No. 21 Motorcraft/DEX Imaging Team Places Fourth In Open Qualifying At North Wilkesboro


 

May 20, 2023


Harrison Burton and the No. 21 Motorcraft/DEX Imaging team have earned the fourth starting spot for Sunday’s Open race that will give the top two finishers a berth in the NASCAR All-Star Race later that evening. (A third Open driver will advance to the All-Star Race through a fan vote.)

Friday’s qualifying session at the historic North Wilkesboro Speedway was based on pit stop times.  Burton and the No. 21 crew posted a time of 14.091 seconds, which was 11th best among combined Open teams and those who have already secured starting berths in the All-Star Race. The Motorcraft/DEX Imaging team was fourth fastest of the Open teams.

In his first laps around North Wilkesboro Speedway, during a practice session Friday afternoon, Burton was 28th fastest with a best lap around the 5/8-mile track at 106.097 miles per hour. He was 18th best among drivers who ran 10 consecutive laps under the green flag, averaging 104.971 mph over his first 10 laps.

Sunday’s 100-lap Open is set to start just after 5:30 p.m., with the 200-lap main event getting underway just after 8 p.m.

FOX Sports 1 will carry the TV coverage.
 

Thornton Rolls Perfect Score at 300 Raceway

Thornton Rolls Perfect Score at 300 Raceway
FARLEY, Iowa (May 19, 2023) – Ricky Thornton Jr. scored a perfect night at 300 Raceway as he was the overall fast qualifier, won his heat, and led all but the first ten laps of the Simon’s Trucking “You Call-We Haul” 50 main event on Friday night. It was Thornton’s fourth Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series win of the season as he closed to within ten points of series point leader, Hudson O’Neal, who finished third. Tim McCreadie, the two-time and reigning series champion came home in second just in front of O’Neal at the stripe. Mason Zeigler, who led the first ten circuits of the race was fourth and defending race winner, Tyler Erb was fifth. Zeigler, the 2018 Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series Rookie of the Year, was making his first start with the series since Speedweeks. Zeigler looked stout from the start as he set a rapid pace at the drop of the green. However, lapped traffic allowed Thornton to close the gap in a hurry on Zeigler as Thornton dove down low entering turn two to take the lead on lap 11.  Zeigler then ran second for several circuits until McCreadie, who started third was able to get by the Pennsylvania racer. O’Neal recovered from two restarts and battled with McCreadie near the end as the two were close at the finish line with McCreadie just edging out O’Neal. Thornton, who started from the pole fell back to second in the early going to Zeigler but bounced back passing Zeigler in traffic to take over a lead he never relinquished. “I just didn’t get a good enough start and that allowed Mason to get out in front. I was just kind of dictating off him how fast I needed to go. We got into lapped traffic, and it was kind of hairy there for a while. It worked out for me.” “There for a while I thought I couldn’t qualify anymore. It was real good tonight. I didn’t hot lap very good, but we qualified really well. It makes your night way easier when you start up front in the heat races and in front of the feature,” said the 32-year-old Martinsville, Indiana racer. “It’s a lot better than starting 20th and driving my tail off to just to get to fifth or sixth.”   McCreadie, who is still looking for his first series win of the season finished 3.5 seconds behind Thornton at the checkers. “It’s just nice to put a normal night together where you are not running B-Mains and not changing everything under the car. I saw the rain here last night and I have been here when it’s rains it’s usually a real tough track, but tonight it was real good and racy. This is one of the few places when you pull a slider at least you clear a guy. It’s nice to see these guys race with a little civility out there and not just slide over your nose or do anything like that. We were clearing each other and crossing back over and having a lot of fun out there. It started to latch up a little bit in that last heat and the track crew went to work and it was a good race to be a part of.” O’Neal, who entered the race 50 points ahead of both Thornton and Brandon Overton will carry the Midwest Sheet Metal orange spoiler onto 34 Raceway on Saturday night with a 10-point advantage. “I really didn’t do my job. I had a pretty good race car and I just messed up on two restarts right back-to-back and fell all the way back to sixth or seventh or whatever it was. It just set me behind the whole race. I just couldn’t quite scratch my way back fast enough to get back to them. McCreadie and I got to battling for second there at the end and that was pretty fun.” The winner’s Todd and Vickie Burns-owned, SSI Motorsports, Longhorn Chassis is powered by a Clements Racing Engine and sponsored by Big River Steel, Hoker Trucking, Sub-Surface of Indiana, Dyno One Inc., West Side Tractor Sales, Certified Inspection Service Company, Inc., D&E Outside Services, Midwest Sheet Metal, Sunoco Race Fuels, Bilstein Shocks, and Murty Farms. Completing the top ten were Devin Moran, Jimmy Owens, Brandon Overton, Chad Simpson, and Daulton Wilson. Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series Race Summary Simon’s Trucking You Call We Haul 50Friday, May 19, 2023300 Raceway – Farley, IA Allstar Performance Time TrialsFast Time Group A: Ricky Thornton, Jr. / 14.630 seconds (overall)Fast Time Group B: Mason Zeigler / 14.656 seconds  Penske Shocks Heat Race #1 Finish (8 Laps, All Transfer): 1. 20RT-Ricky Thornton Jr[1]; 2. 1H-Hudson O’Neal[2]; 3. 1T-Tyler Erb[4]; 4. 18D-Daulton Wilson[3]; 5. 7-Ross Robinson[6]; 6. 58-Garrett Alberson[8]; 7. 4G-Kody Evans[5]; 8. 99B-Boom Briggs[7]; 9. T22-Tegan Evans[9]
Summit Racing Products Heat Race #2 Finish (8 Laps, All Transfer): 1. 25Z-Mason Zeigler[1]; 2. 99-Devin Moran[2]; 3. 11-Spencer Hughes[4]; 4. 20-Jimmy Owens[3]; 5. 49T-Jake Timm[6]; 6. 98-Jason Rauen[8]; 7. 76-Brandon Overton[9]; 8. 22-Daniel Hilsabeck[5]; 9. 29-Spencer Diercks[7]
Simpson Race Products Heat Race #3 (8 Laps, All Transfer): 1. 39-Tim McCreadie[2]; 2. 49-Jonathan Davenport[1]; 3. 46-Earl Pearson Jr[4]; 4. 25C-Chad Simpson[3]; 5. 16-Tyler Bruening[5]; 6. 111B-Max Blair[6]; 7. 40-Joel Callahan[7]; 8. 17-Tim Simpson[8]
Simon’s Trucking You Call We Haul 50 Feature Finish (50 Laps): 
Race Statistics Entrants: 26Terminal Maintenance & Construction Pole Sitter: Ricky Thornton, Jr.Lap Leaders: Mason Zeigler (Laps 1-12); Ricky Thornton, Jr. (Laps 13-50)Wieland Feature Winner: Ricky Thornton, Jr.Arizona Sport Shirts Crown Jewel Cup Feature Winner: n/aBrandon Ford TV Challenge Feature Winner: n/aMargin of Victory: 3.515 secondsGorsuch Performance Solutions Cautions: Kody Evans (Lap 16); Joel Callahan (Lap 17); Spencer Hughes (Lap 18); Max Blair (Lap 31)Fast Time Provisional: n/aSeries Emergency Provisionals: n/aTrack Provisional: n/aBig River Steel Podium Top 3: Ricky Thornton, Jr., Tim McCreadie, Hudson O’NealPenske Shocks Top 5: Ricky Thornton, Jr., Tim McCreadie, Hudson O’Neal, Mason Zeigler, Tyler ErbTodd Steel Buildings Hard Charger of the Race: Brandon Overton (Advanced 12 Positions)Wilwood Brakes Lucky 7th Place Feature: Jimmy OwensDeatherage Opticians Lucky 13th Place Feature: Jonathan DavenportEarnhardt Technologies Most Laps Led: Ricky Thornton, Jr. (36 Laps)Sunoco Race for Gas Highest Finisher: Ricky Thornton, Jr.Midwest Sheet Metal Spoiler Challenge Point Leader: Hudson O’NealO’Reilly Auto Parts Rookie of the Race: Max BlairEtchberger Trucking Fastest Lap of the Race: Ricky Thornton, Jr. (Lap 14 – 14.808 seconds)MD3 Tough Break of the Race: Max BlairOuterwears Crew Chief of the Race: Anthony Burroughs (Ricky Thornton, Jr.)ARP Engine Builder of the Race: Clements Racing EnginesMiller Welders Chassis Builder of the Race: Longhorn ChassisDirt Draft Fastest in Hot Laps: Earl Pearson, Jr. (15.042 seconds)Time of Race: 28 minutes 20 seconds
The Big River Steel Chase for the Championship Presented by ARP Point Standings:

HILLTOP REAPER: Ryan Gustin Wins at Marion Center in 100th Career Start

The Marshalltown, IA driver moves to second in the Series standings, eight points behind Chris Madden

MARION CENTER, PA – May 19. 2023 – An early caution was all Ryan Gustin needed to make his 100th World of Outlaws CASE Construction Equipment Late Models Series start a memorable one.

The Marshalltown, IA driver stormed under Ryan Montgomery on Lap 7 to take the lead and never looked back to win the Connor Bobik Memorial Friday night at Marion Center Raceway. 

Montgomery led the field to the green in the 40-lap affair, holding off challenges from Mike Norris and Gustin, who slowly worked his way to the front from his fourth starting spot in the first few laps.

But as “The Reaper” snuck by Norris on the inside for second, a caution came out on Lap 4 for Colton Flinner, who spun.

After the restart, Gustin needed three laps to wrestle the lead away from Montgomery, sliding underneath him in Turn 2 on Lap 7. 

From there, he aced three more restarts to earn his third career World of Outlaws win and his first of the 2023 season. 

“The Reaper” said his fourth starting position allowed him to ease through the race and not use his equipment up too early.

“We took off, and I felt really, really, good,” Gustin said. “Probably the best I’ve ever felt in a Late Model. It went right around there, and I just kind of tried to ride and not kill the edges on my tires a whole lot once we got to the lead. 

“It’s nice starting up there. If you start eighth or tenth or whatever, you know you just got to go. When you start up there, you can definitely take a lot better care of your tires and make sure you got something left at the end.”

Gustin’s $10,000 victory vaults him to second in the points standings—eight points behind Series points leader Chris Madden, who finished ninth.

While Gustin went unchallenged once he took the lead, two former champions waged war for the runner-up spot. 

Shane Clanton and Brandon Sheppard traded the position before the “Georgia Bulldog” gained the advantage on the outside on Lap 35. 

It’s a finish the Zebulon, GA driver said he needed for his Skyline Motorsports team after they didn’t start the season as he’d hoped.

“We’ve struggled this year with just the balance of the car,” Clanton said. “We struggled at Volusia, just turning and getting traction. So, we worked, and we worked hard to get where we’re at. 

“Overall, our car was real good, though. We just needed a little more tweaking, and I think we know which way to go, and we’re doing the right things.”

Sheppard crossed the line third after falling back to eighth in the first few laps.

The four-time Series champion stated that his team continues building confidence as they improve each race.

“We’re just plugging away,” Sheppard said. “We’re just trying to string together some good runs and just show everybody what we got. 

“We were able to pass a few cars. We fell back to seventh or eighth at the beginning, and then I was able to pick my way up through there, and I was really good in the long run. I don’t know if it was tires, but it was a tricky track. But we were able to get up there a few spots and get a podium run, so we’re happy.”

Nick Hoffman, the Rookie of the Race, finished fourth after starting 12th. 

The Mooresville, NC driver said he was happy with the outcome, especially at a place he’s never raced before.

“That was a really good run,” Hoffman said. “That’s about all you could expect to start 12th there and run fourth. But Gustin was really good. Obviously, he beat me in that Heat Race there, and that was the winning move for the night.

“Our stuff was really good. I was happy with that to run fourth and come up through there.”

Bobby Pierce rounded out the top five after starting 16th. 

While Ryan Gustin bested the field at Marion Center to create a milestone moment with his 100th Series start, his eyes are on a milestone no one has reached—100 wins. 

“I wish it was the 100th win, but that’s not going to happen right now,” Gustin said. “You’re not going to win out here every night. Hopefully, we’ll get to 100 someday.”

UP NEXT: The World of Outlaws CASE Late Models travel to Port Royal Speedway in Port Royal, PA, on Saturday, May 20. Then, the Series makes its lone trip to New York on Tuesday, May 23, stopping at Stateline Speedway in Busti, NY.

If you can’t make it to the track, watch all the action live on DIRTVision – either online on with the DIRTVision App

CASE Construction Equipment Feature (40 Laps): 1. 19R-Ryan Gustin[4]; 2. 25-Shane Clanton[8]; 3. B5-Brandon Sheppard[5]; 4. 9-Nick Hoffman[12]; 5. 32-Bobby Pierce[16]; 6. 96V-Tanner English[24]; 7. 22-Gregg Satterlee[18]; 8. 11-Gordy Gundaker[3]; 9. 44-Chris Madden[11]; 10. 00-Kyle Hardy[22]; 11. 1ST-Johnny Scott[20]; 12. 1*-Chub Frank[19]; 13. 40B-Kyle Bronson[9]; 14. 28-Dennis Erb Jr[25]; 15. 5L-Jon Lee[13]; 16. 36-Logan Martin[28]; 17. 12-Doug Drown[6]; 18. B1-Brent Larson[21]; 19. 3S-Brian Shirley[10]; 20. 97-Cade Dillard[23]; 21. 1C-Alex Ferree[7]; 22. 1Z-Logan Zarin[15]; 23. 30-Todd Cooney[26]; 24. W3-John Weaver[27]; 25. 9Y-Levi Yetter[17]; 26. 14W-Dustin Walker[29]; 27. 10-Mike Norris[2]; 28. 4S-Ryan Montgomery[1]; 29. 48-Colton Flinner[14] FOX FACTORY HARD CHARGER: Tanner English [+18].

A MATTER OF TIME: Donny Schatz Scores First Win of 2023 in Attica Raceway Park Thriller

The 10-time champion makes another strong statement amid hot streak

ATTICA, OH (May 19, 2023) – All signs were pointing to a Donny Schatz win being only a matter of time.

His first three podiums of the season in the last four races. A 4.75 average finish over that span. Leading a lap at Eldora while contending for victory. Add those numbers together, and you end up with the 10-time champion looking like his prime self over the past two weeks.

At Attica Raceway Park on Friday night, the time came.

Schatz put the exclamation mark on his recent run of excellence – sliding by Rico Abreu for the lead coming to the white flag and holding on to collect his first checkered flag of the 2023 World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car season.

After struggling early through the early part of the year before the recent success, Schatz found it appropriate to quote a legend of the sport to sum up his feelings on the breakthrough victory.

“It’s good to get a win. One of the guys I grew up racing with, Kenny Woodruff, he used to say, ‘Even monkeys fall out of trees.’ And we won a race tonight,” Schatz said with a laugh.

On a more serious note, the celebration was especially gratifying. Schatz and his Tony Stewart/Curb Agajanian Racing team endured many difficult nights earlier this year that left them searching for answers. In recent weeks, they’ve begun to find them. And there’s no greater testament than standing atop the podium.

“It’s a credit to this team,” Schatz said of the win. “Ron Shaver and everybody that builds the engines and everybody at Ford. You can build speed. Trying to do it consistently when you have your own road to do things, you find out everything not to do in a short amount of time. But hats off to everybody who kept digging. It’s tough to swallow 12th place finishes, especially when this team is capable of winning championships. They’ve won 10 of them. So, hats off to them for not giving up on me.”

The trip to Victory Lane upped his career total with the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series to 308. Schatz extended his record as the winningest driver in Series history at Attica to five triumphs at the 1/3rd mile. He also moved himself into the top-five in the championship standings.

Schatz’ path to the win began from the fourth starting position aboard the Carquest #15. He quickly moved his way to third at the start and settled in two spots away from the lead.

As the 35-lap Feature moved beyond the halfway point, Schatz began to flex his muscle in the way the Sprint Car world has become accustomed to over his decades of dominance.

Schatz didn’t pound the cushion. He didn’t stick to one line. He moved the TSR #15 all around the Attica surface in a search for speed. The Fargo, ND native began to find what he needed on the bottom in Turns 1 and 2. He slipped by Carson Macedo by using a big run off the bottom of Turn 2 with less than 10 laps to go.

After securing the runner-up spot, Schatz set his sights on Abreu, who was struggling to navigate lapped traffic. After only a couple laps, Schatz closed on the tail tank of the #24. Coming to the white flag he made his move.

Abreu slid himself in Turns 3 and 4. As Abreu’s car drifted toward the cushion, Schatz stuck the bottom and used a powerful run off corner exit to snatch the lead as the white flag waved overhead.

On the final circuit, Macedo threw a slider on Abreu in Turns 1 and 2, which broke both of their momentum enough to effectively seal the deal for Schatz. The veteran protected the bottom in the final set of corners and claimed his first victory since last year’s season finale.

“We just kind of had to go where they weren’t,” Schatz said of his strategy. “I think moving around there is what really helped us get there. When we got to traffic it was hard to get through. Everybody is so equal that even lapped cars are pretty good. That’s how we were able to get there. Hats off to my guys. They’ve been digging. We haven’t had the results we’ve wanted, but this is a tough game.”

Behind Schatz, Rico Abreu settled for second in his #24 after leading the opening 33 circuits. The St. Helena, CA native is now up to five Series podiums on the season – most among drivers who aren’t full-time on the tour. While finishing runner-up after leading such a large chunk of the race was disappointing, a second place result is still an encouraging outing against The Greatest Show on Dirt.

“An incredible job by my guys again,” Abreu said. “I feel like I let them down a little bit there, but you put yourself in different circumstances when you’re leading races. You’re judging your pace off lapped traffic, and you can feel the intensity behind you of guys like Donny and Carson and know they’re knocking on the door there.”

Rounding out the podium was Carson Macedo aboard the Jason Johnson Racing #41. It was a much needed boost for Macedo who hadn’t finished within the top three since 81 Speedway in early April. The Lemoore, CA native pressured Abreu for the lead on multiple occasions and felt he could’ve been celebrating a victory had a few things unfolded differently.  

“I feel like we had a shot to win there, and then we ended up running third,” Macedo said. “I feel it was really competitive there at the end. All three of us were really going for it. I feel like the track was so slow that you had to be so patient to run around there. I debated on moving down in (Turns) 3 and 4 like Donny was. I felt like when I did move down, I maybe didn’t slow down enough and get crowded right around those tires to stick it and get off the corner. It was wild. We got to lapped traffic and that really changed the race a lot.”

Sheldon Haudenschild and David Gravel completed the top-five.

Brad Sweet salvaged his night by driving from 19th to ninth to earn the KSE Racing Hard Charger.

Even with Sweet’s strong charge, Gravel trimmed Sweet’s points lead down to 28 markers. Macedo still sits third, 34 points behind the top spot.

Rico Abreu began the night by earning his second Simpson Performance Products QuickTime of the year and the 15th of his career.

CASE No. 1 Engine Oil Heat One was topped by Rico Abreu (37th Heat win of career). NOS Energy Drink Heats Two through Four were claimed by Carson Macedo (88th of career), Donny Schatz (508th of career), and Sheldon Haudenschild (82nd of career).

UP NEXT: The World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Cars visit Hartford, OH’s Sharon Speedway on Saturday, May 20. For tickets, CLICK HERE.

If you can’t make it to the track, catch all of the action on DIRTVision.

RESULTS:

A Feature (35 Laps): 1. 15-Donny Schatz[4]; 2. 24-Rico Abreu[2]; 3. 41-Carson Macedo[1]; 4. 17-Sheldon Haudenschild[5]; 5. 2-David Gravel[6]; 6. 33W-Cap Henry[7]; 7. 1S-Logan Schuchart[14]; 8. 35-Stuart Brubaker[3]; 9. 49-Brad Sweet[19]; 10. 5-Spencer Bayston[10]; 11. 18-Giovanni Scelzi[9]; 12. 5R-Byron Reed[13]; 13. 3Z-Brock Zearfoss[20]; 14. 22-Brandon Spithaler[16]; 15. 83-James McFadden[8]; 16. 1A-Jacob Allen[17]; 17. 3J-Trey Jacobs[23]; 18. 91-Tyler Gunn[12]; 19. 29-Cole Macedo[21]; 20. 1-Nate Dussel[15]; 21. 15C-Chris Andrews[11]; 22. 32-Bryce Lucius[22]; 23. 2X-Ricky Peterson[24]; 24. 09-Craig Mintz[18]

Upstart Indy 500 Team Finds Speed, Consistency in Fast Friday Practice

Next Up: Qualifying on Saturday

(May 19, 2023) SPEEDWAY, In- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

First-year Indy 500 entrant ABEL Motorsports of Louisville, KY and driver RC Enerson faced plenty of pressure in the week of preparation leading up to Saturday’s qualifying round for the “Greatest Spectacle in Racing”.   But the new squad responded with a strong “Fast Friday” of practice and now is gearing up

for a successful bid to make the 500 field.

The Chevy-powered team posted the day’s 30th best lap of 231.242 mph, and a best four-lap simulated qualifying run of 230.203 mph.  34 cars are entered and the fastest 33 will make up the field on May 28th for the 107th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge.

26-year-old rookie driver RC Enerson knew his team faced long odds.  “I think today was tough.  I think there were a lot of people off their game early.  A lot will change for tomorrow.  We learned a lot today, and we’ll probably come with a whole different downforce setup for tomorrow.   That last run was decent and now we’ll just go back to work for tomorrow morning”.   

Team Manager John Brunner noted, “it was nice to put 4 laps together at the end of the session.  We need to be a little faster than that, but our problem earlier was consistency over a 4-lap run for qualifying.  That last run was encouraging.  We just need to find a little speed now.   There’s more in the car; we put a little more downforce in for that last run to find the consistency.   We can take a little bit out and make a little more mechanical grip for tomorrow, and that’ll be the key.”

Team Principal Bill Abel wrapped up the day by drawing the 16th position in the qualifying order for his #50 team and driver Enerson.   That could well be an advantage.  The earlier qualifying position should provide better track conditions thus improving the team’s odds of making the 500 field.    

The ABEL Motorsports #50 team will have a half-hour of practice Saturday morning at 8:30 AM before qualifying starts at 11:00 AM ET.   The team’s Saturday goal is to make the top 30 on speed, thus avoiding any chance of being bumped from the 500 field on Sunday.

ROBERT HIGHT AND CORNWELL TOOLS SET TRACK RECORDS FRIDAY AT ROUTE 66 RACEWAY

JOLIET, Ill. (May 19, 2023) – Debuting his Cornwell Tools / AAA Chevrolet Camaro SS Funny Car paint scheme, Robert Hight would be the provisional No. 1 qualifier Friday at the Gerber Glass & Collision NHRA Route 66 Nationals presented by PEAK Performance at Route 66 Raceway. John Force landed in the No. 4 spot with the BlueDEF PLATINUM / PEAK Chevy Camaro SS. In Top Fuel, Austin Prock and the Montana Brand dragster earned the No. 3 spot while Brittany Force with the Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy team are No. 19.
Looking for his first No.1. of the season, 78th of his career, Robert Hight and the Cornwell Tools team made a splash in the NHRA return to Route 66 Raceway. Hight would hold on for a stellar 3.831-second pass at 335.07 mph to set both ends of the track record, which he previously set back in 2017.
“That run surprised me. Going up there, Jimmy and Thomas Prock, we were talking about trying to run 3.87 or 3.88 which is what we just ran in the finals at Charlotte. We figured that would be a good baseline to get us qualified and start the weekend,” Hight said. “Jimmy kept saying in Charlotte, that there was so much more left in this thing that we could pick up three hundredths. Sure enough, it did. It was just a smooth run and when they’re smooth like that they honestly don’t feel that fast. When they told me on the radio that it ran 3.83, I had to double-check that I actually heard that right. It’s amazing to come back to a race track that we haven’t raced on in this many years and to just pick up and run like that. It’s pretty impressive. It really goes out to the NHRA, you know, for whipping this place into shape and getting it ready for the fans and us to race on.”
This is the first of 11 races that Hight will be running the Cornwell Tools primary sponsorship on his Chevy Camaro.
“Doing that in the Cornwell Tools Chevy really made this special, because I think there was about 15 Cornwell people back there in the sponsor viewing,” Hight said. “They’ve just been so excited about this, and after Charlotte I got to go to Cornwell and visit their two factories that they have and I just met so many great people that are out in the middle of America. Just hard working, they really care about what they’re doing and the products they’re making. It’s pretty impressive. It makes me really want to do a good job for them and work hard for them because all of those folks work hard and love what they do.”
Most recent Top Fuel winner, Austin Prock and the Montana Brand team had a solid pass to open qualifying at Route 66 Raceway. Prock handled his Chevrolet dragster to a 3.694-second pass at 331.20 mph to land in the No. 2 spot and pick up two qualifying bonus points.
John Force and the BlueDEF Chevy had tire smoke just past midtrack on their first attempt down Route 66 Raceway. Force would manage a 4.442-second pass at 192 mph and end up in the No. 4 spot. The BlueDEF / PEAK Chevy has a specialty look this weekend dawning the names of all the Old World Industries’ (OWI), PEAK and BlueDEF’s parent company, employee names to celebrate their 50th anniversary.
Brittany Force and the Flav-R-Pac team had trouble at the hit shutting off almost immediately to coast across the finish line at 8.067-seconds and 78.10 mph to end the night sitting in the No. 19 spot with two qualifying runs left to work their way up.
The Gerber Collision & Glass Route 66 Nationals presented by PEAK Performance at Route 66 Raceway continues with qualifying Saturday at 2:00 and 5:30 p.m. Sunday eliminations are set to begin at 11:00 a.m. Television coverage will be aired on Friday at 7:00 p.m. ET and Sunday at 3:00 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1 (FS1). Sunday eliminations are slated to begin on Sunday at 10:00 p.m. ET on FS1.
-30-
AUSTIN PROCK, 27, Montana Brand / Rocky Mountain Twist DragsterQualifying:2nd; 3.694-seconds; 331.20 mphBonus Qualifying Points:+2 (second quickest Q1)BRITTANY FORCE, 36, Flav-R-Pac / Monster Energy DragsterQualifying:19th; 8.067-seconds; 331.20 mphBonus Qualifying Points:0 JOHN FORCE, 74, BlueDEF PLATINUM Chevrolet Camaro SSQualifying:4th; 4.442-seconds; 192 mphBonus Qualifying Points: 0ROBERT HIGHT, 53, Cornwell Tools Chevy Camaro SSQualifying:1st; 3.831-seconds; 335.07 mphBonus Qualifying Points:+3 (quickest Q1) 

chevy racing–indycar–indy 500–fast friday

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

INDIANAPOLIS 500

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA

TEAM CHEVY FAST FRIDAY PRACTICE REPORT

MAY 19, 2023

RINUS VEEKAY AND PATO O’WARD LED TEAM CHEVY AT CONCLUSION OF FAST FRIDAY AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

  • Ed Carpenter Racing’s Rinus VeeKay led Team Chevy on the Fast Friday leaderboard, finishing the day overall third with his top speed of 234.171 MPH.
  • Pato O’Ward, driver of the No. 5 Arrow McLaren INDYCAR Chevrolet, was second of the Team Chevy drivers, finishing the day fifth with his best speed of 233.796 MPH.
  • VeeKay led the Bowtie brand on no-tow speed and finished third with his best speed of 233.781 MPH. Arrow McLaren INDYCAR’s Felix Rosenqvist finishing next in sixth with his fastest lap speed of 233.396 MPH.
  • Early into today’s session, within the first hour of Fast Friday practice, Pato O’Ward clocked a Turn 3 trap speed of 243.143 MPH.

TEAM CHEVY TOP-10 PRACTICE RESULT:

Pos.  Driver

3rd     Rinus VeeKay

5th     Pato O’Ward

6th     Josef Newgarden

7th     Santino Ferrucci

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING (QUOTES)

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

“I think in the first run, I wasn’t very happy with the balance. It was just not good for me. We changed it up in the second run. I asked the ECR team, and they delivered. Really, for us, it’s great. But anyway, very happy.”

On a day like today, when you’re happy early in the day but you never want to get complacent, right? What is that balance with the team? How do you extract what you can with the team?

“It’s small changes at this point. The team’s base, where we start with the start set up, it’s so close to perfect. We did a few balance checks on qual downforce, basically, with the lower boost. We had to make a little tweak but we’re right there. We might make small little adjustments for the temperature tomorrow, but I think it’s just going to be all fine. You don’t want to take too much risk today.”

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

”Happy Fast Friday for us today. We did three outings, and every outing we just got better and better. I think we’re in a good spot in terms of balance. Tomorrow we’ll be ready to go out into qualifying, have a solid first run and hopefully that’s all we need to do. If not, we’ll go back out and make sure we get this thing into the top 12 to fight it out on Sunday.”

Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Chevrolet at Team Penske:

“It was a good final run. We had a really disastrous first run. You always come out of the gate feeling really excited for today. The boost is up, and it was a bad first run. We just missed the balance. Came back, and had a pretty good second run. We knew we really needed to do one more and get it really right. I felt like the Shell car was pretty solid. Look, it’s hard to say today. I think today indications look better today than they did on Fast Friday last year. This is going to be more of a fight to get into the top 12 this year. When you look at the cluster of people that are really tight together, it’s much trickier than it looked like last year. We gotta be really on it. We have to nail our run tomorrow. I think the first run is always critical depending upon where you draw. So far, so good. I think Team Chevy has done a stellar job as always, and I hope we can have a good fight to get this into the Sunday show.”

On sticker tires, or bailing on the second run – did it turn into a balance check?

“We needed a balance check on an additional config for tomorrow. It’s good to be able to get that in, especially depending upon what you’re going to do in the morning tomorrow. It’s just nice to get that final balance check on a different look. That’s what today is for. We tried to keep the miles the car and we didn’t have to run too much. I think we got all of the information we needed, which was critical.”

On what happened in T2…

“It was that last lap. I wasn’t flat that last lap, and I think our average could have been what we showed there. We can fix it. It was just a small detail, and the details are going to add up. I think tomorrow is going to be obviously very different complexity with the temperature. But we’ll just clean it up more and be that much better.”

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

“Our first run I thought was good. I think if we would have finished it out, we probably would be P2 or P3 or close to there. Maybe just two spots up. It’s insane how a couple of degrees of track temp and things change. Our entire balance shifted with a quarter-turn of front wing. It’s insane how much that does. I think we know we’re fast. Rinus’s (VeeKay) car is extremely fast, really impressed with what they can do. Thankfully we have that data to look out. It’ll be interesting to see how we progress. All three cars are, we’re close. We’re all similar in what we want whereas last year I would say I was on a bit of an island myself. So, thankfully I’m kind of following the fast guys here in qualifying.”

On weather in qualifying tomorrow…

“It’s going to be colder tomorrow. Colder is faster. If we can go out in the morning, it’ll be like 60 degrees when we go out. It’s much hotter today. We’ll see. Honestly, the weather we know here can always be a crapshoot. Whatever you get, you get.”

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

“Fast Friday done. I felt pretty sporty, I have to say. The last run we did we got everything together with the balance and we made some good changes. We had some minor issues before noon today that we kind of solved, so it was nice to get a clean run before qualifying. It looked pretty quick, as well. I think we’re third-quickest on the four-lap average, so we’ll take that. It’s probably better than we thought we would be. So far, I’m happy.”

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

”A very solid day. I think we’re somewhere in the top five on the four-lap average. This is always a weird place because you can end happy and then the conditions are going to change tomorrow, so you don’t really know. The car is good. The car has been good all week, so we just have to keep staying on top of the changing conditions. Hopefully we get a good draw tonight, and that will make our lives easier tomorrow morning.”

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

”This day is always hectic. You always think about what you got and what you didn’t get, but I think we’re OK. Tomorrow is really going to be about the drawing, the wind and everything else, but I think we have a pretty good car. All four cars are pretty similar. I’ll have some teammates going out before we do. We’ll see what’s going to happen.”

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

“Anything can happen around here. I won’t feel good until Monday practice and we know we’re in the race. It’s crazy competitive right now. I don’t know, I think the Saturday, tomorrow night at the bell is going to be as chaotic and as much jockeying as ever because there are so many people capable of making the top 12 right now. It’s going to be stressed out a little.”

With the track as good as it is in the middle of the day. Would this be a year where the draw may not matter as much, and then you will see people going back and forth and never feeling safe?

“I think the draw is going to matter more than ever because it’s not going to be cloudy tomorrow. In my opinion, track temp always trumps ambient temp around here. The track temp is going to be climbing on the last forecast I saw, which they’ve been inaccurate all month. It’s going to be sunny tomorrow so I think it’s going to throw everything a little bit of a wrinkle from today, plus with wind direction. There could be some volatility but it’s going to be tight no matter what. There are a ton of competitive drivers and teams here. We got a sunny track, so I’m cautiously optimistic for the BITNILE.COM Chevy, that we’ve got something for them tomorrow. Obviously, my teammates really quick, Rinus (VeeKay), right now. We’ve got a lot of decisions to make with a bit of all the things we were doing today. Optimistic we’ll at least have a chance for Sunday.”

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

“I feel good. I mean, today was pretty solid. We’re close to the top on the charts for most of the day. It cooled down, so many went quicker. We’ll see if we make the fast 12 tomorrow.”

On the great couple of days and chances of top-12?

“Yeah, I know. Honestly, it’s kind of shocking but we’ve worked really hard on this car, and everybody’s put in a lot of time for this. When it’s got raw pace, it’s nice to be able to top the board three days in a row.”

With Benjamin’s (Pedersen) car coming to life today, do you feel you’ve helped the program, he’s helped you, that kind of thing?

“Honestly, we’ve been on the same cars the entire three days. We’ve made a couple of changes here and there. Stuff that’s really small to help us get comfortable, but our cars are almost the same.”

Benjamin Pedersen, No. 55 Chevrolet at AJ Foyt Racing:

“Really good day for my first ever Fast Friday, being a rookie this year. We did our first run, which was pretty okay. We were lacking a bit of grip but I just told the engineers what I was feeling, and then we went out for our second run, and the car was hooked up right away. Super, super fast. I think we’re eight at the moment on no-tow. The car is feeling really good. My teammate (Santino Ferrucci) is right there as well with us. We’re right on top of each other with performance. Our day concluded pretty quickly. Looking forward to tomorrow’s qualifying.”

Larry Foyt, President of AJ Foyt Racing:

“Well, (Fast Friday has) been really nice and calm. Honestly, when your cars are fast, it just helps you slow everything down. You’re not scrambling, quite as much so, so it kind of been a been a nice day. I think both drivers are really happy. The Chevy power feels great. So we’re excited for tomorrow. Just trying to make sure all the i’s are dotted and T’s are crossed. But no, it’s just it just feels great. You know the Sexton Properties car and the Homes for Troops car, it’s just nice when you got speed in your car. So engineering has done a great job. mechanics have put together some really clean racecars and now it comes down to tomorrow and putting the four laps together because I think that’s what you’re seeing everyone’s so tight. You know with that first lap a lot of people are fast, but you got to get four laps together.”

Would you guys consider a third car, and have some people calling to inquire about that? Just maybe the decision to really stay with those strengths and use those two numbers you always have?

“There is a little bit of talk obviously. Some people have called and you know, it’s it feels like every year I promise the guys I won’t do it and then I think they were gonna just beat the hell out of me if I were at three this year. They’re pointing at me now. So yeah, we just it was like hey, let’s focus on the two and so it’s good and that’s what we’re doing and it’s nice and yeah, like I say just want to get tomorrow over with hopefully have to in the fastball 12 and give it another go.”

On team chemistry…

“It’s been really nice. I mean, Santina really knows what he wants here. He loves this place. He has a really good idea of what he wants out of the car. So that’s been super helpful. And Benjamin, I mean, I’m just really impressed. He’s just been so calm and cool for his first time here. And, you know, put up that run today. And that was just really nice. I mean, it we haven’t run a lot today, but he feels really confident as far so it’s been I’d say it’s been good. It’s not over yet. And this place can always throw you throw the loop, but we haven’t changed a lot and my engineering has put some good cars together. So, we’re excited.”

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

“My first Fast Friday for the Indy 500, and oh my god what a feeling. Honestly, we’re in a good position. We started rather badly in last positions, but we were improving through the day. We finished in a good position, I think. We will see what happens tomorrow, because everything changes with the weather. We will see what happens.”

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

“Today was our first day really going after the qualifying trim with the added turbo boost. It was a trial-and-error day for us. We found things we didn’t like. But, at the end, we did find things we did like and what I needed out of the car. We were in the top 15 in the four-lap average today, so I’ll take that and move on to the first day of qualifying. You really couldn’t dial too much into it today with wind increasing later in the afternoon. You get to the point where it’s going to be so much different on Saturday that we need to see what we have right now. It’s going to be cooler, and the wind direction is going flip 180 degrees. The good deal is my son, Rhodes, drew number one for qualifying. So, we are the first qualifier tomorrow morning. That’s the best we can ask for entering qualifying.”

RC Enerson, No. 50 Chevrolet at Abel Motorsports:

“I think today was tough. I think there were a lot of people off their game early, especially those who were a lot trimmed out today. A lot’s going to change for tomorrow. We learned a lot today, and we’ll probably come with a whole different downforce setup for tomorrow. But overall today that last run was decent and now we’ll just go back to work for tomorrow morning.”

PATO O’WARD, No. 5 ARROW MCLAREN CHEVROLET – End of Day Press Conference:

THE MODERATOR: Joined by Pato O’Ward, third best overall speed today, 13th best when it came to the four-lap average.

Happy with your day today, Pato?

PATO O’WARD: “Yeah, we did three attempts today. Didn’t finish the first one. Second one was slightly better. Finished it not in the best of ways, I guess. Then we found a very happy balance there in the end.

Yeah, Sato San was quick today, very, very fast, as we were expecting the whole Ganassi camp.

Yeah, I have to reiterate a bit of what Josef said. It’s going to be tight, really, really tight, like to get into the Fast 12 is probably going to be the tightest it’s been in the last few years for sure.

It’s good to see that we were able to put it in the mix there with our cars today. Yeah, tomorrow it seems to be a bit colder ambient, sun is going to be shining, so the track temperature shouldn’t be too cold, fairly similar to what it was today. Obviously, the wind is shifting a bit, that makes things a bit more interesting.”

Q. Pato, I think it was 243 miles an hour into turn three. Were you aware of that? Is the speed on your dash? What happened after that?

PATO O’WARD: “I wasn’t aware of what we hit in the trap speeds until I saw it online. It’s fricking fast. Like before I went out, I was seeing the guys that were doing the runs before me, you can tell the difference.

The engines sound way beefier, it look just fricking fast, and it feels fast (smiling). It’s cool.”

KYLE KIRKWOOD: “Does it feel fast?”

PATO O’WARD: “So fast. I was waiting for that question (smiling).”

Q. (No microphone.)

PATO O’WARD: “Yeah, I don’t have an answer for you. It feels fast. That wall approaches very fast. If you have a bit of a…”

Q. When you go in there 240, you can tell the difference, right?

PATO O’WARD: “I’m more focused to feel what the car is telling me so it doesn’t catch me off guard kind of thing, yeah.”

Q. Seems like most people have that hot lap the first time, then things degrade. Has there ever been an attempt to go maybe a little bit conservative on the first lap? What is the rule of thumb there?

PATO O’WARD: “I guess that’s when you start playing with downforce. You load it up a little bit more if you want to be more consistent. It really depends on what balance you have. Obviously, there’s going to be dropoff, at least that what it seems like today. Not sure what it will be like tomorrow.

Yeah, I mean, I think for tomorrow if you want to be in the Fast 12, your first lap has to be in the 234s. If you want to complete your run well, you can’t fall out of the 232s, high 231s if you want to get a solid average.”

Q. Pato, about Josef saying it was going to be so tight to get into the Fast 12, does the draw make it even more important?

PATO O’WARD: “Yeah, I’ve never drawn my own. I think today Pato fan is going to be doing the draw for me. Positive vibes for him drawing a good number. I don’t know his name. You’ll probably find out later.

Yeah, I mean, I think we were the first one to qualify last year. The previous year we were somewhere in the top 10. Obviously if you get some cloud cover, it’s obviously good. You can be 25th in line, but if you get a cloud cover for your run, you’re fine. It continues to creep up.

I don’t know. We’ll see.”

Q. Pato, given we have six Chevys, six Hondas in the top 12, do you feel Chevy has the power to kind of take it to them?

PATO O’WARD: “Yeah, man. I mean, for sure I feel like we won’t really know until tomorrow. It looks good from today. I think it looks very well-mixed there, a very good mix. The speeds are very tight, yeah.

But I think tomorrow we’ll probably get the better idea of who’s coming out swinging.”

War wizard–march, April, May

March, April & May 2023

March was a a hair puller for the team. Kicking the month off in Corbin, KY for 2 shows. Friday night was pretty good for us. Truck held up pretty good for us enough to bring home a freestyle win and 1 race win. Saturday night was harsh on the team. We started the night off with failure with the rear third member exploding and puncturing the housing and locking the truck up to the point it just would not roll. We had to force the truck out of the arena to attempt the repairs. We did everything we could but failed to make it back in the show. With parts becoming harder and harder to find and get a hold of we were forced to buy new aftermarket ring and pinion for the truck. This proved to be a waste of time. The new part failed causing damages beyond our control.

Leaving out of Corbin extremely disappointed we were headed to Corinth, MS for another 2 day event. After several long days of going over the truck to try and make sure it was 100% we entered

Into what end as a good weekend. With a freestyle win and 2 race wins, we were happy to have a truck in one piece.

From there we were off to Aubrundale, FL for 2 nights of destruction. Night one was good, truck was solid and laid down 2 great freestyle runs for the fans. Night number 2 was stressful. The 1st freestyle was good no issues, but the second half our fresh motor had issues. Lifter failure caused cam damage at the very end of the run. Needless to say that was a long ride back to Maryland, knowing we had to tear into our motor so early in the year.

April we took a breather to gather up parts and do repairs to the engine to get ready for the month of May.

We kicked May off in Anderson, SC for one night. This was just a one night event with 2 freestyles for us. Holding our breath each time the truck fired up, hoping for just a

Clean run. We manage to escape Anderson without issues to the monster but the trip there was brutal blowing the turbo on the rig 2 hours short of the show. Luckily we were able to get back on the road to Anderson in less than 23 hours thanks to a hard working young man.

Next up would Hickory Motor Speedway. Two days of pure destruction! Friday night was great. Had a rain shower to knock the dust down and give RJ the ability to slip and slide around the track. The fans we super excited. Saturday was great up till the end when the output shaft in the transmission said not today boys and girls you are done. Luckily RJ was at the end of his run and the fans still got a great show. Now the hustle to repair the transmission and head out to the mid-west for 2 huge shows in June.

5006 General Stuart CT. Sharpsburg, MD 21782 Office: 407-314-6936 wwr@warwizardracing.com

Part II: DIRTcar’s 40th Anniversary Season Celebrates Vision of Memmer, Leadership of Driggers

CONCORD, NC (May 19, 2023) – Bob Memmer had a love for Late Model racing and a specific vision for it. In 1984, he made it a reality.

His vision – United Midwestern Promoters (UMP) – redefined the landscape of Late Model racing, putting in place a standardized package of technical specifications to govern some of the biggest Late Model races in the country. Memmer carried UMP through the 1980s and 1990s, giving it the push to live well into the 21st century when it eventually rebranded as DIRTcar Racing – celebrating its 40th anniversary this year.

READ FIRST – Part I: DIRTcar’s 40th Anniversary Season Celebrates Vision Of Memmer, Leadership Of Driggers


Memmer couldn’t bare the weight running the organization forever, though. With growth and his declining health came the need for assistance and people who he could trust to shepherd his vision into the future.

Evolution of UMP into DIRTcar Racing (1990s – Present)

Volusia Speedway Park, 1992. A 33-year-old Sam Driggers was working for track owner Dick Murphy at the track’s annual Winternationals event. He’d spent several years at the famed half-mile oval in Barberville, FL, getting his first job at the racetrack as a young boy and later learning to hand-score races.

Originally from St. Augustine, Driggers spent much of his early life in Florida before a career change moved him out to San Francisco in the 1980s. Murphy called him back to work at the track several years later, where he was introduced to Memmer. It was then their historic partnership was born.

“He needed someone like me to come around and make him feel better about all of it,” Driggers said. “Someone that would go with him to all the racetracks and be with him there, hangout, and talk all the old school kind of stuff with him.”

Memmer had spoken with Driggers about joining UMP as an official and accompanying him to the brand’s major events. The Summer Nationals “Hell Tour” had become one of the most iconic and prestigious Late Model racing tours in the nation – which by then had already started competing in its traditional schedule format of multiple consecutive days of racing with few breaks – and Memmer was needing assistance to keep up with his day-to-day duties.

Before the age of the internet and social media, Memmer produced a UMP newsletter with updated national points standings, on paper, and mailed it out to competitors each week. With each year that passed and each new track and driver that joined UMP, the newsletter process became more and more time consuming.

While his duties at home steadily increased, his travel schedule did not slow down. Soon, Memmer’s health began to deteriorate, and life on the road became more difficult. That’s when Driggers started taking a more up-front role, handling some of the things Memmer used to do by himself.

“He didn’t have very many people for a long time, but his health got to where he had to start hiring people,” Driggers said. “He still would stay involved as long as he could, but I could tell it wasn’t what he wanted.”

In the coming years, several health issues struck Memmer and limited his mobility. Though the UMP success raged on into the turn of the millennium, Memmer was later dealt his worst health issue.

In February 2001, doctors diagnosed him with a split aorta – a serious heart condition with a potentially deadly outcome. He was given a month to live.

With the fate of a rapidly expanding dirt track racing organization in his hands, Memmer knew it was time to make a move for the company’s future. That’s when he turned to one of his most trusted partners in the industry – Bob Sargent.

The Track Enterprises owner/founder had been promoting dirt track racing events across the Midwest for over 15 years – many of which were run with UMP sanctioning. Sargent was one of UMP’s longest and most loyal promoters and had formed a strong professional relationship with Memmer through their many seasons of partnership.

Sargent already had discussions with Memmer regarding UMP’s future, offering up a place for it to go should Memmer ever be unable to continue its operation. Those talks were brought up again following Memmer’s heart condition, and a deal was struck for Sargent – and an additional group of motorsports professionals – to purchase UMP and continue its operations for the 2002 season.

Sargent, along with a group of new co-owners – NASCAR veteran Ken Schrader, longtime Lebanon Valley Speedway (NY) promoter Howard Commander, and fellow Midwestern special event promoter Robert Lawton – took charge of UMP, carrying the torch of Memmer’s vision for united tracks and rules.

“I wanted to make sure it was in good hands and that it grew,” Sargent said. “I had another motive because I was also a track owner and promoter, so I had a vested interest to make sure that UMP stayed on the right track and communicated with each promoter well.

“If all that worked well together, then promoters would succeed financially, and the racers would have a good rules package to be able to race all over the Midwest. I wanted to help that stay together and further it as much as I could.”

For the sale of his brand, Memmer was originally offered significant financial compensation. However, in what will forever be remembered as a true symbol of his generosity and love for the sport, he told Sargent to take the money, put it into the year-end points fund, and set both the Late Model and Modified national championship checks at an unprecedented $100,000 each.

Despite doctors’ grim predictions for his life expectancy, Memmer stuck around to see Terry English (Late Model) and Jimmy Owens (Modified) capture the 2002 UMP national points titles. Scott Bloomquist also bagged a $100,000 check for his Summer Nationals championship, completing the holy trinity in what was then the highest-paying season in UMP history.

2002 also marked Memmer’s induction into the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame for his outstanding contributions to the sport and the racers – most notably, for “the little guy,” as he often referred to the more local, weekend racers.

Memmer traveled to as many races as he could in 2003, still enduring the effects of his deteriorating health. However, prior to the start of the 2004 weekly season, Memmer suffered what would be the final blow to his failing health – a hip fracture permanently sidelined him, preventing him from attending any future races.

On July 8, 2004, Memmer passed away at the age of 69 in his long-term care facility in Louisville, KY.

He could rest in peace knowing his vision would live on, especially with Driggers, his hand-picked protégé, stepping into Memmer’s old role after his passing. He worked with Sargent and his staff through the end of 2004, when the course of UMP history was about to change again.

In late 2004, Sargent sold the UMP organization to present-day World Racing Group, who currently owns and operates the organization. A rebrand to “DIRTcar Racing” in 2007 brought along several new changes, but Driggers still remained at the helm of the brand’s direction, on a mission to keep his former mentor’s vision alive and well.

“I remember Sam when he worked at the ticket window there at Volusia Speedway Park in Florida 100 years ago, it seemed like,” said Dirt Late Model Hall-of-Famer Billy Moyer. “He got with Bob [Memmer], and Bob took him under his wing. He went around to enough of them races with Bob through the years that he kinda learned the ropes of how Bob did things. I think he’s tried to follow that same pattern as close as he could for all these years.”

UMP’s history is deep rooted in Late Model racing. But by the turn of the century, there were more Modified competitors racing at the weekly UMP tracks. Every February, UMP-style Modifieds flocked to Volusia Speedway Park by the dozens to compete. Having spent much of his early career in racing at the famed venue, Driggers was always a proponent of the division in the way Memmer was with Late Models, going back as far as the mid-1990s.

1990 UMP Late Model national champion Bob Pierce later began producing his own brand of Modified chassis, and still stands today as of the winningest car builders in UMP/DIRTcar history, having won Chassis Builder of the Year 10 times since starting his business over 20 years ago.

“The Modifieds weren’t all that much when Memmer was doing it,” Pierce said. “When Sam came along, they were as full-bore as Late Models.

“And that wasn’t really what he was supposed to do. Bob didn’t plan on that.”

UMP’s rebrand to DIRTcar in 2007 brought along more new changes and divisions to the local racing landscape. World Racing Group had also completed the purchase of another sanctioning body of weekly racing in the Northeast and folded it in with the former UMP divisions, creating the modern-day version of DIRTcar.

Brian Carter, DIRTcar’s CEO, was among those working with Driggers to complete the transition into the World Racing Group family, and helped spearhead the Midwest’s mesh with the Northeast even before the UMP name was retired.

“I remember meeting Sam at Bob Memmer’s trailer and getting to know Sam and his team that had been with him a long time and, candidly, are all still here with us working,” Carter recalled.

World Racing Group also rebirthed the World of Outlaws Late Model Series in 2004. The national Late Model tour had been dormant since its second year in 1989 and was called back into action featuring the nation’s best racers from around the country, who eventually were required to conform to DIRTcar Late Model tech specs – shades of Memmer’s first vision brought to the forefront then, and still now 40 years later.

“I take great joy in seeing where it’s at now after 40 years,” Carter said. “When I first got introduced to DIRTcar, it was in 2004. We were working against trying to figure out how to get the weekly racing integrated with the Late Model racing, and at the same time, looking to acquire what would later become the World of Outlaws Late Model program.

“DIRTcar was one of the organizations that was foundational to the development of a strong weekly program.”

Crate-engine Late Models and Modifieds, traditional Street Stocks, Factory Stocks, even four-cylinder engine Sport Compact-type cars were also brought into the fold. National points fund money was increased, and regional points fund checks were added, rewarding drivers for finishing well throughout the year against both the traveling racer and their weekly competitors. The DIRTcar Membership program was also created, giving drivers extra insurance in case of accidents and rights to the penalty appeals process.

Overall, the conformity of rules at over 120 different tracks and multiple different series – which, for Late Models in 2023 includes the refreshed Midwest Auto Racing Series, Hunt the Front Super Dirt Series, COMP Cams Super Dirt Series and Ironman Late Model Series – has kept not only Late Model racing afloat, but every division of weekly competition.

DIRTcar has evolved to sanction nine different divisions of racing at over 1,200 events and 120-plus tracks across the country. The regular season has traditionally spread weekly events from April-to-October and has also expanded to include DIRTcar-sanctioned events taking place in all 12 calendar months.

“I think it’s definitely helped the car counts,” Moyer said. “You get into the Midwest area, and I feel like they’re as strong as they are anywhere for weekly car counts. A lot of that has to do with the rules package and trying to keep the rules somewhat under control with the tires and bodies.”

“With DIRTcar coming on and actually being professional and organized, that’s what it needed to keep it alive,” Pierce said. “Or, it probably wouldn’t have stayed alive. It probably wouldn’t have made it.”

On the pages of the history books, the Pierce family will forever be in rare air with the near-instant success of Bob’s son. At 26 years old, Bobby Pierce has already made a name for himself as big as his father’s with five DIRTcar Late Model national titles, five Summer Nationals championships and a victory in the 2016 World 100 at Eldora Speedway.

Bob is one of few retired racers in the Late Model world who’s been around to see all the changes UMP and DIRTcar have gone through. From building his own cars before standard rules practices, to now conforming to a book in the efforts to build his son’s career, the 2003 National Dirt Late Model Hall of Famer said he’s pleased with the way things have evolved.

“Racing’s good right now,” he said. “As far as racing goes, and for my son right now, it’s a good deal. He’s making a good living, and I’m just very fortunate I’m still around to see all this stuff go.”

Still presiding over the weekly, regional and national racing behemoth that is DIRTcar in 2023, Carter has also been around to see the changes grow the brand. He still assists Driggers in keeping Memmer’s vision alive, helping to provide the resources Driggers and his staff need to be successful. Together, they’ve fostered the network of tracks, drivers, sponsors and fans that make up the modern-day weekly racing community.

“It’s the people around us at the racetrack that make us want to keep coming back,” Carter said. “Most of the time, it’s just about being around like-minded people that are enjoying the same things we’re doing and creating that community.

“That community happens at a lot of racetracks across the country every Friday and Saturday night. It’s been happening for 40 years.”

Stick around that community long enough, and you’ll see plenty of change. Drivers rise and fall, teams form and disband, fans come and go. But to anyone that came to know the founding fathers of DIRTcar, there’s a common sentiment they both share that will carry weekly racing on for another 40 years.

“One thing about Bob and I both – we never came into this business to get rich,” Driggers said. “We did it for the love of the sport.

“That’s what this industry needs. A whole lot more of that.”

chevy racing–nascar–North Wilkesboro–all-star race–corey lajoie

NASCAR CUP SERIES NORTH WILKESBORO SPEEDWAYNASCAR ALL-STAR RACETEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPTMAY 19, 2023
COREY LAJOIE, NO. 7 SCHLUTER SYSTEMS CAMARO ZL1, met with the media Friday ahead of the first practice sessions for the NASCAR All-Star weekend. Press Conference Transcript:  GIVE US YOUR OVERALL THOUGHTS OF WALKING IN TODAY.“I put it on Instagram yesterday, a Throwback Thursday… my wife and I took our engagement pictures here in 2018. I didn’t anticipate seeing it in the condition it is currently. It really is something dead that came back to life from the blood-stained gurneys and whatever this room was. I think it was this room where there were some things that you can’t unsee that were in this place five years ago. I don’t think we can give credit to Marcus Smith and the SMI group enough to bring this place back to life. For us to hold the All-Star race here, it really is really cool. When we were here taking pictures, I figured the next time I’d see this place, it would be a cornfield or something and be ruins. The fact that this place is very much alive and looks like we are going to be here for a long time coming makes me excited as a competitor.” WHAT COMPELLED YOU TO TAKE YOUR ENGAGEMENT PHOTOS HERE?“It took a lot of persuasion obviously, right? It’s got to be moody. It’s got to have the right lighting and the whole thing. It had to fit the look that my wife wanted. I showed her some cool pictures. It’s one thing to go to a racetrack… that’s kind of corny to shoot engagement photos. That’s kind of like going to a racetrack for your graduation photos. The fact that it was a run-down, broken-down speedway such as North Wilkesboro at that time, it was a bit easier of a pitch than I expected it to be. We’ve got some really cool pictures that we have framed up on the wall, so it’s pretty cool to come back to the same spots we took pictures at. We took some pictures on the roof in Victory Lane as well, so hopefully we can take a couple more pictures Sunday night. That would be a pretty special event for sure.” INAUDIBLE.“How’d we get in? There’s a fence with a little gap in it… no, I said we snuck in. We didn’t. I called Graham Smith. He asked his dad. He got me in touch with that grumpy guy out front in the trailer with the Chocolate Lab. The call didn’t make it to Paul, apparently. I rolled up and he was not too impressed that some people showed up with a makeup artist, a photographer and some people who were done up in nice clothes. So I had to call Marcus up and say, ‘No, no… I promise. I’m allowed to be here.’ Or at least I got the OK.” NEXT WEEK IS THE COCA-COLA 600. WHAT MAKES IT ONE OF THE CROWN JEWEL RACES AND WHAT DO YOU EXPECT TO SEE?“I think we’ve seen the Next-Gen car perform the best at the intermediates. Just going to that race as a kid growing up in your backyard, those guys really embrace the Memorial Day aspect with all the pre-race festivities. It gives you goosebumps. I have goose bumps right now just talking about the Blackhawks flying in and guys repelling down with ropes before the race starts. You also know as a driver that you’re going to be locked in for four-and-a-half hours. As the race transitions from day to night, your car goes through a lot of balance changes, so it definitely takes every ounce of concentration you have. You have to have a really solid pit crew that night. You have to have a really solid focus from top to bottom. The Coke 600 is one of my crown jewels on my list, for sure.” AS YOU’VE COME IN HERE NOW, WHAT ARE YOUR FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF THE CHANGES AT THE TRACK?“I came to the Racetrack Revival, the Late Model race that Dale Jr., ran in August or September last year. We had the motorhome parked up almost where they had the temporary suites in the back. Just how much of a facelift this place has and how hard these guys have worked to get the track surface and continue to patch that up and put band-aids on that 40-year-old surface… we’ve been scratching our heads all week to try and figure out what the best setup is going to be to try and get some tire longevity over the 100-lap All-Star Open and then the All-Star race as well. How clean it is certainly is what I notice, right? The paint is new. Everything is pretty new except the 40-year-old asphalt we’re racing on. I like that element but also I’m not going to be upset when they dig it up and put a new, fresh layer of pavement on this thing so we can really put on a race where you can hammer down, spin some guys and run close together. I don’t think we’re going to see super-tight racing here over the course of the weekend because of how limited the traction is.” WOULD YOU ADVOCATE COMING BACK HERE NEXT YEAR?“Brad (Keselowski) was up here talking about the stale schedule. Weaving in some events like this… I do think there are markets that I think we should go to every other year or every three years. I’d love to see Kentucky come back occasionally on the schedule. I’d love to see the Nashville Fairgrounds when they get that place hopefully up and going. I think there are going to be some traffic concerns come Sunday. To come back here as an every year All-Star race would be a good setting, but that’s way above my pay grade to figure that out. But I love a good short track, for sure.” WE’VE NOT HAD A CUP RACE ON A SURFACE THIS OLD. COULD THERE BE POSITIVE BENEFITS TO THAT?“The biggest benefit is that the engineers haven’t had time to figure it out yet or make it bad. When the engineers have a good, validated sim model or a good, validated track grip to figure out where the bumps are at, they make the cars drive considerably better so the gap between the comers and goers is a lot more. I think you’re going to see some guys with their setups skewed more toward short-run speed. Some guys skewed more toward long-run speed. I think you’re going to get some disparity there toward the back end of the run… 25 or 40 laps somewhere in that window, you’re going to see some guys fall off heavy and some guys hang on. I don’t think people anticipate how slow we are going to be going. We’re going to probably be two seconds slower than what the Super Late Models were here on Wednesday night just because our cars are a thousand pounds heavier. A lot of factors are playing into this weekend. We’ll be sliding around and I’ll bet you we don’t even get 50 percent throttle after 15 laps. So it definitely will be a challenge.” SEEING THE AMOUNT OF EVENTS IN CUP AND SHORT-TRACK… THERE’S A LOT OF RACING THIS MONTH. HOW EXCITING IS IT TO HAVE THAT KIND OF SPEEDWEEKS ENVIRONMENT HERE?“Yeah, it’s really cool man. Like Brad said, not having to fly anywhere for three weeks in a row is really nice. It’s nice to see short-track racing being healthy as well as NASCAR being healthy. The turnout here over the course of the week has been really impressive. I’m excited to see how amped up the fans are. Today even, it’s starting to fill up and it’s only 2 or 3 o’clock. Sunday is going to be a packed house, I’m sure.” WE HAVE SUCH A BIG FIELD FOR THE ALL-STAR RACE THAT IT’S ONLY LEFT ABOUT 16 CARS FOR THE ALL-STAR OPEN. HOW DO YOU FEEL YOU STACK UP?“I mean, most of the time we can run 18th to 21st as kind of like our average finishing position. So that would go to tell you that we should be in the mix to be one of those front-end cars in the Open. I would hate to think that we couldn’t give ourselves a fighting chance to be one of those first two positions. My pit crew has been unbelievable this year, so I’m sure they’ll lay a heater of a stop down tonight and get us a good starting spot. Then we’ll conserve some tires and try to be one of those two guys that transfer.” IN TWO WEEKS, WE GO BACK TO GATEWAY. WHAT WAS YOUR TAKEAWAY FROM HOW THE TRACK HANDLED LAST YEAR AND WHAT DO YOU EXPECT THIS TIME?“It’s an odd place. Something happened. I think we DNF’d there and blew up or something. I didn’t get a good feel for traffic and longevity of the tire and things like that. I think it’s a cool market to go to. The fans turned out to support it. I’m a fan of going somewhere new often, just to try and see what works. I think our Next-Gen car – as the teams understand how to make them go – should be a little bit better racing than it was last year. I think it got strung out quite a bit, so I’m excited to go back to Gateway here in a couple of weeks.”

chevy racing–nascar–north wilkesboro–all-star race–william byron

NASCAR CUP SERIES

NORTH WILKESBORO SPEEDWAY

NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE

TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT

MAY 19, 2023

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1, met with the media Friday ahead of the first practice sessions for the NASCAR All-Star Race. Press Conference Transcript: 

GIVE US YOUR OVERALL THOUGHTS OF WALKING IN TODAY.

“It’s cool to see all the Cup cars and Trucks here. The garage is amazing… really well-done. Just the asphalt and layout of it. It’s a tight-orders area, really similar to Martinsville in that sense. It’s nice to see all the nice cars. I’m just excited for the All-Star race. I think it’s going to be super-exciting for the fans – the different places you can watch the race from. The overall area around the track looks great, so I’m excited.”

ON ATTENDING THE CAROLINA HURRICANES GAME THURSDAY.

“Unfortunately we had to leave early. I was there through the first overtime and watched the end of the game. That’s why my voice sounds the way it does. I watched it and it was tough. Four overtimes and it was about 2 in the morning. We’ll move on to the next game, I guess. They played really hard. I got some inspiration from watching that, definitely.”

WHAT KIND OF SHAPE ARE YOU IN TODAY?

“I feel fine. All I have to do is sit and push some pedals and steer a wheel. If it were hot out, it would be worse but I’ll be fine. I’ll do my tire runs and give some good feedback on the Truck and the Cup car.”

DID YOU HAVE A SET TIME THAT YOU TOLD YOURSELF YOU HAD TO LEAVE OR WAS THERE SOMEONE WHO WAS THERE TO PULL YOU FROM THE SEAT?

“I had a nice ride up there thanks to Mr. H (Rick Hendrick). So I had a good seat and a good opportunity to go up there and watch the game. Unfortunately I had to come back home but I think it was for the better for the sanity of my race teams today so I could be ready for practice. Tough to watch it, but that’s the way it goes sometimes. I told someone that it felt like I was getting ready for the 600 because it was the same distance.”

ON THE PIT CREW CHALLENGE AND IT BEING PART OF THE ALL-STAR WEEKEND.

“I’m excited about it. Those guys have a swagger about them. They’ve been fast on pit road all year. We’ve been top-two I think in pit road time, so I’m hoping I don’t screw it up and slide through the pitbox. Honestly, that would be an embarrassing thing for the team. Hopefully I don’t screw it up and those guys can go to work and I can launch out of the pit stall. I think it’ll be fun. I grew up watching the All-Star competition at the Hornets arena and loved that, so I’m excited it’s coming back in a form like it is and that it holds some importance in the overall race.”

ROLE OF THE DRIVER IN THE PIT STOP SEQUENCE.

“My job on this pit crew deal is get into the pitbox as fast as I can. I’ll be kicking myself if I do it wrong. The way it’s laid out, you have a staging area where you launch and try to get there as fast as you can because there’s no speed limit. I think the more speed, probably the better in terms of getting to the line quickly. But you also don’t want to be off the marks either. Each week it’s important to be on the marks. It’s really critical for those guys to get set up right so they don’t have to adjust. Hopefully I do all that right.”

DO YOU FEEL LIKE THE REGULAR SEASON CHAMPIONSHIP IS ATTAINABLE IF YOU KEEP PERFORMING THE WAY YOU’RE PERFORMING?

“We certainly do. That’s the ultimate goal for us in this part of the season. Just to accumulate as many bonus points as possible. After Phoenix or after COTA, we really started to see that we could put together consistently high-points races with stage finishes and stuff like that. When we got knocked down in points, the goal was to get to eighth by the 600, so we got that back. I feel like we’re where we need to be. A lot of people talk about the 600 being the benchmark for being close on points because it does get thinned out after that throughout the summer. We need to be in the top four or five at this point, and we’re doing what we need to do. Next week is a big points race. You’ve got the four stages and its long runs, so we need to make sure we bring a really good car to the 600 to kind of get those stage points. Obviously the goal is to win, but points are really important.”

INAUDIBLE.

“Not surprised because of the strength of the team. At the time, it was discouraging to look at the points standings and be like, ‘Ah shoot, we’re 18th now.’ I think realistically if you put one step at a time together, you can start to point your way back forward. Nobody was really separated at the beginning of the year. There was a lot of attrition in some of the races, so it allowed the points to be pretty close. The leader only had maybe a 20-point advantage. It’s still really tight between the top eight guys.”

IF WE DON’T SEE SHIFTING, HOW MUCH MORE VALUABLE WILL THAT BE TO THE RACING?

“It will be tough to want to shift this weekend. The length of the straightaways has a lot to do with it, as well. Martinsville being tight corners and long straightaways, it gets you in that RPM range where you have that other gear to work with. I don’t think you’re going to shift this weekend. I think you’re going to ride around there in fourth gear and maybe shift to fifth all the way around to save the tires more. It might actually work the opposite of what we normally have with wanting less RPMs to save the rear tires. Who knows? Maybe we start shifting if the pace is fast but I think you’re going to run around there in fourth.”

VALUE OF CREATING WEEK-LONG MOTORSPORTS WEEK IN NORTH CAROLINA.

“I think it’s great. That’s what I grew up with was the All-Star race at Charlotte. I know that the race there at times wasn’t the best, so we had to make adjustments. Now that we’ve gotten these short tracks back in order, it creates an awesome opportunity to have these Late Model shows on the same week and transition our way through all three touring series and get our way to the main feature on Sunday. It gives the fans the chance to understand what some of these Late Model guys do and how good they are. It puts everything in an order that builds up to Sunday. That’s great. I hope we get a lot of fan engagement over these next two weeks to build up some of these local races and take it to the big track.”

THE EMOTION OF WATCHING PLAYOFF HOCKEY TO GOING FOR A WIN.

“It is comparable. I watch that and I study kind of what the strategy is. Jordan Martinook (Carolina winger) and I have started to text a little bit here and there, and he had a lot of goals in the last series. I love watching their mannerisms and how they handle adversity. I think I can learn from things they do on the ice and how to handle different challenges. I was watching that game just to see how tired they got. It was interesting to me. The same thing happens in a long race. You get tired to a certain point and then you start to get this second wind and you kind of come back up. They could have played for four more periods, it seemed like. Just the adrenaline and way your body maintains that level. That was interesting to me, and they talked about that on the broadcast. You could see that the players weren’t really getting tired after awhile. That was interesting. Kind of the same thing happens in the car.”

HOW ARE YOU BETTER NOW IN THIS STRETCH COMPARED TO A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO WITH 11 TOP-10s IN A ROW?

“I think I’m more diverse than I was back then. My knowledge of racing in general wasn’t that high. My decision-making was a little bit naïve at times. I just went with the conservative decisions sometimes. I would finish in the top-10, but I would not really know what I need or be comfortable with what I needed to do on the track. I think my decision-making now is a lot more confident because I’ve been in a lot of diverse situations through Late Models, through Trucks and Xfinity. I have enough racing knowledge now to know where my decisions come from a place of more confidence. I used to make decisions to make just the right move. Now I’m confident in the things that I do.”

LOOKING BACK TO DARLINGTON, IS THERE AN EXAMPLE OF SOMETHING YOU DID THERE THAT A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO YOU MIGHT HAVE BEEN MORE CONSERVATIVE WITH?

“I used to set my car up at Darlington just to manage the whole race and be there at the end. I think now I set my car up a little bit differently to be maybe a little more aggressive, running against the fence more often because there is a little bit more speed up there. To run against the fence all day, it takes a certain level of focus and dedication to that, so you can’t be conservative doing that. I had a lot of success early in my career at Darlington running off the wall and being a little more competitive. It yielded top-six or top-seven finishes, but it didn’t yield the top-two or top-three finishes. The line I run at Darlington has changed from what I used to do. It’s a lot more aggressive and takes a lot more focus. And the decisions at the end on the restarts… it’s studying that, knowing those situations and knowing what move to make comes with experience.”

INAUDIBLE.

“I had to adjust and it can, but you can also damage the toe in these cars. You can do a lot of damage. I don’t think we really hit the wall on Sunday, so our car was in good condition. Yeah in the old car, you hit the wall and you had a flat tire. But with this car, there is still some damage to be done… the toe-link bending when you hit the wall.”

YOU MENTIONED BEING EXCITED TO BE HERE. WHAT IS IT THAT EXCITES YOU THE MOST ABOUT BEING AT NORTH WILKESBORO?

“I grew up down the road, so as I touch some of these racetracks that I grew up and hearing stories about, it’s great. Stefan Parsons and I are really good buddies, and we grew up racing Legends cars. Every time we’d go to ski up in the mountains, we’d pass North Wilkesboro and he’d have a story about Benny or Phil racing here, and I was always kind of like, ‘I’ve never seen this place.’ I had only seen the sign outside as you go down the highway. It’s cool for me to see the place now and get some idea of all these historic places that I live right around. It’s just a different vibe when I get in the car to drive up here. I feel like I go back in time a little bit, and it makes me a fan again of what we do. I just think that’s cool versus going to … no offense to going to Kansas or somewhere, I love that place, but it doesn’t have a lot of history to me.”

chevy racing–nascar–north wilkesboro–all star race–chase elliott

NASCAR CUP SERIES

NORTH WILKESBORO SPEEDWAY

NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE

TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT

MAY 19, 2023

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1, met with the media prior to the NASCAR Cup Series practice session at North Wilkesboro Speedway. Press Conference Transcript: 

GIVE US YOUR THOUGHTS AS YOU WALKED IN TODAY AND SEE THAT THE NASCAR CUP SERIES HAS RETURNED TO NORTH WILKSBORO SPEEDWAY. 

“It looked like it did Wednesday when I left (laughs). But no really, it’s a great situation and hats-off to the people that did all the work in here – the rooms that we’re sitting in right now, the grandstand addition. There was a lot of work put in a short period of time and I know we all kind of take that for granted. Had some friends of mine that do the souvenir sales, so there were electricians, plumbers and people here on like Monday trying to get finished up. So just hats-off to all those folks that put in a lot of time and I’m sure a lot of overtime to get it done, and for us to be able to come here to put this show on. That’s a big deal. 

And yeah, looking forward to the weekend. Obviously a lot of excitement around it. I think it’s going to be a great crowd and looking forward to see how it all goes.”

THE INDUSTRY, IN GENERAL, IS PRETTY DIVIDED AT TIMES OVER VARIOUS TOPICS. PEOPLE JUST FEEL STRONGLY ABOUT THINGS ONE WAY OR ANOTHER. IT FEELS LIKE THERE’S A LOT OF DIRECTION IN THE SAME PATH BEHIND THIS ONE. DO YOU GET THAT SENSE FROM TALKING TO PEOPLE IN THE GARAGE? 

“Sure seems that way. It definitely seems like there’s a lot of excitement across the board I think for a lot of reasons. One – this was a place that we probably thought that we weren’t ever going to see again. I know when I raced here in 2010 or ’11 – or whenever that was – that was their first attempt to revive it. And at that point in time when I left, once it started to grow weeds again, I thought that would be it. Most of the time when we have the opportunity to try to revive a race track and it fails like that, I figured that was the end. So I think everyone was surprised that this happened. It was talked about a lot, but I think just the surprise that this is here is a good thing. 

So yeah, seems to be a lot of positivity about it from everybody. It’s not the norm, either, and I think that’s exciting. Less is more.. I say that a lot I feel like, especially when it comes to race tracks and the places we visit. I’m a big believer in less is more. This is special.. it’s different. I hope everybody just exercises a little patience, as it pertains to getting in and out of here, and not being able to go outside. We can’t get across the race track, right? That’s fine.. it’s all good. We just have to know that and have the right headspace for it. It’s not the normal facility that we go to every weekend that we’ve become accustomed to and I’m cool with that, and I hope everybody in here, the fans and everybody that comes this weekend, is as well.”

SOME OF THE MOST ICONIC NAMES ON PIT ROAD TOLD ME THAT THEY’RE NERVOUS ABOUT THE PIT STOP COMPETITION BECAUSE THE CAMERAS ARE ALL ON THEM. EVALUATE YOUR PIT CREW AND HOW DO YOU THINK THEY LOOK FOR TONIGHT? 

“Yeah, our pit crew is a great group and been a great group. It’s been kind of the same group, minus just a couple of small changes really since my rookie year, so that’s been nice. We’ve gotten to know each other really well over the years. I have a lot of confidence in them. I think they can go and have a really good night tonight, just like I think they’ve had a really good season so far this year. As long as I stop in the box where I need to stop and get going, I think they’ll be in good shape.”

WHAT ABOUT PULLING INTO THE BOX? YOU MAKE IT LOOK EASY, BUT IS THAT A CHALLENGE FOR YOU WEEK IN AND WEEK OUT? 

“Yeah, it will definitely be easy to make a mistake to overdue it. But I think in this situation, you just have to – I don’t want to ruin it for them, right? I want to do my part, but try to get into a position where they want me to be and just give them the best opportunity that I can to bust off a good stop. Outside of that, we’ll have some fun with it and move on to the weekend.”

WHEN YOU DROVE HERE IN THE ASA RACE WEDNESDAY NIGHT, WHAT DID YOU NOTICE DIFFERENT IN THE TRACK, IF ANYTHING, FROM WHEN YOU WON HERE IN 2010? 

“Yeah, I don’t remember much of the track at all from 2010. Been a lot of race tracks between then and now. But I remember it being pretty wore out back then and it was much the same. A lot of the sealer and stuff wasn’t on the race track. Yes, it’s different, but it’s the same for everybody here. Very similar characteristics though, in general, I would say.”

HAVING THIS MUCH TIRE FALLOFF AND THE FACT THAT WE PROBABLY WON’T BE SHIFTING, COULD THAT CREATE A LITTLE BIT OF THAT SPEED DISPARITY FOR A SHORT-TRACK EVENT?

“Maybe.. we’ll just have to kind of wait and see. I hope that’s the case, for the racing’s sake. With the track being short, the leader might get to lap traffic a little quicker. So that might be a good thing, especially when the bottom groove was certainly the place to be on Wednesday night. So if that’s the case again and you get to lap traffic and you have to start moving around, I could see that putting us in a good position to put on a good show. Which end your on of that from a driver’s standpoint might change, but maybe. I don’t know.. we’ll see.”

HOW EXCITING IS IT BEING HERE.. SEEING THIS KIND OF NORTH CAROLINA SPEEDWEEKS WITH ALL OF THE RACING ON THE CUP SERIES AND SHORT-TRACK SIDE. 

“Yeah, I talked about it some Wednesday. But I think it was just nice to see the turnout – from the competitors to the fans. We often talk about how much we like places like this and we like short-track racing and we want to support those things. But I just felt like it was a really neat thing to see that actually put to action. There were a lot of racecars here over the course of the week and there were a lot of fans here Wednesday night, too. I know the weather wasn’t great on Tuesday, but there were a lot of folks here through the course of the evening on Wednesday, so that was nice. And I’m sure it will be packed here Sunday night. It’s just been nice to see the support. Obviously we’re really close to a lot of people in motorsports, so to see those folks turnout was a big deal I felt like.”

HOW HARD OF A RACE IS THE COCA-COLA 600 TO WIN AND DOES IT STILL FEEL LIKE NASCAR’S LONGEST RACE? 

“I have not won it, unfortunately. But I wish I have (laughs). We got really close there once. 

But yeah, it’s certainly a big race on the schedule and the race that everybody wants to win, and I’m no different in that regard. I’d love to check that box and say I’ve won the 600. That’s a big deal, so yeah, of course I want to win it. Hopefully we can achieve that someday.”

SHOULD THE OPPORTUNITY TO GO BACK TO ROCKINGHAM BE EXPLORED? 

“I’d be for it. I thought Rockingham was a great race track. I had a chance to race there a few times. I ran a Truck there I think once and a couple K&N races. I ran a late model race there once, as well. I thought Rockingham was a great race track. I loved racing there. Especially at the time, I was just getting going and it was the biggest place I had been to, so I thought that was pretty cool then. But it was a great track; a really wide track. Guys ran all over that race track, at least when we were running there. I don’t know what the surface looks like now, but yeah I think that would be another great fit. Ultimately, you have to ask yourself – why did these places shutdown in the first place? Well, it was because people quit supporting them, but now it’s cool to bring it back. So it’s like which one do you want to do.. do you want it or not? And I think we all have to ask ourselves that and the people that support racing need to ask themselves that, too. If we don’t support this stuff, then it’s going to go away. It’s just how it works. I’d love to see it revived, as well. I know there has been a lot of state funding that North Carolina has allocated to the race tracks and things, and I certainly think Rockingham could be a good place to get in the works, too. But that’s way above me.”

RIGHT WHEN YOU GET INTO TOWN, THERE’S A RESTAURANT THAT HAS A BANNER THAT SAYS ‘BILL ELLIOTT NO. 9 – YOU’RE NO. 1’. IS YOUR DAD COMING UP HERE THIS WEEKEND AND WHAT HAS HE BEEN SAYING ABOUT COMING BACK TO NORTH WILKSBORO? 

“No, I don’t think he’s coming up this weekend. I don’t think I’ve seen the sign though. Is it from the ‘90s or ‘80s?”

IT LOOKS OLD, BUT I THINK IT’S BEEN PUT UP RECENTLY.

“Yeah, I don’t know.. I haven’t seen it. But no, we haven’t talked about it a ton. He raced up here a lot, so it’s not really a big deal for him, right. But yeah, I don’t think he’s going to make it this weekend. But you never know with him.. he might show up, he might not.”

WE’RE GOING BACK TO GATEWAY IN TWO WEEKS. WHAT WAS YOUR TAKEAWAY FROM GOING UP THERE FOR THE FIRST TIME IN A CUP CAR AND WHAT DO YOU EXPECT FROM ROUND TWO? 

“Yeah, just thinking about it from our run, we didn’t have a great run there last year. I thought the track was fine. It’s definitely unique having two different ends like that. We have that at a few different tracks, but that makes a race track kind of unique, fun and different when you have two different ends that are so different from one another. But yeah, I’m looking forward to getting back. Try to get a little better and hopefully get going in the right direction.”

TRACK TALK: Millbridge Brings Excitement, Special Meaning to Drivers

SALISBURY, NC (May 19, 2023) – Fun. Fast. Exciting. Home.

Millbridge Speedway in Salisbury, NC – 30 minutes from Charlotte Motor Speedway – has gone from a small go-kart track in the middle of the woods to one of the most premier dirt tracks in the country for developing the future stars of motorsports.

To many of the drivers competing in the second annual DIAEDGE Double Down Showdown with the Xtreme Outlaw Midget Series presented by Toyota (May 23-24), the 1/6-mile track is more than just another stop on the tour. It birthed their career or gave them their first taste of success.

Last year, Gavan Boschele won the inaugural Xtreme Outlaw event and Taylor Reimer was deemed the winner of the second event – becoming the first women to win a national dirt Midget race.

Boschele, 15, of Mooresville, NC, grew up at Millbridge – only 20 minutes from his home. The track became his second school, teaching him skills that led to his Xtreme Outlaw victory and opportunity with Bell Kemenah Racing (driving a Winged Sprint Car for NASCAR Cup Series driver Christopher Bell and renowned Sprint Car crew chief Brian Kemenah).

MORE: Gavan Boschele Prepared to Defend Inaugural Xtreme Outlaw Victory at Millbridge

“It played a big role all my life,” Boschele said about Millbridge. “You kinda learn what the limit is. Once you made it around that place, you really shouldn’t be scared of anything else because that’s the closest you’re ever really gonna be to a wall or a fence and going that fast around a small track.

“It definitely impacted me a lot. No matter where I am in the future, I’ll always remember Millbridge.”

While Reimer is from Tulsa, OK, Millbridge still feels like home, she said. It reminds her of the tracks she grew up on and is currently the site of her biggest career triumph.

“I love Millbridge,” she said. “It kind of reminds me of my home track Port City (Raceway in Tulsa), which is also a small bullring. I really do enjoy it.”

Coming off a seventh-place finish with the Series at 81 Speedway, Reimer said she believes she and her team will be poised for two strong runs at Millbridge. And this time, hopefully celebrate a win in Victory Lane – after being the deemed the winner a week after the race last year when the initial winner was disqualified.

“I definitely want to be in Victory Lane and celebrate as I should,” Reimer said. “That’s always motivating me. Just trying to get better every week. I put so much pressure on myself to win, win, win, I think it has affected me negatively a little bit. Hoping to have some good finishes over the next couple weeks and the win will come with that.”

Full-time Xtreme Outlaw Midget Series competitor Ethan Mitchell, of Mooresville, NC, got his first taste of four-wheel racing at Millbridge. His father, John “Bundy” Mitchell, founder of Bundy Built, moved his family from California to Mooresville with no knowledge of dirt racing or any race car with four wheels.

“Bundy” befriended Mike McLaughlin, whose son Max McLaughlin – now a full-time Super DIRTcar Series competitor – was racing at Millbridge at the time. Through that friendship, Ethan fell in love with Millbridge and wanted to race there himself.

Now, he has a chance to claim his first national Midget win at the track that birthed his passion for dirt racing.

“I’d say I got more laps around Millbridge than most,” Mitchell said. “I’d definitely say that place is my favorite. When you talk the Midget race, I think that gives me a little bit of an advantage over some of the guys that get to race there a couple times a year. Two, it’s my home track, so I have pretty good confidence going into that race.

“Winning at Millbridge, that would obviously be super cool because I know so many people around this part of town. I feel like it would definitely be a good time winning there and having all of my family around would be awesome. Getting that home track win in front of everybody, that’s a plus too.”

From Midgets to Outlaw Karts, track owners Jeremy and Ashly Burnett have made Millbridge Speedway a marquee destination for drivers to build their talents and have fun. On a weekly basis, fans can see NASCAR stars like Kyle Larson, Kyle Busch and Clint Bowyer coaching their kids or even step behind the wheel of a Micro Sprint themselves.

The DIAEDGE Double Down Showdown will bring out stars from across the motorsport spectrum, including Stewart-Haas Racing NASCAR Cup Series driver Chase Briscoe and UMP Modified standout Kyle Strickler, among others, because to them Millbridge is fun, fast, exciting and home.

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Chevy Racing–INDYCAR–Indy 500–Fast Friday–Team Penske

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

107TH RUNNING OF THE INDIANAPOLIS 500

TEAM PENSKE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

MAY 19, 2023

WILL POWER, SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, JOSEF NEWGARDEN, TIM CINDRIC, and RICK MEARS, met with the media prior to NTT INDYCAR Series Fast Friday practice at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Press Conference Transcript:

THE MODERATOR: Good morning, everyone. So many great traditions here at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and these Fast Friday news conferences have become among them. We’ll start with Team Penske.

Joining us today, Tim Cindric, who is the president of Team Penske.

Josef Newgarden, driver of the No. 2 Shell Powering Progress Dallara Chevrolet.

Scott McLaughlin to his left, driving the No. 3 Pennzoil Dallara Chevrolet.

To his left, Will Power driver of the No. 12 Verizon 5G Dallara Chevrolet.

And of course to his left and far right, the legendary Rick Mears, four-time Indianapolis 500 winner for Team Penske.

This marks the 49th year for Team Penske at the Indianapolis 500, the first one coming back in 1969 with the late great Mark Donohue driving a McLaren.

Team’s first win came with Mark just three years later in 1972. From there, names like of course Rick, Unser, Hornish, De Ferran, Power, Castroneves, they’ve all won 500s for the captain.

13 different drivers have won the 500 for Team Penske. Team Penske earned its 17th and 18th Indianapolis 500 victories in back-to-back fashion Will Power in 2018 and Simon Pagenaud in 2019.

Josef Newgarden has finished inside the top 5 in two of his last four starts in the 500.

Scott McLaughlin will make his third Indianapolis 500 start this year in the iconic yellow submarine livery. Think about this, the team has a combined 711 years of INDYCAR experience this year, 711.

Of course Team Penske coming off a historic season in which they became the first team to win both the NTT INDYCAR Series Championship and the NASCAR Cup Series Championship in the same year with drivers Will Power and Joey Logano.

Quite a year last year, and it’s already turning into a great season here in 2023.

Tim, earlier this year it was announced you’ve got a big honor coming up, something about the Hall of Fame, which is well deserved. Not bad for a kid who grew up in Indianapolis and hit the garage with your dad all the time. Now here you are on the world’s greatest stage in INDYCAR.

Are you looking forward to the week?

TIM CINDRIC: “Good morning, everyone. Thanks for being here so early. No doubt, as a kid growing up here, it’s not something that I ever thought was possible, to have that honor from your peers, and the rest of it is really just a testament to the people that have been around. Whether it’s the drivers or the crew or guys like Roger and Herb Porter and some of these people that I hung around with.

Yeah, to be part of that club is going to be really cool.”

THE MODERATOR: If it’s not Indy — honestly, it’s not Indy if Rick isn’t hanging out with us. It’s great to have you back here in 2023. Your first season with the team back in 1978. You’ve always been a fixture here, which is tremendous.

What do you think as you watch the season unfold this year, the quality of racing, the parity that once again exists in this series? Just your overall thoughts about 2023.

RICK MEARS: “I think it’s great, and thank you to everybody for being here. I think it’s great. Just like I think that’s what INDYCAR has always tried to do, is get that parity. That’s what we always strive to try to make happen.

But I think really, these past years with the rules, the way they’ve been lately, with the new less downforce package and all that, the proof is in the numbers.

It’s been stable for so long that everybody is figuring it out, which makes it tighter across the board.

When you start to look at the numbers, I look at one of the road races here a couple races ago, there was like seven or eight cars in the same tenth, 24 within a second.

So I think everything being stable and everybody playing with the same — it’s probably the easiest time to get into the series and be competitive with the cars and being able to establish yourself, get the right people, because you’re getting the same blocks everybody is playing with.

Now it’s figuring out how to stack them. As people learn how to stack them, it gets tighter and tighter.

I think it’s great across the board, and I think it’s going to continue on that way.

One thing about it I say it’s probably the easiest time to get involved. On the other hand, it makes the competition probably one of the toughest times to win in that respect.

But that’s what it’s all about.”

THE MODERATOR: We’ve had some of the tightest qualifying Firestone Fast Sixes in the history of INDYCAR racing lately.

Will, congratulations to you. An outstanding year last year. You talk about wins, the championship, poles, and so on and so forth. Bottom line, here we are at Indy. What is it going to take to win another 500 for you?

WILL POWER: “Yeah, we’ve worked extremely hard in the off-season development-wise. Just sort of two days in of running I feel like we’re in a pretty good place, definitely in race work.

The no-tow laps look good right now, but you never sort of can rely on that. I think today we’ll get a pretty good idea of where we stack up pace-wise.

It’s like Rick said, there’s so many good team-driver combinations now, people — all these teams turn up, they just improve every year, and the car doesn’t change. So there’s a ceiling.

I think Ganassi was the top, and everyone is sort of getting up there now. I think it’s going to be one of the tightest qualifyings in history here, especially to get in the top 12.

I think we’ve done the work and I think Chevy has improved a bit, and I’m really hoping all three of us are in that top 12, and if everything goes really well, fighting for a pole.”

THE MODERATOR: Josef, for you, you haven’t been shy about talking about the whole team needs to up their game a little bit when it comes to the 500 to get that first win for you and the group.

Was there a change of approach that was needed? Or maybe not? What will be the key, I guess, come a week from Sunday in the 107th running of the 500?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: “Well, it’s great to be back. I feel really good this week headed into this weekend with the No. 2 Shell car, Powering Progress, and I don’t know necessarily change of approach.

I think Indy, there’s a lot of recipes that can work here, and I think our approach of trying to get the details right has always been true at this team. I don’t think we’re going to change that.

But sometimes there’s different elements that we may not look at the right way, and we go back and we look at them again and say, can we look at them differently.

I think that has been a core thing for us, just trying to reassess every little detail in the way that we’re examining it, and hopefully we’ve got a better recipe this time around.

I think our approach is similar to always; this race, this team knows how to win this race. They’ve won it the most of anybody. They’re very successful at doing it.

I think the core principles need to stay the same as always, but we know we need to elevate our game with regards to speed and we’ve been chipping away at it. There’s been a tremendous amount of effort from everybody. There’s no shortage of effort.

We’re excited for this weekend. Hopefully we’re going to have enough, and then obviously the big show is next weekend, so let’s see where we land.”

THE MODERATOR: For Scott, Tim has always talked about year three being the year to show the most improvement. For you, where is that room to grow this year.

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: “There’s always room to grow. It’s been an up-and-down few years, but obviously last year was fantastic in terms of my development, and then this year having a win already before coming to Indy is a nice feeling.

But as the guys have said, I think as a team, I think we’ve really worked together well between the three drivers, between the engineers, between everybody that’s behind the scenes and put in the hard work to make sure we get speed.

But also, it’s not just here. It’s all the other tracks, as well. I think we’ve really worked together and the camaraderie in the team has been great.

From a personal perspective, there’s always times where I can find a bit more of myself, and I’ll continue chipping away at that. New stuff will pop up every year, doesn’t matter if it’s third, fourth or the tenth year.

I feel like I’m in a good place right now, feel comfortable in the car, feel comfortable here at this place, and hopefully that bodes well for the rest of the month.”

Q. It used to be we would come to Indy and we could expect to see the established teams fighting for the pole, fighting for the front row, but it really seems like now there could be a couple of surprises that get up there. Is there anybody in particular that you expect that we’ll see a variety of teams in the first couple of rows this year rather than the two dominant teams?

TIM CINDRIC: “I guess when you look at the past few years, there hasn’t been a dominant team, obviously, in qualifying here. Ganassi and Carpenter have been the ones at least we look at as having the most consistent speed here in what I call the wind screen era.

Prior to that, I think you could look at us and a few others.

But it’s been something that for us every little detail is really, really important in qualifying, and every condition, as it’s closer, the conditions and when you run and what you do there are that much more important, at least getting into the top 12.

Once you get into the top 12 and you go through that process, it becomes — for who actually gets the pole, typically the fastest car is the one that gets the pole here.

I think over the years, when you look at the past few years, you’ve got to start up front when you look at who’s won the race and where they’ve started from the past three or four years.

It’s much tougher in the race to get to the front from the back. It’s really, really important for everybody to at least get to that top 12.”

Q. For Rick, should Scott Dixon get the pole this weekend, he would tie you for most poles in Indy 500 history. He would also become the first driver to ever win three poles in a row. Obviously you have a lot of respect and admiration for Scott Dixon, but when you look at his ability to qualify well here, he’s the best that’s been here since you.

RICK MEARS: “Yeah, if it happens, it happens. That’s the old saying, records are meant to be broken.

Obviously would I like to hang on to it? Sure. But if he gets it, he’s earned it. The job he’s done to be able to get to that position, I definitely respect that.

In one respect I’d be happy for him for the job he’s been doing, but in another respect I’d rather keep it.”

Q. Ganassi was the class of the field last year, and I know that it’s only two days of running here, but I presume it was mostly race setup the last two days and speed charts and everybody out there kind of indicated they’re still really good. How do you guys assess it? Do you feel like you’re closing the gap or do you feel more confident this year? Do they look good?

TIM CINDRIC: “It’s so close right now. Draft speeds, we can go do a 229 if we hang back far enough the past two days, so I think that’s circumstantial in the past few days. I don’t really think that it’s a big indicator until you get to Friday. Today you’ll start to see a bit more of that and then over the weekend, obviously.

I think it’s early days. Certainly they’re going to be tough without a doubt, but as far as assessing where we are, I think the past couple days are more about getting the confidence for these three guys in race trim and being able to actually pass the cars that probably aren’t as fast as you.

I think here it’s really, really difficult to pass the fast cars unless they’re leading. But the key for the race really is to be able to get by the ones that are struggling a couple miles an hour slower than you are, and we couldn’t do that the past couple years confidently.

I think they can talk to that a bit, but that’s kind of where our focus has been as far as how you can follow and how you can pass rather than kind of what the overall lap time is.

I think most cars out here given the right tow can go 229 in the past couple days.”

Q. Josef, what you were saying about how you go through all those minute details and go back and look at things, on Bruce’s podcast last week you said that you guys had maybe gone on the wrong path of development here last year. When did that process begin to change that and get on a new path for this year, and do you feel like you’re on a better path this year than last year?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: “I thought we were on a much better path last year. I think unfortunately we didn’t get to show the full potential of the work that went into last year. I really think we should have had a couple more cars in the Fast 12.

Generally, not just saying that for trying to paint the picture better, but we made a lot of progress last year, and I think this year is more of an evolution of what we did last year.

We can go back and pick apart 2022 and we can make it look a lot better I think if things go differently, but we can’t. We landed where we did. Just to reiterate, I think we made a big step, and we’re just evolving within that step again this year. We obviously need a little bit more than where we were last season, and we’re going to find out this weekend if we fully get there.

I feel pretty confident at the moment that we’ve done a lot of good work to get there, and we’ve just got to execute now.”

TIM CINDRIC: “What he’s really trying to say is the guy that drew for qualifying spots last year, which was me, did a really bad job in the conditions, and that had a lot to do with it.

We’ve got new guys that are going to draw for where they start this year.”

Q. (No microphone.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: “He’s making us go do it.”

TIM CINDRIC: “No, no, no. You guys volunteered to do it.”

Q. (No microphone.)

TIM CINDRIC: “I think if you were there, I would have. I booed myself.” (Laughter.)

Q. Tim, a technical question for you. Tomorrow for qualifying the booster is up, then it goes back to normal for race day. In principle could you run the whole race distance with a higher boost?

TIM CINDRIC: “I think the answer to that is yes. At those levels, the engines have been able to achieve that in the past, but there’s a whole circumstance that goes behind that in terms of how many engines you could use in a year, what the cost would be, all those different things.

I’m sure the engine guys, given the time and the funding to run this level of booster power throughout the race could figure that out.

Could you do it with the engine as it exists right here? I doubt it, because it’s pretty much optimized for what you have and the circumstances you’re given.

It’s not as simple as just saying, let’s turn up the boost for race day and race it at this boost level. But certainly we’ve run that level of power, if you want to call it that, here in the past.

But there’s circumstances that you’re trying to work within, and that’s really what the challenges are.”

Q. Going off of what Tim said earlier about how tough it is to pass fast cars when they’re not leading in a line, where do you guys ultimately feel for the drivers, feel like you need to qualify this weekend to feel comfortable going into the race that you can have a shot to do some work and potentially win from there?

WILL POWER: “Top 12. I think that’s — you can come from the back. It’s just very difficult. You’ve got to have a very good day and yellows fall your way, but top 12, you can definitely work from there.”

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: “Yeah, I’ve seen the 20s, I’ve seen the teens, and would love to be in the top 12 for my third.

But like Will said, it’s definitely doable, but a couple things fall your way, and if you’re got a fast car, you can come from wherever you want.

But certainly it would be a lot easier at the start when you can get into a fuel mileage deal and look after your car before you get into the nitty-gritty stuff towards the end of the race.”

Q. We’ve seen the last couple years this move toward the end of the race that Marcus executed in terms of weaving up and down the backstretch and trying to break the draft and it seems like it’s a pretty hard thing to combat. Is there any way that you guys have over the past year in looking at it, is there any way to try to combat that or maybe defend is not the right word, but if you’re the guy in second place these last couple laps, get around that and have a shot at winning, or is that a pretty unbeatable move?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: “There was a guy that had a shot to get around it last year, so I think it’s not the end all, be all.

They’re all going to shake out differently, too. Last year I’d be surprised if it’s the same scenario, exactly the same.”

Q. Question for the drivers. This race has a very particular qualifying format. If we compare to any other race in the world, two days, a lot of hours’ session. Can you explain the process and the psychology for the drivers and the development of the car doing all these hours of qualifying in Indy?

WILL POWER: “Yeah, I mean, the cars are so finicky, like when you’re getting down to the last little bit of speed you’re looking for, I mean, you’re trimming little bits of downforce off. It takes a lot of time to be able to do that, to understand what the car will do over four laps.

You’re trying to get clear track, as well. So that’s why we have so much time. You’re looking for — you don’t even want to see a car because that disturbs the air, and it’s hard to judge what gears to run because you’re getting a little bit of help.

Around this place, everything — there’s just the smallest of details, smallest of changes. You can’t make a big change at once. That’s why you need a lot of time.”

Q. Curious your thoughts, Rick, and maybe the drivers, out of the four laps here you’re on the razor’s edge. Which is the most important one to land right to qualify better here? Which of the four laps?

RICK MEARS: “That would vary all the time with the setup. One year you’d have tires that maybe the fronts would go off more than the rears, and vice versa the next year. That was always part of the plan that you started working on early in the month to get a feel for what kind of change you were going to get through the first four laps to adjust everything.

You might need to start the car out so loose you can’t drive it the first lap to get it to kind of come into its own in the middle, and then it’s the opposite direction at the last lap.

It was something that’s always changed.

I think today the cars are more consistent in that respect. It’s not as big a change.

I used to run for laps and never run one corner the same way twice in four laps. I was having to adjust the pattern and everything due to what the car was telling me from a previous time through.

It was just a continuous adapting, so it was always about — I think it’s more consistent today, but still, like you’re saying, attention to detail and the finer things, and everything is just a lot tighter.

It’s relative, but still a little different today.”

Q. TC, you’re the son of an engine builder, and Rick, you’re the greatest qualifier in Indy 500 history. Do you guys miss the days when you used to have the qualifying engines that you would put in just for the weekend? And from a team standpoint or a manufacturer’s standpoint, how much does it really save the budget to do it the way they do it now?

TIM CINDRIC: “Yeah, Roger and I were talking about this the other day, not only the engines but backup cars. You were required to run backup cars pretty much on the second week, because if your primary car was eliminated you didn’t start the race or whatever else.

Anyway, to your question, I think those days are over, you know, relative to the way it used to be. We used to put an engine in every day, and to ask the mechanics to do that kind of work and the budgets that went into that. We talk about running three or four engines a year through the whole season right now; we would use that many engines in one week.

These engines were 50-mile engines, 100-mile engines with really short fuses. It was fun to a certain degree, but it was also risky from a driver standpoint, because you saw a lot more failure back then. I think throughout the month you would have one or two accidents just due to blown engines. Fortunately we don’t see that today.

I think those days are gone. But in terms of funding, it was unlimited, so it’s hard to really put a number to it.”

RICK MEARS: “From the driver standpoint, it was always a lot of fun. You always wanted to see numbers you’ve never seen before as far as rpms or speeds or whatever the case may be. But it’s all relative. You do the same thing and try to accomplish the same thing no matter what horsepower range you have.

You’re still trying to trim it enough to get it on the limit and hold your breath longer than the other guys or get it freer or whatever the case may be, so you’re still hanging on.

It’s all relative in that respect, but it was always fun to have a little more and see some numbers you haven’t seen the whole month.”

Q. For the drivers, it started in ’19 with Pagenaud doing the weave to prevent Rossi from passing him and winning, and it seems like now whenever there’s a late restart at the end of this race — Ericsson did it last year, doing the dragon, or whatever, weaving back and forth. Would you guys do that? Is that just what you have to do if there’s a late restart? Would you expect that’s the way you’re going to have to win the race, and should INDYCAR do anything to prevent that from happening because it looks so weird and because there could be a safety element to it?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: “I think you do anything to win the race within the rules. But I think that for me, the only thing that’s nerve-racking about that is maybe coming off 4, and if you’re going sort of head on into the attenuator, or you go below that, sometimes you just can’t see that. You’re following the guy in front of you.

But one thing that Pagenaud did really well in 2019 was he had a car that could just hold really narrow, and he broke the tow straight away. And then as soon as they tried to come back down he went back up, so he wasn’t necessarily below the white down the back straight.

Yeah, that’s the only thing that makes me nervous about that.”

Q. (No microphone.)

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: “I don’t know.”

WILL POWER: “The rule is you can’t move in reaction to, so once a car is close to you, by the rules, you shouldn’t be able to do it. Any other race it would be a penalty for moving in the reaction to the car behind because you’re — yeah, I don’t think it makes that big of a difference, honestly.

I mean, you’re scrubbing more speed out front, plus you have more drag, and if the car behind anticipates well — it’s hard to say or quantify whether that actually makes a difference.

I mean, with this downforce level you could almost not be leading, you could be second coming off a last corner and probably get by the start-finish.”

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: “I would just add it’s not that unique to Indianapolis. People do this everywhere. Texas — it’s more dramatic here because of the nature of the track, the way the straightaways are laid out, but this happens everywhere, this technique to break the tow.

So to Will’s point, as long as you’re not going against the rules, it’s legal. I don’t think INDYCAR is going to do anything about it and you don’t have to have that strategy to win. Obviously that’s what’s been implemented by people because they saw it.

It can be effective I think at times, but it doesn’t mean it’s the only way to win the race in that scenario.”

Q. Are you guys glad the race is no longer double points, and how will that affect the championship?

WILL POWER: “Depends if I win or not. If I win, I would be really mad that it was not double points, but otherwise I think the double points was a terrible idea.”

Q. Will it make a difference on the championship?

WILL POWER: “Oh, big time.”

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: “Yeah, when you won this race, obviously you know that the point difference that you’d get was substantial. Yeah, making it the same as every other race I don’t think is a bad thing.”

ABEL Motorsports Team, Driver RC Enerson, Make Indy Progress Thursday

Enerson runs 68 practice laps during Thursday’s sessions

(May 18, 2023) SPEEDWAY, In- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

The newest IndyCar team to tackle the Indy 500, ABEL Motorsports of Louisville, KY, swept back into action Thursday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway as preparations continued for the 107th Indy 500.   “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” goes green a week from this Sunday, on May 28.  

Driver RC Enerson, 26, of New Port Richey, FL, completed a total of 68 practice laps today and notched the 28th fastest lap in the afternoon session at 225.112 mph.

The team focused today on two different tasks: working on solo speed to prepare for Pole Qualifying on the 2.5 mile oval this Saturday, while also working on race setups by maximizing proper handling in traffic.

“We did a lot of qualifying runs in the morning” commented Enerson.  “Then we started trimming the car out more and we had an awesome run in the heat of the day.   We showed good speed there.  We brought the car back in to set up to run in traffic, and we made some laps around other cars.  That was really eye-opening.   It’s tough. It’s going to be a learning curve for us tomorrow too, but we’ll be ready.”

Team Manager John Brunner, celebrating his 59th birthday, noted that the ABEL team has a tough hill to climb.  “We had to spend a lot of the day running (solo)…we have a lot of catching up to do.   We still need to find a little bit of speed.   We’re in pretty good shape but we want to be better than that.   In the afternoon we did get to run in traffic which was good.   We made some changes to the car in the afternoon, trying to make RC and the car happier on the race track.   We’re not done changing things, I know that.”

Team Principal Bill Abel continues to be impressed with the effort and focus his squad is showing at the Brickyard.  “It was a good second day.   We picked up where we left off yesterday. 

 We’re still continuing to develop all of our processes as an IndyCar team (ABEL Motorsports competes full-time in INDY NXT, the top development level of racing under IndyCar).   For us, it’s continuing to focus on effort and the process, and the results will be there.    We feel pretty comfortable with where we’re at.   John Brunner is orchestrating quite the symphony for us here at the Speedway.”

ABEL Motorsports and driver RC Enerson will continue their preparations for the Indy 500 in “Fast Friday” practice tomorrow, May 19, with on-track activity again scheduled for Noon-6pm ET.   

WILL POWER AND CONOR DALY LEAD TEAM CHEVY AT THE CLOSE OF INDIANAPOLIS 500 THURSDAY PRACTICE

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES

INDIANAPOLIS 500

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA

TEAM CHEVY PRACTICE REPORT

MAY 18, 2023

WILL POWER AND CONOR DALY LEAD TEAM CHEVY AT THE CLOSE OF INDIANAPOLIS 500 THURSDAY PRACTICE

  • Will Power of Team Penske led the Chevrolet teams with his fastest speed at 228.577 MPH for fourth on the second practice day leaderboard.
  • Conor Daly of Ed Carpenter Racing finished second for Chevrolet teams, sixth overall, with his top speed of 228.215 MPH.
  • Will Power (second), Santino Ferrucci (third), and Scott McLaughlin (fourth) led the Bowtie brand on no-tow speeds, seeing an increase of almost one mile per hour more than Wednesday’s end of day speeds. Power led Team Chevy with his fastest no-tow lap at 224.283 MPH.
  • Today’s Indianapolis 500 practice field continues to demonstrate the competitive nature of the NTT INDYCAR Series. Of the 34 cars, the differential of time from first to 34th is under one second, at 0.9931.
  • Kyle Larson, competing in the 2024 Indianapolis 500 with Arrow McLaren, met with members of the media at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this morning along with Jeff Gordon, Vice Chairman at Hendrick Motorsports and decorated racer, and Gavin Ward, Racing Director at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR.

TEAM CHEVY TOP-10 PRACTICE RESULT:

Pos.  Driver

4th     Will Power

6th     Conor Daly

8th     Pato O’Ward

10th   Alexander Rossi

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING (QUOTES) 

Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Camaro ZL1 in the NASCAR Cup Series and 2024 Indianapolis 500 competitor with Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:

“Checking out a practice day here. Getting excited about next year’s Indy 500. Really just came here today to hang out around the Arrow McLaren team to just soak up any little bit of anything to prepare myself for whenever I get behind the wheel of an Indy car. It’s been pretty neat. I’ve been here a couple of times once to hang out, I came here for the race in 2013, but never this close to the action. It’s been neat. I think the more I can soak up, the less surprises I’ll have next year. Happy to be here, happy for the opportunity. I’m excited about the opportunity. It’s still so far away that I haven’t spent that much time preparing yet, but I look forward to the preparation to be ready and competitive. Hopefully, we have a good run next year. We’ll see. It’s been cool hanging out here today. Arrow McLaren has amazing hospitality, great people. Looking forward to next year.”

Will Power, No. 12 Chevrolet at Team Penske:

“A small issue to start the day. We had something going on with our telemetry but once we diagnosed and fixed it, it was a good day for the Verizon 5G Chevy team. We seem to be in a good position for qualifying, but tomorrow will be the true test when we get the boost increase. Qualifying up front is important in the 500, but you can win from several rows back. That’s not where we hope to be, but we have single-car speed and the No. 12 Chevy was racy in the pack.”

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

“Today was a good day. We had the chance to get good no-tow runs in, but know we can trim more and be even faster. The car was even great in traffic so I feel strong and that is a nice feeling.”

Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Chevrolet at Team Penske:

“My second full day and the typical up and down. It changes every day with the conditions but got a lot of good running in with the with the Shell car . Feeling really good with Team Chevy, and what we’re building towards this weekend. Qualifying — that’s going to be most important right now. There is speed in the car and hopefully stay up front. We get through that and we can worry about the race as well.”

Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 Chevrolet at Team Penske:

“I feel good. The Pennzoil Chevy is fast on no-tow and and race running. So it looks good. We get to up the boost t tomorrow so we will see we’ve got. But overall pretty good day. We got through everything what we needed to do today and I feel like we’re in a good spot.”

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

”It was a tough day for us, to be honest. We’re definitely not in the spot where we want to be yet, but we’re working at it. We’ve got a plan to go through after qualifying this weekend. Tomorrow, it’s obviously a very different goal: to go as fast as you can by yourself. Boost is up, so we’re going to get everything prepared for that.”

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

”It was a very productive day. I think we did around 150 laps, so we got a lot of data – some good reads, some bad reads – but we were way more clever today than we were yesterday. Now we switch focus to going fast with Fast Friday, so we will turn up the boost. I think we’re in the game. There are a lot of strong cars out there so it is going to be tight like always, probably even tighter than last year, but our cars are definitely not bad. We just need to stay with it for the month.”

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

“It was a good day. More progress was made from the whole team. I’m getting happier and happier with the car each time we go out, which is great. I think we’re in a pretty good spot for the group running. There are some small tweaks to come, but now the focus turns to qualifying – one of the most fun parts of the year.”

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

”All in all a good day. We worked on race stuff all day long. We made big changes, so I think the team is happy. Now we go back and get ready for qualifying. We had to stop a little early because we want to be ready for tomorrow. There’s a little bit of a chance of rain in the afternoon, so we want to be ready to go right at noon. I’m happy.”

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

“I am very happy today. It may not look like it in charts, but we are fast. The car feels really, really good to drive. We made progress all day and the BITNILE.COM crew has made all the right changes. We have everything that we have, now we will trim it out for tomorrow. It is always the best when you are driving an ECR car here at IMS.” 

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

“Today was a good and productive day. It is funny – I feel better about the car today than yesterday, but we are deeper in the time sheet today. That doesn’t really matter when we accomplished everything we wanted to today. I still have a couple questions on what the right thing ultimately is, but we worked well as a group together. We will go fast tomorrow.” 

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

“Solid day today. P3 in the no-tow, P11 overall. I’m really happy with that and continuing to progress. Got some pace, and looking forward to Fast Friday.”

Benjamin Pedersen, No. 55 Chevrolet at AJ Foyt Racing:

“Very good day. It’s starting to get fun with doing some qualifying runs. Most of the morning was race runs. This afternoon, we started doing some qual runs, and we’ve got very good speed. We’ve been pretty conservative still with our current level, and we’re pretty competitive even with that. Looking forward to getting a little more aggressive with it.”

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

End of day:

“It was a challenge today. We tried throwing quite a bit at the car. We knew some of it wasn’t going to stick. But we wanted to try it anyway. More of it were things to avoid than we really wanted. But at the end of the day, we found a pretty good setting for qualifying. We ended up in the Top Ten in the No-tow chart and that was good. You always want to end the day well and I think we did that today. We are ready for Fast Friday. We’ll get the extra boost right away with Friday practice begins. So, we will be ready to go at 12 noon.”   

“So far so good. You know, it’s only been two days on track that we’ve worked together. Everything so far we’re doing all the right we’re doing all the right stuff, checking off all the right boxes. And, you know, we’re really focusing on and as a group just executing on pit lane. You know, we’re all working together for the first time kind of myself at the team and it’s, it’s been really good though. I’m enjoying the smaller team atmosphere and certainly really happy to be back with Chevy. Got a lot of history there. Whether it be winning the championship, with the IndyCar championship, working with working with the same group on the inside, so Yeah, happy to be back.” 

What has been the hardest thing jumping back in? 

“Jumping back of the car after being gone a year? What’s been the hardest thing? I really, I mean, after two or three laps at the open test, it was like I hadn’t left so it wasn’t you know, it wasn’t something I’ve got a lot of experience here. So it was it was definitely not something that caught me off guard or anything like that. And ideally, you don’t want to take a year and a half off from being in an IndyCar but it’s yeah, it went better than expected.”

Stefan Wilson, No. 24 Chevrolet at Dreyer & Reinbold Racing:

End of day:

“Solid day for the No. 24 DRR/Cusick Motorsports/CareKeepers Chevrolet. We focused on our qualifying setup for the whole day. It doesn’t necessarily look great on the speed charts, but we were in a decent place on the No-tow listings. And we are happy with the car’s handling. Wednesday was a good day with the race car and it’s great to be back at Indianapolis for the 500. We are anxious for Fast Friday now with the additional boost in the engine.” 

How much has changed since you drove two years ago? How difficult is it to jump back in the car?

“It’s actually been really smooth for me. You know, I’m used to last minute preparation, last minute deals coming together. And this year, it’s often so much earlier that we’re just several steps ahead of the game, compared to last time and I’m in the process was a big boost to my program. I’m reacquainting myself to INDYCAR and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway this whole week. And never really feel acquainted until, you know, race week, really. So I just feel like I’m ahead of the game like I’ve hit the ground running this week, having had that open says to get through ROP and you know, get we got 150 laps on the board that day, so it just feels like I’m so much further ahead and the cars changed just a little bit with a bit more arrow. So it’s gonna make the race a little bit more exciting, maybe a few more passing opportunities. And I’m just really pleased with the whole drive. I’m Dreyer and Reinbold/Cusic Motorsports crew, they’ve just done an amazing job to prepare the car and because as you know, me and mine assured we’re pretty fast already. So we’ll see if we can keep that up, keep making some positive changes to try to develop the car and, and I think the goal for the team is trying to get both cars in the festival and we’ll see if that’s possible.”

Ryan Hunter-Reay is your teammate. He’s been out of the car for a year as well, so how are you guys getting through your lists so far?

“He is absolutely a legend. We have been teammates in the past, two years Andretti. In a camp that big and we barely even spoke to each other, so this is the first time we’re really truly teammates. I think we’re both hungry. You know, he didn’t race last year, the 500. And I’m coming off with like, you know, wanting very hungry to prove myself. So we both have similar mindsets. We’re both very, very determined this year and the whole crew, overdrive to that the whole drive onboard basically has something to prove. So we’re all in that same mentality. And I think we’re the underdogs and I think we can prove something this month.”

CONOR DALY, NO. 20 CHEVROLET FOR ED CARPENTER RACING – End of Day Press Conference:

THE MODERATOR: Wrapping up Thursday practice here. Joining us now Conor Daly for Ed Carpenter Racing, who next week will make his 10th Indianapolis 500 start.

No shocker, the Ed Carpenter cars are pretty good, Conor.

CONOR DALY: “Yeah, thankfully this track we’ve still managed to retain our speed. It’s been nice. It’s been fun. The couple days have been interesting.

I still think it will be very interesting come tomorrow when the power goes up because I think we’ll see a general trend on fast cars, but what is that going to look like when we got all the juice? We’ll see what happens.

But I’m very confident so far, more confident than I would say I was last year at this time, both in traffic and in no tow. So, yeah, not too bad.”

THE MODERATOR: When things get turned up, we’re pushing about 100 horsepower more tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday.

CONOR DALY: “100?”

THE MODERATOR: 90, maybe 100.

CONOR DALY: “Geez, I thought it was only 50.”

THE MODERATOR: What could it do to the cars balance-wise?

CONOR DALY: “Honestly, it depends on I guess who is developing the most grip mechanically. We could see some people, at Texas it was interesting, some people managed to run with more downforce and actually be faster.

It’s about efficiency, the less scrub the better. So sometimes you can trim out here too much and be a victim of kind of being a bit too aggressive.

It’s just finding that little window. By lap four, for sure the tires are going off. When you’re doing two hundred a ton miles an hour, the first laps feel like I got this, then three and four you’re fighting an animal – at least I have been.

I’ve always struggled a little bit in qualifying here, but I feel better already going forward, so that’s nice.

All three of our cars are similar in speed, which is encouraging. Obviously the team brings three good cars here all the time.”

THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.

Q. Conor, it’s been a difficult season for ECR. How confident are you coming back to the Speedway, seeing the rhythm is coming back, the cars are fast around this place?

CONOR DALY: “Well, I mean, it just shows like Rinus and I haven’t forgotten how to drive, thankfully. There’s been a lot of difficulties this year.

When we come here, though, it’s been a great two days. It’s been fun. It’s more fun to be competitive as well. Appreciate the team, the effort they’ve put in here.

Yeah, I mean, the goal is obviously to take advantage of it. It’s hard because you never know what can happen, but we’re trying to execute every day, as good as we can.

I love the new look of the car. We want to do the best job we can here for Chevrolet as well, at the Chevrolet Indoor Speedway. We want to be strong for them as well (smiling).”

Q. Obviously you had a lot of boxes you wanted to tick in the first three days. How much did you feel you have ticked and how much do you feel still needs to happen?

CONOR DALY: “I actually feel pretty good when it comes to race setup. I think we’re all still going to try to do a bunch of stuff on Monday and get a little bit more dialed in. But realistically there’s not a ton of changes overall compared to last year, I would say. We want to try to dial in a few more things.

When we come to Sunday, next weekend, raw speed is going to be really what helps. If we can just get our cars to go faster, it’s a little less work to go that fast, then we’ll be in a good spot.”

Q. Conor, is there much changes for setup or in principle can you do the car unchanged when the boost goes up?

CONOR DALY: “Honestly today, as Marcus said, we try to do a couple runs in the qual trim. We peel a lot off the car for at least kind of baseline qual trim. It is different from what we’re doing race setup-wise.

I would say what we ran today we’ll just also start tomorrow with the more power because usually it’s not too dissimilar. We’ll try to run at least what we did today for our single-car runs for tomorrow and go from there.”

Q. How difficult is it to go back to normal boost and race setup? In principle can you start from last year’s?

CONOR DALY: “It always feels wonderful tomorrow because power is your best friend. That’s going to be amazing.

Going back to the race setup, it’s actually a great feeling after you’ve done three days of all qual trim, absolutely wringing your neck for speed, it feels really lovely to go back to the race downforce. You feel like you can do anything, throw the car around.

It’s just part of the game here. You have these next three days where you’re going to be sweating a lot and it’s going to be a very, very challenging situation. We’ll see what we can do.

We want to put all three of our cars up front. I think this team next to me are going to be the ones to beat for sure. Hopefully we can show up in the Fast Six, 9 or 12, whatever the numbers are.”

Q. Anyone you worked with today that you really felt someone around you that had a strong car, were impressed with what you saw from other people?

CONOR DALY: “I mean, I think these guys are strong. The Ganassi cars are strong. I think Josef looked quick, too. Josef seemed pretty strong in traffic. All three of our cars were pretty decent, as well, when I was running around those guys.

I don’t know. I think there’s like one group, then another group. You definitely feel slightly quicker with that one group. The other group, it looks like they’re having a tougher time.

When you’re around fast cars, everyone seems fast. It’s interesting. But usually the key players are still really quick.”

Q. Conor, you talked about the changes, how that gives you a lot of encouragement. Dixon said yesterday he feels like that could help teams close the gap a little bit. Do you feel that’s the case? Are you seeing evidence with all the stuff you can try, you can find a way to decrease their edge?

CONOR DALY: “Oh, I don’t know. I mean, if you’re talking in traffic, it still is a challenge I would say. If you’re deep in the pack, it didn’t matter what car it was, it was rare to see people making progress unless people were letting people by.

The first two cars, boy, it looked like they were having a heck of a race. So I don’t know if that’s the case. I don’t think it brings us closer. I think the entire field is just closer because everyone is really good, and the teams are really good.

When it still comes to the qualifying trim stuff, everyone is going to be peeling off all the stuff we can put on, so it’s still who can generate the most mechanical grip and take the most downforce out comfortably.

I don’t know. I still think closing the gap to them, it’s a challenge, but that’s what we’re all here to do.”

Q. Conor, when the defending winner says, We feel like we’re in a better place than we were last year, should we all just go home?

CONOR DALY: “No.”

CONOR DALY: “Ed (Carpenter) has a big bag of witchcraft working over there. When we show up tomorrow, it will be serious. (laughter)

Of course they’re going to be good, it’s Ganassi. Not like they forgot how to do things.

It’s great to have really good teams like that to race against, right? If you do feel like you make progress towards them, it feels way better. If we’re in a duel for the first two rows or first three rows, it means you’re going up against the best of the best. Shouldn’t be any other way.”

Firefighting Funny Car Driver Chris King Challenges Pros at Quinn Fire Academy

CHICAGO, IL (May 18, 2023) — In advance of the Gerber Collision & Glass Route 66 NHRA Nationals Chicago firefighter and driver of the Howards Cams/Competition Products Dodge Charger Funny Car Chris King took several NHRA drivers through the paces at the Robert Quinn Fire Academy today. King was joined by Pro Stock standout Camrie Caruso as well as Pro Mod drivers Lyle Barnett, JR Gray, Jerico Balduf and Mike Thielen for an afternoon of firefighting skill tests and challenges. The group was outfitted in full fire protection gear including air tanks which added just over 35 pounds to each driver plus a variety of firefighting tools before they took on the challenging “up and over” drill which included five flights of stairs up a run across the top of the training facility and then five flights of stairs down to the main floor. The group paused for a photo with the famed Chicago skyline in the background before continuing with more drills. This event was something King has been planning since he broke onto the NHRA Funny car scene in 2021.

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(from left: Mike Thielen, JR Gray, Lyle Barnett, Chris King, Camrie Caruso and Jerico Balduf pause during the “Up and Over” drill, photo credit Werner Communications

“I think today opened their eyes a little bit to what firefighters do every day for the community and it gave them a different perspective on things,” said King, who will be making his 2023 Funny Car debut this weekend. “I hope they had fun, too. This has been a dream of mine for a long time to bring my life as a firefighter to my life as a racer. Bringing these two together is something I’ve tried to do for a long time but I’m glad we were finally able to pull it off. It’s exciting. I got goosebumps just thinking about it. This is what I do day in and day out. I live for the fire department. I live for drag racing. To be able to combine these into one thing just makes my day I love it. I really appreciate Camrie, Lyle, JR, Jerico and Mike taking the time to try this out.”

Following the “up and over” drill the group was instructed how to properly breach a door and they took turns simulating pulling a 150-pound person out of a fire. They were also provided the opportunity to man a pressurized fire hose, shoot water across the training facility and go through a multi-stage obstacle course. The highlight of the event for the drivers was the chance to use a variety of cutting and prying tools to dissect several automobiles. 

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Lyle Barnett cuts into staged vehicle as Chris King (middle) directs, photo credit Werner Communications

“Today was a cool experience that was definitely eye opening to see what firefighters and first responders have to deal with and the challenges that I go through every day to save people’s lives,” said Caruso, who will be competing in not just the national event but the NHRA Pro Stock All-Star Callout. “It doesn’t matter what kind of fire it is, theseguys are really getting a workout. The work they do is amazing. I really appreciate Chris setting this up and I also want to thank all the Safety Safari staff for being at the track and being ready to help us. Wearing all the gear today showed me I might need to spend more time in the gym, but it was a great afternoon.”

The drivers will all be in action on the track starting Friday, May 19 with the first day of qualifying in all their various classes. Fans can purchase tickets to the Gerber Collision & Glass Route 66 NHRA Nationals here and follow the NHRA social media channels for additional coverage of today’s event.

chevy racing–indycar–indy 500–5/18 Practice

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES INDIANAPOLIS 500 INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA TEAM CHEVY PRACTICE REPORT MAY 18, 2023 WILL POWER AND CONOR DALY LEAD TEAM CHEVY AT THE CLOSE OF INDIANAPOLIS 500 THURSDAY PRACTICE Will Power of Team Penske led the Chevrolet teams with his fastest speed at 228.577 MPH for fourth on the second practice day leaderboard.Conor Daly of Ed Carpenter Racing finished second for Chevrolet teams, sixth overall, with his top speed of 228.215 MPH.Will Power (second), Santino Ferrucci (third), and Scott McLaughlin (fourth) led the Bowtie brand on no-tow speeds, seeing an increase of almost one mile per hour more than Wednesday’s end of day speeds. Power led Team Chevy with his fastest no-tow lap at 224.283 MPH.Today’s Indianapolis 500 practice field continues to demonstrate the competitive nature of the NTT INDYCAR Series. Of the 34 cars, the differential of time from first to 34th is under one second, at 0.9931.Kyle Larson, competing in the 2024 Indianapolis 500 with Arrow McLaren, met with members of the media at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this morning along with Jeff Gordon, Vice Chairman at Hendrick Motorsports and decorated racer, and Gavin Ward, Racing Director at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR. TEAM CHEVY TOP-10 PRACTICE RESULT:Pos.  Driver4th     Will Power6th     Conor Daly8th     Pato O’Ward10th   Alexander Rossi WHAT THEY’RE SAYING (QUOTES) Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Camaro ZL1 in the NASCAR Cup Series and 2024 Indianapolis 500 competitor with Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:“Checking out a practice day here. Getting excited about next year’s Indy 500. Really just came here today to hang out around the Arrow McLaren team to just soak up any little bit of anything to prepare myself for whenever I get behind the wheel of an Indy car. It’s been pretty neat. I’ve been here a couple of times once to hang out, I came here for the race in 2013, but never this close to the action. It’s been neat. I think the more I can soak up, the less surprises I’ll have next year. Happy to be here, happy for the opportunity. I’m excited about the opportunity. It’s still so far away that I haven’t spent that much time preparing yet, but I look forward to the preparation to be ready and competitive. Hopefully, we have a good run next year. We’ll see. It’s been cool hanging out here today. Arrow McLaren has amazing hospitality, great people. Looking forward to next year.” Will Power, No. 12 Chevrolet at Team Penske:“A small issue to start the day. We had something going on with our telemetry but once we diagnosed and fixed it, it was a good day for the Verizon 5G Chevy team. We seem to be in a good position for qualifying, but tomorrow will be the true test when we get the boost increase. Qualifying up front is important in the 500, but you can win from several rows back. That’s not where we hope to be, but we have single-car speed and the No. 12 Chevy was racy in the pack.” Conor Daly, No. 20 Chevrolet at Ed Carpenter Racing:“Today was a good day. We had the chance to get good no-tow runs in, but know we can trim more and be even faster. The car was even great in traffic so I feel strong and that is a nice feeling.” Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Chevrolet at Team Penske:“My second full day and the typical up and down. It changes every day with the conditions but got a lot of good running in with the with the Shell car . Feeling really good with Team Chevy, and what we’re building towards this weekend. Qualifying — that’s going to be most important right now. There is speed in the car and hopefully stay up front. We get through that and we can worry about the race as well.” Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 Chevrolet at Team Penske:“I feel good. The Pennzoil Chevy is fast on no-tow and and race running. So it looks good. We get to up the boost t tomorrow so we will see we’ve got. But overall pretty good day. We got through everything what we needed to do today and I feel like we’re in a good spot.” Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:”It was a tough day for us, to be honest. We’re definitely not in the spot where we want to be yet, but we’re working at it. We’ve got a plan to go through after qualifying this weekend. Tomorrow, it’s obviously a very different goal: to go as fast as you can by yourself. Boost is up, so we’re going to get everything prepared for that.” Felix Roseqvist, No. 6 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:”It was a very productive day. I think we did around 150 laps, so we got a lot of data – some good reads, some bad reads – but we were way more clever today than we were yesterday. Now we switch focus to going fast with Fast Friday, so we will turn up the boost. I think we’re in the game. There are a lot of strong cars out there so it is going to be tight like always, probably even tighter than last year, but our cars are definitely not bad. We just need to stay with it for the month.” Alexander Rossi, No. 7 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:“It was a good day. More progress was made from the whole team. I’m getting happier and happier with the car each time we go out, which is great. I think we’re in a pretty good spot for the group running. There are some small tweaks to come, but now the focus turns to qualifying – one of the most fun parts of the year.”
Tony Kanaan, No. 66 Chevrolet at Arrow McLaren INDYCAR:”All in all a good day. We worked on race stuff all day long. We made big changes, so I think the team is happy. Now we go back and get ready for qualifying. We had to stop a little early because we want to be ready for tomorrow. There’s a little bit of a chance of rain in the afternoon, so we want to be ready to go right at noon. I’m happy.” Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 Chevrolet at Ed Carpenter Racing:“I am very happy today. It may not look like it in charts, but we are fast. The car feels really, really good to drive. We made progress all day and the BITNILE.COM crew has made all the right changes. We have everything that we have, now we will trim it out for tomorrow. It is always the best when you are driving an ECR car here at IMS.”  Ed Carpenter, No. 33 Chevrolet at Ed Carpenter Racing:“Today was a good and productive day. It is funny – I feel better about the car today than yesterday, but we are deeper in the time sheet today. That doesn’t really matter when we accomplished everything we wanted to today. I still have a couple questions on what the right thing ultimately is, but we worked well as a group together. We will go fast tomorrow.”  Santino Ferrucci, No. 14 Chevrolet at AJ Foyt Racing:“Solid day today. P3 in the no-tow, P11 overall. I’m really happy with that and continuing to progress. Got some pace, and looking forward to Fast Friday.” Benjamin Pedersen, No. 55 Chevrolet at AJ Foyt Racing:“Very good day. It’s starting to get fun with doing some qualifying runs. Most of the morning was race runs. This afternoon, we started doing some qual runs, and we’ve got very good speed. We’ve been pretty conservative still with our current level, and we’re pretty competitive even with that. Looking forward to getting a little more aggressive with it.” Ryan Hunter-Reay, No. 23 Chevrolet at Dreyer & Reinbold Racing:End of day:“It was a challenge today. We tried throwing quite a bit at the car. We knew some of it wasn’t going to stick. But we wanted to try it anyway. More of it were things to avoid than we really wanted. But at the end of the day, we found a pretty good setting for qualifying. We ended up in the Top Ten in the No-tow chart and that was good. You always want to end the day well and I think we did that today. We are ready for Fast Friday. We’ll get the extra boost right away with Friday practice begins. So, we will be ready to go at 12 noon.”    “So far so good. You know, it’s only been two days on track that we’ve worked together. Everything so far we’re doing all the right we’re doing all the right stuff, checking off all the right boxes. And, you know, we’re really focusing on and as a group just executing on pit lane. You know, we’re all working together for the first time kind of myself at the team and it’s, it’s been really good though. I’m enjoying the smaller team atmosphere and certainly really happy to be back with Chevy. Got a lot of history there. Whether it be winning the championship, with the IndyCar championship, working with working with the same group on the inside, so Yeah, happy to be back.” 
What has been the hardest thing jumping back in? “Jumping back of the car after being gone a year? What’s been the hardest thing? I really, I mean, after two or three laps at the open test, it was like I hadn’t left so it wasn’t you know, it wasn’t something I’ve got a lot of experience here. So it was it was definitely not something that caught me off guard or anything like that. And ideally, you don’t want to take a year and a half off from being in an IndyCar but it’s yeah, it went better than expected.”
Stefan Wilson, No. 24 Chevrolet at Dreyer & Reinbold Racing:End of day:“Solid day for the No. 24 DRR/Cusick Motorsports/CareKeepers Chevrolet. We focused on our qualifying setup for the whole day. It doesn’t necessarily look great on the speed charts, but we were in a decent place on the No-tow listings. And we are happy with the car’s handling. Wednesday was a good day with the race car and it’s great to be back at Indianapolis for the 500. We are anxious for Fast Friday now with the additional boost in the engine.”  How much has changed since you drove two years ago? How difficult is it to jump back in the car?“It’s actually been really smooth for me. You know, I’m used to last minute preparation, last minute deals coming together. And this year, it’s often so much earlier that we’re just several steps ahead of the game, compared to last time and I’m in the process was a big boost to my program. I’m reacquainting myself to INDYCAR and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway this whole week. And never really feel acquainted until, you know, race week, really. So I just feel like I’m ahead of the game like I’ve hit the ground running this week, having had that open says to get through ROP and you know, get we got 150 laps on the board that day, so it just feels like I’m so much further ahead and the cars changed just a little bit with a bit more arrow. So it’s gonna make the race a little bit more exciting, maybe a few more passing opportunities. And I’m just really pleased with the whole drive. I’m Dreyer and Reinbold/Cusic Motorsports crew, they’ve just done an amazing job to prepare the car and because as you know, me and mine assured we’re pretty fast already. So we’ll see if we can keep that up, keep making some positive changes to try to develop the car and, and I think the goal for the team is trying to get both cars in the festival and we’ll see if that’s possible.”
Ryan Hunter-Reay is your teammate. He’s been out of the car for a year as well, so how are you guys getting through your lists so far?“He is absolutely a legend. We have been teammates in the past, two years Andretti. In a camp that big and we barely even spoke to each other, so this is the first time we’re really truly teammates. I think we’re both hungry. You know, he didn’t race last year, the 500. And I’m coming off with like, you know, wanting very hungry to prove myself. So we both have similar mindsets. We’re both very, very determined this year and the whole crew, overdrive to that the whole drive onboard basically has something to prove. So we’re all in that same mentality. And I think we’re the underdogs and I think we can prove something this month.”
CONOR DALY, NO. 20 CHEVROLET FOR ED CARPENTER RACING – End of Day Press Conference:THE MODERATOR: Wrapping up Thursday practice here. Joining us now Conor Daly for Ed Carpenter Racing, who next week will make his 10th Indianapolis 500 start.No shocker, the Ed Carpenter cars are pretty good, Conor.
CONOR DALY: “Yeah, thankfully this track we’ve still managed to retain our speed. It’s been nice. It’s been fun. The couple days have been interesting.
I still think it will be very interesting come tomorrow when the power goes up because I think we’ll see a general trend on fast cars, but what is that going to look like when we got all the juice? We’ll see what happens.
But I’m very confident so far, more confident than I would say I was last year at this time, both in traffic and in no tow. So, yeah, not too bad.”
THE MODERATOR: When things get turned up, we’re pushing about 100 horsepower more tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday.
CONOR DALY: “100?”
THE MODERATOR: 90, maybe 100.
CONOR DALY: “Geez, I thought it was only 50.”
THE MODERATOR: What could it do to the cars balance-wise?
CONOR DALY: “Honestly, it depends on I guess who is developing the most grip mechanically. We could see some people, at Texas it was interesting, some people managed to run with more downforce and actually be faster.
It’s about efficiency, the less scrub the better. So sometimes you can trim out here too much and be a victim of kind of being a bit too aggressive.
It’s just finding that little window. By lap four, for sure the tires are going off. When you’re doing two hundred a ton miles an hour, the first laps feel like I got this, then three and four you’re fighting an animal – at least I have been.
I’ve always struggled a little bit in qualifying here, but I feel better already going forward, so that’s nice.
All three of our cars are similar in speed, which is encouraging. Obviously the team brings three good cars here all the time.”
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. Conor, it’s been a difficult season for ECR. How confident are you coming back to the Speedway, seeing the rhythm is coming back, the cars are fast around this place?CONOR DALY: “Well, I mean, it just shows like Rinus and I haven’t forgotten how to drive, thankfully. There’s been a lot of difficulties this year.
When we come here, though, it’s been a great two days. It’s been fun. It’s more fun to be competitive as well. Appreciate the team, the effort they’ve put in here.
Yeah, I mean, the goal is obviously to take advantage of it. It’s hard because you never know what can happen, but we’re trying to execute every day, as good as we can.
I love the new look of the car. We want to do the best job we can here for Chevrolet as well, at the Chevrolet Indoor Speedway. We want to be strong for them as well (smiling).”
Q. Obviously you had a lot of boxes you wanted to tick in the first three days. How much did you feel you have ticked and how much do you feel still needs to happen?CONOR DALY: “I actually feel pretty good when it comes to race setup. I think we’re all still going to try to do a bunch of stuff on Monday and get a little bit more dialed in. But realistically there’s not a ton of changes overall compared to last year, I would say. We want to try to dial in a few more things.
When we come to Sunday, next weekend, raw speed is going to be really what helps. If we can just get our cars to go faster, it’s a little less work to go that fast, then we’ll be in a good spot.”
Q. Conor, is there much changes for setup or in principle can you do the car unchanged when the boost goes up?CONOR DALY: “Honestly today, as Marcus said, we try to do a couple runs in the qual trim. We peel a lot off the car for at least kind of baseline qual trim. It is different from what we’re doing race setup-wise.
I would say what we ran today we’ll just also start tomorrow with the more power because usually it’s not too dissimilar. We’ll try to run at least what we did today for our single-car runs for tomorrow and go from there.”
Q. How difficult is it to go back to normal boost and race setup? In principle can you start from last year’s?CONOR DALY: “It always feels wonderful tomorrow because power is your best friend. That’s going to be amazing.
Going back to the race setup, it’s actually a great feeling after you’ve done three days of all qual trim, absolutely wringing your neck for speed, it feels really lovely to go back to the race downforce. You feel like you can do anything, throw the car around.
It’s just part of the game here. You have these next three days where you’re going to be sweating a lot and it’s going to be a very, very challenging situation. We’ll see what we can do.
We want to put all three of our cars up front. I think this team next to me are going to be the ones to beat for sure. Hopefully we can show up in the Fast Six, 9 or 12, whatever the numbers are.”
Q. Anyone you worked with today that you really felt someone around you that had a strong car, were impressed with what you saw from other people?CONOR DALY: “I mean, I think these guys are strong. The Ganassi cars are strong. I think Josef looked quick, too. Josef seemed pretty strong in traffic. All three of our cars were pretty decent, as well, when I was running around those guys.
I don’t know. I think there’s like one group, then another group. You definitely feel slightly quicker with that one group. The other group, it looks like they’re having a tougher time.
When you’re around fast cars, everyone seems fast. It’s interesting. But usually the key players are still really quick.”
Q. Conor, you talked about the changes, how that gives you a lot of encouragement. Dixon said yesterday he feels like that could help teams close the gap a little bit. Do you feel that’s the case? Are you seeing evidence with all the stuff you can try, you can find a way to decrease their edge?CONOR DALY: “Oh, I don’t know. I mean, if you’re talking in traffic, it still is a challenge I would say. If you’re deep in the pack, it didn’t matter what car it was, it was rare to see people making progress unless people were letting people by.
The first two cars, boy, it looked like they were having a heck of a race. So I don’t know if that’s the case. I don’t think it brings us closer. I think the entire field is just closer because everyone is really good, and the teams are really good.
When it still comes to the qualifying trim stuff, everyone is going to be peeling off all the stuff we can put on, so it’s still who can generate the most mechanical grip and take the most downforce out comfortably.
I don’t know. I still think closing the gap to them, it’s a challenge, but that’s what we’re all here to do.”
Q. Conor, when the defending winner says, We feel like we’re in a better place than we were last year, should we all just go home?CONOR DALY: “No.”
CONOR DALY: “Ed (Carpenter) has a big bag of witchcraft working over there. When we show up tomorrow, it will be serious. (laughter)
Of course they’re going to be good, it’s Ganassi. Not like they forgot how to do things.It’s great to have really good teams like that to race against, right? If you do feel like you make progress towards them, it feels way better. If we’re in a duel for the first two rows or first three rows, it means you’re going up against the best of the best. Shouldn’t be any other way.”

chevy racing–indycar–indy 500 practice day 3

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY INDIANAPOLIS 500 PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT MAY 18, 2023 KYLE LARSON, JEFF GORDON, AND GAVIN WARD met with the media prior to the third day of NTT INDYCAR Series practice at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Press Conference Transcript:
THE MODERATOR: “Good morning, everyone. Before we know it, we’re all going to be looking ahead to 2024 and the 108th running of the Indy 500 Presented by Gainbridge. For Arrow McLaren it will include a special, for some, I’m thinking about our late pal Robin Miller, a long-awaited shot at the Indianapolis 500 for Kyle Larson.
2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion expected to make his debut in a partnership with Hendrick Motorsports and Arrow McLaren.
Joining us this morning, the future driver for Arrow McLaren INDYCAR team, Kyle Larson.Also joining us, Jeff Gordon, kind of knows his place around the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Now the vice chairman of Hendrick Motorsports.
To the left, Gavin Ward, the racing director at Arrow McLaren.
Kyle, we’ll start with you. Certainly, you’re no stranger to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, or central Indiana, but how excited are you a year from now you’ll be going for your first Indianapolis 500, qualifying first, right?”
KYLE LARSON: “Yeah, no, it’s obviously very exciting. It’s been something that I’ve wanted to do for a very long time. I wanted to be patient and kind of wait for the timing to feel right. It feels right. Having Hendrick Motorsports be extremely supportive of it, supporting the efforts with Arrow McLaren, it’s something that I’m extremely excited about.
To have Rick and Jeff Gordon involved. Jeff kind of told me that I get to live out a dream of his. That’s really special also to me.
I’ve obviously come here a lot in a stock car. I lived in the area for a couple years. So this place for a long time felt like home or a second home to me.
In my opinion, this is the biggest race in the world, so you want to be a part of the big ones. Hopefully someday be a winner of a big event.
Look forward to it. Happy to be here today. Look forward to kind of taking in as much knowledge as I possibly can in a single day, just trying to better prepare myself for whenever I get behind the wheel.”
THE MODERATOR: “Jeff, Kyle alluded to it. Perhaps no one is more excited about this opportunity than yourself to check things out firsthand and get this perspective on everything. What do you hope to get out of today?”
JEFF GORDON: “First of all, we are excited to be here and be a part of this. It’s been a lot of fun working with Arrow McLaren, Zak Brown, Gavin, his whole team to pull this off.”
I’m kind of glad that Kyle said, This is something I’d really like to do one day. Do you think this is something that Mr. Hendrick and Hendrick Cars would want to support?
We’re happy that that’s all going to come true in 2024.
I think for today, it’s such a different world, right? This car. I think as a driver, driving a race car is sort of natural of what you need to go fast, to compete. But you’re talking about Indianapolis at 230-plus miles per hour, what it takes to get comfortable, what kind of language there is for a driver of the types of things that they’re talking about versus a stockcar or a sprint car.
For us, I think on the Hendrick Motorsports side, it’s building this relationship with Arrow McLaren so that next year we can do everything we can to maximize its full potential, get Kyle everything he needs, to get Arrow McLaren everything they need, to make sure that this effort goes as smooth as possible and gives them the best opportunity to get a great result.”
THE MODERATOR: Gavin, your thoughts? Kyle is known as a guy that can drive anything on four wheels. You have an opportunity to mold that here for what we think is the greatest race in the world.
GAVIN WARD: “Yeah, what better fit for a team like McLaren that’s taken to racing in a lot of different forms to have a driver like Kyle who has shown such versatility.
I think just for the team to build this relationship with Hendrick Motorsports, Hendrick Cars, is great. I think one of the best racing teams in the world, racing organizations in the world. Fun to kind of get that together.
Yeah, having this little bit of time to try to introduce Indianapolis Motor Speedway racing with INDYCAR to Kyle, get ahead of it here and show him a bit how we work, what’s involved. I think it’s a great opportunity.”
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. Kyle, in many ways there’s been a lot of people in the area trying to help promote this for a long time. Do you feel this has been really 10 years in the making?
KYLE LARSON: “For me to run this event?”
Q. Yes.
KYLE LARSON: “I don’t know. I mean, maybe a little bit. I think when I was with Chip Ganassi Racing in the NASCAR stuff, I think a lot of people, maybe myself at times, thought that I would go immediately to try to compete in the Indy 500 for Chip.
I wasn’t as accomplished yet in the NASCAR stuff. I wanted to be able to not feel like I was taking a ton away from that stuff. Now I’ve been able to accomplish a lot in the NASCAR stuff. Hendrick is obviously always a consistent frontrunner. I thought you could take a little bit of focus away from that to run the Indy 500.
I don’t want to do this to just do it. I want to do it, take it serious, feel like I’m prepared enough to win.
Yeah, I feel like I’m surrounded by great people and looking forward for the opportunity. I’ve got 300 some odd days to try to get ready.”
Q. Mr. Brickyard, Jeff Gordon, you’re a legend of the Speedway already, but it was in the Brickyard 400. You drove the Indy 500 pace car one year. Your friend Jimmie Johnson competed last year. Kyle runs next year. How much do you miss the fact you didn’t get a chance to run here in this race?
JEFF GORDON: “Like Kyle said, it’s true, I did say to him he’s going to be able to live out a dream of mine. I go back to the mid to late ’80s when I was living here in Indiana, raced all around here. Every race car driver’s dream, if you race around Indianapolis, is to get here, to compete at this facility.
I watched guys like Rich Vogler, a few other competitors I raced with, come over here and do that. Certainly it was on my radar. But NASCAR came calling. Once that happened, I kind of shifted my focus to that.
I don’t know if really the right opportunity or it ever became serious enough after that to become a reality. So to me, this is equally as exciting because, one, I sure as heck right now don’t want to drive into turn one at 238 miles, whatever they’re running (smiling), but Kyle does. Kyle is capable of it.
The fact that Rick has never been to the Indy 500, we’re going to go to Le Mans this year, next year he’s going to come to the Indy 500, that’s extremely exciting for our organization, as well as the things we can learn from Arrow McLaren in what they do here to compete for this event. I think there’s crossover we can learn from one another.
Super excited. Excited for Kyle. As well as he has the ability. When he has the equipment and the resources, the people surrounding him, he has the ability to go do extraordinary things. We’ve seen him do it in other cars. I have no doubt that he’ll be able to do that in the Indy 500 next year, as well.”
Q. Jeff, you mentioned Le Mans. Rick has not been here. Do you foresee Hendrick five or 10 years down the road being a NTT INDYCAR SERIES team, partner?
JEFF GORDON: “I know what Rick’s answer would be if he was sitting here. It would be an absolute no (smiling).
He loves racing. He loves cars. When he comes here next year, he might change his mind a little bit. NASCAR is always going to be our primary focus, where our history, our legacy lies.
I will say that if you want to run a good business, you have to diversify yourself. We’ve seen ourselves get into GM defense manufacturing, we’re seeing ourselves go to Le Mans. We’ve dabbled a little bit in IMSA. We have a great relationship with Chevrolet and our friends at GM.
If there’s something that makes sense for us as a company, as Hendrick Motorsports, then we’re certainly going to look at it, look at whether or not it makes sense for us or not.”
Q. Obviously we’re talking next year, but was there any hesitation after what happened with Alex and Chase that maybe we need to pause this thing? How much has the philosophy changed behind the scenes at Hendrick Motorsports to let Kyle race outside of NASCAR?
JEFF GORDON: “I think our approach is that we want to support these guys in things that they want to take on. I mean, with Kyle, we’ve had this conversation a lot. He feels like that type of racing actually helps him get prepared and be sharp on Sunday in the Cup car. We’ve actually seen the results of that.
They have to make good, smart decisions, be in good equipment, not take too much risk when they’re involved in that, whether it’s racing or other things.
I can tell you I did a lot of extracurricular activities, even if it wasn’t in other race cars, throughout my entire career, and see the benefits of it.
We’re going to support our guys to do the same. We’re going to encourage them to really weigh out the risk versus the reward and make sure they’re in the best equipment with the best team and the best opportunity to go out there and make the experience a good one. That’s the way we look at this.”
Q. The preparation you’ve been able to do so far, it’s not ideal that you can’t actually get on the track, but the stuff you’ve been able to do off track, can you walk us through what you’ve been able to do so far?
KYLE LARSON: “Not a ton. I went to their race shop a couple weeks ago to get the first initial kind of seat insert formed to me. Still have to finish that whole process.
They gave me a big packet of stuff to look at, notes and dash displays, emailed me some onboard footage. I watched all of that. Kind of got a sense of just nice to see the onboard, see shifting, adjusting, all the cockpit adjustable things that they have, just seeing how the flow of the race kind of goes, how they position themselves behind people in traffic, stuff like that. Restart procedures, all of that. Pit stops, pulling into your pit sign, all of that.
But I don’t know when I’m testing yet. I don’t want to, like, pick people’s brains yet, other drivers’ brains too early on, then have to go to them in a few months and ask the same questions over again. I want to wait a little bit to pick their brains some. I definitely want to talk to guys who are familiar with stockcars and INDYCARs, Jimmie, Kurt, guys who have done this more recently.
Again, I don’t want to do it too early yet and get on their nerves when I go to ask them again later on (smiling).”
Q. Gavin, any chance you might use a test day to get Kyle out before the open test next year or is the plan to wait until then?
GAVIN WARD: “We’re looking at all options really to get as much track testing or readiness. We’re evaluating all that.
But, yeah, we’re keen. So simulator running, as well.”
Q. How much do you think Kyle can learn from the simulator?
GAVIN WARD: “I think it’s more about probably some of the basic stuff, just getting familiarized with the steering wheel, the adjustments in the cockpit, all that sort of stuff. Gives you a heads up on some seat fit work.
Realistically you have to run these things, run them in traffic. That’s what everyone is doing out here. That’s the most important side of it.
But I do think the program we’re running with Tony Kanaan this year, his involvement with the team, it sets us up in a good way to help. Tony and Kyle have raced together before. That’s a good relationship. I think he’s a good reference here to try and help Kyle learn the ropes here.”
Q. Kyle, of course you’ve driven a lot of multiple disciplines. It’s a year from now. What kind of preparations do you have to go into that might be different than what you’ve done in the past?
KYLE LARSON: “Yeah, I mean, I would say everything that I race is much more simple than an INDYCAR. The only kind of thing I feel like that I have to judge off of that was new to me, not overwhelming but just stressful, was when I did the Rolex for the few years that we did. Obviously different cars, but a lot more total different kind of foreign style racing to me, which I feel like INDYCAR stuff would be a little bit that way, with just race procedure stuff, the cockpits are way more in-depth than what I’m used to in anything that I race.
In a stockcar, I’m worried about turning on brake fans. If I don’t, it’s really not a big deal. Sprint car I have a wing valve. Late models nothing. Midgets nothing. In an INDYCAR, you got I don’t even know. You could probably tell me everything (smiling). You have boost, weight jackers, bars, all sorts of stuff that I want to be ready for and know when they tell me to do this or do that, I can be quick to it, not hesitate and give up something that might be crucial for the end of the race.
As far as the driving, the driving part of it I think, hopefully that all will come naturally. I don’t really know. I don’t have any experience yet to even have an opinion on what it could relate to or if it is totally just different than anything I’ve been in.
I feel like our NASCAR racing has trended a little bit closer to INDYCAR style of strategy, with fuel savings, stuff like that. I think I have more experience now than I would have had three years ago on that side of things.
There’s going to be a lot to soak in over the next year, and I look forward to the challenge. I love racing new vehicles to challenge myself and learn something new. I feel like ultimately it makes me a better race car driver.
I think no matter the result throughout this whole experience, I think I’m going to become a better race car driver from it. So, I’m excited about all that.”
Q. Kyle, when you’re doing the 500 next year, does it mean you do it at the same time as the Charlotte race as well?
KYLE LARSON: “The what?”
THE MODERATOR: Charlotte race.
KYLE LARSON: “Yes. It will be crazy.”
Q. Gavin, how much simulator preparation will you prepare for Kyle to get used to INDYCAR?
GAVIN WARD: “I think we’ll start simple, then we’ll see how useful we think it is and go from there.
The good news is the simulator we use is around the corner down by Hendrick. It’s pretty convenient.”
Q. Gavin, a lot of pressure. People are very excited about Kyle Larson. You have a year to prepare for him. What does it mean to have this responsibility, to have Kyle Larson in the team?
GAVIN WARD: “Yeah, I mean, I think of it as a privilege, honestly. Actually early on in the conversations about this is a possibility, and really just the concept of running an extra car regularly at the 500, Well, if you gave me Kyle Larson to put in it, I’d definitely want to do it is kind of my answer (laughter). Little did I know that was even a possibility.”
Q. You were just joking?
GAVIN WARD: “Yeah, just joking. We’ll find a way to make it happen if you can do that. Lo and behold (smiling).
As I said, I think we’re kind of proving the model here with Tony and getting that crew, which a lot of that crew is existing, so there’s a bit of a mix there. We get to prove that sort of model of the extra car.
Having this extra time to get ahead of it is a real advantage, I think. We have to be realistic about what you can really achieve. Yeah, no, I feel pretty good about it.”
Q. Kyle, your racing schedule is packed. With this program where you’ve known a year in advance you’re doing all this preparation for one single race, how is this different from a preparation standpoint, having so much lead time for one single race than what you typically do?
KYLE LARSON: “I mean, I don’t know. I feel like I prepare well for every event, but that’s leading up. Usually, I’ve got a couple days to prepare before it.
I think having this much time, knowing that I’m racing next year, I’m definitely going to pay more attention to all these days than I would have in the past, kind of see how that all goes, just to be really just more prepared for how the couple weeks of on-track time goes for next year, just to not be surprised by anything.
It’s been nice even being here the short amount of time we’ve been here today to see how they have things laid out. The hospitality, where the teams eat, engineering room, stuff like that. I didn’t know any of that before I got here today.
This is the only day I’m going to be able to come this year. Even just getting to get eyes on all that I think will help, little things like that, for next year.
Then, yeah, paying just closer attention to everything than I would have in the past. Me just being a fan in other years, you might just overlook things. You’re probably just looking at the quality of racing and stuff like that, where now I’ll be more in-depth in watching the race, watching what they do in practices. Then being able to listen to communication today is awesome as well.
I don’t know. I think there’s going to be a lot of stuff that comes up, too, throughout the next year that’s going to help prepare me.”
Q. Gavin, Kyle Busch recently said that Kyle Larson stole his ride at the Indy 500. Any truth to that? Comments or negotiations?
GAVIN WARD: “Nothing that I’m aware of on that (laughter).
Yeah, I mean, it’s nice to hear that we got a few people that wanted to be in that seat. We’re happy with our lot right now, but that’s good.”
Q. Kyle, from where you come up, growing up in California, you’ll be 31 next year, how humbling of an experience is it to know where you started to running the double next year, which very few people have done?
KYLE LARSON: “It is. It is a lot. Growing up with dreams — I don’t even know what my dreams were racing in California. I think I would have been happy to make a living as a race car driver, whether that be on the local level or national level like I am now.
Yeah, to be able to accomplish things I’ve accomplished in the relatively short career I guess you want to call it, I’m only 30 currently, hopefully I have a long ways to go. All the opportunities I’ve had to this point, being with Rick Hendrick and Jeff Gordon, everything they’ve been able to do for me the last few years has been spectacular.
I think, too, being able to compete in this event, I think it really more than anybody makes my dad really proud. That’s something that’s special to me. There’s definitely no bigger race to him than Indy 500. I know he’s wanted me to do it for a very long time. It’s going to be really special to see him kind of see me during driver introductions and stuff like that.
He’s a crier, so he’ll probably not even be able to watch the race because he’ll have tears in his eyes the whole time. That’s the thing that’s most special to me at this point, knowing I’m in the Indy 500 is making him proud.”
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Burton To Get First Look At North Wilkesboro

May 18, 2023


As NASCAR’s elite Cup Series makes its highly anticipated return to historic North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend, many of the competitors, including Harrison Burton and other members of the No. 21 Motorcraft/DEX Imaging team have never experienced a Cup race there.

“I’ve never even seen the place,” Burton told reporters on a Ford teleconference last week. “It’s going to be a challenge for sure.”

It’s a different story for his Wood Brothers team, which ran 46 races on the 5/8-mile track before it dropped off the Cup schedule in 1996. The Woods ran their first race at Wilkesboro in 1957 with Jimmy Massey starting fifth and finishing 10th behind the wheel of the No. 21 Ford.

The team went on to score two poles there, both by team founder Glenn Wood, who ran five Cup races at North Wilkesboro, with a runner-up finish to Junior Johnson in 1958 after starting from the pole and a third-place finish in 1960 behind race-winner Lee Petty and Rex White.

Wood had four top-10 finishes at Wilkesboro in five starts, and suffered a blown engine after starting second in the fifth.

The Woods have two North Wilkesboro victories, both by Marvin Panch, and a total of 14 top-five and 23 top-10 finishes at Wilkesboro.

Burton said it would be cool to be the winner of the inaugural All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro, but he has other goals in mind too. To compete in the main event of the All-Star weekend, he’ll have to finish first or second in the preliminary Open or win the fan vote.

“Just making the show in general – it’s important,” he said. “Think about the amount of effort that goes into building these race cars for our guys at the shop, the amount of effort you put in preparing for these races. It’s important.

“It’s a big thing for the morale of everybody and a big thing for your sponsors. So, it’s always been important, especially when it’s a really cool event like this one I think will be. It makes it that much cooler.”

Practice for All-Star and Open drivers is set for Friday from 4 p.m. to 4:50. Qualifying, which will be determined by the Pit Crew Challenge (based on the speed of the pit stop), will begin at 5:45 p.m.

Two heat races for drivers locked into the All-Star race, are set to start Saturday at 7:20 p.m. and approximately 8:15.

The 100-lap Open is scheduled to begin just after 5:30 p.m. on Sunday, with the 200-lap All-Star race getting the green flag just after 8 p.m.

FOX Sports 1 will carry the TV coverage.

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