HUNTERSVILLE, NC — Chris Larsen and Stewart Friesen have announced the formation of Halmar Friesen Racing (HFR). HFR will compete in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) running a full schedule for 2017 with Friesen as the driver. Halmar International will serve as primary sponsor on the No. 52 Chevrolet Silverado.
Managing the day-to-day operations of HFR will be NASCAR veteran Tommy Baldwin Jr.
Friesen, a native of Niagara-on-the-Lake Ontario, is a well decorated Modified and Sprint Car competitor. Making his NCWTS debut in 2016 at Eldora Speedway, Friesen ran a six-race schedule with a best finish of 13th at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
“I’m super excited to be part of the Halmar Friesen Racing team,”said Friesen. “We did a bit of racing last year to get our feet wet on asphalt, and we were pleased with our success. Everything we have going on with Tommy is exciting. It’s great to have his experience guiding our team so we can hit the ground running in Daytona.”
Friesen’s crew chief will be Trip Bruce, who most recently worked with Baldwin in the K&N Pro Series East. Bruce has a championship with driver Johnny Benson and a total of ten wins in the NCWTS.
Larsen, owner of Halmar International, said of the new venture with Friesen, “We got our feet wet at Eldora last season mostly because we wanted to have some fun. After that, we ran several more races to get a sense of where we were. When an opportunity came to work with Tommy (Baldwin) and it was a no brainer for us. Because of the relationship with Tommy we have committed to running the whole season. We know we will be prepared, we have good equipment and a great driver.”
The start of the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season is more than one month away but four competitors will be back behind the wheel much sooner.
The test will mark the first time that the new Toyota Camry, which was unveiled on Monday at the North American International Auto Show held in Detroit, will be on track. Kenseth will be the first Toyota driver to take to the track in the new race car.
Exciting unveil of the 2018 #camry today. I’m looking forward to be the first one to drive the race version tomorrow! @ToyotaRacing
Las Vegas, a 1.5-mile tri-oval, will host the season’s third points race, the Kobalt 400, Sunday, March 12 (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 2 Ford for Team Penske, is the defending race winner.
The 2017 racing season officially gets underway Feb. 18 with the running of The Clash (8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), a non-points event at Daytona International Speedway. The first points event, the Daytona 500, is scheduled for Feb. 26 (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
All are for 2017 races with the exception of AMS, which will be focused on 2018. Track officials there recently announced that the 1.54-mile track will be repaved following this year’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 (March 5, 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series teams will participate in a Goodyear tire test at Eldora Speedway May 16-17. Eldora is the only dirt track hosting a race among NASCAR’s three national series.
Also, with news of a repaving and reconfiguration at Texas Motor Speedway, Goodyear could add a test there as well.
One change of note in the 2017 testing schedule is the addition of separate tests for the manufacturers’ wheel force transducer (WFT) cars. The vehicles, provided by teams and fitted with various data-gathering devices, were previously allowed for each organizational and Goodyear tire test.
NASCAR will also hold a two-day test April 11-12 at Daytona, using the first day to sort through potential safety/competition initiatives while Goodyear is expected to conduct a tire test with any potential changes on the second day.
The 2017 season will be the third in which team testing is limited to participation in Goodyear tire tests, organizational tests or any developmental-type tests set by the sanctioning body.
Private team testing has been prohibited since the start of the 2015 season.
Don’t let Jimmie Johnson’s Instagram fool you — skiing is very difficult to do, and even more difficult to learn, as evidenced by Kevin Harvick’s tweet that shows son Keelan going ass-over-teakettle after a very promising start.
Keelan took it like a champ. Didn’t complain. Didn’t claim "A cat ran right out in front of me." None of that. He likely dusted himself off, climbed back up the hill and tried it again. We have safety workers that can’t walk on a 5-degree-banked track without eating asphalt, so huzzah, Keelan.
This did not, however, keep us from adding NASCAR play-by-play to the video. Sorry.
DETROIT — Toyota teams competing in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series in 2017 will have a different look as the auto manufacturer has redesigned the Toyota Camry for the upcoming racing season to reflect the product that will arrive on the showroom floor later this year.
The new 2018 race car model, which will be used starting in the 2017 season, was unveiled Monday during the North American International Auto Show held at the Cobo Center in Detroit. The Camry race car was displayed along with the newly designed ’18 Camry production car.
"(It) is probably the most aggressively styled Camry in the history of (the model)," said Ed Laukes, vice president of integrated marketing operations for Toyota Motor Sales, USA.
Toyota teams have won one championship, 30 races and made 10 total Chase appearances with six total drivers since 2015, the last time the automaker made any significant changes to its on-track product.
This past season, its teams won 16 races, the most since the company began competing at NASCAR’s top level in 2007. It also won its first premier series manufacturer championship as well.
"You always look to strive to be better," Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch said after the unveil Monday. "TRD and Joe Gibbs Racing as well as Furniture Row have been working really hard on this car, remodeling it to make sure that it’s a step up and not down."
Teammate Denny Hamlin, defending winner of the Daytona 500 said the JGR organization is "excited" about the new model.
"A lot of hard work has been put into it to make these cars perform well on the street and the race track," he said. "I have no doubt that we’ve done our homework in the offseason and we’ll have Camrys that we can race with (on the track)."
One of the significant, although not visible, differences in the race car version is that NASCAR teams were involved in the process much sooner than with previous models that went from dealership to race track.
"Largely the first two shots at this (in 2013 and 2015) Toyota, TRD (and) Calty (Design Research) ultimately were responsible for the design and the initial performance," said Dave Wilson, president and general manager for Toyota Racing Development, USA. "Then in the process you hand it to our team partners and they develop it further.
"This go round … we involved our team partners much earlier in the process and had them work with us side-by-side as we’re designing this because again, they’ve got very, very smart aerodynamicists."
The intent, he said, "is to be able to hit the ground running at Daytona (in February) , being further along than we have been with the past two generations."
NASCAR teams will open the 2017 season Feb. 18 at Daytona International Speedway with the running of The Clash (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), a non-points event. The first points race, the 59th running of the Daytona 500, is scheduled for the following week on Feb. 26 (2 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
"What’s better? It’s the same box of downforce and drag; every time a manufacturer has a shot at building a new car, evolving a new car, you try again, you work closer and closer to the corner of that box, and that’s the lowest drag and the highest downforce," Wilson said.
Changes to the car that was used in competition from 2015-16 focused on the front end, and Laukes said those changes were necessary to "be relevant to what’s on the street."
"So we spent the resources … because we wanted to be relevant to that Camry (street car)," he said, even though the initial work on the 2018 model had already begun.
The 2018 production Camry is scheduled to go on sale to the public in August.
Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kurt Busch took a page out of Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s "How to Make the Most of your Offseason" playbook and married fianceé Ashley Van Metre over the weekend in the Caribbean, according to the driver’s Twitter account.
My life completely changed when fate brought us together. So happy to call you my wife. pic.twitter.com/AtrmzAQSa9
Toyota Racing made offseason waves Monday, unveiling the new Camry for this season’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series alongside its road-going counterpart at the North American International Auto Show.
Team Chevy will have its own ripple effect in place for the following 2018 season.
Chevrolet racing officials confirmed Monday that the automaker will cease production of the Chevrolet SS at the end of the 2017 model run. The news means the manufacturer will have a new race car for NASCAR’s top division for the 2018 season.
Jim Campbell, Chevrolet’s US Vice President of Performance Vehicles and Motorsports, said in a statement that there was no firm timetable for a 2018 replacement.
"It was already known that the Chevrolet SS was going to be discontinued in 2017," Campbell said in a statement provided by Team Chevy. "That information was originally announced last summer. As you know, we don’t talk about future projects. We’ll make any announcement regarding our next Cup entry at the appropriate time."
The SS made its major-league debut in the 2013 season, when NASCAR introduced the Gen-6 stock car to reinforce brand identity among its manufacturers. The SS succeeded the Impala, which Chevrolet used in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series from 2007-2012.
Toyota Racing made offseason waves Monday, unveiling the new Camry for this season’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series alongside its road-going counterpart at the North American International Auto Show.
Team Chevy will have its own ripple effect in place for the following 2018 season.
Chevrolet racing officials confirmed Monday that the automaker will cease production of the Chevrolet SS at the end of the 2017 model run. The news means the manufacturer will have a new race car for NASCAR’s top division for the 2018 season.
Jim Campbell, Chevrolet’s US Vice President of Performance Vehicles and Motorsports, said in a statement that there was no firm timetable for a 2018 replacement.
"It was already known that the Chevrolet SS was going to be discontinued in 2017," Campbell said in a statement provided by Team Chevy. "That information was originally announced last summer. As you know, we don’t talk about future projects. We’ll make any announcement regarding our next Cup entry at the appropriate time."
The SS made its major-league debut in the 2013 season, when NASCAR introduced the Gen-6 stock car to reinforce brand identity among its manufacturers. The SS succeeded the Impala, which Chevrolet used in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series from 2007-2012.
Seeing someone other than Tony Stewart in the No. 14 next year is going to look weird for a while. The Stewart-Haas Racing Twitter account is helping preparations by giving us a glimpse of the future.
‘Smoke’ has driven that number since 2009, when he left Joe Gibbs Racing and the No. 20 to co-found Stewart-Haas Racing. Now that he has retired from full-time competition, Clint Bowyer will pilot the No. 14 Ford in 2017.
Wonder what he looks like in a Mobil 1 fire suit? Wonder no more — just see below.
Monday, Jan. 9
5 p.m., Stories of NASCAR: Memorable Wins of 2016 (re-air), NBCSN
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Top Moments of 2016 (re-air), NBCSN
Tuesday, Jan. 10
5 p.m., Stories of NASCAR: Champions of 2016 (re-air), NBCSN
5:30 p.m., Stories of NASCAR: Behind the Wheel (re-air), NBCSN Wednesday, Jan. 11
8:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR Scan All 43: Championship Edition (re-air), NBCSN
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Scan All 43: Best of Scan All (re-air), NBCSN
Thursday, Jan. 12
8:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1
Friday, Jan. 13
8:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1
Saturday, Jan. 14
7 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1
8 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1
9 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Year (re-air), FS1