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Denny Hamlin gets fuel-mileage NASCAR Cup Series win at Michigan

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Denny Hamlin won in a wild fuel-mileage finish to the NASCAR Cup Series’ FireKeepers Casino 400 in Michigan.

Photo: Dominic Aragon/TRE

Hamlin earned his 57th career win in the NASCAR Cup Series after having enough fuel to get to the end of a wild race. He passed William Byron with four laps to go after swapping side-draft moves for several laps.

Never a fan of a dominator, certainly not someone who is 11th on the all-time wins list, the crowd booed Denny Hamlin as he exited his car.

“I’m sorry, dad, but I beat your favorite driver again,” Hamlin said, repeating a victory quote he said his dad didn’t like. “All of them.”

Hamlin, the 44-year-old senior driver at Joe Gibbs Racing, leads all drivers for wins with the team. He’ll bring home a win to his wife who is on baby watch.

Photo: Marcus Leno/TRE

Hamlin’s teammate, Ty Gibbs, finished third. Gibbs, the 22-year-old junior driver at Joe Gibbs Racing driver, took second from Byron after Hamlin passed Byron.

“I wish we could’ve gotten one but it’s not the option we had with the fuel-mileage situation we were in,” Gibbs said.

Photo: Dominic Aragon/TRE

William Byron ran out of fuel on the final lap. After leading 98 of 200 laps, earning a bonus point for the fastest lap of the race and finishing second and first in the stages, Byron finished 28th.

“We just didn’t have as good of mileage who were further back in the run and that’s just the way the cautions go with the nature of being up front. It stings. I thought we executed well and waited on fuel but burned too much fuel. It is what it is,” Byron said.

Chris Buescher took second and led three RFK Racing cars in the top-10 finishing order.

TOP-10 FINISHERS (LAP 200): Hamlin, Buescher, Gibbs, Bubba Wallace, Kyle Larson, Ross Chastain, Zane Smith, Brad Keselowski, Ryan Preece, Brad Keselowski.

Photo: Dominic Aragon/TRE

Carson Hocevar had a chance at getting his final lap but needed a caution as he was four laps short on fuel, unless he dropped back to save fuel. The caution never came and Hocevar had a left-rear tire issue 15 laps before he needed to pit — disappointing the hometown crowd who came to see the Portage native win for the first time in the Cup Series. Hocevar finished 29th, one lap down.

NASCAR Cup Series Results: 2025 FireKeepers Casino 400 in Michigan

  1. Denny Hamlin
  2. Chris Buescher
  3. Ty Gibbs
  4. Bubba Wallace
  5. Kyle Larson
  6. Ross Chastain
  7. Zane Smith
  8. Kyle Busch
  9. Ryan Preece
  10. Brad Keselowski
  11. Erik Jones
  12. Josh Berry
  13. Tyler Reddick
  14. Daniel Suarez
  15. Chase Elliott
  16. Christopher Bell
  17. AJ Allmendinger
  18. Shane van Gisbergen
  19. Austin Dillon
  20. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  21. Justin Haley
  22. Joey Logano
  23. Chase Briscoe
  24. Ty Dillon
  25. Riley Herbst
  26. Cody Ware
  27. Noah Gragson
  28. William Byron
  29. Carson Hocevar (-1 lap)
  30. Michael McDowell (-1)
  31. Austin Cindric (-1)
  32. Ryan Blaney (-4)
  33. Todd Gilliland
    • Crashed out after 146 laps
  34. John Hunter Nemechek
    • Crashed out after 72 laps
  35. Cole Custer
  36. Alex Bowman
    • Bowman and Custer each crashed out after 66 laps

NASCAR Cup Series playoff standings bubble after Michigan

  • Bubba Wallace +61
  • Chase Briscoe +41
  • Chris Buescher +20
  • Alex Bowman +13
  • Ryan Preece: +0
  • Kyle Busch -0
  • Carson Hocevar -18
  • AJ Allmendinger -18
  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr. -20
  • Erik Jones -36
  • Zane Smith -37
  • Michael McDowell -37
  • Ty Gibbs -52
  • John Hunter Nemechek -52
  • Austin Dillon -52
  • Todd Gilliland -57
  • Daniel Suarez -68

Below is an archive of the live updates throughout the FireKeepers Casino 400.

FINAL STAGE

William Byron, Carson Hocevar, Tyler Reddick, Ryan Preece, Ross Chastain, Denny Hamlin, Bubba Wallace, Kyle Busch, Erik Jones, Josh Berry, Chris Buescher, Ty Gibbs, AJ Allmendinger, Daniel Suarez, Brad Keselowski and Christopher Bell stayed out, restarting first through 16th on lap 126.

Photo: Dominic Aragon/TRE

Kyle Larson pitted with everyone else on the lead lap, going back to 32nd. Larson jumped to 10th but reported possible voltage issues.

Top 10 on Lap 141: Byron, Hocevar, Reddick, Hamlin, Wallace, Busch, Berry, Buescher, Jones, Larson.

Suarez, Preece, Chastain and Gibbs dropped to 11th through 14th.

Todd Gilliland crashed in turn two on lap 147 after blowing a left-rear tire. Gilliland was running 17th before the crash.

“I hit insanely hard so we are done,” Gilliland said on the radio.

With 52 laps to go, everyone pitted. They can likely make it to the end on fuel, especially if there are several cautions. Christopher Bell made it 59 laps on fuel earlier in the race.

Zane Smith, Michael McDowell and Chase Briscoe took two tires and exited pit road first, third and eighth.

Taking four was Carson Hocevar (second), William Byron, Kyle Larson, Josh Berry, Chris Buescher (fourth through seventh), Ty Gibbs and Bubba Wallace (ninth and 10th).

Larson didn’t have to take as much fuel, allowing him to gain as many positions as he did.

On the other end, Tyler Reddick had issues getting out of his pit stall. He dropped to 19th.

Outside of the top-10: Denny Hamlin (11th), Kyle Busch (12th), Brad Keselowski (16th)

Carson Hocevar took the lead from Kyle Larson with a full-send move in turn one. Larson lost second to William Byron.

Hocevar was told he is four laps short while Byron is two laps short. Hocevar was told he is doing a good job saving fuel with 42 laps to go.

Tyler Reddick is up to 10th after restarting 19th. He is one of the biggest movers since the restart:

  • AJ Allmendinger: +15 to 13th
  • Tyler Reddick: +10 to 9th
  • Ross Chastain +9 to 8th
  • Justin Haley: +6 to 25th
  • Michael McDowell: -9 to 12th
  • Chase Briscoe: -9 to 18th
  • Ty Dillon: -8 to 28th
  • Noah Gragson: -8 to 30th

According to Prime Video, third-place Kyle Larson is getting 5.8 mpg while drafting off of William Byron but keeping enough of a gap to minimize dirty air in the turns. Carson Hocevar is getting 4.7 mpg and can’t save enough out in front to make it to the end on fuel, he is told.

“So basically, I just go?” Hocevar said.

Denny Hamlin has jumped to fifth after restarting 11th. Hamlin took longer on pit road to fill up with fuel and was told the top-5 is concerned with fuel. He is “a half lap to the good” and doesn’t need to save fuel.

TOP-10, 20 TO GO: Hocevar, Byron, Larson, Gibbs, Hamlin, Buescher, Zane Smith, Ross Chastain, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick.

With 19 laps to go, Hocevar blew a left-rear tire and lost the lead to Byron. Hamlin took third from Gibbs with 15 to go and got Larson on the same lap. He has no fuel mileage concerns.

Larson dropped to fifth behind Gibbs and Buescher with six laps to go as Byron and Hamlin battled for the lead.

Denny Hamlin took the lead from William Byron after a wild battle with four laps to go after swapping sidedraft moves for several laps. He tried to become the 10th driver to win a Cup race after 700 starts.

Byron ran out coming to get the white flag.

STAGE TWO WINNER: William Byron

STAGE TWO TOP -10 (LAP 120): William Byron, Austin Cindric, Tyler Reddick, Ross Chastain, Ryan Preece, Bubba Wallace, Denny Hamlin, Ty Dillon, Erik Jones.

  • This is Byron’s seventh stage win of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season
    • Second only to Kyle Larson, who has eight stage wins
  • 10 lead changes through 120 laps:
    • Chase Briscoe: 0 to 11
    • William Byron: 12 to 34
    • Chris Buescher: 35 to 47
    • Denny Hamlin: 48
    • Ty Dillon: 49
    • Ryan Blaney: 50 to 56
    • Chase Elliott: 57 to 76
    • Christopher Bell: 76 to 77
    • Byron: 78 to 109
    • Austin Cindric: 110 to 119
    • Byron: 120 to stage end

Cautions breed cautions in racing, they say. Stage two exemplified just that.

Ryan Blaney led the field for the first restart of stage two. Blaney exited pit road first, ahead of Denny Hamlin, Carson Hocevar, Chris Buescher, Chase Elliott, Kyle Busch, William Byron, Bubba Wallace, Kyle Larson and Ross Chastain.

Polesitter Chase Briscoe dropped from fourth to 12th. Josh Berry dropped from fifth to 11th. Christopher Bell dropped from 22nd to 27th.

Chase Elliott made a huge four-wide move on Carson Hocevar and Denny Hamlin for second on lap 54. Elliott then went up and took the lead from Blaney three laps later.

On lap 58, Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin nearly reignited their rivalry. Hamlin ran to the inside of Larson for sixth when his car tightened up on him. Hamlin kept his car off of Larson’s but Hamlin dropped to 12th.

John Hunter Nemechek “snapped loose” exiting turn two on lap 61 and crashed with Noah Gragson. Josh Berry, AJ Allmendinger, Chase Briscoe, Riley Herbst, Austin Dillon, Joey Logano, Todd Gilliland, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Alex Bowman, Daniel Suarez, Cole Custer, Ty Dillon, Austin Cindric, Justin Haley, Ryan Preece, Cody Ware, Michael McDowell and Brad Keselowski pitted under caution. They will restart 17th through 34th.

The top-16 is: Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney, William Byron, Carson Hocevar, Ross Chastain, Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, Kyle Busch, Erik Jones, Chris Buescher, Denny Hamlin, Zane Smith, Christopher Bell, Shane van Gisbergen.

Alex Bowman crashed hard, head-on into the outside wall in turn two after Cole Custer, Daniel Suarez and Austin Cindric made contact with each other. The wreck happened 67 laps in and also collected Chase Briscoe.

MORE: Alex Bowman slips further in NASCAR Cup points after hard Michigan crash

Under caution on lap 69, Chase Elliott, Christopher Bell, Michael McDowell, Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Todd Gilliland, Ryan Preece, Austin Cindric and Justin Haley stayed out while everyone pitted to top off for fuel.

On pit road, Larson was caught speeding.

John Hunter Nemechek ran into trouble again, spinning on lap 73 — 47 laps to go in the stage. Larson jumped from 30th to 26th in the couple of laps run under green.

Top-10: Elliott, Bell, McDowell, Keselowski, Logano, William Byron, Haley, Gilliland, Preece, Tyler Reddick.

Denny Hamlin moved to 10th when Alan Gustafson called Elliott to pit road. They pitted on lap 47 and were going to need a lot of cautions and some miracles to make it to the end of the stage on fuel.

Christopher Bell restarted as the leader on lap 77 with Michael McDowell to the inside on the front row. McDowell raced Bell hard which allowed William Byron to take the lead on the first lap of the restart. Bell held on to second while McDowell dropped to sixth.

Todd Gilliland, who has hardly stood out this season, made waves on lap 85. He took fifth from Joey Logano with a slick move on the frontstretch.

13 laps after pitting, Elliott moved from 33rd to 22nd. Teammate Larson is up to 19th, in between Blaney and Buescher, as strategies have shaken up the outlook of the race.

TOP-10: Byron, Bell, Reddick, Keselowski, Gilliland, Preece, Hamlin, Hocevar, Logano, McDowell.

Front Row Motorsports is trying to fulfill the promise of their name as Zane Smith joined Gilliland in the top-10, taking ninth on lap 93. Smith restarted 18th.

Excluding Elliott (+12 spots to 20th), Smith is the biggest mover, in a positive direction, tied with Josh Berry (+9 to 22nd). Larson gained eight spots to 16th, Hocevar and Chastain +7 to seventh and 12th respectively.

Logano is slipping back, dropping to 14th on lap 97 and 19th on lap 100.

Meanwhile, Bubba Wallace is on the move, cracking the top-10 briefly before Cindric passed him.

Bell pitted on lap 106, stretching the fuel 59 laps. He had 13 caution laps helping him go that far.

Logano has dropped to 23rd as the caution flies on lap 109 for Blaney hitting the wall off of turn four and spinning. Bell will take the free pass.

“Well not exactly our lucky day but we will make it work,” crew chief Adam Stevens said on the radio.

“I think we know the car is good if we can ever get back to the front,” Bell said.

Austin Cindric, Austin Dillon and Chase Briscoe stayed out under caution. On pit road, William Byron, Tyler Reddick, Carson Hocevar, Denny Hamlin, Bubba Wallace, Ryan Preece, Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson pitted and restarted behind them. Brad Keselowski was caught speeding after running inside the top-10.

FanDuel mid-race favorites: Byron +380, Hamlin +500, Reddick +650, Elliott +800, Larson +950

On the restart Cindric held on to the lead after fiercely defending Tyler Reddick. Reddick had to fend off William Byron who took second and challenged Cindric.

With three laps to go in the stage, Byron drove hard into turn one and took the lead from Cindric. Cindric had a challenge from Carson Hocevar, a native of nearby Portage, he successfully defended.

Buescher won stage one. It was his first stage win of the season.

STAGE ONE WINNER: Chris Buescher

  • STAGE ONE TOP -10 (LAP 45): Chris Buescher, William Byron, Denny Hamlin, Chase Briscoe, Josh Berry, Ryan Blaney, Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace, Kyle Busch, Carson Hocevar.
    • This is Buescher’s first stage win of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season
    • Lap leaders: William Byron (23), Chase Briscoe (11), Chris Buescher (11)

Chase Briscoe led the NASCAR Cup Series field to the green flag and claimed lap one of 200 in the FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway.

Briscoe held off a challenge from front row sharer Kyle Busch to lead the first lap. Busch fell back to fourth after the inside lane didn’t have as much momentum and grip as the outside lane.

Tyler Reddick started in the rear of the field but jumped up to 19th in five laps — far exceeding the team’s expectation to be in the teens at the end of the 45-lap stage.

Briscoe lost the lead on lap 12 to William Byron. Byron worked him over for a few laps but finally caught the run just right off of turn two to get a side draft off of his left-rear quarter panel.

Call it deja vu but Chris Buescher called it taking the lead from William Byron after working him over for multiple laps and catching the right run on lap 36.

On lap 18, Reddick has stalled out in 20th. Up front, Chris Buescher is on the move, taking second from Briscoe. Briscoe is falling back as he lost third to teammate Denny Hamlin on lap 22.

Teammate Ty Gibbs is hurting. He started eighth and fell to 23rd on lap 37. Gibbs reported he is loose and had a vibration in the right-rear tire. Gibbs lost the most positions in the opening 45 laps losing 18 positions and dropping to 26th. Alex Bowman was next, dropping from 16th to 32nd.

Ryan Blaney is flying through the field. Blaney started 13th and easily passed Ty Gibbs for eighth on lap 19. Carson Hocevar is following him through the field after starting 14th.

Blaney is now up to sixth while Hocevar has fell to 10th on lap 41.

Daniel Suarez had a tire issue and pitted during the stage. He received the free pass during the caution for the first stage.

NASCAR Cup Series 2025 FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan Starting Lineup

  1. Chase Briscoe
  2. Kyle Busch
  3. Denny Hamlin
  4. William Byron
  5. Kyle Larson
  6. Chris Buescher
  7. Josh Berry
  8. Ty Gibbs
  9. Bubba Wallace
  10. Zane Smith
  11. Austin Cindric
  12. Tyler Reddick
    • Started from the rear due to a flat tire in practice
  13. Ryan Blaney
  14. Carson Hocevar
  15. Joey Logano
  16. Alex Bowman
  17. Chase Elliott
  18. Ty Dillon
  19. AJ Allmendinger
  20. Ross Chastain
  21. John Hunter Nemechek
  22. Erik Jones
  23. Ryan Preece
  24. Cole Custer
  25. Christopher Bell
  26. Shane van Gisbergen
  27. Brad Keselowski
  28. Austin Dillon
  29. Noah Gragson
  30. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  31. Justin Haley
  32. Michael McDowell
  33. Todd Gilliland
  34. Riley Herbst
  35. Daniel Suarez
  36. Cody Ware



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IHRA purchases Rockingham Speedway, plans long-term vision for ‘The Rock’

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The International Hot Rod Association (IHRA) has purchased the Rockingham Speedway, one of the “most iconic and storied venues in American motorsports.”

The move reportedly reflects IHRA’s commitment to preserving motorsports heritage while thoughtfully reinvesting in legendary racing properties. Known worldwide as The Rock, Rockingham Speedway has played a pivotal role in NASCAR and American racing history for decades and remains deeply tied to the identity and pride of the City of Rockingham and Richmond County.

“IHRA recognizes what Rockingham Speedway means to this community and to motorsports fans around the world,” said Darryl Cuttell, owner of IHRA. “This is a special place with a strong foundation. Our goal is to be good stewards of the facility, respect its history, and work collaboratively to bring quality racing and entertainment back to The Rock.”

IHRA intends to restore Rockingham Speedway to its former glory while enhancing the venue as a multi-use destination. Planned improvements include facility upgrades, expanded fan amenities, and the addition of entertainment elements such as concerts and festival-style experiences alongside marquee racing events.

The Easter weekend NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series event will build on the momentum generated in 2025, when the series’ return to Rockingham delivered strong attendance, national television exposure, and renewed excitement around the historic track. The April weekend is expected to feature a full slate of on-track activity, including the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series and ARCA Menards Series West, and fan-focused programming throughout the holiday weekend. 

As IHRA looks ahead, the organization anticipates collaborating with experienced event partners as part of its long-term planning for the facility. IHRA leadership noted that conversations are underway with respected industry operators, including Bob Sargent and Track Enterprises, as Rockingham Speedway is positioned for future events and opportunities beginning in 2026.

“For decades, The Rock has been one of our community’s most recognizable and celebrated tourism icons,” said Meghann Lambeth, executive director of the Richmond County Tourism Development Authority. “We’re proud to continue supporting Rockingham Speedway as it draws visitors to Rockin’ Richmond County under the new ownership of the International Hot Rod Association (IHRA).”

IHRA leadership emphasized that Rockingham Speedway will play a meaningful role in the organization’s broader strategy of revitalizing historic motorsports venues while creating sustainable, fan-focused experiences.

“This isn’t about changing what made Rockingham special,” Cuttell added. “It’s about investing in it, taking care of it, and making sure it continues to be a place where great racing and great memories are made.”

Additional announcements regarding the Easter weekend event, facility enhancements, and future schedules will be released in the coming months.

For Moore news delivered straight to your inbox, please click here to sign up for the free Sandhills Sentinel e-newsletter.

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Jeff Gordon Feels That Hendrick Motorsports’ Car Is Now on a Level-Playing Field With Rivals

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Chevrolet revealed its revised NASCAR Cup Series bodywork in November, shortly after Kyle Larson secured his second Cup championship at Phoenix. The updated body draws inspiration from a performance accessories package developed for the street-going version of the car. On track, the Camaro race body will now carry a taller hood dome, a reshaped front grille, and reworked rocker panels.

Chevrolet explained that those elements mirror the Carbon Performance Package Accessories Kit, which features carbon-fiber components on the hood and rockers, along with a new grille and front splitter. The changes have already sparked renewed belief inside the walls of Hendrick Motorsports.

According to Jeff Gordon, the updated Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 could prove transformative when it makes its competitive debut at the season-opening Cook Out Clash exhibition at Bowman Gray Stadium. The new body underwent on-track testing in November, and the early indicators seemingly left the organization encouraged.

“When you’ve done what we’ve done with our car and our teams and one of those things is winning a lot of races and winning a championship, I get really excited when I think we’ve got something that’s an upgrade. I don’t want to get too caught up in that because sometimes, it takes time to fine-tune that change.”

Gordon acknowledged that HMS had been trailing some rivals in aerodynamic efficiency, particularly when comparing HMS Chevrolet entries to competitors. With the revised body now in hand, he believes the gap has closed. “I feel like we’ve gotten ourselves on a level playing field with them, so I’m very excited about that,” he said.

Though the visual changes appear restrained, their purpose runs deeper because the engineers designed the refinements to enhance stability and trim drag, a combination that could sharpen performance as Chevrolet aims to extend its run of five consecutive manufacturer championships. Improved airflow management should translate into greater downforce and a steadier balance at speed.

Chevrolet first introduced the Camaro ZL1 to NASCAR competition in 2018, replacing the outgoing Chevy SS. The body evolved into the Camaro ZL1 1LE in 2020, before transitioning to a Next Gen version when the platform arrived in the Cup Series two years later. On the consumer side, Chevrolet closed the chapter on the passenger-car Camaro after the 2024 model year.

Dale Jr. is skeptical about the new Chevy model

While many teams welcome the update, Dale Earnhardt Jr. finds himself split between anticipation and caution. The JR Motorsports co-owner, who plans another Daytona 500 entry in 2026, admitted the announcement unsettled him. His unease does not stem from budget or preparation but from the uncertainty that accompanies a brand-new body.

From a financial perspective, Junior views the timing as favorable, offering a chance to compete without bleeding resources. Still, the unknowns are haunting. He noted that when manufacturers roll out a new body, early returns at Daytona rarely come easily. Teams must first learn how that shape behaves in race trim, and without inside knowledge of the finer details, he said he will have to take the results as they come.

History also supports his concern. Fresh body designs often force teams into an early-season learning curve, deciphering aerodynamic traits under pressure. The task extends beyond power or mechanical grip, demanding balance where airflow and stability intersect. Manufacturers also tend to prioritize intermediate tracks when refining new bodies, a reality that explains Junior’s apprehension heading into superspeedway competition.



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Verstappen maintains regular communication with Horner

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In the quiet weeks after the 2025 Formula 1 season ended—a heart-pounding campaign that saw Max Verstappen fall just two points short of a fifth consecutive world title—the Dutch superstar sat down for his traditional end-of-year interview with Viaplay.

–by Mark Cipolloni–

The lights were soft, the questions probing, and as always, Max was candid. But one topic stood out amid reflections on epic comebacks and near-misses: his relationship with Christian Horner, the man who had been Red Bull’s team principal for two decades until his shock sacking midway through the year.

The interviewer leaned in. “Christian’s departure was huge for the team. Do you still keep in touch with him?”

Max paused for a moment, a small smile crossing his face as he thought back to the battles they had shared—especially that ferocious 2021 title fight against Lewis Hamilton, where Horner had backed him through every controversy and corner.

“Yeah,” Max replied simply. “Every week. Every race.”

The room seemed to hold its breath. In a sport where loyalties shift like tire compounds, this was a revelation. Horner had been ousted in July, replaced by Laurent Mekies amid internal turmoil and a dip in performance. Many assumed bridges had been burned. But no.

“We text a lot,” Max continued. “On Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays during the weekends. He’s still my biggest fan—sending messages like ‘Good luck’ or ‘I’m believing in you.’ We talk about the races, sure, but also about everything we’ve been through together. Christian went through fire for me back in the day. Those moments, especially 2021… you never forget that.”

He spoke with genuine warmth, no bitterness toward the team’s decision to move on. “Things weren’t going well for a while—results, some unrest—and the shareholders wanted change. It’s business. But what we built? That’s personal.”

As the interview wrapped, Max’s words lingered like exhaust in the air. In the high-pressure world of F1, where team principals come and go and drivers chase glory under new banners, some connections prove unbreakable. Horner might no longer be in the garage, calling the shots from the pit wall, but every race weekend, a buzz on Max’s phone reminded him: the bond was still there, fueling him forward into 2026 and beyond.

And in a season of dramatic twists, perhaps the most enduring story wasn’t on the track — it was the quiet loyalty between a four-time champion and the boss who helped forge him.



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Roger Penske pens special statement as Team Penske enters landmark season – Motorsport – Sports

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The sun has risen on a landmark year for Team Penske, which will be celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2026.

Kickstarting this momentous occasion, team founder and owner Roger Penske penned a touching letter to team members and fans, taking a moment to step back and thank their supporters in all racing series’ for their “unwavering support” throughout the team’s trophy-laden existence.

The 88-year-old, who raced in Formula 1, the 12 Hours of Sebring, and the 24 Hours of Le Mans prior to founding his own team, will soon see his NASCAR, IndyCar, IMSA, and FIA World Endurance Championship teams embark on a new season, throughout which they will be relying on what he described as “unmatched” loyalty and “unparalleled” dedication.

“Fans are the lifeblood of our sport, and the passion and fervor you display are key to driving Team Penske forward each season,” Penske said. “From Daytona to Indianapolis, Darlington to Long Beach, Detroit to Miami and many more, you continue to amaze us with your terrific and steady support.

“Professional sports will always have its ups and downs, but your support has been unwavering. We remain as committed to you as you are to us.”

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Penske went on to reflect on his team’s humble beginnings in Pennsylvania, first taking to the track in March 1966 with the 12 Hours of Sebring, where the team’s No. 9 entry finished first in class and ninth overall, before entering the 24 Hours of Daytona that June, again topping their class in the No. 6 with a 12th-place overall finish.

“I’ve said this many times, but the real key to Team Penske’s success and longevity is the people,” Penske wrote. “We call it our human capital. It is the magic behind 48 championships, over 650 wins, 700 pole positions, 20 Indianapolis 500 victories, a win in Formula 1, three 24 Hours of Daytona wins and five NASCAR Cup Series championships since 2012.

“More than 100 talented drivers, countless crew members, teammates and partners, along with you, the fans, have all helped to propel those accomplishments, among others.”

Despite this laundry list of remarkable accomplishments, Penske believes “the best is still to come,” making it clear that the team will not be resting on its laurels. “My father taught me the phrase Effort Equals Results many years ago,” he said. “It will take hard work to continue the legacy of so many that have embodied that phrase over the years.

“From everyone at Team Penske, we thank you for being an integral part of our success. Your trust in our people and belief in our culture is at the heart of our story. We could not do it without each of you.”

Penske’s landmark season is soon set to kick off with the Rolex 24 at Daytona, running from January 24 through the 25. The team will then return to the historic Florida venue the following month for NASCAR’s Cup Series opener on the 15th with the Daytona 500. However, it will first take part in the annual non-points scoring season opener Cook Out Clash, which will be held at Bowman Gray Stadium on February 1.



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Ross Chastain Explains How He Landed Sponsorship From $125 Billion Worth Beverage Giant

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Anheuser-Busch is one of the biggest sponsors in the history of NASCAR for over decade 2014 Cup series champion Kevin Harvick was their main man. But in 2024, the Busch Light Marketing team faced a challenge, as they had to pick the right successor for ‘the closer’ after the veteran announced retirement in 2023.

Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain was the racer who won the sponsorship. Since then, the No:1 Chevy has been sporting the iconic white and blue paint scheme. Talking about it recently, the star driver highlighted how he won the sponsorship by taking advantage of Kevin Harvick retiring. Him always being a Busch Light fan made it an easier pitch.

We wanted Busch Light. We knew Kevin Harvick was retiring, and we wanted to make our case to him. I drank Busch Light before they sponsored me. I was going to drink it whether they sponsored me or not. So, that made the first conversation really easy.

Ross Chastain via NASCAR on YouTube.

This passion the Trackhouse Racing driver has about the partnership was evident in his statement announcing the partnership ahead of the 2024 season. He asserted that this is a sponsorship relation that is close to his hear and saw it as an opportunity to help the hard-working people of US enjoy a clod one after their job.

This sponsorship means so much to me as the brand not only supports NASCAR, but also places value and extends their support to communities that are close to my heart—the humble, hard-working people across the U.S. who enjoy cracking a cold one after an honest day’s work.

Ross Chastain said during the sponsorship announcement.

Ross Chastain plans holiday trip to his teammate’s homeland

In the same NASCAR YouTube session, when asked about his travel bucket list, Ross Chastain pointed out that he always wanted to visit Australia, but now he has changed his goal to visit New Zealand. This is because of the friendship he developed with his Kiwi teammate Shane van Gisbergen.

Shane van Gisbergen and Ross Chastain (via NASCAR)
Shane van Gisbergen and Ross Chastain (via nascar.com)

I think, well, I would like to go to Australia — that was always my goal — but now maybe New Zealand. So, I’ve told Shane I want to come visit him this off-season.

Ross Chastain said.

They had talked about having a visit during the off-season, but it depends of SVG schedule. Since the Florida native isn’t that good with geography, something he hilariously admitted, he wants the three times Supercars champion’s help.

I don’t know if we’ll actually pull the trigger on it, but I want to do it. I don’t really know the difference between Australia and New Zealand, so I told Shane to show me the ways over there.

Ross Chastain added.

The comments from the veterans shows he would love to have the opportunity and maybe Trackhouse can use it as a team building trip involving Conor Zilisch. This can also be a content mine for them the grow their brand.

Also Read: Kyle Busch Sets Clear NASCAR Goals for Son Brexton Busch



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Ricky Thornton Jr. Racing For Adam Family At Wild West Shootout

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Adam Family Motorsports announced today it will field a Longhorn Chassis for Ricky Thornton Jr. of Chandler, Ariz., during Jan. 10-18’s Wild West Shootout at Central Arizona Raceway in Casa Grande, Ariz., which brings the miniseries to Thornton’s home state for the first time since 2021.

Daniel Adam, the son of team owner Joe Adam, will pilot the team’s Rocket XR1.2 Chassis alongside Thornton throughout the Southwest miniseries. The connection with Thornton and Adam Family Motorsports likely came together after the team recently announced the addition of sponsor Hoker Trucking, a long-time supporter of Thornton throughout his racing career.

Adam’s team also cited a longstanding friendship with Bobby Koehler of Koehler Motorsports, Thornton’s usual team owner who gave the temporary partnership his blessing, allowing Thornton’s Anthony Burroughs-led Koehler Motorsports team to focus on preparing for Georgia-Florida Speedweeks.

Thornton, 35, will begin his stint as Daniel Adam’s teammate in the Wild West Shootout’s $25,000-to-win opener on Sat., Jan. 10. Thornton is also entered in Jan. 12-17’s Chili Bowl Nationals, an indoor midget event at the Tulsa (Okla.) Expo Center where he will compete in at least one midweek qualifying night preliminary program and could end up missing Jan. 17’s Wild West Shootout show if he’s in position to make the same day’s Chili Bowl finale.

The six-race Wild West Shootout includes $10,000-to-win programs on Jan. 11,, Jan. 14, Jan. 16 and Jan. 17 before concluding with a second $25,000-to-win event on Jan. 18.

Both the Wild West Shootout and Chili Bowl Nationals will be live-streamed on FloRacing.





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