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Larson’s busy racing season continues after Kansas victory – Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather | Indiana Traffic

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kyle Larson said he would turn his attention to the Indianapolis 500, and a second crack at racing immortality, the moment he stepped out of his car following the NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway on Sunday. The only problem with that? He wasn’t due for practice at Indianapolis Motor Speedway until Tuesday. […]

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KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kyle Larson said he would turn his attention to the Indianapolis 500, and a second crack at racing immortality, the moment he stepped out of his car following the NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway on Sunday.

The only problem with that? He wasn’t due for practice at Indianapolis Motor Speedway until Tuesday.

Plenty of time to squeeze in another race.

So even as Larson was basking in the glow of a third Cup Series win of the season while flying to Indianapolis on Sunday night, he wasn’t quite ready to fully focus on the 500. The plan was to hop in a car and drive to Kokomo, Indiana, for a sprint car race on Monday night, and only then turn his focus to the “Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

“He just goes and goes and goes,” marveled Chad Knaus, the vice president of competition at Hendrick Motorsports, which fields his No. 5 car in the Cup Series and is working with Arrow McLaren to field Larson’s car for the Indy 500.

The reality is that Larson would rather be behind the wheel of a race car than behind a TV screen, or a bar, or just about anywhere else. His priority every year may be the Cup Series, and winning a second championship, but that leaves plenty of open dates on the schedule where he can sprinkle in an Xfinity Series race, or Truck Series race, or run at a local dirt track.

He happened to do that Friday night at Lakeside Speedway, just down the road from Kansas Speedway, where his High Limit Racing series was running. Larson nearly had a sprint car land in his lap during a scary wreck that tore up his car. But he simply shrugged it off as part of racing, and he was back at the track the next morning.

“The thing that I’ve always been impressed with Kyle since he showed up at Hendrick Motorsports is that he is unfazed,” Knaus said. “Like, nothing gets under his skin. He doesn’t get wound up. He doesn’t get emotional about maybe something that happens on the race track. He doesn’t get emotional and carry weight on his shoulders.

“He just rolls with it,” Knaus said, “and he goes and he continues to drive.”

That preternaturally placid demeanor was stretched nearly to a breaking point at last year’s Indy 500, though.

Larson was taking his first shot at “the Double,” trying to run every lap of the 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte the same day Memorial Day weekend. Many have tried but only Tony Stewart in 1999 has managed to pull it off.

But while Larson was able to overcome every problem lobbed at him on the track — aside from a speeding penalty on pit road in the 500 that took him out of contention for the win — he was powerless when it came to dealing with the weather.

He doesn’t like being powerless.

On race day, rain swept through Indianapolis Motor Speedway and soaked the track, leaving Larson to wait in Gasoline Alley to see whether the race would even take place that Sunday. And if it did take place, would he stay and run the 500 or be forced to withdraw so that he could head to Charlotte and fulfill his obligations in the Cup Series race that night?

He stuck around and ran every lap of the Indy 500, and was chosen rookie of the year afterward. But the delay kept him from starting the Coca-Cola 600, and by the time his helicopter-plane-helicopter trip from Indiana to North Carolina had deposited him at the track, more rain in Charlotte kept him from ever climbing into his car there and completing a lap.

“Unfortunately once Mother Nature stepped in,” Knaus said, “we didn’t have a whole lot that we could do.”

The long-range forecast for the Indianapolis 500 looks much better this year.

And once again, Larson is heading into perhaps the busiest month of his calendar year riding a wave of on-track momentum.

His dominating victory at Kansas Speedway, where he led 221 of 267 laps on Sunday, was his third Cup Series win of the season, and it moved him into first place in the points standings. Larson also has won two of his three Xfinity starts, one of his two Truck races, and he has a win and three top-five finishes in five sprint car features in the High Limit series.

Then again, all that success doesn’t seem to matter much to him.

“I don’t really let a race affect the next day of my life,” Larson explained Sunday night. “I would rather win leading into these next couple of weeks than have a DNF or something. But I don’t really think it matters.”

What happens the next couple of weeks matters a lot, though. He’s been waiting a whole year to try “the Double” again.

“Yeah, it’s going to be a fun two weeks,” Larson said. “I look forward to working together with the team, Arrow McLaren, and learning the car more, trying to narrow in on our balance, and just trying to have a smooth couple weeks like we had last year, and execute like you would in any race and try to be in the hunt at the end.”



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GCU Motorsports pressing pedal for competition

Members of GCU Motorsports gather around their car at the Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. Grand Canyon University Motorsports, the team on campus known for building racecars, just returned from the big Formula SAE competition in Michigan, and although it didn’t get the chance to race, it continues in its goal to cross the […]

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Members of GCU Motorsports gather around their car at the Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan.

Grand Canyon University Motorsports, the team on campus known for building racecars, just returned from the big Formula SAE competition in Michigan, and although it didn’t get the chance to race, it continues in its goal to cross the finish line of completing a vehicle cleared for competition.

The club, which got its start as a project of the campus’s chapter of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, recently switched lanes to become a club sport. That move is huge, opening the doors to more opportunities for funding.

Another big change: Its home is no longer under the ramp of the university’s 33rd Avenue parking structure.

Powertrain lead Davis Wright gets behind the wheel.

“How many times did I hit my head on the fire suppression (system)?” said Davis Wright, a junior mechanical engineering major.

It now operates out of the College of Engineering and Technology garage, which are three large shipping containers adjacent to Building 1.

Those are just a few of the strides the club took after attending Formula SAE Michigan recently in Brooklyn, Michigan, where 107 registered teams of university undergraduate and graduate students vied for a spot on the racetrack – the Michigan International Speedway – after spending the past academic year conceiving, designing, fabricating and developing small, formula-style racecars.

Despite not advancing past the preliminary rounds, the team beat other notable university teams in those early sessions; it was the furthest GCU Motorsports has progressed in the Formula SAE (formerly the Society of Automotive Engineers) competition.

Back from the big show in Michigan, “Now we can actually tackle the more nitty-gritty of the engineering side of these cars,” said Grant Garcia, a senior mechanical engineering major.

That means building a sturdy foundation, from setting a project management template, to establishing a system that enables new members to step into their roles more easily, to a detailed web design model.

“Once we make it to competition, it will help us move up in rank because we’ll be able to have a more presentable design presentation or a well-built cost report for cost competition,” Garcia said.

The GCU contingent, led by former president Tyler Palanuk, Wright (the powertrain lead) and Garcia (the incoming club president), had the chance to visit with more than 600 representatives from U.S. colleges and foreign countries at the Formula SAE event.

Judges examined each university team’s designs, which those teams support with data, simulations, and production and mass production cost estimates.

Wright and Garcia appreciated the support they received from judges and several universities, including Arizona State, to put the club in a better spot to succeed next year.

“All of us gain so much knowledge that now we have the ability to not just pass down this knowledge to people below us, but kind of build the foundation so we’re a lot stronger and more well equipped for the next year,” Wright said. “… I think our new goal is accomplishing all these other tasks so that now we can ideally start rising up in the ranking after we go through competition.”

Paul Lambertson, College of Engineering and Technology dean and GCU Motorsports’ supervisor, remembers some of the team’s challenges. He met several times with Palanuk to “try to restart the engine of a great team,” he said.

“When you think about how the team got through all of the technical challenges and was only a few minutes, maybe a few seconds, shy of getting actually through that last challenge and getting onto the racetrack, that’s huge,” Lambertson said. “And so looking at that, building on that this year, I see really great things happening for the team.”

GCU Motorsports brought its car to Michigan for the recent Formula SAE competition.

Club leaders encourage team members to attend workshops that will help them use machinery and other equipment and allow them more access to working on the car. They’re also receptive to input from students with project management backgrounds.

“I can’t tell you how many people are in that club that don’t know about cars,” said Wright, who has worked as a professional mechanic for the last two years. “And that’s totally fine, because at the end of the day, you can boil these down to some basic engineering principles and then just kind of focus on those. And then through focusing on those, you start to learn how cars work.

“… Also, we don’t expect new members to hit the ground knowing exactly how to time an engine. I try to really divert my focus into teaching people how these basic systems of car work in the most simplest of form so they can try to have a baseline understanding of where they can pair that with some newly acquired engineering knowledge to help integrating themselves into whatever subsystem team they want – whether that’s electrical or powertrain or aerodynamics.”

There’s motivation from current members and incentive from prospective members hanging in the front of the College of Engineering and Technology Building. Hovering over the conference table in the front corner is last year’s race car structure, powder coated in GCU purple.

“Whenever I give tours, I point out that car,” Lambertson said.

Shining that spotlight on the racecar, built by students, is intentional.

Said Lambertson, “There’s all of this stuff that we’re trying to do to build momentum to help make the team successful.”

GCU News senior writer Mark Gonzales can be reached at [email protected]

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Related content:

GCU News: Canyon Motorsports makes pit stop to debut race car

GCU News: Engineering shops, clubs show what they can do



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Connor Zilisch adds two more races to his 2025 NASCAR Cup schedule

Connor Zilisch is one of the brightest prospects in NASCAR right now and Trackhouse Racing has been working to get the 18-year-old experience in a Cup car while he competes for the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship. With sponsorship from Red Bull, he made his Cup debut at COTA, driving the No. 87 Chevrolet. Zilisch showed impressive […]

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Connor Zilisch is one of the brightest prospects in NASCAR right now and Trackhouse Racing has been working to get the 18-year-old experience in a Cup car while he competes for the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship.

With sponsorship from Red Bull, he made his Cup debut at COTA, driving the No. 87 Chevrolet. Zilisch showed impressive pace, qualifying 14th before being collected in a mid-race crash with teammate Daniel Suarez, finishing 37th. He managed to complete 49 of 95 laps before the incident.

Zilisch returned for his oval debut in NASCAR’s longest race, qualifying 33rd for the Coca-Cola 600. He was involved in a mid-race incident with Jimmie Johnson, spinning, but he escaped with only minor damage. Zilisch soldiered on to finish 23rd while teammate Ross Chastain captured the checkered flag.

Connor Zilisch, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet, Jimmie Johnson, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Toyota, Cole Custer, Haas Factory Team Ford

Connor Zilisch, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet, Jimmie Johnson, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB Toyota, Cole Custer, Haas Factory Team Ford

Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

And now, Trackhouse has revealed two additional Cup races for Zilisch this year where they will again field a fourth entry. His next race will be June 28 at Atlanta, which was recently renamed EchoPark Speedway as part of a seven-year branding deal. He will also run the August 10 Cup race at Watkins Glen, which is the site of his first Xfinity win.

“It’s awesome to have the opportunity to race two more times in the NASCAR Cup Series,” said Zilisch in a release from the team. “Nothing beats experience in this sport, especially at the Cup level. Thanks to everyone at Red Bull and Trackhouse for this opportunity.”  

Zilisch currently sits fifth in the regular season standings for the NASCAR Xfinity Series, despite suffering a minor back injury after crashing from the lead at Talladega that forced to miss the Texas Xfinity race while he recovered. Zilisch already locked himself into the playoffs via a win at COTA earlier this year. He’s also improving on ovals, earning back-to-back runner-up finishes at Charlotte and Nashville.

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Tablo TV Expands Partnership with Ryan Ellis, DGM Racing – Speedway Digest

As NASCAR makes its historical return to Mexico City, DGM Racing and Ryan Ellis are proud to announce additional races with Tablo TV, a subscription-free over-the-air (OTA) DVR and streaming device. Tablo TV is redefining its sponsorship with Ellis and DGM Racing’s No. 71 Chevrolet by adding an in-car camera at each primary-sponsored race, including […]

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As NASCAR makes its historical return to Mexico City, DGM Racing and Ryan Ellis are proud to announce additional races with Tablo TV, a subscription-free over-the-air (OTA) DVR and streaming device. Tablo TV is redefining its sponsorship with Ellis and DGM Racing’s No. 71 Chevrolet by adding an in-car camera at each primary-sponsored race, including Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City, Kansas Speedway, and Talladega Superspeedway during the NASCAR Playoffs.

NASCAR’s return to Mexico City has generated buzz internationally, and Tablo TV looks forward to rejoining forces with Ellis and increasing access for race fans with an in-car camera at one of the most anticipated events of the season. Inspired by Mexico City’s vibrant and colorful communities, Tablo TV has modified its traditional car design to include brighter brand colors.

“We’re thrilled to team up again this season with Ryan Ellis and his amazing crew for the NASCAR Xfinity race in Mexico City, held at the legendary F1 circuit. With Tablo TV, fans won’t miss a second of the action, including exclusive in-car camera coverage that puts you right in the driver’s seat. This will be one of the most exciting live TV moments of the season, and we couldn’t ask for better partners than Ryan and his DGM team to bring the thrill of the race to living rooms everywhere.”

Ellis expresses his excitement about hitting the track at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez for the first time, “Having raced in Mexico once before, I know the fans are passionate and full of energy! The excitement for this event is unmatched as anticipation continues to build across the industry. I know how much this event means to NASCAR and our audience in Mexico, and I’m so grateful to be a small part of a significant moment that will go down in NASCAR history.”

Enhancing the race day experience for fans and engaging with the community have been two crucial pieces of Tablo TV’s partnership with Ellis and his race team. Now, Tablo TV is taking it a step further by sponsoring an in-car camera during the race broadcast on The CW at each Tablo TV scheduled race, providing fans with a real-time, behind-the-scenes view from inside the cockpit as Ellis competes. The Tablo TV-sponsored vantage point will allow fans from across the country to watch all the on-track action from the cockpit right from their living room.

“For our team, having Tablo on board as our sponsor makes it even more special,” Ellis continues. “They’ve been an incredible partner, and I’m thrilled they’re bringing fans even closer to the action with the Tablo onboard camera. Sharing my first laps live from the driver’s seat on the CW is so cool – it’s my first race with an onboard camera in NASCAR, and I know fans will love seeing the track from my point of view. The perspective that this camera will bring is much like watching our races on Tablo – the next best thing to being in the driver’s seat.”

By pairing a Tablo TV device with an OTA TV antenna, consumers can watch, pause and record exciting NASCAR Xfinity racing action on The CW and 125+ more TV channels, subscription-free. Tablo TV lets you enjoy the best of live local broadcast TV and free internet-based streaming channels, including 12 networks in Español, through one cohesive app-based TV experience on any compatible screen in your home. Customers can use code ‘ELLIS’ for $20 off their Tablo TV purchase at checkout at TabloTV.com.

Tune-In Information

The NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is scheduled for Saturday, June 14, at 4:30 p.m. ET. All NXS races will be broadcast live on The CW. Practices and qualifying can be streamed on The CW App. The CW can be watched, paused and recorded on Tablo TV, a subscription-free way to access 125+ broadcast and streaming channels. Content and channels are subject to availability in your area.

DGM Racing PR



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Atlanta Motor Speedway has a new name

At the beginning, the track was known as Atlanta International Raceway, and it was the site of the NASCAR Cup Series season finale from 1987-2000. One of the more famous races in track history occurred in 1992. That year in the finale, NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Richard Petty competed in his final race, NASCAR […]

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At the beginning, the track was known as Atlanta International Raceway, and it was the site of the NASCAR Cup Series season finale from 1987-2000. One of the more famous races in track history occurred in 1992. That year in the finale, NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Richard Petty competed in his final race, NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Jeff Gordon made his first Cup Series start, and NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Bill Elliott, who is from Dawsonville, won the race but still finished a close second in the Cup Series points standings.

From left: Marcus Smith, president and CEO of Speedway Motorsports; David B. Smith, chairman and CEO of Sonic Automotive; Michael Waltrip, a former NASCAR driver who is a two-time Daytona 500 champion; and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp. (Courtesy of EchoPark Speedway)

Credit: Photo courtesy of EchoPark Speedway

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Credit: Photo courtesy of EchoPark Speedway

This year, the track hosted the Ambetter Health 400 Cup Series race Feb. 23, which was won by Christopher Bell. On June 28, EchoPark Speedway will host the Quaker State 400 Cup Series race.

Along with EchoPark Speedway, Speedway Motorsports owns and operates Bristol Motor Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Dover Motor Speedway, Kentucky Speedway, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Nashville Superspeedway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, North Wilkesboro Speedway, Sonoma Raceway, and Texas Motor Speedway.

Dignitaries and drivers discuss the newly named EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway) and added perks for the winner of this month's Quaker State 400 NASCAR Cup Series race, with the victor set to receive a “nearly new” EchoPark Chevy Silverado and a trailer equipped with an 85th Anniversary, Sturgis Motorcyle Rally Limited Edition Harley-Davidson motorcycle. From left to right: Kyle Petty, former Cup Series driver; Ross Chastain, current Cup Series driver; David B. Smith, chairman and CEO of Sonic Automotive; Christopher Bell, current Cup Series driver and winner of the Ambetter 400 race at AMS in February; and Brandon Hutchison, executive vice president and general manager of EchoPark Speedway. Sonic Automotive owns EchoPark Automotive. (Courtesy of EchoPark Speedway)

Credit: Photo courtesy of EchoPark Speedway

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Credit: Photo courtesy of EchoPark Speedway





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Sonic’s EchoPark gets on the fast track as Atlanta speedway’s title sponsor

Sonic Automotive’s latest marketing partnership has put EchoPark on the fast track. Literally. Sonic’s used-car operation has teamed with Speedway Motorsports to put its name on the racetrack formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway in a seven-year, multi-million-dollar agreement. The 66-year-old facility in Hampton, Ga., which hosts two NASCAR Cup Series races each year, is […]

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Sonic Automotive’s latest marketing partnership has put EchoPark on the fast track.

Literally.

Sonic’s used-car operation has teamed with Speedway Motorsports to put its name on the racetrack formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway in a seven-year, multi-million-dollar agreement.

The 66-year-old facility in Hampton, Ga., which hosts two NASCAR Cup Series races each year, is now EchoPark Speedway.

The collaboration is a natural fit. Speedway Motorsports and Sonic Automotive were both founded by the late Bruton Smith, whose sons lead both companies — David Smith is Sonic Automotive’s chairman and CEO, and Marcus Smith serves as president and CEO of Speedway Motorsports. Speedway Motorsports is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sonic Financial Corporation, which is owned by the Smith family

EchoPark Automotive operates 17 locations in 13 markets, including stores in Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama, where most of the fans attending the track’s NASCAR events come from, the companies said in a news release. It already has a presence in nine Speedway Motorsports facilities nationwide, including restart zone signage and fan zone promotions, and it’s the title sponsor of NASCAR’s EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix in Austin, Texas.

Sonic said acquiring the naming rights to the speedway is the latest and biggest step in its strategy for EchoPark, helping share the message of the brand to millions locally and nationally through televised NASCAR events.

“We have enjoyed serving guests in the Atlanta metro area since EchoPark Atlanta opened its doors in 2020,” David Smith said. “This partnership allows us to share the value of the exceptional EchoPark car-buying experience with more guests in Atlanta and the surrounding area who enjoy the excitement of NASCAR racing at this iconic venue.”

Speedway Motorsports said the 850-acre facility, located some 30 miles south of downtown Atlanta, has undergone a “massive facelift” in preparation for the Quaker State 400 Available at Walmart — the opening race of the new in-season Cup Series tournament — coming up June 28.

The new look includes EchoPark Speedway’s signature green color and the track’s new logo on the walls, in Victory Lane and throughout the concourse.

The winner of the race will also receive a “nearly new” Chevy Silverado from EchoPark and a trailer equipped with an 85th anniversary Sturgis Motorcycle Rally Limited Edition Harley-Davidson motorcycle, the first of just 26 such models to be produced.

Sonic Automotive recently acquired a Harley-Davidson franchised in Sturgis, S.D., site of the historic rally.

“This is a great opportunity to showcase the incredible vehicles we sell at EchoPark and share the exposure with another important entity in our Sonic Automotive family,” Sonic Automotive president Jeff Dyke said. “The Sturgis Rally is right around the corner, and we know NASCAR fans and drivers will not only love the new presentation of this track, but also the opportunity to see this limited edition Harley-Davidson presented in Victory Lane.”

EchoPark Speedway has hosted NASCAR races every year since it opened as Atlanta International Raceway in 1960 and was the season finale from 1987-2000. The track was the site of seven-time Cup Series champion Richard Petty’s last NASCAR race and the first start for four-time champion Jeff Gordon.

“EchoPark Automotive is as committed to exceptional customer service as we are, and we know that together we’ll elevate our fan experience to a new level unmatched for Southern hospitality,” Marcus Smith said. “This partnership will fuel great experiences for fans attending our speedway for years to come.”



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Ryan Blaney was “waiting for a yellow” on his way to Nashville win

Ryan Blaney will be joining Penske teammates Joey Logano and Austin Cindric in the NASCAR Cup playoffs after his impressive victory at Nashville, becoming the ninth driver to win his way into the post-season discussion.  But during the final run of the race, Blaney was preparing himself for the worst-case scenario, and who could blame him […]

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Ryan Blaney will be joining Penske teammates Joey Logano and Austin Cindric in the NASCAR Cup playoffs after his impressive victory at Nashville, becoming the ninth driver to win his way into the post-season discussion. 

But during the final run of the race, Blaney was preparing himself for the worst-case scenario, and who could blame him after the season he’s endured. The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion had five DNFs this year with several potential wins slipping through his fingers.

“I was waiting for a yellow,” said Blaney after his victory at Nashville. “I figured this was coming and we were going to have to defend a restart. But you just keep making laps. You just keep doing it. My spotter counts me down laps and everything like that, but yeah, as a driver and you’re leading the race, you’re always expecting something to happen, especially when you have a comfortable lead. But fortunately for us, that didn’t happen and didn’t have to fend off a restart or pit stop or anything like that where things can get wild like they normally do here when you have a bunch of late yellows.”

But instead, the final 101 laps of the race went completely green, which is a very different story from the previous year where there were a total of five overtime restarts in this race. 

All of Team Penske will be fighting for the crown

Ryan Blaney, Team Penske Ford, Joey Logano, Team Penske Ford

Ryan Blaney, Team Penske Ford, Joey Logano, Team Penske Ford

Photo by: David Jensen / Getty Images

Blaney’s win also means that all three Penske cars will be in the playoffs for the second consecutive year. They are the first multi-car team to get every car to Victory Lane in 2025 with fellow ‘super teams’ Joe Gibbs Racing and Hendrick Motorsports, with two of their four cars locked in via wins. You can also count the Wood Brothers No. 21 Ford (which won at Las Vegas) as an honorary Penske car due to the close relationship between the two organizations, so make it 4/4 for them.

“I’ve been really proud of Team Penske and the Wood Brothers speed this year so far through the first dozen races,” said Blaney of the achievement. “For the last couple years we’ve struggled a little bit kind of getting going before the summer months, and I think we’ve figured it out come the fall and things like that or late summer. But I thought we just fired off this year with tons of speed, and was really proud of their efforts over the winter for that and carrying over what we accomplished at the end of last year and bringing it bigger and better at the start of this year.

“So it’s great to have everybody with a win and everybody locked in there, and hopefully we can just continue to rack it up. It’s nice that we have all the speed and all the teams are working very well together right now. Between myself and the #22, #2, #21, we’re all really in sync right now, and that’s tough to get when all four teams are really communicating great and we’re all playing off each other. That’s a really great thing that we have going on at our race shop.”

It’s always good to have the odds in your favor, especially when Penske is trying to remain undefeated in the Next Gen era come November when the champion is crowned. They have won all three titles since this generation of car was first introduced in 2022 with Logano beating Trackhouse’s Ross Chastain in 2022, Blaney beating Hendrick’s Kyle Larson in 2023, and Logano besting Blaney in a Penske 1-2 just one year ago. 

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Nick DeGroot

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Ryan Blaney

Team Penske

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