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Tyler and Will Hour 2 with Trevor Bayne and Dave Hooker this hour including 5 Burning QuestionsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nascar Daytona 500 Winner and Knoxville Native Trevor Bayne joins the guys and talks sports and his new role at Flat Rock MotorclubSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tyler and Will Hour 2 with Trevor Bayne and Dave Hooker this hour including 5 Burning QuestionsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nascar Daytona 500 Winner and Knoxville Native Trevor Bayne joins the guys and talks sports and his new role at Flat Rock MotorclubSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tyler and Will Hour 2 with Trevor Bayne and Dave Hooker this hour including 5 Burning QuestionsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nascar Daytona 500 Winner and Knoxville Native Trevor Bayne joins the guys and talks sports and his new role at Flat Rock MotorclubSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lesley and Brad reflect on Lesley's interview with Nick Hutchison, founder of BookThinkers and author of 'Rise of the Reader.' Discover Nick's inspiring journey from indifference to reading to becoming a passionate advocate for personal development books. Learn practical strategies for reading more effectively, including setting specific, measurable goals and integrating reading into your daily routine. Get actionable tips on how to read 20 books a year and retain valuable information, enhancing your personal and professional growth. If you have any questions about this episode or want to get some of the resources we mentioned, head over to LesleyLogan.co/podcast. If you have any comments or questions about the Be It pod shoot us a message at beit@lesleylogan.co. And as always, if you're enjoying the show please share it with someone who you think would enjoy it as well. It is your continued support that will help us continue to help others. Thank you so much! Never miss another show by subscribing at LesleyLogan.co/subscribe.In this episode you will learn about:Why feeling like an impostor is normal when starting something new.The value of audience engagement and feedback in the creative process.Importance of reading books that address specific problems or build skills.Set SMART goals in retaining and applying knowledge gained from books. Targeted reading to address and solve personal problems effectively.Episode References/Links:OPC Summer Camp - soOPC Summer TourBalanced BodyeLevate 2025 BookThinkers WebsiteBookThinkers InstagramRise of the ReaderThe Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz If you enjoyed this episode, make sure and give us a five star rating and leave us a review on iTunes, Podcast Addict, Podchaser or Castbox. DEALS! Check out all our Preferred Vendors & Special Deals from Clair Sparrow, Sensate, Lyfefuel BeeKeeper's Naturals, Sauna Space, HigherDose, AG1 and ToeSox Be in the know with all the workshops at OPCBe It Till You See It Podcast SurveyBe a part of Lesley's Pilates MentorshipFREE Ditching Busy Webinar Resources:Watch the Be It Till You See It podcast on YouTube!Lesley Logan websiteBe It Till You See It PodcastOnline Pilates Classes by Lesley LoganOnline Pilates Classes by Lesley Logan on YouTubeProfitable Pilates Follow Us on Social Media:InstagramFacebookLinkedIn Episode Transcript:Brad Crowell 0:00 He always asks them, "If I paid you $10,000, if you read this book in the next month, would you do it?" And of course they would say, "yeah, yeah, yeah, I would totally do it." And he said, "Great, I've caught you in my trap." And the trap is obviously prioritization. We don't prioritize reading, so we don't read, right?Lesley Logan 0:24 Welcome to the Be It Till You See It podcast where we talk about taking messy action, knowing that perfect is boring. I'm Lesley Logan, Pilates instructor and fitness business coach. I've trained thousands of people around the world and the number one thing I see stopping people from achieving anything is self-doubt. My friends, action brings clarity and it's the antidote to fear. Each week, my guest will bring bold, executable, intrinsic and targeted steps that you can use to put yourself first and Be It Till You See It. It's a practice, not a perfect. Let's get started. Lesley Logan 1:06 Welcome back to the Be It Till You See It interview recap where my co-host in life Brad and I are going to dig in to the pragmatic convo I had with Nick Hutchison in our last episode. If you haven't yet listened to this episode, you should. You should just listen to it. So listen in any order you want. Doesn't really matter to us. But go listen to Nick. He is incredible. He's amazing. He's also just like, really like, sweet, nice dude. And he, it's announced we can say, he is expecting his first kid.Brad Crowell 1:32 I didn't know that. That's exciting. Congratulations, Nick.Lesley Logan 1:35 Oh. Get on social. I know. Brad Crowell 1:37 Yeah, I'm all over that. (Inaudible)Lesley Logan 1:39 Well, he can do Dad's Club. He could do Vincent's Dad's Club. Yeah. Brad Crowell 1:39 Yeah. I'll connect the dots there, Nick. That's exciting. Lesley Logan 1:46 I love it. He didn't even ask for dad advice and I'm like you should do this thingBrad Crowell 1:50 Congratulations. You're going to get it. Lesley Logan 1:50 So today is May 30th. It is World MS Day. About this day, World Multiple Sclerosis Day, falling on May 30th, invites dialogue on the disease. Multiple sclerosis, MS, is a relapse-remitting disease with a very slow progression. MS is also known as encephalomyelitis disseminata and its symptoms include muscle weakness, double vision and mental physical problems due to lack of research studies on the disease. The exact causes behind it are generally unknown. Many scientists believe that there might be connected to the onset of the disease and genes or nerve-cell dysfunction. Furthermore, there's no permanent cure yet. The symptoms can be relieved using the right set of treatments and medication. I just want to like shout out because there's actually been a lot of talk about this. Selma Blair, I believe, did a docu-series or documentary about this. She's been very vocal about it. Christina Applegate is now in a cane. And she, I believe, has to stop acting because of it and like she had a really amazing show, even up until very recently.Brad Crowell 3:00 We just met someone in Phoenix PLT who has MS.Lesley Logan 3:05 Yeah. Jack Osbourne has it. Montel Williams and Jamie-Lynn Sigler. There's actually more. There's, I'm gonna see if there's anyone you might know. But there's Tamia Hill, David lLnder, Walter Williams, Jonathan Katz, Janice Dean, Richard Pryor, Neil Cavuto, Trevor Bayne. So there's a ton more. I'm sure there's more. The only reason I brought these people up is like, you might have like, loved them for a long time and wonder what they're doing. And the truth is, is that this is a really hard and really sad thing that we have no information on, there's not a lot of treatments or studies being done on it, and it's a real shame. So anyways, but shout out to Selma Blair for the work that she's been doing to draw attention to it. So what do we got coming up? Okay. OPC Summer Camp is like this weekend. It is this weekend, not like, it is this weekend. Brad Crowell 3:56 It is May 30th. That means we're looking at two days from now is June 1st.Lesley Logan 4:03 Yes. So Brad and I will have our blue blockers along (inaudible). We are going to have to go to bed early tomorrow night, Brad, because you have to get up super early on Saturday. We are it's all hands on deck because it is just like Zoom. Like it's seven Zooms a day, seven different links, seven different teachers each day. Different groups of people, some people have day pass, some people have bought ala carte, so we have to be on top of everything. As a camp directors that we are, and we have 13 other camp counselors and just an incredible lineup of events for you. This is the biggest thing we've ever done online and we really hope you join us because it's, it's really it's all about the Pilates practitioner. You do not have to be a teacher to join these. And if you can't join us live you get to have the replays. So buy them anyways.Brad Crowell 4:48 That's right. I think that's the key. If you can't join us live, you get to keep the replays. Lesley Logan 4:53 Yeah, so opc.me/events is how you get your tickets before we go live. Okay, after that we're actually going to head out on tour. OPC Summer Tour. We're headed to the Midwest, y'all. We're hitting cities. We just pretty much skip over all the time. And so, Chicago. I'm looking at Yale. Brad Crowell 5:13 Milwaukee. One of the Twin Cities.Lesley Logan 5:14 Milwaukee. Yes. One of the Twin Cities. Brad Crowell 5:15 We're actually looking atLesley Logan 5:18 Indy.Brad Crowell 5:19 Yeah, sure.Lesley Logan 5:19 We have something in Denver. I mean, we go to Denver all the time, but we're going to, we're going to Denver. Colorado Springs. We are looking at Indy. I think we talked to someone. Brad Crowell 5:31 We're potentially gonna be in Cincinnati. We're looking at that. Lesley Logan 5:34 Yeah. So at any rate, lots of places. I think there's like 12 cities over the two weeks.Brad Crowell 5:40 We're gonna kick it off in Vegas. So we just added a 13th. Lesley Logan 5:42 Oh, hello, Vegas. Hi, for the love, thanks for being our kickoff location and sending us off on the way. So anyways, it's gonna be a lot of fun. Our headlining sponsor is Balanced Body, that means goodies, and you know, you're gonna get certificate towards buying that piece of equipment you've always wanted. And if you use my link, you get the discount. So boom, extra credit. Okay, then another thing that's happening as we speak now, but in June, hopefully open up the doors to eLevate for 2025. And I know that sounds a little early, but the reality is, is that the mentorship is a nine-month program. There's five weekends, I like to give people plenty of time to get their schedule ready, get ready for it, plan for it, and also be able to pay for it. So it is an investment and I don't take that lightly. So if you are wanting to learn more about eLevate if you want to, if you already know you want to do it, we only take 12 people in a round, you want to go to lesleylogan.co/ew. And by the way, my name is spelled L-E-S-L-E-Y L-O-G-A-N (lesleylogan.co/ew) That means eLevate waitlist.Brad Crowell 6:45 If you missed all that and we still have spots left, just reach out to us. If you want to join us.Lesley Logan 6:51 We don't know if we have spots left because we're recording in theBrad Crowell 6:51 We're recording ahead of time.Lesley Logan 6:55 Ahead of time. Brad Crowell 6:57 But yes, let's shift over to the audience question. So this is from schonliving on Instagram, I'm building my hours towards my Pilates mat certification and I find teaching group classes is much harder than one-on-one. Any tips to overcoming the fear, insecurity, anxiety and the form of impostor syndrome that I'm experiencing from being in front of a group class?Lesley Logan 7:24 Yeah, so schonliving, let me, okay, I love this question. First of all, a lot of people even say that they prefer a class to a private and that's because in the class they like it's kind of chaotic, and they, they don't have, there's a lot going on. So no one will notice that they might be nervous and on a one-on-one people can sense it. So I love that you are so confident on your one-on-ones it's actually quite hard to do. So I would say you're winning. The second thing I would just say is if you find you have imposter syndrome and you're new at anything, so this is for anyone, if you're new at something, you should feel like an imposter. You are new at it. If you didn't feel nervous. You are an egomaniac, narcissistic person who should probably go get like, like checked out. So anyway, here's what I will say is if you haven't listened to last week's episode goes into my my answer on cueing, you are new, you are not going to have it all figured out. You are going to have been a little nervous. What I would say first of all, the thing that I always do when I step into something that makes me nervous, I could just go, it's showtime and I be it till I see it. How would you act if you already were feeling confident teaching group classes? How would you act? How would you hold yourself? Like how would you welcome people into your class? How would you? How would you greet the class? How would you start the class? What is your speech for the class? How would you end the class, right? Don't worry about Brad Crowell 7:24 Yeah, you just be it till you see it.Lesley Logan 8:43 Yeah, don't worry about what you're gonna say in the middle of class. What are the in cast that you can control that you want to say to invite people into a space that you're in control of? Okay, so that's first and foremost. Second, my teacher Jay Grimes would say bad Pilates, get used to it. Dangerous Pilates, never. I always translate that to ugly Pilates, get used to it. Dangerous Pilates, never. When you're teaching a bunch of people who have different learning styles and different abilities of paying attention, it's gonna be a hot mess. So you need to look at a class and like be able to spot danger and correct that. Anything in between danger and perfect, just let it be. Okay? It will, they need to come back and they will get better. So that'd be my other thing. And the next thing is, is that people become teachers and in weekends now, like literally in a weekend or months, maybe showing that you, you've been doing this for a year, I don't know. But something tells me probably not. My teacher would say you're not really a teacher till I've been teaching for five years. And so just teach as many people as you can.Brad Crowell 9:54 Not in a judgment way. But the reality is there's so much to process and dots to connect and you know, just understanding plus you have to, you should be feeling it in your own body, too. You know, so it just takes time, y'all. It takes time.Lesley Logan 10:09 A lot of questions and worries and concerns you have they kind of answer themselves, the more you teach. So what I would say is get some friends together that love you. And to say I need to practice teaching a class and just teach them and they in return should give you testimonials. That's what they should do. That is, but that's going to help you but your goal, of course you're gonna feel nervous. You obviously care about doing well. So that says to me, nervous energy, and impostor syndrome just shows that you care and that you're brand new at something. You would never let a client go, oh, I can't do the 100 on day one. Because (inaudible).Brad Crowell 10:14 You would laugh at them and say, of course you can't. Lesley Logan 10:49 You're new. Brad Crowell 10:50 You just started.Lesley Logan 10:51 So my dear, of course you are nervous. You're new. And so for anyone who does teach Pilates, all this stuff applies to everything you want. You got to be it till you see it. How would you act if you already knew how to do the thing? And second of all, if you're beginner, kindness and graciousness and patience with yourself.Brad Crowell 11:09 Yeah, to yourself with yourself. Exactly. Yeah, great question. Okay. Now let's talk about Nick Hutchison. Nick Hutchison is the founder of BookThinkers, a company dedicated to helping authors promote and market their books. Initially indifferent to reading, Nick's outlook transformed in his early 20s after discovering the transformative power of personal development books. Today, as he's a lifelong learner, he has penned Rise of the Reader and podcast host of BookThinkers, Life Changing Books, his work across various platforms provides valuable strategies for implementing the lessons learned from books into everyday life.Lesley Logan 11:51 Yeah, he's cool. I really, I really enjoy him. I was on his podcast, BookThinkers, by the way. Brad Crowell 11:59 He's the nicest dude. Lesley Logan 11:59 Just really nice, very thoughtful. He's very perceptive. He listens. And he integrates it, he analyzes it, and he puts it out. It's just really wonderful. Get his book, you guys, if you are reading books, so that we're talking about on the podcast, and like, I'm not retaining enough, get his book. It's so, so, so good. It's been so helpful. Based off of his book, he taught a little mini version of it to us at the BBG event we went to, and I found that I took less tasks home, because I was like, the only thing I have to do is this thing, I'm only here for this thing, this is my intention for the next few days. And I really listened to a lot of things I was like, That's a great idea, not mine, that's a great idea, not mine, I left going, I just have these three things I'm going to do when I leave, and it's only been three, it's like two. And I'm really, really happy about it, because it's just great. So go get his book. Brad Crowell 12:47 Love that. Lesley Logan 12:48 One of the things I love he said that don't assume what your audience wants. And we mentioned the four agreements.And so the four Agreements, in case you've not read the book is don't take anything personally, don't make assumptions. The other two are be honorable with your word. If you say you're gonna do it, do it. And then there's a fourth one, always do your best. He said, don't assume what they want, ask them what they want. And then they should be brought along with you. Too often, a lot of people who are in this, maybe you're not wanting to write a book, but maybe you want to create a product or on-demand course or have an event. Most people protect it, hold it preciously to themselves. And then they're like, I get it. Here it is, here's the thing I made for you. But you didn't get any feedback along the way. So they weren't part of building it with you, which means they're not invested in the thing that you're excited about. And you didn't get the feedback along the way to know that they would want blue over green. Brad Crowell 13:35 Well, you guys both used personal experiences to relay, relay this obviously, the the first launch of Agency. You know, there was a lot of emotions tied up in that flop and also a shit ton of hours to spending time to like make this thing actually come together. And then Nick laughed and said, oh, I did that. He built an entire app. And he spent hundreds of hours and tens of thousands of dollars to build this app and nobody used it. And that's because we were making assumptions prior to rolling the thing out and then what you talked about with the flashcards was when you were rolling out the second reformer deck, you share the process along the way. And it got people that much more excited that much more excited. And it was it was considerably more of a powerful experience and launch for people than the first deck. Lesley Logan 14:31 Well, we were just at Pilates on tour in Phoenix. And this one girl is like, oh, I'm on the waitlist for the barrels and I'm like, oh, thank you so much. And I went to update her she's like, oh, I got the email. You're in the editing process right now. And she was so excited. So like take them on the journey because they actually get excited with you. They want to know what's going on. Like it was really cool and we hopefully by the time this comes out, it's on presale, because were obviously recording earlier, but it is part of it. And I can't recall if we've ever talked about this on here, but I'm just gonna bring it up in case you missed the episode. You know, we were at the Soho House couple days where we saw Nick in person last month. And this guy was just like how do you get people to wait for things. And it's really not about waiting for things. It's also about buying things. He was bringing up waiting, but to me how I think about how purchasing power you all listening have the purchasing power, every single one of you. You determine if something is successful or not. So you need to know that in everything that you buy, you actually give feedback based on your dollars. Okay, you've voting dollars, like you have a lot of different things you can think about with your money. And I, I shared that I bring people on the journey, I get them excited, I tell them the process behind the thing. And eight years ago, I might not have done that because I might have been like oh my God they're going to take my idea. They're going to be able to do it. Now they know how to do it. Here's the thing. And Nick and I talked about this. James Altucher says that less than 2% of people, yeah, less than 2% of people actually take action on any idea, let alone yours. And being part of the process makes them want to do it. So at any rate, I really love that he brought that up. I think it's useful not just for authors, but for anyone creating anything anywhere. What did you love that he said?Brad Crowell 16:14 I really loved when he was talking about the different reasons that people use excuses, justifications that people use why they don't read. He was talking about, I'm so busy or in a company, I've got a family, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And he he always asks him, if I paid you $10,000 if you read this book in the next month would you do it? And of course, they would say yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I would totally do it. And he said, great, I've caught you in my trap. And the trap is, is obviously prioritization. We don't prioritize reading so we don't read, right? And his book is pretty cool in that it gives some practical advice on how to read 20 books a year by doing 15 minutes a day, which is 1% of your day. If you, if you do that, you're going to put yourself on track to read those 20 books a year. And he basically said, listen, it's not a question of whether or not we can read the books. It's a question of whether or not we value it enough. Right? It's about picking books that solve problems and build skill sets. And so you know, you know, whether you read as an escape, like, you know, to like to step away from the crazy hectic that you have, or you read to learn. When you're picking up a book for, especially for the learning, the rest of his book helps you actually apply and retain and apply the information that you're learning from that book.Lesley Logan 17:55 Yeah, I mean, I actually do like that you said that. We had another guy who said like, what if I told you if I pay you a million dollars to lose 50 pounds overnight could you do it? And he went like 50 pounds overnight? And he said, sure you could. You could have a leg off. Right? He's like, not ideal, but you could, right? And I Brad Crowell 18:12 He did say that and I was like I heard, he did say that. That's true. Lesley Logan 18:17 There's always a way. And I think it is, you know, like really asking yourself what you're prioritizing. And I think we talked about this in the episode which is like, you know, your entertainment time? Like, how much of it are you watching? Like Netflix? What if you just took a little bit of it, like a little portion of your entertainment time and read a book? That could solve the problem.Brad Crowell 18:35 Well, I laughed when he said, Yeah, it was working for this guy who suggested that I take my drive time, my 10 hours of drive time and start listening to podcasts. And I started taking notes on the pods, then decided to implement some of the strategies on the pods. And later, that same boss was like, wait, hold on. So now you're reading books, you're taking notes on the books, and then you're actually taking that advice and implementing it into your life. And he said, Nick, that's weird. He said nobody does that. That's amazing.Lesley Logan 18:37 He was using it in his job and it was making him way better at his job. And his own boss was like, what? How do you know this? How do you do this? So like it can, if you want to differentiate yourself, like it's not about being like 10 years ahead of some people sometimes just being a little bit ahead and that knowledge is that kind of power. So yeah.Brad Crowell 19:26 It's true. Brad Crowell 19:27 All right, welcome back. So finally, let's talk about those Be It Action Items. What bold, executable, intrinsic or targeted action items can we take away from your convo with Nick Hutchison? He said, set a SMART goal for each of the books that you read. We've talked about SMART goals before. SMART stands, it's an acronym, stands for specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-bound goals. Right? So specific, measurable, measurable meaning what's not measured can't really be managed. So set goals that are measurable, attainable. Set a realistic goal, trying to consume too much of an unrealistic goal makes you, it allows procrastination to creep in because it doesn't seem attainable. Then, relevant. You emotionally connect to the information. What does this book going to do for you? Ask yourself why am I actually reading this book and then time-bound. Give yourself an actual deadline to take actions on what you're learning in that book. Or for some of us, it might just be a timeout action to read the damn thing in the first place. Right? So he also includes writing down intentions on the inside cover of the book that you own and then reviewing it every time you read another chapter. So what are your intentions for this book, finished chapter two, go back and read your intentions. finished chapter three, read your intentions, finished chapter four. I think it's a really interesting way to stay focused on what you're trying to get out of the book. And you know, instead of just being like, I'm reading the book, I got through the book. Okay, next. I got through that book, too. I got through this book, too. No, you're actually anchoring, what you're learning against what your intentions for that book were. Pretty cool. Lesley Logan 21:08 Or I think, also, if you, like some books might have several things you can learn from them. But if you stick with one intention, you can always go back through. And like read it with a different intention. Yeah, yeah. But this way, you can actually not just take in information, you can integrate what you're learning, because you're not taking on too much information at one time.Brad Crowell 21:24 I love it. What about you? Lesley Logan 21:25 Okay, he said do a little personal edit, find a problem that you're dealing with and identify the problem and then go there and find a book that can help you solve it correctly. So he said, a lot of us won't do this. He's a warrant. If you don't fix it over the next 30 years, you'll experience that problem almost 11,000 more times. So. Brad Crowell 21:42 It's pretty insane. Lesley Logan 21:43 It's insane. But it's true. Because if you think of like, we have like 60,000, or whatever the amount of thoughts per day, and like 80% of them are like the same thought, because you haven't solved the problem. And you're just like rerunning that in your head. So I would just say, a lot of times people ask for advice on like, what books should I be reading? But yes, you could ask others for that. That could be very helpful. But if you first identify the problem, you might like the book that you pick up first better because it's about you. And we only care about solving our own problems. So there it is. Brad Crowell 22:15 Yeah, yeah. Lesley Logan 22:16 Anyways, Nick is awesome. Just you can actually follow him on Instagram and get really great book advice. You could you can also listen to his podcast BookThinkers to get really great ideas on like, what's a book that can solve a problem that you want to solve? So check him out and let us know what your favorite parts were. Share this with a friend if you've got a friend who's like saying they want to read more. That's a really good episode. Help them understand how they can do that and prioritize that reading goal. And until next time, you guys, I'm Lesley Logan.Brad Crowell 22:41 And I'm Brad Crowell.Lesley Logan 22:42 Thank you so much for listening. How are you going to use these tips in your life, share with us, share with a friend and until next time, Be It Till You See It. Brad Crowell 22:48 Bye for now.Lesley Logan 22:50 That's all I got for this episode of the Be It Till You See It Podcast. One thing that would help both myself and future listeners is for you to rate the show and leave a review and follow or subscribe for free wherever you listen to your podcast. Also, make sure to introduce yourself over at the Be It Pod on Instagram. I would love to know more about you. Share this episode with whoever you think needs to hear it. Help us and others Be It Till You See It. Have an awesome day. Lesley Logan 23:17 Be It Till You See It is a production of The Bloom Podcast Network. If you want to leave us a message or a question that we might read on another episode, you can text us at +1-310-905-5534 or send a DM on Instagram @BeItPod. Brad Crowell 23:32 It's written, filmed, and recorded by your host, Lesley Logan, and me, Brad Crowell. Lesley Logan 23:37 It is transcribed, produced and edited by the epic team at Disenyo.co. Brad Crowell 23:42 Our theme music is by Ali at Apex Production Music and our branding by designer and artist, Gianfranco Cioffi. Lesley Logan 23:49 Special thanks to Melissa Solomon for creating our visuals. Brad Crowell 23:52 Also to Angelina Herico for adding all of our content to our website. And finally to Meridith Root for keeping us all on point and on time.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/be-it-till-you-see-it/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Host Mike is joined by Trevor Bayne (Driver Optimization coach for Legacy Motor Club now) to talk Nascar, his new role, how the sport has changed, and would he get into a race car again? https://www.racingamerica.com/news/nascar/legacy-motor-club-adds-trevor-bayne-corey-heim-to-competition-roles
More reasons why F1 should mandate usage of all three tire compounds during a race. Topics covered: Sam Bird to McLaren FE Hulk and KMag return to Haas Liam Lawson in for Danny Ric SRX to the Middle East? AJ Foyt and Team Penske partner up IndyCar hybrid engine test Marcus Ericsson -> Andretti Pagenaud shut down for season, Blomqvist to fill in Juri Vips to run last two IndyCar races for RLL Mazda MX-5 Cup tests at Martinsville NASCAR back on TNT? Trevor Bayne gets 3-race Xfinity deal with JGR Parker Kligerman gets new Big Machine Racing contract Carson Hocevar to race LMC no. 42 at Darlingon Brandon Jones re-ups with JRM GMS Racing shuts down Truck operations Kurt Busch formally retires Favorite GMS paint scheme Will Checo return to Red Bull? Is the alliance with Penske good for Foyt? Should F1 have an alternate timeline for qualifying? Pack racing good Cup Series playoff predictions Rain makes for fun Dutch GP Scott Dixon does Scott Dixon things Trucks return to Milwaukee Daytona weekend Outstanding performance Roller's Featured Season
Trevor Bayne still wants to be a race car driver but also really enjoys making television with Fox Sports. In discussing those topics this week, Bayne explains what a typical week looks like for him based out of Knoxville; selling the coffee business in anticipation of running full-time in NASCAR again; the coffee business being a distraction in the immediate aftermath of his Cup Series ride going away; how long it's taken to be at peace with where his career is at currently; how realistic it is that he'll race this year; if Bayne feels behind when he does race because he's not doing it every week; making the phone call to get into the Fox Sports rotation; how tuned he is to the racing each week and the preparation; the emotion of being on television compared to being in a race car; seeking out feedback to get better at the craft; watching other sports differently now knowing how television is made; what he wants fans to think of him being on television; how the fans view Bayne when seeing him in public; why he's doing an hour of radio on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio each week; balancing opinion versus relationships in the garage; if not being in the NASCAR hub is a good or bad thing; if there is a timeline of when he needs to decide his future.Music created by Tony Monge.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3228370/advertisement
Today's Lead Lap with Sam Forman & Chris Bernard featured previews for this weekend's NASCAR action at Richmond Raceway & Texas Motor Speedway, as well as for this weekend's IndyCar & F1 races. Plus, comments from Knoxville's Trevor Bayne of Fox NASCAR & Bristol Motor Speedway Pres/GM Jerry Caldwell.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Current events are on the docket as Dale Earnhardt Jr. and co-host Mike Davis unpack the turbulent happenings of NASCAR's weekend in Texas on this week's episode of The Dale Jr. Download. Not only that, but they've brought in a guest who was very much a part of the turbulence, recent Bristol night race winner Chris Buescher.Dale and Chris have had some friendly banter over the past few weeks after Dale mistakenly referred to Chris as “Christopher” during a race broadcast. As the misstep reoccurred, Dale began to embrace the name change-up in an effort to catch his fellow commentators in the same spur-of-the-moment confusion. Chris caught wind of the joke via social media and took it in stride, even going as far as to change his profile name on Twitter and the driver name decal on his Roush Fenway Keselowski No. 17 car. Dale explains that he first grew to admire Chris when he bested then JR Motorsports driver Chase Elliott in the 2015 Xfinity Series season points standings. They discuss Chris leaving his hometown of Prosper, Texas at the age of 15 to move to North Carolina to pursue a career in motorsports. Chris credits his upbringing from his parents and knowing he was there to work and race.A huge part of Buescher's journey was a friendship he forged with Ken and David Ragan, which stemmed from a black flag incident during the Summer Shootout Legends car event at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Chris recalls getting in trouble for rough driving during the race and being sent to Ken's office, who was managing 600 Racing at the time. After the Shootout, Ken explained to Chris' family that if they were serious about racing, they needed to move out east. When they established that they were not in the place to do that at the time, Ken offered the spare bedroom in his house to Chris. Chris talks about getting involved in the Roush Racing development program thanks to help from the Ragans. His first step up the ladder was the ARCA Series, where he raced out of Midlothian, Illinois with the Roulo Brothers Racing outfit. He also discusses adapting to a stock car after transitioning out of Legends cars, and how he knocked the nose off his car on a start in one of his first races at Salem Speedway. The story of Chris making his Xfinity Series debut is a wild one, as he was tabbed last minute to fill in for Trevor Bayne in 2011, who went on medical leave. After forgetting to plug his phone in overnight, he was awakened by Gary Roulo who informed him “get your stuff, we're going to the airport”. In the car, Gary explained the situation, and soon Chris was at Richmond Raceway getting fitted to hop into the No. 16 car with no practice laps or simulator time. The interview also discusses Chris' time with Front Row Motorsports after winning the 2015 Xfinity Championship and his rain-shortened Cup victory at Pocono in 2016. Dale asks about the culture change at RFK since the arrival of Brad Keselowski. They also discuss the NextGen car's tire issues and what changes can be made to Texas Motor Speedway to help better the racing there. With only a few races left in the 2022 Cup schedule, Chris is optimistic about where the RFK Racing organization is heading, and he's looking forward to capitalizing on the momentum they've built in the past few weeks. DIRTY AIR Before Chris joins the show, Dale, Mike, Alex and Hannah discuss: NASCAR's eventful stop in Texas Denny and William Byron have a dust-up The NextGen tire problems continue in a big way What to do about Texas Motor Speedway? ASKJR presented by XfinityThis week the fans asked questions about: Dale's reaction to Jimmie Johnson retiring from full-time competition in 2023 Which underfunded driver would he like to give a shot in a JRM ride Smaller steering wheels vs. bigger Where Noah Gragson's Waffle House tradition stems from To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Current events are on the docket as Dale Earnhardt Jr. and co-host Mike Davis unpack the turbulent happenings of NASCAR's weekend in Texas on this week's episode of The Dale Jr. Download. Not only that, but they've brought in a guest who was very much a part of the turbulence, recent Bristol night race winner Chris Buescher. Dale and Chris have had some friendly banter over the past few weeks after Dale mistakenly referred to Chris as “Christopher” during a race broadcast. As the misstep reoccurred, Dale began to embrace the name change-up in an effort to catch his fellow commentators in the same spur-of-the-moment confusion. Chris caught wind of the joke via social media and took it in stride, even going as far as to change his profile name on Twitter and the driver name decal on his Roush Fenway Keselowski No. 17 car. Dale explains that he first grew to admire Chris when he bested then JR Motorsports driver Chase Elliott in the 2015 Xfinity Series season points standings. They discuss Chris leaving his hometown of Prosper, Texas at the age of 15 to move to North Carolina to pursue a career in motorsports. Chris credits his upbringing from his parents and knowing he was there to work and race. A huge part of Buescher's journey was a friendship he forged with Ken and David Ragan, which stemmed from a black flag incident during the Summer Shootout Legends car event at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Chris recalls getting in trouble for rough driving during the race and being sent to Ken's office, who was managing 600 Racing at the time. After the Shootout, Ken explained to Chris' family that if they were serious about racing, they needed to move out east. When they established that they were not in the place to do that at the time, Ken offered the spare bedroom in his house to Chris. Chris talks about getting involved in the Roush Racing development program thanks to help from the Ragans. His first step up the ladder was the ARCA Series, where he raced out of Midlothian, Illinois with the Roulo Brothers Racing outfit. He also discusses adapting to a stock car after transitioning out of Legends cars, and how he knocked the nose off his car on a start in one of his first races at Salem Speedway. The story of Chris making his Xfinity Series debut is a wild one, as he was tabbed last minute to fill in for Trevor Bayne in 2011, who went on medical leave. After forgetting to plug his phone in overnight, he was awakened by Gary Roulo who informed him “get your stuff, we're going to the airport”. In the car, Gary explained the situation, and soon Chris was at Richmond Raceway getting fitted to hop into the No. 16 car with no practice laps or simulator time. The interview also discusses Chris' time with Front Row Motorsports after winning the 2015 Xfinity Championship and his rain-shortened Cup victory at Pocono in 2016. Dale asks about the culture change at RFK since the arrival of Brad Keselowski. They also discuss the NextGen car's tire issues and what changes can be made to Texas Motor Speedway to help better the racing there. With only a few races left in the 2022 Cup schedule, Chris is optimistic about where the RFK Racing organization is heading, and he's looking forward to capitalizing on the momentum they've built in the past few weeks. DIRTY AIR Before Chris joins the show, Dale, Mike, Alex and Hannah discuss: NASCAR's eventful stop in Texas Denny and William Byron have a dust-up The NextGen tire problems continue in a big way What to do about Texas Motor Speedway? ASKJR presented by Xfinity This week the fans asked questions about: Dale's reaction to Jimmie Johnson retiring from full-time competition in 2023 Which underfunded driver would he like to give a shot in a JRM ride Smaller steering wheels vs. bigger Where Noah Gragson's Waffle House tradition stems from To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
He's only 23-years old, but Austin Cindric is already a Daytona 500 Champion and an accomplished racecar driver. Today, he sits at the big table with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mike Davis so the world can learn more about the young-man beyond the flashbulbs and trophies.At first glance, his life seems like an arranged marriage. The son of Tim Cindric, the president of Team Penske, driving in NASCAR"s top series in the famed Penske No. 2 car. There are some that feel Cindric had a path forged in gold before his feet. What most don't realize is that his parents didn't even want him to race a car. Most also don't realize how hard the Mooresville, N.C., driver has worked to make the most out of every opportunity he has gotten. Oh, and about those opportunities... he's made the most of them.From sportscar racing, Global Rallycross to NASCAR and in between, Cindric hasn't been average. In his rookie of the year attempt in NASCAR's Truck Series he put the bumper to a competitor at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park to get into the series' playoffs. Austin admits to Dale and Mike that it was a move that drew a lot of criticism and he shares how he learned from the experienceNext was his big shot in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The opportunity was something he admits he wasn't exactly ready for. The first year came with its challenges, hopping between three different rides. One of which, through their struggles, taught him another valuable lesson in his young racing career. Getting the nod to fill the seat of the Team Penske No. 22 ride was no surprise, based off of his pathway into NASCAR and his family dynamic. He took the opportunity and ran with it. Soon, Cindric developed himself from a road course threat to a winning racecar. In 2020 he won the finale at Phoenix and stuck his flag into the ground as a Champion in NASCAR's Xfinity Series.The next season, the winning ways continued, but a championship did not. With the knowledge he was already moving up to the Cup Series in 2022, Austin wanted to go out on top. A last lap move by Daniel Hemric stole that from him. In post race interviews, he handled it with the poise of a racer well-beyond his years. Dale and Mike discuss the approach with Austin.There's much more to Cindric than meets the eye. First off, his size. He's a tall racecar driver which is uncommon. He also plays the tuba. Yes, the tuba. Everyone talks about his racing lineage on his father's side, but did you know his mother's side has roots in Sprint Car racing and are winners of the Indianapolis 500?Open SegmentBefore Cindric entered the studio, Dale and Mike decided to grab JR Motorsports Xfinity driver Justin Allgaier and pull him into the Bojangles Studio for a quick chat. The driver of the Brandt #7 Chevrolet in the Xfinity Series recently tested his car and a Chevy wheel-force car at the newly reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway. As we go into this race with so many unknowns, Allgaier shares details on his first hand experience at speed and going backwards at the tricky Georgia speedplant.Dale Jr. also shares an unusual story about how he once had a beer with George Strait in Key West.AskJrHannah Newhouse brings a bunch of great questions from the fans on social media and DIrty Mo Media's live Youtube Stream. Topics covered: DJD's new TV home on Peacock. DEI's number choices. Dale Jr's Super Late Model regret Carson Kvapil's 30k pay-day Time for a racecar speedometer? and a conversation that somehow includes Bryan Adams, Aerosmith and Trevor Bayne. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
He's only 23-years old, but Austin Cindric is already a Daytona 500 Champion and an accomplished racecar driver. Today, he sits at the big table with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mike Davis so the world can learn more about the young-man beyond the flashbulbs and trophies. At first glance, his life seems like an arranged marriage. The son of Tim Cindric, the president of Team Penske, driving in NASCAR"s top series in the famed Penske No. 2 car. There are some that feel Cindric had a path forged in gold before his feet. What most don't realize is that his parents didn't even want him to race a car. Most also don't realize how hard the Mooresville, N.C., driver has worked to make the most out of every opportunity he has gotten. Oh, and about those opportunities... he's made the most of them. From sportscar racing, Global Rallycross to NASCAR and in between, Cindric hasn't been average. In his rookie of the year attempt in NASCAR's Truck Series he put the bumper to a competitor at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park to get into the series' playoffs. Austin admits to Dale and Mike that it was a move that drew a lot of criticism and he shares how he learned from the experience Next was his big shot in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The opportunity was something he admits he wasn't exactly ready for. The first year came with its challenges, hopping between three different rides. One of which, through their struggles, taught him another valuable lesson in his young racing career. Getting the nod to fill the seat of the Team Penske No. 22 ride was no surprise, based off of his pathway into NASCAR and his family dynamic. He took the opportunity and ran with it. Soon, Cindric developed himself from a road course threat to a winning racecar. In 2020 he won the finale at Phoenix and stuck his flag into the ground as a Champion in NASCAR's Xfinity Series. The next season, the winning ways continued, but a championship did not. With the knowledge he was already moving up to the Cup Series in 2022, Austin wanted to go out on top. A last lap move by Daniel Hemric stole that from him. In post race interviews, he handled it with the poise of a racer well-beyond his years. Dale and Mike discuss the approach with Austin. There's much more to Cindric than meets the eye. First off, his size. He's a tall racecar driver which is uncommon. He also plays the tuba. Yes, the tuba. Everyone talks about his racing lineage on his father's side, but did you know his mother's side has roots in Sprint Car racing and are winners of the Indianapolis 500? Open Segment Before Cindric entered the studio, Dale and Mike decided to grab JR Motorsports Xfinity driver Justin Allgaier and pull him into the Bojangles Studio for a quick chat. The driver of the Brandt #7 Chevrolet in the Xfinity Series recently tested his car and a Chevy wheel-force car at the newly reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway. As we go into this race with so many unknowns, Allgaier shares details on his first hand experience at speed and going backwards at the tricky Georgia speedplant. Dale Jr. also shares an unusual story about how he once had a beer with George Strait in Key West. AskJr Hannah Newhouse brings a bunch of great questions from the fans on social media and DIrty Mo Media's live Youtube Stream. Topics covered: DJD's new TV home on Peacock. DEI's number choices. Dale Jr's Super Late Model regret Carson Kvapil's 30k pay-day Time for a racecar speedometer? and a conversation that somehow includes Bryan Adams, Aerosmith and Trevor Bayne. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Thursday means it is time to go wide open on NASCAR Live. This week we have a double dip of guests. Trevor Bayne joins the show to talk about his return to the Xfinity Series and how he got involved in the broadcasting side of the sport. We then celebrate Women's History month by spotlighting Phoenix Raceway track president, Julie Giese. Then we wrap the show as Trey Downey takes us through the betting odds for the weekend and Mike Bagley gives you a restaurant suggestion if you are headed to Arizona for the races. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The boys are back as they discuss the Busch Light Clash at the La Coliseum, Trevor Bayne coming back to NASCAR! and much more! SCS Merch Store: https://stock-car-spectacle.myspreadshop.com/ SCS Twitter: https://twitter.com/Stock_Car_Spec Ian's Twitter: https://twitter.com/IMGeorgeson Mike's Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheGambler23 Nick's Twitter: https://twitter.com/zel824 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuYSDjQ6qaVImioNcXDr6Kw
This week, Aaron and Ben talk about Trevor Bayne's upset win in the 2011 Daytona 500, as well as his memorable reaction and how the Daytona press box broke out into cheers (and why that's a no-no). The two also discuss which 1980s and 1990s NASCAR drivers should be thankful they didn't have Twitter during their careers, and Aaron proves that everything eventually can be traced back to Wally Dallenbach. Six degrees of Wally? A Lifetime in NASCAR features NASCAR historians Ben White and Aaron Burns taking a look at the current events of NASCAR through the lens of the past. What was silly season like in the golden age of NASCAR? How would NASCAR Reddit have reacted to NASCAR's greatest moments of the 90's? Join these historians as they tackle the NASCAR timeline from an all-new perspective. https://twitter.com/NPPMag https://twitter.com/aaronclayburns https://polepositionmag.com/out-of-the-groove-podcast-network/ Part of the Out of the Groove Podcast Network, “A Lifetime in NASCAR” is available on all your favorite platforms including Spotify, Apple Podcasts and YouTube.
NASCAR had a weekend of racing at Kansas. Good and bad we talk about it all. Silly season is shaping up nicely and it includes Trevor Bayne. Matt's cat throws up.
NASCAR driver Trevor Bayne joined Sports 180 to preview the upcoming race weekend and more.
NASCAR driver Trevor Bayne joined Sports 180 to preview the upcoming race weekend and more.
Kevin Harvick held off Austin Dillon to win the 2020 Cook Out Southern 500 from Darlington Raceway. It was a finish that happened because Chase Elliott and Martin Truex Jr got together in the closing stages leaving both drivers with some damage and ending any shot at victory. We'll discuss that event and who has put themselves in a tough spot entering Richmond. Plus, Brandon Jones went to victory lane in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race on Saturday after another late race battle took the leaders out of contention. This time it was Denny Hamlin & Ross Chastain. We'll discuss that finish and we look ahead to Richmond. Plus a late race caution put Ben Rhodes at the front of the field and he was able to capitalize to win the truck race at Darlington. We'll also talk about Auto Club Speedway being turned into a short track and Ty Majeski is out at Niece Motorsports. Trevor Bayne will drive the No. 45 this weekend. We'll give our thoughts.
Two NASCAR playoff drivers signed contract extensions with their current teams. Which two drivers are they? Find out in this edition of Stock Car Scoop. Frontstretch‘s newest podcast focused on the motorsports news of the week also has news on which race Kyle Busch will run for his final Xfinity race of the year, as …
In which our heroes consider the future of Stewart-Haas Racing, given that two of its drivers are facing contract end points. Plus, discussions regarding Trevor Bayne, the rookies of the Truck Series and whether Iowa Speedway deserves a NASCAR Cup Series race.
The 2011 Daytona 500, the 53rd running of the event, was held on February 20, 2011 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida as the first race of the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup season. Trevor Bayne, driving for Wood Brothers Racing, won the race becoming the youngest Daytona 500 winner. Carl Edwards finished second, while David Gilliland, Bobby Labonte, and Kurt Busch rounded out the Top 5. Bayne had taken the lead shortly before the final restart and maintained it to win his first Cup Series race and Wood Brothers' fifth Daytona 500. The race featured 16 cautions and 74 lead changes among 22 different drivers. Following the race, Edwards led the Drivers' Championship with 42 points, one ahead of Gilliland and Labonte. Ford led the Manufacturers' Championship with nine points, three ahead of Toyota and five ahead of Dodge. A total of 182,000 people attended the race, while 15.6 million watched it on television.
2011 Feb 21st Daytona International Speedway Race Time Radio Was There Interview with Trevor Bayne prior to his Daytona 500 Win, and an interview with David Pearson the Silver Fox Access To Race Time Radio: Live Stream Via: http://racetimeradio.com/live_stream.htm Web: http://www.racetimeradio.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/Racetimeradio Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/race.timeradio iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/race-time-radio/id1368707581 Free App For Easy Listening: http://instantapp.com/racetimeradiolive/
Kurt Busch held off Kyle Larson in the closing stages of the Bass Pro Shops/NRA Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday night. It was his 30th career victory and the first of the 2018 season for Busch. It was his crew chief's Billy Scott's first career victory as well. We're breaking down the entire event from Bristol, which featured a couple of incidents with Kyle Busch. He spun on lap 2 and collected several drivers. He also made contact with Martin Truex Jr, ending his day and then blew a left rear tire which he spun out, ending up in the 20th position. We'll discuss his busy night as well. There were also a few nice runs on the day including Trevor Bayne who recorded his best finish of the season Saturday and a couple of drivers and teams that struggle. Brad Keselowski, most notable. We'll also chat about the NASCAR XFINITY and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series events & discuss Kasey Kahne and Elliott Sadler's retirement announcements from earlier in the week. It's a jammed packed Talking in Circles, coming at you!
Trevor and I discussed Bristol racing and in general and his new family life
We've all been there. Junior Earnhardt, however, is on the Road to Walgreen's to fetch diapers. We have it covered, from NASCAR obstetrics to Arthur Gustavo Malzahn.
Hosts: Carolyn Manno and Parker Kligerman in Stamford. Dale Jarrett and Landon Cassill from Burton’s Garage. · After back-to-back short tracks, NASCAR switches gears this weekend to the biggest track on the schedule - the 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway! What chaos can we expect on Dega’s 33-degree high banks? Our drivers DJ, Parker and Landon weigh in. Plus, Parker jumps in the NBCSN iRacing Simulator for high-speed laps around NASCAR’s most unpredictable circuit. · Following the news of Matt Kenseth’s return to racing, questions surround the long-term futures of both Kenseth and Trevor Bayne, the driver he’ll share the #6 car with. We’ll hear what Dale Earnhardt Jr. had to say about it during the NASCAR America Debrief Podcast. · Dave and Ryan Blaney are just one of many father/son pairings that dot NASCAR’s history. Yesterday, Ryan revealed his Darlington throwback scheme that honors his Dad’s Cup Series career, and our Dave Burns got to speak with them about the opportunity.
In our post-Wednesdays With Dale Jr. episode, the NBCSN analysts discuss many topics, including an introspective explanation of why Dale painstakingly kept track of his concussion experiences for a new book; Steve's upcoming new book about his time with Dale; their joy about working closely together again; how long Matt Kenseth might drive for Roush Fenway Racing; and where Dale believes Trevor Bayne should race next.
A collection of NASCAR drivers discuss what's new on and off the track in 2018.
Ever since he started driving go-karts at the age of 5, Nascar driver Trevor Bayne's life has been about racing. He's pretty good at it, too. In 2011, Trevor became the youngest driver ever to win the Daytona 500. Trevor knows where his ability and successes come from, and he's always quick to give God the glory with every win
The series of 12 Questions interviews continues this week with Trevor Bayne of Roush Fenway Racing. Bayne is carrying a career-best 19.6 average so far this season and is 21st in the Cup Series point standings. 1. How much of your success is based on natural ability and how much has come from working at it? … Continue reading "12 Questions with Trevor Bayne"
NASCAR Driver Trevor Bayne joins us today for Testimony Tuesday sharing with us our need to put God first. He explains in his testimony a time where he was thinking that he could do it alone because everything was going so well for him, and that's when he realized he needed God the most after some unfortunate events. He then shares how he made a decision to put God back in the front, and how his life changed. Please visit iamsecond.com to view this video, or watch it on YouTube.
On this date in 1959, Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500. Here are some things you may not have known about stock car racing’s crown jewel. The Daytona 500 is the direct descendant of earlier races held on the Daytona Beach Road Course. Stock car races were held on a stretch of Daytona Beach and an adjacent stretch of highway. The first stock car race held on the course took place in 1936. NASCAR, the stock car sanctioning body, was formed in 1948, and its top series included races on the beach course until 1958. Five years prior to the final beach race, Bill France Sr., the founder of NASCAR, began planning a paved 2 1/2-mile superspeedway called Daytona International Speedway. Construction began in 1957, on the high-banked oval. The banking proved to be a construction hurdle, as normal paving equipment couldn’t stand upright on the 31-degree turns. The track’s architect, Charles Moneypenny, designed a system that anchored the equipment from the top of the banking. He later patented the method. The first race drew 42,000 fans to the new facility, where they saw Lee Petty beat Johnny Beauchamp in a photo finish that wasn’t decided for three days. The Daytona 500 wasn’t the first 500-mile NASCAR race. The first Southern 500 was held in Darlington, South Carolina, in 1950. 1974 saw the only time the Daytona 500 was not a true 500-mile race. As a result of the oil embargo, the race was shortened to 450 miles. Officials did this by symbolically starting the race on the 21st lap. Lee Petty’s son, Richard Petty, would go on to win the race a record seven times between 1964 and 1981. 11 drivers have won the race more than once. Chevrolet is the winningest manufacturer with 23 victories, ahead of Ford with 14 victories. The youngest driver to win the Daytona 500 was Trevor Bayne, who was 20 years and one day old in 2011. The oldest was Bobby Allison, who won it in 1988 at 50 years and 73 days. Our question: Who is the only driver born outside the United States to win the Daytona 500? Today is Independence Day in Saint Lucia. It’s unofficially Be Humble Day, Walking the Dog Day, and Margarita Day. It’s the birthday of George Washington, who was born in 1732; founder of the Boy Scouts Robert Baden-Powell, who was born in 1857; and basketball legend Julius Erving, who is 67. This week in 1959, the top song in the U.S. was “Stagger Lee” by Lloyd Price. The top grossing film was was “Ben-Hur,” while the novel “Doctor Zhivago” by Boris Pasternak topped the New York Times Bestsellers list. Weekly question: Who is the most prolific inventor, in terms of total number of patents? Submit your answer at triviapeople.com/test and we’ll add the name of the person with the first correct answer to our winner’s wall … at triviapeople.com. We'll have the correct answer on Friday’s episode. Links Follow us on Twitter, Facebook or our website. Also, if you’re enjoying the show, please consider supporting it through Patreon.com Please rate the show on iTunes by clicking here. Subscribe on iOS: http://apple.co/1H2paH9 Subscribe on Android: http://bit.ly/2bQnk3m Sources https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_22 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daytona_500 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daytona_500_history https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daytona_Beach_and_Road_Course https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_France_Sr https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daytona_International_Speedway https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bojangles%27_Southern_500 https://www.checkiday.com/2/22/2017 http://www.biography.com/people/groups/born-on-february-22 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1959_in_film http://www.bobborst.com/popculture/numberonesongs/?chart=us&m=2&d=22&y=1940&o= https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_York_Times_Fiction_Best_Sellers_of_1959
We discuss the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway. Brad Keselowski won 20th career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race and his 3rd of the 2016 season. Keselowski dominated the event leading 115 of the race's 161 laps. He beat out Kyle Busch and Trevor Bayne for the top spot. Several accidents happened including a 19 car wreck which occurred on lap 91. We'll discuss what happened and what could have prevented it. We'll talk about the racing at Daytona International Speedway. Was it a good race? What could be better? We'll give out our weekly attaboys and disappointments and who should be worried after leaving Daytona. Also Denny Hamlin's comments about the Sprint All-Star Race and Sprint Unlimited made headlines this week. We'll discuss what those were and what we think about them. Another report about the replacement for Sprint came out this week and one reporter mentioned the possibility of 2 title sponsors. What would that do for NASCAR and would that be a good thing? We'll also discuss the NASCAR XFINITY Series race and the controversial finish. Did NASCAR throw the yellow at the right time and should Almirola have been the winner? Also the NASCAR XFINITY Series cars tested this weekend to try and limit tandam drafting for the 2017 season. Is this a step in the right direction for the sport? Will this help the XFINITY Series. Plus we'll preview the triple-header weekend at Kentucky Speedway. It's a freshly paved facility and we'll discuss what that will do for the racing and for drivers. Plus we'll take your phone calls at 917-889-8280!
The 2011 Daytona 500 winner on his career ups and downs, and NASCAR's most successful female driver discusses her connection to kids, her 2016 season, Tony Stewart and more.
On this episode of Talking in Circles we break down the Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Carl Edwards locked himself into the Chase and showed people that JGR is on a rail in the 2016 season. Matt DiBenedetto, Clint Bowyer, Trevor Bayne all had great runs- we discuss that. We discuss that and the NASCAR XFINITY Fitzgereld Glider Kits 300 at Bristol, including the inagural race featuring Heat races. We'll discuss what we thought about the racing and what can be done with that. Erik Jones won the race and the money. Also Ben Kennedy is out a ride in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series as he and Red Horse Racing part ways. What does that mean for the rest of the 2016 for Kennedy and Red Horse Racing? Plus we take your phone calls at 917-889-8280.
This was an extremely special day for the podcast. Pocono Raceway invited us out to the Kalihari Resort to partake in a media day to help promote the upcoming race. We were fortunate to views the great amenities, eat awesome food,drink excellent beer, ride water slides, and even shoot zombies! But more importantly, we able to do this all with Daytona 500 winner, Trevor Bayne! The Kalahari Resort is gorgeous, the people from Pocono Raceway could not have been nicer, and Trevor was a really interesting and welcoming guy. Take a listen! To check out Pocono Raceway, visit www.PoconoRaceway.com To check in on Trevor, visit www.TrevorBayne.com To take a look at the Kalahari Resort, visit www.kalahariresorts.com/pennsylvania Keep following us on iTunes and follow @VScomedy #trevorbayne #poconoraceway #kalahariresort #NASCAR #goodtimes
Super show today. Guests were;Tom Weinmann - Bracken Paving (Quiz Show 35:38) Barry Walton - Max Medicine Mart (51:06) Greg Salyer - Pastor Southwestern Baptist Church (#1 Reds fan! 1:07:54)Plus additional sound bytes from Daytona Media Day with; Kevin Harvick (24:58) Joey Logano (1:15:28)Trevor Bayne (1:23:58)Kyle Bush (1:51:20)As always check us out "Live" each weekday from 1-3p on Livestream.com and "Like us" on our Facebook page. Plus we are now podcasting through Stitcher and iTunes! Just search for The Tom Taylor Sports Show.
Guest: Brian Scott - We recap NASCAR's longest race of the season, The Coke 600, hear the longest audio clip ever from Trevor Bayne, Kurt Busch is a rookie of the year, Smoke climbs back into a Sprint Car, and we preview Dover where Jimmie Johnson has 8......yes 8 wins at! Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Toby Christie. Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guests: Trevor Bayne/Dylan Kwasniewski - We recap all the action from Las Vegas Motor Speedway, News of the week coming atcha, Preview short track racing at Bristol Motor Speedway! Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Toby Christie Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guest: Ford Racing's Pat DiMarco - We recap Phoenix, let you know about Trevor Bayne, Travis Pastrana, Mark Martin and more. Plus a full Homestead-Miami Championship Preview. Hosted by Toby Christie and Kerry Murphey (Bumble Bunny!) Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Due to pending inclement weather, Xtreme Racing Center in Pigeon Forge has decided to postpone their grand opening celebration for a later date. With safety as our utmost priority, we do not want our guests experiencing less than ideal track conditions in our professional grade racing karts. The new dates will be announced as soon as they […] The post NASCAR’s Trevor Bayne To Help New Pigeon Forge Attraction Celebrate Grand Opening appeared first on Visit My Smokies.
Guest: Trevor Bayne - We break down the MWR Spin Scandal, every angle is discussed, a dolphin makes an appearence, Mike Helton's mustache speaks for the first time, plus we get you all set up for the Chase and Chicagoland. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Toby Christie Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
While on summer break here are a few of Art's interviews he did in the past few months. They are with comedian Jim Gaffigan, former NFL QB Drew Bledsoe, and NASCAR driver Trevor Bayne.
Trevor Bayne had a really outstanding week this past week. He got married and then come Saturday he headed straight to Iowa where he landed in Victory Lane. This weekend he will be driving at the Michigan International Speedway. While he is in Michigan he took part in the 2013 Ford/AAA Student Auto Skills Competition National Finals. Students compete to win scholarships and prizes. Plus the winning team will also have a weeklong job shadowing Bayne and Wood Brothers Racing leading up to and during the Coke Zero 400 this July in Daytona. I was able to talk with Trevor on the phone about racing, his wedding, and the 2013 Ford/AAA Student Auto Skills Competition. Plus I also got to ask him what his car of choice is when he is not on the track.
Guests: Parker Kligerman, Trevor Bayne - We find out what the drivers did during the off weekend, who's gonna drive the 11 car and when, fantasy nascar, plus a Martinsville preview. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Toby (I got no rhythm) Christie. Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guests: Marcos Ambrose and Trevor Bayne. Plus we review Phoenix, preview the final race of the season at Homestead-Miami Speedway, and the battle between Carl Edwards and Tony Stewart. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Paul Northrop Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kerry chats with Monica Palumbo (Miss Sprint Cup) and Trevor Bayne (2011 Daytona 500 winner) plus recaps Chicagoland and previews New Hampshire. Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Les Ebert enters his third season as the strength and conditioning coach for Roush Fenway Racing. Ebert oversees the strength and conditioning programs for seven Roush Fenway Racing pit crews along with two Richard Petty Motorsports pit crews and the Wood Brothers pit crew. Along with training the pit crew members, Ebert also works with Sprint Cup drivers David Ragan, Trevor Bayne (2011 Daytona 500 winner), Nationwide Driver Ricky Stenhouse, and development drivers Chris Beusher and Billy Johnson. The SMARTER Team Training Audio Interview Series has been developed to share insights from some of the best in the industry. Stay tuned for more insights, tips, drills, and techniques to come from STT. Be sure to share the STT Audio Interview Series with coaches, trainers, parents, and athletes too. Visit STT at http://www.SMARTERTeamTraining.com. For more info, check out http://www.STTBlog.wordpress.com. Join STT on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/SMARTERTeamTraining. Subscribe to STT on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/SMARTERTeamTraining. And follow us on twitter at http://www.twitter.com/SMARTERTeam. SMARTER Team Training has been developed to focus on athlete and team development, performance, and education. By incorporating the SMARTER Team Training programs into your year round athletic development program, you will decrease your injury potential, increase individual athleticism, and maximize your team training time.
Guest Host Farrah Kaye joins us from rubbingsracing.com to discuss The Daytona 500, Trevor Bayne, headlines, and our Phoenix Preview. Hosted by Kerry Murphey Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Trevor Bayne became the youngest driver in history to win the Daytona 500 when he edged Carl Edwards to win Sundays 53rd running of The Great American Race.
Paul returns, interviews from Ricky Carmichael, Joey Logano, Justin Allgaier, and Trevor Bayne. Plus we recap Fontana, and preview Charlotte. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Paul Northrop Support the show: http://patreon.com/thefinallap See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jeff Holtzclaw and the Race 2 Win Radio crew kick off the 2010 NASCAR season with the first episode of the year. Special guests for this episode include Trevor Bayne, driver of the No. 99 Diamond-Waltrip Racing Toyota, Tommy Baldwin, owner of Tommy Baldwin Racing, and Doug George, crew chief for the No. 2 KHI Chevrolet owned by Kevin Harvick. Kenny Bruce, assistant managing editor of SceneDaily.com and NASCAR Illustrated, will tackle the top news of the off-season on the Writer's Block, while Mike Calinoff, spotter for Matt Kenseth, will check in with his Keys to Winning segment for the Budweiser Shootout. Rick Minter, senior writer for RacinToday.com, will serve as co-host for the first hour of this episode.
Jeff Holtzclaw and the Race 2 Win Radio crew kick off the 2010 NASCAR season with the first episode of the year. Special guests for this episode include Trevor Bayne, driver of the No. 99 Diamond-Waltrip Racing Toyota, Tommy Baldwin, owner of Tommy Baldwin Racing, and Doug George, crew chief for the No. 2 KHI Chevrolet owned by Kevin Harvick. Kenny Bruce, assistant managing editor of SceneDaily.com and NASCAR Illustrated, will tackle the top news of the off-season on the Writer's Block, while Mike Calinoff, spotter for Matt Kenseth, will check in with his Keys to Winning segment for the Budweiser Shootout. Rick Minter, senior writer for RacinToday.com, will serve as co-host for the first hour of this episode.