Motorsports
Welcome to the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, Shane van Gisbergen!
MEXICO CITY — If you can win a race by the largest margin of victory in two decades, you have proven you are among the best of the best in your discipline. Getty Images, courtesy of NASCAR Media Shane van Gisbergen did just that in Mexico City. He punched his ticket to the NASCAR Cup […]

MEXICO CITY — If you can win a race by the largest margin of victory in two decades, you have proven you are among the best of the best in your discipline.

Shane van Gisbergen did just that in Mexico City. He punched his ticket to the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs by 16.567 seconds. It was the largest margin of victory in a Cup race since Kurt Busch won at Texas Motor Speedway in November 2009 by a fuel-mileage-aided 25.686-second margin of victory.
The playoffs is supposed to include the best of the best of the series, isn’t it? Now Shane van Gisbergen is in.
SVG held off past road course winners and playoff qualifiers Christopher Bell and Alex Bowman when they hounded him. Then, he proceeded to drive away from them by as much as a second a lap and buried past champion Chase Elliott’s chances of winning in a far, far distant third-place.
The New Zealander admittedly has an advantage. SVG became an 81-time winner and a three-time champion running Supercars Championship cars that have essentially the same tube-style chassis as the current Cup Series cars. Even still, in his lone NASCAR Xfinity Series season with cars most akin to traditional American stock cars generations of drivers and champions have grown up on, SVG was one of the series’ leading winners with three checkered flags in 2024.
SVG is not a traditional driver in any sense. He is 36 years old in his rookie Cup season and just jumped from 33rd in the championship points standings to being virtually locked into the playoffs. Even after the win, he is 30th in points — far away from even whiffing the playoffs for the first 10 years of it.
For 10 years, the playoffs were about taking the top-10 or top-12 drivers in the series — with points used to effectively determine the top drivers. The 2014 format shift meant winners effectively determined the top drivers more.
Winning is valuable. Fans clamored for it to mean more after Matt Kenseth’s 2003 championship, leading to the playoffs.
Winning proves a point. SVG could easily affirm his place in the playoffs and detract any haters at the three road courses coming up where he is a favorite.
Winning is tough. In the 77-year history of the Cup Series, only 206 drivers have ever won a single race. 144 drivers have won multiple races. For reference:
- 2,997 drivers have made at least one start
- 1,945 drivers have multiple starts
- 418 drivers have made 30 or more starts
- Sunday marked SVG’s 30th Cup start
There are more drivers who have made any starts as SVG and never won than there are drivers who have made as many starts as him and won.
NASCAR has continuously swung the pendulum on rewarding wins in the playoffs. The original format didn’t seed the playoffs based on wins. The second through fourth formats did but the fourth format didn’t beyond the first round of the playoffs, leading us to the balance NASCAR has struck — drivers get into the playoffs on the strength of the win but get into the championship round on the strength of their performance throughout the season.
SVG has been improving on ovals but is unlikely (for now) to steal a spot in the Championship 4 – let alone the Round of 16. Historically, the Round of 16 is a time for some teams and their partners to revel in the playoff glory before their subsequent elimination.
Again, it’s a reward for achieving something tough — winning. In the respective years that drivers like Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Harrison Burton got it done, former champions like Chase Elliott and Kyle Busch didn’t and paid for it — albeit in different circumstances than each other.
Beyond a win and glory, a playoff berth guarantees extra money over the next three years. That extra money arguably allowed a team like Hyak Motorsports to survive and contend for the playoffs this year despite losing many of their major partners.
For Trackhouse Racing, a team that has been struggling with finding raw speed, losing key higher-ups like Pitbull and Ty Norris and failing to get multiple cars in the playoffs the last two seasons, this is just as huge for them. Two cars in the playoffs puts them on-par with heavyweights like Joe Gibbs Racing, Team Penske and Hendrick Motorsports. With contract talks swirling within the team as they look to find a spot for hotshot Connor Zilisch, SVG and Trackhouse are securing their future in real-time.
As some have said, “don’t hate the player, hate the game” — but how do you change the game? Proposals have swirled and people have called for past formats to return. But NASCAR usually never looks back, especially when their format has promoted parity in the sense of what a burgeoning or smaller team can do with playoff money that they couldn’t do without it.
Not to, crossovers like SVG can bring a new audience and excitement to the sport for more than a handful of races.
So welcome to the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, Shane van Gisbergen! You’re here at the right time when a ringer like yourself can be hired for your talents and to deliver for a huge, new opportunity for a team like yours.
Again, “don’t hate the player, hate the game.” Play on, SVG.
Jonathan Fjeld is the co-owner of the The Racing Experts, LLC. He has been with TRE since 2010.
A Twin Valley, MN, native, Fjeld became a motorsports fan at just three years old (first race was the 2002 Pennsylvania 500). He worked as a contributor and writer for TRE from 2010-18. Since then, he has stepped up and covered 24 NASCAR race weekends and taken on a larger role with TRE. He became the co-owner and managing editor in 2023 and has guided the site to massive growth in that time.
Fjeld has covered a wide array of stories and moments over the years, including Kevin Harvick’s final Cup Series season, the first NASCAR national series disqualification in over 50 years, Shane van Gisbergen’s stunning win in Chicago and the first Cup Series race at Road America in 66 years – as well as up-and-coming drivers’ stories and stories from inside the sport, like the tech it takes for Hendrick Motorsports to remain a top-tier team.
Currently, he resides in Albuquerque, N.M., where he works for KOB 4, an NBC station. He works as a digital producer and does on-air reports. He loves spending time with friends and family, playing and listening to music, exploring new places, being outdoors, reading books and writing among other activities. You can email him at fjeldjonathan@gmail.com
Motorsports
Viewership numbers from Saturday’s NASCAR race on WISH-TV – Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather | Indiana Traffic
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Saturday will be a day that NASCAR driver Connor Zilisch will never forget. The NASCAR Xfinity Series driver for JR Motorsports won the Pennzoil 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. “This is awesome,” Zilisch said in an IMS news release. “Those bricks look really kissable, and I’m ready to kiss them. Winning at […]

INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Saturday will be a day that NASCAR driver Connor Zilisch will never forget.
The NASCAR Xfinity Series driver for JR Motorsports won the Pennzoil 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
“This is awesome,” Zilisch said in an IMS news release. “Those bricks look really kissable, and I’m ready to kiss them. Winning at Indy is awesome and getting 100 wins for JRM is pretty cool, too, so I consider this a pretty awesome day.”
It was his third straight win in the Xfinity Series, following victories at Dover and Sonoma.
The race aired on live on WISH-TV and the numbers are in. According to a post on X, formally known as Twitter, by The CW Sports:
- Viewership was up +23% compared to last year’s 21st race from Michigan (which aired on USA)
- Audience grew +6% over last week’s race from Dover
- Viewership peaked at 1,333,000 total viewers from 7:15 – 7:30 p.m. EDT
Overall, the event had 1,108,000 viewers according to the post.
Zilisch actually spoke with News 8’s Cody Adams earlier this year on Life.Style.Live! ahead of the Xfinity Series’ race in Mexico. Click here to watch their full conversation.
The next NASCAR Xfinity Series race will be at Iowa Speedway on Saturday. The HyVee Perks 250 will begin at 4:30 p.m. EDT and can be seen live on WISH-TV. It will be one of five races remaining for the series before the Xfinity Series playoffs begin.
The following are the remaining races remaining ahead of the playoffs:
- Saturday, Aug. 2 – Iowa Speedway
- Saturday, Aug. 9 – Watkins Glen International
- Friday, Aug. 22 – Daytona International Speedway
- Saturday, Aug. 30 – Portland International Raceway
- Saturday, Sept. 6 – World Wide Technology Raceway
The playoffs begin on Friday, Sept. 12 at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Justin Allgaier leads the Xfinity Series standings by 21 points over Zilisch, although Zilisch has won five times this season compared to Allgaier’s three victories.
To re-watch Saturday’s Pennzoil 250 at IMS, click here.
Motorsports
NASCAR’s Stewart Friesen injured in fiery Canada crash
Friesen will need surgery to fix his pelvis, which was broken in multiple places, and his fractured leg after his car flipped multiple times and caught fire. WASHINGTON — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Stewart Friesen suffered multiple injuries to his pelvis and leg during a dirt modified racing crash Monday in Canada. Video of […]

Friesen will need surgery to fix his pelvis, which was broken in multiple places, and his fractured leg after his car flipped multiple times and caught fire.
WASHINGTON — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Stewart Friesen suffered multiple injuries to his pelvis and leg during a dirt modified racing crash Monday in Canada.
Video of the incident, which was being streamed live, shows the fiery crash out during the King Of The North race at Autodrome Drummond in Quebec.
Friesen’s car appears to drift wide around a turn, striking the sidewall around the track. His vehicle flew into the air, tumbling multiple times before coming back down in a fireball. As it continued rolling down the track, less than a second later it was struck by at least one other vehicle coming down the track behind him, igniting more flame and sending debris out over the dirt.
According to a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, by Friesen’s wife Jess, he is in the hospital with severe injuries.
“Stewart has suffered an unstable/open-book pelvic fracture, meaning his pelvis is broken in two or more places, with a large hematoma on the area,” Jess Friesen wrote. “CT scans have come back clear of any head, neck or spine injuries. Unfortunately, he is still in a tremendous amount of pain.”
She said her husband also suffered a fractured right leg in the crash.
Both the pelvis and leg breaks will require surgery, but as of Tuesday he is “in better spirits and resting” after he was transferred to a larger hospital for the procedures, Jess Friesen said.
Three days before the crash, Friesen competed in his 200th Craftsman Truck Series race, according to NASCAR.com.
What kind of vehicle was Friesen driving?
Dirt car racers are highly modified vehicles designed specifically for the rough terrain of a dirt track. They come in various classes and characteristics, but the most common type of dirt car is called a modified.
The cars are blocky, with metal paneling wrapped around cage bars, and sit low to the ground on open wheels, with a body similar to a dune buggy.
During races, modifieds hit speeds of around 75 mph going around corners and 90 mph on straightaways.
Motorsports
NASCAR suspends Austin Hill one race for wrecking Aric Almirola at Indy
NASCAR suspended Austin Hill one race for intentionally wrecking Aric Almirola in last weekend’s Xfinity Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Hill will not compete in Saturday’s race at Iowa Speedway. Richard Childress Racing stated it would not appeal Hill’s penalty. Austin Dillon will drive Hill’s car at Iowa. A playoff waiver will have to […]

NASCAR suspended Austin Hill one race for intentionally wrecking Aric Almirola in last weekend’s Xfinity Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Hill will not compete in Saturday’s race at Iowa Speedway. Richard Childress Racing stated it would not appeal Hill’s penalty. Austin Dillon will drive Hill’s car at Iowa.
A playoff waiver will have to be requested for Hill to maintain his playoff eligibility, but he will lose all the playoff points he’s earned and any playoff points he scores in the final five races of the regular season.
With the waiver, Hill will be last in points with 2,000 entering the first round of the playoffs.
Hill had scored 21 playoff points — behind only Connor Zilisch (29 playoff points) and Justin Allgaier (21) — this season. Hill has three wins and six stage wins.
Stewart Friesen will require surgery after his crash Monday night.
The incident between Hill and Almirola unfolded late in the Xfinity race last weekend.
Almirola got to the rear of Hill’s car and got him loose as they raced for fourth with 10 laps left in last weekend’s race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The back end of Hill’s car slid out but he corrected the slide and straightened the car as Almirola moved underneath him. Hill’s car then had contact with the right rear of Almirola’s car, sending into the SAFER barrier nose-first.
“That was violent,” Almirola said of the crash. “To be totally honest, that was one of the hardest hits I’ve taken in my NASCAR career. The impact felt very similar to when I broke my back (in 2017 at Kansas Speedway). I’d be very interested to see the black box data from (Saturday’s) crash, but it was vicious and that’s just uncalled for.
“I got him a little bit loose to get under him because it was time to go. I would have never done that five laps into the race, but when you’re coming down to the end of the race at Indianapolis and he’s already blocked me three times, I certainly got him loose.
“I didn’t feel what he did was necessary. I felt like he could have easily fell back in line. He was damaged anyway. We were losing time to the leaders. It wasn’t like we were on pace with them. He was holding me up clearly.
“It’s just unfortunate. He obviously lost his mind right there. That was really bad judgment in my opinion.”
NASCAR penalized Hill five laps his contact with Almirola.
Chase Elliott leads the points but the next three drivers in the standings are within 20 points with four races left in the regular season.
Hill said on the team’s radio after the incident: “I couldn’t hang on to it. I was not trying to right rear him. He had me out of control. I was like jerk back to the left to keep it off the wall. I’m not sure what the hell he thought just running me over in (Turn) 3, though.”
After being told on the radio he was being held five laps for reckless driving, Hill directed multiple expletives to NASCAR.
Asked if Hill should be suspended, car owner Richard Childress said: “Hell, no. They didn’t do a damn thing to the No. 2 car (Austin Cindric). He wrecked Ty (Dillon) and admitted to it, drove him in the right rear and wrecked him at COTA. It’s who you are. We’re a blue-collar team. They give us trouble all the time.”
NASCAR did not penalize Cindric during the race for wrecking Dillon at COTA, but series officials docked Cindric 50 points and fined him $50,000 a few days later after reviewing the incident.
Motorsports
NASCAR’s Stewart Friesen injured in fiery Canada crash
Friesen will need surgery to fix his pelvis, which was broken in multiple places, and his fractured leg after his car flipped multiple times and caught fire. WASHINGTON — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Stewart Friesen suffered multiple injuries to his pelvis and leg during a dirt modified racing crash Monday in Canada. Video of […]

Friesen will need surgery to fix his pelvis, which was broken in multiple places, and his fractured leg after his car flipped multiple times and caught fire.
WASHINGTON — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Stewart Friesen suffered multiple injuries to his pelvis and leg during a dirt modified racing crash Monday in Canada.
Video of the incident, which was being streamed live, shows the fiery crash out during the King Of The North race at Autodrome Drummond in Quebec.
Friesen’s car appears to drift wide around a turn, striking the sidewall around the track. His vehicle flew into the air, tumbling multiple times before coming back down in a fireball. As it continued rolling down the track, less than a second later it was struck by at least one other vehicle coming down the track behind him, igniting more flame and sending debris out over the dirt.
According to a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, by Friesen’s wife Jess, he is in the hospital with severe injuries.
“Stewart has suffered an unstable/open-book pelvic fracture, meaning his pelvis is broken in two or more places, with a large hematoma on the area,” Jess Friesen wrote. “CT scans have come back clear of any head, neck or spine injuries. Unfortunately, he is still in a tremendous amount of pain.”
She said her husband also suffered a fractured right leg in the crash.
Both the pelvis and leg breaks will require surgery, but as of Tuesday he is “in better spirits and resting” after he was transferred to a larger hospital for the procedures, Jess Friesen said.
Three days before the crash, Friesen competed in his 200th Craftsman Truck Series race, according to NASCAR.com.
What kind of vehicle was Friesen driving?
Dirt car racers are highly modified vehicles designed specifically for the rough terrain of a dirt track. They come in various classes and characteristics, but the most common type of dirt car is called a modified.
The cars are blocky, with metal paneling wrapped around cage bars, and sit low to the ground on open wheels, with a body similar to a dune buggy.
During races, modifieds hit speeds of around 75 mph going around corners and 90 mph on straightaways.
Motorsports
Frankie Muniz shares truth about funding $3.5million NASCAR career – Motorsport – Sports
Malcolm in the Middle star turned NASCAR driver Frankie Muniz, who recently participated in the Mustang Challenge Le Mans Invitational, has no intention of spending any of his Hollywood earnings on his racing career. Currently in the middle of a tough Craftsman Truck Series season with Reaume Brothers Racing, driving the No. 33 Ford, Muniz […]

Malcolm in the Middle star turned NASCAR driver Frankie Muniz, who recently participated in the Mustang Challenge Le Mans Invitational, has no intention of spending any of his Hollywood earnings on his racing career.
Currently in the middle of a tough Craftsman Truck Series season with Reaume Brothers Racing, driving the No. 33 Ford, Muniz has recently opened up on the financial difficulties associated with his newfound career, whilst taking the opportunity to shoot down suggestions he is funding this passion project off the back of his silver screen success.
“I don’t spend any of my money going racing,” the 39-year-old told the LA Times. “I made a promise to my wife (Paige) that I would not do that. So, I can kill that rumor right there.”
With none of Muniz’s personal money funding his truck for the year, which has an estimated cost of $3.5 million for a 25-race season, he’s had to rely on sponsorships just like the rest of the field. Unsurprisingly, this aspect of racing is one Muniz has admitted to disliking in a recent appearance on the Beating and Banging podcast.
“It is so hard,” Muniz admitted. “And I said, I don’t like tooting my own horn, but like, I have a lot of social media followers. I was on TV. I do get press and things and, like, I’m doing a cover shoot right now for a huge nationwide national syndicated magazine. And I get things, or attention, that because I was on TV that other drivers don’t get. I don’t know how other people sell. That’s the truth, because it is so hard.”
“Can we raise more money? Absolutely. Do I want to raise more money? Absolutely,” he said. “Because if we have more as a team together, like collectively makes us better. And if you’re competing against teams that are spending in the Truck Series, $3 to $5 million, I don’t know, crazy numbers, like $3 million, and you’re spending $1, $5, $2 million, it’s hard to compete. You know what I mean?
“That’s just the truth. Money does equate to speed usually. So there’s also the fine line of like, you’ve got to start building, like we have 10 races left. We’ve got races open…
“We can sell more races, but then you’ve got to start going like, well, we need to be focused on next year. People’s budgets or our company’s budgets for 2026 are closing by the end of this quarter. Then when you start asking for money in November, December, January, we’ve already allotted where we’re putting our money. So you’ve got to be so far ahead of the game, but it’s probably my least favorite part.”
With 16 races done and nine to go this season, Muniz has so far finished in the top 20 on three occasions, with his best result coming at Daytona in the season opener where he crossed the line in 10th for the team’s second best result of the year behind Jason White’s eighth places finish that same day in the No. 22.
Now, following a 27th place finish at the TSport 200 on Friday, leaving him 24th in the drivers standings, Muniz will turn his attention to the challenging road course at Watkins Glen on August 8.
Motorsports
NASCAR’s Stewart Friesen injured in fiery Canada crash
Friesen will need surgery to fix his pelvis, which was broken in multiple places, and his fractured leg after his car flipped multiple times and caught fire. WASHINGTON — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Stewart Friesen suffered multiple injuries to his pelvis and leg during a dirt modified racing crash Monday in Canada. Video of […]

Friesen will need surgery to fix his pelvis, which was broken in multiple places, and his fractured leg after his car flipped multiple times and caught fire.
WASHINGTON — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver Stewart Friesen suffered multiple injuries to his pelvis and leg during a dirt modified racing crash Monday in Canada.
Video of the incident, which was being streamed live, shows the fiery crash out during the King Of The North race at Autodrome Drummond in Quebec.
Friesen’s car appears to drift wide around a turn, striking the sidewall around the track. His vehicle flew into the air, tumbling multiple times before coming back down in a fireball. As it continued rolling down the track, less than a second later it was struck by at least one other vehicle coming down the track behind him, igniting more flame and sending debris out over the dirt.
According to a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, by Friesen’s wife Jess, he is in the hospital with severe injuries.
“Stewart has suffered an unstable/open-book pelvic fracture, meaning his pelvis is broken in two or more places, with a large hematoma on the area,” Jess Friesen wrote. “CT scans have come back clear of any head, neck or spine injuries. Unfortunately, he is still in a tremendous amount of pain.”
She said her husband also suffered a fractured right leg in the crash.
Both the pelvis and leg breaks will require surgery, but as of Tuesday he is “in better spirits and resting” after he was transferred to a larger hospital for the procedures, Jess Friesen said.
Three days before the crash, Friesen competed in his 200th Craftsman Truck Series race, according to NASCAR.com.
What kind of vehicle was Friesen driving?
Dirt car racers are highly modified vehicles designed specifically for the rough terrain of a dirt track. They come in various classes and characteristics, but the most common type of dirt car is called a modified.
The cars are blocky, with metal paneling wrapped around cage bars, and sit low to the ground on open wheels, with a body similar to a dune buggy.
During races, modifieds hit speeds of around 75 mph going around corners and 90 mph on straightaways.
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