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1 MONTH ALERT: Dairyland Showdown Set to Boast Massive $264,000 Overall Purse in May

FOUNTAIN CITY, WI (April 4, 2023) – One of the biggest World of Outlaws CASE Construction Equipment Late Model events of the season lands in May at Wisconsin’s Mississippi Thunder Speedway.

The Dairyland Showdown, May 4-6, will boast a $264,000 overall purse – the second biggest of the year – between the three days with Thursday and Friday’s events featuring two $5,000-to-win Features each night and then Saturday boasting a $50,000 payday.

It makes for a massive destination weekend at the 3/8-mile track, loved by fans and drivers, in Fountain City, WI.

TICKETS: CLICK HERE

Early Storylines:

GUSTIN’S PLAYGROUND: Ryan Gustin, of Marshalltown, IA – less than 4 hours from Fountain City – has collected five wins at Mississippi Thunder Speedway. However, all five came in a Modified.

He’ll be poised to get his first with the World of Outlaws this year after a breakthrough season in 2022, which saw him pick up his first two Series victories. He hasn’t finished outside the top 10 in his last four Series starts at the track and has a career best Series finish of second there.

OUTLAW WINNERS: Three of the current World of Outlaws championship contenders have scored Series victories at Mississippi Thunder Speedway – Bobby Pierce, four-time Series champion Brandon Sheppard and current Series points leader Chris Madden.

Sheppard scored his win during the World of Outlaws’ Series debut at the track in 2021 and then Madden claimed the victory the next night. Pierce earned his third win with the Series at the track last year and will be poised to try and repeat as he chases the World of Outlaws title for the first time in his career.

TITLE HUNT: With one of the most impressive rosters in World of Outlaws CASE Late Model history, the hunt for the 2023 title is far from predictable. After securing his first Series title last year, Dennis Erb Jr. is back with two-time Crew Chief of the Year winner Heather Lyne, for a back to back run, but drivers like Chris Madden, Brian Shirley, Brandon Sheppard and Max Blair have had a strong start to the season, putting themselves at the front of the leaderboard.

Three nights at Mississippi Thunder Speedway could shake up the standings if one contenders hits a hot streak all three nights or if someone misses their setup.

PREVIOUS MISSISSIPPI THUNDER WINNERS:
2022 – Bobby Pierce, on May 5, Jonathan Davenport on May 6, Mike Marlar on May 7
2021 – Brandon Sheppard on May 7, Chris Madden on May 8

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WHAT TO WATCH FOR: US 36 Visit, $20,000 to win Jason Johnson Classic at 81 Kickoff Massive Midwest Swing for World of Outlaws

Gravel, Sweet, and Macedo attempting to separate themselves as tour hits the Heartland

OSBORN, MO (April 4, 2023) – After Texas two-steppin’ at Devil’s Bowl Speedway, the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars are set to begin an extended stay in America’s Heartland.

This Friday, April 7 The Greatest Show on Dirt heads to US 36 Raceway (Osborn, MO). It’ll be the sixth visit to the 3/8thmile and first since August of 2020. Then a four-hour drive southwest takes the tour to Wichita, KS where 81 Speedway hosts the fifth Jason Johnson Classic, awarding $20,000 to the winner. The World of Outlaws have visited the Kansas oval 13 times, but Saturday’s trip will be the first in six years and the first time its hosted the Jason Johnson Classic.

The double header will be the first of five consecutive weekends in the Midwest with a return to Missouri along with races in Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio all awaiting the country’s best drivers.

Let’s look at some of this weekend’s top storylines:

TITLE TRIO: It’s still very early in the 2023 World of Outlaws season, but three drivers have established themselves as early championship favorites with roughly an eighth of the campaign in the books.

Ever since winning the season opener, David Gravel has refused to relinquish his spot atop the standings. The pilot of the Big Game Motorsports #2 hasn’t won since topping three of the five Volusia Speedway Park races to begin the year, but he’s maintained consistency with a streak of four straight top fives entering this weekend.

The Watertown, CT native has been strong at both tracks awaiting the tour this weekend. At 36, Gravel owns top fives in both of his Series starts. His one appearance at 81 (’17) yielded a podium.

Brad Sweet has been chipping away at Gravel’s lead and has it down to 26 markers courtesy of five top-two finishes in the last seven races. Like Gravel, Sweet owns a pair of World of Outlaws appearances in Osborn that resulted in top fives. The four-time champion finished fifth in Wichita in 2017.

Only six points behind Sweet in the standings is where Carson Macedo can be found. He’s fresh off posting his first podium since Volusia aboard the Jason Johnson Racing #41. Saturday’s race is circled for the Lemoore, CA native as he’d love nothing more than parking the JJR machine in Victory Lane on the night honoring the late legend. It’ll be Macedo’s debut at 81 Speedway.

BAYSTON BUILDING MOMENTUM: After some early struggles in Florida, Spencer Bayston continues to head in the right direction with CJB Motorsports.

The Lebanon, IN native earned a pair of top 10s at Devil’s Bowl. After posting an 11.6 average finish in the first five races of the season, he’s improved to an 8.8 in the most recent five. The 24-year-old is now tied with Donny Schatz for seventh in points.

Bayston looks to keep rolling at a pair of tracks he’s yet to visit with the World of Outlaws.

OSBORN ENCORE?: Sheldon Haudenschild is known as one of the most exciting drivers on the World of Outlaws tour, and during the Series’ most recent visit to US 36, he gave a strong piece of evidence.

The Stenhouse Jr./Marshall Racing gasser came out of nowhere on the last lap and ripped around the outside of Brad Sweet to steal the win in the final corner with the checkered flag in sight.

After a tough weekend in Texas with finishes of 16th and 13th, the Wooster, OH native hopes for a similar outcome at this year’s Osborn invasion to kickstart his campaign with his first win of the year.

ONE WICHITA WINNER: Only a single driver who will be in attendance this weekend has visited Victory Lane at 81 Speedway in World of Outlaws competition – Donny Schatz.

The 10-time Series champion has topped the two most recent visits (’06 & ’17) to the Kansas oval. In four total starts there, his average finish is 3.75 with podiums in three of the four.

It’s been an up and down season so far for Schatz aboard the Tony Stewart/Curb Agajanian Racing #15. He owns five finishes of seventh or better, but the other half of the schedule has seen him land outside the top 10.

HONORING THE RAGIN’ CAJUN: Saturday in Kansas is much more than a race. It’s a chance to remember and honor a man who was unanimously revered in the pit area, Jason Johnson. For fellow drivers, the best way to do so is cementing their name as a Jason Johnson Classic winner.

The first edition in 2019 provided a moment that couldn’t have been scripted better when David Gravel wheeled the JJR #41 to victory.

Next up, it was the Series’ most recent winner and current Roth Motorsports driver, James McFadden, coming out on top by leading all 41 circuits.

Two years ago, Brad Sweet wheeled the Kasey Kahne Racing #49 to glory in the third edition.

Last season Jacob Allen outdueled Brady Bacon to jumpstart his breakout 2022 campaign that saw him go on to win four races.

All four of these full-time World of Outlaws will be looking to become the first multi-time winner of the event while a bevy of others aim to add their name to the list.

LOCAL FLAVOR: A variety of drivers local to the region are expected to join The Greatest Show on Dirt this weekend.

Grain Valley, MO’s Brian Brown aims to follow the tour for a second consecutive weekend. Brown owns a few ASCS Regional top fives at US 36 and topped an NCRA show at 81 Speedway back in ’08.

After making his season debut at Devil’s Bowl, Ayrton Gennetten plans to compete with the World of Outlaws again. The Versailles, MO native finished third in a 2020 ASCS race in Osborn and claimed the runner-up spot in a 2019 NCRA event in Wichita.

Blake Hahn is fresh off earning a top-10 finish in his World of Outlaws Feature debut. The wheelman from the nearby Sooner State has been close to victory at US 36 and has won with both NCRA (’18) and the ASCS Sooner Region (’22) at 81.

For tickets to US 36 Raceway and 81 Speedway, CLICK HERE.

If you can’t make it to the tracks, you can watch all the action live on DIRTVision.

CURRENT CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS (10/84 Races)

  1. 2 – David Gravel (1424 PTS); 2. 49 – Brad Sweet (-26PTS); 3. 41 – Carson Macedo (-32PTS); 4. 11 – Michael Kofoid (-64PTS); 5. 1S – Logan Schuchart (-74PTS); 6. 17 – Sheldon Haudenschild (-114PTS); 7. 15 – Donny Schatz (-128PTS); 8. 5 – Spencer Bayston (-128PTS); 9. – 83 James McFadden (-144PTS); 10. 9 – Kasey Kahne (-176PTS)

NOS ENERGY DRINK FEATURE WINNERS (6 Drivers):

3 wins – David Gravel (Big Game Motorsports #2)
2 wins – Brad Sweet (Kasey Kahne Racing #49), James McFadden (Roth Motorsports #83)
1 win – Carson Macedo (Jason Johnson Racing #41), Rico Abreu (Rico Abreu Racing #24), Buddy Kofoid (CMS Racing #11)

FEATURE LAPS LED (11 Drivers):

64 laps – Brad Sweet
60 laps – James McFadden
54 laps – David Gravel
46 laps – Buddy Kofoid
21 laps – Carson Macedo
13 laps – Rico Abreu
10 laps – Anthony Macri, Cory Eliason
9 laps – Gio Scelzi, Sheldon Haudenschild, Brent Marks

LOW-E INSULATION QUICKTIME AWARDS (7 Drivers):

4 QuickTimes – Carson Macedo
1 QuickTime – Anthony Macri, Logan Schuchart, Brian Brown, Donny Schatz, David Gravel, Buddy Kofoid

HEAT RACE WINNERS (14 Drivers):

6 Heat Wins – Buddy Kofoid
4 Heat Wins – David Gravel, Carson Macedo, Brent Marks
3 Heat Wins – Logan Schuchart
2 Heat Wins – Spencer Bayston, Gio Scelzi, Brad Sweet
1 Heat Win – James McFadden, Brian Brown, Donny Schatz, Danny Dietrich, Freddie Rahmer, Sheldon Haudenschild, Jacob Allen

TOYOTA DASH APPEARANCES (22 Drivers):

7 Dashes – David Gravel, Brad Sweet
6 Dashes – Logan Schuchart, Buddy Kofoid, Carson Macedo
4 Dashes – Jacob Allen, Spencer Bayston, Brent Marks
3 Dashes – Donny Schatz, Gio Scelzi, Rico Abreu,
2 Dashes – Brian Brown, Danny Dietrich, Sheldon Haudenschild, James McFadden
1 Dash – Anthony Macri, Robbie Price, Cory Eliason, Justin Peck, Kasey Kahne, Freddie Rahmer, Devon Borden

MICROLITE LAST CHANCE SHOWDOWN WINS (8 Drivers):

1 LCS Win – Brock Zearfoss, Parker Price-Miller, Sheldon Haudenschild, Gio Scelzi, Noah Gass, Hunter Schuerenberg, James McFadden, Wayne Johnson

KSE HARD CHARGER AWARDS (8 Drivers):

2 Hard Chargers – Brock Zearfoss, James McFadden
1 Hard Charger – Tyler Courtney, Donny Schatz, Gio Scelzi, Robbie Price, David Gravel, Logan Schuchart

PODIUM FINISHES (15 Drivers):

5 Podiums – David Gravel, Brad Sweet
4 Podiums – Buddy Kofoid
3 Podiums – Carson Macedo
2 Podiums – Jacob Allen, James McFadden
1 Podium – Danny Dietrich, Logan Schuchart, Brian Brown, Kasey Kahne, Rico Abreu, Devon Borden, Spencer Bayston, Sheldon Haudenschild, Brent Marks

TOP 10 FINISHES (26 Drivers):

10 Top 10s – Carson Macedo
9 Top 10s – Brad Sweet, David Gravel
8 Top 10s – Logan Schuchart
7 Top 10s – Sheldon Haudenschild, Buddy Kofoid
5 Top 10s – Donny Schatz, James McFadden, Spencer Bayston
4 Top 10s – Brent Marks, Gio Scelzi, Rico Abreu
3 Top 10s – Justin Peck, Jacob Allen, Kasey Kahne
2 Top 10s – Aaron Reutzel, Brian Brown, Danny Dietrich
1 Top 10 – Brock Zearfoss, Cory Eliason, Robbie Price, Tyler Courtney, Zeb Wise, Devon Borden, Blake Hahn, Sam Hafertepe Jr

2023 WORLD OF OUTLAWS SPRINT CAR SCHEDULE & WINNERS:

No. / Day, Date / Track / Location / Winner (Total Wins)

  1. Fri, Feb 10 / Volusia Speedway Park / Barberville, FL / David Gravel (1)
  2. Fri, Feb 10 / Volusia Speedway Park / Barberville, FL / David Gravel (2)
  3. Sat, Feb 11* / Volusia Speedway Park / Barberville, FL / James McFadden (1)
  4. Sun, March 5 / Volusia Speedway Park / Barberville, FL / Carson Macedo (1)
  5. Mon, March 6 / Volusia Speedway Park / Barberville, FL / David Gravel (3)
  6. Sat, March 18 / Lincoln Speedway / Abbottstown, PA / Rico Abreu (1)
  7. Fri, March 24 / Talladega Short Track / Eastaboga, AL / Buddy Kofoid (1)
  8. Sat, March 25 / Magnolia Motor Speedway / Columbus, MS / Brad Sweet (1)
  9. Fri, March 31 / Devil’s Bowl Speedway / Mesquite, TX / Brad Sweet (2)
  10. Sat, April 1 / Devil’s Bowl Speedway / Mesquite, TX / James McFadden (2)

Dominic Scelzi Aiming to Log Laps Saturday at Kings Speedway

Inside Line Promotions – FRESNO, Calif. (April 4, 2023) – Mother Nature has halted the racing plans for Dominic Scelzi the last few weekends.

Fingers are crossed the weather is favorable this Saturday when Scelzi invades Kings Speedway in Hanford, Calif., for the Anthony Simone Classic with the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series.

“The wet weather hasn’t benefitted racing, but there are people in California who needed the rain,” Scelzi said. “Hopefully we can get back to action this weekend at one of my favorite tracks.”

Scelzi was victorious at Kings Speedway six times in 2021 and he earned one triumph there last year when he posted seven top-five finishes.

“We’ve enjoyed a lot of success there throughout my career,” he said. “I feel like we are extremely confident every time we drive through the gates. Lately our biggest challenge has been Mother Nature so hopefully she gives us a chance on Saturday.”

The Anthony Simone Classic marks the third scheduled NARC Series race of the year – with the first two raining out – and the first at Kings Speedway, which hosts four total races this season for the Series. Scelzi has nine more races planned at the dirt oval this season.

“I’m excited for the Anthony Simone Classic, which honors a great guy,” he said. “We have a lot of races remaining at Kings Speedway this year so I hope we can start off on the right foot by contending for a victory.”

SEASON STATS –

2 races, 0 wins, 2 top fives, 2 top 10s, 2 top 15s, 2 top 20s

UP NEXT –

Saturday at Kings Speedway in Hanford, Calif., for the Anthony Simone Classic with the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series

MEDIA LINKS –

Website: http://www.GaryScelziMotorsports.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/DominicScelzi41

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Scelzi41

SPONSOR SPOTLIGHT – K&N Filters 

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“K&N Filters gives our motors the maximum performance they can possibly have,” Scelzi said. “They are the best product on the market and we’ve enjoyed getting to know everyone at K&N throughout the years.”

Scelzi would like to thank Red Rose Transportation, Inc., Scelzi Enterprises, Whipple Superchargers, System 1, Fuel Delivery Services, Inc., Red Line Oil, FK Rod Ends, Schoenfeld Headers, Roth Motorsports, K&N Filters, Brown & Miller Racing Solutions, NAPA Auto Parts, Todd Jorgensen, Sparco, Allstar Performance, Meridian Steel, Auto Meter, Kenny’s Components and Worldwide Bearings for their continued support.

$10,000 T0 Win Anthony Simone Classic Looks To Lead Off 2023 NARC 410 Sprint Series

(April 3, 2023 – Ben Deatherage) Hanford, CA … For the third time in about as many weeks, the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series, presented by NAPA Auto Parts, hopes to fire off the 2023 season in California. The previous two races have been washed away due to wet weather but that streak will end when the tour heads to Kings Speedway for the Anthony Simone Classic on Saturday, April 8th. Good weather is in the forecast and the winner of the 30-lap NAPA headliner will pocket a cool $10,000 at the end of the night.
“We’ve been waiting for the weather the change so that we can race,” commented Kings Speedway promoter Peter Murphy. “Hopefully we can be one of the first ones to get going here so everyone can come out and celebrate racing again, especially with the Anthony Simone being ‘Mr. Excitement’ as he was as last year’s race you had to be there.”
It will be the third edition of the Anthony Simone Classic, a tradition that began in 2021. Shane Golobic of Fremont won the inaugural event, while the defending race winner is Rico Abreu.
Returning to the program will be a non-wing, non-points race to cap the night off. The only time this happened was in the first incarnation of the event, and Indiana driver Tyler Courtney won it. It also was the first time since 1985 that NARC sanctioned a wingless event.
“I appreciate the NARC Series, Peter Murphy, and everybody at Kings Speedway that’s going to put this race on,” said Anthony Simone’s son Mauro, “It’s a great way to get everybody together, and it’s a great race. My dad started running NARC all the way back in 1978.”
Of the twenty-seven winners in the past fifty-three trips to Kings, Tim Kaeding has amassed the most wins since 2001 with eight trips to victory. In addition, Brent Kaeding has bagged five trophies, while Jonathan Allard and Dominic Scelzi have four each.
Who to Watch
D.J. Netto will make a hometown stand at Kings looking for his first win with the NARC 410 Sprint Series at Hanford. Netto has accumulated four podiums finishes, seven Top 5s, and seventeen Top 10s in twenty starts. Last season, D.J. won at the Stockton Dirt Track, the fifth of his career in 148 starts with the group.
Roseville’s Justyn Cox looks forward to hitting the 3/8-mile in the Bates Hamilton Racing #42X entry. Cox posted his lone podium finish of the 2022 campaign with the NARC 410 Sprint Series at Kings and went along with his total of two Top 5s and three Top 10s in six starts in Hanford. Cox is running his first full NARC season since 2016 when he finished third in the final championship standings. Justyn has qualified for forty-one main events throughout his career with the tour and has nineteen Top 10s and five Top 5s.
Dylan Bloomfield only made nine starts with the NARC 410 Sprint Series last season in the famed Dave Vertullo #83V machine. Nevertheless, the Oakley teenager had two Top 10 results, one happening at Hanford on October 8th during the Morrie Williams Memorial. He will be representing a large contingent of young drivers that include last seasons rookie of the year Max Mittry of Redding, Clovis driver Corey Day, Joey Ancona of Concord, Templeton driver and Oregon driver Tanner Holmes.
Billy Aton was eighth in NARC 410 Sprint Series final points last year. The Benicia-based chauffeur has five career starts at Kings and has just one Top 10, a seventh-place result on September 25th, 2021. Aton has one series career win, at Santa Maria Raceway in 2021, two Top 5s, and fifteen Top 10s in forty-six feature appearances.
Also competing for the huge winners payday will be two-time defending series champion Dominic Scelzi of Fresno, Aromas pilot Justin Sanders, Bud Kaeding of Campbell, Penngrove’s Chase Johnson, Fremont’s Shane Golobic, Geoffrey Strole from Hanford, Nevada driver Bill Smith, and many more!
Fan & Competitor Info
Kings Speedway powered by Keller Motors is located at the Kings Fairgrounds at 801 S 10th Avenue in Hanford, California. For ticket information, log on to https://www.myracepass.com/tracks/1797/tickets/1325082 for online purchases. Tickets are priced at $20.00 for Adults and $15.00 for Children (7-17), Military, and Seniors (65+). Also, be sure to visit the track website, www.racekingsspeedway.com.
Pit Gates open at 1:00 pm, Front Gates at 4:00, Hot Laps at 5:00, and Racing is scheduled to kick off around 6:00. Be sure to visit Pete’s Pub after the Front Gates open and take advantage of special deals on food and beverages before the races start.
The NARC 410 Sprint Series, presented by Napa Auto Parts, is the leading 410 Sprint Car tour west of the Rocky Mountains. Since 1960, they have enthralled countless thousands of fans from tracks up and down the Pacific Coast. For more information, visit their website at www.narc410.com or social media pages.
The Anthony Simone Classic can be viewed live on Floracing.com, along with every NARC 410 Sprint Car Series race.

CAMRIE CARUSO RACES TO SEMIS AT WINTERNATIONALS

POMONA, CA (April 2, 2023) —- For second year Pro Stock driver Camrie Caruso last weekend’s win at the NHRA Arizona Nationals was a huge step forward. The driver of the Powerbuilt Tools Chevrolet Camaro wanted to prove to herself and her fellow competitors that her first professional win was not a fluke and the 2022 NHRA Rookie of the Year was ready to be a championship contender. Today at the Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals Caruso and her KB Titan Racing team proved just that point racing to the semifinals before losing to eventual winner and KB Titan Racing teammate Dallas Glenn from the No. 1 qualifier position.

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Camrie Caruso and Powerbuilt Chevrolet Camaro, photo credit SR Driven Media

“Our expectations were to win this race and go back-to-back,” said Caruso, who now has two career No. 1 qualifiers in just 22 professional races. “We have a consistent racecar, a good team, and a good combo. Our engine tuner Mike Smith texted me on Wednesday and told me we were going to win from the pole this weekend. I was like that sounds like a great plan. We came off the trailer and went to No. 1 so that felt pretty good.”

Caruso and her Powerbuilt Chevrolet team rolled off the trailer and went to No. 1 on Friday before holding off the rest of the field on Saturday. Caruso competed in the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge and while she did not advance to the final round, she recorded the quickest losing time in the semifinals and earned one championship point for her effort. Going into race day Caruso was facing No. 16 qualifier Steven Graham for the first time. The competitiveness of the Pro Stock class had Caruso feeling on edge.

“I was more nervous for the first round today than I was for the final in Arizona,” said Caruso. “Everybody thinks you’re number one and you have the quickest car. I know that doesn’t matter on race day when anything can happen.”

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Camrie Caruso rolls to lanes during Winternationals, photo credit SR Driven Media

She took the first round win with a wire-to-wire run that had her first off the line with a .017 reaction time and an elapsed time of 6.546 seconds at 209.98 mph. The win moved her into a match-up with Troy Coughlin Jr., the Gatornationals winner and only other driver besides Caruso who had stood in a winner’s circle in 2023. Once again Caruso was strong off the line with another .017 reaction time and her aggressiveness proved to be the deciding factor in the win. Her slower elapsed time of 6.576 seconds got to the finish line stripe first over Coughlin’s 6.566 second run thanks to the starting line advantage.

“I know Troy is a great racer,” said Caruso. “They have a great program over there. I kind of anticipated some starting line games but it wasn’t too bad. I knew it was going to be a tight race one no matter which way it went. I was a little nervous for that one, but we recovered well. The car started drifting left and you have to get in the mindset that you’re controlling a monster. You have to be careful because one big movement at the top end and you’re probably going to flip. You have a fine line to walk and we were able to get it done.”

In the semifinals looking to go to back-to-back finals for the first time Caruso raced her teammate Dallas Glenn. Both young stars are lethal off the starting line and Glenn was nearly perfect with a .002 against Caruso’s solid .029 to grab an early lead which he held onto for the full quarter mile. While Caruso’s day was done with a semifinal finish, she knew there was a positive side regardless.

“Racing Dallas was hard. I wanted to win but he did great. It’s an all KB Titan Final so no matter what KB Titan comes out on top,” said Caruso, who will leave Pomona sitting No. 2 in the Pro Stock point standings. 

Qualifying Results

Q1: 6.518 sec, 211.79 mph; Qual. 1

Q2: 6.550 sec, 210.73 mph; Qual. 1

Q3: 6.572 sec, 210.80 mph; Qual. 1

Bonus Points:  +3 (Quickest of Q1)

Race Results

First Round

Camrie Caruso, Mooresville, NC, Powerbuilt Tools Chevrolet Camaro, (.017) 6.546, 209.98 mph def. Steven Graham, Chevrolet Camaro, (.022) 6.626, 207.46 mph

Second Round

Camrie Caruso, Mooresville, NC, Powerbuilt Tools Chevrolet Camaro, (.017) 6.576, 210.24 mph def. Troy Coughlin Jr., JEGS Chevrolet Camaro, (.037) 6.566, 211.16 mph

Semifinals

Dallas Glenn, RAD Torque Systems Chevrolet Camaro, (.002) 6.573, 209.43 mph def.Camrie Caruso, Mooresville, NC, Powerbuilt Tools Chevrolet Camaro, (.029) 6.574, 209.59 mph

Camping World Drag Racing Series Top Ten – Pro Stock

1.         Dallas Glenn               235

2.         Camrie Caruso            230

2.         Matt Hartford             230

4.         Troy Coughlin Jr          209

5.         Bo Butner                   182

6.         Aaron Stanfield          173

7.         Greg Anderson           165

7.         Kyle Koretsky              165

9.         Mason McGaha          161

10.       Cristian Cuadra           128

10.       Erica Enders                128

JUSTIN ASHLEY WINS WINTERNATIONALS AGAIN; TAKES POINTS LEAD


POMONA, CA (April 2, 2023) — Justin Ashley and the Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel dragster powered by National Debt Relief roared to victory today at the Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals in front of packed grandstands and a host of sponsor representatives from Phillips Connect, Phillips Industries, Toyota, Lucas Oil, Mac Tools, KATO Fastening Systems and National Debt Relief. The No. 1 qualifier outran Krista Baldwin, won on a bye run and then defeated three-time world champion and Toyota teammate Antron Brown before besting Austin Prock for the second year in a row in the Winternationals final round. 

“I feel very fortunate and blessed to have the kind of relationship that we have with Phillips Connect,” said Ashley, from the Shav Glick Media Center. “You know, when we started this last year, for the most part they were new to drag racing so to be able to bring them into this community to be able to work with them as one team, not Phillips Connect and Justin Ashley Racing but as one Phillips Connect team that is really something special. You see it with the results on the race track but you also see it with the results off the race track and the culture fit is just perfect. So being able to have everyone from Phillips Industries, Phillips Connect here in their hometown and collect the Wally and give it to Rob Phillips, Amber White and Jim Epler to take back with them to the office is really something special.”

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Justin Ashley and Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel dragster powered by National Debt Relief, photo by Gary Nastase/Auto Imagery

Over the course of the weekend Ashley qualified No. 1 for the third time in his career and won the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge on Saturday outrunning Steve Torrence and Leah Pruett for the $10,000 top prize and more importantly three championship points. On race day Ashley was nonplussed by the pressure of being the No. 1 qualifier and raced his way to his seventh Top Fuel victory of his career and his first back-to-back wins.

“I’m not sure a race weekend gets better than this to be honest with you,” confessed Ashley. “I think it was just really an incredible job top to bottom. We were saying on our way up here that to win any race is special and then to be able to win two races in a row, with the Mission Foods Challenge in between is just amazing. What makes it even greater is how much we really struggled in Gainesville. To be able to bounce back like that really shows you how resilient our team is and it started on Friday and Saturday during qualifying.”

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Final round win for Justin Ashley (foreground) versus Austin Prock, photo credit Gary Nastase/Auto Imagery

The competition top to bottom in Top Fuel has been tough the past three seasons and in 2023 the margin for error is zero in qualifying and on race day. Every round is important and the drivers in the other lane have strong equipment and experience behind the wheel.

“No matter who you race, it’s going to be tough, and you have to have four almost perfect rounds of racing to give yourself a chance to win. Qualifying number one did help us out because we had that second round bye so that all adds up to a really successful weekend,” added Ashley.

Throughout the day Ashley was strong off the starting line with reaction times of .039, .055, .047 and .033 in the final versus Prock who he extended his final round record to 3-1 against with today’s win. The budding rivalry is not on Ashley’s radar, and he evaluates the entire group of Top Fuel racers as a very tough selection of competitors.

“No, he’s (Prock) just another opponent in the other lane,” said Ashley. “Obviously, I have a lot of respect for Austin. I think he does a great job on the starting line. He’s a great driver and I have a lot of respect for all the drivers out here, but I think I’d be doing my team a disservice if I was focused on what’s going on in the other lane. We’re just focused on doing the very best that we can to focus on our lane, doing everything I can to go from A to B as straight and as quickly as possible. So that’s really where the focus always is.”

The back-to-back wins moved Ashley into the Top Fuel points lead after three races. For the fourth year pro and the Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel dragster powered by National Debt Relief the string start has them focused on the championship as well as the next race in Las Vegas.

“It is important to know the championships a long way but it’s important to start collecting points now because you want to be in the best possible position once that Countdown starts,” said Ashley. “Goal number one is to make the Countdown. Goal number two is put yourself in a position to win the championship and those points add up. The points that we accumulate now count just as much as the points that we accumulate in Indy before the Countdown starts. It’s never too early to start thinking about the championship. Our focus is going to stay on one race at a time. After this win it will shift to Las Vegas but I think collecting those points is something that’s always in the back of our mind.”

Qualifying Results

Q1: 3.729 sec, 329.99 mph; Qual. 2

Q2: 3.751 sec; 331.20 mph; Qual. 3

Q3: 3.707 sec, 330.15 mph; Qual. 1

Bonus Points: +5 (2nd quickest of Q1 and quickest of Q3)

Race Results

First Round

Justin Ashley, Phillips Connect Toyota dragster powered by National Debt Relief, (.039) 3.719, 329.91 mph def. Krista Baldwin, dragster, (.058) 5.634, 120.83 mph

Second Round

Justin Ashley, Phillips Connect Toyota dragster powered by National Debt Relief, (.055) 3.712, 329.99 mph def. competition bye

Semifinals

Justin Ashley, Phillips Connect Toyota dragster powered by National Debt Relief, (.047) 3.743, 331.77 mph def. Antron Brown, Matco Tools Toyota dragster, (.049) 3.749, 331.61 mph

Final Round

Justin Ashley, Phillips Connect Toyota dragster powered by National Debt Relief, (.033) 3.713, 330.63 mph def. Austin Prock, Montana Brand/Rocky Mountain Twist dragster, (.054) 3.762, 327.43 mph

Camping World Drag Racing Series Top Ten – Top Fuel

1.         Justin Ashley              268

2.         Steve Torrence           223

3.         Mike Salinas               213

4.         Brittany Force             204

5.         Austin Prock                201

6.         Leah Pruett                 195

7.         Shawn Langdon          181

8.         Doug Kalitta                167

9.         Antron Brown             162

10.       Tony Schumacher       117

POINTS UPDATE: Gravel Stays Strong; Sweet and Macedo Swap Spots

Latest points update after Federated Auto Parts Texas Outlaw Nationals (March 31-April1)

OSBORN, MO (April 3, 2023) – Keep up with the latest movers in the chase for the 2023 World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series championship.

LATEST RACE(S): Devil’s Bowl Speedway (March 31-April 1)

CURRENT POINTS LEADER: With a pair of fourth-place efforts in Texas, David Gravel continued to hold his point lead. The Watertown, CT native hasn’t finished worse than fourth in the last four races and owns a 4.1 average finish for the season.

MOVERS:

Brad Sweet (+1): The four-time and reigning champion put together another productive weekend, topping Friday’s Feature and following it with a fifth on Saturday. After entering the weekend third in points and 32 markers out of the top spot, Sweet climbed into second – just 26 points behind Gravel.

“The Big Cat” has only missed the top five once in the last seven races and owns a 2.7 average finish over that span.

Carson Macedo (-1): The Jason Johnson Racing driver lost a spot but didn’t lose a ton of ground in the grand scheme of things. On night one, Macedo finished seventh then followed it with a third on Saturday – his first podium since Volusia.

Macedo slipped into third but is still only 32 points behind Gravel after trailing him by 28 points at the start of the weekend. He remains the only driver yet to miss the top 10 this season.

Michael Kofoid (+1): Finishes of fifth and second at Devil’s Bowl elevated Kofoid into fourth in the standings. However, his time there won’t be long as he and CMS Racing are running a part-time World of Outlaws schedule.

Logan Schuchart (-1): Shark Racing’s Logan Schuchart posted results of sixth and 14th this past weekend, dropping him down to fifth in the standings.

While he would’ve preferred better finishes, the Hanover, PA native salvaged the second night by driving from 24th up to 14th, softening the blow in points and keeping the leaders not too far ahead.

TOP-10 IN POINTS:

1. David Gravel: 1424 Points (Big Game Motorsports #2)

2. Brad Sweet: -26 Points (Kasey Kahne Racing #49)

3. Carson Macedo: -32 Points (Jason Johnson Racing #41)

4. Buddy Kofoid: -64 Points (CMS Racing #11)

5. Logan Schuchart: -74 Points (Shark Racing #1S)

6. Sheldon Haudenschild: -114 Points (Stenhouse Jr./Marshall Racing #17)

7. Donny Schatz: -128 Points (Tony Stewart Racing/Curb Agajanian #15)

8. Spencer Bayston: -128 Points (CJB Motorsports #5)

9. James McFadden: -144 Points (Roth Motorsports #83)

10. Kasey Kahne: -176 Points (Kasey Kahne Racing #9)

For full Series Points, CLICK HERE.

NEXT RACE(S): US 36 Raceway (Osborn, MO) on April 7 & 81 Speedway (Wichita, KS) on April 8 ($20,000 to win Jason Johnson Classic). For tickets, CLICK HERE.

DalLAS GLENN EARNS CHEVROLET’S 250TH NHRA PRO STOCK WIN AND HIS FIFTH CAREER VICTORY AT POMONA

CHEVROLET IN NHRA

LUCAS OIL NHRA WINTERNATIONALS

POMONA, CALIFORNIA

TEAM CHEVY RACE REPORT

APRIL 2, 2023

DALLAS GLENN EARNS CHEVROLET’S 250TH NHRA PRO STOCK WIN AND HIS FIFTH CAREER VICTORY AT POMONA

  • Dallas Glenn earned Chevrolet’s 369th win Pro Stock since 1970, the 250th in the Chevrolet Camaro.
  • Austin Prock raced to his eighth career final round, finishing runner-up in his fourth straight final round at Pomona.

POMONA, Calif. (April 2, 2023) – Under sunny Southern Californian skies at the In-N-Out Pomona Dragstrip, the Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals saw Chevrolet racing to victory in Pro Stock once again this season, with Dallas Glenn in the RAD Torque Chevrolet Camaro SS capturing his fifth career NHRA victory in his ninth final round, Chevrolet’s 250th victory in the Camaro, and the 369th Pro Stock win since 1970.

“I looked over and he was right there,” said Glenn on racing his KB Titan Racing teammate Matt Hartford in the final round. “I knew he’s been outrunning me down the back, so I knew it was tight. It got real loose from 1,000 ft. on. It feels really good. I’ve never won here at Pomona. I’ve been in the final round once in Stock. This feels awesome right here. This is great.”

For Brittany Force, in the Flav-R-Pac/Monster Energy Chevrolet Top Fuel dragster, and John Force Racing teammate Austin Prock, in the Montana Brand/Rocky Mountain Twist Chevrolet Top Fuel dragster, it came down to the semifinals facing each other to see who would move to the final round to face off for the win. With identical runs to the 60-foot mark, Prock got the win over B. Force after she smoked the tires mid-track, with Prock entering his fourth straight final round in Pomona versus Justin Ashley, finishing runner-up for the fourth time in his career on his run of 3.762 ET at 327.43 MPH.

Earning the second No. 1 qualifier of her young NHRA Pro Stock career, Camrie Caruso, in her Powerbuilt Tools Chevrolet Camaro SS, looked to kick off her Sunday strong, and raced to the semifinals until KB Titan Racing teammate Dallas Glenn, in his RAD Torque Chevrolet Camaro SS, knocked her out and raced to the finals to face teammate Matt Hartford. While Hartford beat Glenn off of the starting line in reaction time, Glenn powered to the finish line first to capture the Wally.

In Funny Car, both John Force Racing Chevrolet Funny Cars faced early ends to their race days, eliminated by their opponents in Round 1. John Force, who qualified No. 16 after an on-track incident in Q2 Saturday sent him to a backup BlueDEF Chevrolet Camaro Funny Car, looks to the upcoming NHRA Four-Wide Nationals at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway for redemption. Robert Hight, in the Auto Club Chevrolet Camaro Funny Car, started the weekend with a strong run in qualifying to put him on the ladder in the No. 3 position. He next heads to Las Vegas’s NHRA Four-Wide Nationals to potentially compete in his 400th NHRA Funny Car event.

Up next for the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series is the NHRA Four-Wide Nationals Friday, April 14-Sunday, April 16, 2023, at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Broadcast of Sunday’s eliminations will air live on April 16 at 9:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1 (FS1).

ROUND 1 RECAP

Top Fuel:

  • No. 2 Brittany Force defeated No. 13 Ron August, Jr. on a solo run after August, Jr. faces mechanical issues on the starting line, with B. Force setting top speed of the event with the strong pass.
  • No. 12 Austin Prock defeated No. 3 Leah Pruett after Prock made a solid run at 3.739 ET at 331.53 MPH while Pruett smoked the tires.

Funny Car:

  • No. 16 John Force falls to No. 1 Cruz Pedregon after Force smokes the tires early on his run.
  • No. 3 Robert Hight falls to No. 14 Terry Haddock after smoking the tires during the run and was unable to recover to catch Haddock.

Pro Stock:

  • No. 8 Troy Coughlin, Jr. defeated No. 9 Kyle Koretsky in a close race with his run of 6.550 ET at 210.74 MPH.
  • No. 10 Erica Enders defeated No. 7 Cristian Cuadra with her run of 6.547 ET at 210.01 MPH.
  • No. 6 Greg Anderson falls to No. 11 Fernando Cuadra, Jr. after red lighting on the starting line.
  • No. 5 Bo Butner, III defeated No. 12 Mason McGaha with his run of 6.553 ET at 209.95 MPH.
  • No. 4 Dallas Glenn defeated No. 13 Chris McGaha with his run of 6.535 ET at 210.41 MPH.
  • No. 2 Matt Hartford defeated No. 15 Deric Kramer with his run of 6.532 ET at 211.03 MPH.
  • No. 1 Camrie Caruso defeated No. 16 Steve Graham on her run of 6.546 ET at 209.98 MPH.
  • No. 3 Aaron Stanfield defeated No. 14 Jerry Tucker with his run of 6.562 ET at 209.92 MPH.

ROUND 2 RECAP

Top Fuel:

  • B. Force defeated Shawn Langdon with her run of 3.729 ET at 330.55 MPH.
  • Prock defeated Steve Torrence with his run of 3.822 ET at 318.32 MPH.

Pro Stock:

  • Stanfield defeated Cuadra, Jr. with his run at 6.576 ET at 210.67 MPH.
  • Caruso defeated Coughlin, Jr. with her run of 6.576 ET at 210.24 MPH.
  • Glenn defeated Butner, III with his run of 6.547 ET at 210.80 MPH.
  • Hartford defeated Enders with his run of 6.545 ET at 210.70 MPH and getting lane choice in the semifinals.

SEMIFINALS

Top Fuel:

  • Prock defeated B. Force after his run of 3.734 ET at 331.36 MPH in identical timing at the 60-foot mark, with B. Force smoking the tires mid-track.

Pro Stock:

  • Glenn defeated Caruso with his run of 6.573 ET at 209.43 MPH after his .002 reaction time at the starting line.
  • Hartford defeated Stanfield with his run of 6.558 ET at 210.44 MPH after a lengthy staging battle on the starting line.

FINALS

Top Fuel:

  • Prock fell to Justin Ashley with his run of 3.762 ET at 327.43 MPH.

Pro Stock:

  • Glenn defeated KB Titan Racing teammate Hartford with his run of 6.546 ET at 209.92 MPH and a reaction time of .025.

DALLAS GLENN – NHRA PRO STOCK WINNER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:

Dallas Glenn, driver of the RAD Torque Chevrolet Camaro SS for KB Titan Racing on his win at Pomona:

“I knew I hit the tree good, and then I instantly turned my stomach when I was looking at the Christmas tree. I think I put about a half of a turn in the wheel to the right, and I wasn’t sure if it was going to come back. I pulled third (gear) and it just kind of came back. I think I feel like I had to earn it on that one, but we came back. Dave Connolly and Rob Downing turned around and we made a really good run in the final.”

On getting the win at Pomona after finishing runner-up in 2010 in Stock:

“Oh, I really wanted it. I really wanted it when Jody (Lang) got me back then. Pomona has been up and down for me. Some years, I do really good and I come up just a little short in the semis, and some years, it’s just absolutely brutal to me. To finally get this win down feels really good. I’ve always wanted to win here.”

With Pro Stock being tough this year, everybody out there is brutal on race day…

“Absolutely. When you go in for the first run on Friday, you cannot leave anything on the table because if you slow down two-thousandths, you could lose six spots. It’s just so brutal. In between Phoenix and here, Doug at our shop made me a new clutch pedal and made tweaks to it, and I really like it.”

On the final round against KB Titan Racing teammate Matt Hartford…

“I don’t know if there’s too much of a difference here in lane choice right now. We’ve made good runs in both, and I think it was probably pretty even. I just made that one run in the semis in the right (lane), so I wasn’t scared of it. I knew they were going to make some changes and I knew the track was going to be good. Hartford had been getting me by a couple of thousandths all day, so I knew I needed to get him on the tree and I felt like I missed it but it felt really nice. I kind of crossed my fingers as I ran through the gears, and it definitely made a really good run.”

Dallas on recapping his Pomona 1 race day:

“It’s obviously a great long day, and any time I’m worn out at the end of the day, I’m pretty happy about it. It started off, I mean, I’ve got an absolutely great car right now, making small tweaks to it and just running really, really good. Really happy with it. It’s a different car from last year and I really like it. I’m really comfortable in it. I feel really good. Started off just making a nice clean run. Second round come up, and it was another nice clean run. I think Bo (Butner, III) shook, and I was just clicking them off making nice clean passes, hitting my shifts. Then I came up against Camrie (Caruso), and I know she really wants to beat me. She was double-0 on me last time, and I knew she would be good. I know she’s fast; she was the No. 1 qualifier. I just kind of did everything I could to absolutely murder the tree the best I could, and when it dropped green, it was really happy because it felt really good. Then it took a hard left on me and I didn’t know if I was going to get it back until about third gear and it kind of came back real nice. I ran through the gears, and then I took a glance over and I couldn’t see her, so I was pretty thankful about that. In the final, I feel I got real lucky that Rob Downing and Dave Connolly and Nate Van Wassenhove gave me a really good car for the final round. It went nice and straight; had a great 60-foot. Hit all of my shifts good. It was spinning a little bit through the lights, but we were good enough to hold on for the win. I don’t think Matt (Hartford) made the run that he wanted, and he was really good on the tree. I was a little nervous when I left on that one because I feel like I didn’t get it all.”

You are now the NHRA Pro Stock points leader for the first time in your career. How does that feel?

“That feels really good. Obviously, it’s early in the season, but you know points at the beginning of the season mean just as much as the points near the end of the season. It feels really good. I’m probably going to take a screenshot of that when the points come out so I can see it and save it. Hopefully, that ends the same at the end of the year.”

You’re still young in your career but you’ve had a lot of big wins. What do these continue to mean to you when you’re able to win at some of the legendary tracks?

“I’ve always wanted it here. I’ve done pretty good in Sportsman here and I’ve done pretty good in Sportsman but I’ve never been able to seal the deal so to do it in Pomona, we come here twice a year, so it’s been slightly frustrating to me. I’ll have a great car then all of a sudden, it shakes in the semifinals one year, or it just goes and shakes first round. There’s always little things going on. I knew I’ve had a really good race car. I feel like it’s been one tiny little thing that’s holding me up all season so far, and it all kind of came together today. We stayed and tested Monday in Phoenix and I think we figured out a lot of stuff. So it’s going to be a really good car for the rest of the season.”

You mentioned a different clutch pedal. Could you elaborate on what you did?

“I started off with kind of a shorter one, and then I kind of went a longer for Phoenix. I feel like I went a little over-center, so I met somewhere in the middle. The shape of it is slightly different, and it feels really, really comfortable on my foot. As far as stiff or soft, this is actually one of the first races I haven’t touched it the entire race. I kind of just kept everything the same. I knew from the first run when I went perfect on the tree I could hit it good when I needed to. Other than that, I’ve just been clicking them off making sure I do a good job staging, and just kind of clicking them off.”

That’s two wins in a row for KB Titan Racing. What’s different since the merger from your perspective?

“The Whitleys have been doing a phenomenal job. Not saying that Ken and Judy Black haven’t, they’re great, the absolutely greatest owners. They’re the nicest people I’ve ever met. We’ve been doing a lot more testing than we have in previous years. They’ve been working really, really hard. I know that last year kind of stung really bad, especially for Greg (Anderson). We’ve been working really hard back at the shop. A lot of new things coming. I think we’re going to be really good for the rest of the season. I feel like some of our performance that appears to be, I think, maybe the Elite (Motorsports) team might’ve fallen off just a little bit kind of like we did the previous year. So, I’m sure they’re going to get it back and the racing is going to get even tougher from here.”

Looking ahead to the Four-Wide Nationals in Las Vegas:

“I absolutely love Vegas. Me and that track usually get along. I’m really looking forward to the Four-Wide. I feel like last year, I kind of almost got robbed a little bit. I felt really good on the tree and I had the fastest car going into the final quad and a wire broke, then everything shut off in my car. I feel like I got robbed of a win on that one so I’m really looking for redemption on that.”

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING (TEAM CHEVY QUOTES):

Austin Prock, driver of the Montana Brand/Rocky Mountain Twist Chevrolet Top Fuel dragster for John Force Racing:

“Really excellent points day for our Montana Brand / Rocky Mountain Twist team. Really proud of these guys. It’s race three and they worked like champions today. We knocked out hitters in the first three rounds of eliminations and then we went head-to-head with one of the hottest cars in the class right now. We’re starting to hit our strides and I’m really excited about it.”

Brittany Force, driver of the Flav-R-Pack/Monster Energy Chevrolet Top Fuel dragster for John Force Racing:

“Overall a good weekend for this Flav-R-Pac team qualifying second and making a semifinal appearance. We’re qualified now in the Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty challenge which is excellent for u because it means bonus points at the end of the regular season. We had this car running, made an awesome lap first round, made it to semis and it was our teammate Austin Prock that got around us. A good weekend and we’re looking forward to going to Vegas.”

Robert Hight, driver of the Auto Club Chevrolet Camaro Funny Car for John Force Racing:

“Not the day this Auto Club team was looking for. Really wanted to be in that winner’s circle for Auto Club. It’s how it goes sometimes. Bit of an unexpected day in Funny Car, but that’s drag racing, any day could be your day. We’ll bounce back, I’m not worried. We’ve already proven we know what we need to do and how to do it. I have all the confidence in my guys. Jimmy Prock with Thomas Prock and Nick Hildahl, they’ll be anxious to get back out again in Vegas. I know I am.”

John Force, driver of the BlueDEF Chevrolet Funny Car for John Force Racing:

“Tough weekend for this BlueDEF Chevy team. Tougher than we’ve had in a while. It will be okay though, it’s early, we’ll get it figured out, we’ll be okay. Robert with Auto Club, Flav-R-Pac, and Cornwell Tools already has a win, Brittany and that Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy team is getting things figured out and Prock going to the finals with Montana Brand. It’s coming together.”

Greg Anderson, driver of the HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Camaro SS for KB Titan Racing:

“I rolled right through the lights. I put it on the wood, and she just kept on rolling. We’ve got a problem there we’ve got to figure out. It did it last night to a minor degree and I gave it extra line lock pressure this morning. It laughed at it; it just rolled right through the beams. One of those things. We’ve got to figure it out before the next race. I had a great car but another gremlin got us.”

CHEVROLET SWEEPS TOP-THREE AS LARSON WINS AT RICHMOND

No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 leads strong Bowtie effort in NASCAR Cup Series
·       Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1, won for the 20th time in 302 career NCS starts. It was his first victory of the 2023 season.·       He is now a two-time winner at Richmond Raceway, having won in 2017.·       Chevrolet won for the fifth time in 2023 to lead all manufacturers. The Bowtie brand now has 838 all-time victories in NASCAR’s premier series.·       Team Chevy won at Richmond for the 40th time in 133 Cup Series races at Richmond.·       Six Chevrolet drivers combined to lead 246 of the 400 laps at Richmond on Sunday.·       The victory gave Chevrolet a sweep of the top-three positions and wins in all three NASCAR national series on the weekend, adding to Chandler Smith’s win at Richmond in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Carson Hocevar’s victory at Texas Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
RICHMOND, Va. (April 2, 2023) – Chevrolet and Kyle Larson drove to victory Sunday in the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway as the manufacturer continued its strong early-season run in the NASCAR Cup Series.
Larson, in the No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, took the lead for good with 21 laps to go to earn his first NCS victory of the season and the 20th of his career. The result also gave Chevrolet five victories this season – the most of any manufacturer in the series.
Chevrolet drivers swept the top three positions Sunday. Josh Berry, in the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1, took advantage of a caution period with 28 laps to go and gained track position en route to a career-best, runner-up finish.
Ross Chastain finished third in the No. 1 Jockey Camaro ZL1 to complete Chevrolet’s top-three sweep at Richmond, where the manufacturer has now won 40 times in 133 races at the track.
Team Chevy drivers dominated the day with six Camaro ZL1 drivers combining to lead 246 of the 400 laps on the day. William Byron led the most laps with his No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1 – 117 laps – followed by Larson with 93 laps led.
Byron dominated the 70-lap opening stage and claimed his season-best fifth stage win as Chevrolet drivers led the entirety of the segment. Stage Two ended with almost 130 laps of green-flag running and four Team Chevy Camaros in the top-eight  for the final 170-lap run.
Following contact on pit road that sent him back in the field during the second stage, Larson moved back into the top-five on Lap 283 and kept coming forward until he controlled the field for the final 13 green-flag laps and took the checkered flag.
The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Bristol Motor Speedway with the Food City Dirt Race on Sunday, April 9, at 7 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
NASCAR Media ConferencePress ConferenceSunday, April 2, 2023An Interview with:Kyle Larson
THE MODERATOR: We’re now joined by tonight’s race winner, Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. Once again, we’ll open it up for questions.Q. You’ve had a couple of wins slip away this year. After you had that damage from with the contact with Suarez, did you think, oh, this is another one of those days?KYLE LARSON: I wouldn’t say that ever crept into my mind. I was just kind of hoping and praying that the damage was the reason why it got slow.Obviously, couldn’t see the damage. Still haven’t seen how it was dented, but I was definitely a lot slower then. So I was hoping once we got to the end of the second stage that they could fix it and then that our car would go back to normal because I was surprised at how bad I was after that.So I felt like before that pit stop we were going to cruise to a stage two win and then I kind of fell apart there. So I was just mad at the situation and mad at just not knowing if it was the damage why I was bad or if the track had gone through transition and we were going to be average the rest of the race.But thankfully that wasn’t the case, and we were able to get refocused there to start the third stage and inch our way forward and then have some things work out for us, cautions work out at the right time, and our pit crew executed a great pit stop at the last one.Q. Talk about kind of that frustration, how did you overcome it, and then the impact of Hendrick Motorsports in your career.KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I feel like a lot of the races — even looking at last week. My race was going good in the beginning, and then one small mishap turned into me trying too hard, and I made a lot more mistakes and kind of hurt our day going forward.So when I was going backwards in the second stage and mad, I just needed a caution to take a break and then tell myself just to not overreact and just we still have 170-something laps left or whatever it was. It’s plenty of time to get back to the front. So our car was good enough to do that too.Then, yeah, the impact of Hendrick Motorsports has been amazing for my career obviously. I’ve won a lot of races with them and a championship in 2021. It’s Ricky Hendrick’s birthday today. That I learned about as well.Just a great day all around for Hendrick Motorsports. Great week especially. So, yeah, a lot of significance to this week, and I’ll probably remember it now for a long time.Q. Kyle, after the incident, what did the car feel like? Was it noticeably different from the damage?KYLE LARSON: Yeah. Typically when you leave from a green flag stop, it feels different because there’s rubber on the track and all that. So I took off when the green flag stopped, and I was, like, okay, my car is driving different than it did to start this run.I didn’t think that I hit Suarez that hard. It didn’t feel that hard from my seat. So I am, like, okay, it’s whatever. I was, like, man, I’m not good.I was really tight loading into the corner. Snapped loose off. Lap cars were driving by me. I was just, like, man, is this the track change or — and then they told me the damage. And, yeah, there was just nothing I could do to manage what I was fighting.I think when I was tight in the center, it just pissed off my exit and my rear tires. And I was really, really bad, really lacking traction that run. I was just shocked that the damage did that much to me.But thankfully it was in an area where they could pop it back out, and our car drove fine after that.Q. What about Ricky’s birthday and the paint scheme and all that? Is it an extra special thing for you to have all that come together?KYLE LARSON: Yeah, for sure. No, it definitely is. Me racing this 5 car has been special, but especially this paint scheme.I was watching just flipping through old YouTube videos this week of my 2021 season so I could remind myself that I used to be good (smiling), but I didn’t realize after watching it that Vegas was my first win with Hendrick, and that was my first race with that paint scheme and the colors that year.Kansas later on that year was — I think it was 17 years to the date of the accident and then now this, winning on his birthday. It’s all really special and kind of crazy kind of how things maybe work out from the power above. Things work out that way.So pretty special for sure. There’s a couple of other birthdays on our team also. You know, my jackman, he turned 30 today. My spotter turned 30 today. So just a special day all around. Looking forward to celebrating with them.Q. What were your thoughts about the new short track package, and what do you think we can expect when we get back on the pavement at Martinsville?KYLE LARSON: So I thought things felt more normal to the previous model car. I felt like — last year here at Richmond you could follow somebody down to the bottom, and you would just get so tight. Even if they missed the bottom a little bit in front of you, you would get tight.But today seemed like normal. Like you could wrap the paint. If somebody missed the bottom in front of you, you could throttle up and get to their back bumper.So I just didn’t feel as affected behind people in traffic. I was pleased with that. It seemed like there was more passing. It seemed like there was a little more coming and going compared to last year’s races.I’m curious what other drivers think, but I thought it was an improvement. I thought it was an improvement at Phoenix, but I thought it was even more of an improvement compared to the racing we had here last year for this race.So, yeah, I was happy about that.Q. So it seems like your close competition pretty much throughout the day were the JGR Toyotas. Were you kind of expecting them to be your closest competition, and how did the Hendrick Chevys compare to the JGR Toyotas throughout the race?KYLE LARSON: Always when you come to Richmond, you know that the Gibbs cars are going to be the ones to beat. They just have a package, I guess, for this track.So I knew — at least I thought going into the race — you know, you don’t know without practice, but I thought going into the race that they were going to be the tough ones.When I was going backwards at the end of that second stage, a lot of the cars passing me were Gibbs cars. So I was, like, okay, they’re really good.I could see them kind of chewing up on Williams’ lead in front of me and then ultimately passing him, too. So, yeah, they were probably still better than we were today.But, you know, this has historically been a really bad track for Hendrick, too. So to have all of us run up front majority of the day, come away with a one-two finish, lead as many laps as we did between William and I, it was the best day I think Hendrick has had at Richmond in decades probably.So proud of the effort and really, really proud of how we’ve been as a whole organization at every racetrack so far this season.Q. I found it funny that you said that you watched your highlights from your championship season to prove that you were quote, unquote good or at a time…KYLE LARSON: Remind myself. Not prove.Q. Sorry. Remind yourself. Can you expound on that? Why did you do it? What did you learn, et cetera?KYLE LARSON: I don’t know. Just trying to — I don’t know. I was just bored at night the other night.But it was a great season, and just kind of listening to even post-race interviews and kind of where my mindset was at then when I was winning a lot just to kind of compare to what I think I’m like maybe right now.The Next Gen stuff, it’s so up and down. It’s easy to — obviously 2021 was so strong. We were just riding a high kind of all season. Expectations were high. Execution was great. Results were amazing.Whereas since we’ve gone to the Next Gen car, it’s hard to get your confidence up. Yeah, I just really wanted to look at old tape of myself and just kind of see where my mindset was and see my confidence and, yeah, just do all that.So I don’t think it mattered for the race today, but just to, I don’t know, kind of reset your mindset a little bit.Q. Today you talked about the odds for the most part were against a good finish here today at Richmond for Hendrick Motorsports even though you all really had a great day. But having won today and then going to a track where for the most part it fits your driving style. I heard your name mentioned in different venues today as a favorite going to Bristol. What does that do for you going to Bristol, especially going in as a favorite?KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I mean, I could have ran last in every single race leading into Bristol, and the media is probably going to point to me as being the favorite anyway at Bristol just because it’s a dirt track.So I don’t know. It does not matter to me. I know that we’re going to be good at every racetrack, so that’s promising.But, yeah, it is so different than the dirt racing that I do during the week. These heavy stock cars drive nothing like even a dirt late model that’s 2,400 pounds.Yes, I maybe can read a track better than people, but now this is our third year on it. So I think everybody has kind of got a good idea of what to look for.I feel like the track prep crew does a good job of making things consistent throughout the years, but the weekend especially. So, yeah, I think it’s going to be at least in the two races that we’ve ran there, your same guys that run up front here today will probably be up front at Bristol next week, too.So I think we’ll be — because we’ve been a lot better at all these racetracks so far this year, I think we’ll be better than what we were there last year. We weren’t great. We were good when the track had grip. Not great when it got slick. I’m sure we’ve learned from it and will hopefully be better going back.Q. Obviously you get the points back this week. You get the victory. How does this change your outlook for the rest of the season?KYLE LARSON: Yeah, I don’t know. It doesn’t really change my outlook for the rest of the season. I felt like, yes, we got hit with 100 points and all that, but I felt like our race car is really fast all year long.So I knew we were going to have many opportunities to win. Yeah, we were just able to do that today, and I know we’re going to have more opportunities going forward. It really doesn’t — nothing has changed my confidence I guess going into — sorry, I saw my buddy. I was checking that out.Yeah, I don’t know. Just try to keep executing.Q. In those last couple of restarts you’ve raced Josh there for the win. In these last couple of weeks that he has been in the 9 car and he has been in the shop, what have you seen out of him in terms of his growth?KYLE LARSON: Well, he’s an extremely good race car driver and a great short track racer. So I think — it’s hard for me to follow along when I’m out there racing, but I think due to their track position that they had throughout the race, they were on a totally different strategy there at the end just hoping to catch a caution. That’s ultimately what happened.Their team did a great job on pit road, and he came out second. Me being the leader, I was nervous because I hadn’t been around him all day. I know he is a super good short track racer. So, yeah, I knew it was going to be tough.Thankfully we got clear of him, but he has done a phenomenal job filling in. It’s been nice to have him a part of the debriefs. I feel like he describes his car really well. He seems like he is probably really easy to work with. I’m sure the 9 team probably feels he is easy to work with.I’ve enjoyed having him a part of our team throughout Chase’s injury. I hope whenever Chase comes back that Josh gets more opportunity going forward and good equipment because he is a Cup Series caliber driver. He has proven it just in the few races that he has ran.He is very, very deserving of being in the Cup Series, and he has worked extremely hard his whole career to get these opportunities.Q. We’ve kind of gotten used to you being the guy over the years where you are the first to go to the wall, run the top lane. It seemed like the package or tires, something, let it kind of — the racing groove extend a little bit here, but there’s only a couple of guys really running up against the wall, and they weren’t winning. What more do you think it needed for that to be a preferable line?KYLE LARSON: Well, I mean, if your car is good, you don’t need to go up there. The guys who are up there, it’s because their cars were really bad.I think early in the race the 47 was going really good. It was kind of unfortunate to see him have his, I guess, brake issues because he was making the top work before that competition caution. Then after that you could tell he had brake issues.But who knows? Maybe had he been towards the front and showing speed up there, it would have drug others up there. Usually Richmond is like that. Richmond especially after it rains and stuff that first run, you’ll just kind of — the majority of the people run around the bottom like where you should be at Richmond.You drag and just run until the rubber gets to the wall, and then everybody comes back down. It’s just a product of this racetrack I think.There’s only been one Richmond race — I can’t remember what year, but where I remember running the wall. Again, I don’t want to run the wall at any track. I just feel like if my car is not handling how I want it on the bottom, I have to find speed elsewhere.But if your car is good, you just stay glued to the bottom.Q. When you’re battling Josh Berry there on a late restart, somebody that I assume you haven’t really raced against a whole lot, is there any question in your mind that you don’t know what he is going to do?KYLE LARSON: Sure. I mean, as far as like aggression? No, I didn’t think of that.But, I could tell that first restart he — and myself both. That was the first time I restarted on the front row on the inside. We both kind of under-drove, one, and I got clear of him pretty easy. So we got that quick caution. I was, like, dang, now he knows how much further he can run the corner and all that. He did a much better job that second time, and I had to work a lot harder to get clear of him off of two.So I was more just thinking about one and two, how are we going to get through there and if he is on my right side, he probably has a pretty good idea how to pass people because he has been in traffic the whole race.Thankfully it worked out where I got clear and could kind of just manage my stuff and take care of my tires in case we had another caution.
An Interview with:Jeff GordonKevin MeenderingTHE MODERATOR: We’ll go ahead and get started. We’re joined by tonight’s race winning crew chief of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Kevin Meendering and Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports. Open it up for questions.Kevin, first, what does this mean for you on a personal level getting a win as a crew chief?KEVIN MEENDERING: It’s a big accomplishment, but like I said before, this isn’t about me, this is about this team. They’ve got a great group of guys here. They got a great leader in Cliff, and I was just happy to kind of fill a gap and help those guys out in a tough situation.But this is a testament to all the hard work from those guys on that team and everybody at Hendrick Motorsports.For Jeff, this is Ricky Hendrick’s birthday, and I’m curious, what do you see in Hendrick Motorsports that still today he had an impact on?JEFF GORDON: Yeah, I think days like today makes you wonder, you know, what Ricky’s presence would do for us if he was here with us today and what his leadership… You know, he was so passionate about Hendrick Motorsports and racing.So it’s nice, days like today, you know, when you do something special on his birthday. And I was talking to Rick, and he was emotional and excited, and so his presence is still here.I think that, you know, certainly our folks try to do everything they can to make Rick Hendrick proud. But when you know what Ricky’s impact could have been on our company and the people and the 5 car and that paint scheme and what that means to the whole company, it’s very rewarding to know that we’re still kind of thinking of him and paying tribute to him as often as we can. Maybe he is looking down on us as well.I do want to say one thing. He is going to shove all the credit to… To me what I love about seeing a guy like Kevin come in and do this is the depth of our people and our company.We’ve been put under really, really difficult circumstances with all four crew chiefs being out, and just the job that I’ve watched them do, how they’ve communicated, you know.I mean, we’re lucky we have people that have been crew chiefs that have a lot of experience, but at the same time with this car, with no practice, no qualifying there’s so much that has to be done to tie everything in together. Great job for Kevin for all the hard work that he has put in. He is still doing his other job too in that contribution.Kevin, with all that was going on in the last 30, 40, 50 laps with cautions and all, how are you dealing with the tire question? Was there any doubt that you would come in almost whenever you could to get new tires?KEVIN MEENDERING: Actually, that last set of tires we put on was our last set, so we were starting to run out of tires, but the laps were running down.We kind of planned it out, and we had a strategy going into the race, and it kind of worked out in our favor. With about 20 to go, we put our last set on, and that’s probably late enough in the race where we wouldn’t have to worry about having to put another set on.So it just kind of fell in our favor.How dramatic was the fall-off?KEVIN MEENDERING: You kind of saw with the 19, he didn’t have any stickers left at the at the end, and he dropped pretty quickly. There’s definitely a lot of fall-off especially the first five, 10 laps. It’s pretty considerable.But we were kind of on the same strategy as the majority of the field, so tire-wise we were in a good spot.Jeff, this is for you. With Josh finishing second today, he has been in the car the last month or so in place of Chase. What’s the growth you’ve seen out of him when he has been in the 9 car?JEFF GORDON: I feel like he has done a great job every time he has been in the car. You start to see a bit of a trend with him. Of course, we didn’t do him any favors by him starting 30th today.We made one adjustment there early that didn’t seem to go the right direction. They got him further behind. So to see them climb up through there and the car come to life, and staying out there paid off and caught the caution.But Josh, when you look at his lap times, he is a guy that he gets in there, he feels the car out, he doesn’t take too many risks or chances until he knows what he has. Then you just start to see the lap times come and build and the run start to come together.And every time I’m scanning, I kept hearing by the end of the run, Hey, those lap times are really good. Hey, those lap times are similar to the leaders’.So he clearly knows how to manage tires and manage a race well. It seems like the longer the race, the better he does. We’re really happy with the job that he has done.Certainly everybody has known his talent watching him in other forms of racing, late models, and the Xfinity Series. You have to put him in other cars with other teams and other people to really see how far he could take it.I think he’s got a future in the Cup Series.That was the question I was going to ask, but Jeff, for you as a driver to driver, what’s the significance of this young man at this point to have that level of success with an organization like Hendrick Motorsports?JEFF GORDON: Most young guys, they come in and they have to build up their experience and their knowledge and the confidence and everything else, and hope you get the chance to be in quality equipment.Even when I came in, it was at Hendrick, but it was a whole new team and brand new people. So it took us a while to build that.To truly measure somebody’s talent, you plug them into an existing top-caliber team, and that’s what’s taken place here. Then you say, Let’s see what you can do. Clearly he has been proving that he has the talent and the ability as well as the work ethic.That’s what you don’t see behind the scenes. He is a quiet guy, but behind the scenes he is doing all the things that he needs to do to get prepared. And he still is running Xfinity too and trying to win a championship over there.So, yeah, great job by him.Jeff, given this week and how the points penalty got rescinded, you get the 10 playoff points back, and you end up winning the race. What are the emotions kind of as a team? You get three cars in the top ten. William led a bunch of laps today. It has to feel good kind of. You have four cars theoretically earning the most points this week because they got 100 back, and they had a really good day.JEFF GORDON: Well, I’m probably looking at it a little bit different than you are because I don’t know that we should have ever had the points taken away to begin with.But, yeah, it’s been a good week. It’s been really stressful trying to prep for an appeal and not knowing what the outcome is going to be. We’re certainly happy with what the appeals committee came to that conclusion, but at the same time we feel like we laid out enough information there that it shouldn’t have ever happened, or even the monetary side of it and the crew chief side of it.We were really hoping we were going to get all of that back. But we’re going to move on from that. Then we come in here obviously with qualifying raining out, that paid off in more ways than one. Good track position and then fast race cars.I mean, once the green flag dropped, it’s all about those teams execute and doing their job. But certainly quite a few smiles around campus this day. They’ve been down with what happened. So that definitely re-energized our folks this week and coming into this weekend’s race.Certainly this win will do a lot for us as we move forward and go to Bristol.For either of you guys or both. Have you heard from Cliff yet? Was he in contact with you throughout the day or, Jeff, with you? Have you heard from him yet?JEFF GORDON: I’m not seen or heard from Cliff. I don’t know if Kevin has.KEVIN MEENDERING: I haven’t either. Obviously we’ve been in contact with him throughout the weekend and remotely. So this is a big win for him as well as all of us.JEFF GORDON: Yeah, I guarantee he is jumping up and down and excited.I was thinking about Cliff, though, during the race when Kyle made the contact with Suarez. I was seeing Cliff throw things wherever he was. Then I could see him jumping up and down, screaming and yelling when the win happened.You guys, you’ve got three wins for the team and five for the Chevy camp in seven races so far. Are we on the cusp of a historic season for Chevy and for Hendrick?JEFF GORDON: Well, it’s too early to tell. I mean, certainly we’re off to a great start. Our folks at Chevy are doing an amazing job with not only the design of this car starting last year, but also some of the new things that have been brought to all the OEMs and opportunities that they’ve had. I think Chevy did an excellent job with that as well.Then the job that the teams do collaborating together, sharing information, and trying to prepare for each and every race. They’ve done an amazing job.You know, you could have looked a little that race today, and there were times where the Gibbs Toyotas were the best cars on the long run. You had times when I thought the 22 was really, really good, the 4 was good.So I think there is a lot of parity out there. But right now I just like the way that I’m seeing our teams execute and our teams come prepared and the speed that are in our race cars.It doesn’t seem like we’re the only Chevy team seeing that, so that’s good.Jeff, you’re a guy that’s won at Richmond before. We saw you come up to Josh and congratulate him after the race. How have you seen him grow in the races he has done with Hendrick, and what did you guys talk about Richmond at all in preparation for this?JEFF GORDON: I’ve been pretty tied up this week, I’ll be honest. That’s been with Tom Gray and with Alan Gustafson and that whole team. All I know is them bragging on him a lot about the effort that he is putting in, the things he is focused on. And even watching video from last year when maybe they didn’t even ask him to, and he just kind of took the initiative to do that.I think every race gets his confidence up. But you go into a new track, different track every time, so it’s, Okay, what’s the car going to be like this weekend? Okay, what’s is it going to be like this weekend?You threw Atlanta in there on him too, and that’s a pretty unique one.It’s a much different car than what he is used to racing every weekend, and so there’s a lot of things that you have to adapt completely different to.I’m not even sure if Saturday is not hurting him for the Sunday races because the cars are so much different. The sidewall, tires, the rear input… Just from me going from an H-pattern transmission to sequential would throw me off.You know, big brakes. Car doesn’t have a lot of downforce. You can’t put the skew in it. There’s a lot of things that are different about what he is doing.So I love his approach, and it’s turning into results, which I’m sure it’s turning into confidence for him as he continues to go to each track that he is going to be behind the wheel of the car.What do you think was the reason you guys were successful with the appeal on Wednesday?JEFF GORDON: I just think we were very transparent from the beginning of why we believed there was a miscommunication and what happened.I said this in Atlanta. It should have never even come to that. I don’t want to give too much information because I want to respect the process, but it’s also a little frustrating that nothing gets shared from what determines whether there’s points given back or whether there’s money not given back and crew chief suspensions.I just feel like there was enough there that it’s not clear-cut. It’s not just a black-and-white situation because there was enough communication to justify why we showed up to the racetrack in Phoenix the way we did.I think that had it been handled in a situation more like the wheels at Daytona with RFK and Penske, I think that’s the way it should have been handled. It’s I understand it, there’s a reason why you did this, and there’s also a reason why you need to take them off the car.But it should never to me have elevated up to the level that it did. Clearly, the panel felt very similar to that.Jeff, you’re shuffling papers now and writing budgets and things and running the show, but how different are the emotions for you with these wins from when you were driving?JEFF GORDON: It’s much different. I mean, when you are in the car, the adrenaline and working with these guys and seeing what they put into it, you’re a part of the effort that’s on the racetrack, and there’s an emotion that you’ll never be able to compare to.But I can tell you when we win a championship like we did in ’20 and ’21, to me those are very, very exciting moments for me where I felt like I was driving.Today it’s exciting, and it’s emotional. But it’s mainly just seeing these guys do their job and do it well and do it at a high level and stepping up when the pressure is on. Whether it’s a pit call or whether it’s a restart or it’s a pit stop, whatever it may be, you just feel pride. You feel pride in the organization because you see how they work throughout the week, over the offseason, and what they’re focused on and then seeing that turn into results.I know everybody works hard in this garage area and probably deserves to have great results, but when you do did get it, you just feel extremely fortunate to work with such great people and have such great people on the race teams as well as behind the wheel.There’s been a lot of talk earlier this season about the new Next Gen cars and more vent holes for more breathing into the car for safety. How did you feel any of that had an affect on your strategy for this year’s race versus previous races?JEFF GORDON: You want to take that one? Not sure I completely understand the question.There’s a lot of changes with the Next Gen cars, and how did that affect…JEFF GORDON: For this year you mean?Yes.JEFF GORDON: I think it was the 15 car backed into the wall earlier, and you saw the rear of the car collapse. That’s I think what the drivers are asking, right, is to have it absorb more.We’re still not seeing any real progress when you are at places like COTA or earlier in the year when we were at the Clash with guys just running straight into their bumpers.So at low impacts I don’t think that there’s been significant progress there, but there’s a lot of discussions happening to fix that, and I’m happy about that.But if that’s the changes that you are talking about, then I did at least see something good happen there.What would be the next set of changes you would like to see for you and your team?JEFF GORDON: Well, I think there’s a lot of technology in head support foam padding and absorption. So they have to do these drop tests where they kind of — the helmet design, inner padding, the headrest itself.And then I think — and Kevin should be answering it because he knows about structures of cars. He is an engineer.I just know from a race car driver I’m seeing these guys. They’re taking these small hits, and their head is whiplashing inside the car, and that’s not good.So I think the rear bumper structure and the front bumper structure is far too stiff still. So I would like to see them find a way to make that a little bit more — it kind of gives a little bit more. I don’t know if it’s in the foam or if it’s in the metal structure because it’s all aluminum structure. That’s very, very stiff.But today we at least saw some collapse in the chassis, which I think needs — I really think that the fuel cell needs to move further forward. That’s what’s going to probably help.The Garage 56 car has that, so I think some of the things that we’re seeing on the Garage 56 car, we might be able to see that into the future in our cars that we’re racing as well.FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Spor

Burton Finishes 19th on Wood Brothers Racing Day in Virginia

April 2, 2023


Harrison Burton and the No. 21 Menards/Dutch Boy team fought their way forward in the second half of the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway and scored a 19th-place finish on Wood Brothers Racing Day in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin was on hand at the track to present the Wood Brothers, from Stuart, with a proclamation recognizing them for their many achievements in the sport. Youngkin also spent time atop the team’s pit box during Sunday’s race.

With qualifying and practice washed out on Saturday, Burton, whose family also is from Virginia, lined up 26th for the start of Sunday’s 400 lapper on the three-quarter-mile oval in Richmond.
 
Burton dropped to 31st when the Competition Caution flag flew at Lap 30. He ran in the top 25 for a time in the second half of the first Stage and ended that 70-lap segment of the race in 28th place.
 
In the second Stage he continued to keep his Menards/Dutch Boy Mustang in the top 25 and finished that 160-lap stretch in 21st place but a lap behind the leaders.
 
He rejoined the lead lap by taking the wave-around during a caution period following a Lap 306 spin by Noah Gragson.
 
Burton made his final pit stop from 19th place during a caution period at Lap 381, and despite some late-race brake issues remained inside the top 20 for the remainder of the race and finished 19th.
 
Burton and the Wood Brothers team now head to Bristol Motor Speedway for an Easter Sunday evening race on the high-banked short track now covered in red clay. 
 

AUSTIN PROCK AND MONTANA BRAND RUNNER-UP ATNHRA WINTERNATIONALS

POMONA, Calif. (April 02, 2023) – Austin Prock and the Montana Brand / Rocky Mountain Twist Chevrolet dragster team earned a runner-up finish at the Lucas Oil NHRA WInternaitonals at In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip on Sunday. Brittany Force and the Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy dragster went to the semifinals while John Force and the PEAK BlueDEF Chevrolet Camaro SS team and Robert Hight in the Automobile Club of Southern California / Cornwell Tools / Flav-R-Pac Chevy had first-round exits.
In the final round, it was a battle of Top Fuel rising starts with Austin Prock, the 2019 rookie of the year, and the Montana Brand / RMT dragster racing against Justin Ashley, the 2020 rookie of the year. Prock would handle his Chris Cunningham and Joe Barlam tuned hot rod to a respectable 3.762-second pass at 327.43 mph, but it wouldn’t be enough for Ashely’s 3.713 at 330.63.
“Really excellent points day for our Montana Brand / Rocky Mountain Twist team. Really proud of these guys. It’s race three and they worked like champions today,” Prock said. We knocked out hitters in the first three rounds of eliminations and then we went head-to-head with one of the hottest cars in the class right now. We’re starting to hit our strides and I’m really excited about it.”
To reach the sixth final round of his career, first of the season, fourth at In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip, and third at the Winternationals, Prock lined up with a slew of top competitors.
In what NHRA dubbed a “marquee matchup”, Austin Prock and the Montana Brand / RMT dragster got the better of Leah Pruett in the first round. Prock would have a solid clean pass of 3.739 seconds and 331.53 mph to defeat Pruett who ran into tire smoke for a 4.208 at 231.60 and set himself up with a match-up against four-time world champion Steve Torrence in the second round.
Austin would have a clean pass at 3.822 seconds and 318.32 while Torrence ran into tire smoke for only a 4.157 at 216.55 allowing Prock to match up with Top Fuel teammate Brittany Force in the semifinals. Prock would have another solid run of 3.734 seconds and 331.36 mph while Force, after having a nearly identical reaction time to Prock (.067 for Force and .068 for Prock), would run into tire smoke to coast to a 7.067 at 80.14.
En route to her semifinal appearance, No. 2 qualifier Brittany Force and the Flav-R-Pac dragster team had an unexpected solo run in the first round. Ron August Jr. had a fuel lever failure and had to shut off before taking the tree. The David Grubnic tuned hot rod would end up running the quickest and fastest pass of the weekend at 3.690 seconds and 334.98 mph.
In the second round, Force left the starting line first and never trailed against Shawn Langdon. Her 3.729-second pass at 330.55 mph was more than enough for Langdon’s 3.743 at 331.69. The win set her up with a match-up against Top Fuel teammate Austin Prock in the semifinals. Her appearance in the semifinals also qualifies Force for the Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty Challenge that will be contested in Chicago where Force and Prock will have a rematch during Saturday qualifying.
“Overall a good weekend for this Flav-R-Pac team qualifying second and making a semifinal appearance. We’re qualified now in the Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty challenge which is excellent for u because it means bonus points at the end of the regular season,” Force said. “We had this car running, made an awesome lap first round, made it to semis and it was our teammate Austin Prock that got around us. A good weekend and we’re looking forward to going to Vegas.”
Robert Hight and the Auto Club team opened eliminations with a pedalfest against Terry Haddock. Hight would eventually cross the finish line at 4.341 seconds at 303.50 mph but it wouldn’t be enough for Haddock’s 4.015 at 310.55. The first-round loss is Hight’s first in 24 events. The last time he had that early of an exit was 2021 at the NHRA Finals in Pomona, Calif.
“Not the day this Auto Club team was looking for. Really wanted to be in that winner’s circle for Auto Club. It’s how it goes sometimes,” Hight said. “Bit of an unexpected day in Funny Car, but that’s drag racing, any day could be your day. We’ll bounce back, I’m not worried. We’ve already proven we know what we need to do and how to do it. I have all the confidence in my guys. Jimmy Prock with Thomas Prock and Nick Hildahl, they’ll be anxious to get back out again in Vegas. I know I am.”
John Force and the BlueDEF PLATINUM Chevy’s weekend came to a close in the first round after running into tire smoke early against No. 1 qualifier Cruz Pedregon. Force would coast to a 7.280-second pass at 89.47 mph while Pedregon had a clean 3.881 ag 322.19.
“Tough weekend for this BlueDEF Chevy team. Tougher than we’ve had in a while,” Force said. “It will be okay though, it’s early, we’ll get it figured out, we’ll be okay. Robert with Auto Club, Flav-R-Pac, and Cornwell Tools already has a win, Brittany and that Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy team is getting things figured out and Prock going to the finals with Montana Brand. It’s coming together.”
The NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series continues with the NHRA Four-Wide Nationals at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway April 14-16.
AUSTIN PROCK, 27, Montana Brand / Rocky Mountain Twist DragsterQualifying:12th; 3.816-seconds; 322.34 mphBonus Qualifying Points:0 Race Results: Beat Leah Pruett, Steve Torrence, Brittany ForceBRITTANY FORCE, 36, Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy DragsterQualifying:2nd; 3.712-seconds; 328.86 mphBonus Qualifying Points:+5 (quickest Q1; 2nd quickest Q3)Race Results: Beat Ron August Jr, Shawn Langdon; Lost to Austin ProckJOHN FORCE, 73, BlueDEF PLATINUM Chevrolet Camaro SSQualifying:16th; 4.162-seconds; 230.61 mphBonus Qualifying Points: 0Race Results: Lost to Cruz PedregonROBERT HIGHT, 53, Auto Club Chevy Camaro SSQualifying:3rd; 3.892-seconds; 329.99 mphBonus Qualifying Points:+1 (third quickest Q1) Race Results: Lost to Terry Haddock
Photo Credit: Gary Nastase, Auto Imagery
Unofficial NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series Top Ten Points Standings
TOP FUEL – 1. Justin Ashley, 268; 2. Steve Torrence, 223; 3. Mike Salinas, 213; 4. Brittany Force, Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy dragster, 2045. Austin Prock, Montana Brand/Rocky Mountain Twist dragster, 201; 6. Leah Pruett, 195; 7. Shawn Langdon, 181; 8. Doug Kalitta, 167; 9. Antron Brown, 161; 10. Tony Schumacher, 117.                                                                      FUNNY CAR – 1. Ron Capps, 271; 2. Matt Hagan, 257; 3. Alexis DeJoria, 213; 4. Robert Hight, Auto Club / Flav-R-Pac / Cornwell Tools Chevy Camaro SS, 206; 5. Bob Tasca III, 203; 6. Chad Green, 181; 7. J.R. Todd, 168; 8. Terry Haddock, 136; 9. Tim Wilkerson, 133; 10. Blake Alexander, 126; 11. Cruz Pedregon, 125; 12. Alex Laughlin, 115; 13. John Force, Blue DEF PLATINUM Chevy Camaro SS, 113.

LARSON, CHEVROLET TAKE RICHMOND CUP SERIES VICTORY

NASCAR CUP SERIESRICHMOND RACEWAYTOYOTA OWNERS 400TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES & QUOTESAPRIL 2, 2023
Team Chevy Drivers Sweep Top-Three in Short-Track Battle
Kyle Larson drove his No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 to victory Sunday in the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway as Team Chevy drivers swept the top-three positions and won for the fifth time this year in the NASCAR Cup Series.
·       Larson won for the 20th time in 302 career NCS starts. It was his first victory of the 2023 season.
·       He is now a two-time winner at Richmond Raceway, having won in 2017.
·       Chevrolet won for the fifth time in 2023 to lead all manufacturers. The Bowtie brand now has 838 all-time victories in NASCAR’s premier series.
·       Team Chevy won at Richmond for the 40th time in 133 Cup Series races at Richmond.
·       Six Chevrolet drivers combined to lead 246 of the 400 laps at Richmond on Sunday.
·       The victory gave Chevrolet a sweep of the top-three positions and wins in all three NASCAR national series on the weekend, adding to Chandler Smith’s win at Richmond in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Carson Hocevar’s victory at Texas Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 HENDRICKCARS.COM CAMARO ZL1 – Race Winner Quote“It’s really cool. We’ve been close to winning a couple. William has been extremely good this year. It was going to be between probably him, the 19, us, and the 20 was really good. So just things worked out. My pit crew had a great stop. So, shout out to Brandon Johnson. He is our jackman. He just turned 30 today. Our spotter, Tyler Monn, he turned 30 today. Great day for them guys. What an awesome Hendrickcars.com Chevy. I can’t say enough about it. I got into the 99 on pit road there sometime in the second stage, and we were awful after that. I was hoping the damage was the reason why, but they had to calm me down a little bit and get refocused and was able to get it done. Thanks to everyone on this team, Cliff Daniels, for everything he does to prepare the team to be as strong as we are without him on the box. So good to get a win, and hopefully many more.”
TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 RESULTS:POS.   DRIVER1st       Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL12nd      Josh Berry, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL13rd       Ross Chastain, No. 1 Jockey Camaro ZL18th       Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
TOP-FIVE UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: POS.  DRIVER1st       Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)2nd      Josh Berry (Chevrolet)3rd       Ross Chastain (Chevrolet)4th       Christopher Bell (Toyota)5th       Kevin Harvick (Ford)
The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at Bristol Motor Speedway with the Food City Dirt Race on Sunday, April 9, at 7 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES:Ross Chastain, No. 1 Jockey Camaro ZL1Finished: Third“We definitely needed more to fight for the lead. For our Jockey Chevy, it was probably more about clean air. There were better cars throughout the race that got cycled back on strategy. For our group – the 5, the 9, the 20 was probably a little better – but out of the Chevys I thought that in clean air that any of us – the 5, 9 or us – could lead. Hats off to the 5 team, Kyle, and everyone at HMS. Chevrolet keeps locking down these wins with the Bowtie. We’re proud to be part of it.”
Josh Berry, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1Finished: Second“Man, this is really cool. I have to give all the credit to this NAPA team. Tom (Grey, interim crew chief), Alan (Gustafson, full-time crew chief) remotely, of course, and everybody at Hendrick Motorsports. They made some great calls. When we got some clean track, we weren’t running bad lap times. I’m so glad they tried something different to get us there at the end. I felt like we were decent the whole time. Just getting in cleaner air (was key). We were free to race with Kyle. Man, what a huge day. You know, to come here and start in the back, no practice, qualifying, get spun out, work through the field like that, just second place, it’s pretty cool.”
William Byron, No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL1Finished: 24th“It looked like the 1 was inside the 20 and the 20 just overcooked the corner and had the fronts locked up and nailed us in the left rear. So I was just kind of restarting fourth there and trying to stay tight to the 9 and get a good restart. I just got tagged in the left rear. So, yeah, just a dive bomb move on the inside on his part and it is what it is. I had a great race car. The Raptor Chevrolet was awesome all day and we will just keep bringing fast race cars like that and we will get a lot more wins. It was looking like it could be another win before the caution. That’s the way it goes.”
TEAM CHEVY RACE HIGHLIGHTS: 
Stage One·       Alex Bowman in the No. 48 Ally Camaro led the field to green ahead of Team Chevy drivers Kurt Busch, William Byron and Ross Chastain.·       Three different Chevrolet drivers led in the first 30 laps ahead of a competition caution on Lap 30. Byron led Chastain with Bowman fourth and Ricky Stenhouse Jr., in fifth.·       After the field all stopped for fuel and tires during the first yellow, Chastain led on the restart in the No. 1 Jockey Chevrolet before Byron moved back ahead on Lap 50 and led to the end of the stage break.·       Byron claimed his series-leading fifth stage victory at the end of Lap 70 to close Stage One. Chevrolet drivers led the entirety of the opening stage with Byron out front for 44 laps and Chastain 16.·       Four Team Chevy drivers recorded stage points at the end of Stage One:1st        William Byron, No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL12nd      Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL13rd       Ross Chastain, No. 1 Jockey Camaro ZL17th       Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
Stage Two·       William Byron continued to lead from the start of Stage Two to the race’s fourth caution period. Kyle Larson, Ross Chastain and Alex Bowman continued to pace Team Chevy’s strong opening start to the race.·       Larson in the No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1 took the race lead for the first time on Lap 124 as he went around the outside of Byron. He was the fifth different Chevrolet driver to lead at least one lap in the opening 125 laps.·       The majority of the field made green-flag pit stops on Lap 159 with Byron stopping for fuel and four tires from second place. Larson and Chastain stopped the next lap, and Larson cycled back to the lead on Lap 167, despite contact in pitlane with Daniel Suarez. Byron ran second with Bowman fourth and Chastain fifth into the second half of Stage Two.·       Byron move back into the race lead for the third time on Lap 197 by getting around Larson just before the halfway point.·       Stage Two ended with almost 130 laps of green-flag running.·       Four Team Chevy drivers recorded stage points at the end of Stage Two:3rd       William Byron, No. 24 RaptorTough.com Camaro ZL15th       Ross Chastain, No. 1 Jockey Camaro ZL17th       Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL18th       Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL1Final Stage / Post-Race Notes·       Four Chevrolet drivers – William Byron, Alex Bowman, Kyle Larson and Ross Chastain – were in the top-10 as the final stage began with 170 laps left.·       Green-flag pit stops began on Lap 288. Once the field cycled through, Chevrolets were second (Larson), third (Byron), fourth (Bowman) and sixth (Chastain).·       The race’s sixth caution flew on Lap 305 for a single-car incident. All cars on the lead lap stopped on Lap 307 for fuel and tires. Byron came out second followed by Larson and Bowman with Chastain sixth.·       The race began again on Lap 313 with Chevrolet drivers in positions two through five. The race continued green when part of the field began making another round of green-flag stops with 50 laps to go. Among the leaders, Byron stopped first followed by Larson, Bowman and Chastain a lap later. Byron won the race for track position and was the first of the cars among those who decided to pit completed their stops. Byron moved back into the lead on Lap 367.·       The race’s seventh caution came out with 28 laps to go for a car that spun at Turn One with Byron leading, Larson third and Josh Berry – No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1, who didn’t stop with the rest of the field – in fourth.·       The green flag flew with 22 laps to go with Larson in front alongside Berry. Byron was spun on the restart and went into the outside wall from fourth place, bringing out another caution.·       Larson led the final 13 laps for his first Cup Series victory of the season while Berry finished second for his best career NCS result.

JUSTIN ASHLEY GOES BACK-TO-BACK WITH ANOTHER WIN AT POMONA

Capps Makes Final Round Appearance in GR Supra Funny Car

POMONA, Calif. (April 2, 2023) – Justin Ashley drove his Toyota Top Fuel dragster to a second consecutive nation event win in Sunday’s NHRA event at In-N-Out Dragstrip in Pomona. Ashley claimed the number one qualifier position during Saturday’s qualifying session and went on to claim his second event win in the first three races of the 2023 season. It was also Ashley’s 10th consecutive win light.

The GR Supra of Ron Capps represented for Toyota in the final for Funny Cars on Sunday afternoon, but had to settle for a runner-up result to race-winner Matt Hagan.

The Kalitta Motorsports Funny Car team of J.R. Todd had a difficult weekend in Southern California. Their DHL GR Supra was involved in an incident on Saturday afternoon that resulted in the team having to go to a backup chassis and body for Sunday’s race. Then in Round One on Sunday morning, the car exploded toward the end of the run resulting in the loss of another chassis and body. Todd walked away from both incidents. The team will regroup and prepare for the next event in Las Vegas in two weeks.

Toyota Post-Race Recap

NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series

In-N-Out Pomona Dragstrip

Race 3 of 21

TOYOTA TOP FUEL FINISHING POSITIONS 

NameCarFinal ResultRound-by-Round
Justin AshleyPhillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel DragsterRace WinnerW. 3.719 vs. 5.634 (K. Baldwin)W. 3.712 vs. BYEW. 3.743 vs. 3.749 (A. Brown)W. 3.713 vs. 3.762 (A. Prock)
Antron BrownMatco Tools Toyota Top Fuel DragsterSemi-FinalsW. 3.690 vs. 6.548 (D. Kalitta)W. 3.733 vs. 3.769 (M. Salinas)L. 3.749 vs. 3.743 (J. Ashley)
Shawn LangdonDHL Toyota Top Fuel DragsterRound TwoW. 3.740 vs. 3.738 (T. Schumacher)L. 3.743 vs. 3.729 (B. Force)
Steve TorrenceCapco Contractors Toyota Top Fuel DragsterRound TwoW. 3.715 vs. 3.756 (J. Hart)L. 4.157 vs. 3.822 (A. Prock)
Doug KalittaMac Tools Toyota Top Fuel DragsterRound OneL. 6.548 vs. 3.690 (A. Brown)

TOYOTA FUNNY CAR FINISHING POSITIONS 

NameCarFinal ResultRound-by-Round
Ron CappsNAPA Auto Parts Toyota GR Supra Funny CarFinal RoundW. 3.947 vs. 4.412 (P. Lee)W. 3.997 vs. 4.598 (C. Pedregon)W. 3.987 vs. 4.078 (B. Tasca III)L. 4.303 vs. 3.967 (M. Hagan)
Alexis DeJoriaBandero Tequila Toyota GR Supra Funny CarRound TwoW. 3.945 vs. 12.709 (J. Arend)L. 4.060 vs. 3.950 (M. Hagan)
J.R. ToddDHL Toyota GR Supra Funny CarRound OneL. 4.154 vs. 4.066 (A. Laughlin)

TOYOTA QUOTES

JUSTIN ASHLEY, Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel Dragster, Davis Motorsports

Final Result: Race Winner

How are you able to remain so focused during the race weekend and what does it mean to have turned on your 10th consecutive win light and go back-to-back with national wins?

“It becomes much easier when you have the kind of team that we do, I’ll tell you that much. It really takes an entire team effort from start to finish. Not only on the race weekends, but during the week and I mean on and off the racetrack. This car has been on absolute rails, and I think it’s now 10 straight win lights. One thing that I’ve learned, that’s one win light that you never get sick of looking at. Just really proud of our guys all day long. They brought the smarts to this Phillips Connect team. For everybody at National Debt Relief, Toyota, Kato, Matco Tools, Lucas Oil and all the guys that do such a great job supporting us. We are really going to enjoy this one.”

RON CAPPS, NAPA Auto Parts Toyota GR Supra Funny Car, Ron Capps Motorsports

Final Result: Final Round

How would you evaluate your race weekend at Pomona with another final round appearance?

“Great weekend. It was almost a fantastic weekend. You hate to get that close. Qualifying, I said I really wasn’t worried, but to not be qualified going into one session to go and feel that type of pressure, which I told my NAPA Auto Parts team, that’s the same type of pressure I felt going into a World Championship on Sunday of last year. It’s the same type of pressure for different situations and it builds character of course. But I looked at my guys when I was sitting in the car and there was no way that they were even worried, which made me much calmer as a driver. To start from eighth and last pair, a lot of things that would have been obstacles for a lot of teams, I thrive in that moment with Guido and our team because they’re so good at adapting. As a driver, I feel so good driving this Toyota Supra. There’s nothing better than to know that they’re on top of everything and they’ve thought of everything and the car goes up and runs great every time and it just builds confidence. Two finals in a row. The car was out in front of (Matt) Hagan on that one and I thought we could hang onto it and I couldn’t keep it from going to the center lane. Definitely my fault. But we’ll go on to Vegas and I told Guido to download that same run into Vegas and we’ll start out the weekend great. We’re the defending champions of that event and I can’t wait to go back.”

ANTRON BROWN, Matco Tools Toyota Top Fuel Dragster, AB Motorsports

Final Result: Semi-Finals

After making it to the semi-finals, how would you evaluate your race weekend overall?

“It was a good weekend here at Pomona for our Matco Tools team with Lucas Oil and Toyota and FVP and our great partners. We came out and qualified where we wanted to and that’s in the top five. We got the number four spot and felt good about it. We wanted to go for that number one spot on Saturday and had a few gremlins, but threw down first round with that 3.69 for low ET w/Brittany (Force) and a big mph. We ran big speeds all weekend. I’m super pumped and super happy with how this team is progressing. We made the semifinals after a tough first round race a week ago at Phoenix and made it into the Mission 2 Fast 2 Tasty (Challenge) at Joliet (Ill.) in May and we’re looking forward to (Las) Vegas in a few weeks. It’s a four-wide and we love those and so do the fans and our goal is to do well.”

J.R. TODD, DHL Toyota GR Supra Funny Car, Kalitta Motorsports

Final Result: Round One

What did you experience from the cockpit with the explosion in Round One?

“Nowadays, the way we run these things, as soon as it spins the tires, you have to get off the throttle and I was too late doing that. As soon as I got off the throttle, there was stuff starting to fly in my face. Really just a bad weekend for us all in all. I hate it for my guys, they’ve been busting their asses. Going through what they went through yesterday, which didn’t need to happen and now to have this, just a lot of work that we have to get done before Las Vegas. That’s two chassis and obviously two bodies. I’m just at a loss for words.”

It’s been a difficult weekend for the DHL GR Supra Funny Car team with Saturday’s incident with John Force and now the explosion in Round One.

“If you knew a weekend like this was coming, you’d rather stay home,” Todd said. “More than anything, I just hate all the work that’s been created for all my guys – especially right before an off weekend. With all the work the DHL team’s been doing up to this point, my guys needed that off week badly. Now they have a ton more work to get done before we go to Las Vegas. 

How was the DHL GR Supra running before the explosion?

“The DHL Toyota Supra was running ok early, and I didn’t see Alex Laughlin next to me. The next thing I knew, after it got down the track quite a ways, it started spinning the tires. I learned in the Gainesville (Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals in Gainesville, Fla.) final that when it starts spinning like that, you gotta get out of the throttle as soon as possible. Sure enough, it happened in the first round today, and we saw what can happen. Looking back on it, I wish I could go back and lift sooner; if you do that, you’ll lose the round, but we would have come back with a race car and body instead a lot of extra work for these guys. 

How will the team prepare for Las Vegas after losing two chassis and two bodies this weekend?

“We’ll see where we are this week with cars and parts. If I need to go to the shop in Ypsilanti (Ypsilanti, Mich.) or Brownsburg (Brownsburg, Ind.) to deliver parts and pieces, I’ll do whatever the DHL team needs; I just want to do anything I can to contribute on my end to get us ready for Las Vegas.” 

# # #

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 65 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships. 

Toyota directly employs more than 48,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of nearly 45 million cars and trucks at our 13 manufacturing plants. By 2025, Toyota’s 14th plant in North Carolina will begin to manufacture automotive batteries for electrified vehicles. With more electrified vehicles on the road than any other automaker, Toyota currently offers 22 electrified options.

Through the Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

chevy racing–indycar–texas–post race

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

PPG 375

TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

FT. WORTH, TEXAS

TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT – FULL PACKAGE

DRIVER QUOTES AND TRANSCRIPT

APRIL 2, 2023

JOSEF NEWGARDEN PUTS CHEVROLET IN TEXAS VICTORY LANE

WIN IS EIGHTH FOR THE BOWTIE BRAND 2.2 LITER V6 ON 1.5-MILE TRACK SINCE 2012

  • Victory is third and second consecutive for Newgarden at Texas Motor Speedway and 26th of his NTT INDYCAR Series career
  • Pato O’Ward finished second in the 250-lap race to give Chevrolet 1-2 finish
  • Newgarden and O’Ward traded the lead at least six times, and raced in the lead pack the entire as the race ended under yellow with final caution on lap 248
  •  O’Ward leaves with points lead as series heads to Streets of Long Beach

FT. WORTH (April 2, 2023) – Josef Newgarden kicked his 2023 NTT INDYCAR Series season into high gear with a hard-fought victory at Texas Motor Speedway behind the wheel of the No. 2 PPG Team Penske Chevrolet. Newgarden led eight times for a total of 123 of the 250 laps in the PPG 375.

From the drop of the green flag, the two-time champion battled in the lead pack trading the lead six times with runner-up Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, and in the lead pack that was as many as six cars numerous times during the race.

As the result of an single car incident on lap 248, the race ended under yellow flag conditions giving O’Ward his second consecutive runner-up finish and vaulted him to the points lead as the Series heads to the Streets of Long Beach on April 16, 2023.

Pole winner Felix Rosenqvist, No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, finished 26thafter a single car incident on lap 178.

Other Team Chevrolet contenders Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet and Alexander Rossi, No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, were left with disappointing 16th and 22nd place finishes respectively after separate incidents on pit lane.

Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet and Callum Ilott, No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, gave Chevrolet four of the top-10 with sixth and ninth place finishes.

Rookie Agustin Canapino, No. 78 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, finished 12th in his first oval race. Rookie Benjamin Pedersen, No. 55 AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet, impressed in his first INDYCAR oval race with a 15th place finish.

Next on the calendar for Team Chevy is the Long Beach Grand Prix on the Streets of Long Beach April 14-16, 2023.

WHAT THEY ARE SAYING (DRIVER POST RACE QUOTES)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 PPG TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED WINNER:

TALK ABOUT THAT FINAL RESTART WITH PATO O’WARD WITH 12 TO GO

“I am just so happy to be here for PPG and Team Penske and it was a group effort this weekend. Pato gave me all the respect in the world when he was racing next to me and it was hard, it was hard to race those guys. I think (Alex) Palou was super strong too and there were no gimmies, it was just packed up today. It was very difficult to get away. There were parts where we were really good, parts where we were weaker and when we needed to be good, the car was there at the end. So proud of this team.  After St. Pete I was kind of rethinking everything and thinking, ‘can we do this again’.  But I am so happy to be here and want to thank Team Chevy for all their support and to PPG obviously. Given the title here, its just a big day for everybody.”

WHEN PATO TOOK OFF AND THERE WERE JUST TWO CARS ON THE LEAD LAP, WERE THINKING NO WAY THIS WAS GOING TO HAPPEN TODAY?

“I knew I needed something to catch back up. Because that stint where he got by me, and ripped a gap, that was my worst stint.  I think we went the wrong way with our adjustments, which was my decision.  I was the one asking for it and then I wanted to reverse it. But like I said, when we needed the car at the end, it was absolutely there. So, I was worried if we didn’t get help to catch back up that he may run away with it and we lost our chance. But they gave us another chance again and we took it.”

PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, FINISHED 2ND: 

“IF NOT FOR THE CAUTION, WHAT WOULD WE HAVE HAD?

“I was timing the tow, but its been a hell of a start to the year. The guys gave me an absolute rocket ship and everybody that was watching the race from midway through, pretty sure saw that. So, its been an absolute joy to drive this Arrow/McLaren No. 5 Chevrolet and I guess we have had two second places and we are still waiting for that win this year.  But that’s great, and a great start to the championship like I said.  That is what we need, and we are going to keep chipping at it to see that first win of the season and try and rack some more up.”

JOSEF SAID YOU GAVE HIM ALL THE RESPECT IN THE WORLD. IS THAT THE WAY IT SHOULD BE?

“That is how it should be. It shouldn’t be any other way.”

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 XPEL TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 6TH:

“Overall pretty good day for the Excel Chevy to move from 15th to sixth and that’s no mean feat. We actually went back to like 20 running at the start so really proud of the team. We had a one bad pitstop. I made a couple of mistakes in the race that wasn’t a perfect day but to still come back and salvage the sixth place, big props to the team and my car and my team and my engineer being so I feel really good going into the next Speedway. ”

CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 9TH: “Overall P9, another top 10 so far this year, I think, in a lot of ways we did a great job. I had some amazing restarts. We had a good car, the first half of each then and then really struggled on the older tires, which is a bit strange. So we need to figure that out. Otherwise, yeah. I don’t know. I don’t know where our pit stops are not good. Losing lots of places each pit stop. But we managed to make it back and keep fighting. Yeah, there’s some things to work on, but overall was good to capitalize on these kind of results and get them when we can. And then yeah, the next one is Long Beach. It’d be interesting. So I’m looking forward to that. take a week off and come back fighting.”

AGUSTIN CANAPINO, NO. 78 JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 12TH: “We finish at P12. Again, like St. Pete. I am really really happy with this weekend. My my first oval race. We did a great job, I think, because we had a really good pace, especially with used up tires in the middle of the race. I do finish the race and I am really, really happy!”

RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 BITNILE.COM ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 11TH:  “I had a pretty good day out there! Yesterday was a struggle, qualifying as far back as I’ve ever qualified! Today I was the biggest mover, from P26 up to P11. I’m happy, I had a lot of fun. I wish I had two laps more! It was tight out there, a lot of butt squeezing! On to Long Beach, let’s keep this going!” 

ED CARPENTER, NO. 33 BITNILE.COM ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 13TH: “I thought the race was a lot of fun, I hope everyone really enjoyed it. I feel like the work that INDYCAR did made the product better for sure. I am a little disappointed with where we finished, I don’t think it’s representative of the car we had today. We kind of missed it on a couple of decisions late in the race that held us back. I feel like we for sure had a Top 10 car, we may not have had the speed to be in the Top 5 so we do still have work to do. I am happy we put on a good show for BITNILE.COM and Circle 8 Cranes, they had a really great group here. This was a good start to the season and I feel really good heading into Indy.”

BENJAMIN PEDERSEN, NO. 55 SEXTON PROPERTIES AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED  15TH: “The first IndyCar race that we finished. P 15. Today you’re at Texas. Honestly pretty ecstatic with that my first ever IndyCar oval car was in one piece I learned a lot. But yeah just just reflecting. I think, you know, there’s so much to learn just being that it’s my first ever IndyCar race the longest race I’ve ever done. Yeah, very, very happy about 15 For my first ever finish and oval in an IndyCar race.”

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 16TH:

“We’re just talking about the day Yeah, I think we probably could have got a top 10 We didn’t have that so we obviously got a dry three pounds it goes from a stake in the pits but wasn’t as bad as I thought. I thought it’d be way worse and sixteenths Yeah. Good regroup. Go on to Long Beach y’all”

CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE.COM ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 20TH:  “I struggled today, for sure. I was glad to see our other two BITNILE.COM cars have a good day, but I just could not find the balance I needed. It was kind of trying to hang on for dear life most of the time. That was a shame, we did get a little better at the end but we had already lost too much ground. It was a shame for us, I hate to leave Texas like this. But, all of the cars are in one piece and we’ll move on to Long Beach and be better there.”

SANTINO FERRUCCI, NO. 14 SEXTON PROPERTIES AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 21ST“Tough day here in Texas. You know, we definitely had top 10 car we’re definitely in the hunt. Even though the headrest kind of fell off the right side, which doesn’t exactly make our job easy, it’s 60. By the time we got it sorted, something happened in our clutch pack. So we didn’t have a clutch, which is actually why we ended up going from one that back to five, which couldn’t get the car fired. It’s hard to just push start in IndyCar complicated, but on all just long day, I’m pretty sure and looking forward to relaxing the next couple days.”

ALEXANDER ROSSI, NO. 7 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, FINISHED 22ND:

” We had a really strong car. That’s obvious with qualifying and Pato’s result. It got taken away from us in the first stop to no fault of our own. It was an inconsistent ruling from INDYCAR and very disappointing from Kyle. It was a wasted day for the No. 7 VELO Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, but the car was good and that’s all that matters.”

FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 6 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET, FINISHED 28TH:

“Tough call today, ending up in the wall. I got too wide in the marbles in Turns 3 and 4 and just spun around and crashed. It was a tough race for me. I thought we were competitive, but I was not super comfy with the balance of the car. But it was on me, that one. It sucks, but we’ll just have to bounce back stronger. It was a shame for Pato as well. He looked like the strongest guy out there. We look forward to Long Beach.” 

NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Josef Newgarden

Pato O’Ward

Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by Josef Newgarden, a three-time winner at Texas Motor Speedway. 26th career win now in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES. You led eight times for 123 laps. Jumps up for fourth in the championship.

Nice cowboy hat.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Thanks. I don’t know if it fits, right. I apologize to any cowboys that would make fun of my fit.

Great car. I don’t know what else to say other than our car was fast. That’s what made the difference. I sort of owe tuned it middle of the race. Pato ran up on us, got by us, was walking away. We got the tuning back, which was great. Reversed everything that I asked for. Got it into a happy window and were in position at the end.

Team Chevy, PPG, a great weekend for us, great team effort. We’re on the board. We are on the board. We were not on the board leaving St. Pete. We’re on the board now.

THE MODERATOR: The bounceback feels pretty good, too?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s great. I would have liked to start under better circumstances after round one. Here we are playing a little bit of catch-up. Got a long way to go. I’m happy we were able to get this done today. It was good affirmation for the whole team.

Really, really positive on our team. We’ve got a great group across the board, but really on the 2 car, there’s a lot of changes. They’re really good. I’m happy they were able to be shown what they’re capable of this weekend ’cause I know it. Now I feel like they’re really going to believe it going forward.

THE MODERATOR: Questions.

Q. Did you and Pato touch wheels with two to go?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We did. Right in the dogleg there. The second apex, we just touched kind of heading into T1. Wasn’t as bad as the hit I had with Romain, but it was a light touch.

Q. How was Romain out there? Seems people have many opinions.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, I’m fine. I’m cool. Like, look, everything worked out fine. Almost didn’t work out. It gets tight. It gets tight in INDYCAR. It got tight for me.

I came out the other side, so I’ve got nothing to complain about right now. Very happy.

Q. Were you just biding your time?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, yeah, yeah.

Q. You were that good?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, well, you know, it would have looked silly if we led the whole race… Just trying to keep it fun. People would have said it’s a conspiracy for PPG. Don’t want to see that happen (smiling). Let Pato have his fun, then I had to put him away.

No, just kidding, that’s not what happened. We were getting beat pretty significantly in the middle of the race. I thought beginning of the race we had him, like, super covered. The car was good, track gripped up. I asked for some progressions on the setup. They were not right for the way the track was trending.

I think Pato went the right way. He did the exact opposite of what I was doing. They were telling me what he was asking for. We were bad in the middle. He snuck back up on me. I had a big gap. He snuck up on me, was walking away.

I was like we just need to get through this stint and catch back up. He had such a lead at that point, it was going to be difficult. The caution 100% brought us back into it. We got the car back to where it needed to be. When we were in position, we could get the job done.

But we were not significantly better than him. I mean, he was just as good. He was definitely better in the middle. In the end he was just as good. It could have gone either way, in my opinion, between our cars.

Q. I asked Pato and Palou this. In the final third of the race, there was a lot of three-wide passing. What wires you guys to get in there and do that?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Man, I think it’s the Jimmie Johnson effect. We were here last year. People were like, This Jimmie guy, look at him, he can do it. I think Jimmie Johnson basically gave everybody confidence this weekend.

It’s obviously more than that. We’ve got a lot more downforce on the cars. The lanes were working pretty well. How great was that to see, there was a second lane. This was a real race today, which was fantastic.

But I think in this sport you definitely can’t think about the potential. It’s just you got to go pretty flat out if you want to drive the cars at a high level.

It’s impossible to drive these things at the level you need to without blocking everything else out. I think that’s what you get from a lot of drivers here.

Q. The second lane racing, was it a combination of aero changes, tire deg, traction compound? What made the racing what it was today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think the biggest factors are the downforce increase, which was significant. There’s a lot more load on the cars. The entire last stint, I was flat the whole time, flat for the first half of the stint. It’s a big jump from last year. That’s definitely factor number one.

I think factor two is just the track seemed better this year. Like, it was not quite as dark on the PJ1 patches. I know the last time they coated was September last year. That’s what I was told at least in our briefing. Maybe that’s incorrect.

Q. I think it’s been a few years. They put the resin down but they don’t put the PJ1 down. That’s critical.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I apologize. That’s what they said in the report, they said they put resin down, which I don’t know, I’m not a chemist, I have no idea what these effects are.

But the track was better. It was less dark in the area where the PJ1 has been applied. It didn’t seem as low-grip initially as times when we’ve been here in the past.

Even when everyone tried the high line running, it wasn’t like you ventured up there just to start out and it’s really low grip. Pretty much immediately when we went up there, it was okay grip. I think that was much more inviting for people to have more downforce. We were able to more successfully apply rubber to it from our cars.

I think all of that contributed and led to the type of racing that we had today.

Q. Big-picture question. Last year there was a lot of questions about the future of this place. There’s potential for this track maybe changing in the future, resurfacing… What is your take on that? Is it like we got the racing back, but on the other hand you don’t want the track to be changed?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I just want to see Texas race the way it should race. I think most people would look at today and say that’s how Texas should race.

You look at the past, it’s even been taken up a notch from that. Three-wide the entire time. I wouldn’t want to see that. I think you can go too far nowadays.

I really like high tire deg. I like when people come and go and you’ve got to work your advantage. You’ve really got to work to try to keep the car underneath you.

We’re kind of a step above where I like to see the cars at. I know from an entertainment standpoint this had to be significantly better than last year. It just had to be. It felt packed up for most of the race and definitely at the end.

Where we go from here, it’s hard to say. Old Texas is hard to beat. The configuration was great. The track surface was better for us, we could run all three lanes. I’d like to see that back, then we can start peeling off downforce off the cars. If you go and try and find that again, we might not get it right.

So I don’t think I have a great answer for you. We’ve had the product we’ve had, at least as far as the track. We’ve just chipped away at it. By this year we’ve gotten it really good. I don’t have a good answer for you.

Q. You told us in the bullpen you put St. Pete behind you. When you make an engineer change, have a race like that, any sort of concerns coming into this race?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Not as far as the crew. I can tell you that. I don’t care, I’ll say that, it doesn’t bug me. Every year there’s a reset personally. When you sit out for six months, you start to think, Okay, do I still believe we can do what we were doing last year? I knew exactly where we were last year, what we were capable of.

I said some statements towards the end of the year. These were not grandiose statements, they were true what I said, what I thought was possible on the 2 car.

Six months in an off-season you start to think if that’s true, if we’re still capable of that. Leaving St. Pete, it’s always natural to have those thoughts. I was ready to get here to Texas and get on the board, as I say.

Today is very validating for stuff like that. It just validates my self-positivity, but also affirms what I felt about the team. I know how good the people on the 2 car are. Doesn’t matter that they’re new. I know who’s on it, what they’re capable of.

I hate making these type of statements, but we’re in a really good spot, really good spot.

Q. Back-to-back at Texas Motor Speedway, I believe Helio has done it in the past, it’s quite an achievement. How proud are you of being able to do that?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’m proud of the team honestly. Obviously personally it’s satisfying, but I think it’s more gratifying, just continue to repeat and echo, but it’s really gratifying for the people that are on the car. There’s a lot of new people on the 2 car specifically. I know each individual and what they can do.

Just coming back and repeating is big validation for all of them, I think gives them a lot of belief. So we’re going to leave here in a good spot.

Look, you can’t take anything for granted. It’s very easy for this championship to swing one weekend to the next. It’s entirely possible we go to Long Beach and have a tough weekend. That can happen.

I think we have to focus on having good, clean weekends going forward. Everybody knows the game in here. It’s a game of averages when you look across the championship. And we have to be the best at that.

Q. Three-wide into three, you got to go for it then or else…

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: That’s pretty much about go forward or you’re exposed. That was the racing style. There was no like I’m going to sit here and ride. You’re in a risky position by doing that.

I think your mentality had to be I’m going forward.

Q. At the end you’re side by side with Pato. Had the race gone on, what was your strategy going to be to be able to nudge ahead of him?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s hard to say. We were building to the white. I was watching the runs every lap, kind of trying to gauge what I needed to do, where I needed to be.

I think the difference maker for our car was that it just had really good speed. It had really natural speed to it. I felt like it was a little bit quicker than Pato’s car, which in the past when I’ve raced him here I felt the opposite, I actually felt like Pato had a really quick car innately.

Today was the complete opposite for me. My car had the speed it needed. It was about keeping positioning where I was. That was the key. Just don’t let him get underneath me basically.

Q. During a portion of the race were you laying back in the weeds conserving the car because you knew you had that speed?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I was full throttle the whole race. I was trying to build the gap early, and we were doing that. We got into the weeds in the middle when I was asking for adjustments that weren’t the right way. At the end there, I was giving it everything. I gave it everything the whole race.

Q. (No microphone.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: No, it’s a one-time deal, yeah. I do. That’s fair.

Q. Last year you sat here and you were asked about winning your first race with your new engineer. I don’t know what it is about you, Texas, new engineers. You’ve done it again. Tell me about this.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think the world of Luke. I guess just to look back a year ago, I felt the same way about Eric. I think Eric did a tremendous job for us in 2022. I can’t speak highly enough about the job that he did.

Then for Luke to step into the role, I’ve just got a high level of confidence in that man. He’s excellent. He is just so excellent at what he does. He is a phenomenal race engineer. You got to understand the definition of ‘race engineer’ to really understand that praise. But he is phenomenal.

I’m excited for him. Obviously extends much further than Luke. Luke has a great team behind him, James, we have Mustafa, aka Simba, is on the stand now. A new guy on our team doing performance and helping Luke. You have the entire crew obviously behind him.

It’s a big team effort. But I think the world of Luke and the entire team. Just to repeat, I feel really good about where we’re at.

Q. Last year in Victory Lane your pockets were filled with hundred dollar bills peeled off from Roger Penske.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: He brought ice cream sandwiches. That is almost as good as 600 bucks. I value ice cream sandwiches tremendously. It’s all perspective (smiling). No cash, though, unfortunately. Shut the valve off this year.

Q. Pato was lapping everybody. It was like you guys were having another race. Did you feel at that point maybe the race was starting to slip away from you at all?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, definitely. It started. It was slipping away. It can happen that quickly. It was one stint that was really not good.

I could see where Pato was strong. In a lot of ways I thought he was just right in step with us, even to start the race. When I would start to pull maybe a second on him, he could pretty much match us straight up. He was very good.

Then I de-tuned us in that stint. He tuned in his race car into the correct direction. He just really took advantage of that particular segment of the race. For sure, I was really worried about did I just compromise the finish here. He’s gotten a big gap on us.

But you got to stay positive. We fortunately had a yellow that bunched us back up and gave us an opportunity.

Q. You feel like the yellow is what saved your race, your day?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s hard to say. I think we could have run him down. It would have been tough. I would like to think on the flip, if I could have gotten that advantage on him in the middle, I would beat him pretty straight up with no yellows. He probably would have done that to us. It would have been hard for me to catch up.

That’s how quickly the race can change and one stint can walk you back. That’s essentially what happened to us.

Q. In your mind how would you have done the race strategy-wise if this race had played out?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Strategy-wise, I have no qualms with what we did. I think it was the right stuff.

I would go back and completely revert what I asked for in the middle of the race tuning-wise. I think I would have gone the opposite direction in hindsight. Fortunately we got it right for the end. I sort of learned from that bad stint what we did wrong, then we got it back.

Q. How was it handling-wise?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I thought we were really balanced well in the beginning. If anything, maybe working towards a little loose. I thought the track was going to really come to us, so I didn’t want any changes. I just wanted to leave it.

I could hear Pato was asking for front wing. He wanted to add turn to the car as we were building into the race. We went kind of somewhat opposite directions ’cause after the first stint, that was the first stint I was talking about, in the second stint I felt the same way. We actually took wing out. We just went opposite ways.

After that second stop, it was very clear that I needed to be probably building with the track. Track grip was coming up. I was pushing to the fence when he was racing me. That’s kind of how he got by me. He was just holding the outside, looked like he could just run flat. I had to be lifting. I was going to run into him if I didn’t lift. That’s kind of where I was on the state of our car.

We just unwound all that stuff, started going the right way, got the car in a good spot.

Q. There was a strategy call, pitted on caution, came back five laps later and topped up, is that strategy something you were asking for, was that a team decision?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: No, that’s all T.C. probably. Tim, I mean, you’re going to be hard-pressed to find a better strategist than Tim. He’s just got a good feel to these races. It was a great call.

If there was no other yellows till the end, I think that was probably the call to win. Then it obviously changed the game again. Pato, luckily for them, that brought them back in. They got another shot to come back into it.

I’m glad we made the call to get tires as well, because then we were match for match with him, which was probably pretty critical.

Q. We saw a bit of a different race today with lap cars. That’s different than what we’re used to with INDYCAR oval racing, particularly at places like Indianapolis and Gateway. Was there anything different about this particular package at Texas that made lapping cars easier for fast guys?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I mean, the second lane. There still was degradation. I think for the first third of the stint almost to the first half, you had people really packed up and congested. It wasn’t like people were falling off a cliff really early, but you still had the degradation on the second half of the stint.

When that started to build in, you just had somewhere to go. That’s the big thing you need. You’ve got to have racing room. At high-speed places like this, even short ovals, you just can’t follow super well in direct wheel tracks. It’s possible, but the racing is more difficult.

When you have real estate to put your car (indiscernible), it makes the racing 10 times better. That’s all you really saw, was there’s real estate this time around to use.

Q. You mentioned some of the changes in setup that INDYCAR brought. Generally speaking, was a lot of that what you have been clambering for for several years, particularly since the addition of the aeroscreen?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s a tricky balance. They’ve been doing this. They’ve been putting downforce on every year. You don’t want to go too far.

I know I don’t want just a straight-up pack race. I really don’t. I think it takes out too much of the skill. I mean, you want the skill of tire degradation where you’ve got to make a good car and you’ve got to learn how to drive it, but you need some element of a packed-up race, certainly in the beginning of stints, to make the show good, to make that also part of the challenge in the race. I just don’t want that the whole way.

INDYCAR is always walking a fine line. They’ve been adding downforce every single year. So I think it’s been a combination of finding enough downforce on the cars. Unfortunately just sometimes takes this long to get that right combo.

I think more than the downforce, it’s really been the track. I think two, three years ago, it wouldn’t have mattered how much downforce you put on the car, you still weren’t going to use the second lane. It was unusable.

It’s not just been the downforce. It’s been a combination of getting the track better and stopping the PJ1 being laid down has greatly improved that.

I wouldn’t put it just on the downforce or configuration thing. It’s also been the track kind of coming back to where we needed it.

Q. There were some questions whether the Goodyear rubber from the trucks would undo the work you did in the high lane. Did you sense that being an issue?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: From my perspective, no negative impact from the trucks. I really felt like the trucks wouldn’t negatively impact us. Obviously their rubber is not a match to ours.

But I thought the more cars circulating and running multiple lanes would ultimately be better. There’s always the inherent reduction in grip on the start of our race when trucks have been on. You got to give it a good 10, 15 laps to clean up their rubber.

I think from a long-term standpoint in the race, it was never going to be a negative to what we had done. And it wasn’t. It did not unwind the work we did the day before. If anything, it just helped it more.

Q. Thinking about how exciting this race was from your vantage point, can you think back to the last non-Indy 500 that you felt like INDYCAR oval racing was as exciting as today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, hard to say. It’s been through a lot of configuration changes over the last 10, 15 years, you know?

I mean, I remember old school Texas, ’06, ’07. I mean, I would consider that pretty old school for this track if it started late ’90s. It was classic nighttime, three-wide, all the sparks, everybody packed up. It was just a different time in INDYCAR, different era.

I really think today was a good mix. I’d probably take a little downforce off, if you asked me. I don’t like it super packed up. But I think today was a very good mix between the two worlds, of not having a pack race, but also having a difference maker where there’s tire degradation and you have to work as a team to figure that puzzle out.

I was really happy with today. On ovals, that’s what we need. At Indy we search for something like that. It’s a different race than Texas. Indy is not Texas, so I don’t know that we can compare those two.

Trying to find the balance with downforce and grip, it’s always the game nowadays. We’re just trying to find the right balance where there’s not too much but enough to help us go.

THE MODERATOR: I’m assuming it’s back to Wags & Walks?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, the charity stuff. Same charities. Split between the Children’s Network and Wags & Walks. They did an amazing job of providing that opportunity. It’s a significant difference for these great charities, significant.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll wrap it up there.

THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everyone. Wrapping up another NTT INDYCAR SERIES race at Texas Motor Speedway.

For now, joined by second-place finishing driver, Pato O’Ward.

Pato, I’m sure you’re wondering if this thing stays green for the next couple of laps what happens? Or how pleased are you with a second?

PATO O’WARD: At which point (laughter)?

THE MODERATOR: The question is, did you have anything for Josef?

PATO O’WARD: Oh, yeah, I had the timing right. The lap before we crossed the line, my nose was slightly in front of his. There was no way it was going to finish in single file. Yeah, racing gods had other plans.

I have to say to the guys it’s been a hell of a start to the year. I had a rocket. Like, I don’t think there’s another way to put it.I was really comfortable in the car. It was fun, I have to say. Like, it’s got to be the best Texas race in the last four, five years. It was freaking awesome.

Really, really nice that I got to drive and race with guys that I have so much respect for: Alex, Josef. You can push it to the limit, but you always give each other the room that you need. I think that’s what we gave the fans. That’s what they deserve.

THE MODERATOR: Pato talked about the respect that the three of you had for everyone, knowing you could push them a little bit but still have room to do what you need to do.

PATO O’WARD: That’s how it has to be. There’s really no other way to do it. Going way too fast to mess around at those speeds. We’re going wheel-to-wheel like 226 miles an hour or something. It’s a little wiggle from somebody can be really big.

So hats off to everybody. It’s pretty insane, I have to say. I don’t know how it looks. It must look cool, I’m assuming. It looks insane. But inside of the car, you’re going in, you see two guys there, then you’re just like keep it in. It’s commitment.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up for questions.

Q. INDYCAR brought some new aero pieces, different aero package this weekend. Is that what produced the good racing today? Did you think they nailed it?

PATO O’WARD: I think a mix of both, track and pieces.

PATO O’WARD: There was a legit second lane, for sure.

PATO O’WARD: No, it was a proper second lane.

Q. Do you think the rubbering-in session helped with that, too?

PATO O’WARD: Yes. But as soon as I went out in the rubbering session, it was like, Wow.

PATO O’WARD: You were running fine.

PATO O’WARD: Yeah, I think the tougher part, which I think then strings people out, is 75% to 100% of the stint, that zone is where I think you really see people. I feel like in the beginning, like the top five, top six guys, were basically able to run the same everywhere.

I think then the stronger cars, they were just able to do that for just a lot longer in the stint.

Q. Where do you feel this race shifted out of your favor?

PATO O’WARD: I knew I could have won. It’s just there was really no other way to do it besides timing it. You had to do it the last lap ’cause if not, they were probably going to do it to you.

Just the timing of the last yellow is what really killed us to be honest. All the other ones, you can’t judge when they fall or didn’t fall. If they did, it would probably be a very different story.

Q. (No microphone.)

PATO O’WARD: My strategy? I’m super happy with the calls my team made. No problems there. I think everybody did a phenomenal job.

Q. It looked insane.

PATO O’WARD: Nice (smiling).

Q. Did you and Josef actually touch wheels with two to go?

PATO O’WARD: I don’t know why Josef likes to get so close to me (laughter).

Q. It’s because you’re cute.

PATO O’WARD: I didn’t really have anywhere to go. I had the walls.

Q. You didn’t touch?

PATO O’WARD: We touched in Detroit. That one I felt. This one, no.

Q. What wires you guys to do something that stupid?

PATO O’WARD: The tow was just so strong. With the second lane opening up, you really couldn’t back off or you’re going to get freight-trained by somebody. It’s like keep your foot in it, keep your position, maybe get a position, or lose one. You kind of have to go.

PATO O’WARD: I have to say it would have been really sketchy if it was, like, lap 45 or lap 50 and everyone has tires. I think that would have been, yeah, maybe not very safe.

I just think everybody feels like a hero when everybody has fairly fresh tires, yeah.

Q. You guys obviously put on a great show today. Does this race call for more ovals to INDYCAR? If so, which ones would you like to see added to the schedule?

PATO O’WARD: I haven’t had the pleasure of running Milwaukee and Richmond. I don’t know what to say. We could have a long season, more races, but I say out and about…

PATO O’WARD: That would be n

2023 Camaro SS Convertibles Unveiled as Indianapolis 500 Festival Event Cars INDIANAPOLIS

(Monday, April 3, 2023) – Fifty identical 2023 Chevrolet Camaro SS convertibles were staged on the main straightaway April 3 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in a sign the return of the Month of May soon approaches.
A longtime tradition, the “Festival Event Cars” have reminded Indianapolis-area residents of the upcoming Indianapolis 500 since the 1960s. As the unique fleet of Camaros is driven around Central Indiana, they once again will turn heads and remind everyone “This is May.”
Presenting the cars were J. Douglas Boles, IMS president; Pat Merna, 500 Festival vice president strategic partnerships; Sarah Fisher, 500 Festival board chair and Mike Quinn, Chevrolet Indianapolis district sales manager.
The Festival Event Cars are a unique option code based off the 2023 Chevrolet Camaro SS convertible and are powered by a 6.2-liter small block V-8, which offers 455 horsepower and 455 pound-feet of torque.
The exterior of the car features Sharkskin Metallic exterior paint with special graphics from Chevrolet’s Performance Design Studio representing the 107th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. The car also features an Ash Gray leather interior, a power-folding convertible top that can be lowered while driving at speeds up to 30 mph, Brembo front and rear performance brakes and 20-inch aluminum wheels.
“These Camaro convertibles are a symbol of the shared passion Chevrolet, INDYCAR and the 500 Festival board have for the Indianapolis 500,” Quinn said. “Living and working in Central Indiana, seeing these Camaros on the road always reminds me we’re one step closer to May.”
The 107th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge is scheduled for Sunday, May 28, 2023. Visit IMS.com for tickets and more information on all Month of May events and activities at IMS.

SOLID WINTERNATIONALS HAS HART READY FOR VEGAS

POMONA, CA (April 2, 2023) — After a tough race at the NHRA Arizona Nationals last weekend Josh Hart and the R+L Carriers Top Fuel dragster made major strides this weekend at the NHRA Lucas Oil NHRA Nationals. The rising star from Ocala, Florida made three solid qualifying runs Friday and Saturday posting times of 3.769, 3.773 and 3.782 seconds all under power. The winner of the 2023 Pep Boys Top Fuel Allstar Callout event rolled into race day as the No. 9 qualifier and a tough match-up with Steve Torrence.

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Josh Hart and R+L Carriers Top Fuel dragster, photo credit Gary Nastase/Auto Imagery

Knowing he needed to step up on the performance side in the first round Hart and his Ron Douglas tuned 12,000-horsepowered R+L Carriers Top Fuel dragster made their quickest run of the weekend a solid 3.756 second run at 326.32 mph. Hart was also first off the line with a tremendous .027 reaction time, quickest of the session to give his team the best shot at advancing to the quarterfinals. Unfortunately, even with Hart’s stellar starting line performance and the improved run by the R+L Carrier dragster he dropped a close race by .002 seconds.

“My awesome co-crew chief, Dave Gaterell and my crew chief Ron Douglas told me I could do whatever I wanted in qualifying to get more acclimated to the car,” said Hart. “I’m super grateful for them putting up with me and I found my groove at the Winternationals. The shallower you stage the lower your ET be. We had a bracket car all weekend and it was a great reset. We got our car back and we needed to get the driver back, so they agreed to let me do whatever I wanted in staging. I feel great now.”

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R+L Carriers Top Fuel dragster, photo credit Gary Nastase/Auto Imagery

The steady improvement during qualifying combined with the improved run in the first round has the determined Hart ready to make a move in two weeks. Hart will head to Las Vegas for the first four-wide nationals of the season. Hart will be ready to take on the unique racing event just 20 minutes from The Strip.

“You have to understand upfront before you ever get in one of these things that this is racing,” said Hart. “There’s gonna be peaks and valleys and we found a peak when we won the Pep Boys Allstar Callout and we found a valley the past two races. Now it’s time for us to level out a little bit and win some races. I am excited to get to the Las Vegas Four-Wide Nationals in two weeks.”

Qualifying Results

Q1: 3.769 sec, 330.07 mph; Qual. 8

Q2: 3.773 sec, 330.31 mph; Qual. 9

Q3: 3.782 sec, 323.97 mph; Qual. 9

Bonus Points: 0

Race Results

First Round

Steve Torrence, Kilgore, Texas, CAPCO dragster, (.066) 3.715, 330.23 mph def. Josh Hart, Ocala, Fla., R+L Carriers dragster, (.027) 3.756, 326.32 mph
 

Camping World Drag Racing Series Top Ten – Top Fuel

1.         Justin Ashley               268

2.         Steve Torrence           223

3.         Mike Salinas               213

4.         Brittany Force             204

5.         Austin Prock                201

6.         Leah Pruett                 195

7.         Shawn Langdon          181

8.         Doug Kalitta                167

9.         Antron Brown             162

10.       Tony Schumacher       117

11.       Josh Hart                    97

11.       Clay Millican               97

chevy racing–indycar–texas post race

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

PPG 375

TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

FT. WORTH, TEXAS

TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT

APRIL 2, 2023

JOSEF NEWGARDEN PUTS CHEVROLET IN TEXAS VICTORY LANE

WIN IS EIGHTH FOR THE BOWTIE BRAND 2.2 LITER V6 ON 1.5-MILE TRACK SINCE 2012

  • Victory is third and second consecutive for Newgarden at Texas Motor Speedway and 26th of his NTT INDYCAR Series career
  • Pato O’Ward finished second in the 250-lap race to give Chevrolet 1-2 finish
  • Newgarden and O’Ward traded the lead at least six times, and raced in the lead pack the entire as the race ended under yellow with final caution on lap 248
  •  O’Ward leaves with points lead as series heads to Streets of Long Beach

FT. WORTH (April 2, 2023) – Josef Newgarden kicked his 2023 NTT INDYCAR Series season into high gear with a hard-fought victory at Texas Motor Speedway behind the wheel of the No. 2 PPG Team Penske Chevrolet. Newgarden led eight times for a total of 123 of the 250 laps in the PPG 375.

From the drop of the green flag, the two-time champion battled in the lead pack trading the lead six times with runner-up Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, and in the lead pack that was as many as six cars numerous times during the race.

As the result of an single car incident on lap 248, the race ended under yellow flag conditions giving O’Ward his second consecutive runner-up finish and vaulted him to the points lead as the Series heads to the Streets of Long Beach on April 16, 2023.

Pole winner Felix Rosenqvist, No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, finished 26thafter a single car incident on lap 178.

Other Team Chevrolet contenders Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet and Alexander Rossi, No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, were left with disappointing 16th and 22nd place finishes respectively after separate incidents on pit lane.

Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet and Callum Ilott, No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, gave Chevrolet four of the top-10 with sixth and ninth place finishes.

Rookie Agustin Canapino, No. 78 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, finished 12th in his first oval race.  Rookie Benjamin Pedersen, No. 55 AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet, impressed in his first INDYCAR oval race with a 15th place finish.

Next on the calendar for Team Chevy is the Long Beach Grand Prix on the Streets of Long Beach April 14-16, 2023.

NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Josef Newgarden

Pato O’Ward

Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by Josef Newgarden, a three-time winner at Texas Motor Speedway. 26th career win now in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES. You led eight times for 123 laps. Jumps up for fourth in the championship.

Nice cowboy hat.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Thanks. I don’t know if it fits, right. I apologize to any cowboys that would make fun of my fit.

Great car. I don’t know what else to say other than our car was fast. That’s what made the difference. I sort of owe tuned it middle of the race. Pato ran up on us, got by us, was walking away. We got the tuning back, which was great. Reversed everything that I asked for. Got it into a happy window and were in position at the end.

Team Chevy, PPG, a great weekend for us, great team effort. We’re on the board. We are on the board. We were not on the board leaving St. Pete. We’re on the board now.

THE MODERATOR: The bounceback feels pretty good, too?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s great. I would have liked to start under better circumstances after round one. Here we are playing a little bit of catch-up. Got a long way to go. I’m happy we were able to get this done today. It was good affirmation for the whole team.

Really, really positive on our team. We’ve got a great group across the board, but really on the 2 car, there’s a lot of changes. They’re really good. I’m happy they were able to be shown what they’re capable of this weekend ’cause I know it. Now I feel like they’re really going to believe it going forward.

THE MODERATOR: Questions.

Q. Did you and Pato touch wheels with two to go?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We did. Right in the dogleg there. The second apex, we just touched kind of heading into T1. Wasn’t as bad as the hit I had with Romain, but it was a light touch.

Q. How was Romain out there? Seems people have many opinions.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, I’m fine. I’m cool. Like, look, everything worked out fine. Almost didn’t work out. It gets tight. It gets tight in INDYCAR. It got tight for me.

I came out the other side, so I’ve got nothing to complain about right now. Very happy.

Q. Were you just biding your time?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, yeah, yeah.

Q. You were that good?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, well, you know, it would have looked silly if we led the whole race… Just trying to keep it fun. People would have said it’s a conspiracy for PPG. Don’t want to see that happen (smiling). Let Pato have his fun, then I had to put him away.

No, just kidding, that’s not what happened. We were getting beat pretty significantly in the middle of the race. I thought beginning of the race we had him, like, super covered. The car was good, track gripped up. I asked for some progressions on the setup. They were not right for the way the track was trending.

I think Pato went the right way. He did the exact opposite of what I was doing. They were telling me what he was asking for. We were bad in the middle. He snuck back up on me. I had a big gap. He snuck up on me, was walking away.

I was like we just need to get through this stint and catch back up. He had such a lead at that point, it was going to be difficult. The caution 100% brought us back into it. We got the car back to where it needed to be. When we were in position, we could get the job done.

But we were not significantly better than him. I mean, he was just as good. He was definitely better in the middle. In the end he was just as good. It could have gone either way, in my opinion, between our cars.

Q. I asked Pato and Palou this. In the final third of the race, there was a lot of three-wide passing. What wires you guys to get in there and do that?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Man, I think it’s the Jimmie Johnson effect. We were here last year. People were like, This Jimmie guy, look at him, he can do it. I think Jimmie Johnson basically gave everybody confidence this weekend.

It’s obviously more than that. We’ve got a lot more downforce on the cars. The lanes were working pretty well. How great was that to see, there was a second lane. This was a real race today, which was fantastic.

But I think in this sport you definitely can’t think about the potential. It’s just you got to go pretty flat out if you want to drive the cars at a high level.

It’s impossible to drive these things at the level you need to without blocking everything else out. I think that’s what you get from a lot of drivers here.

Q. The second lane racing, was it a combination of aero changes, tire deg, traction compound? What made the racing what it was today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think the biggest factors are the downforce increase, which was significant. There’s a lot more load on the cars. The entire last stint, I was flat the whole time, flat for the first half of the stint. It’s a big jump from last year. That’s definitely factor number one.

I think factor two is just the track seemed better this year. Like, it was not quite as dark on the PJ1 patches. I know the last time they coated was September last year. That’s what I was told at least in our briefing. Maybe that’s incorrect.

Q. I think it’s been a few years. They put the resin down but they don’t put the PJ1 down. That’s critical.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I apologize. That’s what they said in the report, they said they put resin down, which I don’t know, I’m not a chemist, I have no idea what these effects are.

But the track was better. It was less dark in the area where the PJ1 has been applied. It didn’t seem as low-grip initially as times when we’ve been here in the past.

Even when everyone tried the high line running, it wasn’t like you ventured up there just to start out and it’s really low grip. Pretty much immediately when we went up there, it was okay grip. I think that was much more inviting for people to have more downforce. We were able to more successfully apply rubber to it from our cars.

I think all of that contributed and led to the type of racing that we had today.

Q. Big-picture question. Last year there was a lot of questions about the future of this place. There’s potential for this track maybe changing in the future, resurfacing… What is your take on that? Is it like we got the racing back, but on the other hand you don’t want the track to be changed?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I just want to see Texas race the way it should race. I think most people would look at today and say that’s how Texas should race.

You look at the past, it’s even been taken up a notch from that. Three-wide the entire time. I wouldn’t want to see that. I think you can go too far nowadays.

I really like high tire deg. I like when people come and go and you’ve got to work your advantage. You’ve really got to work to try to keep the car underneath you.

We’re kind of a step above where I like to see the cars at. I know from an entertainment standpoint this had to be significantly better than last year. It just had to be. It felt packed up for most of the race and definitely at the end.

Where we go from here, it’s hard to say. Old Texas is hard to beat. The configuration was great. The track surface was better for us, we could run all three lanes. I’d like to see that back, then we can start peeling off downforce off the cars. If you go and try and find that again, we might not get it right.

So I don’t think I have a great answer for you. We’ve had the product we’ve had, at least as far as the track. We’ve just chipped away at it. By this year we’ve gotten it really good. I don’t have a good answer for you.

Q. You told us in the bullpen you put St. Pete behind you. When you make an engineer change, have a race like that, any sort of concerns coming into this race?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Not as far as the crew. I can tell you that. I don’t care, I’ll say that, it doesn’t bug me. Every year there’s a reset personally. When you sit out for six months, you start to think, Okay, do I still believe we can do what we were doing last year? I knew exactly where we were last year, what we were capable of.

I said some statements towards the end of the year. These were not grandiose statements, they were true what I said, what I thought was possible on the 2 car.

Six months in an off-season you start to think if that’s true, if we’re still capable of that. Leaving St. Pete, it’s always natural to have those thoughts. I was ready to get here to Texas and get on the board, as I say.

Today is very validating for stuff like that. It just validates my self-positivity, but also affirms what I felt about the team. I know how good the people on the 2 car are. Doesn’t matter that they’re new. I know who’s on it, what they’re capable of.

I hate making these type of statements, but we’re in a really good spot, really good spot.

Q. Back-to-back at Texas Motor Speedway, I believe Helio has done it in the past, it’s quite an achievement. How proud are you of being able to do that?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’m proud of the team honestly. Obviously personally it’s satisfying, but I think it’s more gratifying, just continue to repeat and echo, but it’s really gratifying for the people that are on the car. There’s a lot of new people on the 2 car specifically. I know each individual and what they can do.

Just coming back and repeating is big validation for all of them, I think gives them a lot of belief. So we’re going to leave here in a good spot.

Look, you can’t take anything for granted. It’s very easy for this championship to swing one weekend to the next. It’s entirely possible we go to Long Beach and have a tough weekend. That can happen.

I think we have to focus on having good, clean weekends going forward. Everybody knows the game in here. It’s a game of averages when you look across the championship. And we have to be the best at that.

Q. Three-wide into three, you got to go for it then or else…

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: That’s pretty much about go forward or you’re exposed. That was the racing style. There was no like I’m going to sit here and ride. You’re in a risky position by doing that.

I think your mentality had to be I’m going forward.

Q. At the end you’re side by side with Pato. Had the race gone on, what was your strategy going to be to be able to nudge ahead of him?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s hard to say. We were building to the white. I was watching the runs every lap, kind of trying to gauge what I needed to do, where I needed to be.

I think the difference maker for our car was that it just had really good speed. It had really natural speed to it. I felt like it was a little bit quicker than Pato’s car, which in the past when I’ve raced him here I felt the opposite, I actually felt like Pato had a really quick car innately.

Today was the complete opposite for me. My car had the speed it needed. It was about keeping positioning where I was. That was the key. Just don’t let him get underneath me basically.

Q. During a portion of the race were you laying back in the weeds conserving the car because you knew you had that speed?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I was full throttle the whole race. I was trying to build the gap early, and we were doing that. We got into the weeds in the middle when I was asking for adjustments that weren’t the right way. At the end there, I was giving it everything. I gave it everything the whole race.

Q. (No microphone.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: No, it’s a one-time deal, yeah. I do. That’s fair.

Q. Last year you sat here and you were asked about winning your first race with your new engineer. I don’t know what it is about you, Texas, new engineers. You’ve done it again. Tell me about this.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think the world of Luke. I guess just to look back a year ago, I felt the same way about Eric. I think Eric did a tremendous job for us in 2022. I can’t speak highly enough about the job that he did.

Then for Luke to step into the role, I’ve just got a high level of confidence in that man. He’s excellent. He is just so excellent at what he does. He is a phenomenal race engineer. You got to understand the definition of ‘race engineer’ to really understand that praise. But he is phenomenal.

I’m excited for him. Obviously extends much further than Luke. Luke has a great team behind him, James, we have Mustafa, aka Simba, is on the stand now. A new guy on our team doing performance and helping Luke. You have the entire crew obviously behind him.

It’s a big team effort. But I think the world of Luke and the entire team. Just to repeat, I feel really good about where we’re at.

Q. Last year in Victory Lane your pockets were filled with hundred dollar bills peeled off from Roger Penske.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: He brought ice cream sandwiches. That is almost as good as 600 bucks. I value ice cream sandwiches tremendously. It’s all perspective (smiling). No cash, though, unfortunately. Shut the valve off this year.

Q. Pato was lapping everybody. It was like you guys were having another race. Did you feel at that point maybe the race was starting to slip away from you at all?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, definitely. It started. It was slipping away. It can happen that quickly. It was one stint that was really not good.

I could see where Pato was strong. In a lot of ways I thought he was just right in step with us, even to start the race. When I would start to pull maybe a second on him, he could pretty much match us straight up. He was very good.

Then I de-tuned us in that stint. He tuned in his race car into the correct direction. He just really took advantage of that particular segment of the race. For sure, I was really worried about did I just compromise the finish here. He’s gotten a big gap on us.

But you got to stay positive. We fortunately had a yellow that bunched us back up and gave us an opportunity.

Q. You feel like the yellow is what saved your race, your day?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s hard to say. I think we could have run him down. It would have been tough. I would like to think on the flip, if I could have gotten that advantage on him in the middle, I would beat him pretty straight up with no yellows. He probably would have done that to us. It would have been hard for me to catch up.

That’s how quickly the race can change and one stint can walk you back. That’s essentially what happened to us.

Q. In your mind how would you have done the race strategy-wise if this race had played out?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Strategy-wise, I have no qualms with what we did. I think it was the right stuff.

I would go back and completely revert what I asked for in the middle of the race tuning-wise. I think I would have gone the opposite direction in hindsight. Fortunately we got it right for the end. I sort of learned from that bad stint what we did wrong, then we got it back.

Q. How was it handling-wise?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I thought we were really balanced well in the beginning. If anything, maybe working towards a little loose. I thought the track was going to really come to us, so I didn’t want any changes. I just wanted to leave it.

I could hear Pato was asking for front wing. He wanted to add turn to the car as we were building into the race. We went kind of somewhat opposite directions ’cause after the first stint, that was the first stint I was talking about, in the second stint I felt the same way. We actually took wing out. We just went opposite ways.

After that second stop, it was very clear that I needed to be probably building with the track. Track grip was coming up. I was pushing to the fence when he was racing me. That’s kind of how he got by me. He was just holding the outside, looked like he could just run flat. I had to be lifting. I was going to run into him if I didn’t lift. That’s kind of where I was on the state of our car.

We just unwound all that stuff, started going the right way, got the car in a good spot.

Q. There was a strategy call, pitted on caution, came back five laps later and topped up, is that strategy something you were asking for, was that a team decision?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: No, that’s all T.C. probably. Tim, I mean, you’re going to be hard-pressed to find a better strategist than Tim. He’s just got a good feel to these races. It was a great call.

If there was no other yellows till the end, I think that was probably the call to win. Then it obviously changed the game again. Pato, luckily for them, that brought them back in. They got another shot to come back into it.

I’m glad we made the call to get tires as well, because then we were match for match with him, which was probably pretty critical.

Q. We saw a bit of a different race today with lap cars. That’s different than what we’re used to with INDYCAR oval racing, particularly at places like Indianapolis and Gateway. Was there anything different about this particular package at Texas that made lapping cars easier for fast guys?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I mean, the second lane. There still was degradation. I think for the first third of the stint almost to the first half, you had people really packed up and congested. It wasn’t like people were falling off a cliff really early, but you still had the degradation on the second half of the stint.

When that started to build in, you just had somewhere to go. That’s the big thing you need. You’ve got to have racing room. At high-speed places like this, even short ovals, you just can’t follow super well in direct wheel tracks. It’s possible, but the racing is more difficult.

When you have real estate to put your car (indiscernible), it makes the racing 10 times better. That’s all you really saw, was there’s real estate this time around to use.

Q. You mentioned some of the changes in setup that INDYCAR brought. Generally speaking, was a lot of that what you have been clambering for for several years, particularly since the addition of the aeroscreen?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s a tricky balance. They’ve been doing this. They’ve been putting downforce on every year. You don’t want to go too far.

I know I don’t want just a straight-up pack race. I really don’t. I think it takes out too much of the skill. I mean, you want the skill of tire degradation where you’ve got to make a good car and you’ve got to learn how to drive it, but you need some element of a packed-up race, certainly in the beginning of stints, to make the show good, to make that also part of the challenge in the race. I just don’t want that the whole way.

INDYCAR is always walking a fine line. They’ve been adding downforce every single year. So I think it’s been a combination of finding enough downforce on the cars. Unfortunately just sometimes takes this long to get that right combo.

I think more than the downforce, it’s really been the track. I think two, three years ago, it wouldn’t have mattered how much downforce you put on the car, you still weren’t going to use the second lane. It was unusable.

It’s not just been the downforce. It’s been a combination of getting the track better and stopping the PJ1 being laid down has greatly improved that.

I wouldn’t put it just on the downforce or configuration thing. It’s also been the track kind of coming back to where we needed it.

Q. There were some questions whether the Goodyear rubber from the trucks would undo the work you did in the high lane. Did you sense that being an issue?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: From my perspective, no negative impact from the trucks. I really felt like the trucks wouldn’t negatively impact us. Obviously their rubber is not a match to ours.

But I thought the more cars circulating and running multiple lanes would ultimately be better. There’s always the inherent reduction in grip on the start of our race when trucks have been on. You got to give it a good 10, 15 laps to clean up their rubber.

I think from a long-term standpoint in the race, it was never going to be a negative to what we had done. And it wasn’t. It did not unwind the work we did the day before. If anything, it just helped it more.

Q. Thinking about how exciting this race was from your vantage point, can you think back to the last non-Indy 500 that you felt like INDYCAR oval racing was as exciting as today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, hard to say. It’s been through a lot of configuration changes over the last 10, 15 years, you know?

I mean, I remember old school Texas, ’06, ’07. I mean, I would consider that pretty old school for this track if it started late ’90s. It was classic nighttime, three-wide, all the sparks, everybody packed up. It was just a different time in INDYCAR, different era.

I really think today was a good mix. I’d probably take a little downforce off, if you asked me. I don’t like it super packed up. But I think today was a very good mix between the two worlds, of not having a pack race, but also having a difference maker where there’s tire degradation and you have to work as a team to figure that puzzle out.

I was really happy with today. On ovals, that’s what we need. At Indy we search for something like that. It’s a different race than Texas. Indy is not Texas, so I don’t know that we can compare those two.

Trying to find the balance with downforce and grip, it’s always the game nowadays. We’re just trying to find the right balance where there’s not too much but enough to help us go.

THE MODERATOR: I’m assuming it’s back to Wags & Walks?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, the charity stuff. Same charities. Split between the Children’s Network and Wags & Walks. They did an amazing job of providing that opportunity. It’s a significant difference for these great charities, significant.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll wrap it up there.

THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everyone. Wrapping up another NTT INDYCAR SERIES race at Texas Motor Speedway.

For now, joined by second-place finishing driver, Pato O’Ward.

Pato, I’m sure you’re wondering if this thing stays green for the next couple of laps what happens? Or how pleased are you with a second?

PATO O’WARD: At which point (laughter)?

THE MODERATOR: The question is, did you have anything for Josef?

PATO O’WARD: Oh, yeah, I had the timing right. The lap before we crossed the line, my nose was slightly in front of his. There was no way it was going to finish in single file. Yeah, racing gods had other plans.

I have to say to the guys it’s been a hell of a start to the year. I had a rocket. Like, I don’t think there’s another way to put it.I was really comfortable in the car. It was fun, I have to say. Like, it’s got to be the best Texas race in the last four, five years. It was freaking awesome.

Really, really nice that I got to drive and race with guys that I have so much respect for: Alex, Josef. You can push it to the limit, but you always give each other the room that you need. I think that’s what we gave the fans. That’s what they deserve.

THE MODERATOR: Pato talked about the respect that the three of you had for everyone, knowing you could push them a little bit but still have room to do what you need to do.

PATO O’WARD: That’s how it has to be. There’s really no other way to do it. Going way too fast to mess around at those speeds. We’re going wheel-to-wheel like 226 miles an hour or something. It’s a little wiggle from somebody can be really big.

So hats off to everybody. It’s pretty insane, I have to say. I don’t know how it looks. It must look cool, I’m assuming. It looks insane. But inside of the car, you’re going in, you see two guys there, then you’re just like keep it in. It’s commitment.

THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up for questions.

Q. INDYCAR brought some new aero pieces, different aero package this weekend. Is that what produced the good racing today? Did you think they nailed it?

PATO O’WARD: I think a mix of both, track and pieces.

PATO O’WARD: There was a legit second lane, for sure.

PATO O’WARD: No, it was a proper second lane.

Q. Do you think the rubbering-in session helped with that, too?

PATO O’WARD: Yes. But as soon as I went out in the rubbering session, it was like, Wow.

PATO O’WARD: You were running fine.

PATO O’WARD: Yeah, I think the tougher part, which I think then strings people out, is 75% to 100% of the stint, that zone is where I think you really see people. I feel like in the beginning, like the top five, top six guys, were basically able to run the same everywhere.

I think then the stronger cars, they were just able to do that for just a lot longer in the stint.

Q. Where do you feel this race shifted out of your favor?

PATO O’WARD: I knew I could have won. It’s just there was really no other way to do it besides timing it. You had to do it the last lap ’cause if not, they were probably going to do it to you.

Just the timing of the last yellow is what really killed us to be honest. All the other ones, you can’t judge when they fall or didn’t fall. If they did, it would probably be a very different story.

Q. (No microphone.)

PATO O’WARD: My strategy? I’m super happy with the calls my team made. No problems there. I think everybody did a phenomenal job.

Q. It looked insane.

PATO O’WARD: Nice (smiling).

Q. Did you and Josef actually touch wheels with two to go?

PATO O’WARD: I don’t know why Josef likes to get so close to me (laughter).

Q. It’s because you’re cute.

PATO O’WARD: I didn’t really have anywhere to go. I had the walls.

Q. You didn’t touch?

PATO O’WARD: We touched in Detroit. That one I felt. This one, no.

Q. What wires you guys to do something that stupid?

PATO O’WARD: The tow was just so strong. With the second lane opening up, you really couldn’t back off or you’re going to get freight-trained by somebody. It’s like keep your foot in it, keep your position, maybe get a position, or lose one. You kind of have to go.

PATO O’WARD: I have to say it would have been really sketchy if it was, like, lap 45 or lap 50 and everyone has tires. I think that would have been, yeah, maybe not very safe.

I just think everybody feels like a hero when everybody has fairly fresh tires, yeah.

Q. You guys obviously put on a great show today. Does this race call for more ovals to INDYCAR? If so, which ones would you like to see added to the schedule?

PATO O’WARD: I haven’t had the pleasure of running Milwaukee and Richmond. I don’t know what to say. We could have a long season, more races, but I say out and about…

PATO O’WARD: That would be nice.

chevy racing–indycar–texas–winner quote

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

PPG 375

TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

FT. WORTH, TEXAS

TEAM CHEVY JOSEF NEWGARDEN WINNER’S QUOTE

APRIL 2, 2023

JOSEF NEWGARDEN PUTS CHEVROLET IN TEXAS VICTORY LANE

CHEVROLET HAS ONE-TWO FINISH WITH PATO

O’WARD CLAIMING RUNNER-UP SPOT

  • Third Texas Motor Speedway victory for Newgarden
  • Led 123 of 250 lap race
  • Newgarden has 26 career NTT INDYCAR Series victories-all in a Chevrolet powered Team Penske car
  • Win is the 8th at Texas for the Chevrolet 2.2 liter V6 since 2012

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 PPG TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, WINNER:

TALK ABOUT THAT FINAL RESTART WITH PATO O’WARD WITH 12 TO GO

“I am just so happy to be here for PPG and Team Penske and it was a group effort this weekend. Pato gave me all the respect in the world when he was racing next to me and it was hard, it was hard to race those guys. I think (Alex) Palou was super strong too and there were no gimmies, it was just packed up today. It was very difficult to get away. There were parts where we were really good, parts where we were weaker and when we needed to be good, the car was there at the end. So proud of this team.  After St. Pete I was kind of rethinking everything and thinking, ‘can we do this again’.  But I am so happy to be here and want to thank Team Chevy for all their support and to PPG obviously. Given the title here, its just a big day for everybody.”

WHEN PATO TOOK OFF AND THERE WERE JUST TWO CARS ON THE LEAD LAP, WERE THINKING NO WAY THIS WAS GOING TO HAPPEN TODAY?

“I knew I needed something to catch back up. Because that stint where he got by me, and ripped a gap, that was my worst stint.  I think we went the wrong way with our adjustments, which was my decision.  I was the one asking for it and then I wanted to reverse it. But like I said, when we needed the car at the end, it was absolutely there. So, I was worried if we didn’t get help to catch back up that he may run away with it and we lost our chance. But they gave us another chance again and we took it. 

JUSTIN ASHLEY CLAIMS NUMBER ONE QUALIFIER AT POMONA


Alexis DeJoria Takes GR Supra to Number Two Qualifier in Funny Car

POMONA, Calif. (April 1, 2023) – Justin Ashley drove his Toyota Top Fuel dragster to the number one qualifier position in the third round of qualifying on Saturday afternoon at In-N-Out Raceway in Pomona, California. With Ashley’s run at 3.707 seconds, he also won the second round of the Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty Challenge for a $10,000 bonus for his Davis Motorsports team.

In Funny Car competition, Alexis DeJoria drove her GR Supra to the number two qualifier position with her time of 3.883 holding from Friday afternoon’s qualifying session. Fellow Toyota driver J.R. Todd qualified in the fifth position during round two of qualifying but was involved in an on-track accident after crossing the timing lines and was forced to a backup car and body for the remainder of the race weekend. Defending World Champion, Ron Capps was on the outside of the top-16 qualifiers after two rounds of qualifying, but a time of 3.943 in the final round moved him to the eighth position.

Toyota Post-Qualifying Recap

NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series

In-N-Out Pomona Dragstrip

Race 3 of 21

TOYOTA TOP FUEL QUALIFYING POSITIONS

NameCarQualifying PositionFirst Round Opponent
Justin AshleyPhillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel Dragster1st (3.707)K. Baldwin
Antron BrownMatco Tools Toyota Top Fuel Dragster2nd (3.730)D. Kalitta
Steve TorrenceCapco Contractors Toyota Top Fuel Dragster6th (3.736)J. Hart
Shawn LangdonDHL Toyota Top Fuel Dragster7th (3.758)T. Schumacher
Doug KalittaMac Tools Toyota Top Fuel Dragster11th (3.793)A. Brown

(*non-Toyota driver)

TOYOTA FUNNY CAR QUALIFYING POSITIONS

NameCarQualifying PositionFirst Round Opponent
Cruz PedregonSnap-On Tools Funny Car1st (3.865)J. Force
Alexis DeJoriaBandero Tequila Toyota GR Supra Funny Car2nd (3.883)J. Arend
J.R. ToddDHL Toyota GR Supra Funny Car5th (3.935)A. Laughlin
Ron CappsNAPA Auto Parts Toyota GR Supra Funny Car8th (3.943)P. Lee

(*non-Toyota driver)

TOYOTA QUOTES

JUSTIN ASHLEY, Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel Dragster, Davis Motorsports

TF Qualifying Result: 1st

How much does a number one qualifying position in the third round fall on the driver’s shoulders?

“On my team it really doesn’t, it’s this team. Our Phillips Connect team is very, very resilient. We struggled in Gainesville and came back and had a great win last week in Phoenix. This Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty Challenge, we want to win this. We’re in Phillips Connect hometown and we’re just really happy to qualify number one. Mike Green and Tommy DeLago, they’re doing such a great job. Now we can enjoy this win for a very short time. Go back, relax and then try to win another one tomorrow.”

RON CAPPS, NAPA Auto Parts Toyota GR Supra Funny Car, Ron Capps Motorsports

FC Qualifying Result: 8th

Were you concerned on the final pass about making it into the field?

“A little bit. I had all the confidence in the world, but I was hearing some weird things in the car when I was backing up from the burnout. There’s a reason we’re World Champions. There’s a reason you build that trust, when you see a NAPA Auto Care on the side of the road, you pull in there and that’s what these guys are all about. Guido wanted to give it that little more get up and go and it’s too bad he couldn’t because we could have thrown down a nice .80. The calmness came from the Toyota guys – Slugger (Labbe) and the track specialists and everybody up there with the nod that everything was going to be alright. That was it. My family, we have 70 or 80 people packed together up there and I did not want to stand around tomorrow and sign autographs. Great job boys.”

Surf’s Up for Phillips Connect CEO Rob Phillips Following Gift from Justin Ashley


POMONA, CA (April 2, 2023) — Yesterday before Justin Ashley won the Mission #Fast2Tasty Top Fuel Challenge and raced to the No. 1 qualifier position at the NHRA Lucas Oil Winternationals the rising star  presented a custom surfboard to Phillips Connect CEO Rob Phillips to commemorate last year’s win at the NHRA Lucas Oil Winternationals. Ashley and the Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel team surprised Phillips with the surfboard following the first warm-up of the day. The custom board was made by Michael Quesenbury with Handmade in California who has a personal relationship with co-team owner Dustin Davis. Quesenbury has been working on the custom surfboard, a Longboard Papilionidae, since the beginning of the year and details include pinstriping, Phillips Connect and Justin Ashley team branding, personalization to Rob Phillips and blue colorization to match Phillips Connect brand and look. The longboard measures eight feet six inches long and is made from clear vertical grain Western Red Cedar, reclaimed Redwood, and Alaskan Yellow Cedar.

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Dustin Davis, Rob Phillips, Justin Ashley and Michael Quesenbury, photo credit Gary Nastase/Auto Imagery

“I am blown away. This is awesome!” said Phillips, when the surfboard was revealed in the Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel dragster pit area.

Ashley won the 2022 season opening NHRA Winternationals in dominant fashion qualifying No. 2 and outrunning Jim Maroney, Antron Brown, Steve Torrence and Austin Prock for the victory. Ashley would go on to win three times in seven final round appearances in 2022 and contend for the championship until the final day of the season. This year Ashley is off to another hot start winning the NHRA Arizona Nationals and currently sitting No. 2 in qualifying with NHRA Lucas Oil Winternationals.

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Phillips Connect corporate team with custom Made in California surfboard, photo by Gary Nastaste/Auto Imagery

“We wanted to give Rob something special to commemorate our first win together and what better gift to give a surfer than a custom surfboard,” said Ashley. “It turned out great and thank you to Michael from Handmade in California and also Dustin Davis for helping us pull this off. It was a great surprise and wonderful way to thank Rob.”

Following the presentation Ashley went on to defeat Steve Torrence in the semifinals of the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge and in the final qualifying session Ashley posted a winning time of 3.707 seconds to outrun Leah Pruett for the $10,000 top prize for the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge and grab the No. 1 qualifier spot. It was Ashley’s third No. 1 of his career and he will race Krista Baldwin in the first round on race day.