On bright days like this, in a chase car, you'll likely be shooting at 1/125s or perhaps in the 1/60s in order to get the blur in the wheels and road at highway speeds. Getting the car sharp, assuming the chase car and photographed car are traveling at the same speed, is not difficult. Most likely the photographer (if it were me) shot this in burst mode (continuous fire/sequential/etc) and will select the sharpest of the shots.
So to answer the question.... I'd set the camera to Shutter priority mode (denoted by the "S" in most camera setting wheels/selectors), ISO 100 or 200 should be fine, and let the camera to figure out the aperture. Set the camera to 1/125s as a starting point, go to it...
Also, the shooter used a polarizing filter. These are usually referred to as Circular Polarizers or CP's. You can tell by the variation in the blue sky. Notice the sky seems "deeper" or more blue on the left corner than on the right. The CP cuts a great deal of glare, reflections from the glass, etc... also deepens colors. Adds contrast to colors. In the first shot it is more apparent, the red in the car is deeper than in the second shot. That comes from the relative position of the sun to the camera and car. If you remember the photographer when he was shooting, you would see what looks like tinted glass or sunglasses on the camera lens. That's the CP.
Hope this helps... if I went too deep into the explanation, my apologies... don't really know if I am going too deep as I don't know how comfortable you, and others, are with the cameras....