piloted by Matt Mills, and Jeriod Prince, crew chief for the No. 88 ThorSport Racing Ford F-150 entry piloted by Matt Crafton. During this past Friday’s Truck Series event at Nashville, Mills ended up in eighth place while Crafton settled in 23rd place.

With the Craftsman Truck Series entering a one-week break, the NASCAR Xfinity and Cup Series’ teams return to action for this upcoming weekend’s second annual Chicago Street Course events in Downtown Chicago, Illinois. The Xfinity Series’ The Loop 110 is set to occur on Saturday, July 6, at 3:30 p.m. ET on NBC while the Cup Series’ Grant Park 165 is set to occur on Sunday, July 7, at 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC.

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes – Joey Hand Chicago Media Availability

Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Chicago Street Race Media Availability | Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Joey Hand will be making his 2024 NASCAR Cup Series debut this weekend as he pilots the Stage 60 Ford Mustang Dark Horse for RFK Racing in the Chicago Street Race. Hand answered questions from the media earlier today about making the transition from the Mustang GT3 and how it differs from a Cup Series stock car.

JOEY HAND, Stage 60 Ford Mustang Dark Horse – YOUR THOUGHTS ON CHICAGO? “I love street racing. I say it all the time. Obviously, I love racing, but street races are just another kind of beast. People aren’t used to it and it’s one of those things where you run road courses where you have your limit is like ‘I’ll just put a wheel off in the dirt or the gravel,’ or at COTA it’s just off the other end of the curb and there’s no real big repercussions necessarily, so with the street course it just tightens up your limits. That’s all. I think there is definitely something to be said for those who have done a lot of street racing. Fortunately, I’ve done a lot of them. Long Beach is one of my favorite races in the world. It’s one of my favorite venues in the world. I’ve been able to do Vancouver and Toronto and Houston, Denver – I’ve done a lot of them in my life, so I definitely have some experience on them. I’ve had some good success. I’ve won a lot of street courses in different types of cars, so that always makes you feel better about it, but also just coming back into Cup racing. I mean, I had a lot of fun doing it in 2022 and I had a lot of opportunities. We ran well a lot of times and had some opportunities that we didn’t really capitalize on. I mean, one time it was my fault at Watkins Glen. I spun trying to pass and just feel like there was a better result in there, so I’m excited to get another chance to roll with these boys and see what I can do. It’s just a great opportunity here with RFK and this Stage 60 program and BuildSubmarines.com. I think the car looks really cool. I think when you see it up close it looks good and that’s always a good sign for fast race cars. I think they’ve got to look good first, so we’ve got that covered. I’m just doing my normal thing. I spent the week here in Concord getting ready. We did a little bit of pit stop practice just now actually and all the things that will help us roll out and have the potential to be quick.”

WERE YOU PUSHING TO GET THIS RACE ON YOUR SCHEDULE OR DID RFK COME TO YOU? “This one they came to me, to be honest. I’m always, I think everybody knows I always have my hand up to go do races in Cup if it came up. Over the last three years I’ve spent a lot of time in the simulator. It’s no secret that I do sim stuff for Ford and I help a lot of the teams in the weeks leading up to road course racing, so I became closer and closer with the RFK group, but especially Brad. We kind of hit it off in our time in the simulator and doing work together and I just have a ton of respect for him. It’s pretty wild what he’s doing. To come in and be an owner/driver is not easy and I can see why he’s had the success that he’s had because he has just a massive work ethic to just get it done. I just appreciate that and, like I said, we’ve gotten close. When I was running in ‘22, even though we were racing against each other, he was always offering help to me at the race weekends – anything he could help with – so it just came up from their side. They asked if I would be interested in doing it and I said, ‘Absolutely, I’d be interested in doing it.’ Obviously, I had to ask Ford and programs that I run with in IMSA and everybody was on board there. Everybody seemed excited to see me have a go at it again in the Cup stuff, especially with a really good car like this.”

HOW DIFFERENT DO YOU THINK THE RESTARTS WILL BE ASSUMING THEY WILL BE DOUBLE FILE ON THAT TYPE OF COURSE? “It’s like you heard me talk before or something. I do think the restarts will be different. I did watch the race from last year. I’ve watched it many times so far, and I definitely think that played a factor in how the race came out, but I think double-file restarts are always gonna change it a little bit. It’s gonna get a little more aggressive, but with the nature of these corners I don’t think you can get quite as wild as a COTA turn one or an Indy turn one like we had before, where it’s six, seven-wide going into the first turn. I think it’s still gonna be fairly reasonable and I think where the restart zone is it should get spread out a little bit going into turn one, so I think it’ll be OK. You can only fit so many cars down in there, and I think everybody knows with the funneling effect of turn one and two on exit that you’re not gonna get three cars through there, so restarts for sure in NASCAR is where the intensity ramps up really hard, especially in the Cup Series, so that was something that I love racing. I’m a hard racer, but sometimes in sports car racing in the first hour you might have a restart of a six-hour race or even a two hour and four minute race you’re not ready to go knock dive planes off or knock mirrors off or body work stuff. Here, it doesn’t matter what time of the race it is, when the restart happens you’ve got to be up on it and ready to make moves.”

DO YOU HAVE TO BE AWARE OF THE WAY THE STREET IS CONSTRUCTED WITH CROWNS IN THE MIDDLE FOR WATER FALL OFF? “Absolutely. The rain situation is a whole different situation, where you have the crowns and it’s running to the edges – for sure you’re thinking about that – but even just in dry situations. I always talk about our racetracks like Mid-Ohio and VIR and Road America and all these tracks that you run on the topography of the land. Well, it’s not different in Chicago. There’s still that topography, but it’s crowns and the distance of the crowns away from apexes is different every corner and just the amount of crown is different every corner. You have to play those crowns, absolutely, and that’s what’s also a little bit different about street racing. On one side of them, normally on the entry side of them, to start with you’re off camber and as you drop over the crown on that street you’re on before you get to the apex, you’re on camber. You stay on camber normally through the apex of the crosswalk, if you will, and then you fly back out of that crown off camber again, so you have to like I say make your money in the right spots. So, if you look at track maps like a 2D, you look straight down and they all look like 90-degree corners, but you don’t drive them like that. You don’t drive them like a standard flat 90-degree corner. You have to really think about where that crown is and where you turn in, so that’s definitely that comes back to running street courses and understanding that and kind of knowing your way around that. For me, we do sim work and the tracks are scanned and you can see what’s going on pretty much, but it still doesn’t exactly tell you what you’re gonna see when you walk it. So when I do the track walk on Friday afternoon, I’ll be able to tell exactly what those crown heights look like and how much they drop in at the apexes. Again, at a lot of those crosswalks you’ll have the little gulley that you can use to hook the car, so those vary every corner. Again, you look at the track map you have a bunch of nineties, but none of those nineties is the same. You will not drive one of them exactly the same. Again, it’s one of the things I love about street racing because not everybody is thinking about it and not everybody is able to catch on to it, so if you can get on to it sooner than others, obviously that’s what you’re always trying to do as racers. As I was telling my son, we want to be the first one fast.”

WHAT DID YOU FOCUS ON IN PREPARING FOR THIS RACE WEEKEND? “The good thing is I’m doing a lot of stuff right now, so I’m racing all the time. Luckily, it was only less than a month ago we were racing the streets of Detroit with the new GT3 Mustang, so I’m in the mix and I’m doing stuff anyway. Like, we just ran Watkins Glen last weekend and you come off of that, so my goal was to get through that, stay focused on that and then move forward to this. I got some sim time this week, helping some guys out in the sim. That always helps me also just to understand more of it and a lot of guys, like we already talked about, I haven’t been on Chicago in real life and so there’s some little stuff that the guys can help me with that were there last year. But it starts basically last Thursday or Friday with some meetings with the team I’m running with, crew chief, engineer, doing pit stop practice like I just did a little bit ago. Looking at the rules now, the NASCAR rules again just to refresh my memory. For me, unlike some of these these guys that come in and have done these one-off races, this is a one-off for me this year, but I’ve done seven total before, so I have a feeling. It’s more of a refresher course on all the stuff. How many boxes can you drive through? Honestly, I think the biggest thing that I talk about, especially with my sport car buddies that ask me about doing these Cup races, like what’s the most difficult thing. Driving a race car is driving a race car, ultimately. It’s not easy, but it comes naturally when you do it all your life. One of the things that is the most difficult for me is pit lane because there are so many cars pitting at once, especially if you’re pitting under yellow, but even sometimes when you’re pitting under green. In IMSA we use a pit speed limiter, so I literally come to the pit line, hit the button, go wide-open throttle and it just holds it right there for me. In Cup, you’re always managing your pit speed with throttle and brake. You’re watching the lights, but then there’s a car coming out and a car coming in and you’re still managing the lights yourself, so there’s a big difference on pit lane intensity-wise. And then of course leaving the box. I just got done telling my crew chief, I’m like, ‘I’m gonna need you to be saying pit speed, pit speed, pit speed when I’m leaving the box,’ because I’m used to coming out of the box wide-open until it hits the limiter and just driving out. So, I have to know manage that coming out of the pit box, along with managing the first lane and second lane of traffic. I would say we’re thinking about the race car and setup and all that. We do a lot of that in simulation, but as I get closer to the weekend I’m working on this refresher course on pit lane stuff, some of the small rule things just to make sure I’m spot on.”

HOW MUCH HAS WORKING ON DEVELOPMENT FOR THE MUSTANG IMSA PROGRAM ENHANCED YOUR SENSE OF WHAT A RACE CAR IS DOING AND WILL THAT HELP AS FAR AS MAKING ADJUSTMENTS IN YOUR CAR THIS WEEKEND AND FINDING SPEED? “I’ve been doing this for a long time and I’ve been fortunate to help develop a lot of race cars in the past 30 years of racing. We had a good go of development with the Ford GT and now most recently we’re doing a lot of stuff with the Mustang GT3. All of that stuff enhances your skills. It’s never ending. It’s amazing that you can do it for as long as I’ve done it and still learn stuff every day. I mean, people say it all the time but it’s really true, and I always keep my brain going. Outside of what I do, my son is running a late model and he’s racing go karts and we talk about stuff all the time. How are we gonna make more power? How are we gonna find more grip? It never changes. That never changes for me, whether it’s a GT3 car or even now on the Cup car. Fortunately for me, I am doing a lot of stuff in the simulator for the last three years with these guys, so every time there’s a road course I’m here in Concord doing things and helping and hearing the stuff and the changes and things that have worked and haven’t worked and being able to see the evolution that we started with. One of the things for me is in ‘21 I did the last Roval race in the old Cup car and then I was the first guy to drive the new car at the Roval that next day when we first started the Next Gen car, so in the background I’ve been with this program in the Next Gen car since the beginning for the road course stuff. Things are always turning. When I leave here in these weeks where I’m helping everybody, I’ll still text with crew chiefs and Ford engineers. I’ll be like, ‘You know what, I just thought of something from when we were doing that session last week. Maybe we should try this.’ This thing (his brain) is always turning. There’s smoke coming out of here all the time. Second to racing, one of my favorite things is doing that development and making things better. In my life, in my career, I’ve been super fortunate, especially with Ford, to be able to be with a program that when you say, ‘This needs to be better.’ They say, ‘We’ll fix it.’ I have a ton of engineers with Ford Performance and Multimatic and all the people that we have that I literally say, ‘This doesn’t feel right,’ and they say, ‘Let’s make it better.’ So when you come in the NASCAR world working with all the Ford Performance people and then also all of the teams, it’s the same thing. I enjoy that. Number one, I love racing, but my second-favorite thing is helping with development.”

HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE STREET COURSE RACING AND WHAT MAKES IT SO UNIQUE? “I’m a huge fan of street course racing. I always have been and the number one thing starts with the fans, like the outside part of it when you’re not talking about the driving the track because you have so many people wherever it is, in this case Chicago, where I say you bring it to the people. There’s gonna be people that didn’t want to go to the race that will go to the race because it’s in their city. Those are the fans that we gain. There are people that are gonna come to Chicago because a lot of the tracks we run are in places that are on the outskirts and a long ways from a city. So a ton of people will say, ‘Oh, it’s in Chicago? Chicago is fun. Let’s go to Chicago and watch a street race. Let’s go to a NASCAR race.’ So, there are so many different reasons that street racing, to me, is exciting and I don’t think you can really understand if you’ve not been at a street race the sound and the vibration coming off the walls. How the air continues to go around the racetrack when cars are running. It’s like an air flow going around the track. The fact that you can eat lunch standing 12 feet from a car going 175 miles an hour by you or whatever that situation is, you can stand right there and watch it. I mean, it’s just a different level of intensity and that’s just outside of the track, like watching. On the track, I think that street course racing for sure, and especially in Chicago, just gains and have a lot more respect for the track. Everybody is coming in here, especially last year when we were preparing for this, you look and it’s like super bumpy. There are transitions from new pavement to old pavement. There’s parts that are wider and narrower, so everybody is like, ‘We’re gonna take it easy here and find a way.’ Even with this being the second race, you still have the feeling that there’s respect for the racetrack, let’s put it that way. So when you get on the racetrack you’re like, ‘OK, maybe at the end of the race I can drag the left-rear along the wall and do all of that, but I don’t want to do that in the first practice.’ And I think the point is that I think it creates good racing. That respect for the racetrack and being pinned into the walls and having to work within those confines I honestly think it made for really good racing last year, and I think it will do the same this year. It’s looking more and more dry for us. The weather looks pretty spot on, like 80 degrees from the fan side and from the driver’s side it’s looking to shape up like a good one.”

HOW MUCH CAN YOU HELP CHRIS AND BRAD AND HOW MUCH OF IT IS YOU SOAKING IT IN? “I hope I can help a lot. I do spend time with them for the last three years I’ve been in the sim every week that there’s a road course race if I haven’t had a race. That’s kind of where this even came from was just because of that relationship we started three years ago and just kind of got better and better with all of the people – engineers. One thing I noticed a while ago with RFK is what they’re doing in the background was really good. Even when I was racing against them in 2022 I was like, ‘Man, they’re making good choices.’ Every week they’d always show up and they’re always there at the right time, and I think a lot of that has to do with the people in the shop, people that do the sim engineering and stuff like that. I’m excited to be part of the program and I really do hope that we can do stuff that advances their program since they’re giving me the opportunity to have a go of it and race. Honestly, I’m gonna be asking questions to Brad and Chris also because they were here last year. Yeah, I have street course experience, but I don’t have experience on this one per se. Back to the pit stop stuff, they do it every week – six to 12 times a week or whatever, and I don’t, so I’m gonna ask a lot of questions about that and see what I can do. But it’s all gonna happen fast starting right now because a little more sim work tomorrow helping other teams and then Thursday is the Fourth of July and everybody is off. I’m gonna actually do some stuff at the GT3 shop which, for me, I’m fortunate that our GT3 race shop – Multimatic – is based in Mooresville and the simulation stuff is done in Concord, so I can bounce back and forth. We’re doing some stuff over there on Thursday and have a team party there and then on Friday we’re off to Chicago. And then it still happens fast. We race on Sunday. My son and I go home on Monday and we’re back at MoSport racing IMSA the very next weekend, so I’m only home one day of 29 days this run. My son is sitting over here. He’s on a 20-day trip with me. We did Watkins Glen and haven’t been home staying out for this one, but that’s what it’s all about. We’re a racing family. My son is a racer. My wife and I met racing. We started dating when we were 16 years old, but we met when we were 12, so we’re just a racing family. My daughter is a softball player, but she can drive too. It’s just what we do, so we love it. This is a really good opportunity for me to help out RFK, help out Ford, but also for me to potentially have a good run too.”

HOW DO YOU THINK THE CHANGES IN THE BUS STOP AT WATKINS GLEN WORKED? DID THEY DO SOME CHANGES TO TURN ONE AS WELL AND WILL IT IMPACT THE STOCK CARS THERE IN A COUPLE OF MONTHS? “The turn one thing is hard to tell. I didn’t really see anything. They said they changed the exit curbs, but we were still able to run on them pretty hard. The bus stop chicane, I’m questioning how NASCAR will run it, but the way we ran it was quite a bit less aggressive I’d say. The whole yellow curb, the first yellow curb, is gone and it’s just gators with some little pyramids in the middle. We cut over it pretty far. We were left-side tires right on the point of the curb and shot straight over it and I thought it was easier to get across, less harmful to the car, but also carried a good bit more speed. The reason I say I’m not 100 percent sure what they’re gonna do is there were some other options it looked like as far as what they could bolt in, so I’m not 100 percent sure what NASCAR is gonna do, but if it was just like the IMSA thing, I think it would be a quicker entry, but probably a little less harmful to the car and slightly different how you would take the rest of the corners. But the rest of it, if you said there were four curbs in the bus stop, two, three and four are the same as they’ve always been. It’ll be interesting. I do think it will carry more speed in if they run like that.”

WAS THERE ANY DIFFERENCE IN THE VIOLENCE YOU WOULD FEEL IN THAT AREA AS FAR AS HOW YOU DROVE IT? “I would say in that first curb it’s a little more tame, but, again, I also think the way we ran it you could carry more speed across it, so it makes the center of the bus stop I would say more challenging because you carry more speed across the first one, so the way you have to rotate the car in the center of the second part is a little trickier. With a downforce car it’s hard to say. We drove in and we broke on entry and we flowed speed across the first one and then we never had to use the brake again. We just powered right through it with downforce, but I think that will not be the case with NASCAR. You’d probably have to carry some speed over it, touch the brake again to set the nose, and then drive out of it. It will be interesting. I think, again, if they ran it the way it is for us in IMSA, I thought it was a little easier on the car. It’s easier on your body a little bit.”

Stewart-Haas Racing: Chicago Street Race NXS Advance (Cole Custer | Riley Herbst)

COLE CUSTER | RILEY HERBST
Chicago Street Race NASCAR Xfinity Series Advance
NASCAR Xfinity Series Overview

  • Event: The Loop 121 (Round 18 of 33)
  • Date: Saturday, July 6
  • Location: Chicago Street Course
  • Layout: 2.2-mile, 12-turn street course
  • Time/TV/Radio: 3:30 p.m. EDT on NBC/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Cole Custer Notes of Interest

  • Cole Custer and his NASCAR Xfinity Series counterparts are trading in the oval tracks for the unpredictability of the Chicago Street Course in Saturday’s The Loop 121 in downtown Chicago. The Ladera Ranch, California native who scored his second of three wins of 2023 in the inaugural Chicago Street Race a year ago, hits town riding a streak of consistency. He’s scored top-10s in 14 of the past 15 races, including each of the last five, starting with his sixth-place finish June 1 at Portland (Ore.) International Raceway and culminating with his ninth-place finish last Saturday at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway. At Nashville, he qualified second, just .051 of a second shy of his third pole earned this season. He led twice for 64 laps and tallied a total of 15 stage points throughout the race. While he fell back in the final stage due to struggles with his long-run speed, he was able to hold on for a solid ninth-place result, equaling his previous best at the track, earned in June 2023. Custer’s 14th top-10 of the season was his second in a row at Nashville, and he leads the regular-season points standings with a 15-point advantage over Chandler Smith. He’s dealt with the difficulty of the summer heat and rain storms in recent weeks, and now he’ll be presented with a different challenge during NASCAR’s return to the streets of Chicago for the second year in a row.
  • Custer was up for the challenge in last year’s inaugural event, posting the fastest lap in practice before earning the pole for the race. The 2023 NASCAR Xfinity Series champion led all 25 laps prior to a torrential downpour that brought out the red flag and eventually led NASCAR officials to call the race before its halfway point, giving Custer his second win of 2023 in unprecedented fashion.
  • Custer will sport the bright and vibrant colors of Andy’s Frozen Custard once again this weekend in the company’s second of three races as primary partner in 2024. Founded in 1986 in Osage Beach, Missouri by Andy Kuntz’s parents John and Carol Kuntz, Andy’s Frozen Custard has been providing the freshest frozen custard in the business for 38 years, giving ice cream the “cold shoulder” by scooping, mixing and presenting handcrafted frozen custard treats with speed and a smile. Since the beginning, the family members have had one dream: to share what makes them happiest with everyone else, and to warm hearts one scoop of frozen custard at a time. With a focus on product quality, customer service and community involvement, Andy’s has grown into the nation’s largest frozen custard-only business, with 150 stores across 15 states proudly serving the World’s Finest Frozen Custard. Andy’s has been committed to supporting developing drivers of all ages from their first race throughout their racing career for more than 30 years, an extension of the family’s lifelong commitment to motorsports. Andy’s is the “Official Frozen Treat” of Texas Motor Speedway.

Riley Herbst Notes of Interest

  • Riley Herbst is ready for the electricity of downtown Chicago during Saturday’s The Loop 121 on the Chicago Street Course. The driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang Dark Horse will bank on his family roots of racing SCORE International Trophy Trucks in the deserts of Mexico and the Desert Southwest while learning to navigate the city streets of Chicago. While the two types of racing are significantly different, both are full of unknowns, but Herbst showed his propensity to overcome the unknown when he piloted the Herbst Motorsports Trophy Truck to a third-place finish in the November 2022 Baja 1000, and a win in last November’s renewal of the iconic event. He’s looking to channel that positive mojo this weekend on 2.2-mile, 12-turn Chicago Street Course as he looks to extend his streak of three consecutive top-10s. His latest run started with a runner-up finish June 15 at Iowa Speedway in Newton, an eighth-place finish at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, and a sixth-place result last Saturday at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway after battling his way into race-winning contention on the final restart. Herbst’s Nashville effort, waged in extreme heat and humidity, was all the more impressive as his coolsuit malfunctioned early in the race and necessitated an extended pit stop that sent him to the back of the field. He persevered through the extreme conditions in driving to his eighth top-10 of the season.
  • In last year’s inaugural Chicago Street Race, Herbst started 15th and worked his way into the top-10 before pitting to repair damage sustained when he was collected by a spinning car in the opening laps. He worked his way back toward the front until the No. 98 Monster Energy team opted to pit when the caution flag flew on lap 24, dropping him out of the top-20. Lightning then brought out the red flag on lap 25 and the race never resumed due to torrential rain and standing water. When it was declared official the next day, Herbst was credited with a 24th-place finish despite the speed he had shown during the weekend.
  • With just nine races to go before the Xfinity Series Playoffs kick off Sept. 28 at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Herbst looks to be in a good position to make the 12-driver postseason field. While he has yet to score his first win of the season that would lock him into the playoff field, his consistency and stage points have put him 103 points above the top-12 cutline. In the regular-season standings, he is currently fifth, 118 points behind his first-place teammate Cole Custer and 40 points behind fourth-place Austin Hill. After missing the playoffs last season, Herbst not only went on to score his first victory during the Round of 8 at his home track of Las Vegas Motor Speedway, but he scored more points than any other driver during that round. He followed up his Las Vegas win with a runner-up finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway and fourth-place finish at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway.

Cole Custer, Driver of the No. 00 Andy’s Frozen Custard Ford Mustang Dark Horse

You’re returning to the place where you got your second win of the 2023 season in a rain-shortened inaugural event at the Chicago Street Course. You won the pole and led all 25 laps before the torrential downpour came. What’s your confidence level this weekend, knowing the field includes some road course ringers?

“I won’t lie – the competition is going to be stiff this weekend. The Xfinity Series field will have both of the inaugural Chicago Street Course winners racing with myself with SVG (Shane van Gisbergen). That’s just crazy, but it’s a challenge that myself and the No. 00 team are ready for. We have proven that we can compete with the best of them at road courses and hopefully that holds true this weekend. Of course, there’s always extra pressure heading into a race that you had previously won, but I’m excited. I enjoyed this track last year, and to be the inaugural winner meant a lot. We’ve been close to a win the past few weekends, but it’s all about putting it all together and having a great race. We’re close to that win, but we just need that little bit more.”

Andy’s Frozen Custard is back on your No. 00 Ford Mustang Dark Horse this weekend. Talk about that relationship and what it means to have their support this season with their long history in motorsports.

“It means a lot to have the support of Andy’s Frozen Custard on the No. 00 Ford Mustang Dark Horse this year. They’ve been in this sport as a supporter for so long, so to have them on my car just proves that they think I can go win another championship. I met Andy Kuntz (owner) on the streets on Nashville during the NASCAR Awards and immediately gave him my business card. A couple of months later, they were on my car at Texas. It’s a dream come true to have a custard company as a sponsor, and I’m thankful for their support. It was a perfect match and, hopefully I’ll be able to get them a good run at Chicago.”

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

After three strong weekends on intermediates and short tracks, you’re heading back to the Chicago Street Course. What are your expectations for the weekend?

“Honestly, Chicago was one of those races we struggled at last year, so I think our goal this weekend is to just have the same speed we’ve shown all season. We’ve been a top-five car every weekend except two – COTA and Sonoma. Even at those tracks, though, we outperformed for a good portion of the race. We just lacked speed. Still, we were fast at Portland, so hopefully we can see that again at Chicago. It’s such a unique race given its location, and I want to do well there. I’m confident in my No. 98 Monster Energy team and ready for the challenge.”

You’ve found a stride in the summer months during the same timeframe you were having difficulties last season. Describe what you’ve gone through this season to be sitting where you are in the points.

“I think it’s super interesting, to be honest with you, because Iowa and New Hampshire actually gave us our first back-to-back top-10s of the year, which was a big surprise to me. That just kind of shows how fast we are to get stage points and help get us to fifth in points, so I feel like if we could finish where we’ve been running, we would probably be first or second in points, but we’ve had some awful finishes, some of our own doing and some not. It just shows how much speed we’ve had on the No. 98 Monster Energy team because last year we finished really bad, and we were really bad in points. This year, we’re finishing bad and we’re still pretty high in points, so that just means we have to execute and put everything together and I think we can close in on the gap. I believe in this team, though, and I’m having fun right now.”

Todd Gilliland and the No. 38 gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Chicago Street Race Competition Notes

 MOORESVILLE, N.C. (July 2, 2024) – The NASCAR Cup Series returns to the streets of Chicago for the Grant Park 165. gener8tor will return with Todd Gilliland for the 75-lap event, showcasing the same fan-favorite scheme from last week’s race at the Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway.

This will be the Cup Series third road-course race of the season, most recently competing at the Sonoma (Calif.) Raceway, where Gilliland scored a 10th place finish.

The weekend will begin with practice and qualifying on Saturday, July 6th at 12:30 p.m. ET. Sunday’s race will be at 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC. Fans can also listen in on the action live from Sirius XM and the Motor Racing Network.

No. 38 gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

DRIVER TODD GILLILAND:

“Chicago is a big race for us, it’s one I have had circled on my calendar. We left Sonoma with a Top-10, which is a huge confidence booster. We showed a lot of speed in practice last year, we just have to translate that into qualifying and get a good starting spot. I think it will be a good weekend for us.”

CREW CHIEF RYAN BERGENTY:

“I think we have a really solid chance of bringing home a win and punching our ticket to the playoffs this weekend. We have been working nonstop to get this car ready, double checking everything. We have a lot of positive momentum heading into Chicago from how we performed at Sonoma, we just have to bring another fast gener8tor Ford Mustang Dark Horse and execute.”

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

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

Michael McDowell and the No. 34 Chicago White Sox Ford Mustang Dark Horse

Chicago Street Course Competition Notes

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (July 2, 2024) – Michael McDowell and the No. 34 team will head to the Windy City to tackle the streets of Chicago, in the second edition of the Chicago Street Race.

McDowell will be carrying a hometown team on his Ford Mustang Dark Horse as the Chicago White Sox will serve as the primary sponsor for the weekend. The Major League Baseball club will be joined by SKIL, an innovative electric power tool brand founded in Chicago in 1924. Celebrating 100 years of innovation including the original worm drive Saw that Built America and current lineup of cordless power tools and outdoor power equipment, SKIL will be featured as an associate sponsor aboard McDowell’s No. 34 entry.

McDowell finished seventh in last year’s rain-shortened, inaugural race after qualifying sixth. The 39-year-old also has a Top-5 finish on a road course this season, finishing second at Sonoma Raceway, back in June.

The weekend will begin with practice and qualifying on Saturday, July 6th at 12:30 p.m. ET on USA Network. Sunday’s race will be at 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock. Fans can also listen in on the action live from Sirius XM and the Motor Racing Network.

No. 34 Chicago White Sox Ford Mustang Dark Horse:

DRIVER MICHAEL MCDOWELL:

“I think we can be as confident as possible going into the weekend. The Street Course is a really fun track, definitely a challenge. We need to be smart and execute, but I think we can have a good weekend. Also, I’m excited to have the Chicago White Sox on the car, especially with family ties to the Chicago area, so it will be a fun weekend for us and the fans for sure.”

CREW CHIEF TRAVIS PETERSON:

“Chicago is going to be a very important race for us. We have been strong on the road courses, and we look at this event as another great opportunity to get a win and get in the playoffs. It’s a very unique track and weekend, but we are looking forward to the challenge and opportunity of it!”

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

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

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Race Preview | Chicago Street Race

CLUB ENTRY LIST

JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK
POINT STANDINGS: 27th

ERIK JONES
POINT STANDINGS: 28th

CLUB NOTES

With its inaugural start in the 2023 season, the Chicago Street Course has its second annual race this weekend on Sunday, July 7th.

WINNER WINNER: Last week in the NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS), LEGACY MOTOR CLUB driver, John Hunter Nemechek went to victory lane at Nashville Superspeedway piloting the No. 20 Pye-Barker Fire & Safety GR Supra for Joe Gibbs Racing. This was Nemechek’s second NXS victory of season, and his 11th of his career.

TRAINING FOR CHICAGO: Erik Jones had the opportunity to test for Chicago with Skip Barber Racing School at VIRginia International Raceway.

“Making some laps with Skip Barber was good. Just being able to talk to those guys and pick their brain about road course racing and what they focus on, how they find lap time, and how they adjust to what the track is doing was helpful for me and I was able to take away some good notes and some good things to focus on and be able to work through. Hopefully we can take some of that to Chicago, focus on some different things that I hadn’t always looked at and make it worthwhile.”

Double the Street Fun: Nemechek will once again be pulling double duty at Chicago Street Course this weekend. He will pilot the No. 20 for Joe Gibbs Racing in the NXS and the No. 42 for LEGACY MOTOR CLUB.

JHN on the Chicago Streets: This year will mark Nemechek’s first Cup Series start on the Chicago Street course. Last year, he piloted the Joe Gibbs Racing NXS entry to a runner-up finish with his current Cup crew chief, Ben Beshore on top of the pit box.

Erik Jones at Chicago: Erik Jones will drive the No. 43 UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Toyota Camry XSE through the streets of downtown Chicago this Sunday, July 7. Jones finished last year’s race with a top-20, finishing in 16th position.

Elenz at Chicago: Dave Elenz, Crew Chief of the No. 43 UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Toyota Camry XSE, led the sole Chicago Street Course race with Erik Jones last year. The duo finished 16th after moving up five spots throughout the race.

Partner Spotlight: This weekend in Chicago, the No. 42 Dollar Tree Toyota Camry XSE piloted by John Hunter Nemechek will carry vendor partners, Tyson, Unilever, Bic, and Coca-Cola on their LEGACY MOTOR CLUB entry.

AdventHealth joins UChicago Medicine to partner with the No. 43 for this weekend at Chicago. UChicago Medicine and AdventHealth will team up with Erik Jones to get involved with the community before the race on Sunday. The Sun Bus will make an appearance Friday morning at the UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Cancer Institute, providing free cancer screenings – an initiative that AdventHealth and Jones are passionate about. Later Friday afternoon, Erik Jones will visit the UChicago Medicine Comer Children’s Hospital for a book reading and to hand out hero cards.

Going for G.O.L.D.: Partners Dollar Tree and Family Dollar will honor store #4215 this weekend as a part of the company’s “Go for G.O.L.D.” (Grand Opening Look Daily) program. The Dollar Tree and Family Dollar primaries will highlight these stores on the deck lid of all three LEGACY M.C. entries throughout the race season. Store #4215 is located in Chicago, Ill.

CLUB QUOTES

John Hunter Nemechek, Driver of the No. 42 Dollar Tree Toyota Camry XSE:

“I think it’s really cool being able to race downtown, Chicago. It’s a different market that brings new fans into the sport. If you’re somebody walking on the street, we’re going to be able to see racing right there. It’s a pretty cool weekend with all of the events and the music that is planned; it brings a different atmosphere to the city of Chicago. With this being the only city course that [NASCAR] has, it’s unique in itself so it’s a really neat venue and I am glad that we’re going back this year. I hope that we can run well.”

“With me running the NASCAR Xfinity Series this year that should help. I also I think there were some track trends and different things that I learned last year, like getting the scope of the layout. Last year we ran in the wet and the dry in the [NXS] car, so I felt like I’ve learned quite a bit but I’m not really sure what to expect going into the Cup race. Last year was pretty crazy for sure so battle of attrition and being there at the end; helpfully it doesn’t turn out this way again, but if it does you need to keep your nose clean and be there at the end and be one of the last one standing.”

Ben Beshore, Crew chief of the No. 42 Dollar Tree Toyota Camry XSE:

“With John Hunter running the NASCAR Xfinity Race, getting some laps prior to the Cup race should give him a better idea of braking markers and certain driving techniques that will cross over to the Cup car. Chicago is a tight street course, so trying to avoid mistakes and limit your time on pit road generally will put you in a good position for a solid finish.”

Erik Jones, Driver of the No. 43 UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Toyota Camry XSE:

“Looking forward to Chicago. I thought last year’s event went really well and the rain hampered some of it. Overall, I thought it was one of our better road courses last season, as far as the car we had and how we ran. I think everybody will be a bit better this year. I think we all learned what it takes to race on a street course and what you have to focus on and what you have to be good at, like track layout and what grip levels are like.”

Dave Elenz, Crew chief of the No. 43 UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Toyota Camry XSE:

“It’s pretty neat going to Chicago and having the race downtown, definitely a different environment. Last year we had a really exciting show with all of the rain and a lot of passing and a lot of different things going on. We had a pretty good car last year and some circumstances kept us out of a good finish, but hopefully we can build on that – we had a good run at Sonoma, and we just continue to take that momentum and finish good at Chicago.”

PETTY 75TH ANNIVERSARY

ABOUT PETTY 75th: The 2024 season marks a significant milestone in the history of the Petty family as they have helped define stock car racing for 75 years. Their commitment to the sport and the people who make it possible – behind the wheel, under the hood, in the back office, and beyond – has shaped the growth and success of NASCAR. Their LEGACY lives on with the countless fans, drivers, technicians, and team members they touched. Throughout 2024, LEGACY M.C. will celebrate the Petty family and share countless memories with friends and fans at race tracks across the country.

This Week in Petty History: Happy Birthday to The King himself – Richard Petty! On July 2, The King turns 87-years-old.

On July 4, 1984, Richard Petty won his 200th win, the final of his career, at the Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

The King’s Hat and Q&A: The King’s Hat will be located in Butler’s Field all weekend for photo ops. Additionally, Richard Petty will be conducting a Q&A on Sunday at 11:00 a.m. at the NASCAR Experience.

BROADCAST INFO

CHICAGO STREET RACE
SUNDAY, JULY 7TH @ 4:30 PM ET

ABOUT OUR PARTNERS

ABOUT DOLLAR TREE, INC.: Dollar Tree, a Fortune 200 Company, operated 16,622 stores across 48 states and five Canadian provinces as of October 28, 2023. Stores operate under the brands of Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, and Dollar Tree Canada. To learn more about the Company, visit www.DollarTree.com.

ABOUT LEGACY MOTOR CLUB: LEGACY MOTOR CLUB™ is a professional auto racing club owned by businessman and entrepreneur Maurice “Maury” J. Gallagher and seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson. The CLUB competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series fielding the No. 42 Toyota Camry XSE of John Hunter Nemechek, the No. 43 Toyota Camry XSE of Erik Jones, and the No. 84 limited schedule entry for Johnson. LEGACY M.C. also competes in the Extreme E Series. Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty “The King” serves as CLUB Ambassador. With a unique title signifying a nod to car clubs of past eras, LEGACY M.C. is an inclusive club for all motorsport enthusiasts to celebrate the past and future legacies of its members, while competing for wins and championships at NASCAR’s elite level. To keep up-to-date with the latest news, information and exclusive content, follow LEGACY MOTOR CLUB™ on Facebook, X, Instagram and at www.LEGACYMOTORCLUB.com.

Ford Performance NASCAR – 2024 Chicago Street Race Advance

CHICAGO STREET RACE

Saturday, July 6 — NASCAR Xfinity Series, 3:30 p.m. ET (NBC)
Sunday, July 7 — NASCAR Cup Series, 4:30 p.m. ET (NBC)

The streets of Chicago will be filled with sights and sounds of stock cars making left and right-hand turns as the NASCAR Cup and NASCAR Xfinity Series visits the city for a second straight year. Weather dominated last year’s inaugural event, which included Ford’s Cole Custer winning the rain-shortened The Loop 121.

LOGANO CLINCHES PLAYOFF BERTH

Joey Logano’s dramatic victory on Sunday at Nashville Superspeedway, in which he went the final 110 laps without pitting and survived five overtimes, was Ford’s fifth win in the last eight weeks. Logano, who captured the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway in May, joins Team Penske teammates Austin Cindric and defending Cup champion Ryan Blaney in the playoffs, along with RFK’s Brad Keselowski.

CLIMBING THE FORD WIN LIST

Logano’s victory was the 33rd of his NASCAR Cup Series career and 31st with Ford, which is fourth on the all-time Blue Oval win list. The only three drivers ahead of him are Ned Jarrett (43), Bill Elliott (40) and Mark Martin (35).

ALL-TIME FORD WIN LIST (TOP 5)

Ned Jarrett (43)
Bill Elliott (40)
Mark Martin (35)
Joey Logano (31)
Dale Jarrett (30)

CLOSING IN ON 100

In addition to being fourth on Ford’s all-time win list, Logano has also won more races for Team Penske with Ford than any other driver. His win on Sunday marked the organization’s 96th with the manufacturer. Rusty Wallace scored the first win when he won at North Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, NC, in 1994. Team Penske won 27 races from 1994-2002 and then returned to Ford in 2013 with Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano. Since then, they’ve added a third car with Ryan Blaney and have won 69 times. Seven different drivers have won at least one race with Team Penske and Ford with Logano leading the way (31).

TEAM PENSKE ALL-TIME FORD WINNERS

Joey Logano (31)
Brad Keselowski (26)
Rusty Wallace (23)
Ryan Blaney (10)
Jeremy Mayfield (3)
Austin Cindric (2)
Ryan Newman (1)

RYAN BLANEY: “I am looking forward to Chicago. I’m looking forward to hopefully having good weather that weekend. It can’t get much worse than what it was last year. That city deserves it. I feel like the hype around that race last year was through the roof and the amount of people that still came even though the weather was what it was, I think if it all goes good this year weather-wise it’s just gonna be an absolute spectacle to see, so I’m excited to go back.”

MICHAEL MCDOWELL: “Chicago was a lot of fun and really cool. I think they did a great job with the track. It’s fun to drive and challenging. There are different types of corners that some are off camber and some aren’t, plus you’re driving on a street course that is not shaped for race cars. They’re shaped for street cars and to have water shed off of it, so there’s some tricky areas for sure, but I thought they did a great job with the design. It’s fun to drive and you’ve got a cool back setting there. The rain made it challenging, but I feel like overall the weekend was really good.”

TODD GILLILAND: “I think there’s still a lot of notes that we can look back on, whether it’s the dry practice and dry qualifying, stuff you’ve seen on other cars and how it reacts, stuff you want to achieve going back, I don’t know that it’s usually that easy, but I still think there’s some worth in the notes from last year, for sure, just as far as everyone went there with their best guess and then you’re gonna see the window of setups probably cut in half every single time we go back to a place like that. I think that’s the biggest thing is you’ll probably see guys be a lot closer.”

SOLDIER FIELD CUP HISTORY

NASCAR hosted one Cup Series race inside historic Soldier Field on July 21, 1956. The 200-lap race was held on a half-mile track and Fireball Roberts led a Ford Motor Company sweep of the top three positions as only five cars finished on the lead lap. Roberts drove to victory in a ‘56 Ford while Jim Paschal was second in a ‘56 Mercury and Ralph Moody third in a ‘56 Ford. Both Roberts and Moody were driving for owner Pete DePaolo, winner of the 1925 Indianapolis 500, as part of Ford’s first full season of factory-backed stock car racing. The end result that season was 14 series victories and Ford’s first manufacturers’ championship.

SOLDIER FIELD CONVERTIBLE HISTORY

In addition to the Cup Series race, NASCAR also held three convertible races at Soldier Field – two in 1956 and one more in 1957. NASCAR Hall of Famers Curtis Turner and Glen Wood both drove their respective ‘56 Fords to victory during that time. Turner, driving for DePaolo, led a race-high 329-of-500 laps while teammate Joe Weatherly led the other 171 circuits to give Ford a 1-2 finish on Sept. 9, 1956. Wood beat Possum Jones on June 29, 1957 as those were the only two drivers to take the checkered flag on the lead lap.

CUSTER GOING FOR REPEAT

Cole Custer became the first NASCAR driver to win on the streets of Chicago when he captured the rain-shortened The Loop 121 last year. Custer started on the pole and led all 25 laps before rain and standing water forced the race to be called three laps before the scheduled 55-lapper would have been official. The win was Custer’s second of the season and second straight on a road/street course after taking the race in Portland a few weeks earlier.

FORD’S NASCAR XFINITY SERIES WINNERS

AT CHICAGO

2023 — Cole Custer

HSR Announces NASCAR Classic Presented by Petty’s Garage Series for Growing Historic Stock Cars Category

  • New Series Debuts with the HSR NASCAR Classic at the IMSA Michelin GT Challenge at VIRginia International Raceway, August 23 – 24
  • Additional 2024 Events Include Watkins Glen International for the HSR NASCAR Classic at the NASCAR Go Bowling at the Glen, September 13 – 14, and the HSR NASCAR Classic at the NASCAR Bank of America ROVAL 400 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, October 11 – 12

DAYTONA BEACH, Florida (July 2, 2024) – Historic Sportscar Racing (HSR) officials announced today the introduction of the HSR NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage, a racing series for HSR’s growing Group 8 Historic Stock Cars division. The NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage debuts at VIRginia International Raceway, August 23 – 24, with the HSR NASCAR Classic at the IMSA Michelin GT Challenge at VIR.

Open to stock cars that have been retired from active competition, the introduction of the HSR NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage is a direct response to the increasing popularity of the Group 8 Historic Stock Cars category with HSR competitors and fans alike. The interest has been further bolstered by HSR’s partnership with the Historic Stock Car Racing Association (HSCRA) that has produced several successful event weekends at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, Watkins Glen International and other top U.S. racing circuits in recent years.

“The across-the-board support for and the rapid growth of the HSR Classic Stock Cars category made starting a dedicated series around the division an easy decision,” said HSR President Chris Ward. “NASCAR stock cars of all generations are perhaps the most identifiable category of race cars in the U.S. to motorsports enthusiasts, competitors and even mainstream audiences. We have experienced this incredible growth and popularity with several HSR Historic Stock Cars showcase events in the last few years, particularly in partnership with the HSCRA. We can’t thank enough HSCRA Founders Chris Evans and Carlus Gann and all of the HSR Group 8 competitors, and we look we forward to continuing to race with them in the HSR NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage series for many more years to come.”

Eligible NASCAR Classic cars include those built to previous NASCAR rule book specifications for Cup, Xfinity, Truck and ARCA competition. Current editions of the rules-eligible cars in each series, such as the Cup series Generation 7 chassis, are not eligible in NASCAR Classic competition.

Additionally, all rules eligible cars must carry authentic and period-correct liveries previously seen in NASCAR competition over the years. A maximum of 30 select entries will be accepted by HSR for each of 2024’s HSR NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage rounds.

The Petty’s Garage presenting sponsorship is a perfect fit for the HSR NASCAR Classic at a more than appropriate time. With one of Stock Car racing’s “First Families” celebrating its 75th Anniversary in 2024, the NASCAR Classic partnership adds an on-track competition component to the Diamond Jubilee celebration of the legendary Petty family that has been in full swing all year.

The VIR event date was part of 2024’s full-season schedule unveiled last year, but the HSR NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage announcement coincides with two new race additions to this year’s calendar.

HSR Historic Stock Cars now return to Watkins Glen for the second-straight year for a support race on the New York track’s NASCAR weekend, September 13 – 14, which will now be known as the HSR NASCAR Classic at the Go Bowling at the Glen.

The other addition is the HSR NASCAR Classic at the NASCAR Bank of America ROVAL 400, October 11 – 12, which is HSR’s first appearance at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

For more information on the HSR NASCAR Classic presented by Petty’s Garage, and HSR overall, please visit https://www.hsrrace.com/.

The VIR HSR NASCAR Classic – the first time HSR has been part of an IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship race weekend – is the next event on HSR’s 2024 schedule of events, August 23 – 25. Spectator tickets are available at https://virnow.com/.

About HSR: Now an IMSA property, Historic Sportscar Racing (HSR) was formed in the mid-1970s with an event at Road Atlanta. There was one goal then and it remains true today: to celebrate the race cars from the past. As a “time machine” of sights and sounds, HSR provides a venue for competitors and spectators alike to share in the wonderful history and excitement created by the cars that competed at race tracks around the world. HSR currently sanctions 10 vintage and historic racing events at some of the world’s most renowned race tracks, including Road Atlanta, Sebring International Raceway, Daytona International Speedway and more. The complete schedule and full event information can be found on HSR’s website at www.HSRRace.com. Look for the HSR Channel on YouTube and follow HSR on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/HSRrace/ and on Twitter and Instagram at @HSR_race.

Trans Am Series Star Thomas Annunziata Takes on the Chicago Street Course With JD Motorsports

Gaffney, NC—Road courses can be some of the most challenging tracks for NASCAR drivers, and the Chicago Street Course is even more difficult than most.

That’s why Trans Am Series and ARCA Series regular Thomas Annunziata will once again team up with JD Motorsports for an exciting NASCAR Xfinity Series race, and this time they’re headed to the windy city.

The New Jersey native driver is pursuing a full-time career in the upper echelons of NASCAR, and he’ll be getting another taste of it behind the wheel of the Opti-Coat No. 6 Chevy Camaro for the second annual The Loop 110 this Saturday. The 19-year-old Italian-American may have gotten a late start in racing compared to many other drivers, but he’s impressed many around the garage even in his short time in the sport.

“We’ve heard the buzz around Thomas and we’ve seen it up close for ourselves,” said team owner Johnny Davis. “He’s got a very unconventional story, and I’m excited to help him write this chapter.”

To make this all happen, Annunziata and JD Motorsports have partnered with Opti-Coat Ceramic Coating, The Daily Downforce’s YouTube channel, Chicago Food Guide, America’s Vet Dogs and BOOSTane to send him to Chicago with a sleek finish and a fresh style.

“Opti-Coat and the other partners really have delivered me a slick-looking car,” said Annunziata. “I love the Daily Downforce YouTube videos, and they’re even bringing along some of their friends to join me. So Chicago is going to be a blast.”

The Chicago Food Guide, one of the windy city’s most popular food content creators, is excited to put its mark on a race car as well.

“Thomas and Johnny are bringing this incredible NASCAR show to Chicago,” said Amin Tomalieh of the Chicago Food Guide, “and I’ll be with them to make sure Chicago delivers them some incredible food.”

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 Opti-Coat

Opti-Coat’s permanent bonding Silicon Carbide Automotive Ceramic Coatings provide The Ultimate™ protection for your vehicle. A one-time application Opti-Coat Pro provides long term protection without the need for waxes, sealants, coating toppers or refreshers. Opti-Coat enhances the gloss, shine and beauty of your vehicle’s paint to help keep it looking better than new. Your vehicle will look better, stay clean longer, be easier to maintain and have unmatched protection from the elements.Our mission is to provide vehicle owners with superior car care products and services that enhance the beauty and extend the life of automotive surfaces to maximize value and driving pleasure. Furthermore, we strive to offer products that are safe for our customers and the environment. https://www.opticoat.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