Naskar Ross Shastein’s driver recently opened the extent of his unpopularity and physical drying during the media tours of Mexico City. Chastain admitted that he had not even tried to learn the Spanish for the trip and felt since his arrival in the city.
The video was first shared by Stephen Taranto on X. TARANTO is a NASCAR reporter for CBS SPORTS. A tweet showed him Shastein sitting in a press session while driver colleague Daniel Suarez treated questions in Spanish.
In the clip, Ross Shasin said he did not try to pick up the language before the trip. With his own words,
“No Spanish lessons,”
“I am honest with everyone, I didn’t even try.”
He also participated that it was physical of some kind since the landing. He added,
“I don’t feel very good, I will be honest,”
“I have a headache … I just had to run with a higher heart rate than usual … I feel tired, I didn’t do much. I’m ready to sleep now.”
As mentioned in the explanatory name, Suárez presented questions in the Spanish language, and waited for chastain nearby, clearly exhausted. At some point, he jokingly said he was ready to contact him a day – “after a lukewarm.” Suarez, who maintains a mood light, asked if Shamawi wanted a lukewarm like those they tried the day before. He responded to this negative, saying that he wanted bacon instead.
Ross Shastein says in second and third places deserve more credit in NASCACAR
In a separate interview with Dustin Long from the inside, Ross Shastein shared his views on recognizing the platform before the weekend in the Mexico City race. The next event will have a full platform celebrations for the three best finishing tools in both the CUP and Xfinity series races.
Chastain supported the decision. He said that the celebration of the winner only overlooks the difficulty of completing the second or third place in the cup chain. According to a student, Shasin explained,
“I love it. I have always felt a little disappointment because we do not celebrate the second and the third because this means a lot … when you do it frequently, you can feel disappointed, but yes, we all want to win.”
He went on to say that this sport has done “damage” to drivers who only end the shy of first place. Adding,
He said: “The first three jogging in the cup chain is very difficult.”
“I think we should always celebrate it more.”
Ross Shastein, who is driving the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 No. 1 of the Trackhouse race, has seen success across the best NASCAC departments. It has 13 professional wins in general, including six in the cup chain. His latest win in a cup in Charlotte Motor Speedway was earlier this season. At the end of this week, Chastain will compete in the Mesico City Cup chain race on Sunday 15 June.
Edited by Pratham K Sharma