Trackhouse Racing Owner Justin Marks’ Message for Ross Chastain
For Trackhouse, the Roval was a great day! But for Ross Chastain’s day and his day at the Charlotte Roval? Total gut punch for Trackhouse Racing. The weekend was all over the place, and then a bunch of little screwups snowballed into a big ol’ disaster on the last lap. First, Chastain got nailed for speeding on pit road (a rookie mistake, but hey, it happens to the best of them), then he botched Turn 7, flat-out missing the mark.
The Hamlin tangle that ended in Trackhouse heartbreak!
And to top it off, he went all in with a wild move at the end, tangled with Denny Hamlin, spun both cars, and that was it. Playoff dreams, gone by a handful of points. Seriously, you could see how much it stung. The dude looked like he wanted to crawl under the car and disappear. After the race, Trackhouse boss Justin Marks didn’t waste time.
He tracked Ross down and, in true “tough love but also dad vibes” fashion, basically told him, “You gave it everything, man. Shake it off. We’ve gotta move.”And honestly, what else can you say? There’s still racing left, and he wanted the team laser-focused, not wallowing. (Pretty sure every NASCAR fan out there’s heard some version of “get over it quick” at least once.) Or to put it in the Trackhouse co-owner’s actual words.
What Trackhouse Owner Justin Marks Had to Say
“I mean, Ross is one of these guys that, he internally processes these a lot, these things, and he sits in his emotions, and he gets very, very quiet as he kind of works through his mind, the emotions that he’s feeling and the experience that he’s having in the moment. And it’s not really until he kind of comes out of that that you can really start having meaningful conversations.”
“But all I told him last night, before we left the racetrack, was that we were at the bus for a little bit. I said, ‘Just the one favor I’m going to ask you is just getting over it quickly. Just get over it quickly. Tomorrow’s a new day. We’ve got to go prepare for Vegas. And just keep the big picture as clear as possible, which is that it was a bummer that the day didn’t turn out as we had hoped. But we have a lot to fight for the rest of this year. We still have opportunities to win races.’
The Glass is Always Half Full for Trackhouse
Marks wasn’t interested in finger-pointing. If anything, he was almost annoyingly upbeat. He pushed back on the idea that Chastain’s meltdown meant he lacked commitment or grit. Instead, Marks kept hammering the big-picture stuff: resilience, the long game, building a powerhouse team for 2026 and beyond. Easy to preach after a win as Shane van Gisbergen grabbed the Roval victory for the team, so it wasn’t all doom and gloom, but still, the contrast probably stung a bit for Chastain.
Meanwhile, Ross didn’t sugarcoat his own mess. He stood there, raw and honest, admitting he flat-out blew it. No hiding behind excuses, no blaming the car, just straight-up took it on the chin. You gotta respect that. And despite what some armchair critics might think, Marks made it clear: Chastain’s not going anywhere. He loves the guy’s fire, and the team’s still got his back.
Final Thoughts
All this drama? Classic NASCAR playoffs. It’s always the tiniest things, a penalty, a missed turn, one mad lunge at the end that decides who’s in and who’s out. But the real story’s how teams handle the fallout. Do they implode, or rally? Marks is betting on the latter: grieve a little, then get back to work. For Trackhouse, the mission now is simple patch up the wounds, keep the faith, and aim bigger down the road. Plenty of season left, and honestly, stranger things have happened in this sport. Thanks a bunch for reading!
