(Chris Graythen/Getty Images)
William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet, is presented the Harley J. Earl Trophy from Frank Kelleher, president of Daytona International Speedway in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway. In a frantic scramble after a restart on Lap 197 of 200, Byron reached the start/finish line and took the white flag moments before NASCAR called the fifth caution of the evening as Ross Chastain slid wildly through the infield grass off the bumper of Austin Cindric’s Ford. Alex Bowman was a close second to his teammate at the moment of caution, giving Hendrick a 1-2 finish and the organization’s first victory in the Daytona 500 since Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s triumph in 2014. It marked the first Hendrick 1-2 in the race since Jimmie Johnson bested Earnhardt to the stripe in 2013. The victory was Hendrick’s ninth in the Daytona 500, tying the company with Petty Enterprises for most in the history of the NASCAR Cup Series most prestigious event. The race was postponed from Sunday to Monday because of heavy rains during the weekend. (Thank you to Reid Spencer/NASCAR Wire Service)
Editor-in-Chief's Note: The Daytona 500 was yet another embarrassing crash-fest. There are no excuses, and there's really no other way to put it. What a frickin' joke. -PMD
Aston Martin unveiled its 2024 F1 machine - the AMR24 - at Silverstone on Monday (the 12th). According to Racer.com, the AMR24 is the first car to be manufactured and assembled in Aston Martin’s new factory at its Silverstone headquarters, just across the road from the entrance to the British Grand Prix venue. The car had its first on track outing at Silverstone on Monday. Aston Martin's technical director, Dan Fallows, called it an evolution of last year’s car. “We’ve made changes all over the car,” Fallows said. “It’s very different in many ways. The majority of the parts have changed on it, but it is really still essentially a strong evolution of last year’s car. We have kind of built on the end of AMR23. The obvious things you’ll see that are different are things like the front nose and front wing. Bodywork will be different, but there’s also obviously quite a lot of stuff under the hood, which hopefully you won’t see [on track]. We will obviously try and keep some of that under wraps."
Editor's Note: This is our dearly departed billboard, which we had at Road America for several years. Peter gifted the phrase "America's National Park of Speed" to the track, which now uses it proudly in all of its communications. -WG
Editor's Note: Click on "Next 1 Entries" at the bottom of this page to see previous issues. - WG