There's a race this weekend, so
Justin Marks made sure Trackhouse Racing had entry in the field
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[January 21, 2025]
By JENNA FRYER
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Justin Marks had grandiose ideas when he
bought Chip Ganassi Racing ahead of the 2022 NASCAR season. The
former driver is probably the most forward-thinking team owner in
NASCAR and in three seasons is making his mark all over motorsports.
He was the first to change the look of the Cup Series garage,
building a small hospitality area in front of the Trackhouse Racing
team hauler so his sponsors and guests had something to do besides
stand aimlessly in the heat on race weekends. It's now industry
standard.
But his ideas and his plans stretch far beyond some high-top tables,
plants and a blue carpet that makes Trackhouse Racing special: Marks
is relentless in that Trackhouse isn't just a NASCAR team — it's a
full sports entertainment organization.
“His attitude toward everything and how forward-thinking he is just
inspires us all in how to think and act,” said Shane van Gisbergen,
who had his life totally upended when Marks brought him from
Australia to try NASCAR’s debut race on the streets of Chicago. When
van Gisbergen shockingly won the race, Marks worked on a plan to
pull him out of V8 Supercars and bring him to North America.

This all started when Marks bought two cars from Ganassi. In three
seasons, he has expanded to three for 2025. He will enter four-time
Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves in the Daytona 500, making
Trackhouse the first team in history to bring four drivers born in
four different countries to “The Great American Race.” Ross Chastain
is American, Daniel Suarez in Mexican, Shane van Gisbergen is from
New Zealand and Castroneves is Brazilian.
He's got 18-year-old Connor Zilisch signed but with nowhere to put
the phenom, he's leased him out to JR Motorsports in the Xfinity
Series for 2025. Marks has a MotoGP team launched and entered the
series before Liberty Media made a bid to purchase the top class of
motorcycle road racing in the world.
If Marks timed it right, and the Liberty purchase goes through, he
has a shot of capitalizing if Liberty is able to grow MotoGP the way
it did Formula 1.
“What Justin has done is fantastic, and he sure has hit his timing,”
said IndyCar and IMSA team owner Michael Shank, who is longtime
friends with Marks. “He's gotten the people right. He's got Helio
coming to the 500 and he's done everything right to get him ready.
He's just done a really good job of balancing his big ambitions, but
there's no doubt about it, he wants to be very big.”
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Trackhouse owner Justin Marks speaks during a post-race interview
after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Circuit of the
Americas, March 27, 2022, in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Stephen
Spillman, File)

Shank also lauded what a feat Marks pulled off by signing Wendy's —
the chain based in Shank's Ohio hometown — for Castroneves' Daytona
500 entry. Shank has not been able to land significant business with
a hometown brand.
But, that's all got to wait. There's a race this weekend and Marks
wanted Trackhouse represented. So he's entered Trackhouse in this
weekend's Rolex 24 at Daytona with a stacked lineup of van Gisbergen,
Zilisch, IndyCar driver Scott McLaughlin of Team Penske and sports
car veteran Ben Keating. The quartet will compete in the GTD Daytona
Pro class.
Zilisch returns after helping a different team win last year's LMP2
class at both Daytona and Sebring.
“Justin is so innovative, all his plans and ideas, nobody has any
doubt he's going to get these things accomplished,” Zilisch said.
“All the employees love working at Trackhouse and I think that goes
to show what he's built. He wants to grow the brand. He wants to
grow the business, and he wants to do it for the overall good of the
sport.”
Marks has more on his to-do list, which includes an eventual
entrance in the Indianapolis 500. He's been seen at practice days at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway over the last few years and is always
having conversations about getting a program together for “The
Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”
“It’s such an incredible experience just being there watching and
certainly it is a dream of mine to have Trackhouse represented in
that race," Marks said. "There are continuing discussions. It’s no
small feat. It’s something that we’ve looked at as a company for a
number of years. I think when the time is right, we’ll take a real
hard look at it. It’s very high on my personal list, and then I got
to get sort of the business and commercial and partnerships and all
that worked out, to figure out how to do it in a meaningful and
competitive way.
“I don’t think that Trackhouse will ever be complete without us
competing in the world’s greatest open-wheel race.”
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