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Team change brings challenges to McDowell – The Morning Call

Switching teams has created a challenge for Michael McDowell. After seven seasons in the No. 34 Ford with Front Row Motorsports, the 40-year-old driver from Glendale, Arizona, is in his first season in the No. 71 Chevrolet of Spire Motorsports. That has meant learning new people, new processes and a new manufacturer. “The cars drive […]

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Switching teams has created a challenge for Michael McDowell.

After seven seasons in the No. 34 Ford with Front Row Motorsports, the 40-year-old driver from Glendale, Arizona, is in his first season in the No. 71 Chevrolet of Spire Motorsports. That has meant learning new people, new processes and a new manufacturer.

“The cars drive a little different, they feel a little different. So what I needed last year versus what I need this year has been a little bit of difference,” McDowell said. “That’s honestly been a bit of a surprise, but that’s part of that working out process. We’re learning those things. We’re learning those tendencies and trends that maybe aren’t the same as we’ve experienced the past few years.

“But all in all I’m happy with the progress. I’m not happy where we’re at as far as points and finishes. But that’s because as a racer you want more. You feel like you should be doing more. But I feel like everything is in place to be successful. I’m happy where I’m at, happy with the direction we’re going. Just wish we would get there a little faster.”

On Sunday, McDowell and the rest of the NASCAR Cup drivers will compete in the series’ first race in Mexico City at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez. Then, they head to Pocono Raceway for next Sunday’s Great American Getaway 400 Presented by VISITPA.com. It is part of a NASCAR tripleheader weekend at the 2.5-mile triangular track in Long Pond that includes the Craftsman Truck Series Miller Tech Battery 200 on Friday and the Xfinity Series Explore the Pocono Mountains 250 on Saturday.

Through 15 races, McDowell has one pole at Las Vegas and one top-10 finish — a seventh at Charlotte. His average finish is 19.1 and he is tied for 22nd in the standings, 37 points in back of Kyle Busch for the 16th and final cutoff spot to qualify for the playoffs over the final 10 races.

“All in all, with the speed we’ve had and some of the results we’ve gotten, I feel really good about where we’re at,” McDowell said. “We’ve had some bad weeks, no doubt about it, some off weeks — we call those character building. There have been some real challenges. At the same time, our car has had a lot of speed. So I feel good about where we’re at.

“Now, we don’t have a race win under our belt and I wish we had more top 10s and top fives to show for it. But we’re still early in the process. I feel like we’re one week away from being great. This is a good week to be great. That’s the mindset we have. Keep building and keep pushing forward.”

This could be the week for McDowell on the road course in Mexico City. The second of his two career Cup Series wins came on the road course at Indianapolis in 2023. His other victory occurred in the 2021 Daytona 500. On Friday, McDowell was the fastest car in the first practice session. On Saturday, he qualified fifth.

If not at Mexico City, then Pocono could possibly be McDowell’s breakthrough. In 22 career starts there, he has two top-10 finishes: eighth in June 2020 and sixth in July 2022. He also started second in the June 2021 race.

“I’ve had some good runs there, some not good runs there,” McDowell said. “But I love coming to Pocono. I feel like the last few years have been solid for me there. I feel like I find a rhythm there quickly. Some places just click and Pocono for me has always been a place that’s just clicked.”

He has a lot of support there, too. Besides Phoenix, McDowell said he has the most amount of fans at Pocono than any other track.

“I really don’t know why,” McDowell said. “It’s something I look forward to. The line of people standing along the fence as you walk out to the garage. There’s probably five or six people that I recognize every year that have been there for 20 years and I say Hi to and make a connection with. It’s just a place I enjoy going to.”

With its three different corners, drivers and teams vary in their philosophies on which one they feel is more important at Pocono. McDowell said you don’t have to be the best in any of them, but you have to be decent in all of them.

“I feel like it’s a compromise place where you’re going to have to live with being a little bit free here or a little bit tight there,” McDowell said. “You have to adapt well, find your rhythm. It is a rhythm race track, but it also is long straightaways with fast corners that challenge you every lap to live on the edge. It is one of those places that, like Indy, where you go, ‘I’m just going to commit to sailing it off in here and I hope it sticks’ because I know this straightaway is so important and so long. You just do that lap after lap after lap. There’s a lot to pushing yourself and being comfortably uncomfortable all day long.”

NASCAR AT POCONO SCHEDULE

Friday, June 20: Craftsman Truck Series practice, 12:35-1:30 p.m.; qualifying, 1:40-2:30 p.m.; Miller Tech Battery 200, 5 p.m.

Saturday, June 21: Xfinity Series practice, 10-10:55 a.m.; Xfinity qualifying, 11:05 a.m.-noon; Cup Series practice, 12:35-1:35 p.m.; Cup qualifying, 1:45-2:30 p.m.; Xfinity Explore the Pocono Mountains 250, 3:30 p.m.

Sunday, June 22: Cup Series, The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA.COM, 2 p.m.



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23XI and Front Row Denied Rehearing, Clash Returning to Bowman Gray and More: NASCAR News Flash

It has already been a hectic week in the NASCAR world. From a wild racing weekend on the streets of Chicago, to some major breaking news stories. This is the NASCAR News Flash for July 7th through the 12th. 23XI and Front Row Denied Rehearing, Clash Returning to Bowman Gray and More: NASCAR News Flash […]

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It has already been a hectic week in the NASCAR world. From a wild racing weekend on the streets of Chicago, to some major breaking news stories. This is the NASCAR News Flash for July 7th through the 12th.

23XI and Front Row Denied Rehearing, Clash Returning to Bowman Gray and More: NASCAR News Flash

There were plenty of crazy moments in the closing moments in Chicago. You had quite the drama between several different drivers. Including a heated exchange between Joey Logano and Ross Chastain. That, however, might not be the biggest news of the week.  23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports received some not-so-great news. Not to mention, the Clash will return to the ‘Madhouse’ for 2026.

NASHVILLE, TN – JUNE 26: Bubba Wallace 23 23XI Racing Root Insurance Toyota talks with Denny Hamlin 11 Joe Gibbs Racing FedEx Office Toyota during driver introductions prior to the running of the 2nd annual NASCAR, Motorsport, USA Cup Series Ally 400 on June 26, 2022 at Nashville Super Speedway in Nashville, TN. Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire

23XI and Front Row Motorsports Rehearing Denied, Won’t Be Chartered Teams Come Dover

While there have been plenty of headlines surrounding 23XI and FRM’s standing as chartered race teams this season. They will have to face a real reality come next week at Dover. A massive bombshell dropped for both teams this week. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals denied the teams’ request for a rehearing in their lawsuit against the Sport.

That now means, as early as the Dover Race Weekend, both teams’ three cars will have to qualify their way into the races as open cars. Affecting drivers Bubba Wallace (No. 23), Tyler Reddick (No. 45), and Riley Herbst (No. 35) from 23XI.  Noah Gragson (No. 4), Todd Gilliland (No. 34), and Zane Smith (No. 38) from FRM are also in a tough situation.

It would also mean that FRM and the 23XI team, co-owned by Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin, would make less money than the chartered teams. It also begs the question of what becomes of those six charters in the future.

In a statement from Jeffery Kessler, Attorney for both teams in this case, cited the disappointment in the lack of a full rehearing, and that the teams are still committed to competing every week.

” We are disappointed by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision to deny our request for a full rehearing,” Kessler said. ” This decision has no bearing on the strength of our antitrust case, which we look forward to presenting at trial. We are committed to racing this season as we continue to fight for more competitive and fair terms for all teams to ensure the future of the sport, and remain fully confident in our case.”

At this point, it pretty much makes all six drivers expendable in a way. Each has proven to be a very capable driver, so it will be interesting to see what happens over the next several weeks. It certainly makes things much more difficult for all who are battling for the 2025 NASCAR playoffs at this rate.

Clash Returns to Bowman Gray for 2026

In a statement shared on Wednesday, NASCAR officials announced that the return of the Cook Out Clash exhibition race. The first race of the 2026 NASCAR season will once again be at the historic Bowman Gray Stadium. Joey Dennewitz, the NASCAR Regional’s Managing Director was happy to announce the return of the event for the second-straight year.

” We wrote a new chapter in the storied history of motorsports at Bowman Gray Stadium with the Cook Out Clash this year,” Dennewitz said. ” As NASCAR’s first weekly race track, we are proud to bring the 2026 Cook Out Clash back to the original home to grassroots racing. Thanks to the City of Winston-Salem and Winston-Salem State University for their continued partnership at ‘The Madhouse.’”

The first run their this season did not disappoint, and it saw NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver, Chase Elliott, emerge victorious. Which made him a perfect way for NASCAR to promote the return in a promotional video on Social Media.

 

Logano vs Chastain Rivalry Should Be Fun

A very heated exchange occurred following Sunday’s race in Chicago. Ross Chastain and Joey Logano had a bit of a run-in in the closing laps of the race, and the pair exchanged words after the event. Though you couldn’t make out exactly what was said, during their moment of talking to each other. After Logano walked away, he claimed Chastain admitted to wrecking him on purpose and called for Ross to be fined, to the media that was walking with him.

It also appears that Chastain’s onboard camera and audio caught him admitting he did it on purpose. NASCAR did announce there will be no penalties for rough driving from Chicago, so Joey will just have to get even with Ross. It just seems like stubborn drivers butting heads in all reality. Which should make for a fun rest of the season for the pair.

 

Plenty of storylines as NASCAR heads to Wine Country and Sonoma Raceway.

Read Next: What Future Do Street Courses Have In NASCAR?

Main Photo: Sean Gardner, Getty Images

Recording Date: 2/2/2025

 





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Hendrick Motorsports Media Advance: Sonoma – Speedway Digest

5 KYLE LARSON  Age: 32 (July 31, 1992)  Hometown: Elk Grove, California  Last Week: 13th (Chicago Street Course)  Crew Chief: Cliff Daniels  Standings: 3rd Twitter Instagram Facebook  No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet      2025   Cup Career   Sonoma Races 19   385   10 Wins 3   32   2 Poles 1   22   4 […]

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5 KYLE LARSON

Age: 32 (July 31, 1992)

Hometown: Elk Grove, California

Last Week: 13th (Chicago Street Course)

Crew Chief: Cliff Daniels

Standings: 3rd

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No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet

 

 

2025

 

Cup Career

 

Sonoma

Races

19

 

385

 

10

Wins

3

 

32

 

2

Poles

1

 

22

 

4

Top 5

9

 

128

 

2

Top 10

12

 

194

 

4

Laps Led

851

 

10,107

 

113

Stage Wins

8

 

70

 

3

Average Finish

12.7

 

14.0

 

13.0

Kyle Larson comes home to race at Sonoma Raceway. The Elk Grove, California, native grew up approximately 80 miles from the raceway.
Larson ranks second among active drivers with the most NASCAR Cup Series road course wins (six). Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott is the only driver with more (seven).
The 32-year-old is tied for the most road course wins in the Next Gen era with three.
Larson is tied for the second-most poles at Sonoma (four), trailing only Jeff Gordon (five)
The driver of the No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevy has the best average all-time starting position (3.8) at Sonoma in 10 starts.
Larson and Denny Hamlin lead all drivers with nine top-five finishes in 2025.
Larson is ranked third in the points standings just 19 points behind teammate William Byron. He is projected first in the playoff standings.

 


9 CHASE ELLIOTT

Age: 29 (Nov. 28, 1995)

Hometown: Dawsonville, Georgia

Last week: 16th (Chicago Street Course)

Crew Chief: Alan Gustafson

Standings: 2nd

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No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet

 

 

2025

 

Cup Career

 

Sonoma

Races

19

 

341

 

8

Wins

1

 

19

 

0

Poles

0

 

12

 

0

Top 5

6

 

110

 

4

Top 10

10

 

181

 

6

Laps Led

136

 

5,662

 

52

Stage Wins

0

 

38

 

0

Average Finish

10.6

 

12.8

 

11.1

Heading to Sonoma Raceway this weekend, Chase Elliott is second in the NASCAR Cup Series regular season points standings, 13 markers behind teammate William Byron.
Making his 341st Cup Series start last weekend at the Chicago Street Course, Elliott surpassed Dale Earnhardt Jr. as the driver with the fourth-most starts for Hendrick Motorsports.
Elliott’s average finish of 10.58 in 2025 leads the series and is also his second best all-time through a season’s first 19 races. He is the only driver to finish in the top 20 in every event so far. It’s the second straight season he’s headed into the 20th event having completed all but one lap.
The Dawsonville, Georgia, native has scored more points (155) than any other driver over the last four races. His average finish of 6.3 in that span is also tops.
Elliott has four consecutive top-10 finishes at Sonoma, tied for the longest active streak. He’s won at five road courses in his career, most of all drivers, but is still looking for his first win on the Napa Valley road course. He’s led laps in each of the last five Sonoma Cup Series events, tied for the record.
The 2020 Cup Series champion has the most road course wins among active drivers (seven) and the third all-time behind NASCAR Hall of Famers Jeff Gordon (nine) and Tony Stewart (eight). His average finish of 9.03 leads active drivers (minimum four starts).
In the Next Gen era on road courses, Elliott leads the series in top-five finishes (10), and his 12 top 10s are third most. His 147 laps led rank third and 610 points earned rank second.

 


24 WILLIAM BYRON

Age: 27 (Nov. 29, 1997)

Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Last Week: 40th (Chicago Street Course)

Crew Chief: Rudy Fugle

Standings: 1st

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No. 24 Valvoline Chevrolet

 

 

2025

 

Cup Career

 

Sonoma

Races

19

 

271

 

6

Wins

1

 

14

 

0

Poles

2

 

15

 

0

Top 5

7

 

61

 

0

Top 10

10

 

114

 

1

Laps Led

769

 

3,747

 

26

Stage Wins

7

 

30

 

1

Average Finish

14.2

 

15.1

 

22.0

William Byron is in the midst of a career year, leading the NASCAR Cup Series points standings for 16 out of 19 weeks, including presently by 13 markers.
Through the same stretch of 19 races, the Charlotte, North Carolina, native has paced the field for 769 laps across 13 events, the most races with a lap led by a driver and second most laps total.
In the Next Gen era on road courses, Byron has two wins (fifth most), 138 laps led (fourth most) and has collected 542 points.
In the last 10 road course races, the 27-year-old has two wins, five top-five finishes and seven top 10s, all tied for the most. He also has led 110 laps in that same span, tied for the second most.

 


48 ALEX BOWMAN

Age: 32 (April 25, 1993)

Hometown: Tucson, Arizona

Last Week: 8th (Chicago Street Course)

Crew Chief: Blake Harris

Standings: 10th

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No. 48 Ally Chevrolet

 

 

2025

 

Cup Career

 

Sonoma

Races

19

 

344

 

8

Wins

0

 

8

 

0

Poles

2

 

7

 

0

Top 5

4

 

44

 

0

Top 10

10

 

106

 

2

Laps Led

157

 

1,525

 

0

Stage Wins

0

 

7

 

0

Average Finish

17.4

 

19.2

 

17.3

Alex Bowman sits 14th in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoff standings, holding a 39-point cushion above the elimination point.
The Tucson, Arizona, native has finished inside the top 10 in each of the last three road course races in 2025, making him one of only two drivers to do so.
Bowman’s average finish on road courses in 2025 is seventh, which ranks second among full-time drivers.
Bowman’s best finish across eight starts at Sonoma Raceway is ninth, achieved twice (2018, 2021).
In the Next Gen era, Bowman has accumulated six top-five finishes and nine top 10s on road courses.
With his eighth-place finish at Chicago, Bowman advanced to the third round of the NASCAR In-Season Tournament and will compete against Ty Dillon.
For this weekend’s Sonoma race, the Best Friends Animal shelter partner Friends of Upland Animal Shelter, in Sonoma, California.
Ally and HendrickCars.com are teaming up again to give fans the chance to win prizes with this year’s “Open Road Sweepstakes.” Fans can win VIP experiences at various races throughout the season and one lucky winner will hit the open road in a Chevy Silverado LT Trail Boss with an Airstream camper. Fans can stop by the Ally Fan Zone to enter the sweepstakes in-person and check out the camper. Fans can also enter at ally.com/sweepstakes/nascar.

 


HENDRICK
MOTORSPORTS /
Hendrick Motorsports

 

2025

 

All-Time

 

Sonoma

Races

18

 

1,400

 

35

Wins

5

 

317*

 

8*

Poles

5

 

258*

 

10*

Top 5

26*

 

1,305*

 

36*

Top 10

42*

 

2,229*

 

63*

Laps Led

1,913*

 

84,225*

 

830*

Stage Wins

15*

 

130

 

5*


*Most all time
**Tied for most all time

With Alex Bowman’s eighth-place run at the Chicago Street Course on Sunday, Hendrick Motorsports remains the only organization to place at least one car in the top 10 of every event in 2025. That streak goes back 27 events to last season, the longest such run of any team in the Next Gen era.
The Hendrick Motorsports engine shop has won 15 combined poles (seven in the NASCAR Cup Series and eight in the Xfinity Series) and 16 combined races (five in the Cup Series, 10 in the Xfinity Series and the preseason Clash) this year. Its 39 victories in regular season Cup Series events are the most in the Next Gen era.
Hendrick Motorsports has led 1,913 laps through 19 events this year, accounting for 40% of all circuits completed in the Cup Series and more than any other team by 953.
Hendrick Motorsports enters this weekend’s race at Sonoma Raceway as the all-time leader in wins (eight), poles (10), top fives (36), top 10s (63) laps led (830) and stage wins (five).
Five of the last 10 road course races have gone to Hendrick Motorsports with Bowman, Kyle Larson (twice) and William Byron (twice) all winning in that span. Larson is the defending winner at Sonoma Raceway.

 


QUOTABLE /

Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet, on racing in his home state of California: “It’s always special to go back home. I love having friends and family at the track, especially the friends that don’t typically get to go to the track. We have dominated there in the past – hopefully we’ll be just as good and catch Jeff Gordon (on Sonoma Raceway’s all-time wins list). It will feel hotter in Sonoma with the race being in July. The pavement will be a little bit slicker. I personally prefer the race to be in July, more enjoyable for everyone that comes into town and experience Napa (California).”

Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet, on Sonoma Raceway: “Sonoma is a track I always enjoy going to. Last year, I thought that we had really good pace, and our road course program this season has been strong, so that gives me confidence heading into this weekend. This entire stretch of races coming up, really, I think could be good for us. We’re within reach of the regular season championship, so running well and maximizing points is going to be really important.”

William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet, on the team as it heads to Sonoma Raceway: “It’s been a rough couple weeks for our No. 24 team. We can’t get down though. We’ve been fast at every track and just had something, both in and out of our control, happen. Hopefully this weekend can just be a smooth one so we can get back in the groove we were in. I know everyone on the team has the same mindset, and no one is giving up.”

Alex Bowman, driver of the No. 48 Chevrolet, on Sonoma Raceway: “Sonoma’s one of those places that really challenges you as a driver. It’s technical, it’s physical, and every lap you’re just trying to stay mistake-free. We are coming off of a solid race from Chicago. I feel like we got our bad luck out of the way and need to be consistent here on out to make sure that we stay off the cutoff line. We’re a team capable of winning it just hasn’t been in the cards for us yet.”

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Chase Elliott replacement confirmed at Hendrick Motorsports for Sonoma

After finishing in second place at Darlington Raceway back in April, Chase Elliott returned to the NASCAR Xfinity Series behind the wheel of the No. 17 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports, the team for which he competes full-time in the Cup Series, at Pocono Raceway a few weeks ago. He finished in fourth place after trouble […]

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After finishing in second place at Darlington Raceway back in April, Chase Elliott returned to the NASCAR Xfinity Series behind the wheel of the No. 17 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports, the team for which he competes full-time in the Cup Series, at Pocono Raceway a few weeks ago.

He finished in fourth place after trouble and contact with Justin Allgaier on a late restart ultimately knocked him from the lead. As it turns out, the No. 17 car was taken back to the NASCAR R&D Center in Concord, North Carolina, and Rick Hendrick’s team ended up being slapped with several hefty penalties due to a technical infraction.

The No. 17 Chevrolet hasn’t been back since, and Elliott does not have any plans to drive it throughout the remainder of the 2025 season. But this weekend, it is set to return, and it’s the driver with the most starts behind the wheel of the car so far this year who is set to drive it once again.

Corey Day is set to replace Elliott for this Saturday afternoon’s Pit Boss/FoodMaxx 250 at Sonoma Raceway.

The 19-year-old Clovis, California native has made three starts so far this season. He made his Xfinity Series debut at Martinsville Speedway and finished in 21st place, and he added finishes of 16th at Texas Motor Speedway and 11th at Nashville Superspeedway.

Day is effectively set to become the car’s primary driver moving forward, even though he won’t compete every weekend.

In addition to this weekend’s 79-lap race around the 12-turn, 1.99-mile (3.203-kilometer) Sonoma, California road course, he is set to drive the No. 17 entry in the upcoming race at Iowa Speedway, plus the playoff races at Bristol Motor Speedway, the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Martinsville Speedway, and Phoenix Raceway.

Rajah Caruth and Jake Finch are expected to drive the car at some point before the season ends as well, but schedules have not yet been confirmed for either one of them.

William Byron and Kyle Larson have each driven the No. 17 Chevrolet twice this year, like Elliott, and Alex Bowman has driven it once. Nobody else is currently lined up to drive it later this year.

As for this weekend’s race, tune in to the CW Network at 4:30 p.m. ET on Saturday, July 12 for the live broadcast of the Pit Boss/FoodMaxx 250 from Sonoma Raceway. Start a free trial of FuboTV now if you have not already had the chance to do so!



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F1 movie seems familiar. Brackets ain’t for NASCAR. Bad losses linger

It’s been a while since we virtually dipped into the virtual mail bag. Not sure what we’ll accomplish, but I assure you this is the only place you’ll find Robert Redford, Ty Dillon and either of those golfing Molinari brothers in the same dispatch. F1 movie review HEY, WILLIE! I enjoyed your column about Brad […]

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It’s been a while since we virtually dipped into the virtual mail bag.

Not sure what we’ll accomplish, but I assure you this is the only place you’ll find Robert Redford, Ty Dillon and either of those golfing Molinari brothers in the same dispatch.

F1 movie review

HEY, WILLIE!

I enjoyed your column about Brad Pitt’s F1 movie, but didn’t really get your personal review.

BRADLEY

HEY, BRAD!

I’ve been tossing around the term “entertainingly formulaic.” 

I’m not big on show-folk, so I don’t see a lot of modern movies, but I recognized that story line: Aging hero returns, wins the day, wins the girl, hits the road again — it was a vagabond racer this time, but it also works with aging gunfighter, ballplayer, detective, whatever.

It was an hour or two later when I realized, “I just watched the four-wheeled version of ‘The Natural,’ ” including the similarity between Brad Pitt and long-ago Robert Redford. Those two were put on Earth to humble the rest of us and our merely handsome selves.

Here’s a NASCAR In-Season Challenge idea

HEY, WILLIE!

NASCAR’s bracket event has turned into a dud. I believe you said that was highly possible because of everything that can happen to ruin a driver’s race. I agree.

Ty Dillon knocks out Denny Hamlin just because Hamlin got wrecked while Dillon didn’t. If the two drivers went head-to-head without interference, there’s no way Hamlin would lose.

So I started thinking. Why not set aside a day and race them all, one-on-one?

STEVE

HEY, STEVE!

Not the worst idea I’ve heard today. If Hamlin and Dillon lined up for a few laps at, say, Darlington or Richmond, Hamlin would win every time he didn’t blow a Goodyear or miss a shift.

Have the next two ready to roll as soon as they’re done, and so on, and we could blow through a 32-car tournament bracket in a couple hours. 

The more I think about it, the more I like it. I’ll pass along the idea, but, meanwhile, I’m gonna keep lobbying to move the preseason Clash to the Seekonk Figure 8 track in lower Mass.

My Mount Rushmore of most depressing sports outcomes

HEY, WILLIE!

Long-time reader here from Indianapolis.

What would be your Mount Rushmore of the most depressing sport outcomes you’ve witnessed/experienced?

Tyrese Haliburton’s Achilles in Game 7 of the NBA finals got me thinking about that, and I would like to know yours since you’re a seasoned vet of sports watching.

KYLE IN INDY

HEY, KYLE!

That’s a good one but a tough one. I have to break mine up into two mountains, one for personal rooting interest and another for personal financial interest.

First, rooting interest …

∎ The memory is hazy because my cerebral cortex was still forming, but anyone with the fuzziest memory would list the 1972 Gold Medal basketball game between our Yanks and the cheating Soviets.

∎ Also a bit fuzzy, but the Raiders’ “Sea of Hands” win over the Dolphins in the 1974 playoffs. A possible three-peat was gone for the Fins, who were our state’s only big-league team at the time.

∎ The history books and highlight reels are still in love with Tom Watson’s miracle chip that won him the 1982 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. But if you were a Jack Nicklaus fan, you still cringe.

∎ Magic Johnson’s mini-sky hook to beat the Celtics in Game 4 of the ’87 finals.

Some World Series games that make my honorable mention: Game 4 in ’79, Game 6 in ’86, and Game 7 in ’91, though I’ve forgiven Lonnie Smith for that one. Oh, and the rained-out Game 1 of the ’82 NLCS. Do your own research.

Now, those that hurt the wallet more than the heart …

∎ Ross Chastain punting AJ Allmendinger at the COTA road course three years ago on the final lap (AJ, NASCAR’s best road-racer at that time, went off at shockingly tall odds that some of us couldn’t resist).

∎ Francesco Molinari joining the line of guys drowning their 2019 Masters hopes in Rae’s Creek.

∎ Also in 2019, and to show you my willingness to shop far and wide for a “sure thing:” Morgan State 34, Delaware State 3. This one can’t be forgotten because I dragged others down with me and therefore, as I said, it can’t be forgotten because they won’t let it.

∎ Does the entire 1980s at the old Daytona dog track count as one heartbreak? 

Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com



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Second life for used tires from NASCAR Chicago race

During a weekend of hot, high-speed friction against the asphalt of the NASCAR Chicago Street Race course, thousands of tires burn out and wear down. After a few dozen laps, they lose their grip and become obsolete. But their life cycle doesn’t end there. Each NASCAR race weekend, most of the 3,000 tires provided by […]

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During a weekend of hot, high-speed friction against the asphalt of the NASCAR Chicago Street Race course, thousands of tires burn out and wear down. After a few dozen laps, they lose their grip and become obsolete.

But their life cycle doesn’t end there. Each NASCAR race weekend, most of the 3,000 tires provided by Goodyear Racing become a fraction of the tens of thousands recycled annually by Liberty Tire Recycling. Before state laws prohibited it, used tires would be landfilled or stored in stockpiles, said Rick Heinrich, Goodyear’s product manager for NASCAR.

“And at a certain point, that’s got to be dealt with. We came to the realization that there had to be a new use for these tires, and that’s where we’re at today,” he said. “When they’re not usable anymore on the street, they’re very suitable when they’re turned into a different type of product to make other things, things that are all around us.”

A crew member releases tire air for Katherine Legge (78)'s team during the NASCAR Xfinity Series The Loop 110 on July 5, 2025. (Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune)
A crew member releases tire air for Katherine Legge (78)’s team during the NASCAR Xfinity Series The Loop 110 on July 5, 2025. (Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune)

In 2024, a total of 215 million tires — including 92,588 from NASCAR — were recycled by Liberty, a company based in North Carolina that collects and processes racing, as well as auto and truck tires, from all across North America, according to spokesperson John Dowdy.

The ideal would be to reuse a tire for the rest of its life, Dowdy said, which is possible when retailers resell gently used auto or truck tires for less than new ones. But, after being used, racing tires don’t usually have any more life left in them, at least in their original form.

At a Liberty facility in Concord, a suburb of Charlotte in North Carolina, NASCAR racing tires are shredded into quarter-sized chips that can be used as aggregate in roadbeds, landfill liners and landscaping products.

“It’s a perfect example of sustainability,” Heinrich said. “You’re taking stuff that’s worn out, you can’t use it again for what it was originally built for, but it goes into something else. Nothing is wasted.”

The shredded tires can also be used as a more efficient fuel to power kilns and boilers in concrete factories, electric plants and pulp and paper mills. However, while burning so-called tire-derived fuel is cleaner than using other fossil fuels, the process still releases some greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide.



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Kurt Busch Reflects on a Storied NASCAR Career—And the One Regret That Sticks With Him to This Day

Kurt Busch will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame next January. He’s definitely deserving of it, having won the 2004 NASCAR Cup championship and 34 Cup races before his career was cut short due to a serious concussion. Busch had a lot of great moments in his NASCAR career, and some not so […]

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Kurt Busch will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame next January. He’s definitely deserving of it, having won the 2004 NASCAR Cup championship and 34 Cup races before his career was cut short due to a serious concussion. Busch had a lot of great moments in his NASCAR career, and some not so great moments, including several run-ins with reporters.

There’s one instance that he particularly regrets, a hot mic incident with TV reporter Jamie Little that still bothers Busch today. He relayed this in a recent episode of the SpakeUp Podcast with Shannon Spake.

It was in 2011 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and Busch’s car did not pass pre-race inspection. He was heading across the track, from Turn 1 to Turn 4 (where tech inspection was located) and Little intercepted him, asking if he was willing to talk.

Busch and Little are good friends and both are from Las Vegas. But Busch was in no mood to talk that day and, unfortunately, his verbiage was picked up live.

“I don’t know that (my car didn’t pass tech), I’m doing driver intros, I’m doing a lap around in the truck, taking a couple pictures by the pit box with our fans, with our sponsors,” Busch said. “And I go out to find my car on the grid and it’s not there. I’m like, ‘Where’s my f***ing car?’

“So the cameras are coming at me and I’m like, ‘Oh I know they’re coming to me and I’m going to just beeline to go find my car… It’s like a couple minutes and the National Anthem’s going to play. I’m like, ‘Not right now, Jamie, I’ve got to go find my f***ing car.’”

Little responded by asking, “Are you okay with asking a question?” To which Busch promptly said, “Why the f*** do you think I’d be okay? I’ve got to go get in my car. NASCAR told me I’ve got to get in my car.”

That moment opened Pandora’s Box, in a way, with a number of officials on other teams giving their take on what just happened. Billy O’Shea, spotter for Kevin Harvick, said, “Keep an eye on the 22 (Busch). He’s in full meltdown mode.”

Jeff Dickerson (now co-owner of Spire Motorsports, but back then the spotter for Jeff Gordon) went, “22 just went ape-s**t. I guess he went crazy sometime here in the last few minutes.” Kevin Hamlin, spotter for Clint Bowyer, said, “Hey Clint, word is the driver of the 22 had a slight meltdown in driver intros today.”

“I wasn’t really cussing at Jamie, I was just trying to find my f***ing car,” Busch said.

Busch had run-ins with other media

Busch had several other run-ins ranging from Dr. Jerry Punch to Marty Smith from ESPN during his career. But he also had some good situations, even though they sometimes eventually led to a bad situation, such as with Bob Pockrass (formerly of Sporting News, and now with FOX Sports).

“Those things happen,” Busch said. “But at the end of the day, if I could do one thing over, because everyone says they wouldn’t change anything, but maybe it would have been to go out to dinner with different media members and go have a beer and to chill.

“Like I ran into Bob Pockrass one time at the airport. We were going into an off week, I was going to the Bahamas and he was going to London and we had a beer and we chit-chatted.

“Then it was like two months later when he was asking me something about Justin Allgaier at Dover and I’m like, ‘Bob, if I wasn’t on (NASCAR) probation right now, I’d just kick your a**.’ But it was kind of like a friendship moment. He definitely got under my skin in that moment but it was like, ‘Oh boy, I did it again.’”



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