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Concours in the Hills is April 19 in Fountain Hills

After being postponed due to poor weather conditions, Phoenix Children’s 11th annual Concours in the Hills will take place Saturday, April 19, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Fountain Park. The “Greatest Car Show on Grass” will showcase breathtaking cars, motorcycles, helicopters and military vehicles, all supporting Phoenix Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood […]

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Concours in the Hills is April 19 in Fountain Hills

After being postponed due to poor weather conditions, Phoenix Children’s 11th annual Concours in the Hills will take place Saturday, April 19, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Fountain Park.

The “Greatest Car Show on Grass” will showcase breathtaking cars, motorcycles, helicopters and military vehicles, all supporting Phoenix Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders as well as the Cardiothoracic Surgery Support Fund, according to a press release.

The show is organized into sections for domestics, imports, race cars, limited-edition exotics, off-road and motorcycles. Helicopters on display will range from civilian to military.

The show is supported by leading car clubs and dealers, including Ferrari, Lamborghini, Porsche, McLaren, Corvette, Viper, Ford GT, Audi, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Mustang, Jaguar, Cadillac, Lotus and others.

The value of vehicles is many hundreds of millions, with several individual cars worth over $10 million, the release said.

Concours in the Hills creator Peter Volny built a thriving advertising business around promoting the automobile industry.

Migrating to Arizona, a “mecca” for car collectors, he turned his passion for speed and exotic cars into the premier auto show that draws car enthusiasts from across the Southwest.

While the money raised has always gone to Phoenix Children’s, Volny handed the reigns of the event over to Phoenix Children’s in 2022. The auxiliary group, PCH50, now leads Concours in the Hills, with member Dr. Kris Birkeland as chair.

The group, also known as “The Fifty,” has a mission to harness the energy, enthusiasm and experience of 50 driven community leaders as the next generation of supporters of Phoenix Children’s.

Concours in the Hills began in 2014 with 220 cars and 3,000 spectators. In 2024, there were approximately 50,000 spectators, 1,200 vehicles and more than 100 vendor and sponsor booths.

Event admission and parking are free to spectators. For more information, visit phoenixchildrensfoundation.org/signature/concours/.

Motorsports

Pagenaud easing back into motorsports after serious injury in 2023. Finding a new career outside car

INDIANAPOLIS – Simon Pagenaud’s career was cut short eight races into the 2023 season when he was badly injured in a crash that caused concussion-related symptoms he’s still battling nearly two years later. He wants no sympathy, no pity, and looks back fondly on a career in which he won the Indianapolis 500, an IndyCar […]

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INDIANAPOLIS – Simon Pagenaud’s career was cut short eight races into the 2023 season when he was badly injured in a crash that caused concussion-related symptoms he’s still battling nearly two years later.

He wants no sympathy, no pity, and looks back fondly on a career in which he won the Indianapolis 500, an IndyCar championship, 15 races and the Rolex 24 at Daytona.

He also doesn’t want to dwell on his personal health, which has been a frustrating rollercoaster of improvements, setbacks, and constant rehabilitation to return to some normalcy and enjoy life with his wife and two young children.

But the Frenchman will never be able to shake the motorsports bug — and he has a goal of one day returning to some form of racing because without goals, what does a racer even have?

For now, though, he’s adjusting to a slow comeback that began last year when Team Penske driver Scott McLaughlin asked Pagenaud to be his driver coach at the Indianapolis 500. It wasn’t as easy as he’d hoped because everything from his vision to the noise at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the vibration he felt as cars whizzed past the Team Penske timing stand disrupted his recovery.

Even so, McLaughlin has him back this year as Pagenaud attempts to find a career outside the racecar.

“Last year he didn’t know how he was going to feel with the noises, but he definitely feels a lot better,” McLaughlin said. “I really enjoy working with him and bringing him back to the speedway, brought him back to something he loves. He’s really intense, too. His preparation is next level.”

It’s just the start for Pagenaud’s transition: Théo Pourchaire, a fellow Frenchman, announced Tuesday that Pagenaud will be his representation as Pourchaire tries to make a full-time move to racing in the United States.

“I don’t want to be involved with the management of 30 drivers, but I want to be involved with the best,” Pagenaud said. “I want to go to teams with a guy I know can perform. I don’t want to put my name on someone and then have a team come back to me and say he didn’t perform, the guy wasn’t good enough. I’ve got to be selective and to me, I think Theo can be one of the best.”

But that’s not all for Pagenaud, who was contacted by Chevrolet and asked to help do simulator work for the manufacturer in a true case of “just what the doctor ordered.”

“I had no idea if I was going to be of use, but I was very attracted by the idea and my doctors were very enthused by the chance to test myself on a moving simulator,” he said. ”I’m not going to lie — it was a big challenge personally — but it was awesome to have a reference, a new reference, of where I was at and how much I was struggling for different things.

“And we decided that we would do this a bit more frequently. It was very useful for my recovery. It’s probably been the most useful therapy I’ve had, and when I’m talking about therapies, physical therapy, eye coordination, reconnecting the bridges in the brain, things that were not as seamless as they used to be.”

Pagenaud is also open to a more formal role with former team Team Penske, where he spent seven seasons and time with their sports car program. Team President Tim Cindric didn’t rule out a role within the organization for the driver who contributed one of Roger Penske’s record 20 Indy 500 wins.

McLaughlin has raved about what Pagenaud has brought him at Indy.

“I’m probably a detriment to my own career throughout the years — I haven’t been as intricate with looking at little details, and I think Simon is the professor in that regard,” McLaughlin said. “He strives for perfection in a lot of ways in how he sets up his car and what he feels. He’s probably allowing me to look into more details and just the way I look at myself and the driving, the lines and what I’m doing with weight jacker and bars. It’s really helped sort of accelerate my progress here, and really am enjoying working with a friend, as well.”

That knowledge could be welcome inside Team Penske as a whole at some point, Cindric said.

“Simon is always welcome within our team,” Cindric said. “But Simon has a lot going on on his own, beyond our team. I know Simon has been offered some really good things to do, but there’s only so much that Simon really wants to do.

“I think he can be a benefit for anybody around this place. I don’t think there’s any limit in terms of what he does, but at the same time, he wants to be productive. Just hanging around probably isn’t what he wants to do, either. I think we have a pretty good balance, and we’re always open to him within our team.”

___

AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



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Dale Earnhardt Jr. implores NASCAR to make major change to race rules

Dale Earnhardt Jr. wouldn’t mind if NASCAR made one big change to its races in the foreseeable future. Earlier this month, Earnhardt talked about changing NASCAR’s caution rule on Dale Jr. Download. “Get rid of stage cautions entirely,” Earnhardt Jr. said when talking about what Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch discussed on the Actions Detrimental […]

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. wouldn’t mind if NASCAR made one big change to its races in the foreseeable future. Earlier this month, Earnhardt talked about changing NASCAR’s caution rule on Dale Jr. Download.

“Get rid of stage cautions entirely,” Earnhardt Jr. said when talking about what Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch discussed on the Actions Detrimental podcast. “No stage break caution, that goes away. You still pay points out at certain moments in the race, as we do today. I’m fine with that. I like people accumulating points during the race.

“It does create a conversation that I think we need to have around somebody who finished 14th getting fifth-place points or the fifth-best points, or the guy even winning the race not having the most points as the guy in second or third because of what happened throughout the race. I don’t know if I love all that, but hey, that’s another conversation.”

Dale Earnhardt revealed the one challenge with the potential NASCAR rule change

Earnhardt then said, “There’s a lap clock, a lap counter. You run a certain amount of laps green, and if no caution has come out, you throw the yellow. If there’s a natural yellow at some point in that mix it resets the clock. I like that. That way, I think it changes fuel strategy, all types of things to be able to get the teams to have to… They have to race a little bit.”

Later in the conversation, Earnhardt implied that the change might be difficult because of TV. “The networks want yellows so they can go to break,” he said. “I’m sure the plan stuff makes it easier. That’s a part of it. The networks have a lot of leverage in terms of when we’re going to start races and how races is going to look and all that stuff.”

As mentioned by USA Today, NASCAR has been racing with stage cautions in the Cup Series since 2017. NASCAR removed stage cautions from road courses in 2023 but brought them back last year.

For the next Cup Series race, which is the Coca-Cola 600, NASCAR will have three stage cautions for the four-stage race. The cautions will be thrown every 100 laps at Charlotte Motor Speedway.



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Pagenaud easing back into motorsports after serious injury in 2023. Finding a new career outside car

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Simon Pagenaud’s career was cut short eight races into the 2023 season when he was badly injured in a crash that caused concussion-related symptoms he’s still battling nearly two years later. He wants no sympathy, no pity, and looks back fondly on a career in which he won the Indianapolis 500, an […]

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Simon Pagenaud’s career was cut short eight races into the 2023 season when he was badly injured in a crash that caused concussion-related symptoms he’s still battling nearly two years later.

He wants no sympathy, no pity, and looks back fondly on a career in which he won the Indianapolis 500, an IndyCar championship, 15 races and the Rolex 24 at Daytona.

He also doesn’t want to dwell on his personal health, which has been a frustrating rollercoaster of improvements, setbacks, and constant rehabilitation to return to some normalcy and enjoy life with his wife and two young children.

But the Frenchman will never be able to shake the motorsports bug — and he has a goal of one day returning to some form of racing because without goals, what does a racer even have?

For now, though, he’s adjusting to a slow comeback that began last year when Team Penske driver Scott McLaughlin asked Pagenaud to be his driver coach at the Indianapolis 500. It wasn’t as easy as he’d hoped because everything from his vision to the noise at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the vibration he felt as cars whizzed past the Team Penske timing stand disrupted his recovery.

Even so, McLaughlin has him back this year as Pagenaud attempts to find a career outside the racecar.

“Last year he didn’t know how he was going to feel with the noises, but he definitely feels a lot better,” McLaughlin said. “I really enjoy working with him and bringing him back to the speedway, brought him back to something he loves. He’s really intense, too. His preparation is next level.”

It’s just the start for Pagenaud’s transition: Théo Pourchaire, a fellow Frenchman, announced Tuesday that Pagenaud will be his representation as Pourchaire tries to make a full-time move to racing in the United States.

“I don’t want to be involved with the management of 30 drivers, but I want to be involved with the best,” Pagenaud said. “I want to go to teams with a guy I know can perform. I don’t want to put my name on someone and then have a team come back to me and say he didn’t perform, the guy wasn’t good enough. I’ve got to be selective and to me, I think Theo can be one of the best.”

But that’s not all for Pagenaud, who was contacted by Chevrolet and asked to help do simulator work for the manufacturer in a true case of “just what the doctor ordered.”

“I had no idea if I was going to be of use, but I was very attracted by the idea and my doctors were very enthused by the chance to test myself on a moving simulator,” he said. ”I’m not going to lie — it was a big challenge personally — but it was awesome to have a reference, a new reference, of where I was at and how much I was struggling for different things.

“And we decided that we would do this a bit more frequently. It was very useful for my recovery. It’s probably been the most useful therapy I’ve had, and when I’m talking about therapies, physical therapy, eye coordination, reconnecting the bridges in the brain, things that were not as seamless as they used to be.”

Pagenaud is also open to a more formal role with former team Team Penske, where he spent seven seasons and time with their sports car program. Team President Tim Cindric didn’t rule out a role within the organization for the driver who contributed one of Roger Penske’s record 20 Indy 500 wins.

McLaughlin has raved about what Pagenaud has brought him at Indy.

“I’m probably a detriment to my own career throughout the years — I haven’t been as intricate with looking at little details, and I think Simon is the professor in that regard,” McLaughlin said. “He strives for perfection in a lot of ways in how he sets up his car and what he feels. He’s probably allowing me to look into more details and just the way I look at myself and the driving, the lines and what I’m doing with weight jacker and bars. It’s really helped sort of accelerate my progress here, and really am enjoying working with a friend, as well.”

That knowledge could be welcome inside Team Penske as a whole at some point, Cindric said.

“Simon is always welcome within our team,” Cindric said. “But Simon has a lot going on on his own, beyond our team. I know Simon has been offered some really good things to do, but there’s only so much that Simon really wants to do.

“I think he can be a benefit for anybody around this place. I don’t think there’s any limit in terms of what he does, but at the same time, he wants to be productive. Just hanging around probably isn’t what he wants to do, either. I think we have a pretty good balance, and we’re always open to him within our team.”

___

AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



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Legendary NASCAR Broadcaster Mike Joy to Compete in Historic Trans Am at Sonoma Raceway During Toyota/Save Mart 350 Weekend – Speedway Digest

NASCAR on FOX lead announcer Mike Joy is trading the broadcast booth for the driver’s seat during one of the biggest weekends in wine country racing. Joy will join the Historic Trans Am Series at Sonoma Raceway, racing alongside his son Scott during the Toyota/Save Mart 350 NASCAR weekend, July 11–13. Best known as the […]

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NASCAR on FOX lead announcer Mike Joy is trading the broadcast booth for the driver’s seat during one of the biggest weekends in wine country racing. Joy will join the Historic Trans Am Series at Sonoma Raceway, racing alongside his son Scott during the Toyota/Save Mart 350 NASCAR weekend, July 11–13.

Best known as the voice of the NASCAR Cup Series on FOX, Joy will suit up to compete in a fully restored 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Z28, a historic car originally raced by Jerry Thompson for Tony DeLorenzo’s Owens Corning Racing Team with factory backing. Sonoma’s own Chris Drysdale will prep the car.

The Historic Trans Am Series features a remarkable collection of restored race cars from the golden era of American road racing—1966 to 1972—when names like Parnelli Jones, Dan Gurney, Mark Donohue, George Follmer, and Sam Posey ruled the track in Mustangs, Camaros, and Challengers. These iconic muscle cars will race on Friday and Saturday and remain on display for fans to enjoy on Sunday.

NASCAR weekend’s racing action kicks off Friday with the ARCA Menards Series West, continues Saturday with the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Historic Trans Am, and culminates Sunday with the main event – the Toyota/Save Mart 350 NASCAR Cup Series race broadcasted live on TNT at 12:30 p.m. PT.

Tickets, premium, upgrades, camping, and parking options for NASCAR weekend in Sonoma are available at SonomaRaceway.com or by calling (800) 870-RACE [7223].

Sonoma Raceway PR



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Pagenaud easing back into motorsports after serious injury in 2023. Finding a new career outside car

Pagenaud easing back into motorsports after serious injury in 2023. Finding a new career outside car – myMotherLode.com   Link 0

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Pagenaud easing back into motorsports after serious injury in 2023. Finding a new career outside car – myMotherLode.com

































































 




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Prime Video Unveils Tech Plans for NASCAR Cup Series Coverage

NEW YORK—Prime Video has released some of its tech plans for NASCAR Cup Series, which begins on Sunday, May 25 at 5:00 p.m. ET with the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. As part of its coverage of five consecutive races including the series’ first-ever international points event in Mexico City, Prime Video will use […]

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NEW YORK—Prime Video has released some of its tech plans for NASCAR Cup Series, which begins on Sunday, May 25 at 5:00 p.m. ET with the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

As part of its coverage of five consecutive races including the series’ first-ever international points event in Mexico City, Prime Video will use 70+ cameras, provide real-time highlights on demand, offer a 1080p HDR feed and provide coverage of every green flag moment during the races.



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