Cadillac at Le Mans: Triple threat for overall victory

Three V-Series.R Hypercars ready to compete in 91st edition of endurance classic
DETROIT (May 31, 2023) – After a 21-year hiatus, Cadillac returns to the 24 Hours of Le Mans with ambitions to fulfill.
It will be a homecoming of sorts; the Cadillac Motor Car Co. name was derived from the French explorer who founded Detroit in 1701. Cadillac first competed in the iconic endurance race in 1950. Five decades passed until the American luxury brand again appeared at Circuit de la Sarthe with prototype challengers in 2000-2002.
Following 2004-2017 championship campaigns in GT racing and the 2017-2022 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship DPi era, Cadillac Racing remains at the forefront of sports car racing with the new Cadillac V-Series.R hybrid racecar that competes in IMSA and the FIA World Endurance Championship.The 91st running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans – the fourth race of the WEC season — will take place on the 100th anniversary of the first race on the outskirts of the city in Northwest France. Media resources
Le Mans guide:* Driver, team bios* History of winning* A look at the Hypercar* Driver, car photos
Records: How Cadillac Racing drivers have fared at Le MansLe Mans notes: Facts, figures and moreHistory: Cadillac Racing at Le MansTimeline: Cadillac V-Series.R development
In French: Cadillac Racing media resources
“Competing for the overall win at Le Mans with an iconic American brand like Cadillac is an honor,” said Laura Wontrop Klauser, GM sports car racing program manager. “The entire team is excited to continue building Cadillac’s racing legacy by competing against the very best internationally and in the world’s toughest race. I think we’re bringing America pretty loud and strong with our Cadillac, and we’re proud of that.”
Nine drivers of the three impressive Cadillac V-Series.Rs will aim to grab the overall victory in the 16-car Hypercar class on the 8.47-mile (13.629 kilometers) course that includes public roads. Cadillac is paying homage to its first venture to Le Mans with the same car numbers 2 and 3 as 1950, along with No. 311.
The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R co-driven by Earl Bamber, Alex Lynn and Richard Westbrook is the full-season FIA WEC entry. Through three races, the Chip Ganassi Racing-run team is a respectable fourth in the championship standings. The trio of drivers recently were joined by Renger van der Zande and Scott Dixon, co-drivers with Sebastien Bourdais of the No. 3 Cadillac V-Series.R, for an endurance and performance test at Autódromo Internacional do Algarve in Portimão, Portugal.
Both the No. 3 Cadillac V-Series.R and No. 311 Whelen Engineering Cadillac V-Series.R, co-driven by Pipo Derani, Alexander Sims and Jack Aitken, already have won races this season in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.
“The team has put in a lot of work and focus on Le Mans, so we know we will have a good and reliable car,” said Westbrook, who earned an overall podium finish in 2022 at Le Mans. “Then it comes down to us executing and keeping everything clean and run max attack for 24 hours. If you do that, there is a good chance you’re going to get podium or something better.”
On-track activity begins Sunday, June 4, with two test sessions totaling six hours.
The Cadillac V-Series.R features an all-new Cadillac 5.5-liter DOHC V8 engine developed by GM’s Performance and Racing propulsion team based in Pontiac, Michigan. Cadillac is the sole GTP manufacturer with a naturally aspirated engine.The last timeSome world events in June 2002 – the last time Cadillac Racing competed in the 24 Hours of Le Mans:* Ronaldo scores twice as Brazil defeats Germany 2-0 in the FIFA World Cup final in Yokohama, Japan, for its record fifth title.* Serena Williams wins her first French Open tennis title, defeating older sister Venus Williams 7-5, 6-3.* Albert Costa defeats Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-1, 6-0, 4-6, 6-3 to win the French Open –his lone major title.* The Glastonbury Festival in England opens with Coldplay and Rod Stewart as headliners.* The first direct electronic communication experiment between the nervous systems of two humans is carried out by Kevin Warwick in the United Kingdom.* Los Angeles Lakers beat New Jersey Nets for a 4-0 sweep and third consecutive NBA title. Shaquille O’Neal is the Finals MVP for the third year in a row.* Detroit Red Wings beat Carolina Hurricanes to win the Stanley Cup for the 10th time. Coach Scotty Bowman retires with record ninth title.* Asteroid 2002 MN missed the Earth by 75,000 miles (120,000 km), about one-third of the distance between the Earth and the Moon.* Canadian singer Avril Lavigne releases debut album, “Let Go.”
What they’re saying
No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.REarl Bamber: “It’s exciting to see the talent we have at Cadillac Racing and I’m looking forward to going to Le Mans. It’s going to be tough, but we’re definitely closing the gap to Toyota and Ferrari step by step and the endurance and performance testing we have done has been important. You have to run a clean race and have good pit stops at Le Mans to have a chance at victory. I said it at Daytona that if that car was at Le Mans, it would have won because we had a clean race and a quick car. That’s what we need to repeat when we go to Le Mans, and I think this group is building towards it.” Alex Lynn: “Winning Le Mans takes perfection. It takes everything to go right. I’ve been lucky enough to do it in GT Pro with Aston Martin and I can honestly say it takes perfection to win that race because you’ll be the car that takes all the risk, doesn’t break down and the drivers are all on perfect form to win. The one that does win has all those ingredients go correctly. From our side, it’s a difficult race to win but the most rewarding. We’ll arrive with confidence in our car and team.”
Richard Westbrook: “Everything has to be clean and perfect at Le Mans, especially this year. A lot of new machinery out there and it’s a big ask for a lot of manufacturers. The Cadillac has been really reliable so that gives us a lot of confidence. The team has put in a lot of work and focus on Le Mans, so we know we will have a good and reliable car. Then it comes down to us executing and keeping everything clean and run max attack for 24 hours. If you do that, there is a good chance you’re going to get podium or something better. I think the main thing at Le Mans if you are a couple of tenths (of a second) off, say the Toyota or Ferrari, you at least put pressure on them because Le Mans is all about pressure. You keep people under pressure, they can make mistakes. We’ll be going there full of confidence and knowing we have a good car.”
No. 3 Cadillac V-Series.RRenger van der Zande: “It’s a special race. It’s the most famous classic race in the world and that’s what we’re aiming to win. I think Cadillac is a super American brand. I’ve been racing in America for 10 years and most of my time with Cadillac, so going with my American racing family as I call them to go for the Le Mans overall victory is something special. A lot of people from Holland will be watching us fight for the overall win, and that would be special. It will be a busy week, tense and exciting. We’ll be having tire warmers now for Le Mans, so it’s also a little different from what we’re used to racing the whole season (in IMSA). We’ll have to learn a lot in a short period of time.”
Sebastien Bourdais: “To drive for a manufacturer like Cadillac and going back to Le Mans to try to win the overall is a great honor. I’ve had the chance to do that a few times in my career and there is nothing like going for the Le Mans overall victory. Being from Le Mans, it’s very busy trying to handle all the requests from the media, but it will make it even more special if it’s a great day. It will be the first time in some time that I’m not rushing to get there and rushing to get back (to North America) for an IndyCar race or whatever. I think the last time that happened was 2011, so that will help me focus more on the event and optimizing the result.” Scott Dixon: “I’m excited to go back to Le Mans. It’s been a few years and my first time to go in the premier class. Competing with the Hypercar brings a totally different level to it. It’s a difficult race and having the opportunity to win with the Cadillac LMDh is very special.”No. 311 Whelen Engineering Cadillac V-Series.R
Jack Aitken: “I think some of the biggest challenges of Le Mans are off the track because it’s obviously a huge event and there is a lot of pomp and circumstance with scrutineering the car in town, the driver parade and it’s a very long week. Managing your energy levels through the week is a bit of a fine art, I believe. I have full faith on the engineering side that we’ll get up to speed quickly. That’s not going to be a problem. It’s going to be more the intricacies of Le Mans itself.”
Pipo Derani: “A lot of resilience it takes to win that race. It’s a whole new game, especially coming with Action Express for the very first time. The good thing is as a team we’ve been operating together for a long time. At the same time, we’re going into a new environment with new regulations and new set of rules. It will be an extra challenge for us as a team, but it’s fantastic. It’s one of those races you look forward to and it’s special to be a part of it. I’m very much looking forward to being there with the team that I’ve achieved most of my best results in America and try to win with them at Le Mans. It will be a great challenge, but a great opportunity to be present in the centenary edition of the race. We will do our best to lead Cadillac to a good result on its return to Le Mans.”
Alexander Sims: “It’s such a momentous occasion and not really comparable with any race you do. The track is fun to drive and it will be a learning curve for us in these cars. Hopefully, we can use the test day to get up to speed from a car performance point of view. I think the benefit we have going there for the first time is it’s the first time with these cars for everyone. In some ways, we’re on a level playing field and it’s who can get up to speed as quick as possible. The team has been preparing for this race for a long time already, so they’ll do a good job. We’ll give it our best shot.”

JOSH HART BATTLES CRUZ PEDREGON AT SNAP-ON SUPERSPEEDWAY EVENT

OCALA, FL (May 31, 2023) — NHRA Top Fuel championship contender Josh Hart squared off with two-time NHRA Funny Car champion Cruz Pedregon on Monday, May 29, at Lucas Oil Raceway as part of the grand prize Snap-on Tools Superspeedway contest event. Snap-on Tools hosted 24 VIP contest winners and their guests at the Indy 500 on Sunday and then at an all-day fully immersive day of drag racing that included instruction in the Frank Hawley Drag Racing School culminating with a side-by-side exhibition race between Hart’s R+L Carrier Top Fuel dragster and Pedregon’s Snap-on Tools Dodge Funny Car.

“Cruz called and asked me if I would be interested in racing him in front of some of the Snap-on Tools Superspeedway contest winners and franchisees. I jumped at the chance,” said Hart, who has two Top Fuel national event titles to his credit. “I have never made a pass beside a nitro Funny Car and it was an awesome experience. This was a cool event Snap-on Tools hosted giving these winners the chance to check out the Indy 500 and then get a full day of drag racing.”

<IMG_3551.jpg>

Cruz Pedregon and Josh Hart set to square off at Lucas Oil Raceway Park, photo courtesy of Cruz Pedregon Racing

Hart and Pedregon fired up their 12,000-horsepower land rockets while the Snap-on guests got an up close and personal experience. They each executed long and smoky burnouts before taking the Christmas Tree with Pedregon getting a slight competition advantage off the starting line to even out the elapsed times. Both Pedregon and Hart were clean off the line and as they blasted towards half-track Cruz’s Snap-on Dodge Funny Car dropped a cylinder and shut off on the exhibition with Hart making a clean pass to the finish line.

“I have to tell you it was cool to race beside a Top Fuel dragster,” said Pedregon, who spent most of the day conversing with Snap-on contest winners. “This was a great event hosted by Snap-on and I am so proud to have been a major part of celebrating these customers and franchisees. These folks are the best in the business. I can’t wait for a rematch with Josh.”

<IMG_3557.jpg>

Josh Hart and Cruz Pedregon prepare for side by side exhibition run, photo courtesy of Cruz Pedregon Racing

The Snap-on Superspeedway event was the final chapter of the contest that afforded Snap-on customers and franchisees the chance to win prizes ranging from tools to Traxxas radio-controlled cars to the grand prize event. Twelve customer winners plus a guest and twelve franchisee winners and a guest were treated to an amazing two-day racing experience. On Monday, the winners enjoyed a full day of Frank Hawley’s Drag Racing School instruction and racing. There was also an opportunity to take rides on a separate AutoCross course set up at the track. The Pedregon versus Hart side-by-side Funny Car versus Top Fuel dragster exhibition was the finale before the group enjoyed hospitality at the track.

Hart and Pedregon will head from Indianapolis to Epping, New Hampshire at the end of the week for the NHRA New England Nationals from New England Dragway, June 2-4.

JOSH HART ON A MISSION AT NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS

OCALA, FL (May 31, 2023) — The R+L Carriers Top Fuel team with driver and team owner Josh Hart are heading to New England on a mission and with a plan. Two weeks ago, Hart raced to the final round at Route 66 Raceway and was just one one-hundredth of a second away from his first win of the 2023 NHRA season. The runner-up finish was further proof that the strategy Hart and crew chief Ron Douglas have put into place following a tough start to the season is coming together. This weekend at the NHRA New England Nationals, June 2-4, Hart will be looking to pick up his first national event win of the season.

“We won the Pep Boys All-Star Callout and had a car that could have won the Gatornationals on Sunday, but the driver cost us,” said Hart, a two-time Top Fuel national event winner. “After that we went into a little slump, and we have been methodically working our way back to our rookie season performance level. No one ever panicked over here, we just went to work and figured some things out. The main thing we have seen is we are making progress and keep moving forward. Chicago was a big race for this R+L Carriers team.”

<Josh Hart and RL Carriers TF_Auto Imagery.JPG>

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

Hart didn’t dominate in qualifying at the Gerber Collision & Glass Route 66 Nationals entering race day as the No. 12 qualifier, but his team managed some tricky track conditions and the veteran tuning skills of Douglas put Hart in a position to win with his driving abilities. A pedal-fest first round win over three-time world champion Antron Brown led to two solid round wins over rookie Jacob McNeal and veteran TJ Zizzo in the semis. Facing friend and long-time racer Clay Millican in the final Hart was in a no-lose situation.

“Clay is a great friend of mine and we wanted to win for sure but seeing what that win meant to Clay and his team was pretty cool,” said Hart. “We have a race car that can win rounds and we are looking to have more success in Epping than we did last year. We will have a busy weekend and I am looking forward to racing in the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge for the first time. That looks like a really cool deal and it will make for a fun Saturday.”

Hart will be one of four Top Fuel semifinalists from Chicago that will get to rerun their races with $10,000 and three championship points on the line. During the first qualifying run on Saturday Millican will match up with Brittany Force who he beat in Chicago. Hart was scheduled to race Zizzo but the part-time driver from Chicago will not be racing at the New England Nationals. The next driver up is the quickest second round loser, Jacob McNeal, who will also be absent, so Hart will face Leah Pruett, who was the second quickest loser in Chicago.

“We will be ready for whoever we have to race for the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge,” said Hart, who pocketed $80,000 earlier this year winning the Pep Boys Top Fuel All-Star Callout. “These specialty races are great for the fans and when you get into the Countdown those championship points could come in handy. I want to thank Mission Foods for putting this race on and I am looking forward to getting after it.”

The R+L Carriers Top Fuel team will come into New England Dragway with a win light already on their record. On Monday before the race Hart raced two-time Funny Car world champion Cruz Pedregon during the Snap-on Tools Superspeedway contest event. 

<IMG_3551.jpg>

Cruz Pedregon and Josh Hart square off at Lucas Oil Raceway Park, photo courtesy of Cruz Pedregon Racing

“Cruz called and asked me if I would be interested in racing him in front of some of the Snap-on Tools Superspeedway contest winners and franchisees. I jumped at the chance,” said Hart, who has two Top Fuel national event titles to his credit. “I have never made a pass beside a nitro Funny Car and it was an awesome experience. This was a cool event Snap-on Tools hosted giving these winners the chance to check out the Indy 500 and then get a full day of drag racing.”

Hart and Pedregon fired up their 12,000-horsepower land rockets while the Snap-on guests got an up close and personal experience. They each executed long and smoky burnouts before taking the Christmas Tree with Pedregon getting a slight competition advantage off the starting line to even out the elapsed times. Both Pedregon and Hart were clean off the line and as they blasted towards half-track Cruz’s Snap-on Dodge Funny Car dropped a cylinder and shut off on the exhibition with Hart making a clean pass to the finish line.

Last year during his first trip to New England Dragway Hart made quick and consistent runs entering race day at the No. 5 qualifier. Unfortunately, a mechanical issue at the start of the race grenaded his R+L Carriers engine right off the starting line costing him a first round win. It was a costly error and one that Hart has no plans to repeat.

“We were ready to go in that first round and I remember hitting the throttle pedal and then all heck broke loose,” said Hart. “The only positive was there were some amazing photos, but that isn’t really what we are after out here. My team works too hard to not win rounds and we want to win races. This season has been a progression of positive steps. I am excited to get back to New England Dragway and see the fans again and turn on some win lights.”

Hart and the R+L Carriers Top Fuel team will get their first pass at New England Dragway on Friday night at 6 p.m. followed by two qualifying runs on Saturday at 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. which will include the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge races. Final eliminations will commence on Sunday, June 4, at 11 a.m. (ET) with the race being broadcast on FS1.

JOSH HART ON A MISSION AT NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS

OCALA, FL (May 31, 2023) — The R+L Carriers Top Fuel team with driver and team owner Josh Hart are heading to New England on a mission and with a plan. Two weeks ago, Hart raced to the final round at Route 66 Raceway and was just one one-hundredth of a second away from his first win of the 2023 NHRA season. The runner-up finish was further proof that the strategy Hart and crew chief Ron Douglas have put into place following a tough start to the season is coming together. This weekend at the NHRA New England Nationals, June 2-4, Hart will be looking to pick up his first national event win of the season.

“We won the Pep Boys All-Star Callout and had a car that could have won the Gatornationals on Sunday, but the driver cost us,” said Hart, a two-time Top Fuel national event winner. “After that we went into a little slump, and we have been methodically working our way back to our rookie season performance level. No one ever panicked over here, we just went to work and figured some things out. The main thing we have seen is we are making progress and keep moving forward. Chicago was a big race for this R+L Carriers team.”

<Josh Hart and RL Carriers TF_Auto Imagery.JPG>

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

Hart didn’t dominate in qualifying at the Gerber Collision & Glass Route 66 Nationals entering race day as the No. 12 qualifier, but his team managed some tricky track conditions and the veteran tuning skills of Douglas put Hart in a position to win with his driving abilities. A pedal-fest first round win over three-time world champion Antron Brown led to two solid round wins over rookie Jacob McNeal and veteran TJ Zizzo in the semis. Facing friend and long-time racer Clay Millican in the final Hart was in a no-lose situation.

“Clay is a great friend of mine and we wanted to win for sure but seeing what that win meant to Clay and his team was pretty cool,” said Hart. “We have a race car that can win rounds and we are looking to have more success in Epping than we did last year. We will have a busy weekend and I am looking forward to racing in the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge for the first time. That looks like a really cool deal and it will make for a fun Saturday.”

Hart will be one of four Top Fuel semifinalists from Chicago that will get to rerun their races with $10,000 and three championship points on the line. During the first qualifying run on Saturday Millican will match up with Brittany Force who he beat in Chicago. Hart was scheduled to race Zizzo but the part-time driver from Chicago will not be racing at the New England Nationals. The next driver up is the quickest second round loser, Jacob McNeal, who will also be absent, so Hart will face Leah Pruett, who was the second quickest loser in Chicago.

“We will be ready for whoever we have to race for the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge,” said Hart, who pocketed $80,000 earlier this year winning the Pep Boys Top Fuel All-Star Callout. “These specialty races are great for the fans and when you get into the Countdown those championship points could come in handy. I want to thank Mission Foods for putting this race on and I am looking forward to getting after it.”

The R+L Carriers Top Fuel team will come into New England Dragway with a win light already on their record. On Monday before the race Hart raced two-time Funny Car world champion Cruz Pedregon during the Snap-on Tools Superspeedway contest event. 

<IMG_3551.jpg>

Cruz Pedregon and Josh Hart square off at Lucas Oil Raceway Park, photo courtesy of Cruz Pedregon Racing

“Cruz called and asked me if I would be interested in racing him in front of some of the Snap-on Tools Superspeedway contest winners and franchisees. I jumped at the chance,” said Hart, who has two Top Fuel national event titles to his credit. “I have never made a pass beside a nitro Funny Car and it was an awesome experience. This was a cool event Snap-on Tools hosted giving these winners the chance to check out the Indy 500 and then get a full day of drag racing.”

Hart and Pedregon fired up their 12,000-horsepower land rockets while the Snap-on guests got an up close and personal experience. They each executed long and smoky burnouts before taking the Christmas Tree with Pedregon getting a slight competition advantage off the starting line to even out the elapsed times. Both Pedregon and Hart were clean off the line and as they blasted towards half-track Cruz’s Snap-on Dodge Funny Car dropped a cylinder and shut off on the exhibition with Hart making a clean pass to the finish line.

Last year during his first trip to New England Dragway Hart made quick and consistent runs entering race day at the No. 5 qualifier. Unfortunately, a mechanical issue at the start of the race grenaded his R+L Carriers engine right off the starting line costing him a first round win. It was a costly error and one that Hart has no plans to repeat.

“We were ready to go in that first round and I remember hitting the throttle pedal and then all heck broke loose,” said Hart. “The only positive was there were some amazing photos, but that isn’t really what we are after out here. My team works too hard to not win rounds and we want to win races. This season has been a progression of positive steps. I am excited to get back to New England Dragway and see the fans again and turn on some win lights.”

Hart and the R+L Carriers Top Fuel team will get their first pass at New England Dragway on Friday night at 6 p.m. followed by two qualifying runs on Saturday at 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. which will include the Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge races. Final eliminations will commence on Sunday, June 4, at 11 a.m. (ET) with the race being broadcast on FS1.

WVMS Historic 100 Next for Lucas Oil Late Models

BATAVIA, Ohio (May 30, 2023) – The stars of the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series are headed to the Mountain State this Friday, June 2 and Saturday, June 3 – chasing a combined weekend purse of over $180,000.   The nation’s elite dirt late model teams will tackle the 5/8-mile West Virginia Motor Speedway in Mineral Wells during the 3rd Annual Jan Dils Attorneys at Law “Historic 100” presented by Arizona Sport Shirts. On Friday, June 2, drivers will compete in a 30 lap A-Main for a shot at $10,000 with the weekend culminating in a 50-lap, $50,000-to-win finale on Saturday, June 3. Each night of the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series action will include a full program of Dirt Draft Hot Laps, Allstar Performance Time Trials, Heat Races, B-Mains, and respective A-Main. In addition to the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series, the SCDRA Northeast Series will make its return to West Virginia Motor Speedway boasting a $12,000 top prize for Sport Compacts in the JWE Remodeling & Roofing Northeast Nationals. The USMPA Sport Mods and EDGE Hotmods will also be in competition. Each day, the pit gates will open at 3:00PM ET, followed by general admission gates at 4:00PM ET. On track action, beginning with Dirt Draft Hot Laps, is set to kick off at 6:30PM ET each day. To purchase tickets in advance for the 3rd Annual Jan Dils Attorneys at Law “Historic 100” presented by Arizona Sport Shirts, please visit: https://tinyurl.com/37a67jrc Since being crafted marvelously in 1984, the West Virginia Motor Speedway has played host to some of the sport’s biggest events and brightest stars. Boasting one of the most beautiful settings and seats in dirt track racing while nestled attractively into the wild and wonderful mountains of small-town Mineral Wells, West Virginia the 5/8-mile terraced hillside sits conveniently adjacent to Interstate 77 for effortless access.  Home to the ‘World’s Fastest Dirt Track’ ™, West Virginia Motor Speedway will blow you away with its incredible racing action and thrill-seeking speed. Affectionately known as “The Speedplant” the 70-acre site underwent a massive renovation before its reopening in 2021, claiming its place among the premier dirt tracks in the country. To learn more about West Virginia Motor Speedway, visit www.wvmotorspeedway.com.  Ricky Thornton Jr. continues to lead the Big River Steel Chase for the Championship presented by ARP – holding a 115-point advantage over Hudson O’Neal. Brandon Overton is third, followed by Tim McCreadie and Devin Moran rounding out the top five in the championship standings. For the latest news, results, championship standings and more about the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series, please visit www.lucasdirt.comLucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series Purses:Friday, June 2 (30 Laps): 1. $10,000, 2. $5,500, 3. $3,500, 4. $2,700, 5. $2,500, 6. $2,300, 7. $2,200, 8. $2,100, 9. $2,050, 10. $2,000, 11. $1,600, 12. $1,400, 13. $1,200, 14. $1,000, 15. $950, 16. $925, 17. $900, 18. $875, 19. $850, 20. $825, 21. $800, 22. $800, 23. $800, 24. $800 = $48,575 Saturday, June 3 (50 Laps): 1. $50,000, 2. $20,000, 3. $10,000, 4. $5,000, 5. $4,000, 6. $3,750, 7. $3,500, 8. $3,000, 9. $2,800, 10. $2,700, 11. $2,500, 12. $2,400, 13. $2,350, 14. $2,300, 15. $2,250, 16. $2,200, 17. $2,150, 18. $2,125, 19. $2,100, 20. $2,075, 21. $2,050, 22. $2,025, 23. $2,000, 24. $2,000. = $135,275 Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series Tire Rule:Friday, June 2 and Saturday, June 3:Left Rear/Fronts – (90) NLMT2, (90) LM20, (90) NLMT3, (90) LM30sRight Rear – Hoosier (92) NLMT2, (92) LM20, (92) NLMT3, (92) LM30s, (92) NLMT4, (92) LM40 *Must use the same set of 4 tires for Time Trials and Heat Races

2023 MONSTER ENERGY UP IN SMOKE TOUR


 
After 2000 miles, five incredible circuits, and over a week on the road; Baggsy and the SB Motorsport Team crossed the finish line of the 2023 Monster Energy Up In Smoke Tour. Tyres were shredded, memories made, and the bar for drift road road trips was forever raised.
 
If you weren’t able to come along, or meet the tour on the road or on the track; here’s a quick round-up of what went down.
 
Click here for photos & videos
 First things first though – the only rule of the tour was… No pro-cars and no competition spec built engines. It was all about taking drifting back to its roots, and with the help of Monster Energy; reminding everybody why they fell in love with drifting in the first place. Spending time with your friends, driving street legal cars, and making tyre smoke filled memories!
 
For the Tour Baggsy and the SB Motorsport Team built and prepped three Nissan 350Z – adding custom parts from GKTech, ST Suspension, BBS Wheels, Hel Performance, Forge Motorsport, Zestino Tyres, Samco Sport, EBC, Japspeed, Sparco, K&N Airfilters, Abbey Motorsport and Sparco. Check out the build breakdown of Baggsy’s 350Z here…
As May 12th rolled round, it was time to hit the road. For the first time since the venue closed in 2018, Rockingham Motor Speedway in the UK opened its doors to drifting – allowing Baggsy and the Up In Smoke Tour to kick off the week in epic style. Universal Studios newest release of the Fast and Furious franchise – FastX – also jumped on board – creating an incredible atmosphere on and off the track. Baggsy took key media and influencers for laps of the track – check out the footage here…
Click to check out the action from Rockingham. 
As the day wrapped – the tour headed for Ferries bound for the Netherlands; where stop number two awaited. First off a visit to X-Car Wrapping and the Dutch Monster Energy team for a cars and Monster takeover. JDM, Americana and Euro style cars all mixed together in the summer sun, with cold Monster cans for good measure. The next day, the Tour linked up with Rick Van Goethem, and headed to the Foundation Midland Circuit in Lelystad to shred the tread for a full day on the asphalt.

Waving goodbye to the Netherlands – stop three called for an epic road trip leg; spanning nearly 600 miles south, with an overnight stop in Luxembourg. The drive was worth it however; as a private circuit awaited – run by former Gymkhana GRiD competitor and star of Netflix HyperDrive; Alex Claudin.
BBQs and burnouts were the order of the day in France. Baggsy’s former team mate, and Monster Energy ambassador Shane Lynch ran the grill in between drift sessions, making for an unreal day four – and the half way mark of the tour.


 
An early start after the previous day’s action in Lyon brought more twisting roads, streeto-worthy passes, and a final night time run into the mountains to Andorra. With exclusive use of the 2400 meter-above-seal level Circuit Andorra Pas de la Casa – famous for hosting the annual Trophée Andros ice race – the surrounding snow-peak mountains echoed with limiter bashing and tyre slaying like never before.
Sadly all things must come to an end; and with Andorra fading in the rear view mirror, the Tour headed for its final stop in France – at the Circuit Bourbonnais. With a final day of tyre slaying in the books, there was only one thing left to do – light all the leftover smoke flares and fireworks… but that’s a story for another time…

Victory Speeds Away from the Dream Team at Maple Grove

MARSTONS MILLS, Massachusetts (May 30, 2023) – Jay Blake and The Follow A Dream Team were anxious to get back to the racetrack after a long off-season. The first race of the year was at Maple Grove raceway in Mohnton, PA. Longtime fans of the Follow A Dream Team will recognize this track as the first place Jay dare to dream of starting his own race team. It is also the one wally Jay desires more than any other. Stopping on the way to give an inspirational presentation to students at J.M. Wright Technical Highschool Jay recounted that moment:”I was riding through the pits on the back of a golf cart and I threw my hands up and the air and said “I’m gonna do it, I’m going for it!’, It was at that moment that I knew what I was going to do with the rest of my life, I was going to start my own race team.” The students erupted in applause and the optimism and energy was palpable in the auditorium.Sadly, even with all the positive energy, this win has eluded the world’s only totally blind crew chief once again. The Follow A Dream Top Alcohol Funny Car was warmed up and ready to roll when testing began on Thursday, May 25th. The Dream team’s first race of the year had finally arrived and although the first test run down the track was slightly disappointing, by the second test it appeared that the gremlins were worked out and the car was ready to perform. The second test launched the Follow A Dream funnycar powerfully down the track yielding a 5.50 at 267 mph. High fives and cheers broke out amongst the team member as it seemed that team tuner Anthony Terenzio and Tuning Consultant Rich Bozzelli had finally gotten the racecar set just right.The next day the team was ready to secure a top qualifying spot. After 3 rounds of qualifying runs they ended up in the 3rd position on the ladder with a qualifying time of 5.75 at 263 mph. First round of eliminations was set for 5:00 pm the next day. The team anxiously prepared the 4000+ horsepower racecar for its evening run. Cool weather and a solid warm-up had the dream team hoping for the win that has escaped them for over 20 years. The teams spirit’s were high as driver Phil Burkart Jr. perfectly staged the funnycar and all seemed well. As the funnycar took off, excitement quickly turned to shock when the left side of the funnycar exploded in flames halfway down the track. The number 7 fuel line had broke sending the car’s safety system into an automatic shutdown, sparing the car from more damage, but stripping the team of their long sough after victory. The sense of disappointment was undeniable back in the pits but Jay Blake’s optimism was unwavering. “We’ll be back for the Nationals in September and for another chance at this win. I’m proud of the whole team and thrilled to be back for the 2023 season.”The team’s next race is at New England Dragway on August 25th.
Lt. Carol Walker, USN (retired) signs the back of the funnycar, which is dedicated to the troops.Jay Blake signs autographs for tech students while displaying his racecar at J.M Wright Technical Highschool in Stanford, CT.Follow A Dream Clutch Specialist Lukas VanGelder pulling up tp the staging lanes.

JUSTIN ASHLEY LOOKING TO NEW ENGLAND NATIONALS FOR MORE SUCCESS

PLAINVIEW, NY (May 30, 2023) — Last year Justin Ashley used a runner-up finish at the NHRA New England Nationals as the launching pad for a summer-long surge of consistency. This year the third-year professional is the only multi-time Top Fuel winner so far this season, has picked up two Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge victories and two weeks ago announced the formation of Maynard Ashley Racing to make his Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel team even stronger for the foreseeable future. The 2020 NHRA Rookie of the Year is eager to get to a track that is one of the closest facilities to his hometown.

“New England Dragway is considered a home track for my family and I since we can make the drive over in a few short hours,” said Ashley, a seven-time Top Fuel national event winner. “It’s nice to race in the Northeast and give my family and friends the opportunity to join us at the racetrack. The New England Nationals are sure to be packed with a lot of excitement and enthusiasm.”

<2320-06013.JPG>

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

This will be Ashley’s third race at the historic facility and the young driver and team owner has never started from the bottom half of the field. This season Ashley has started every race except for the season opening Gatornationals from the top half of the field. The strong qualifying efforts combined with his nearly psychic reaction times have made Ashley and the Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel dragster team one of the leading championship contenders. They have two wins this season collecting Wally’s at the Arizona Nationals and the famed Winternationals and Ashley was also the No. 1 qualifier at the Winternationals. It was a stellar weekend for the team and one that he would like to continue to duplicate throughout the season.

“Getting back-to-back wins at the Winternationals from the No. 1 spot was an amazing feeling for this Phillips Connect Toyota team,” said Ashley, who sits No. 4 in the Top Fuel points less than two rounds out of first place. “It was proof that all the work our Maynard-Ashley Racing team put in during the offseason was justified.  We haven’t gone as many rounds as we expected in the races since then, but we have a great racecar surrounded by a great team. You can never get too high or too low in this sport. We are totally focused on trying to win the New England Nationals and doing whatever it takes to be successful on and off the racetrack.”

With the new team announced Ashley continues to build a solid foundation on and off the racetrack. Long-time sponsors KATO Fastening Systems and Strutmasters along with Lucas Oil, Toyota and most recently Mac Tools will all benefit from this new organization. Over three years Ashley has built his organization along with Dustin Davis to be a team corporate sponsors and fans will want to be a part of for years to come.

In 2022 Ashley qualified No. 8 and defeated Dan Mercier in the first round. He received a competition bye when Scott Farley could not make the call in the quarterfinals. A close semifinal win over 2013 world champion Shawn Langdon set up Ashley’s final round against Mike Salinas. It was a close race, but Salinas was able to get the win and Ashley took the positives from the race and parlayed that into a stretch run over the summer that saw him winning the Thunder Valley Nationals the following event and racing to five semifinals over the next seven races leading up to the Countdown.

“I really think that the two races, Epping and Bristol, gave us a lot of momentum going into the summer,” said Ashley. “We rattled off a ton of semifinal finishes over a short period of time and improved upon our performance even further during the Countdown. You want to use the regular season to get ready for the playoffs and that is what we did beginning with the New England Nationals last year. We have a championship winning team led by Dustin Davis, Mike Green and Tommy DeLago and I am proud to be a part of it.”

Two weeks ago in Chicago Ashley took another step towards the Top Fuel championship winning his second Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge race picking up the $10,000 top prize but more importantly another three championship points. As it stands right now Ashley has six championship points in the bank with the opportunity to pick up more at future events with at least a semifinal finish. The specialty race on Saturday has fired up Ashley and the rest of the Camping World Drag Racing Series competitors.

“I love what Mission Foods is doing with the #2Fast2Tasty Challenge,” said Ashley. “It gives the fans another opportunity to watch competitive racing while teams try to accumulate valuable bonus points. Our sport is built on entertainment, and I am a big proponent of doing everything we can to increase the value of entertainment.” 

This weekend Ashley and the Phillips Connect Toyota Top Fuel team will get their first shot at the track on Friday night under the lights when qualifying starts at 6:00 p.m. On Saturday there will be two more qualifying sessions at 2:00 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. leading to final eliminations on Sunday at 11 a.m. (ET). The race will be broadcast nationally on FS1 from 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (ET).

RUNNER-UP FINISH AT LIME ROCK PARK BOOSTS DYSON’S TRANS AM SERIES POINT LEAD

POUGHKEEPSIE, NY (May 30, 2023) – It wasn’t what Chris Dyson was looking for on Memorial Day at his home track, but his second-place finish behind Justin Marks at Lime Rock Park meant the two-time defending Trans Am by Pirelli series champion left the rural Connecticut circuit with a bigger point lead than before the weekend began.

“Congratulations to Justin,” Dyson said following the race. “He gave me everything he had. He came back from problems in qualifying and drove a terrific race.”

Dyson, who qualified his #16 GYM Weed Ford Mustang on the front row alongside the #20 GYM Weed Ford Mustang of his pole-winning teammate Matthew Brabham, wrestled with handling problems all weekend. Had the team found a solution to the #16’s chronic understeer, could Dyson have taken Marks in a straight-up fight? 

“We can’t deal in hypotheticals in this game,” Dyson said. “Matty and I drove our hearts out today, and Matty did set the fastest race lap, but we honestly just didn’t have the pace to match him over the full distance. But competition is what keeps the fire burning and we are going to work very hard in the weeks before (the next series race at) Indianapolis to get back on top.” 

Despite Dyson’s handling issue the race began well for the CD Racing team. Brabham, who eventually finished third in the 100-mile sprint race, took the lead at the start, before Dyson passed him on the second lap. For most of the first half of the race the GYM Weed duo kept Marks’ Camaro in third place. Eventually the vagaries of lapped traffic provided Marks with the opportunities he needed, first to get past Brabham for second place and then Dyson for the race lead. Marks then held the lead comfortably to the finish, despite a red flag period due to damage to the track’s safety barrier system when Tomy Drissi crashed heavily (but fortunately without injury).

CD Racing drivers Dyson and Brabham lead the drivers’ National point standings after four rounds, with three victories between them. 

For more on Chris Dyson Racing, visit https://chrisdysonracing.com/

Next Up: Indianapolis Motor Speedway

The Trans Am Series’ next event for the headline TA class is June 15-19 at on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. Dyson won the series most recent race there, in 2019.

Lime Rock Park Rebroadcast Schedule

A 60-minute feature on the Lime Rock Park race, produced by Greenlight TV, will be broadcast this Thursday at 9:00 p.m. ET to MAVTV’s 22 million North American linear households and 175 million connected devices. 

Additional Broadcast Coverage On MAVTV


In addition to the livestream, 60-minute feature produced by Greenlight TV will be broadcast the following Thursday at 9:00 p.m. ET to MAVTV’s 22 million North American linear households and 175 million connected devices. 

GYM WEED

FEEL GOOD.  WORK OUT.

GYM WEED by ALTWELL. The hemp infused sports nutrition products to help take your workouts to a higher level.  Gym Weed is paired with the power of Hemp Extract and additional functional ingredients to enhance performance and support recovery.  GYM WEED products are third party lab tested and THC FREE to ensure safe, high-quality ingredients at the right dose.

allgram

Your Data is Yours!

allgram is the next generation decentralized Peer to Peer secure communication platform hosted on the blockchain and developed with cyber and information security as the core elements of the solution.

Leveraging Digital IDs you can communicate securely via chat, voice, video, & social media knowing that nobody is accessing your data.
DIGITAL ID – Digital IDs are authenticated through the blockchain for true identity verification.

CHAT – Peer to Peer communication via text, voice and video with no central servers.

SCHEDULE CALLS – Send meeting invites using allgram calendar for business or personal use.

SOCIAL MEDIA – Create private or public clubs and share posts securely with no targeted advertisements.

RUNNER-UP FINISH AT LIME ROCK PARK BOOSTS DYSON’S TRANS AM SERIES POINT LEAD

POUGHKEEPSIE, NY (May 30, 2023) – It wasn’t what Chris Dyson was looking for on Memorial Day at his home track, but his second-place finish behind Justin Marks at Lime Rock Park meant the two-time defending Trans Am by Pirelli series champion left the rural Connecticut circuit with a bigger point lead than before the weekend began.

“Congratulations to Justin,” Dyson said following the race. “He gave me everything he had. He came back from problems in qualifying and drove a terrific race.”

Dyson, who qualified his #16 GYM Weed Ford Mustang on the front row alongside the #20 GYM Weed Ford Mustang of his pole-winning teammate Matthew Brabham, wrestled with handling problems all weekend. Had the team found a solution to the #16’s chronic understeer, could Dyson have taken Marks in a straight-up fight? 

“We can’t deal in hypotheticals in this game,” Dyson said. “Matty and I drove our hearts out today, and Matty did set the fastest race lap, but we honestly just didn’t have the pace to match him over the full distance. But competition is what keeps the fire burning and we are going to work very hard in the weeks before (the next series race at) Indianapolis to get back on top.” 

Despite Dyson’s handling issue the race began well for the CD Racing team. Brabham, who eventually finished third in the 100-mile sprint race, took the lead at the start, before Dyson passed him on the second lap. For most of the first half of the race the GYM Weed duo kept Marks’ Camaro in third place. Eventually the vagaries of lapped traffic provided Marks with the opportunities he needed, first to get past Brabham for second place and then Dyson for the race lead. Marks then held the lead comfortably to the finish, despite a red flag period due to damage to the track’s safety barrier system when Tomy Drissi crashed heavily (but fortunately without injury).

CD Racing drivers Dyson and Brabham lead the drivers’ National point standings after four rounds, with three victories between them. 

For more on Chris Dyson Racing, visit https://chrisdysonracing.com/

Next Up: Indianapolis Motor Speedway

The Trans Am Series’ next event for the headline TA class is June 15-19 at on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. Dyson won the series most recent race there, in 2019.

Lime Rock Park Rebroadcast Schedule

A 60-minute feature on the Lime Rock Park race, produced by Greenlight TV, will be broadcast this Thursday at 9:00 p.m. ET to MAVTV’s 22 million North American linear households and 175 million connected devices. 

Additional Broadcast Coverage On MAVTV


In addition to the livestream, 60-minute feature produced by Greenlight TV will be broadcast the following Thursday at 9:00 p.m. ET to MAVTV’s 22 million North American linear households and 175 million connected devices. 

GYM WEED

FEEL GOOD.  WORK OUT.

GYM WEED by ALTWELL. The hemp infused sports nutrition products to help take your workouts to a higher level.  Gym Weed is paired with the power of Hemp Extract and additional functional ingredients to enhance performance and support recovery.  GYM WEED products are third party lab tested and THC FREE to ensure safe, high-quality ingredients at the right dose.

allgram

Your Data is Yours!

allgram is the next generation decentralized Peer to Peer secure communication platform hosted on the blockchain and developed with cyber and information security as the core elements of the solution.

Leveraging Digital IDs you can communicate securely via chat, voice, video, & social media knowing that nobody is accessing your data.
DIGITAL ID – Digital IDs are authenticated through the blockchain for true identity verification.

CHAT – Peer to Peer communication via text, voice and video with no central servers.

SCHEDULE CALLS – Send meeting invites using allgram calendar for business or personal use.

SOCIAL MEDIA – Create private or public clubs and share posts securely with no targeted advertisements

Burton Finishes 18th In Coke 600


May 30, 2023


Harrison Burton steered the No. 21 DEX Imaging Mustang clear of several late-race incidents to post an 18th-place finish in Monday’s rain-delayed Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

It was his second top-20 finish in a row and his sixth in the 14 races run this season.

Burton and the No. 21 team were racing to honor the memory of the late Sgt. Shawm Dunkin who was on his second tour of duty in Iraq on Feb. 19, 2007, when he died from injuries suffered when his vehicle was struck by a bomb.  

Burton lined up for Monday’s marathon from 13th place as the starting spots were determined by metrics after rain on Saturday washed out both practice and qualifying.

He was running 20th when the Competition Caution flag flew at Lap 35 and 25th when the first of three Stages ended a Lap 100.

In the second Stage, he ran as high as third place while running long on a pit-stop sequence at the midpoint but ended that 100-lap segment in 26th place, one lap off the pace.

He and the DEX Imaging team were able to use the wave-around in the third Stage to rejoin the lead lap and wound up 21st at the 300-lap mark.

The final 100 laps of the race saw Burton and the DEX Imaging team work their way forward and were able to line up 12th for a restart with just under 40 laps left to run.

But a car spun sideways and into Burton’s path on the restart. He pitted for new tires and rejoined the race in 27th place.

Several caution flags ensued and Burton steered clear of contact and worked his way back into the top 20.

He held on for 18th place as his Ford teammate Ryan Blaney, whose No. 21 Team Penske crew shares a technical alliance with the Wood Brothers team, took his Mustang to Victory Lane. Blaney’s win gives team owner Roger Penske wins in both of the Memorial Day classics – the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 – in the same year, a first for Penske.

Up next for Burton and the Wood Brothers team is the Enjoy Illinois 300 at World Wide Technology Raceway near St. Louis.
 

‘BURG BRILLIANCE: James McFadden Dominates at Lawrenceburg for Third World of Outlaws Win of 2023

The Roth Motorsports driver moves up to eight career Series wins.LAWRENCEBURG, IN (May 29, 2023) – The last month has been a trying time for James McFadden and the Roth Motorsports team.A penalty issued at the end of April for a failed tire test sent their 2023 World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car season in a tough direction.But the team stayed motivated. The Roth Motorsports organization stuck behind them. Partners maintained support. They went home to California and had a pair of encouraging races near their Fresno based shop before returning to the tour less than two weeks ago. Five races later came a revitalizing trip to Victory Lane with The Greatest Show on Dirt.McFadden dominated Monday’s Federated Auto Parts Memorial Day Spectacular at Lawrenceburg Speedway – leading all 30 laps on his way to a third victory of the season. His son, Mav, joined him atop the wing for an emotional celebration.“We’ve obviously been through a lot as a team,” McFadden said. “I’ve just got to thank everyone for sticking behind us. Obviously, Dennis and Teresa (Roth) and Toyota Racing Development. It’s hard enough doing this up and down the road, and then to have the issues we had was pretty brutal for our team. To be standing here (Victory Lane) at Lawrenceburg is pretty crazy. I never thought I would. It’s a tough joint. I’ve always felt really uncomfortable here. Hats off to Brent (Ventura), Wood (Gary Patellaro), and Rob (Beattie) for getting the car dialed in. We felt really good.” The Alice Springs, NT native is now an eight-time winner with the World of Outlaws. Prior to the night, McFadden’s seven wins had been spread in seven different states. But with a triumph at Kokomo Speedway under his belt (2021), McFadden now owns a pair of victories in the state of Indiana. And of course, another win for McFadden means another for the Toyota Development Engine – upping its total to three with the World of Outlaws.“I’m extremely happy,” McFadden said. “Thank you, Dennis and Teresa, for this opportunity. It means a lot for me to be out here and be able to race against the best in the world. Thanks to all the fans for coming out. I hope you enjoyed the race. From my point of view, it was badass.”At the drop of the green flag, McFadden immediately pulled ahead from his pole starting position after topping the Toyota Racing Dash.The driver of the Roth #83 survived a handful of early cautions and the ensuing restarts by staying at the top of his game each time the green flag flew. Behind him was a hornet’s nest of haymakers for positioning within the top-five. A collection of the sport’s best in Carson Macedo, Gio Scelzi, Rico Abreu, and Buddy Kofoid continued trading spots. Eventually, Macedo established control of runner-up.As McFadden navigated slower traffic, he was able to move his machine anywhere necessary and maintain grip to move by cars – proof of their recent progress.“We’ve been struggling to get everything to the ground and stop wheel spinning” McFadden said. “The last few nights we really gained a lot on our car. I think tonight was a testament to that.”McFadden’s biggest challenge came slightly beyond the halfway point when Macedo found enough momentum to take a swing at the lead. Macedo threw a slider, but McFadden maintained momentum around the top to stay ahead and never looked back. The 34-year-old went on to cross under the checkered flag with a 1.355 second advantage.“You always know Carson is going to be there,” McFadden said of the second half of the race. “It’s his sort of racetrack. You have to get up and get your elbows up. You race with these guys every weekend, and you know you’ve got to go. So, we did that. I felt like we got through lapped traffic really, really well.“You always know someone’s coming. You know Carson is going to throw a bomb or two, and that’s why we do it. It’s badass fun. We all have a lot of respect for each other. I’m just pumped to be standing here. It’s been a rough month.”Macedo crossed the finish line after McFadden to notch his sixth consecutive top five finish and fifth podium over that stretch. He and the Jason Johnson Racing team have rediscovered some of their early season consistency, and Monday’s runner-up put them in a tie for the points lead with Brad Sweet – who finished ninth. Macedo’s finish marked his best Lawrenceburg result by far.“He (McFadden) just did a really good job,” Macedo explained. “We got to him in traffic there, and I was pacing him. And I thought if he were to make a mistake, I would have a really good shot at throwing something at him, and he just didn’t really make one. He did a really good job. Hats off to him and the Roth team for getting the win. My guys did an incredible job all night, too. I felt like my car was solid.”Completing the podium was Rico Abreu for his sixth top three effort of the year aboard his #24 machine, which already matches his single season high for podiums in a year with the World of Outlaws. Abreu felt that a red flag slowed his momentum and chance to win but still came away happy with yet another strong performance.“You just had to throw some bombs,” Abreu said of his strategy. “Our car was phenomenally good. I honestly didn’t need that red flag. These guys just kind of came right to me, but that’s just racing. Hats off to (team members) Ricky (Warner), Zack (Middlebrooks), and Brady (Forbrook). A bunch of our friends are here tonight that got to see me race, so it’s cool to get a good finish in front of them.”Rounding out the top five was Gio Scelzi (season best finish) and Buddy Kofoid.Sheldon Haudenschild claimed the night’s KSE Racing Hard Charger Award with a 19th to sixth effort in the Feature.Carson Macedo opened the night by collecting his second consecutive Simpson Performance Products QuickTime and his Series-best seventh of the season. The Lemoore, CA native is up to 26 career Simpson QuickTimes. CASE No.1 Engine Oil Heat One was topped by Donny Schatz (511th Heat win of career). Buddy Kofoid claimed NOS Energy Drink Heat Two (ninth of career), and Rico Abreu earned the win in NOS Energy Drink Heat Three (38th of career).UP NEXT: The World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars are northbound for the first time in 2023 with a trip to River Cities Speedway (Grand Forks, ND) on Friday, June 2 before the Series debut at Ogilvie Raceway (Ogilvie, MN) on Saturday, June 3. For tickets, CLICK HERE.If you can’t make it to the track, catch all of the action on DIRTVisionRESULTS:NOS Energy Drink Feature (30 Laps): 1. 83-James McFadden[1]; 2. 41-Carson Macedo[2]; 3. 24-Rico Abreu[5]; 4. 18-Giovanni Scelzi[4]; 5. 71-Michael Kofoid[3]; 6. 17-Sheldon Haudenschild[19]; 7. 9P-Parker Price Miller[10]; 8. 2-David Gravel[11]; 9. 49-Brad Sweet[8]; 10. 15-Donny Schatz[6]; 11. 3Z-Brock Zearfoss[12]; 12. 1S-Logan Schuchart[9]; 13. 19AZ-Mitchel Moles[16]; 14. A79-Brandon Wimmer[14]; 15. 20G-Noah Gass[20]; 16. 1A-Jacob Allen[15]; 17. 101-Cody Maroske[23]; 18. 7S-Robbie Price[18]; 19. 99-Skylar Gee[17]; 20. 78-Justin Clark[24]; 21. 5-Spencer Bayston[13]; 22. 11K-Kraig Kinser[22]; 23. 29-Cole Macedo[7]; 24. 6-Bill Rose[21]; 25. 4X-Bradley Ashford[25]

William Byron Leads Chevrolet with Runner-Up Finish in Coca-Cola 600

NASCAR CUP SERIES CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY COCA-COLA 600 TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE REPORT MAY 29, 2023


 Team Chevy Drivers Take Four Top-10 Finishes 
TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL TOP-10 RESULTS:POS.   DRIVER2nd     William Byron, No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL16th      Kyle Busch, No. 8 Alsco Uniforms Camaro ZL17th      Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Kroger / Coca-Cola Camaro ZL19th      Austin Dillon, No. 3 Bass Pro Shops Camaro ZL1  TOP-FIVE UNOFFICIAL RESULTS: POS.  DRIVER1st      Ryan Blaney (Ford)2nd     William Byron (Chevrolet)3rd      Martin Truex Jr. (Toyota)4th      Bubba Wallace (Toyota)5th     Tyler Reddick (Toyota)  The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season continues at World Wide Technology Raceway with the Enjoy Illinois 300 presented by TicketSmarter on Sunday, June 4, at 3:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES: AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 BASS PRO SHOPS CAMARO ZL1 Finished: 9th “We never gave up all night, and it feels like we passed more cars than anyone else all race long in our Bass Pro Shops/TRACKER Off Road Chevrolet. It was a hard-earned top-10 finish. We started this year’s Coca-Cola 600 deep in the field – 33rd – after practice and qualifying were canceled due to weather, but I knew that we would have a chance to be in contention at the end because this is the longest race of the year and there are plenty of laps to work our way forward. It was challenging, though. Pit road was tight for us today, and it felt like every time we gained positions we would pit and get trapped in our box and lose everything we worked so hard for. We never gave up and to finish in the top-10 is a testament to the tenacity that this No. 3 team has. We were just too tight at the end to advance any further, but I think we showed how hard we are willing to work. Today is about our heroes who served and made the ultimate sacrifice. I’m thankful that I can do what I love, which is race, because of them. Thank you to the families of Navy SEAL Mark Crampton and Army soldier Rusten Smith for allowing us to recognize them on our Bass Pro Shops/TRACKER Off Road Chevy today as part of NASCAR’s 600 Miles of Remembrance program.”

KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 ALSCO UNIFORMS CAMARO ZL1Finished: 6th “Coca-Cola 600’s are normally up-and-down, so we definitely had an up-and-down day. But the guys fought hard all race long and made some good repairs. We made a lot of good adjustments. There were a couple that we had to go back on, and then go back on again. But all-in-all, just proud of everyone on the No. 8 Alsco Chevy team. Our car wasn’t as fast as we wanted on the fire-off’s there – we wanted the long run to finish. Even though we hadn’t been good on the long runs all night, we adjusted for that, but we just didn’t get it. We’ll take a good solid effort and top-10 finish.”

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA PATRIOTIC CAMARO ZL1 Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident on lap 185. Finished: 34th “The No. 11 (Denny Hamlin) ran us up into the fence there. Once you tear the right-side off these things, it’s kind of over. I hate it – I thought our No. 9 NAPA Chevy was getting better. It was nice to be making some gains there throughout the race. Our pit stops were really good. We had some pretty good fortune to get up towards the front there. It was just trying to get to mile 600 and have a shot, so unfortunately failed to do that again.”
Denny (Hamlin) said there was some retaliation there. Was there any retaliation on your part? “No, like I said, once you hit the wall in these things, you can’t drive them anymore. So no, just unfortunate circumstances.”

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1Finished: 2ndByron on what else he needed for the win: “I think we just needed a little bit more. Our No. 24 Liberty University Chevy was good. We could move around and get through the field. We could get to the top-five, and then we would just kind of stay there and not have enough pace to really get further than that. That’s the way it goes sometimes, for sure. We’ll keep working.”
It looked like you kept up with the track changes from the day to the evening. “Yeah, it was easier with the fact that it was cloudy and cool out when the race started, and it stayed that way for three-quarters of the race. It wasn’t as much change as it normally is here. Honestly I think everyone’s dialed their cars in so much that I don’t know how much change there would be even if it was really hot out.”
How satisfying is it that you guys were good enough to win the Coca-Cola 600?“Yeah, we have some work to do. I felt like our balance was as close as its probably ever been in some ways. But we would just get out-paced for 20 or 25 laps. So I think we need a little bit more speed, but overall, it was a good day. Our balance was close every time – good on both sides of it, so that was good.”
Talk about the battle with (Ryan) Blaney. Every restart, it was the two of you battling back and forth. “Yeah, it was fun. I enjoyed it. I have trust in how he (Ryan Blaney) races. He caught me off guard with the last restart. He restarted first and I thought about it – I tried it in the simulator actually, but I never did it throughout the night. I was getting good pushes from the No. 5 (Kyle Larson). When we got wrecked or whatever happened there, I had lost my help. Anytime you have the same engine, you can kind of match your push-up pretty good. So yeah, he caught me off guard there that last restart. But like I said, I think he was just that good and cleared me anyways.”

JUSTIN HALEY, NO. 31 LEAFFILTER GUTTER PROTECTION CAMARO ZL1 Finished: 15th “We fired off tight today, but the No. 31 team made some great adjustments and had good pit stops. We made it as high as eighth and thought we would get a top 10 there but just got shuffled at the end. A top 15 is not a bad day, but our car was by far the best car we’ve had all year. We made some major gains today as a team.”

NOAH GRAGSON, NO. 42 BLACK RIFLE COFFEE COMPANY CAMARO ZL1 Sidelined by a mechanical failure. Finished: 36th “Bummer day for the No. 42 Black Rifle Coffee Company Chevy team. We made it through the first stage clean. Something went through the radiator. We replaced the radiator and the motor blew up. Just frustrating. 
Thank you to Black Rifle Coffee Company and the Menusa family for coming out here. Wish we could have had a better run for them, but it was an honor to have Sgt. Menusa on the windshield. It makes this weekend all worth it. Wish we could have given him and his family a better run, but we’ll try again at Gateway.” 

ERIK JONES, NO. 43 U.S. AIR FORCE CAMARO ZL1Finished: 32nd“We had a fast No. 43 U.S. Air Force Chevy, but nothing to really show for it. Appreciate the U.S. Air Force and their support. Just hate that we had the radiator issue, but hopefully we’ll go to Gateway with the same speed and have a good day.”

RICKY STENHOUSE JR., NO. 47 KROGER / COCA-COLA CAMARO ZL1Finished: 7th How are you feeling after 600 miles? “I feel great. I got up and did the “Murph” workout this morning. My trainer wasn’t too thrilled about that, but went ahead and did that, and then came out here and ran 600 miles. Our No. 47 Kroger / Coca-Cola Chevy was so good all night. We just fought some track position every now and then, and then the No. 8 (Kyle Busch) fenced us there. I felt like we would have had a top-five if it wasn’t for that. But all-in-all, it was a great Coca-Cola 600 for us. It was what we needed after last week at the All-Star Race.. we kind of got beat up there a little bit. But it’s cool to get another top-10. This team is doing a lot of good things.”
It was a wild weekend, obviously dealing with weather and no track time. As a driver with no preparation and going into 600-miles, was it easy or were you a little worried about it?“Well it’s the same for everybody, so we weren’t too concerned about it. But I think all-in-all, you’re a little cautious the first few laps. I definitely was. We were a little looser than I thought we were going to be, so that kind of caught me off guard. But my guys did a really good job on pit road making adjustments and making the car better all night. It was a fun one.”

ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1Finished: 12thFirst and most importantly, how is your back? “It doesn’t feel very good at the moment, but about what I was expecting. There was no pain in the car really, but now that I’m out, I feel it a little bit. 
Just proud of my No. 48 Ally Chevy team. We had a really fast long run car. Obviously the short runs was what we needed, but we were just too tight for that. We got stuck on pit road – every stop, we came in like 10th, but lost spots coming out. But that wasn’t on my guys, it was just pit stall selection. We’ll move onto Gateway. Hopefully we’ll get to qualify there, have a good pit box and just go have a normal day.”

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 84 CLUB WYNDHAM CAMARO ZL1 Sidelined by damage sustained in an accident. Finished: 37th “I just didn’t know we were put in that three-wide situation. There were a bunch of us cars that were wrecked and just trying to limp it home. Unfortunately I ended up in a situation I wasn’t aware of and got turned around. It’s a bummer for the No. 84 Club Wyndham Chevy team.”  
TEAM CHEVY RACE HIGHLIGHTS: Stage One·       After a battle with weather throughout the weekend, the NASCAR Cup Series finally hit the track for the first time Monday afternoon to take the green for the 64th running of the Coca-Cola 600. ·       A scheduled competition caution flew on lap 35 with pit road opening for the first round of pit stops of the day. Polesitter William Byron was running in the fourth position at the time of the caution, and with the No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1 pit crew firing off a fast four-tire stop, Byron won the race off pit road – gaining four positions to take a front-row starting position for the restart. ·       The green-white checkered flag flew on lap 100 with Byron leading the field to the Stage One finish – his series-leading seventh stage win of the season and his first career stage win at Charlotte Motor Speedway. ·       Team Chevy Stage One: Top-101st      William Byron, No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL17th      Kyle Busch, No. 8 Alsco Uniforms Camaro ZL19th      Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL110th     Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Kroger / Coca-Cola Camaro ZL1

Stage Two·       After driving to an 11th-place finish in Stage One, Erik Jones was forced to take his No. 43 U.S. Air Force Camaro ZL1 to the garage to replace the radiator due to damage caused after hitting debris. ·       After hitting the halfway point in Stage Two – precipitation began to fall, ultimately forcing the race to go under red flag conditions at lap 155. ·       The race took the green flag following a brief weather delay, but was quickly brought back under caution on lap 163 following an incident involving the Jimmie Johnson and the No. 84 Club Wyndham Camaro ZL1 team. Damage sustained was deemed too much to repair, forcing the team’s early departure from the race. ·       A handful of caution periods followed with an accident involving Team Chevy’s Kyle Busch and Daniel Suarez bringing out the sixth caution of the race on lap 175. Both Camaro ZL1’s obtained minimal damage and were able to make quick repairs to return to competition. ·       Stage Two ended under a caution flag, bringing the race to the halfway point. Two Team Chevy drivers scored stage points, led by polesitter William Byron and the No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1 team in the eighth position. ·       Team Chevy Stage Two: Top-108th      William Byron, No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL19th      Ross Chastain, No. 1 Advent Health Camaro ZL1

Stage Three·       At the conclusion of Stage Three – the 300 lap marker – the race had seen 24 lead changes among 11 different drivers. ·       For the third consecutive stage, William Byron led Team Chevy to the green-white checkered at the stage end – driving his No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1 to fourth-place stage points. ·       Team Chevy Stage Three: Top-104th      William Byron, No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL16th      Kyle Larson, No. 5 HendrickCars.com Camaro ZL17th      Kyle Busch, No. 8 Alsco Uniforms Camaro ZL19th      Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Kroger / Coca-Cola Camaro ZL110th     Alex Bowman, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1

Stage Four / Post-Race Notes·       William Byron led Team Chevy to the finish in the NASCAR Cup Series’ Coca-Cola 600 – driving his No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1 to a runner-up finish in the crown jewel event. ·       Byron’s runner-up finish marked his third career top-10 finish in seven NASCAR Cup Series starts at Charlotte Motor Speedway; and his eighth top-10 NCS finish of the 2023 season. ·       The No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1 pit crew showcased a stellar performance on pit road throughout the 600-mile race – giving Byron the win off pit road on seven different occasions, gaining a total of 18 spots by the conclusion of the race. ·       Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain maintained the NASCAR Cup Series’ driver points standings lead with a one-point advantage over the Coca-Cola 600 winner Ryan Blaney. ·       In 14 points-paying NASCAR Cup Series race this season, Chevrolet continues to lead the series in wins (eight), top-fives (31), top-10s (59), stage wins (11) and laps led (1,845). 

WHAT TO WATCH FOR: Midgets Take on Tri-City, Wayne County Before Summer Break

NASCAR stars Briscoe, Stenhouse expected to compete, Shelton makes Xtreme debut

PONTOON BEACH, IL (May 29, 2023) – The Xtreme Outlaw Midget Series presented by Toyota heads back to Illinois for a three-race weekend this Thursday-Saturday, June 1-3, at two tracks the tour has yet to hold competition.

Tri-City Speedway in Pontoon Beach, IL, kicks things off on Thursday, June 1 with the first of three 30-lap, $4,000-to-win Features for the weekend. The following two will be held at Wayne County Speedway in Wayne City, IL, Friday-Saturday, June 2-3.

The three-day stretch is the last batch of Xtreme Outlaw races before a multi-week summer break which ends with the next Series event on the calendar at Doe Run Raceway on Friday, July 21. Coupled with a visit to Southern Illinois Raceway the following evening, the weekend kicks off a stretch of four consecutive race weekends – culminating with a five-races-in-five-days, Speedweek-style event at five different tracks in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Aug. 8-12.

Tickets for this weekend’s races will be on sale at the gate on race day. If you can’t make it to the tracks to watch in person, stream all the action live on DIRTVision.

Here are the drivers to watch and storylines to follow this weekend:

GATEWAY TO THE DIRT – With the NASCAR events taking place in St. Louis this weekend, Cup Series regulars Chase Briscoe and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will be taking advantage of the nearby Xtreme Outlaw races and competing on the dirt.

Briscoe was scheduled to compete with the Series last week at Millbridge Speedway but suffered terminal mechanical failure in the opening Hot Laps session, ending his week early. He’ll now pilot a Mahindra Tractors, Spike Chassis #5 for Paul May Motorsports Friday and Saturday night at Wayne County.

Stenhouse is set to make his Series debut, piloting a third entry for Dave Mac-Dalby Motorsports. The 2023 Daytona 500 winner took a Midget on track for the team during USAC’s marquee BC39 event in Indianapolis last year and has linked back up with them to take on Tri-City Thursday and Wayne County on Saturday.

GUESS WHO’S BACK – News of Holly Shelton’s long-awaited return to the seat of a dirt Midget broke several weeks ago, and now the time has come to get on track.

Shelton, the 27-year-old open-wheel racer from Gold River, CA, put her driving career on hold at the end of the 2018 season after three years driving for Keith Kunz Motorsports. She got the itch to compete again over the winter and has since paired with her close friends at Bundy Built Motorsports to get a car prepared for her Xtreme Outlaw debut Thursday at Tri-City.

Read More – Holly Shelton Returns to Midget Racing with Xtreme Outlaws June 1 at Tri-City

She’ll pilot a Spike Chassis with Bundy Built power in the event – a car which she tested last Thursday at Millbridge Speedway. She said it’s taken some adjustments to get used to her new power plant, compared to the Toyota Racing engine she’d driven with KKM, but is ready for the new challenge on a fast racetrack that she prefers over the smaller, more technical tracks.

GOING STREAKING – A dominant sweep of the Double Down Showdown at Millbridge last week boosted Cannon McIntosh’s lead in the Series points standings up to 89. He’s now finished either first or second in each of the last five Series races.

Next, he tackles the 1/3-mile and 1/5-mile ovals of Tri-City and Wayne County – both of which he’s done well racing in the past. In his last three starts at Tri-City, McIntosh hasn’t finished worse than seventh, and had a best finish of third there at the 2020 Gold Crown Midget Nationals. At Wayne County, he has two career top-10s with a best finish of fourth in the 2020 Jason Leffler Memorial.

He’ll play teammate to Stenhouse this weekend as part of the Dave Mac stable, now emerging as the most competitive Midget teams in the nation.

HEADING HOME – It’s been a great stretch of races since the season opener for Chase McDermand. With podium finishes in each of the last four Series races, he’s riding a great wave of momentum as the Series heads back into his home state this weekend.

McDermand, 22, of Springfield, IL, has surged from lower than 20th in the points standings after the first race in March all the way up to second, now 89 points behind leader McIntosh with 3/4 of the season remaining. He did lose some ground in the standings to McIntosh after the two races at Millbridge, but back-to-back third-place finishes kept the championship goal within reach.

Historically, McDermand has not seen much of either track on tap for this weekend, but did finish eighth at Wayne County and 15th at Tri-City a year ago.

BACK FOR MORE – Gavan Boschele made his first starts of the season with the Series last week at Millbridge, posting finishes of sixth and fourth at the controls of the Keith Kunz Motorsports, Bullet/Toyota #5G.

Boschele, 15, of Mooresville, NC, is slated to race all three nights this weekend, making his debut at both facilities. He’ll have several of his KKM teammates beside him including Jade Avedisian, Gavin Miller, Taylor Reimer, Ryan Timms and Cooper Williams.

THIS WEEKEND AT A GLANCE


When and where
Thursday, June 1 at Tri-City Speedway in Pontoon Beach, IL
Friday-Saturday, June 2-3 at Wayne County Speedway in Wayne City, IL


On the internet
Xtreme Outlaw Midget Series presented by Toyota
Twitter – @Xtreme_Outlaw
Instagram – @XtremeOutlaw
Facebook – @XtremeOutlawSeries.WRG


Live broadcast
DIRTVision – DIRTVision.com. Platinum annual FAST PASS for $299 or monthly FAST PASS for $39/month.


Current championship points standings (view full standings)
1. Cannon McIntosh (1520pts); 2. Chase McDermand 1431pts (-89); 3. Jade Avedisian 1422pts (-98); 4. Gavin Miller 1414pts (-106); 5. Chance Crum 1314pts (-206); 6. Kyle Jones 1288pts (-232); 7. Taylor Reimer 1279pts (-241); 8. Ethan Mitchell 1248pts (-272); 9. Zach Daum 1224pts (-278); 10. Landon Brooks 1220pts (-3000).


Toyota Feature winners (3 drivers)
4 wins – Cannon McIntosh (Dave Mac-Dalby Motorsports)
2 wins – Chase McDermand (Mounce/Stout Motorsports)
1 win – Jade Avedisian (Keith Kunz Motorsports)


Toyota Feature laps led (10 drivers)
69 laps – Cannon McIntosh
26 laps – Thomas Meseraull
24 laps – Jade Avedisian, Chase McDermand
22 laps – Shane Cottle
21 laps – Ashton Torgerson
18 laps – Zach Daum
15 laps – Gavin Miller
2 laps – Ryan Timms
1 lap – Nick Drake


Whitz RC Racing Products Quick Time Awards (5 drivers)
2 awards – Ethan Mitchell, Cannon McIntosh
1 award – Gavin Miller, Daniel Whitley, Hayden Reinbold


Heat Race winners (16 drivers)
3 wins – Jade Avedisian
2 wins – Chance Crum, Nick Drake, Cannon McIntosh, Chase McDermand, Ethan Mitchell
1 win – Austin Barnhill, Shane Cottle, Gavin Miller, Thomas Meseraull, Corbin Rueschenberg, Kyle Jones, Rico Abreu, Zach Daum, Hayden Reinbold, Briggs Danner


High-points honors (7 drivers)
1 honor – Gavin Miller, Chance Crum, Rico Abreu, Daniel Whitley, Landon Brooks, Briggs Danner, Hayden Reinbold


Last Chance Showdown wins (8 drivers)
2 wins – Kyle Jones
1 win – Landon Brooks, Karter Sarff, Howard Moore, Ryan Timms, Taylor Reimer, Henry Chambers, Chance Crum


DIRTVision Hard Charger Awards (7 drivers)
1 award – Mitchel Moles, Chase Johnson, Ryan Timms, Chance Crum, Zach Daum, Gavan Boschele, Taylor Reimer


Podium finishes (11 drivers)
6 podiums – Cannon McIntosh
5 podiums – Chase McDermand
2 podiums – Gavin Miller
1 podium – Shane Cottle, Thomas Meseraull, Jade Avedisian, Kyle Jones, Zach Daum, Ryan Timms, Ashton Torgerson, Taylor Reimer


Top-10 finishes (28 drivers)
6 top-10s – Cannon McIntosh, Jade Avedisian, Chase McDermand, Gavin Miller
4 top-10s – Zach Daum, Kyle Jones, Chance Crum, Ethan Mitchell
3 top-10s – Landon Brooks, Thomas Meseraull, Taylor Reimer, Ryan Timms
2 top-10s – Corbin Rueschenberg, Briggs Danner, Gavan Boschele
1 top-10 – Shane Cottle, Mitchel Moles, Chase Johnson, Austin Barnhill, Daniel Adler, Sam Johnson, Rico Abreu, Ashton Torgerson, Daniel Whitley, Don Droud Jr., Mariah Ede, Nick Drake


2023 Schedule & Winners – Race No. Day, Date / Track / Location / Winner (Total Wins)
1. Fri, March 10 / Southern Illinois Center / Du Quoin, IL / Cannon McIntosh (1)
2. Sat, March 11 / Southern Illinois Center / Du Quoin, IL / Jade Avedisian (1)
3. Fri, April 14 / Federated Auto Parts Raceway at I-55 / Pevely, MO / Cannon McIntosh (2)
4. Fri, May 5 / Humboldt Speedway / Humboldt, KS / Chase McDermand (1)
5. Sat, May 6 / 81 Speedway / Park City, KS / Chase McDermand (2)
6. Tue, May 22 / Millbridge Speedway / Salisbury, NC / Cannon McIntosh (3)
7. Wed, May 23 / Millbridge Speedway / Salisbury, NC / Cannon McIntosh (4)

THE NARC 410 SPRINT CAR SERIES HEAD TO PLACERVILLE FOR DAVE BRADWAY JR. MEMORIAL RACE ON SATURDAY


(5/30/23) Placerville, CA … Action and tradition will meet each other on Saturday, June 3rd, when the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series returns to Placerville Speedway. A $5,000 payday will go to the driver who can slay the field of the 32nd Annual Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial. This will be the only time you will see the fire-breathing mudslinging monsters of the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series at “Little Knoxville On The Hill” in 2023.

The popular event features a lucrative payday and pays tribute to an incredible driver, Dave Bradway Jr., who tragically passed away in a racing accident in June of 1987 at Skagit Speedway. The event was initially held at Silver Dollar Speedway from its inception in 1991 until it was relocated to Placerville in 2021. 

Several additional prizes are up for grabs, including $5,200 in additional lap money, $1,100 for a quick time, $650 for the hard charger, and much more.  

“I’m excited to get back to Placerville,” commented driver Corey Day of Clovis, the defending race winner. “It’s such a cool place and it’s really good for racing. There is no place like it, so to be good there and win there is cool too. I was pumped to win (the Bradway) last year, and it’d be great to win it in the (Jason Meyers Racing) #14 this year.” 

All of the top cars and stars of the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series will be in attendance, as well as several Placerville Speedway regulars.  The facility is an action-filled quarter-mile clay oval with high banks that will take your breath away every single lap.  

The Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial weekend kicks off with the Sprint Car Challenge Tour 360 sprint cars on Friday night. The NorCal Dwarf Cars will be the companion division both nights.

Championship Chase

An electric points battle is raging for the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series points championship. Day continues to reign atop the standings, holding a slim eight-point margin over two-time defending series champion Dominic Scelzi of Fresno. With a large slate of events on the June docket, it will undoubtedly play a significant factor in determining who will be crowned the King of the West in November. Day is chasing his first-ever NARC title.

Both pilots have three wins to their credit this season, and both have yet to finish outside of the Top 10. However, Scelzi has been scorching hot lately, as he has visited victory lane the last two times that the tour has run and three out of the last four. He was fifth at this event last year and won it in 2021. 

Who to Watch

Justin Sanders, who has five top-five finishes to his credit this season. is still looking for that first win of 2023 with the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series.  The Aromas racer always runs well at Placerville, with two 360 Sprint Car wins at Placerville this season. Sanders is the 2019 winner of this event, the last time it was held in Chico.

Shane Golobic has won several crown jewel events in California, but the Fremont native has yet to win the coveted Bradway trophy. Last year Golobic was third when the checkered flag dropped and is looking for his first NARC win this season.

Besides Day and Scelzi, Roseville’s Justyn Cox is the only other feature winner on the NARC tour this season.  He is currently fourth in the points standings after claiming the lucrative Dennis Roth Classic in April and posting six top ten finishes.

Campbell veteran Bud Kaeding wants to build off his incredible second-place effort at Petaluma in the most recent NARC race.  Kaeding was the 2015 winner of this event, and there is no doubt that the iconic BK Racing team is hungry for another Bradway trophy to add to the case. 

Andy Forsberg is the defending track champion at Placerville Speedway. Despite all his Placerville success, like Golobic, Forsberg has yet to win the Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial. However, the Auburn veteran is coming off his best run of the current campaign with the tour, as he posted a fifth-place finish at Petaluma on May 20th.

No doubt, another favorite that the Placerville crowd will be roaring for is Michael Faccinto. The Hanford driver drives the #X1 entry owned by Alan Bradway and Steve Tuccelli. Faccinto has had some strong runs in the 360 Sprints with the local Placerville scene and will look to apply that experience on Saturday night.

Despite a limited schedule, Willie Croft is a driver you don’t want to discount. Now residing in Colfax, Croft collected a Bradway win in 2018 and boasted an impressive fourth-place performance at Petaluma a couple of weeks ago despite being out of the race car for nearly two months.  He has earned the Mike Avilla fast time award at the event for five-years running.

Also running will be Penngrove’s Chase Johnson, Billy Aton of Benicia, Tucson native Nick Parker, Oakley teenager Dylan Bloomfield, Joey Ancona of Concord, Roseville driver’s Colby Copeland,  Ryan Bernal and Sean Becker, Kaleb Montgomery from Templeton, and many more!

PAST RACE HISTORY:  Jonathan Allard has accumulated the most Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial wins in the race’s storied existence. The Chico chauffeur, now living in New Zealand, has won the Bradway five times over the years, with the most recent achievement in 2012.

Fan & Competitor Info

Placerville Speedway is located at the El Dorado Fairgrounds at 100 Placerville Drive in Placerville, California. Front Gates open at 3:00 PM with cars on the track around 5:15 with Hot Laps and ARP Qualifying to follow. Tickets are $28.00 for Adults, Junior/Senior/Military $25.00, Kids (6-11) $10.00, and 5 & Under are FREE. For more information, log on to www.placervillespeedway.com

The NARC 410 Sprint Series 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 Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial can be viewed live on Floracing.com, along with every NARC 410 Sprint Car Series race. 

The NARC 410 Sprint Car Racing Series is also sponsored by Hoosier Racing Tires, Floracing.com, and NAPA Auto Parts. Associate and product award sponsors include Automotive Racing Products (ARP), Beacon Wealth Strategies-Raymond James Financial, Brown & Miller Racing Solutions, Bullet Impressions, D & D Roofing, Diversified Machine Inc., Johnstone Supply, Kaeding Performance Center, Kimo’s Tropical Car Wash, KSE Racing Enterprises, Lifeline LLC, Maxim Racing Products, Mettec Titanium, Pyrotect, Safecraft Safety Equipment, Saldana Racing Products, Schoenfeld Headers, Scelzi Enterprises, SCI Racing Products, Starr Property Management, Sunnyvalley Bacon, System 1 Ignition, Ultra Lite Brakes, Williams Roofing, Wilwood Disc Brakes, and Winters Performance Products.

NARC 410 SPRINT CAR SERIES 
CHAMPIONSHIP POINT STANDINGS
(AFTER SEVEN EVENTS IN 21-RACE SERIES – 5/29/23)

  1. Corey Day, Clovis – 976
  2. Dominic Scelzi, Fresno – 969
  3. Justin Sanders, Aromas – 950
  4. Justyn Cox, Roseville – 933
  5. Chase Johnson, Penngrove – 926
  6. Bud Kaeding, Campbell – 924
  7. Dylan Bloomfield, Oakley – 892
  8. Nick Parker, Tucson, AZ (R) – 858
  9. Billy Aton, Benicia – 829
  10. Shane Golobic, Fremont – 800
  11. Joey Ancona, Concord (R) – 773
  12. Kaleb Montgomery, Templeton (R) – 741
  13. Ryan Bernal, Roseville – 656
  14. Tanner Holmes, Central Point, OR – 641
  15. DJ Netto, Hanford – 499
  16. Colby Copeland, Roseville – 630
  17. Craig Stidham, Fresno – 607
  18. Cole Macedo, Hanford – 513
  19. Joel Myers Jr., Sebastopol – 511
  20. Dawson Faria, Tipton – 493

Former Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial Winners
2022- Corey Day
2021- Dominic Scelzi
2019- Justin Sanders
2018- Willie Croft
2017- Rico Abreu
2016- Kyle Hirst
2015- Bud Kaeding
2014- Rico Abreu
2013- Rico Abreu
2012- Jonathan Allard
2011- Peter Murphy
2010- Shane Stewart
2009- Jonathan Allard
2008- Tim Kaeding
2007- Brent Kaeding
2006- Sean Becker
2005- Jonathan Allard
2004- Jason Statler
2003- Jonathan Allard
2002- Tim Kaeding
2001- Jonathan Allard
2000- Brent Kaeding
1999- Brent Kaeding
1998- Randy Tiner
1997- Jimmy Sills
1996- Paul McMahan
1995- Brent Kaeding
1994- Randy Tiner
1993- Eric Rossi
1992- Greg DeCaires
1991- Jason McMillen

UPCOMING EVENTS:
Fastest Four Days in Motorsports
June 15 – Southern Oregon Speedway (Central Point, OR) – Thursday Night Thunder
June 16 – Douglas County Dirt Track (Roseburg, OR) – Friday Night Frenzy
June 17 – Willamette Speedway (Lebanon, OR) – Sprint Car Invasion
June 18 – Grays Harbor Raceway (Elma, WA) – Timber Cup

June 22-24th – Skagit Speedway (Burlington, WA) – $62,000 to win Super Dirt Cup

<32nd Annual Dave Bradway Jr Memorial Race - 052823.pdf>

Dominic Scelzi Set for Placerville Speedway Doubleheader This Weekend

Inside Line Promotions – FRESNO, Calif. (May 29, 2023) – Dominic Scelzi returns to action this weekend with a doubleheader at Placerville Speedway during the 32 nd annual Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial.

Scelzi invades the bullring in Placerville, Calif., on Friday with the Sprint Car Challenge Tour and on Saturday with the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series.

“I feel like I put Placerville and Petaluma, where we just raced, on the same page,” he said. “I haven’t had a bunch of success overall, but have gotten better in recent years. Placerville has been really, really tough for me historically, but in the last three or four races I’ve been in the top five and we’ve led laps.”

Scelzi’s lone victory at the track came during the Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial in June 2021. He’s also finished inside the top six in all five of his races there during the last two years.

“We’ve had good runs,” he said. “I just want to go in there and be as good as my race car has been.”

Scelzi enters Saturday’s NARC 410 Sprint Car Series show ranked second in the championship standings – only seven points behind the leader. Statistically, Scelzi has led in five races this season for a series-best 78 laps. He’s closed out three with victories – tied for the most in the series.

Scelzi has won two straight series races and three of the last four.

SEASON STATS –

13 races, 4 wins, 10 top fives, 11 top 10s, 11 top 15s, 13 top 20s

UP NEXT –

Friday and Saturday at Placerville Speedway in Placerville, Calif., for the 32 nd annual Dave Bradway Jr. Memorial with the NARC 410 Sprint Car Series and Sprint Car Challenge Tour

Emotional Indianapolis 500 Race Day for Cusick Motorsports


(Indianapolis, IN) May 29, 2023 – It was an emotional day for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing and Cusick Motorsports on Sunday for the 107thRunning of the Indianapolis 500 that saw a huge crowd at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
The Sunday morning garage visit by the injured Stefan Wilson, who received back surgery Wednesday after a Monday practice crash at IMS, had the entire two-car organization in high emotions as Wilson greeted his racing team members as well as drivers Ryan Hunter-Reay and Graham Rahal, who filled in for Wilson in the No. 24 DRR/Cusick Motorsports/CareKeepers Chevrolet in the Indy 500. 
High hopes for the squad went throughout the garage in the morning engine warm-up, but, unfortunately, the emotions dropped before the race when Rahal’s engine failed to start due to a faulty battery. When the engine was started, Graham was two laps behind the 32 other drivers, but fought his way back to finish 22nd in the 200-lap race.

“First, I’m very thankful to get the opportunity to race at the 500 and thank you to Dreyer & Reinbold and Cusick Motorsports for allowing me to be here and be a part of the 500 with them,” said Rahal. “Obviously, a tough start to the day. We never really got going. We actually had a decent day from there on moving forward up until the very end as I filled in for Stef. We just didn’t get to see it through after the battery issue. Again, I’m thankful and lucky to have been here, but I’m certainly already eager to come back next year and have a shot at winning this race. It was great to spend time with Stef before the race.”
After fracturing his 12th thoracic vertebrae in a crash on Monday and going through surgery on Wednesday, Stefan Wilson made a surprise visit to the track on Sunday morning that had media, fans and team members in awe. The 33-year old British racer was due to make his fifth start at the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday, but is now driven to come back for the 108th Running of the Greatest Spectacle in Racing.
 
“The finish of the 2023 Indianapolis 500 was disappointing, but there are a lot of positives to take away from this year,” said Stefan Wilson. “I think the performance that we showed in the No. 24 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Cusick Motorsports CareKeepers Chevy for most of the month was really encouraging. There are a lot of positives that I take away from my side as well on the driving front. I am looking forward to getting through this recovery process and focusing on next year and the 2024 Indy 500. The goal for me is to get back to being fully fit and making a return next year. Obviously, it was disappointing to not be out there on race day representing all the partners that made this year possible. I think Graham did a great job stepping in for me, but I’m already excited about the prospect of returning next year and taking the next step with this incredible team and group of partners we have.”
“This past week has been an emotional rollercoaster unlike anything I’ve ever experienced,” said Don Cusick, Founder & CEO of Cusick Motorsports. “While our primary concern remains on Stefan’s recovery, we are so proud of the effort put in by Dreyer & Reinbold Racing and Graham Rahal to make the most of a very difficult circumstance. The No. 24 CareKeepers car fought back hard after going two laps down at the start, but you just can’t make that up in such a competitive field. But despite the setbacks, we’ve built some fantastic relationships with Dreyer & Reinbold Racing and our partners over the last few weeks. And we will be back.”
 
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing’s No. 23 car driven by Ryan Hunter-Reay went on to finish 11th after starting 18th, with Cusick Motorsports and Stefan Wilson partner Sierra Pacific Windows added as the co-primary partner ahead of the race weekend. 
The 107th Running of the Indianapolis 500 saw the biggest group of partners associated with Cusick Motorsports to date. With a mission to make racing more accessible, build relationships and drive business, Cusick Motorsports is proud to be trusted by CareKeepers, Sierra Pacific Windows, LOHLA SPORT, Fizzy Beez, Liberty Group, Kitchen Mart, the Law Offices of Gerald L. Marcus, CarBlip, 181 Fremont Residences, Romak Iron Works, Agromin, Mosaic Animal CareGroup, The Thermal Club, ProviderScience, High Alpha, Rite-Way Thermal, Menlo Ventures, Westin Homes, Westlake Yoga and Mr. and Mrs. James Lowes. 
 
As the dust settles on the 107th Running of the Indianapolis 500, Cusick Motorsports is fully focused on expanding its endeavors and partnerships for the future.

News from Abel Motorsports

The #50 ABEL Motorsports Chevrolet of RC Enerson gets service from his crew during the 107th Indianapolis 500 Photo Courtesy Lumen Digital Agency: Gavin Baker
First Indy 500 Effort Shows Team, Driver Strengths; Mechanical Woes Cause Early Retirement
(May 28, 2023) SPEEDWAY, In- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
First-year Indy 500 entrants ABEL Motorsports of Louisville, KY and Speedway, IN, and their rookie driver RC Enerson of New Port Richey, FL combined for a strong first few stints in their first appearance in the Memorial Day classic.  Mechanical issues though forced an early exit from today’s 107th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. Enerson was scored 32nd after completing 75 laps of the 200-lap distance. The 26-year-old Enerson qualified the Abel Construction Chevy/Dallara 29th for the race last Saturday, an amazing performance for the Indy newcomers.  Enerson rolled off from 28th spot in today’s 500-miler after a driver change was needed for another team. 
 “It’s still an amazing accomplishment for this team, considering we’ve been an IndyCar team for what, 7 days on track this month” noted the Rookie of the Year contender.  
 “To just be here, qualify for the race on the first day and avoid Bump Day, everything we’ve done here has been nothing short of amazing.   Bill (Abel) and (Team Manager) John Brunner have put together an amazing crew.  We’ve been flawless all month.   We had settled into a nice rhythm by our second stint and we were much better in our third stint before the problem hit.  It’s just a shame for this team and all our partners.   A big thanks to Team Chevy and Firestone and all the partners that came on board with us these last few days.” Team Principal Bill Abel was disappointed with the short day for his team but thrilled with the effort his driver and crew put in to make this year’s Indy 500.
“For us, mission accomplished (just to qualify) We’d have loved to have gone a lot further in the race but for our first time out in IndyCar and the 500, that’s ok. I hate it for RC and the team but sometimes that’s just what happens in this sport.This is the pinnacle of our sport, so just to be here with the car, with the team, to qualify, we exceeded expectations,” said Abel.“We hope to be back, maybe next year, maybe the year after, just the fact that we’ve been here and had as much success as we have, hopefully that paves the way for us to come back.” Team Manager John Brunner was disappointed as well but applauded the effort his squad put together at IMS.  “The guys have all worked so hard on this car.  We just hadn’t had any problems until today.  The car has been flawless.  It’s heartbreaking for these guys, it’s very disappointing, but the car’s in one piece.  We’ll take this and learn from it and see what we can do in the future.” ABEL Motorsports returns to action in the Indy NXT Series by Firestone at the Detroit Grand Prix next weekend.   The team’s two-car effort featuring Jacob Abel in the #51 and Colin Kaminsky driving the team’s #57 entry will compete in a doubleheader weekend June 3 and 4.  

JOSEF NEWGARDEN PREVAILS DURING WILD INDIANAPOLIS 500 TO CAPTURE CHEVROLET’S 12TH IN LONG-STANDING HISTORY

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

107TH RUNNING OF THE INDIANAPOLIS 500

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA

TEAM CHEVY POST RACE REPORT

MAY 28, 2023

NEWGARDEN RACED TO HIS FIRST INDIANAPOLIS 500 VICTORY IN A CHAOTIC-FILLED EVENT EARNING CHEVROLET’S FIFTH SINCE 2012 IN THE 2.2 LITER TWIN TURBO DIRECT INJECTED ERA

  • Josef Newgarden raced to his first Indianapolis 500 victory of his NTT INDYCAR Series career and earned Chevrolet their 12th in event history.
  • Newgarden’s win at Indianapolis marks Chevrolet’s fifth win since 2012 in the V6 2.2 liter twin turbo direct injected era.
  • Newgarden’s win today also marks Chevrolet’s 109th victory in the NTT INDYCAR Series since 2012.
  • Today’s victory also marks Tim Cindric, President at Team Penske’s, ninth Indianapolis 500 win and the 19th for Roger Penske as team owner.
  • Newgarden’s victory was the fourth closest finish in Indianapolis 500 history, separating first from second by 0.0974.
  • Santino Ferrucci, driver of the No. 14 Sexton Properties AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet, earned his first podium in the NTT INDYCAR Series and second top-five finish.
  • Alexander Rossi, driver of the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, earned his third top-five finish of the 2023 season after joining both Arrow McLaren and the Bowtie brand in the offseason.
  • Ryan Hunter-Reay, in the No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold Chevrolet, earned a hard-fought 11th place finish to elevate the team in their lone race of the 2023 season.

INDIANAPOLIS (May 28, 2023) – In what will go down as a race for the history books, Josef Newgarden, driver of the No. 2 Shell Powering Progress Team Penske Chevrolet, raced to his first Indianapolis 500 victory and capturing the Bowtie brand’s 12th in its long-standing history at Indianapolis. Additionally, Newgarden’s win today earned Chevrolet the fifth Indianapolis 500 victory in the V6 2.2-liter twin turbo direct injected era since 2012.

Coming down to a one-lap dash for the checkered flag after a late-race incident on-track that brought out the red flag, it was Newgarden making the jump and taking the lead on the last lap to take the checkered flag.

“I’m so I thankful,” exclaimed Newgarden after today’s victory. “I’ve cried out the emotions. I had it. I had a ton of emotion there for a little bit. I’m just thankful to the team that we finally got this done. You know, I was trying to put it off that you know it’s not going to define a career winning a race here. But everyone seems to want to make it a defining moment, and for me, you know, it’s impossible but I look at it that way and then I’m elated to finally get it to work out. This is way more than me. This is the entire team. They built an amazing car. Tim (Cindric) calling an amazing strategy. [Roger Penske] for sticking with us and having the fate. I can’t speak enough about the team effort because that’s what it takes. I’ve been wanting to win here and go in the crowd for so long. I’ve been waiting to do that–I’ve always wanted to go in the crowd here to Indy. There’s nothing like it. I’m just so thankful to be here to have a shot to run this race. It’s I will never forget this from my from my life.”

“What an exciting pass by Josef Newgarden and an incredible finish to The Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” said Jim Campbell, vice president Performance and Motorsports. We all will be talking about Josef’s last-lap move, sprint to the finish line and post-race celebration for a long time. Josef drove a solid race all afternoon and he put himself in position for that well-timed and memorable move. This is a great win for a popular driver and champion. Congratulations to Josef and the No. 2 Shell Team Penske Chevrolet for his first Indianapolis 500 win, and congratulations to Roger Penske on his 19th.”

Campbell added, “Thanks to all of the hard work by our Chevrolet engineers along with our technical partners at Ilmor on delivering an engine package that delivered the right combination of power, durability and efficiency.”

Team Chevy shifts their sights next to the home of General Motors, with the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix returning to the streets of downtown Detroit Sunday, June 4. With 100 laps, or 170 miles, determining the winner in Motor City, the broadcast airs live Sunday starting at 3 p.m. ET on NBC. Additional coverage is carried by Peacock, or with INDYCAR Radio and SiriusXM Channel 160.

TEAM CHEVY RACE RESULT:

Pos. Driver

1st     Josef Newgarden

3rd     Santino Ferrucci

5th     Alexander Rossi

8th     Conor Daly

10th   Rinus VeeKay

11th    Ryan Hunter-Reay

12th   Callum Ilott

14th   Scott McLaughlin

16th   Tony Kanaan

20th   Ed Carpenter

21st   Benjamin Pedersen

22nd  Graham Rahal

23rd   Will Power

24th   Pato O’Ward

26th   Agustin Canapino

27th   Felix Rosenqvist

32nd  RC Enerson

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING (QUOTES)

Conor Daly, No. 20 Chevrolet at Ed Carpenter Racing:

“We had a great car all month and we were so competitive. There were a few things that held us back. Our car was competitive – we kept moving up even if something happened. I loved feeling like we had a shot at it, but difficult to attack on restarts. Thank you to the BITNILE.COM crew for getting me back up front again. Congratulations to Josef (Newgarden) – he is INDYCAR’s best representative and he is a deserving champion.” 

Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 Chevrolet at Ed Carpenter Racing:

“We were doing well saving fuel and with our strategy until the contact in pit lane. After the drive through penalty we were almost a lap down, but we fought back to eighth until we got squeezed into turn one with people crashing. We came home tenth – a step up from last year.” 

Ed Carpenter, No. 33 Chevrolet at Ed Carpenter Racing:

“At the end of the day, we had a mistake coming into pit lane. It was a weird communication, but I take responsibility for it. I should have gone another lap. Then these red flags cause situations and some of these guys are just dumb. Like the incident that ended my day, we were running 18th and not going to win the race. (Christian) Luungard looks stupid. We need to use our heads when the racing is so close and aggressive. Open-wheel racing has to have a certain level of respect, but we see so much unprofessional racing out there which is disappointing. But to not be totally poopy, the crowd was awesome. Good job to Josef (Newgarden) – who is an alum of ECR. He will be a great champion. It is painful to watch anyone win this race, but I am proud of him and Team Chevy. The BITNILE.COM Chevys were strong. We got to the front at one point, but we weren’t there when it counted. We will keep coming back.” 

Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:

”I’m just sad for the whole team. We had four very fast race cars. Obviously our day ended in a not-so-nice way but it can’t take away from the fact that we were there. We were there in qualifying, we were there in the race, and we continue to push and be contenders every single weekend. I’m proud of everybody. We move on to a new circuit now, and I’m excited for the rest of the season. We’ll have another shot at this one next year.”

Felix Rosenqvist, No. 6 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:

“It’s a pass. I don’t remember who it was. But yeah, I got on the wrong side of the wake it had and I almost caught it. But the rear came out right before the exit of the corner and then it just hit the wall and I tried to stay out there. But eventually I think something broke in the rear and I just came back on the track and Kyle Kirkwood hit me. It could have been worse, it was so fortunate for him as well. All month I’ve been pretty proud of my team, and my car. The car was amazing. I’m okay. I just want to go talk to my team and thank them.”

Alexander Rossi, No. 7 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:

“I think Arrow McLaren had three cars to beat. It really sucks to come away with a fifth when our car were that good. When the chaos started, after Felix’s (Roseqvist) crash, it was a lap then a crash. A lap then a crash. And then people in my mind were getting away with some pretty crazy jump starts. We’ll look into it. I mean, it’s disappointing. I think, obviously, it’s amazing for Team Chevy to have the win. It was an amazing showing for the team all month. I was grateful for the cars that we had. And it just shows how good of cars we had that we’re annoyed and disappointed with fifth. We’ll take the positives and the fact of what we, as a group, were able to accomplish this month and go forward to Detroit, but certainly feels frustrating and like a missed opportunity. We’ll try and learn from it and move on.”

Tony Kanaan, No. 66 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:

“In a way, I was telling my wife, if we were to have one, it was going to be a big deal, a big problem. It’s probably better to finish 16th so people don’t wonder like we did last year when we finished third if we were coming back. I mean, what a day, what a race. You guys, these fans, they made me feel very special and I’ll take that forever. The coming back part? I don’t think I want to spoil the moment that I have. I’ll come back here but as a spectator.

In your storied career, how will you view this place, this race, and how the fans embrace you each and every year?

“It changed my life. The story I had of my dad and the day before he passed, I promised him I’d win this thing one day. All the tries, and everything, the fans sympathize. The relationship that we built, I think it’s something really special. It’s beyond a Borg Warner, you know, a win, beyond anything I’ve done. This experience, to be able to show my kids that this is what it’s all about, and having inspiring kids to do better and be a good person, even if you don’t win it’s fine if you don’t. As long as you’re making a difference. I will always be and IndyCar driver. I will always be an Indy 500 winner. I will always make people aware of INDYCAR as they deserve.”

On the pass in the grass with Scott McLaughlin…

“It was okay, right? That’s one thing I hadn’t done in 22 years, so here it is. I think it was a good one. Even Sam (Schmidt) came to me and said that was a good one. I didn’t think it was that bad.”

Santino Ferrucci, No. 14 Chevrolet at AJ Foyt Racing:

“We will win this, it’s just a matter of when. It’s, man, just tough. Just tough. It’s bittersweet. We were definitely better than the two cars ahead of us. We’ve worked so hard for this. I’m just so upset for these guys. There are so many good people back home that we wanted to win this for. Chris Rock, obviously Larry’s (Foyt) mom Lucy. I feel so bad, I wish we could’ve done a little bit more.”

You said this morning you’re in it to win it. Take us through those last red flags, so many different variables. Did you have everything out there?

“We hung it all out there. It’s tough. We needed to be where we were, I don’t understand the reordering. Timing and scoring doesn’t lie. This Homes for Troops car was on rails all day long. We had such a great racecar. I can’t thank this whole team, AJ Foyt, enough. I also hope running up front like that, we raised a [ton] of money for them. They deserve it. We’ll come back, we’ll win this thing.”

“I’m just really, really upset. I just don’t know if I could’ve done anything better. I thought that last restart, that was it for us. That’s this place, man. That’s how the chips fall. I will stay bittersweet the fact we didn’t win.”

Callum Ilott, No. 77 Chevrolet at Juncos Hollinger Racing:

“Pretty crazy race. We went from P27 to leading it for a little bit. Honestly, we had good apce on our own. I couldn’t get too close to the cars in front. I kept in it. Good restarts. Good pit stops. We did a great job to get the car into qualifying, into the race. Kept working on it Monday and Carb Day. It got us to this point. 15 position up, P12, it’s pretty special. Big thank you to everyone, the team, Chevy, and everyone else who has individually been helping us out. Moving on to Detroit.”

Agustin Canapino, No. 78 Chevrolet at Juncos Hollinger Racing:

“Unfortunately we had a crash with only 10 laps to go. We were 14th with it happened. We were in position to work for the top-10, or 15th. It was really bad luck with the accident because the accident happened in front of me. (Simon) Pagenaud had a big crash and spun in front of me. And I can’t avoid Pato O’Ward. I am pretty sad because the car was very good and we were in a good position. Anyway yeah it was a good race for most of the days.”

Ryan Hunter-Reay, No. 23 Chevrolet at Dreyer & Reinbold Racing:

“We started the race with a lot of push (understeer) and because of that, we got tire vibrations in the first two stints which really impacted our performance today. We spent half of the race chasing the balance of the car. Unfortunately, the front wing adjuster broke on the first pit stop, and that limited on what we could do (with the car). We could only trim the rear of the car to get the balance we needed. In the last quarter of the race, I could actually race and move forward. I made up some positions then. It was one of those day where the ball didn’t roll our day. Even late in the race when we ran in the lead, we didn’t get in the pits for fuel when the red came out. That hurt us late in the race too.”

Graham Rahal, No. 24 Chevrolet at Dreyer & Reinbold Racing:

“First, I’m very thankful to get the opportunity to race at the 500 and thank you to Dreyer & Reinbold and Cusick Motorsports for allowing me to be here and be a part of it. Obviously, a tough start to the day. We never really got going. We actually had a decent day from there on forward up until the very end. We just didn’t get to see it through after the battery issue. Again, I’m thankful and lucky to have been here, but certainly already eager to come back next year and have a shot at it.”

RC Enerson, No. 50 Chevrolet at Abel Motorsports:

“It’s still an amazing accomplishment for this team, considering we’ve been an IndyCar team for what, 7 days on track this month. To just be here, qualify for the race on the first day and avoid Bump Day, everything we’ve done here has been nothing short of amazing. Bill (Abel) and (Team Manager) John Brunner have put together an amazing crew. We’ve been flawless all month.  We had settled into a nice rhythm by our second stint and we were much better in our third stint before the problem hit. It’s just a shame for this team and all our partners. A big thanks to Team Chevy and Firestone and all the partners that came on board with us these last few days.”

Bill Abel, Owner of Abel Motorsports:

“For us, mission accomplished (just to qualify). We’d have loved to have gone a lot further in the race but for our first time out in IndyCar and the 500, that’s ok. I hate it for RC and the team but sometimes that’s just what happens in this sport. This is the pinnacle of our sport, so just to be here with the car, with the team, to qualify, we exceeded expectations. We hope to be back, maybe next year, maybe the year after, just the fact that we’ve been here and had as much success as we have, hopefully that paves the way for us to come back.”

John Brunner, Team Manager at Abel Motorsports:

“The guys have all worked so hard on this car. We just hadn’t had any problems until today. The car has been flawless. It’s heartbreaking for these guys, it’s very disappointing, but the car’s in one piece. We’ll take this and learn from it and see what we can do in the future.”

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 SHELL POWERING PROGRESS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – End of Day Press Conference:

THE MODERATOR: Joined now by someone who might be catching his breath after everything he went through winning the race that he had long been awaiting to do, Josef Newgarden, driver of the No. 2 Shell Powering Progress Team Penske Chevrolet.

Led five laps of the 200; got it done in thrilling fashion there at the end. Congratulations. You visited the stands, which no one saw coming. Congratulations.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Thank you. You’ll have to bear with me. I feel emotionally depleted. I really do.

Obviously I’ve never had the honor of winning this race. I was in awe of sitting next to my boss Roger Penske and realizing this is his 19th. So it was very special.

To win this race is indescribable. I think being at this event is indescribable. Someone has to come and see it and be a part of it to understand what it is really all about, and I’ve always wanted the honor to win this race because I wanted to go in the crowd if it was ever possible because I know what the energy is like here in Indianapolis.

So to me, it was an unbelievable finish to be able to be here with the team and do that.

I’m a little out of words. I apologize that I’m running out of steam here. It’s been a lot.

THE MODERATOR: Obviously the 19th for Team Penske, first American to win since Alexander Rossi back in 2016, and of course here’s one for you, the first Tennessee native to win the Indianapolis 500.

You’ve got that going for you.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, cool.

Q. Josef, when you were growing up, all those years that you and your dad drove up from Nashville to go to Newcastle to race go-karts, you either had to go through Indianapolis or around it. When you reflect back on what you did today, how much of that do you think of your father, the effort and sacrifice that he made when you were a kid to help you become a professional race driver?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, it’s undeniable. I wouldn’t be standing here without my dad and my mom. It’s an impossible career to make happen without support, and they are my No. 1 supporters.

I think about the time that we drove up here starting when I was 13, and, I mean, it’s just weekend after weekend learning about racing together. My dad really put pretty much everything on the line, like probably irresponsibly, to allow me to have a career in racing.

It was very fitting, I think, for him to be here and to see it. And to do this in Indiana, it’s like a second home to me. Very, very special.

Q. We saw Marcus use the tail of the dragon to his benefit to win last year. Do you feel this year you beat him at his own game?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Look, it’s impossible to not use that because of the ease it is to follow one car. It got even tougher this year. I think sitting in first place was even more difficult than what we’ve seen in years past, even just last year, and when I was able to get by him on the back straight I was actually really surprised how much momentum he still had in 3 and 4.

He was like super close and had a good run coming off 4, and with that, I thought, I’ve got to be as aggressive as possible to not let him by.

Today we had an opportunity to win the race, and I wasn’t looking to take anyone else out of the race, but I was going to put my car on the line to win. I was either going to win the race or I’d end up in the wall. I wasn’t here to finish second, third, or fourth today. I was here to win.

So I just did everything I could at the end there.

Q. Josef, you talked after the race about always wanting to go in the stands and celebrate with the fans after you won this race if you ever got there. Had you scouted out where you wanted to try and get to the fans? Because I know there’s a lot of fencing up here and it’s not super easy to do.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I knew exactly where the gap was. I’d been over there many, many years. I’ve seen that photo, whole spot, and really it’s just like an access point that you can crawl under. It looks like it’s closed but there’s a way to get through. I knew exactly where I was going at the end of this race.

I planned to go higher in the stands, but it quickly got a little out of control, and I thought, maybe the best thing is for me to leave again. I hugged a couple people. I felt the energy, and I’m like, I need to get out of here.

But it was really cool. You just can’t beat the Hoosier hospitality, the energy that people bring here. It is second to none when it comes to a sporting event.

I’ve always known that, having the privilege of being here many, many years and seeing it, and I just wanted to be a part of it. It was always something that would be a dream come true to be able to do that.

Q. You’ve obviously been waiting 12 years to finally capture that win. Roger has been waiting three and a half years since he bought the speedway to try to win this race as a track owner and a team owner. Do you have a sense of just kind of what this means for this whole organization that’s been waiting for another one of these?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I think it’s gratifying for the entire team. There should be a tremendous amount of pride across the entire Team Penske group because we’ve had a tough go here the last three, four years, and we’ve had a lot of questions to answer every day.

After every qualifying weekend we’ve got to come and put a brave face on and say that we just didn’t fully get there.

I knew this year, similar to last year, but even better this year, that we had a good race car and a car that could win the race, and I wasn’t worried about where we qualified.

Of course we wanted to be on the front row, and if possible qualify on the pole, but it’s very gratifying for all the work that’s been put in.

I know firsthand how much effort has been poured into the last two, three years to figure out how we win this race again, and for our standard, we don’t show up here to be average. There’s nothing given; Indy doesn’t owe anybody anything. It doesn’t matter how many 500s you have. It doesn’t matter what team you are. It doesn’t matter how much money you have. It isn’t an easy place to succeed at.

I don’t think we came with an ego, and to work through the difficulty the last three, four years, this victory is a win for all of us on our team, and it’s very gratifying for every member that’s put the time in.

Q. Josef, I wanted to ask you about — we know how much pressure you put on yourself and the weight of expectation that you’ve had on yourself for so long to try and win this race. I just wondered how difficult that’s been to fight that off year after year and what it’s like to have that released from your shoulders now?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’ll be honest, it’s annoying. It’s been terrible. It is mentally draining to be here for three weeks and just to know that you really only have one opportunity, and it comes down to today, and that’s the day you’ve got to be perfect and great and everything has got to work out.

So you spend all this time and effort, and it’s really just a mental grind to work through that. The more you’ve been here, the more it’s not worked out, the more that grind really starts to gnaw at you.

I don’t necessarily subscribe to the fact that if you don’t win the 500 your career is a failure, but I think a lot of people really view this race and this championship with that lens, that the 500 stands alone, and that if you’re not able to capture one, then the career really is a failure in a lot of ways.

It’s impossible to not recognize that or to absorb that from people when you’re here, and I just didn’t know if circumstance would ever work out where it would really come to be where we could win the race.

I just said — especially after ’19, where I did have an opportunity to win the race and we fell short, I said, if I’m ever in a position again to win this race, I’m not coming back with a top-5 result. I just don’t care what happens. You come here to win the race, and we’re going to do that.

Q. So you committed to win the race and the rest of it goes out the window, but you spend the year so focused on winning championships, Team Penske, and doing your absolute best to stay consistent through a whole season, so what’s it like to come into May and to have that total change of an opposite mindset almost to come in here and treat it completely differently to the rest of the year?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: In a lot of ways it was nice to just be — look, I just went out there and drove today. I knew I had a pretty good car. I was pretty happy with Fast Friday. Luke Mason did an amazing job. We basically just went back to our test car from the pre — from the April test where our car was so good, and we had never run that car again in May, and we were both looking at each other laughing, like what are we doing.

We left that test and said, if we have this car, we’re winning the 500. That’s what I said. We never ran the car until Fast Friday — sorry, until Carb Day.

We ran that car, and I said, okay, you did a good job; we’re going to be just fine here.

I didn’t study a lot. I typically, like, pour over every detail. I don’t leave a lot of stones unturned. But I was just pretty relaxed. I was like, you know what, I’m not going to overthink this. I’m not going to overdo it. I’ve been here before. I think I know how you need to win this race.

I’m going to relax and I’m going to show up and go race on Sunday, and that’s what I did. I just came with kind of a carefree attitude and just tried to trust my natural instinct.

It worked, so I was pretty happy.

It was so much more than that, obviously. I’m kind of simplifying my own personal — my internal messaging, but there’s a lot more than that. The amount of — I’ll come back to the team side, but the amount of effort and timeline to get to this point really makes everything happen.

But just from a personal stance I think that was the right approach for me this year.

Q. Marcus was unhappy with the call by INDYCAR, the way the race finished. He felt like there weren’t enough laps left leaving the pits essentially when they’re throwing the green. Did it surprise you that they made the third red flag call, and what did you think about that whole process?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I’m happy they did it to give a good finish. Obviously if I was in Marcus’ situation, I would have said, yeah, just end it. That’s great. I’ve got to the line and they’re not going to go to a — I’ve also been in a lot of races where you get ahead of somebody like that and the yellow just comes out, and you’re going back to the timing line of Turn 4. And I’m like, what are you talking about? We’ve been sitting here for about five seconds where I’m in front of this person.

There’s so many different ways that this could have played out and you could have said this is fair or that’s fair. I’ve seen it all. At this point I’m just really thankful they did it the way they did. I’m glad I had the car. I don’t really care. I’ve seen a lot of situations where it didn’t go our way. Today went our way, and I’ll take it. I’ll take it all day.

Q. Using Marcus’ move to beat him when he used that move to essentially beat Pato last year, you guys were way below the white line coming off 4. Can you describe that?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I was about driving through pit lane. It was legal is all I’m going to say. They were very clear that they are not enforcing that line, and they didn’t enforce it last year. They said they’re not enforcing it again, and I’m coming to the checkered flag and I’m going to do everything I can to win this race, and I had to be as aggressive as possible, because the tow effect to just the first car was even more difficult than last year. You were just a sitting duck if you were in the lead.

Honestly, I don’t love that. I think the cars should be more difficult to drive here. It’s a very — terribly difficult balance for the series to walk because you want to have a good show. You want everybody to be as close together as possible and you want it to be difficult for someone to win this race, and I agree with that.

But I think it’s not difficult in the right way. We’ve got to find a different formula where we can trim the cars out and they’re easier to follow in the pack. Basically all this downforce that we’ve added has only made it easier and easier for the first two cars, so when you’re the third car you’re still just stuck in that tow line where no one is really going anywhere. We’re all closer, but it’s only the first two that can really do something.

So we’ve got to change that formula where it’s easier to follow in the pack, but you can also be rewarded if you’re better at driving the car with less downforce. I want to see the drivers that really excel get a better advantage.

That’s why they pay us to be in the seat. That’s why they pay the engineers, to find the perfect setups that we can make an advantage and get away with it. Not so we can win by two laps, but I just think the dynamic of the race, the complexion could look a little differently.

Q. If they do that, it takes care of itself, the discussion, the debate about the way these races are ending takes care of itself?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: For sure. I just because we’ve added downforce year after year. You sort of noticed that at first with probably Pagenaud was the first time we really saw that, 2019. We’ve just added more and more downforce, and it’s become more important to try and break the tow.

What are you going to do? Just sit there and get — I mean, if you sit in a straight line you’re just going to get passed super easily.

I don’t hold any grudge against anyone that’s doing it in front of me, as long as it’s not a true block, which it’s not if you’re — if you’re not reacting to the person, if they’re following you, that’s not a block.

It’s just the style of racing that has become imperative because of the style of racing.

Q. If I remember correctly, when you made the move from Indy Lights to INDYCAR, you drove for Sarah Fisher’s team. Any reaction from her?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yes. I saw Sarah’s daughter, Zoey in Victory Circle. Actually, fun note: Zoey texted me this month and said, I just have a feeling this is your year. She’s never said that before, and she was very adamant. She said, I don’t know why, but this is your year.

I’ve heard that from a lot of people, okay, many times, so it’s hard to react to any of that stuff, but she made a good call this year. Maybe she’s my good luck charm.

Q. INDYCAR champion and Indy 500 winner. Does one feel more rewarding than the other?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think this feels more relieving. There’s no doubt that this was a bigger weight.

I think I’m still in the camp that the championship is tougher. In a lot of ways it is, because there’s so much more that goes into it.

This is the single-most difficult race in the world to win. I’ll stand by that. There’s no doubt. If you’re looking at a single event, you cannot beat the difficulty of the Indy 500.

But I don’t know how you compare the two. You’re looking at one standalone versus a championship, and putting a championship together, I think, is very, very difficult. You really see the best rise to the top. You see the best team, the best pit stop performance, consistently it adds up over a year, and it’s very difficult to do that.

They felt very different. I just don’t know that — I classify them as different things. I think internally I feel differently about them.

Q. Do you feel like a more complete driver now that you’ve won both?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, I don’t. I’m going to be honest, I don’t feel different — the only thing I feel is the weight of what everyone else wants to put on you because they think the Indy 500 has to be won.

I think about all the drivers that probably should have won this race that never won it, and it doesn’t make a difference whether they won it or not. Their career is still fantastic. It’s more just a shame that it didn’t work out for them.

That’s really how I feel about the event. I’m not here to take anything away from it, but I don’t like looping it into the category that you have to have it to be complete. I don’t feel differently as a driver because today happened, I just feel less weight.

Q. In 2016 when you finished third, your post-race interview, despair, frustration, and all that. Today with the elation, could you elaborate on how one place can evoke such a wide range of emotion in one person over the course of their chosen career?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Absolutely. There’s no denying that Indianapolis, this is the most difficult motor race in the world to win. It’s the pressure that builds this entire month. You have so much time to potentially get it right, and it comes down to really one day to be perfect.

You can have a good qualifying. You can have a good Fast Friday. You can have good Carb Day. If you’re not good on Race Day, it’s all for nothing.

That’s what makes Indy so terribly pressure filled but terribly difficult, too.

I think that’s what has made it special today to win it. I just feel overjoyed for the amount of work we put in this month.

On the flipside, when you don’t win it, that’s what makes it so demoralizing. You pack up, you say we, lived here for three weeks’ and we put everything we had into this and it didn’t work out. It just breaks your heart. It’s broken my heart every year.

And so I feel — I just feel amazing now that it didn’t break my heart this year.

Q. You mentioned earlier about the sacrifices that your parents made to get you here, possibly irresponsibly. What made it that way growing up, that they sacrificed that much? What did they have to do — I’m assuming they didn’t put the house up for mortgage, but how far did it have to go for you to get to this point?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, I won’t go into the details, but my parents, they gave everything for my career, I can tell you that, and more. It’s not from a lack of effort and belief.

I think my dad has really just been wired that way, that anything is possible, and he’s always given me that belief. I’m a pretty pragmatic person. I’m very realistic. But I also have an internal belief that anything is possible because of him. He’s instilled that in me.

Look where it’s gotten us.

Q. In terms of the milk celebration, had you practiced it in the mirror before? How did you feel it went today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Dude, no practice. I haven’t. The only thing I really had in my head that I wanted to do was go in the crowd. That was the only thing I felt adamant about. If I was lucky enough to win, I was doing that.

The milk, I felt good about it. It tasted so good. I love milk. I drink a lot of milk. So for me the Indy 500 is kind of the greatest thing ever. Other people might not like to get milk after. That’s the choice I would have made, too. I love Louis Meyer. I love that he threw that up as a tradition. I’m a big milk guy.

Q. We spoke a couple months ago, and Scott McLaughlin said that your love language is finance. What do you plan on doing with the prize money?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We’re going to the NASDAQ on Wednesday. I can’t wait. We’re going to talk about equity. NASDAQ is up 18 percent year to date; Dow is lagging. I’m excited. Finance is my love language. I don’t know. The money, we’re going to invest it into a prudent mutual fund and let it grow sustainably over 20 years and then look at it and say where are we at and what can we do and be responsible and budget.

These are high-level questions. I have no idea what we’re doing yet.

Q. You’ve made it a point that you’ve wanted to win this, and now you have. How does it feel? Is this your dream? Is this what it feels like?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s amazing. I just really wanted to emphasize that to me there’s no bad seat in this house. I’ve been a fan here. That’s kind of where I started.

Everybody should take a lot of pride in being at this race, whether you’re someone sitting in Turn 1 or Turn 4, you’re working on the car or you’re a partner or you’re a friend or you’re the driver. All the seats matter, and they’re all special.

I genuinely mean that. We all make the energy that this event is, so I just feel incredibly lucky to have been able to be here for 12 years and drive this race and try and win it, and to win it with such great partners like Shell, and especially the messaging they’ve had this year, it’s been — you know, it was really fitting to drive this car, this Shell car this year with that livery and the powering progress message that they have.

They’re all running Shell fuel this year. It’s all sustainable fuel. It’s a very big deal for this series.

Yeah, I’m just elated. I don’t know how to put it more into words how special it is to have an opportunity as a driver here.

Q. Tim Cindric talked about the importance of getting an Indy 500 victory with Roger Penske as the track owner. How important was that to you?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I don’t think it — honestly, it doesn’t matter the circumstances at Indy. Indy is just special.

But there is, of course, another layer to that with RP now owning the track. To see Roger and the family, and the amount of work that he’s put into this place has been impressive to witness. Very, very impressive.

I think you really notice that with everyone that was here, that they appreciate the event and they appreciate how much he loves the tradition of the Indy 500.

This team was built off the Indianapolis 500. Roger came here, and this is what brought him into the world of racing and has built this whole Penske Corporation.

I think it is so fitting he is the custodian of the track in elevating it to a new place. To win for the first time that now that he owns it is definitely more emotional, very, very special.

Q. When he won in 2019, his 18th victory, he said his goal is to get to 20. Now that can happen next year. How important would that be for any one of the three drivers?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: That’s what I said. I put my hand on his shoulder in Victory Lane and said, now we got to get 20. He was the first one to go, absolutely. He didn’t even take a breath. He was ahead of me in the thought process, as you know.

He’s eyes forward. It will be important. We need to come back. There’s still areas we can be better, so we’ll go and analyze after this weekend and see where we can improve. But we’ll come back ready to fight and get No. 20 for him.

Q. You said that you’re a man of process, but can you tell us about that time when you are doing the pass for the lead?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, it was a good position to be in. I think second or third was a good start or a good position to be in on the restart, particularly with only one lap to go. That’s where you want to be.

For me it was get the lead at all costs, whether that’s Turn 1 or Turn 3. I wasn’t premeditating that Turn 3; had to be the spot. If I had a little better jump I probably would have passed Marcus in Turn 1.

Maybe that wouldn’t have been right, but I think you have to go at the first opportunity because of the potential for the yellows.

We had a yellow come out for that second red flag and we didn’t even get to the start-finish line. You just don’t know what’s going to happen, and I think it’s the mentality of getting the lead at all costs is where you have to be.

If it doesn’t work out, if a yellow does come out when you’re not in the lead or something goes wrong, then that’s okay, but I think that’s the right approach to try and win the race.

Q. Was it the best drink of milk that you’ve ever had?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: 100 percent the best.

Q. It seemed like Ricky Bobby was right based on what you said earlier, that you’re either first or you’re last or at least here. That is it, right?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s a funny quote, but it is true at Indianapolis. You’re either walking away the winner with your team or you’re walking away as someone that didn’t win the race.

That’s not true for everywhere that we go, but Indy, the only thing that matters is winning the race, so that’s why for me it was extra special to have that mentality today.

Q. You’re familiar, I think, with the term red mist. Maybe you’re not. But there was carnage out there the last part of this race. Three red flags, unprecedented. What comes over drivers? Can you explain it? With the Indy 500 on the line, et cetera, that they’re willing to — you are willing to throw it all out there, so to speak?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I think you saw exactly what it means. Everyone probably carried the same attitude that winning the race is the only things that matters here, and so you saw everybody going for it.

Everyone was doing everything they could to win the race or to position themselves to win the race, and you can’t fault people for that. That’s what this place brings out of everybody. That’s why we spend so much time here, to just give ourselves a chance to potentially win it.

Yeah, it just gets more elevated at this event probably more than anywhere else because of that reason.

Q. I asked you on Thursday, does this place owe you anything, just like I asked Tony Kanaan one time, and he said absolutely not; you have to earn this race. Was that the lesson further learned today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I was a believer of that many years ago. I never expected anything from this track. I don’t believe that it owes anybody anything. I wholeheartedly believe that.

I think you can’t have any ego when you show up here. I’ll say that about our team. Doesn’t matter who we are, it doesn’t matter how much money we have, it doesn’t matter how many times you’ve won the race, this place doesn’t owe you anything. You have to go and earn it. I think that’s why you have to carry the attitude that you either come here to take the win or you’re not going to win the race.

Things can happen, obviously. Maybe it falls in your lap. But I think more times than not, you have to go out and earn the win.

Q. When we were talking about the 500 versus the championship and what’s harder, and now that you’re a final winner of the 500, are you upset about the removal of the double points?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We already said — we said, you know what, now that they took the double points away we’ll win the race. We just knew it. Knew it. But I’m very happy it’s not double points. I’m very, very happy.

It would have been lovely today, but that’s okay. I was not a fan of them ever.

I think that it also took away from what the 500 is. You shouldn’t ever be here racing for points. It’s the Indy 500. You’re running for the win. You don’t leave fifth here and go, we had a good day, we finished fifth, we got good points. That’s not how it works.

I’m not saying you’ve got to be reckless and wreck people, but you have to give everything to win this race. Yeah, probably bittersweet about the points, but I’m happy the way it is. I think it was the right call to go back to single points.

Q. I overheard you talking about stocks coming out of the elevator. What makes you fascinated by stocks or finances?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, I was joking around. I am into finance. I think it’s a great career path. It’s probably something I would be doing if I wasn’t driving cars. It’s kind of as simple as that. I won’t bore everybody, but I love that world. I think it’s super fun.

Q. Do you own any stocks?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I do. I carry equities, yep. I have many positions. We could go on a lot of different paths on that, but I think, yes, looking after a portfolio yourself is prudent.

I think you should have good advisors and you should make good long-term decisions with your investments and your budgeting. I am a man that, yeah, likes looking after most of it myself. I think everybody should be educated on finance in this room. I think it’s a good thing.

I didn’t think we were going to be talking about stocks here.

Q. Just a quick note on Tony and his final Indy 500. I know growing up you probably looked up to Tony, and a lot of other Indy 500 drivers did, too, and just what Tony has meant to you as a fellow racer.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I think Tony has been a tremendous ambassador for the sport, first and foremost. He’s been a great Indy 500 champion, as everyone in this room knows. He’s a fan favorite for a reason. He wears his heart right on his sleeve, publicly displayed, and I think that’s why everybody loves him.

He’s been a tremendous competitor.

I think someone that is tough to race against, but also someone that you could go to if you needed advice or assistance. He’s pretty open minded and ready to help the young guys if needed. You’re seeing that even more so now that he’s working with younger drivers in his team.

He’s been great for the sport. I’m so happy that he was still here for this final race. I’m also in the camp that doesn’t believe he’s done, like most people are.

But if it is his last go, then he’s had a tremendous career, and we should all be thankful that Tony was here.

Q. Josef, now that you’ve been out of the car, I’m not sure if you’ve had a chance to see the final lap or the reactions, especially from your wife. Watching the last lap, she was really emotional. It was a really cool video. I’m curious to know what it’s like to watch someone who’s been in this with you for so long and their reaction to this dream of yours coming true.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, my poor wife gets the — she’s probably got the toughest job in our family, not just because she looks out for everything and helps make my world go round, but she sees the negative impact, she sees the heartbreak more than anyone else, so she knows what that’s like.

I’m just happy we were able to finally win it. She knows that, too. I don’t know why I’m getting emotional about it. She’s just as competitive as me. I can imagine how happy she was.

THE MODERATOR: I know you’ve got a long laundry list of things to do today and tomorrow, but enjoy it.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I appreciate everybody, all the coverage, all the support in this room. I really mean that when I say that there is no bad seat in this place. There truly isn’t.

We all make the Indy 500 what it is, so thank you for covering us and pushing the sport. I think we’re all trying to elevate INDYCAR back to where it belongs, so thanks for all the effort from this room and everybody that’s given us time and feedback and great coverage. Thanks for being here today.

chevy racing–indycar–indy 500 post race–roger penske

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES 107th RUNNING OF THE INDIANAPOLIS 500 INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT MAY 28, 2023
ROGER PENSKE, OWNER OF TEAM PENSKE, and TIM CINDRIC, PRESIDENT OF TEAM PENSKE – Post Race Press Conference:THE MODERATOR: The celebration continues for Team Penske, and honored to be joined by Roger Penske, now a 19-time winner at the Indianapolis 500, and longtime Team Penske president Tim Cindric.
Roger, how thrilling there the last several moments of this race?
ROGER PENSKE: Well, I took my car owner hat off and became a car owner there the last two laps. But Tim had it under control. I listened to the radio all day long, and quite honestly, to get up there and work our way through the day was amazing.
With the red flags, everything, it could have been anybody’s race. But I think Newgarden showed what he’s really made of today. He was, I think, confident but yet cautious there at the end, and when it was time to go he made it happen. We can’t thank him enough from the team.
THE MODERATOR: Tim, your thoughts?
TIM CINDRIC: It’s amazing. Anytime you win this race, obviously he’s done it twice as many times or more than I have been a part of. But from the point in time where obviously we always want to win this place, but 2019 was the last time that we had won and somebody else owned the place before.
I apologize it’s taken four years to get him to start the race and put him back up there at the end of the race. We feel really good about that.
Then for Josef, obviously he’s shown throughout his career that he’s a championship-caliber driver, and he’s wanted this place so bad that it was kind of going to be checkers or wreckers there at the end. You kind of knew that.
The crew, I can’t say enough about. All day long it was flawless. I think the guys, all the engineers worked together, not just from the 2 car team but everybody else to really give him a great car today.
Fortunate to execute. Obviously it can be anybody’s race there at the end.
THE MODERATOR: The margin of victory was .0974. That’s the fourth closest finish in Indianapolis 500 history. The top three, ’92, Al Jr. over Scott Goodyear, then 2014, Hunter-Reay over Helio; and then 2006, Sam Hornish Jr. over Marco Andretti.
So incredibly tight finish there at the end.
THE CELEBRATION JOSEF DID AT THE END, HE GOES INTO THE GRANDSTANDS, CELEBRATES WITH THE FANS. YOU OWN THIS PLACE; ARE YOU GOING TO CHARGE HIM A TICKET?ROGER PENSKE: No, I think he’s just trying to beat Helio and get up in the stands with the fans. We wouldn’t charge him for a ticket for sure. It’s great.
I KNOW YOU SAID YOUR GOAL WAS TO GET TO 20. THAT’S NOW ONE WIN OFF. HOW ACHIEVABLE DO YOU BELIEVE THAT IS NOW?ROGER PENSKE: We’re certainly not going to stop here, I can tell you, with the team we have and the depth of our drivers.
The competition, though, everybody here today knows it’s never been tighter. You could see all during the race, maybe within four or five seconds you had 20 cars, and that’s what we’re racing every day. We seen it when we qualify. I think 16 inches was the difference between 1 and 2 in qualifying.
We’re going to be back next year. I think Newgarden, this is one he wanted to check off for years. He didn’t understand why he hadn’t won the race today. He earned it. He won the race today, which is certainly to his credit.
FOR TIM, THE TAIL OF THE DRAGON WORKED FOR MARCUS LAST YEAR. DO YOU THINK THIS YEAR IT WAS A CASE THAT JOSEF BEAT HIM AT HIS OWN GAME?TIM CINDRIC: Well, I know Josef, he knew in his mind what he had to do if he got the opportunity. We just needed to try and get him up in the right position, and between what he was able to do on the racetrack and what we were able to do in the pits today, we kind of methodically got there.
I think I told him at some point during the race that we were kind of ahead of schedule because there was a point there where certainly didn’t want to lead, and it’s hard to tell yourself that you start 17th and you don’t want to lead. But that’s the way it played out.
For us, we’ve been trying to get Shell a win here for a long time in that Shell car, and to have the contingent in the sport that we have from that group and to have all their top executives here and for what they’ve done with the renewable fuel and that type of thing for INDYCAR and the series to really set the stage, it was awesome to bring them home something that’s got the biggest trophy in the world on it.
MR. PENSKE, WHERE DOES THIS RANK IN TERMS OF YOUR WINS AS A TEAM OWNER?ROGER PENSKE: Well, I’d have to say the first win here back in ’72, but to come here and be the steward of the track and have the opportunity — I had to step away. I loved being on the box, running one of these cars here every year as I have been.But I was up on the top there. I had my scoreboard where I could see what was going on, but to see him go down by the start-finish line number one was pretty important. I guess it goes almost to the top.
MARCUS ERICSSON WAS FAIRLY UPSET AFTERWARDS. HE FELT LIKE IT WAS UNFAIR THE WAY THE RED FLAGS WERE MANAGED AT THE END, AND HE FELT AS IF THE FINAL RED FLAG SHOULD HAVE BEEN FLOWN EARLIER AND THAT ONE LAP WASN’T ENOUGH FOR A SHOOTOUT TO FINISH THE RACE. I JUST WANTED YOUR THOUGHTS ON THAT.TIM CINDRIC: Are you asking me or him or both or what?
I’LL START WITH YOU.TIM CINDRIC: Yeah, I think it’s more of a race control program. Obviously you’re sitting there and it’s really hard to determine how that’s all going to play out. Each restart could have played out a different way, and I think Josef, when you look at the fact that we lost the lead on one of the restarts, as well, it can kind of go either way, and that’s kind of the way this place is now.I think somebody has got to win and somebody doesn’t. We’ve been on the other side of that, too.
ANY THOUGHTS, ROGER?ROGER PENSKE: Really I don’t have any thoughts. I had nothing to do with it, obviously. We have a group that is certainly the officials of the track, and to me, we’ve said this before, I think all of you had said, we want to see a checkered flag, not a yellow flag.
AS A TRACK OWNER, I DON’T KNOW IF YOU HAD A CHANCE TO ASSESS THIS DURING THE RACE, BUT THERE WAS A TIRE THAT WENT OVER THE FENCE IN TURN 2. HAVE YOU HAD A CHANCE TO LOOK AT THAT?ROGER PENSKE: Yeah, I saw what had happened; saw it bounced on top of a building and went and hit a car over there, which obviously is very concerning. We have tethers on the wheels, and it was a rear wheel that came off, and I’m sure the guys at INDYCAR will look at it, will determine what really happened.
We haven’t seen a wheel come off in a long time. We have high fences here. But we were very fortunate we didn’t have a bad accident.
QUESTION FOR TIM. HOW IS THE 2 CAR IN TERMS OF DOWNFORCE? IT SEEMED AS THE RACE GOT HOTTER, SLICKER AS IT WENT ON. HOW CONFIDENT WERE YOU IN THE 2 CREW’S SETUP AND HOW GOOD THE RACE PACE WAS ALL MONTH?TIM CINDRIC: Yeah, I felt as a race car we just needed to get Josef’s confidence around it. This place is all about — especially with drivers that are going to need to pass from a little further back.We just needed to be sure that — you see him do it at Texas and Gateway and Iowa and all these other places, and once he has the confidence, that’s what we needed to build on.
My hats off to Luke and that whole group because we didn’t touch the downforce. He didn’t ask about it. We didn’t even touch the front wing today. It was amazing, really, just the tools in the car. Getting the track position was really the key and trying to put ourselves in a position relative to fuel and all the rest of the things that happened.
Yeah, you have to have a flawless day here, and then sometimes you still don’t win, especially with the way the category is right now and the series and how competitive it is.
I’m surprised because I’m not sure I’ve ever been in a race here that we haven’t at least changed the front wing at some point during the race, so it was a pretty solid effort from that whole group.
TIM, WHAT MADE IT SO DIFFICULT FOR JOSEF TO WIN HERE FOR SO LONG?TIM CINDRIC: I think some of it is circumstances. Some of it I think is developing a bit of a feel, because it’s different than any other place. You see people that come here and run really well, and we go to these other ovals and you wonder, why not. It’s vice versa. You see people on the other ovals — I mean, and I don’t think he’s ever — I think we’ve had a shot to win it here a couple times and it hasn’t really chosen us for different reasons.
It’s a track position game and it’s a bit of chess, and you see it no different than the Daytona 500 in some ways as far as how you position yourself at the end and what you have to — where you have to be throughout the race. It’s becoming closer to that.
Don’t get me wrong. It’s not a stock car race. But I think you have to be in that — you saw where he restarted third and was able to take the lead, and you see where you’re the leader and you’ve got to figure out, okay, how to give up one position but not give up two positions, because it’s really not a question whether you’re going to give up one, it’s just how you position yourself to get back to the next stride.
ROGER, YOU HAD A GREAT CROWD TODAY, A GREAT SHOW. YOU WON THE RACE. YOU GO TO DETROIT NEXT WEEK TO THROW A BIG PARTY THERE. YOU GO TO LE MANS THE WEEK AFTER THAT. TALK ABOUT WHAT ALL OF THAT MEANS TO YOU AND WHAT YOU’RE LOOKING FORWARD TO IN DETROIT NEXT WEEK.ROGER PENSKE: Well, I guess when I think back, I think back about coming here in 1951 with my dad to see the first race of my own with him, and of course never realized that many, many years would pass and I would be here today, our family as the steward of the track, and also to have 19 wins.
But we’re competitors. We love this business. We’re committed to this track, to this series, to make it better. And when I see the people today and the demographics and the kids and 70,000 people here on Carburetion Day, and we had the biggest crowd we had since probably 2016. You saw it yourself. Amazing.
But we go on to Detroit, and we’re excited because we’re trying to make this series not just Indianapolis, but it’s all around the country. I think we’ve got the fastest cars, the high tech cars. I think our group of drivers are amazing and teams that’s competitive. We just want to take this on to many, many key cities around the United States and maybe other places.
Next week to be able to come to Detroit. It’s ironic last Wednesday or Thursday the mayor and the City Council president took the speed limit signs down to 25 miles an hour in front of the GM Building and put up 200 mile-an-hour signs, so that’s what I’m counting on for next week.
I KNOW A LOT OF THE RACES, A LOT OF THIS RACE IS KIND OF OUT OF YOUR CONTROL, BUT WHAT DO YOU FEEL LIKE IS THE BIGGEST THING WITHIN YOUR CONTROL OVER THE PAST THREE YEARS THAT’S HELPED YOU GET BACK TO VICTORY LANE AGAIN HERE?TIM CINDRIC: Really I think it’s just a continuation of building forward and executing on race day. Last year I thought we had cars that were capable of running up front, and unfortunately every one of them we either made a mistake or we put ourselves in a position where we couldn’t get there.
I think halfway through the race last year, I remember pretty vividly we were up to fifth and it was going to be a really good day, and the engine shut off in the pit or we stalled or whatever happened there, and that ended the day halfway through. And we had a couple other problems coming along.
We needed to execute, and you have to have a good car. I think, like I said, it’s about the people, and the group that we have there on the 2 car this year, although we have a new chief mechanic, a new race engineer, people that haven’t been in their positions here at the Indy 500, I think Josef was really good at ensuring that he has the confidence in the group.
Before the race he made it clear that he felt like he could win from anywhere. Obviously he proved that today.
THE GAPS IN 2019 WITHOUT A VICTORY, HOW HEAVILY HAS THAT WEIGHED UPON YOU AND HOW MUCH MOTIVATION HAS THAT GIVEN YOU TO TURN THINGS AROUND FOR THIS YEAR?TIM CINDRIC: I think it’s great when they talk about four years being a drought here, because I see some of the biggest teams here that went on 10- or 11-year droughts or whatever else.
So I think it’s a testament to the legacy that Roger has built here and the expectations we have.
Yeah, we do expect to come here and have a shot to win at it every single year, and unfortunately we haven’t been the ones at the front of the race when it starts the past couple years. I think that’s been a bigger weakness, because 2019 and prior, I guess I call it the pre-wind screen era for whatever reason, whether that’s basically a coincidence or not, we haven’t been able to qualify where we are used to qualifying. It’s a little harder to make your day exactly right from the front.
You saw today where a couple cars started in the front, had some problems, and were still able to be at the front at the end of the race. So it’s a lot more forgiving if you’re there in the beginning, and I think that’s been the key.
WHEN WE TALKED IN MOORESVILLE THREE WEEKS AGO AND YOU WERE TALKING ABOUT HOW MOTIVATED YOU WERE TO WIN AND GIVE ROGER HIS FIRST WIN AS THE OWNER OF THIS PLACE, HE STARTS THE DAY, YOU WANT TO END THE DAY WITH HIM, HOW DID THAT FEEL TO DO THAT?TIM CINDRIC: There’s nothing better. To check that box and to be able, like you said, to really as a team be able to reward him, and Josef in some ways. But really even Josef would tell you, to see Roger up on the lift that he put together, he made it what it is and made this place a lot younger, a lot more fan friendly.
It would be a shame if we couldn’t get him back up on there. I think it’s something that I’ll always remember and the team will, being able to, as I said, have him start the race and the enthusiasm that he gives at the start of this race.
I’ve been around this place a long time, and I love the, drivers start your engines. I always have. I think the energy he puts behind that and the preparation he puts behind that is kind of second to none, and then to be able to hand him another one of these Baby Borgs at some point in time is really cool.
TIM, CAN YOU SPEAK ABOUT THE RAPID EVOLUTION AND TRAINING OF KAITLYN BROWN, WHO I BELIEVE JUST MADE HISTORY AS THE FIRST WOMAN TO WIN THE INDY 500 GOING OVER THE WALL AS A MEMBER OF THE CREW CHANGING A TIRE? SHE’S SOMEONE YOU TOLD ME WITHIN THE LAST YEAR OR SO, WE’RE GOING TO TRY AND GET HER READY, AND LOOK WHAT SHE DID TODAY.TIM CINDRIC: Yeah, obviously Kaitlyn came — she had been on our NASCAR team. First of all, I signed her up. I’m her agent going forward.
So I told her all the notoriety she has, she’s going to have to have an agent, and it might as well be me.
She came to us on the NASCAR program and just wanted to work on race cars. When Beth Paretta’s program started up here we told everybody internally what was happening there and wanted to know if there were any females that wanted to be part of that program, and she was the first one to raise her hand and say, hey, I want a chance.
We watched how hard she worked at it. They came in at 5:00 in the morning, doing pit stops before the rest of our pit stop practices started internally, and she worked her butt off.
She earned the whole respect of the crew, and obviously we had some of our mechanics on that crew while it was here and they said, look, she deserves a chance on these cars if she wants it.And then she worked really, really hard to earn her way and earn her spot changing the left front tire on Josef’s car.
She’s solid. She is solid. She’s all business.
I think she has the opportunity and really the work ethic to be one of the top people at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. I think her runway is really long, and if she’s patient and she continues to be in the right place and do the things she’s doing now, kind of the sky’s the limit for her.
CAN YOU SPEAK QUICKLY ABOUT TEAM CHEVY? LAST YEAR WAS A ROUGH YEAR HERE; AN AMAZING YEAR-TO-YEAR REBOUND. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THEM? THEY WERE DOING PRETTY BIG THINGS.TIM CINDRIC: Yeah, they were. I think everybody there, they continue to get stronger. Mark Reuss and his group, they’re here to win, and they’ve continued to put more and more resources behind it. It’s the details that win this place, and when you look at last year’s race, I think the Chevys needed a little more at the end when it was time to go, and they gave us more at the end when it was time to go.
I think we either closed the gap or at least gave us the tools to win as Chevy teams, and when you looked at it, there were quite a few Chevys. You look at going into whatever it was, the third to last restart, I think there was four Chevys up there in the top 5 if I remember correctly, and it’s a testament to what that whole group has done.
It’s been really good. The relationship they have with Ilmor and the two of them working together between GM there in Detroit and Ilmor has continued to pay dividends for us.
MR. PENSKE, YOU TOLD ME A FEW YEARS BACK THAT ONE OF YOUR FAVORITE INDY 500 VICTORIES WAS WHEN SAM HORNISH WON BECAUSE YOU KNEW WHAT IT MEANT TO SAM AND HIS DAD. KNOWING WHAT THIS MEANS TO JOSEF AND HIS FATHER, DO YOU SEE A LOT OF SIMILARITIES IN THOSE TWO INDY WINS?ROGER PENSKE: I think it’s for the family really. When Sam won that race in ’06 it was the same kind of a race, coming from the back and executing at the end. His mom was in the car with us. She had his young son, Kota, and it was a family affair really, and that’s just yourself. We see it in our gut, I guess, when you think about what’s happening. But to see what it does, Josef is a proud guy. He’s been a great assimilation with the team. Brought McLaughlin on, worked really well with Will, and I think he’s 100 percent out for the team, and I think his parents were really focused on his future when we first met him, when he first came to work with us.
One thing Tim didn’t say, we really worked on our cars for the race. As he said, we were disappointed in qualifying, but I think you could see when it was time to go, we were there, and I think, Tim, it’s a credit to you and Ilmor and the guys — the little things make a difference, it’s so tight. I just wanted to say, I didn’t get a chance to tell you, but under your leadership, and as you know, Tim, we got the award for the other night, obviously the Hall of Fame, and I guess he is a Hall of Fame guy now for sure.
TIM CINDRIC: Any club you’re in is a good club to be in, I promise you.
HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE TO REPLACE MR. PENSKE’S PARKING PERMIT DOWN STAIRS? IT’S OBVIOUSLY 19 WINS NOW.TIM CINDRIC: I hope it’s already done. I think that group was on that when the flag flew.But yeah, it’s good to start looking at 19s around here. Yeah, glad we could be part of it.

Racer News and Results