{"version":"1.1.0","producer":"fm.getcarcurious","layer":"official","episode":{"title":"Antonelli Rules Monaco, Newgarden Owns St. Louis & Hamlin Matches Busch","url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/antonelli-rules-monaco-newgarden-owns-st-louis-hamlin-matches-busch","audioUrl":"https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/pdst.fm/e/traffic.megaphone.fm/FOXM8881683592.mp3","description":"The future of open-wheel racing has officially taken over Monte Carlo. This week on SPEED, Kevin Harvick and Will Buxton dive deep into Mercedes phenom Kimi Antonelli’s spectacular, chaotic maiden Monaco Grand Prix victory while championship hopefuls George Russell, Max Verstappen, Charles Leclerc, and Lando Norris walked away with a devastating zero. \n\nWill is in St. Louis where he called Josef Newgarden’s weather-shortened short-oval masterclass at WWTR and witnessed championship leader Alex Palou's strategy disaster.\n\nOver in NASCAR, Denny Hamlin pulled off an incredible last-to-first comeback at Michigan to secure his 63rd career victory, tying Kyle Busch on the all-time wins list. The guys break down the heavy impact between Chase Elliott and Christopher Bell, Carson Hocevar's post-race confrontation with Bubba Wallace, and what Jason Kelce thought of the Hendrick Motorsports experience.\n\nPlus:\n\n\n  Myles Rowe's historic Indy NXT drive from the very back of the grid.\n\n  Marc Marquez joining legendary territory with his 100th career Grand Prix win in Hungary.\n\n  Sheldon Haudenschild's emotional, heavy-hearted World of Outlaws triumph dedicated to his companion, Pella.\n\n  Kyle Larson's spectacular multi-race dirt track streak.\n\n\nWe close out the show by crowning our Driver of the Week and looking ahead to a massive weekend featuring the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the Barcelona Grand Prix! \n\nFueled by our friends at POET. Remember to rate, review, and subscribe on your favorite podcast platform!\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices"},"annotations":[{"id":406218,"startTime":99.9,"endTime":106.0,"type":"person","title":"Lance Stroll","url":"/glossary/lance-stroll","quote":"But luckily, Lance Stroll did Lance Stroll things and clattered into the barriers fairly close to the end, which brought out full course yellow.","canonicalId":"person:lance-stroll","priority":0.85,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Lance Stroll is a Formula 1 driver who competes for Aston Martin. In this segment, he’s described as making contact with the barriers at Monaco, which is a common kind of incident on the tight, unforgiving street circuit.","simplifiedExplanation":"Lance Stroll is a Formula 1 race car driver. Here, they’re saying he hit the barriers during the Monaco race, which is especially easy to do on a narrow track."}},{"id":406219,"startTime":105.7,"endTime":109.2,"type":"term","title":"full course yellow","url":"/glossary/full-course-yellow","quote":"fairly close to the end, which brought out full course yellow. Then we got a red flag when Charlotte Claire bumps into the barriers.","canonicalId":"term:full-course-yellow","priority":0.75,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Full course yellow” means the race is under caution across the entire track, not just a single corner. Drivers must slow down and avoid aggressive passing because marshals may be dealing with an incident.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “full course yellow” is when the race is slowed down everywhere because of an incident. Drivers have to be careful and can’t race at full speed or try risky passes."}},{"id":406220,"startTime":109.2,"endTime":112.8,"type":"term","title":"red flag","url":"/glossary/red-flag","quote":"Then we got a red flag when Charlotte Claire bumps into the barriers. And what we got was a pretty exciting end to the race.","canonicalId":"term:red-flag","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “red flag” stops the race entirely due to a serious hazard, like a crash or debris on track. When that happens, cars slow and follow official instructions until the race can restart safely.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “red flag” means the race is stopped. Something dangerous happened on track, so everyone has to slow down and wait for officials to clear it."}},{"id":406221,"startTime":121.8,"endTime":178.4,"type":"person","title":"Kimi Antonelli","url":"/glossary/kimi-antonelli","quote":"the level of Kimi Antonelli, this 19 year old phenom, five race wins in a row, the youngest winner in Monaco ever. Dude, he lapped George Russell.","canonicalId":"person:kimi-antonelli","priority":0.95,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Kimi Antonelli is a young Formula 1 driver highlighted here for a dominant Monaco performance. The hosts emphasize his qualifying pace, then his race control—pulling away, showing maturity, and even lapping George Russell.","simplifiedExplanation":"Kimi Antonelli is a Formula 1 driver. The hosts are praising how he was extremely fast at Monaco—first in qualifying, then in the race—showing he could manage the car and the situation like a seasoned driver."}},{"id":406222,"startTime":131.7,"endTime":134.0,"type":"person","title":"George Russell","url":"/glossary/george-russell","quote":"Dude, he lapped George Russell. He left his teammate.","canonicalId":"person:george-russell","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"George Russell is a Formula 1 driver mentioned as the person Kimi Antonelli lapped. Lapping means Antonelli completed an extra circuit relative to Russell, underscoring how far ahead he was on pace.","simplifiedExplanation":"George Russell is another Formula 1 driver. When they say Antonelli lapped him, it means Antonelli was so fast he got a full lap ahead during the race."}},{"id":406223,"startTime":141.9,"endTime":151.5,"type":"term","title":"qualifying lap","url":"/glossary/qualifying-lap","quote":"First of all, his qualifying lap on Saturday and Monaco is all about qualifying, right? It is it is take your skill, your guts, everything that you have about you create that one perfect lap to give yourself the best opportunity of winnings.","canonicalId":"term:qualifying-lap","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “qualifying lap” is the single fastest circuit a driver sets during the qualifying session to determine starting position. The hosts stress that Monaco is especially dependent on qualifying because overtaking is difficult on the narrow street layout.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “qualifying lap” is the timed lap drivers do to set their starting spot for the race. At Monaco, qualifying matters a lot because it’s hard to pass once the race starts."}},{"id":406224,"startTime":141.9,"endTime":178.4,"type":"topic","title":"Monaco qualifying and race control","url":"/glossary/monaco-qualifying-and-race-control","quote":"First of all, his qualifying lap on Saturday and Monaco is all about qualifying, right? ... And then on Sunday, just controlled it, pulled away from the field, drove with so much maturity and skill and calm.","canonicalId":"topic:monaco-qualifying-and-race-control","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"This segment focuses on why Monaco rewards qualifying and how Antonelli translated that into race dominance. The hosts connect his Saturday pace to Sunday execution—controlling the race, pulling away, and demonstrating composure.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re talking about why Monaco is won in qualifying and how a driver can then manage the race afterward. The point is that being fast once (qualifying) and then staying calm (race control) leads to big results."}},{"id":406225,"startTime":285.7,"endTime":292.1,"type":"term","title":"Formula One","url":"/glossary/formula-one","quote":"And I look back at, you know, when Max Verstappen broke into the sport or when\n[289.1s] Lewis Hamilton broke into the sport, even Michael Schumacher, when he came in,","canonicalId":"term:formula-one","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Formula One (often shortened to F1) is the top tier of open-wheel racing run under the FIA. It’s known for highly technical cars, tight competition, and races held on purpose-built circuits and street tracks. Drivers and teams compete for championships across a season.","simplifiedExplanation":"Formula One is the highest level of race car competition in the world. Drivers race very advanced, open-wheel cars on tracks around the globe. Teams and drivers earn points across the season to win championships."}},{"id":406226,"startTime":336.4,"endTime":338.8,"type":"place","title":"Barcelona","url":"/glossary/barcelona","quote":"And now everyone's saying, when Barcelona, George Russell's got Kim,\n[338.8s] he's got almost double the points that George Russell has at this stage of the season.","canonicalId":"place:barcelona","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Barcelona here points to the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, a common Formula One venue. It’s known for a mix of high-speed corners and heavy braking zones, which makes car balance and tire management important. Teams often use it as a benchmark for setup changes."}},{"id":406227,"startTime":343.9,"endTime":350.0,"type":"term","title":"penalty situation","url":"/glossary/penalty-situation","quote":"The one thing that sticks out to me was this whole penalty situation\n[347.3s] in the team dropping the ball. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.","canonicalId":"term:penalty-situation","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In Formula One, a penalty situation refers to an on-track or race-control punishment for a rules infringement. Penalties can change race outcomes by affecting track position, time, or eligibility for points. Because F1 is so close, even small penalties can create large gaps between cars.","simplifiedExplanation":"A penalty situation means the race officials decided someone broke a rule. The penalty can cost them position or time during the race. In F1, that can quickly change who finishes where."}},{"id":406228,"startTime":350.0,"endTime":356.3,"type":"term","title":"team cars","url":"/glossary/team-cars","quote":"So so when you see that and you see what like we expect George Russell\n[354.7s] to at least run second, right?\n[356.3s] Like he shouldn't see the gap in the team cars.","canonicalId":"term:team-cars","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Team cars” means the two cars entered by the same Formula One team, driven by teammates. Teams often manage strategy and pit timing to maximize points, but penalties or errors can disrupt that plan. The phrase highlights how a strong car should be able to control gaps relative to the rest of the field.","simplifiedExplanation":"Team cars are the two cars from the same Formula One team. The team tries to coordinate strategy so both drivers can score well. If something goes wrong, like a penalty, it can affect how far apart the cars end up."}},{"id":406229,"startTime":371.1,"endTime":375.8,"type":"term","title":"yellow flag","url":"/glossary/yellow-flag","quote":"He had the penalty and they brought him in to make a pit stop under the yellow flag, right? So you have to come into your box, you stop for five seconds.","canonicalId":"term:yellow-flag","priority":0.75,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A yellow flag in racing means there’s a hazard on track and drivers must slow down and be prepared for caution. It also changes race strategy because pit stops taken under yellow flags can be less costly than pitting under green.","simplifiedExplanation":"A yellow flag is a warning that something is wrong on the track. Cars have to slow down and drive carefully, and teams often time pit stops during this period because it can be safer and sometimes saves position."}},{"id":406230,"startTime":375.8,"endTime":390.7,"type":"term","title":"five second penalty","url":"/glossary/five-second-penalty","quote":"So you have to come into your box, you stop for five seconds. Then the team can start work on the car... George thought that he would have taken his five second penalty by waiting behind Kimmy, but you can only serve it once you're in the box.","canonicalId":"term:five-second-penalty","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.88,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A five-second penalty is a time penalty served by stopping for a set duration in the pit lane/box before the car can rejoin. In this case, the key rule is that it can only be served once the car is properly in the box.","simplifiedExplanation":"A five-second penalty is a punishment where the team has to stop the car for five seconds before it can continue. The timing matters a lot—if you don’t serve it correctly, you can get an additional penalty."}},{"id":406231,"startTime":382.4,"endTime":386.6,"type":"term","title":"double stacked","url":"/glossary/double-stacked","quote":"Mercedes double stacked their drivers. So George is waiting for Kimmy to have his stop. Then he rolls in.","canonicalId":"term:double-stacked","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Double stacking” is when two cars from the same team are scheduled to pit back-to-back (or very closely timed) so one car’s stop overlaps with the other’s. It’s a common strategy in pit-lane timing, but it can create confusion if penalties and box timing rules aren’t synchronized.","simplifiedExplanation":"Double stacking is when a team brings two cars into the pits close together, one after the other. It can save time, but it also makes communication and timing more complicated."}},{"id":406232,"startTime":395.4,"endTime":402.8,"type":"term","title":"pit box","url":"/glossary/pit-box","quote":"And in Formula One, they have one pit box that serves both cars. They don't have individual pit stalls per car number as we see in in carp or as we see in Indy car.","canonicalId":"term:pit-box","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A pit box is the specific marked pit area where a car stops for service during a race. The transcript highlights a Formula One pit-box setup where one box can be used to serve both cars, unlike series that use separate stalls per car.","simplifiedExplanation":"A pit box is the designated spot in the pit lane where a race car pulls in to get serviced. Different racing series organize these spots differently, which can affect how penalties and timing work."}},{"id":406233,"startTime":417.8,"endTime":424.1,"type":"term","title":"drive through penalty","url":"/glossary/drive-through-penalty","quote":"So he then got a drive through penalty for not observing the five second penalty when he took that initial stop, which is what dropped him all the way back down the order and outside of the points.","canonicalId":"term:drive-through-penalty","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.86,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A drive-through penalty requires the driver to pass through the pit lane at a controlled speed without stopping, as punishment for a rules infraction. It’s often used when a team fails to correctly serve a time penalty or follow pit-lane procedures.","simplifiedExplanation":"A drive-through penalty means you have to go through the pit lane without stopping, while driving slowly. It’s a penalty for breaking a rule, and it usually costs you positions because you lose time."}},{"id":406234,"startTime":435.1,"endTime":445.7,"type":"person","title":"Verstappen","url":"/glossary/verstappen","quote":"Yeah. And you know, I think when you look at the start of the race, you you have the Verstappen problem at the beginning of the race... Not having to worry about Max on the original start.","canonicalId":"person:verstappen","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Max Verstappen is a top Formula One driver, and the transcript says an early-race problem involving him changed how the race played out. The “whole complexion” comment refers to how one incident can reshape strategy and outcomes across the field."}},{"id":406235,"startTime":449.0,"endTime":455.5,"type":"brand","title":"Ferrari","url":"/glossary/ferrari","quote":"everyone's expecting Ferrari to dominate this weekend. They were quickest all the way through practice...","canonicalId":"brand:ferrari","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Ferrari is the Italian Formula 1 team and car manufacturer that the hosts say is expected to dominate the weekend. In F1, “dominance” usually means the team is fastest in practice and can secure strong qualifying positions and race pace.","simplifiedExplanation":"Ferrari is a famous Formula 1 racing team. When people say Ferrari is expected to dominate, they mean Ferrari’s cars are likely to be the quickest and most competitive all weekend."}},{"id":406236,"startTime":451.1,"endTime":455.5,"type":"term","title":"generational laps","url":"/glossary/generational-laps","quote":"They were quickest all the way through practice and then you get two phenomenal generational laps, one from Max, one from Kimmy...","canonicalId":"term:generational-laps","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Generational laps” is racing slang for an exceptionally fast lap that stands out as rare and historically impressive. In qualifying or practice, it usually signals a car and driver combination that’s performing at a level beyond what’s typical for that session.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Generational laps” is a dramatic way of saying someone set an amazing lap time—something really rare and impressive. It suggests they were driving and the car was working at a top level."}},{"id":406237,"startTime":455.5,"endTime":459.6,"type":"term","title":"front row of the grid","url":"/glossary/front-row-of-the-grid","quote":"generational laps, one from Max, one from Kimmy, puts them on the front row of the grid. Then the lights go out...","canonicalId":"term:front-row-of-the-grid","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.86,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The grid is the starting order for the race, and the front row means the two cars lined up directly at the front. Starting from the front row is valuable at Monaco because track position helps you avoid traffic and reduces the chance of getting stuck in incidents."}},{"id":406238,"startTime":502.3,"endTime":521.9,"type":"concept","title":"pressure at Monaco","url":"/glossary/pressure-at-monaco","quote":"So for a 19 year old, you know, there's there's two forms of pressure at Monaco. One is when you have somebody right up behind you... The other one is when you have such a lead that your mind wanders...","canonicalId":"concept:pressure-at-monaco","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The hosts describe two distinct kinds of pressure unique to Monaco: pressure from a car right behind you forcing mistakes, and pressure from leading so far that your focus can drift. Both scenarios can lead to a momentary lapse of concentration, which is especially dangerous on a barrier-lined street circuit.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re talking about how Monaco creates pressure in two ways: when someone is right behind you, and when you’re leading and start to lose focus. Either way, a quick mistake can send you into the wall."}},{"id":406239,"startTime":623.12,"endTime":628.4,"type":"car","title":"Seagull","url":"/cars/byd/seagull","image":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b4/BYD_Seagull_001.jpg","quote":"I guess I love it. Yeah, I mean, Seagull, Seagull stealing the pizza straight off the tabl...","canonicalId":"car:seagull:","priority":0.5,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Seagull” isn’t a specific car model in the context provided—it sounds like a nickname or a character in a story (for example, “stealing the pizza”). It’s likely mentioned for humor or a vivid moment rather than as a vehicle being discussed technically.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Seagull” here doesn’t appear to be a car. It sounds like a nickname or part of a story, not something you’d look up as a vehicle.","imageAttribution":"JustAnotherCarDesigner (CC BY-SA 4.0)"}},{"id":406240,"startTime":836.7,"endTime":872.6,"type":"brand","title":"McLaren","url":"/glossary/mclaren","quote":"McLaren, it was their one thousandths... The McLaren MTB M2B is for me to say, put my dentures back in, which made its debut in 1966 was out on track.","canonicalId":"brand:mclaren","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"McLaren is a Formula 1 racing brand known for high-performance race cars and a long history of championship success. In this segment, they’re tied to a milestone celebration and a classic car making an appearance.","simplifiedExplanation":"McLaren is a well-known race team and car brand in Formula 1. Here, they’re celebrating a big anniversary and bringing out a historic car."}},{"id":406241,"startTime":880.2,"endTime":889.4,"type":"place","title":"Vegas","url":"/glossary/vegas","quote":"And also confirmed over the weekend, Vegas. Vegas will be on the calendar now almost to 2040.","canonicalId":"place:vegas","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Vegas” here refers to the Las Vegas Grand Prix, a modern Formula 1 event held on a purpose-built street circuit in Las Vegas. The segment discusses how the race is scheduled far into the future and the impact it’s having locally.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Vegas” is shorthand for the Formula 1 race in Las Vegas. They’re talking about how long it’s expected to stay on the calendar and how big it’s become for the city."}},{"id":406242,"startTime":1102.2,"endTime":1102.2,"type":"term","title":"live session","url":"/glossary/live-session","quote":"I mean, it's and you're not allowed over that wall to cross that pit lane during a live session. You're not allowed to do it.","canonicalId":"term:live-session","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A live session is any on-track period where cars are actively racing or circulating under race control. Rules are enforced strictly because any unsafe movement or unauthorized access can affect safety and competitive fairness.","simplifiedExplanation":"A live session means the race is actively happening on track. Because cars are moving at speed, officials enforce the rules very strictly."}},{"id":406243,"startTime":1102.2,"endTime":1102.2,"type":"term","title":"pit lane","url":"/glossary/pit-lane","quote":"I mean, it's and you're not allowed over that wall to cross that pit lane during a live session. You're not allowed to do it.","canonicalId":"term:pit-lane","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The pit lane is the restricted lane beside the track where teams enter to service the car during a race. It’s tightly controlled during live sessions, and crossing into or out of it improperly can lead to penalties or safety issues.","simplifiedExplanation":"The pit lane is the area next to the track where race teams pull in to work on the car. During the race, it’s controlled and you’re not supposed to cross boundaries or enter it the wrong way."}},{"id":406244,"startTime":1141.8,"endTime":1141.8,"type":"term","title":"Pit Road","url":"/glossary/pit-road","quote":"Yeah. Well, only thing I've seen like that in NASCAR is when, you know, the tire would roll across Pit Road into the infield and, you know, the crew guy would run while the cars were were under green to go grab the tire out of the infield grass.","canonicalId":"term:pit-road","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Pit Road is the NASCAR term for the pit area/road where teams service cars. It’s the controlled section that connects the track to the garages, and it has specific rules about what can happen while cars are under green or during cautions.","simplifiedExplanation":"In NASCAR, Pit Road is the official pit area where teams work on the cars. It’s a specific part of the track/pit complex with rules about when and how teams can act."}},{"id":406245,"startTime":1145.1,"endTime":1145.1,"type":"term","title":"under green","url":"/glossary/under-green","quote":"the crew guy would run while the cars were were under green to go grab the tire out of the infield grass.","canonicalId":"term:under-green","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Under green” means the race is running normally with no caution flags active, so cars are at full racing speed. Team activity is more restricted because the cars are still moving quickly and the pit area is not “slowed down” by race control.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Under green” means the race is in normal mode—no slowdown or caution. Cars are still going fast, so teams have to be careful about what they do in the pit area."}},{"id":406246,"startTime":1170.6,"endTime":1170.6,"type":"term","title":"full course cautions","url":"/glossary/full-course-cautions","quote":"And I want to thank everybody for tuning in last night and sticking with us through full course cautions, through red flags for rain,","canonicalId":"term:full-course-cautions","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A full course caution is when race control slows the field across the entire track due to an incident. Everyone must follow the caution procedure, which can bunch cars up and dramatically change strategy.","simplifiedExplanation":"A full course caution means the whole race slows down because of something on the track. Drivers have to follow the slowdown rules, and it often changes the race strategy."}},{"id":406247,"startTime":1174.2,"endTime":1238.3,"type":"place","title":"St. Louis","url":"/glossary/st-louis","quote":"because we got an absolute barnstorm at Joseph Newgarden,\n[1177.4s] his sixth win in St. Louis.\n...\n[1234.9s] Newgarden comes home the winner.","canonicalId":"place:st-louis","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"St. Louis is the race location being discussed, and the hosts are describing an IndyCar event there. The mention of Newgarden’s sixth win and the podium order ties it to a specific weekend’s results.","simplifiedExplanation":"St. Louis is where this race happened. The hosts are talking about who won and how the drivers finished on the podium."}},{"id":406248,"startTime":1174.2,"endTime":1234.9,"type":"person","title":"Joseph Newgarden","url":"/glossary/joseph-newgarden","quote":"because we got an absolute barnstorm at Joseph Newgarden,\n[1177.4s] his sixth win in St. Louis.\n...\n[1203.4s] But you can never discount Joseph Newgarden not here.","canonicalId":"person:joseph-newgarden","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Joseph Newgarden is a top IndyCar driver, and the segment highlights his dominance in St. Louis with his sixth win there. The hosts frame his racecraft as something you can’t ignore, even when other drivers look in control.","simplifiedExplanation":"Joseph Newgarden is a professional race car driver in IndyCar. In this segment, they’re talking about how he won again in St. Louis and how hard it is to beat him there."}},{"id":406249,"startTime":1180.7,"endTime":1183.4,"type":"term","title":"pyro","url":"/glossary/pyro","quote":" [1180.7s] As always, I love that pyro, man.\n[1183.4s] Nearly rocked the commentary box off the top of the grandstands.","canonicalId":"term:pyro","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In motorsport broadcasts, “pyro” refers to the use of controlled fireworks or flame effects for spectacle, often triggered at the start, during cautions, or for big moments. The host is reacting to how dramatic the show was at this event."}},{"id":406250,"startTime":1188.9,"endTime":1192.5,"type":"term","title":"poll","url":"/glossary/poll","quote":"[1188.9s] Polo took the poll by over a mile an hour, and we were like,\n[1192.5s] he's just going to walk this, right?","canonicalId":"term:poll","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Poll” is short for pole position—the starting spot at the front of the grid earned by qualifying fastest. The host says Polo took the pole by over a mile per hour, implying a strong qualifying performance.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Poll” means pole position, the best starting spot at the front of the race. They’re saying Polo qualified really fast compared to everyone else."}},{"id":406251,"startTime":1196.4,"endTime":1236.7,"type":"person","title":"Marcus Erickson","url":"/glossary/marcus-erickson","quote":"[1196.4s] Marcus Erickson led the most laps of his Indy car career last night\n[1200.3s] and looked so comfortable, so in control.\n...\n[1236.7s] Erickson came home second.","canonicalId":"person:marcus-erickson","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Marcus Erickson is an IndyCar driver mentioned for leading the most laps of his career in this St. Louis race. The hosts emphasize how comfortable and in control he looked before Newgarden won.","simplifiedExplanation":"Marcus Erickson is a professional IndyCar driver. In this race, he led the most laps of his career and finished second."}},{"id":406252,"startTime":1209.1,"endTime":1238.3,"type":"person","title":"Christian Rasmussen","url":"/glossary/christian-rasmussen","quote":"[1209.1s] put on a masterclass display, great battles with Christian Rasmussen,\n[1213.5s] who had signed a new deal earlier in the week with ECR.\n...\n[1238.3s] Rasmussen came home third.","canonicalId":"person:christian-rasmussen","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Christian Rasmussen is an IndyCar driver discussed as an especially exciting performer on short ovals. The segment contrasts his season struggles with how he challenged Newgarden and finished third in St. Louis.","simplifiedExplanation":"Christian Rasmussen is a race driver in IndyCar. They say he’s usually very exciting on short tracks, and in this race he fought up front and ended up third."}},{"id":406253,"startTime":1213.5,"endTime":1220.0,"type":"company","title":"ECR","url":"/glossary/ecr","quote":"[1213.5s] who had signed a new deal earlier in the week with ECR.\n[1216.4s] Been a horrible year actually for ECR and for Christian Rasmussen,","canonicalId":"company:ecr","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"ECR is referenced as the team Christian Rasmussen signed with, and the hosts discuss the team’s difficult season. In IndyCar, teams like ECR are responsible for car preparation, strategy, and driver support.","simplifiedExplanation":"ECR is a racing team. The hosts are saying Rasmussen joined them and that the team hasn’t had a great year."}},{"id":406254,"startTime":1220.0,"endTime":1227.0,"type":"term","title":"short ovals","url":"/glossary/short-ovals","quote":"[1220.0s] who we know is such an electrifying driver on the short ovals,\n[1222.9s] but he was second last in points coming into this weekend in St. Louis,","canonicalId":"term:short-ovals","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Short ovals” are oval tracks with relatively short lap lengths, which tend to create frequent traffic and tighter racing lines. The hosts connect Rasmussen’s driving style to this type of circuit, saying he’s especially electrifying there.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Short ovals” are smaller oval race tracks. Because the laps are shorter, drivers deal with more cars and more frequent passing, and the host says Rasmussen shines in that kind of racing."}},{"id":406255,"startTime":1222.9,"endTime":1227.0,"type":"term","title":"points","url":"/glossary/points","quote":"[1222.9s] but he was second last in points coming into this weekend in St. Louis,\n[1227.0s] but showed us the old Christian Rasmussen,","canonicalId":"term:points","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Points” refers to the championship scoring system used in series like IndyCar, where drivers accumulate points based on race results. The segment notes Rasmussen was second last in points before this St. Louis weekend, then improved with strong racing.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Points” are how drivers earn standings in the championship. Finishing well in races gives you more points, and the host is saying Rasmussen was near the bottom before this weekend."}},{"id":406256,"startTime":1247.5,"endTime":1255.0,"type":"company","title":"Chip Ganassi racing team","url":"/glossary/chip-ganassi-racing-team","quote":"But a disaster, disaster for Alex Polo for the whole Chip Ganassi racing team,\n[1253.9s] actually, because with all of the cautions coming out and the rain falling,","canonicalId":"company:chip-ganassi-racing-team","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Chip Ganassi Racing is a motorsport team that competes in top-level American open-wheel racing. In this segment, the hosts describe how the team’s race strategy and pit decisions affected multiple cars during a caution-and-rain sequence.","simplifiedExplanation":"Chip Ganassi Racing is a race team. Here, the discussion is about how their strategy during a messy, rainy race led to problems for their drivers."}},{"id":406257,"startTime":1247.5,"endTime":1280.0,"type":"person","title":"Alex Polo","url":"/glossary/alex-polo","quote":"But a disaster, disaster for Alex Polo for the whole Chip Ganassi racing team,\n[1253.9s] actually, because with all of the cautions coming out and the rain falling,","canonicalId":"person:alex-polo","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Alex Polo is a racing driver mentioned here as part of Chip Ganassi Racing. The segment focuses on a fuel-related mistake during a caution/rain period that cost him track position and affected the team’s overall outcome.","simplifiedExplanation":"Alex Polo is a driver. In this race story, he ran out of fuel at the wrong time, which dropped him back and forced extra work to recover."}},{"id":406258,"startTime":1264.0,"endTime":1265.9,"type":"term","title":"push, push, push","url":"/glossary/push-push-push","quote":"The majority went push, push, push.\n[1265.9s] Ganassi tried to play the smart game with the fuel.","canonicalId":"term:push-push-push","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Push, push, push” here describes the decision to drive aggressively to maintain speed while trying to make it on fuel without pitting. It’s the opposite of a fuel-conserving plan that would pit earlier to avoid running out.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Push, push, push” means the team told the driver to keep going hard instead of backing off. The goal was to stay fast, but it can be risky if you don’t have enough fuel."}},{"id":406259,"startTime":1268.7,"endTime":1283.8,"type":"term","title":"ran out of fuel","url":"/glossary/ran-out-of-fuel","quote":"Kiffin Simpson ran out of fuel.\n[1270.6s] Scott Dixon had to take emergency fuel and a closed pit lane,","canonicalId":"term:ran-out-of-fuel","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Running out of fuel means the car’s fuel supply is depleted before the next planned pit stop. In racing, it usually results in losing speed, getting stuck in traffic, or needing emergency measures—exactly what happened to multiple Ganassi cars in this rain-and-caution sequence.","simplifiedExplanation":"Running out of fuel means the car runs out of gas. In a race, that’s a big problem because you can’t keep going normally and you lose a lot of positions."}},{"id":406260,"startTime":1270.6,"endTime":1275.1,"type":"term","title":"emergency fuel","url":"/glossary/emergency-fuel","quote":"Scott Dixon had to take emergency fuel and a closed pit lane,\n[1275.1s] and ultimately ended up getting thrown to the back of the field","canonicalId":"term:emergency-fuel","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Emergency fuel refers to an unscheduled, urgent fuel top-up—typically when a car is at risk of running out. It’s a sign the team’s normal fuel plan didn’t work out, so they scramble to keep the car running and avoid being stranded."}},{"id":406261,"startTime":1270.6,"endTime":1280.0,"type":"person","title":"Scott Dixon","url":"/glossary/scott-dixon","quote":"Scott Dixon had to take emergency fuel and a closed pit lane,\n[1275.1s] and ultimately ended up getting thrown to the back of the field","canonicalId":"person:scott-dixon","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Scott Dixon is a well-known open-wheel racing driver. Here, he’s described as needing emergency fuel and dealing with a closed pit lane, which then forced him to restart from deep in the field and fight back through traffic.","simplifiedExplanation":"Scott Dixon is a race driver. In this moment, he had to get extra fuel when things went wrong, and because the pits were closed he ended up far behind and had to work his way back."}},{"id":406262,"startTime":1312.5,"endTime":1317.7,"type":"term","title":"fuel mileage strategy","url":"/glossary/fuel-mileage-strategy","quote":"But those are rare mistakes that you see out of that Ganassi bunch\n[1312.5s] with all the fuel mileage strategy.","canonicalId":"term:fuel-mileage-strategy","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Fuel mileage strategy is planning how far the car can go on a given fuel load to decide when to pit. In this segment, the hosts contrast a successful history of stretching fuel with the downside: the Ganassi cars ran out because they tried to go too far.","simplifiedExplanation":"Fuel mileage strategy means deciding how long you can stay out before you have to pit for gas. If you guess wrong and try to stretch it too far, you can run out of fuel before the next stop."}},{"id":406263,"startTime":1338.8,"endTime":1347.0,"type":"concept","title":"pit to get ahead of something that could happen on track","url":"/glossary/pit-to-get-ahead-of-something-that-could-happen-on-track","quote":"They're so good at usually kind of seeing ahead of time and figuring out, OK, we're in a dangerous window, so let's pit to get ahead of something that could happen on track and then boom, that thing happens on track.","canonicalId":"concept:pit-to-get-ahead-of-something-that-could-happen-on-track","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"This is describing race strategy around timing your pit stop so you gain track position. In practice, teams try to pit just before a likely event (like rain or a caution) so they can come out ahead of competitors who pit later. It’s a high-stakes call because the timing has to be right.","simplifiedExplanation":"Teams sometimes stop in the pits at a very specific moment to come out in front of other cars. The idea is to beat other drivers to the next “event” on track. If the timing is off, you can lose positions quickly."}},{"id":406264,"startTime":1354.6,"endTime":1372.9,"type":"concept","title":"hero or zero","url":"/glossary/hero-or-zero","quote":"And look, it's as it always is in racing, mate, when you take those chances is hero or zero, it pays off for you. You win the race, your heroes, if it doesn't.","canonicalId":"concept:hero-or-zero","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.72,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Hero or zero” is a shorthand for how racing strategy can swing outcomes dramatically based on timing and luck. A bold call can make you win (hero), but if conditions change unexpectedly, it can leave you with a poor result (zero). It’s especially true when weather and caution timing interact with pit strategy.","simplifiedExplanation":"In racing, one big strategy decision can go really right or really wrong. If the timing works out, you look like a genius; if it doesn’t, you end up with a bad finish. Weather and cautions can make that swing happen fast."}},{"id":406265,"startTime":1365.1,"endTime":1368.2,"type":"term","title":"yellows","url":"/glossary/yellows","quote":"And the yellows fell at precisely the wrong time for them. The rain arrived at precisely the wrong moment for them.","canonicalId":"term:yellows","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing, “yellows” refers to a caution period where the race is slowed and drivers must follow rules for reduced speed. Cautions bunch up the field and can dramatically change pit timing and track position. When cautions happen at the wrong moment, teams that gambled on strategy can get hurt.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Yellows” means the race is under caution, so cars slow down and drivers have to be careful. It can shuffle positions because everyone is moving differently than during normal racing. Strategy teams watch for it because it can make or break a pit call."}},{"id":406266,"startTime":1398.5,"endTime":1404.5,"type":"term","title":"road and street courses","url":"/glossary/road-and-street-courses","quote":"of being used to road and street courses, it was the most unnatural for me. And yet they're the races that I enjoy the most now because I love the amount of passing.","canonicalId":"term:road-and-street-courses","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Road courses and street courses are two types of circuit layouts: road courses are purpose-built tracks, while street courses use city streets with temporary barriers and tight geometry. Street courses tend to feel more “unnatural” to drivers because the track is narrower, has less run-off, and passing is harder."}},{"id":406267,"startTime":1426.0,"endTime":1453.1,"type":"term","title":"throwback livery","url":"/glossary/throwback-livery","quote":"Throwback livery and respect for the past. Nobody does it better than Penske.","canonicalId":"term:throwback-livery","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.92,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A throwback livery is a special car paint scheme designed to reference an earlier era, team design, or historic race. It’s often used for anniversaries and can include period-correct colors, logos, and sponsor layouts.","simplifiedExplanation":"A throwback livery is a retro paint job. It’s meant to look like the car/team from an earlier time, usually for an anniversary."}},{"id":406268,"startTime":1433.3,"endTime":1437.4,"type":"brand","title":"Penske","url":"/glossary/penske","quote":"Nobody does it better than Penske. They do it in Indycar. They do it in the Cup series.","canonicalId":"brand:penske","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Penske is a major American motorsport organization that competes across multiple series, including IndyCar and NASCAR Cup. The hosts connect Penske to a reputation for high-quality throwback liveries and honoring racing history.","simplifiedExplanation":"Penske is a big racing team/organization. In this segment, they’re praised for doing really impressive retro paint schemes in different racing series."}},{"id":406269,"startTime":1596.9,"endTime":1608.6,"type":"term","title":"IndyNext","url":"/glossary/indynext","quote":"But make look, we were talking about IndyCar. For me, though, the driver that we can didn't come from from IndyCar at St. Louis, it came in IndyNext, which is the feeder category for IndyCar.","canonicalId":"term:indynext","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"IndyNext is a feeder (development) racing series that helps drivers move up toward IndyCar. It’s part of the ladder system where young drivers get seat time in cars that are closer to IndyCar than lower junior categories.","simplifiedExplanation":"IndyNext is a junior racing series that trains drivers for IndyCar. Think of it as a stepping-stone where drivers prove themselves before moving up."}},{"id":406270,"startTime":1604.4,"endTime":1608.6,"type":"term","title":"feeder category","url":"/glossary/feeder-category","quote":"it came in IndyNext, which is the feeder category for IndyCar. And Miles Rowe, he was so fast in qualifying...","canonicalId":"term:feeder-category","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A feeder category is a lower-level racing series designed to develop drivers for a higher-tier championship. Drivers typically use these series to build racecraft, experience, and results before earning opportunities in the top series.","simplifiedExplanation":"A feeder category is a lower-level race series that helps drivers get ready for a bigger, higher-level series. It’s where drivers learn and prove themselves on the way up."}},{"id":406271,"startTime":1608.6,"endTime":1614.1,"type":"term","title":"qualifying run","url":"/glossary/qualifying-run","quote":"And Miles Rowe, he was so fast in qualifying that he forgot he'd already completed his qualifying run and did an additional lap.","canonicalId":"term:qualifying-run","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A qualifying run is the timed session where drivers set their starting position for the race. If a driver forgets they already completed qualifying and does an extra lap, it can affect how they’re scored and where they start."}},{"id":406272,"startTime":1626.9,"endTime":1635.5,"type":"term","title":"high line","url":"/glossary/high-line","quote":"took the lead two thirds of the way through the race, passed everyone on the high line on the inside.","canonicalId":"term:high-line","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The high line is the racing line taken higher up on the track (closer to the outside wall), often used to set up passes or maintain speed through certain corners. Whether the high line is faster depends on tire grip, track conditions, and car setup.","simplifiedExplanation":"The high line means driving near the outside of the track. Drivers use it to keep momentum or set up a pass depending on grip and track layout."}},{"id":406273,"startTime":1631.4,"endTime":1635.5,"type":"term","title":"inside","quote":"passed everyone on the high line on the inside. Didn't matter where he found you.","canonicalId":"term:inside","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.65,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing, the inside is the line closer to the center of the track, typically used for overtakes by braking later or taking a tighter path. Passing on the inside often requires strong traction and precise car placement.","simplifiedExplanation":"The inside is the part of the track closer to the middle. Passing on the inside usually means you’re trying to get alongside and get the better line through the corner."}},{"id":406274,"startTime":1644.0,"endTime":1647.04,"type":"term","title":"USF 2000","url":"/glossary/usf-2000","quote":"Seeing him come up through the ranks in USF 2000.","canonicalId":"term:usf-2000","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"USF 2000 is a junior open-wheel racing series that sits in the development ladder toward IndyCar. Drivers often start here to gain experience with race strategy, car control, and competitive fields.","simplifiedExplanation":"USF 2000 is a stepping-stone racing series for young open-wheel drivers. It’s one of the places drivers build experience before moving up to higher levels like IndyCar."}},{"id":406275,"startTime":1651.8,"endTime":1654.0,"type":"term","title":"oval specialist","url":"/glossary/oval-specialist","quote":"He's become more of an oval specialist.\n[1654.0s] He's not bad on road or street courses.","canonicalId":"term:oval-specialist","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"An “oval specialist” is a driver whose skills translate especially well to oval tracks, where cars run mostly left turns at high speed. Oval racing rewards things like throttle control, drafting/positioning, and maintaining momentum through long, sweeping corners.","simplifiedExplanation":"An “oval specialist” is a driver who’s really good on oval tracks. Those tracks are high-speed and mostly turn one direction, so the driving style is different from road courses."}},{"id":406276,"startTime":1654.0,"endTime":1656.3,"type":"term","title":"road or street courses","url":"/glossary/road-or-street-courses","quote":"He's not bad on road or street courses.\n[1656.3s] He just hasn't had the victories to back up what he's able to do on an oval.","canonicalId":"term:road-or-street-courses","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Road courses” and “street courses” are two different types of non-oval racing layouts. Road courses are purpose-built tracks, while street courses use closed public roads, which usually means tighter turns, uneven surfaces, and less runoff area.","simplifiedExplanation":"These are the non-oval tracks. Road courses are normal race tracks built for racing, while street courses use regular city streets that are closed for the event."}},{"id":406277,"startTime":1662.9,"endTime":1670.0,"type":"topic","title":"Indy 500","url":"/glossary/indy-500","quote":"If not a full season, I want to see him at the 500.\n[1665.9s] So do you think is there I mean, is that a realistic opportunity for him","canonicalId":"topic:indy-500","priority":0.85,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The “Indy 500” refers to the Indianapolis 500, one of the biggest events in American open-wheel racing. It’s a 500-mile oval race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and getting a seat there is a major career milestone for IndyCar drivers and prospects.","simplifiedExplanation":"The Indy 500 is a huge open-wheel race in the U.S. It’s run on a big oval track in Indianapolis, and getting to race there is a big deal for a driver’s career."}},{"id":406278,"startTime":1680.9,"endTime":1684.9,"type":"company","title":"AJ Foyt","url":"/glossary/aj-foyt","quote":"If he's not in a third AJ Foyt entry for the Indy 500 next year,\n[1684.9s] if Roger doesn't front up the cash to put him in one of his own cars","canonicalId":"company:aj-foyt","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"AJ Foyt refers to AJ Foyt Enterprises, a historic IndyCar team associated with multiple Indianapolis 500 entries. The mention of a “third AJ Foyt entry” implies the team could field multiple cars for the Indy 500, increasing the odds of a seat for the driver being discussed."}},{"id":406279,"startTime":1684.9,"endTime":1688.1,"type":"term","title":"front up the cash","url":"/glossary/front-up-the-cash","quote":"if Roger doesn't front up the cash to put him in one of his own cars\n[1688.1s] and Penske runs a fourth car at the 500 next year, then I don't know.","canonicalId":"term:front-up-the-cash","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Front up the cash” is a racing/financing shorthand for providing the money needed to fund a car entry and the associated team costs. In motorsport, seats often depend on sponsorship, funding, or team backing to cover entry fees and operational budgets.","simplifiedExplanation":"It means someone has to provide the money to make the racing entry happen. In racing, a driver’s seat can depend on who pays for the car and team effort."}},{"id":406280,"startTime":1719.9,"endTime":1723.4,"type":"topic","title":"Indianapolis 500","url":"/glossary/indianapolis-500","quote":"I don't just want to see him in a seat.\n[1719.9s] I want to see him in a good seat at the Indianapolis 500.\n[1723.4s] Because, my God, he would electrify that place.","canonicalId":"topic:indianapolis-500","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The Indianapolis 500 is the specific IndyCar oval race the hosts are discussing, distinct from the broader IndyCar season. It’s known for its high-speed oval demands and for being a “must-have” event on many drivers’ résumés.","simplifiedExplanation":"The Indianapolis 500 is the famous IndyCar race at Indianapolis. It’s a big oval event, and drivers really want to get a good chance to race there."}},{"id":406281,"startTime":1830.9,"endTime":1857.1,"type":"person","title":"Kyle Busch","url":"/glossary/kyle-busch","quote":"So Kyle Busch still just can't believe that we're sitting here talking about Kyle Busch not being here.","canonicalId":"person:kyle-busch","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Kyle Busch is a top NASCAR driver whose career includes many wins and a long-running rivalry with other elite drivers. The segment references his position on the win list and the fact that he’s not present, which makes the tribute and celebration feel especially meaningful.","simplifiedExplanation":"Kyle Busch is a well-known NASCAR driver. The hosts are talking about his win record and how the race included a tribute connected to him, even though he wasn’t there."}},{"id":406282,"startTime":1862.1,"endTime":1871.1,"type":"term","title":"unapproved adjustment","url":"/glossary/unapproved-adjustment","quote":"had to change some of the under bodied and so that is an unapproved adjustment, had to go to the back of the field.","canonicalId":"term:unapproved-adjustment","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"An unapproved adjustment refers to a change to the car that violates NASCAR rules or hasn’t been permitted by officials. When that happens, the team can face penalties such as starting from the back of the field.","simplifiedExplanation":"An unapproved adjustment means the team changed the car in a way NASCAR didn’t allow. That can lead to penalties, like having to start at the back."}},{"id":406283,"startTime":1871.1,"endTime":1875.8,"type":"term","title":"last restart","url":"/glossary/last-restart","quote":"Methodically worked himself through that field, got a great last restart with like 38 laps to go, beat him by 11 seconds and 38 laps.","canonicalId":"term:last-restart","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A restart is when the race resumes after a caution period, and the field is re-launched. The “last restart” is the final time cars are restarted, which often becomes decisive because there are fewer laps left to recover.","simplifiedExplanation":"A restart is when the race starts again after a caution. The last restart is the final restart, so it usually matters a lot because the race is almost over."}},{"id":406284,"startTime":1918.2,"endTime":1920.08,"type":"term","title":"on board","url":"/glossary/onboard","quote":"I saw I saw that took a mass. I mean, I've seen the on board of this as well.","canonicalId":"term:on-board","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“On board” refers to in-car camera footage that shows what the driver sees and does during the race. It’s commonly used to analyze driving lines, overtakes, and how the car behaves under braking and acceleration.","simplifiedExplanation":"“On board” means the video is filmed from inside the race car. It helps you see what the driver is seeing during the action."}},{"id":406285,"startTime":1932.5,"endTime":1934.0,"type":"term","title":"safer barrier","url":"/glossary/safer-barrier","quote":"And you see both of those cars hard into the wall. Bell making, you know, the biggest impact right there. But that that's safer barrier.","canonicalId":"term:safer-barrier","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A safer barrier is an energy-absorbing crash barrier designed to reduce the forces transferred to the car and driver during impacts. In NASCAR and other oval racing, it’s built to deform in a controlled way so the impact is less severe than with older, rigid walls.","simplifiedExplanation":"A safer barrier is a crash wall designed to absorb energy when a car hits it. Instead of staying rigid, it’s meant to crumple in a controlled way to help protect the driver."}},{"id":406286,"startTime":1970.7,"endTime":1974.3,"type":"term","title":"jaws of life","url":"/glossary/jaws-of-life","quote":"They had to literally take the jaws of life and the port of power to get this wall back out in order to get the foam back in in place","canonicalId":"term:jaws-of-life","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Jaws of life” is the common name for hydraulic rescue tools used by firefighters to cut apart wrecked vehicles. They’re typically used when a car’s structure is crushed or jammed and occupants need to be freed quickly.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Jaws of life” refers to heavy-duty rescue equipment firefighters use to cut open a wrecked car. It helps free people when the car is too damaged to open normally."}},{"id":406287,"startTime":1972.0,"endTime":1974.3,"type":"term","title":"port of power","url":"/glossary/port-of-power","quote":"They had to literally take the jaws of life and the port of power to get this wall back out in order to get the foam back in in place","canonicalId":"term:port-of-power","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A port-a-power is a set of hydraulic tools used to spread, lift, or push heavy objects under controlled force. In this context, it’s being used to reposition damaged barrier components back into place after a high-speed impact.","simplifiedExplanation":"A port-a-power is a hydraulic tool set that can push or lift heavy things with a lot of force. Here, it’s used to move parts of the crash barrier back where they belong."}},{"id":406288,"startTime":1974.3,"endTime":1979.1,"type":"term","title":"foam back in place","url":"/glossary/foam-back-in-place","quote":"to get this wall back out in order to get the foam back in in place to get the safer barrier back intact.","canonicalId":"term:foam-back-in-place","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The foam in a safer barrier system is part of the energy-absorbing design that helps manage crash forces. After a major impact, the barrier may need to be disassembled and rebuilt so the foam and structure can perform as intended in a future crash."}},{"id":406289,"startTime":2005.0,"endTime":2010.1,"type":"person","title":"John Hunter Nemechek","url":"/glossary/john-hunter-nemechek","quote":"he was just a little offline with the 42 car of John Hunter Nemechek got into him and tried to square that car back up while he was against the bumper","canonicalId":"person:john-hunter-nemechek","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"John Hunter Nemechek is a NASCAR driver, and in this segment he’s identified by his car number (the 42). The hosts describe him making contact that triggers a multi-car wreck.","simplifiedExplanation":"John Hunter Nemechek is a NASCAR race driver. In this clip, he’s involved in the contact that starts a big crash."}},{"id":406290,"startTime":2008.7,"endTime":2013.8,"type":"term","title":"square that car back up","url":"/glossary/square-that-car-back-up","quote":"got into him and tried to square that car back up while he was against the bumper shot Nemechek to the right and that wiped out everybody from second place back","canonicalId":"term:square-that-car-back-up","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Square that car back up” is racing jargon meaning to straighten the car’s angle relative to the track after it gets pushed or rotates. In this context, the driver is trying to regain control while still close to another car (“against the bumper”).","simplifiedExplanation":"This phrase means getting the car pointed straight again after it gets shoved or starts to turn the wrong way. It’s about regaining control so you can keep driving instead of spinning out."}},{"id":406291,"startTime":2010.1,"endTime":2013.8,"type":"term","title":"against the bumper","url":"/glossary/against-the-bumper","quote":"got into him and tried to square that car back up while he was against the bumper shot Nemechek to the right and that wiped out everybody from second place back","canonicalId":"term:against-the-bumper","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Against the bumper” describes a very close, contact-prone situation in NASCAR where one car is directly pushing or riding the other car’s rear. It’s a common setup for both drafting pressure and accidental contact that can trigger a wreck.","simplifiedExplanation":"This means one car is right up behind another car, very close to the back bumper. That kind of close racing can create pressure, but it also makes it easier to accidentally hit and cause a crash."}},{"id":406292,"startTime":2013.8,"endTime":2028.3,"type":"term","title":"wreck","url":"/glossary/wreck","quote":"shot Nemechek to the right and that wiped out everybody from second place back at the front of the field took out Tyler Redick, Ty Gibbs. Diddy Hamlin actually spun around in the middle of this wreck and didn't get hit.","canonicalId":"term:wreck","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In NASCAR, a “wreck” is a multi-car crash that can start from a single contact and then spread through the pack. This segment describes how one incident “wiped out” multiple drivers and forced others out of contention.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “wreck” here means a crash. The hosts are describing how one hit caused a chain reaction that took out several cars."}},{"id":406293,"startTime":2019.4,"endTime":2022.7,"type":"person","title":"Tyler Redick","url":"/glossary/tyler-redick","quote":"at the front of the field took out Tyler Redick, Ty Gibbs. Diddy Hamlin actually spun around in the middle of this wreck and didn't get hit.","canonicalId":"person:tyler-redick","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Tyler Reddick is a NASCAR driver mentioned as being taken out by the wreck described in this segment. The hosts say the incident wiped out cars from second place onward at the front of the field.","simplifiedExplanation":"Tyler Reddick is a NASCAR driver. The hosts are saying a crash in the front of the pack took him out."}},{"id":406294,"startTime":2019.4,"endTime":2022.7,"type":"person","title":"Ty Gibbs","url":"/glossary/ty-gibbs","quote":"at the front of the field took out Tyler Redick, Ty Gibbs. Diddy Hamlin actually spun around in the middle of this wreck and didn't get hit.","canonicalId":"person:ty-gibbs","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Ty Gibbs is a NASCAR driver referenced as being caught in the same multi-car incident. The hosts connect the contact and recovery attempt to a chain reaction that eliminates multiple cars.","simplifiedExplanation":"Ty Gibbs is a NASCAR driver. In this clip, he’s one of the drivers caught up in the crash."}},{"id":406295,"startTime":2022.7,"endTime":2028.3,"type":"person","title":"Diddy Hamlin","quote":"Diddy Hamlin actually spun around in the middle of this wreck and didn't get hit. That's that tells you where his luck is at right now.","canonicalId":"person:diddy-hamlin","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Diddy Hamlin appears to be a transcription error for Denny Hamlin, a NASCAR driver. The hosts say he spun in the middle of the wreck but avoided being hit, highlighting how luck and situational awareness can matter in pileups.","simplifiedExplanation":"This is likely Denny Hamlin, a NASCAR driver. The point here is that he spun during the crash but managed to avoid getting struck."}},{"id":406297,"startTime":2030.6,"endTime":2035.9,"type":"term","title":"left front","url":"/glossary/left-front","quote":"You see Austin Dillon right there, massive hit, you know, to the left front of his car. So after the afterwards, though,","canonicalId":"term:left-front","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Left front” specifies the corner of the car that was hit, which matters because front-end impacts can affect steering geometry and suspension alignment. The hosts use it to emphasize how severe the damage was to Austin Dillon’s car.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Left front” means the front-left corner of the car took the impact. Hits there are often serious because they can mess with how the car steers and handles."}},{"id":406296,"startTime":2030.6,"endTime":2035.9,"type":"person","title":"Austin Dillon","url":"/glossary/austin-dillon","quote":"You see Austin Dillon right there, massive hit, you know, to the left front of his car. So after the afterwards, though,","canonicalId":"person:austin-dillon","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Austin Dillon is a NASCAR driver mentioned as taking a “massive hit” to the left front of his car. That detail indicates the impact location, which is often where damage can be most severe for steering and suspension components.","simplifiedExplanation":"Austin Dillon is a NASCAR driver. The hosts say his car got a big hit on the left front corner, which is usually a serious impact area."}},{"id":406298,"startTime":2038.4,"endTime":2048.5,"type":"person","title":"Bubba Wallace","url":"/glossary/bubba-wallace","quote":"Bubba Wallace kind of sat next to the wall with Hosevar and was trying to explain to him that he needed to figure out how to be aggressive, but also not wreck cars.","canonicalId":"person:bubba-wallace","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Bubba Wallace is a NASCAR driver described here as sitting next to the wall and talking with another driver after the wreck. The hosts frame it as post-incident coaching: being aggressive without wrecking cars.","simplifiedExplanation":"Bubba Wallace is a NASCAR driver. After the crash, he’s shown talking with another driver about how to race hard but avoid causing wrecks."}},{"id":406299,"startTime":2038.4,"endTime":2043.3,"type":"person","title":"Hosevar","quote":"Bubba Wallace kind of sat next to the wall with Hosevar and was trying to explain to him that he needed to figure out how to be aggressive, but also not wreck cars.","canonicalId":"person:hosevar","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Hosevar is referenced as the driver Bubba Wallace is talking to after the wreck. The segment uses him as an example of a super-aggressive driver who has “cleaned it up” over time.","simplifiedExplanation":"Hosevar is another NASCAR driver mentioned in the conversation. The hosts say he’s very aggressive, but he’s been improving and learning how to race without wrecking people."}},{"id":406300,"startTime":2043.3,"endTime":2048.5,"type":"term","title":"aggressive","quote":"Bubba Wallace kind of sat next to the wall with Hosevar and was trying to explain to him that he needed to figure out how to be aggressive, but also not wreck cars.","canonicalId":"term:aggressive","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.65,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing talk, “aggressive” usually means driving with more assertive positioning—pushing for gaps and challenging for track position. The host contrasts it with “not wreck cars,” implying aggression should be controlled and racecraft-driven.","simplifiedExplanation":"Here “aggressive” means racing hard and pushing for position. The point is to do it in a way that doesn’t cause crashes."}},{"id":406301,"startTime":2054.3,"endTime":2063.9,"type":"person","title":"Kevin Harvick","url":"/glossary/kevin-harvick","quote":"Kevin Harvick told me, I don't know, whenever I was hitting four or five years ago, he said, stop hitting and your finishes will result show.","canonicalId":"person:kevin-harvick","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Kevin Harvick is a NASCAR driver and veteran whose advice is quoted in this segment. The hosts say Harvick told him to stop “hitting” and that better finishes would follow—an example of racecraft focused on avoiding contact.","simplifiedExplanation":"Kevin Harvick is a well-known NASCAR veteran driver. Here he’s being quoted saying that if you stop making contact, you’ll usually finish better because you avoid wrecks and damage."}},{"id":406302,"startTime":2200.5,"endTime":2204.8,"type":"term","title":"air pressure up, air pressure down","url":"/glossary/air-pressure-up-air-pressure-down","quote":"Because now you're not getting any direction to be able to fix your cars during the race to say, well, Conor likes, you know, he liked the car up or down or, you know, whatever the adjustments are, air pressure up, air pressure down on whatever tires.","canonicalId":"term:air-pressure-up-air-pressure-down","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"This refers to adjusting tire pressures during a race. Higher or lower pressure changes how the tire’s contact patch behaves, which affects grip, wear, and how the car responds to steering and braking. Teams may tweak pressures to match track conditions and tire temperature.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re talking about changing how much air is in the tires. That changes how the tire “touches” the road, which can make the car grip better or handle differently. Teams adjust it to help the car work better during the race."}},{"id":406303,"startTime":2233.9,"endTime":2239.8,"type":"term","title":"behind the wheel","url":"/glossary/behind-the-wheel","quote":"We've seen him on the, on the fuel before, but I hadn't seen him behind the wheel.","canonicalId":"term:behind-the-wheel","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Behind the wheel” is a racing-specific way to say the driver is actually controlling the car on track. In this context, it contrasts with other roles (like appearing on TV or doing fuel-related duties) and emphasizes that the person is now driving competitively. It’s not a technical term, but it’s a meaningful role distinction in motorsport."}},{"id":406304,"startTime":2248.2,"endTime":2252.8,"type":"term","title":"pit stop practices","url":"/glossary/pit-stop-practices","quote":"And I think to see him lean into all this stuff at the pit stop practices at the race and now in the car, he's got a pretty good teacher up there with with Jeff Gordon on the radio, though.","canonicalId":"term:pit-stop-practices","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Pit stop practices are rehearsals for the crew’s procedures during a stop—like tire changes and refueling (where applicable). The goal is to reduce time lost in the pits and improve consistency under pressure. In NASCAR-style racing, these drills are tightly linked to race strategy and car setup.","simplifiedExplanation":"Pit stop practices are practice runs for the crew to change tires and do the stop quickly. The better they practice, the faster and smoother the real pit stop goes during the race. It can directly affect track position."}},{"id":406305,"startTime":2252.8,"endTime":2256.1,"type":"person","title":"Jeff Gordon","url":"/glossary/jeff-gordon","quote":"And I think to see him lean into all this stuff at the pit stop practices at the race and now in the car, he's got a pretty good teacher up there with with Jeff Gordon on the radio, though.","canonicalId":"person:jeff-gordon","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Jeff Gordon is a legendary NASCAR driver who later became a prominent broadcaster and analyst. In racing, having an experienced figure “on the radio” typically means real-time guidance and feedback to the driver during the race. His presence signals high-level coaching and strategy support.","simplifiedExplanation":"Jeff Gordon is a famous NASCAR driver. In this segment, he’s mentioned as being on the radio, meaning he’s helping the driver with advice during the race. It’s like having an expert coach talking to you in real time."}},{"id":406306,"startTime":2370.0,"endTime":2376.0,"type":"term","title":"supercars","url":"/glossary/supercar","quote":"Supercars, Aussie Supercars standout, Matthew Payne was set to make his debut in the NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet, wanted to place him with RCR in Sonoma.","canonicalId":"term:supercars","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Supercars” refers to Australia’s Supercars Championship, a touring-car series with high-performance cars and strong road-course/road-racing emphasis. The segment is about an Australian driver moving from that series into NASCAR.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Supercars” here means the big Australian touring-car racing series. The point is that some drivers from that series are being considered for NASCAR."}},{"id":406307,"startTime":2370.0,"endTime":2376.0,"type":"term","title":"NASCAR Cup Series","url":"/glossary/nascar-cup-series","quote":"Supercars, Aussie Supercars standout, Matthew Payne was set to make his debut in the NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet, wanted to place him with RCR in Sonoma.","canonicalId":"term:nascar-cup-series","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The NASCAR Cup Series is NASCAR’s top-level stock-car racing series in the United States. It’s where teams run the highest-profile cars and compete for the Cup championship.","simplifiedExplanation":"NASCAR’s Cup Series is the top tier of NASCAR racing. It’s the main championship series teams and drivers aim for."}},{"id":406308,"startTime":2372.0,"endTime":2376.0,"type":"car","title":"Chevrolet","image":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/81/Chevrolet-SuburbanPTY.jpg","quote":"Supercars, Aussie Supercars standout, Matthew Payne was set to make his debut in the NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet, wanted to place him with RCR in Sonoma.","canonicalId":"car:chevrolet:chevrolet","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In NASCAR, “Chevrolet” refers to the manufacturer/brand of the Cup Series stock car. Teams build and run cars around Chevrolet’s approved body and powertrain package for that season.","simplifiedExplanation":"Here, “Chevrolet” means the race team would be running a Chevrolet-branded car in NASCAR. NASCAR lets teams compete with different manufacturers.","imageAttribution":"Iamjosemom (CC BY 4.0)"}},{"id":406309,"startTime":2376.0,"endTime":2380.0,"type":"company","title":"RCR","url":"/glossary/rcr","quote":"Supercars, Aussie Supercars standout, Matthew Payne was set to make his debut in the NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet, wanted to place him with RCR in Sonoma.","canonicalId":"company:rcr","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"RCR is Richard Childress Racing, a prominent NASCAR team. In this context, the host is saying Payne was expected to be placed with that team.","simplifiedExplanation":"RCR is a NASCAR racing team. The host is saying they were hoping to put Matthew Payne with that team."}},{"id":406310,"startTime":2376.0,"endTime":2381.0,"type":"place","title":"Sonoma","url":"/glossary/sonoma","quote":"Supercars, Aussie Supercars standout, Matthew Payne was set to make his debut in the NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet, wanted to place him with RCR in Sonoma.","canonicalId":"place:sonoma","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Sonoma refers to Sonoma Raceway in California, a road-course track used on the NASCAR schedule. It’s known for technical corners and elevation changes, which often reward drivers who are strong on road courses.","simplifiedExplanation":"Sonoma is a race track in California that NASCAR visits. It’s a road course, so it favors drivers who handle twisting corners well."}},{"id":406311,"startTime":2398.0,"endTime":2406.0,"type":"term","title":"road courses","url":"/glossary/road-courses","quote":"However, as we look at the impact that a Shane van Gisburgen has obviously had on Cup after transitioning from supercars and how brilliant he is on road courses, it makes sense that more people would be looking at supercar standouts.","canonicalId":"term:road-courses","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Road courses are tracks built from a mix of left and right turns, often with elevation changes and braking zones that resemble real-world roads. In NASCAR, they’re distinct from oval tracks and can favor drivers with touring-car or road-racing backgrounds."}},{"id":406312,"startTime":2429.6,"endTime":2436.0,"type":"term","title":"Gen Seven car","url":"/glossary/gen-seven-car","quote":"And I think that the supercar guys have, I think with SVG coming over here and showing just how much common ground there is between the Gen Seven car and the supercar over in Australia.","canonicalId":"term:gen-seven-car","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Gen Seven” is NASCAR’s next-generation Cup car platform (the newer generation of the car used in the Cup Series). The host is arguing that it shares “common ground” with Australian Supercars, making cross-over driving more feasible.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Gen Seven” is NASCAR’s newer generation of race car. The host is saying it’s similar enough to the Australian supercars that drivers can adapt more easily."}},{"id":406313,"startTime":2620.2,"endTime":2623.2,"type":"term","title":"cup car","url":"/glossary/cup-car","quote":"I can't wait to see him consistently in that cup car. Yeah, pretty stuff.","canonicalId":"term:cup-car","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “cup car” refers to the NASCAR Cup Series race car. It’s the top-level NASCAR stock-car platform, with standardized rules for body, chassis, and safety equipment, so teams focus on setup and driving to gain an edge.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “cup car” is the main kind of stock car used in NASCAR’s top series. It’s the top-tier race car that teams build and tune for the Cup races."}},{"id":406314,"startTime":2625.5,"endTime":2630.1,"type":"topic","title":"arca race","url":"/glossary/arca-race","quote":"Geo Rogero won the arca race this this weekend. They had a little bit of weather like you guys over there in St. Louis.","canonicalId":"topic:arca-race","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“ARCA” refers to the ARCA Menards Series, a NASCAR-affiliated stock-car series. It’s commonly used as a proving ground for drivers and teams before moving up to higher NASCAR levels.","simplifiedExplanation":"The ARCA race is part of a stock-car racing series that’s connected to NASCAR. Drivers often use it to build experience before stepping up to bigger NASCAR races."}},{"id":406315,"startTime":2635.5,"endTime":2640.4,"type":"concept","title":"race actually wound up being called early because of of the rain","url":"/glossary/race-actually-wound-up-being-called-early-because-of-of-the-rain","quote":"So that race actually wound up being called early because of of the rain. But that kid is amazing.","canonicalId":"concept:race-actually-wound-up-being-called-early-because-of-of-the-rain","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"When a race is “called early” due to rain, officials end it before the scheduled distance is completed for safety. NASCAR/ARCA procedures typically rely on track conditions and whether enough laps have been completed to determine results.","simplifiedExplanation":"If it rains, race officials may stop the race early for safety. They decide whether to end it based on how bad conditions are and how much of the race has already been run."}},{"id":406316,"startTime":2648.5,"endTime":2653.7,"type":"topic","title":"truck race","url":"/glossary/truck-race","quote":"Cletus was back in the truck, had a little spin out, got involved in an accident at the end of the truck race.","canonicalId":"topic:truck-race","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In NASCAR context, a “truck race” usually means the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. It features pickup-truck-bodied stock cars and is another key development step for drivers.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “truck race” is NASCAR’s series that uses race cars shaped like pickup trucks. It’s a major stepping-stone series for drivers aiming for the top NASCAR levels."}},{"id":406317,"startTime":2650.2,"endTime":2653.7,"type":"term","title":"spin out","url":"/glossary/spin-out","quote":"Cletus was back in the truck, had a little spin out, got involved in an accident at the end of the truck race.","canonicalId":"term:spin-out","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “spin out” is when the car loses traction and rotates uncontrollably, often due to oversteer or reduced grip. In stock-car racing, it can happen when tires are overloaded, track conditions change, or a driver misjudges entry/exit.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “spin out” is when the car starts sliding and turns around instead of going straight. It usually happens when the tires lose grip."}},{"id":406318,"startTime":2650.24,"endTime":2653.74,"type":"car","title":"Chevrolet Spin","url":"/cars/chevrolet/spin","image":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e9/2_Elliott_Sadler_Rights_the_Car_2012_Road_America_Sargento_200.jpg","quote":"... back. Cletus was back in the truck, had a little spin out, got involved in an accident at the end of th...","canonicalId":"car:chevrolet:spin","priority":0.5,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The Chevrolet Spin is a compact multi-purpose vehicle (MPV) designed for carrying people and everyday cargo. It may come up in a podcast when discussing real-world driving moments—like a “spin out” or accident—because it’s a common type of family-oriented vehicle. The mention suggests the vehicle was involved in a specific incident rather than a performance-focused topic.","simplifiedExplanation":"The Chevrolet Spin is a small family vehicle meant to carry passengers and luggage. In the podcast context, it’s mentioned because someone had a “spin out” and an accident involving that vehicle.","imageAttribution":"I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license: (CC BY-SA 3.0)"}},{"id":406319,"startTime":2668.5,"endTime":2673.0,"type":"term","title":"pole","url":"/glossary/pole","quote":"He's actually on the pole for the arca race this weekend. Qualified on a freaking pole.","canonicalId":"term:pole","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Pole” means qualifying first—starting the race from the front of the grid. In NASCAR-style racing, starting up front can reduce traffic risk and help a driver control the early race pace.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Pole” means you qualify fastest and start the race in the first position. It’s a big advantage because you’re not stuck in traffic at the start."}},{"id":406320,"startTime":2857.4,"endTime":2920.0,"type":"place","title":"Eldora","url":"/glossary/eldora","quote":"Well, we also had the Eldora dream this weekend,\n[2861.8s] which pays a 100000 dollars to win dirt, late model race.\n...\nSo Eldora's have you been to Eldora?","canonicalId":"place:eldora","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Eldora Speedway is a dirt-track oval known for high-level short-track racing, especially dirt late models and sprint cars. In this segment, the hosts reference Eldora as the venue for “the Eldora dream,” a race weekend format that includes qualifying races and a big winner’s payout.","simplifiedExplanation":"Eldora is a famous dirt-racing track. The hosts are talking about a big race weekend there where drivers qualify through heats and then race for a large prize."}},{"id":406321,"startTime":2861.8,"endTime":2876.1,"type":"term","title":"dirt, late model","url":"/glossary/dirt-late-model-c30a8763-8aa8-4e0e-b55c-ac85cf23e563","quote":"Well, we also had the Eldora dream this weekend,\n[2861.8s] which pays a 100000 dollars to win dirt, late model race.\n...\nBobby Pierce, he charged from his 13th starting position","canonicalId":"term:dirt-late-model","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Late model” refers to a class of dirt oval racing cars that are purpose-built for short-track competition. They’re typically raced on dirt surfaces and are known for close, high-grip racing and large regional-to-national events.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Late model” is a type of race car used in dirt-track racing. It’s a specific racing class, not just a generic description of a car."}},{"id":406322,"startTime":2887.4,"endTime":2893.3,"type":"term","title":"flat tire","url":"/glossary/flat-tire","quote":"Bobby Pierce actually had a flat tire there\n[2889.6s] and he wound up going around him on lap 59.","canonicalId":"term:flat-tire","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A flat tire is a sudden loss of tire pressure, which can drastically reduce traction and control. In dirt racing, it often forces a driver to lose positions immediately because the car can become unstable or slow enough to be passed."}},{"id":406323,"startTime":2893.3,"endTime":2903.1,"type":"term","title":"heat races","url":"/glossary/heat-races","quote":"But this this whole process to get all these dirt cars qualified\n[2897.3s] and into these races is like a three day process of qualifying heat races,\n[2903.1s] B mains, and then they all go out on the racetrack and do what they do.","canonicalId":"term:heat-races","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Heat races are preliminary races used to sort drivers into the correct starting fields for the main event. On dirt tracks, they’re a key part of the weekend structure because they determine who advances and where they start.","simplifiedExplanation":"Heat races are smaller races before the main race. They help decide which drivers move on and how they line up for the big event."}},{"id":406324,"startTime":2903.1,"endTime":2908.2,"type":"term","title":"B mains","url":"/glossary/b-mains","quote":"But this this whole process to get all these dirt cars qualified\n[2897.3s] and into these races is like a three day process of qualifying heat races,\n[2903.1s] B mains, and then they all go out on the racetrack and do what they do.","canonicalId":"term:b-mains","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In dirt racing, “B mains” are secondary qualifying races (often for drivers who didn’t advance directly through heats) to determine additional spots in the main event. It’s essentially another ladder step to get more cars into the final race.","simplifiedExplanation":"“B mains” are extra qualifying races. If you don’t make it straight through the heats, you race again to earn a spot in the main event."}},{"id":406325,"startTime":2928.6,"endTime":2930.9,"type":"term","title":"high limit sprint cars","url":"/glossary/high-limit-sprint-cars","quote":"Kyle Larson, high limit sprint cars.\n[2930.9s] My goodness, this guy is on an absolute tear right now.","canonicalId":"term:high-limit-sprint-cars","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"High Limit sprint cars are a top-level sprint-car racing series/format focused on winged sprint cars competing for major purses. These races are known for fast, aggressive driving on dirt and for attracting elite drivers.","simplifiedExplanation":"High Limit sprint cars are a big dirt-racing category for sprint cars. It’s where top drivers compete for large prizes."}},{"id":406326,"startTime":2940.5,"endTime":2950.0,"type":"term","title":"throttle","url":"/glossary/throttle","quote":"High limits, they put the throttle down with their schedule.\nBut Kyle Larson is in he's in full blown.","canonicalId":"term:throttle","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The throttle is the driver’s control for how much engine power is requested by opening the throttle body (or commanding electronic throttle). In racing, “put the throttle down” means applying full or near-full power to accelerate and set the car’s behavior through corners and straights.","simplifiedExplanation":"The throttle is the pedal/command that tells the engine how much power to make. “Put the throttle down” means press it hard to get maximum acceleration."}},{"id":406327,"startTime":2952.4,"endTime":2960.4,"type":"term","title":"cup side","url":"/glossary/cup-side","quote":"needs a little bit of that over to carry over to the cup side.\nBut can't blame it on the driver because he is on the gas","canonicalId":"term:cup-side","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Cup side” refers to the NASCAR Cup Series, the top-level NASCAR national series. The host is contrasting Larson’s sprint-car driving with how that skill should translate to NASCAR’s highest-profile stock-car racing.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Cup side” means the top NASCAR series, the Cup Series. The speaker is saying what works in sprint cars should help when the driver moves to NASCAR’s biggest level."}},{"id":406328,"startTime":3010.0,"endTime":3016.7,"type":"term","title":"victory line","url":"/glossary/victory-line","quote":"If they're going to get back into victory line and not just rely on the team\nand getting them and drive them, but he can get in and drive them.","canonicalId":"term:victory-line","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing talk, the “victory line” is the track position/strategy zone where a driver is set up to win—often meaning being in the lead pack and in the right place at the right time for the final laps or restart. It’s not a literal line on the track so much as a shorthand for being in contention.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Victory line” is a racing way of saying the spot you want to be in to have a real shot at winning. It usually means being near the front and positioned well when it matters most."}},{"id":406329,"startTime":3318.1,"endTime":3324.3,"type":"person","title":"Denny Hamlin","url":"/glossary/denny-hamlin","quote":"So Denny Hamlin, I mean, back to the front again, just an absolute clinic.\nYeah, hell of a drive, drive.","canonicalId":"person:denny-hamlin","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Denny Hamlin is a NASCAR driver known for strong oval-racing performances. In this segment, the hosts name him as the “driver of the week,” praising his race execution as a “clinic.”","simplifiedExplanation":"Denny Hamlin is a famous NASCAR race driver. Here, the hosts are saying he drove really well and deserved the top honor for the week."}},{"id":406330,"startTime":3340.1,"endTime":3379.0,"type":"person","title":"Marz Rowe","quote":"For me, it was Marz Rowe.\nI already spoke earlier in the show about what a phenomenal performance\nI thought he put in one of the best open wheel drives I've seen\nin a very, very long time, just sensational.\nNo strategy, no pit stops, just got the job done.","canonicalId":"person:marz-rowe","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Marz Rowe is credited with a standout open-wheel performance in this segment. The hosts emphasize the “no strategy, no pit stops” execution—suggesting a clean, controlled drive that didn’t rely on race calls or additional stops.","simplifiedExplanation":"Marz Rowe is the driver the hosts pick as the winner of “driver of the week.” They’re praising how he handled the race without needing extra pit stops or complicated strategy."}},{"id":406331,"startTime":3343.6,"endTime":3348.4,"type":"term","title":"open wheel","url":"/glossary/open-wheel","quote":"I already spoke earlier in the show about what a phenomenal performance\nI thought he put in one of the best open wheel drives I've seen\nin a very, very long time, just sensational.","canonicalId":"term:open-wheel","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Open wheel” refers to race cars with wheels that are exposed outside the bodywork, typical of series like IndyCar and Formula-style racing. The hosts use it to describe the type of driving they’re praising from Marz Rowe.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Open wheel” means the race car’s wheels are exposed (not covered by the body). It’s a common look for top-level open-wheel racing."}},{"id":406332,"startTime":3350.5,"endTime":3354.7,"type":"term","title":"pit stops","url":"/glossary/pit-stops","quote":"No strategy, no pit stops, just got the job done.\nAlso for contention this week was Kimmy Antonelli,","canonicalId":"term:pit-stops","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Pit stops are scheduled stops in the pits where teams service the car—most commonly for refueling, tire changes, or repairs. The hosts highlight “no strategy, no pit stops,” implying the race was won through driving rather than timing stops.","simplifiedExplanation":"A pit stop is when a race car pulls into the pit lane to get serviced. Here, the hosts are saying Marz Rowe didn’t need to stop for tires or other changes to win."}},{"id":406333,"startTime":3354.7,"endTime":3358.2,"type":"person","title":"Kimmy Antonelli","url":"/glossary/kimmy-antonelli","quote":"Also for contention this week was Kimmy Antonelli,\nobviously winning in Monaco and Mark Marquez,","canonicalId":"person:kimmy-antonelli","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Kimmy Antonelli is discussed as a contender because the hosts say he won in Monaco. The segment frames it as a major result that contributed to the week’s shortlist.","simplifiedExplanation":"Kimmy Antonelli is a driver the hosts mention as a strong contender. They say he won in Monaco, which made him part of the conversation for driver of the week."}},{"id":406334,"startTime":3358.2,"endTime":3365.5,"type":"person","title":"Mark Marquez","url":"/glossary/mark-marquez","quote":"obviously winning in Monaco and Mark Marquez,\nthe bruised and battered Mark Marquez taking the win.","canonicalId":"person:mark-marquez","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Mark Marquez is mentioned as another contender, described as “bruised and battered” while taking the win. The hosts treat it as a notable comeback/effort story that influenced their weekly picks.","simplifiedExplanation":"Mark Marquez is another driver the hosts mention as a winner. They’re emphasizing that he still won even though he sounded banged up."}},{"id":406335,"startTime":3395.9,"endTime":3402.9,"type":"topic","title":"IndieNext","url":"/glossary/indienext","quote":"because the IndieNext is not.\n[3400.6s] You know, it's not Cup.\n[3402.0s] It's not Formula One.","canonicalId":"topic:indienext","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.45,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“IndieNext” is being contrasted with the best-known top-tier open-wheel series. In this context, it’s presented as a racing series/ladder that isn’t as famous as Cup or Formula One, but can still produce top-level driving and race wins.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re talking about a racing series called “IndieNext.” The point is that it’s not as famous as the biggest series, but the racing can still be really impressive."}},{"id":406336,"startTime":3443.0,"endTime":3446.6,"type":"topic","title":"Indie 500","url":"/glossary/indie-500","quote":"And guys, we've had Monaco.\n[3443.0s] We've had the Indie 500.\n[3444.2s] What's left in the motorsport triple crown?","canonicalId":"topic:indie-500","priority":0.8,"confidence":0.88,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Indie 500” is a shorthand reference to the Indy 500, one of the most important events in American open-wheel racing. It’s known for high-speed oval racing, pit strategy, and the difficulty of sustaining pace over long stints.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re talking about the Indy 500, a huge American race. It’s famous for racing on an oval at very high speed for a long time, which makes strategy and consistency really important."}},{"id":406337,"startTime":3447.5,"endTime":3450.54,"type":"topic","title":"Le Mans 24 hours","url":"/glossary/le-mans-24-hours","quote":"[3444.2s] What's left in the motorsport triple crown?\n[3446.6s] That's right.\n[3447.5s] The Le Mans 24 hours is this weekend.","canonicalId":"topic:le-mans-24-hours","priority":0.95,"confidence":0.97,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The “Le Mans 24 hours” refers to the 24-hour endurance race at Le Mans, a cornerstone event in global sports car racing. Endurance races like this emphasize reliability, driver stints, and consistent lap times over a full day rather than just outright sprint speed.","simplifiedExplanation":"They mean the 24-hour race at Le Mans. Cars and drivers have to keep going for an entire day, so it’s as much about staying reliable and consistent as it is about being fast."}},{"id":406338,"startTime":3450.54,"endTime":3452.0,"type":"place","title":"circuit de la Sarth","quote":"At the circuit de la Sarth in France, always a massively enjoyable one.","canonicalId":"place:circuit-de-la-sarth","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The circuit de la Sarth is a racing venue in France that the hosts reference as part of the current motorsport schedule. It’s mentioned in the context of how enjoyable the weekend is, tying it to track-based racing culture rather than a specific car or series technical detail.","simplifiedExplanation":"That’s a race track in France. The hosts are talking about it as a place where racing weekends are fun to watch."}},{"id":406339,"startTime":3464.5,"endTime":3470.5,"type":"place","title":"Pocono","url":"/glossary/pocono","quote":"NASCAR Cup Series is in Pocono.\n\n[3468.0s] O'Reilly is, of course, in Pocono.","canonicalId":"place:pocono","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Pocono refers to Pocono Raceway in Pennsylvania, known for its distinctive triangular-ish layout and high-speed banking that challenges car setup and driver line choice. The hosts tie it to both NASCAR Cup Series and O’Reilly’s presence.","simplifiedExplanation":"Pocono is a well-known NASCAR track in Pennsylvania. It’s a big stop on the racing calendar."}},{"id":406340,"startTime":3468.0,"endTime":3470.5,"type":"company","title":"O'Reilly","url":"/glossary/o-reilly","quote":"[3464.5s] NASCAR Cup Series is in Pocono.\n[3468.0s] O'Reilly is, of course, in Pocono.","canonicalId":"company:o-reilly","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"O’Reilly is a consumer-facing automotive parts retailer and service brand that sponsors or supports racing events. Here, it’s mentioned as being “in Pocono,” indicating a track-level presence tied to motorsports marketing.","simplifiedExplanation":"O’Reilly is an auto parts company. The hosts are saying it’s involved with the event at Pocono."}},{"id":406341,"startTime":3470.5,"endTime":3494.4,"type":"topic","title":"cars tour West","quote":"The cars tour at Dominion Raceway, cars tour West.\n\n[3475.1s] Stateline Speedway.","canonicalId":"topic:cars-tour-west","priority":0.4,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Cars Tour West” appears to be a regional touring-stock-car series event, with the hosts describing where it’s running and who will be participating. The mention is tied to Kevin’s personal schedule and the type of racing weekend it represents.","simplifiedExplanation":"This sounds like a regional racing series event in the western part of the schedule. The host is saying he’ll be racing there."}},{"id":406342,"startTime":3470.5,"endTime":3475.1,"type":"place","title":"Dominion Raceway","quote":"The cars tour at Dominion Raceway, cars tour West.","canonicalId":"place:dominion-raceway","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Dominion Raceway is a motorsports venue where the hosts say the “cars tour” is running. It’s referenced as part of the broader schedule of regional stock-car-style racing events.","simplifiedExplanation":"Dominion Raceway is another race track where a racing series is running. The hosts are listing where different races are happening."}},{"id":406343,"startTime":3475.1,"endTime":3494.4,"type":"place","title":"Stateline Speedway","url":"/glossary/stateline-speedway","quote":"[3475.1s] Stateline Speedway.\n[3476.6s] And that is your final lap and all the races for this weekend.\n\n[3486.7s] because I will actually be at Stateline Speedway in Idaho,","canonicalId":"place:stateline-speedway","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Stateline Speedway is a specific racing venue in Idaho that the host says he’ll be at to run a late model race. It’s important because it anchors the conversation in a real, local track event rather than only national series.","simplifiedExplanation":"Stateline Speedway is a real race track in Idaho. The host is saying he’ll be there racing a late model."}},{"id":406344,"startTime":3502.3,"endTime":3520.9,"type":"topic","title":"24 hours Le Mans","url":"/glossary/24-hours-le-mans","quote":"When you talk about the Le Mans race and the 24 hours Le Mans, \n[3510.0s] if it's on, you at least have to watch some of it, because it's just","canonicalId":"topic:24-hours-le-mans","priority":0.75,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The 24 Hours of Le Mans is an endurance race held at Le Mans, famous for running for a full day and night with teams managing pace, reliability, and driver stints. The hosts emphasize watching it—especially at night—because the conditions and commentary make it uniquely entertaining.","simplifiedExplanation":"Le Mans is a famous endurance race that lasts 24 hours. Cars and drivers have to keep going for a full day and night, and it’s a big event to watch."}}],"speakers":[{"id":"s1","name":"Will Buxton","role":"host"},{"id":"s2","name":"Kevin Harvick","role":"host"}],"transcripts":[{"url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/antonelli-rules-monaco-newgarden-owns-st-louis-hamlin-matches-busch/transcript.vtt","type":"text/vtt"}]}