Credit: Jonathan Bachman / Getty Images Heim time? Nah, Corey Heim is in another zipcode! After starting on pole and sweeping both stages with gaps upwards of five seconds, Heim takes his fifth win of the year at Lime Rock. Heim started on the pole ahead of Jordan Taylor. Heim gets a great start and […]
Heim time? Nah, Corey Heim is in another zipcode! After starting on pole and sweeping both stages with gaps upwards of five seconds, Heim takes his fifth win of the year at Lime Rock.
Heim started on the pole ahead of Jordan Taylor. Heim gets a great start and immediately flies ahead of Taylor. Layne Riggs moves up to second.
Brent Crews closed in on Taylor for third by lap 5.
Crews went a little off-road on lap 7 and fell back from Taylor. Kaden Honeycutt, who ran in fifth, was still about three seconds behind.
On lap 11, Wesley Slimp went off track at turn 1 from 34th but was able to keep going.
Heim also went a little wide, dipping a tyre into the dirt, but lost no time.
On lap 15, Spencer Boyd spun while running 34th and got stuck momentarily before getting going with a flat front tyre.
Towards the end of the stage, Heim started reaching the backmarkers.
At the end of the stage, the race was red-flagged for modified, non-competitive stops.
Heim and Riggs lead the way on lap 40. The two went side by side at the start, but Heim eventually got ahead by the end of the lap.
Dale Quarterley spun off the exit of turn 1 on lap 42 but was able to keep going.
By lap 55, Heim had a gap of about four seconds to Riggs in second when Heim ran into backmarkers again. He passed Frankie Muniz, putting him two laps down, on lap 57 before opening the gap back up to five seconds by lap 60.
Not many change-ups happened in this stage as Heim takes the second stage win with a lead of seven seconds. This is also Heim’s fifth stage sweep of the year, and his fifth consecutive Stage 2 win.
Another red flag is called for all of the drivers to pit non-competitively.
Heim and Riggs line up again for the restart, but the start was aborted. A car was leaking oil on the track. Another red flag was thrown.
They led the way to green on lap 76, and they stayed side by side into the first turn.
Matt Crafton goes through the grass just as Heim pulled into the lead. Crafton has to pit after.
Connor Mosack, after restarting in fourth, moved up to third and started closing in on Riggs.
On lap 87, Dawson Sutton slowed on the track, and smoke came from the car with a flat tyre, but he made it to pit road.
The first incident caution came on lap 90 when Matt Mills went off at turn 1 and got stuck in the grass.
Some drivers took the opportunity to pit under caution, but the top 10 stayed the same.
Still under caution on lap 92, Wesley Slimp slowed on track and came to a stop between turns 4 and 5.
Heim and Riggs line up as they had for the restart on lap 95. Drivers fanned out behind them as Riggs got a big push from behind. The push made Riggs lock his tyres and forced him off track. Riggs dropped out of the top 10. A few drivers had followed behind him and went through the grass.
Heim to the lead with Ty Majeski and Giovanni Ruggiero right behind. Ben Rhodes and Cam Waters moved up to the top 5.
Corey Heim makes it five wins for the season after sweeping all three stages for the inaugural race at Lime Rock.
No. 11 – Corey Heim (TRICON Garage) [FL]
No. 98 – Ty Majeski (ThorSport Racing)
No. 17 – Giovanni Ruggiero (TRICON Garage)
No. 99 – Ben Rhodes (ThorSport Racing)
No. 66 – Cam Waters (ThorSport Racing)
No. 38 – Chandler Smith (Front Row Motorsports)
No. 44 – Josh Bilicki (Niece Motorsports)
No. 1 – Brent Crews (TRICON Garage)
No. 19 – Daniel Hemric (McAnally Hilgemann Racing)
No. 22 – Alex Labbe (Reaume Brothers Racing) [DNF]
The Craftsman Truck Series has a bit of a break before heading to the Indianapolis Raceway Park on Friday, July 25, at 19:00 EST (Saturday, July 26, at 00:00 BST).
Kyle Larson Grateful for Sprint Car Freedom as Hendrick Motorsports Star Eyes 2025 Knoxville Nationals Run
After an eight-week skid marked by frustration, including a double-duty disaster with crashes at both the Indy 500 and the Coca-Cola 600, Kyle Larson finally found daylight in mid-July. His $100,000 Joker’s Jackpot victory at Eldora Speedway in the High Limit Racing Series looked like the spark he needed. Riding that wave of confidence into […]
After an eight-week skid marked by frustration, including a double-duty disaster with crashes at both the Indy 500 and the Coca-Cola 600, Kyle Larson finally found daylight in mid-July. His $100,000 Joker’s Jackpot victory at Eldora Speedway in the High Limit Racing Series looked like the spark he needed. Riding that wave of confidence into the NASCAR Cup Series, Larson logged back-to-back top-five finishes at Dover and Indianapolis. But Iowa brought him back to earth.
A 28th-place finish, compounded by heated on-track tension with teammate Chase Elliott, who twice bumped Larson’s No. 5 Chevrolet and nearly sent it into the outside wall, left Larson with more aggravation than momentum.
Just one day later, however, Larson flipped the script. He rolled into Southern Iowa Speedway on Monday night for the Front Row Challenge and took the checkered flag, winning the prestigious event for the fifth time in his career and his fourth in the last five years.
The victory serves as a traditional prelude to Knoxville Nationals week, where sprint car racing’s elite will battle for big money and bragging rights at “The Sprint Car Capital of the World,” Knoxville Raceway.
Larson expressed his gratitude to team owner Rick Hendrick and crew chief Cliff Daniels for letting him keep one foot in the sprint car world. He said, “It caps off with the most prestigious sprint car race in the world. So yeah, there’s a lot that goes into making the Knoxville Nationals the coolest event in the world.
“I enjoy getting to run it. I’m thankful that I get to run it ’cause you know, I could easily not. I could have an owner that wouldn’t allow me to run it. But thankfully, Mr. H and Cliff and everybody there let me run. They know how important it is to me, and yeah it’s cool. We’ve been here since last Wednesday and look forward to the weekend.”
Despite winning three Cup races this season and holding third in the driver standings, Larson still seeks to reclaim his midseason momentum. Monday night’s Front Row Challenge win might be the jolt he needed to get his Cup campaign back on track.
Race now on for NASCAR to prepare after MLB game | The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Let us read it for you. Listen now. Your browser does not support the audio element. BRISTOL, Tenn. — The instant the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Braves cleared the baseball diamond inside the infield at Bristol Motor Speedway, a new clock started. “The Last Great Colosseum” has to switch from hosting the MLB Speedway Classic […]
BRISTOL, Tenn. — The instant the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Braves cleared the baseball diamond inside the infield at Bristol Motor Speedway, a new clock started.
“The Last Great Colosseum” has to switch from hosting the MLB Speedway Classic and be ready for NASCAR’s return to the historic racetrack hosting a playoff chase race Sept. 13.
“As soon as the last pitch is thrown, the last hit’s hit, teams do their thing, postgame’s taken care of, pads will start coming off the wall, and they’ll work through the night to basically start disassembling so we can reassemble for the NASCAR race,” said Steve Swift, Speedway Motorsports’ senior vice president of operations.
Major League Baseball used BaAM to create everything from clubhouses for the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds complete with showers, strength and conditioning rooms, coach and trainers’ offices and batting cages. Grandstands down both base lines with broadcast booths.
Pit walls taken down to keep the Reds and Braves from crashing into them have to be rebuilt. Swift said pouring concrete walls does take time and then more time to cure properly. Additives can help concrete cure faster, but that’s just one of the reconstruction issues causing obstacles.
Swift said Bristol has had great partners planning for all the details of making this happen. Now it’s time for Bristol Motor Speedway to go from hosting the first MLB regular-season game in the state of Tennessee and setting a record with a paid attendance of 91,032 back to its racing roots.
“It is difficult, but it’s things that we like,” Swift said. “It gives us a challenge and we like challenges.”
The transformation to a baseball diamond in the infield required 17,500 tons of gravel to level the infield, then 340 tons of Pennsylvania clay for the playing surface.
Braves first baseman Matt Olson said Saturday that he couldn’t believe Bristol was transformed all for one game. Well, everything that can be recycled will be used somewhere after the baseball diamond is removed.
Some of the gravel will be used in Bristol Motor Speedway’s parking lots. Swift said they have found groups to help use some of the materials to help people still recovering from the damages left by Hurricane Helene. That includes 2x4s and plywood used for the grandstands.
“A lot of stuff is going to go to good use as far as the rebuild portion,” Swift said. “We just need to get it out of the way so we can put back asphalt and concrete.”
This new renovation schedule has a couple of days built in for protection. The target date for being finished is Sept. 7.
“There may still be some paint drying whenever they roll in with the Goodyear haulers, but we’ll definitely shoot for that (Sept. 7) day,” Swift said. “And at the latest, we’re looking at Tuesday.”
Bristol hosted a college football game in 2016 that drew 156,990. Now the NHL might be in Bristol’s future after Sportico reported Friday that league officials would be checking out how the racetrack handled Major League Baseball.
When asked about possibly hosting an outdoor hockey game, Swift only said a hockey rink would be similar to a football field and that Speedway Motorsports has big dreams for what is possible at places like Bristol.
“We’ve shown with football and now baseball being here, that things can take place and we can do the the things that nobody would even think about,” Swift said.
Atlanta Braves outfielder Eli White holds the trophy after their win against the Cincinnati Reds I the MLB Speedway Classic baseball game at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn., Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025. Play was resumed today after yesterday’s weather delay. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Fans gather for the MLB Speedway Classic baseball game at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn., Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025. Play was resumed today after yesterday’s weather delay. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Members of the grounds crew prepare the field prior to the MLB Speedway Classic baseball game at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn., Saturday, Aug. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Rice’s Rapid Motorsports celebrates 50 years of the Honda Gold Wing during Sturgis Motorcycle Rally
RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) – When you think of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, you likely picture Main Street Sturgis packed with people and bikes but the fun doesn’t stop there. “We’re excited to have Honda back doing the factory demo expo here on Exit 61,” said Wade Rice, owner of Rice’s Rapid Motorsports. “They’re here […]
RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) – When you think of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, you likely picture Main Street Sturgis packed with people and bikes but the fun doesn’t stop there.
“We’re excited to have Honda back doing the factory demo expo here on Exit 61,” said Wade Rice, owner of Rice’s Rapid Motorsports. “They’re here doing demos. They have multiple models, 40 units total so you don’t have to wait long to get on a test drive.”
And while the rally celebrates a monumental 85 years, Honda is also celebrating a monumental 50 years of their Gold Wing motorcycle.
“Seventy-five was the first model,” Rice said. “It was a bare model and now they’re fully decked out with bags and trunks and all that kind of stuff … the new safety ABS, they make one with an airbag, there’s all kinds of different features for the new Gold Wings.”
While the rally is taking place you can stop by Rice Honda and meet the man with the first, 25th and 50th models of the Gold Wing.
“I bought my first Gold Wing in 1978 and I’ve had a new Gold Wing almost every year ever since,” said John Lazzeroni, president of JM Corporation. “So, seeing the 50 years of the Honda Gold Wing from the original 1975 all the way to the new 50th anniversary including this 2025 Gold Wing here is amazing.”
Lazzeroni called his 25th anniversary bike a “time capsule” as everything is in mint condition and the owner’s manual is still in the plastic wrap.
“I had a favorite, and it was this one until I rode my brand new 50th anniversary 2025 Gold Wing and now that’s my favorite,” Lazzeroni said.
Not only has Lazzeroni been enjoying the Gold Wing for years but he’s enjoyed every motorcycle rally since 1985.
“I remember the 50th, I remember the 75th and now here we are at the 85th,” Lazzeroni said. “I’m looking forward now to the 100th.”
Rice said he loves seeing the same people visit the Rapid City location each rally season.
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Daytona Motor Mouths: William Byron makes it to gas station in Iowa Ken and Chris review William Byron’s Iowa win and Bristol’s MLB Speedway Classic, present a Jeff Gordon show-and-tell and preview Watkins Glen. NASCAR 25, the first NASCAR game for home consoles since 2021, will be released on October 14. NASCAR 25 features over […]
Daytona Motor Mouths: William Byron makes it to gas station in Iowa
Ken and Chris review William Byron’s Iowa win and Bristol’s MLB Speedway Classic, present a Jeff Gordon show-and-tell and preview Watkins Glen.
NASCAR 25, the first NASCAR game for home consoles since 2021, will be released on October 14.
NASCAR 25 features over 190 drivers across the Cup, Xfinity, Truck, and ARCA series, including a 45-driver Cup Series roster.
Gamers know their options now.
On Aug. 5, NASCAR announced the 45 drivers who will comprise the Cup Series roster on the new NASCAR 25 video game.
The game, which will be the brand’s first on home consoles since 2021, will come out Oct. 14 on Xbox Series X|S and PlayStation 5. A PC release is planned for a later date.
It is being developed by iRacing.
NASCAR 25 will include four circuits: the Cup Series, Xfinity Series, Truck Series and ARCA. Overall, more than 190 real drivers will appear in the game. It also features a career mode and multiplayer and online modes.
NASCAR Weekend in Watkins Glen: Catching up with Driver Denny Hamlin
The News10NBC Team details breaking News, Traffic and Weather. NASCAR Weekend at Watkins Glen International is upon us. Three days of racing in the Finger Lakes begins on Friday with the Craftsman Truck Series race at 5pm, the green flag will drop on Xfinity Series Race on Saturday at 3pm and the NASCAR Cup Series Race […]
The News10NBC Team details breaking News, Traffic and Weather.
NASCAR Weekend at Watkins Glen International is upon us. Three days of racing in the Finger Lakes begins on Friday with the Craftsman Truck Series race at 5pm, the green flag will drop on Xfinity Series Race on Saturday at 3pm and the NASCAR Cup Series Race is set to begin at 2pm on Sunday.
In anticipation of the weekend, News10NBC Investigative Reporter and NASCAR Fan Jennifer Lewke and her 8-year old son Jett spoke with NASCAR Driver Denny Hamlin. Hamlin has 4 wins, 11 top 5’s and 12 top 10’s so far this season.
Full interview:
Jennifer Lewke (News10NBC): “What do you like and not like about Watkins Glen, you’ve won here before but it’s been a while.”
Denny Hamlin: “Yea, I like Watkins Glen, I think it races almost like an intermediate type track with our cars, it’s one of the highest speed road courses that we have. My favorite thing about Watkins Glen has nothing to do with the racetrack though, it really is kind of the infield there, we’ve seen people come out in huge numbers to hang out in Watkins Glen infield. The midway there, the fan area is filled with different activations and stuff, there’s tons of stuff to do so, I’ve explored around that racetrack and it’s been a blast.”
Jennifer Lewke: “What I also love about Watkins is they let you, as fans, drive the course in your own personal car, I’ve done it with my two sons and my husband and the S’s, we got up to like 80 and then I made them pull back, I was like okay, this is getting a little crazy… the race itself and the track… it’s fast for a road course.”
Denny Hamlin: “It is, it’s extremely fast. It’s fast but it’s technical. Like when you talk about the S’s…that’s probably the most treacherous corner that we enter on all of our circuit. Is turn 2 there, so the car really unloads and then you’ve got to switch back the other direction into a blind corner, it’s really, really difficult. And certainly, I’ve only been able to win there one time so it tell you that race track has its own challenges.”
Jennifer Lewke: “You mentioned the experience of it all, I think that’s what it is for a lot of folks who spend the weekend at the Glen…I mean, we have the Buffalo Bills here, we have other professional sports, but you don’t really get as close to the stars of the sport, I think, as you do in NASCAR, how big of a role do you think that plays in expanding the sport beyond just the hardcore NASCAR fans?
Denny Hamlin: “Well, that’s the difference in our sport than others, it is the access. You’re able to more than likely get an autograph or take a picture with your favorite driver just an hour before they’re getting in the race car. You never get that access to the locker room in any other sports and so the access is what makes us different. You’re not just going for the event itself, you’re making a weekend out of it with your family or friends and getting to explore all that Watkins Glen has to offer.
Jennifer Lewke: “Are you ever able to explore beyond the track when you’re in Upstate New York?”
Denny Hamlin: “I check out the town a little bit, I do try to golf when I’m in that town.”
Jennifer Lewke: “Denny, if you don’t mind, I kind of have a special guest off to the side, it’s my 8 year-old, he is a huge NASCAR fan and he happens to be a huge, Denny Hamlin fan.”
Denny: “Hey, my man!”
Jennifer Lewke: “This is Jett, he wanted to say Hi, I let him stay home from Summer camp, did you want to ask Denny a question?”
Jett (Jennifer Lewke’s Son): “Yes, and by the way… I met you before as you can see in this picture.” (Jett holds up a photo from Watkins Glen in 2023 where he is posing with Denny)
Denny Hamlin: “I see that. Man you got the hat and the shirt and everything! What’s your question bud?”
Jett: “At what was the age you knew you wanted to be a NASCAR driver?”
Denny Hamlin: “I was 8 years-old.”
Jett: “That’s my age right now!”
Denny Hamlin: “Yea, well let’s see that’s the first time I got into a go-cart. I went to a race when I was 5 and at that point, I smelled the tires and fuel and saw all the cars that were roaring by and I was like, “oh I love this” right? And so, at that time, back then, you couldn’t get into a go-cart until you were 8 years-old so, my parents bought me a go-cart when I was 8, I got in, they showed me… this is how you go, this is how you stop, this is how you steer and they sent me around this little dirt track and when I went around there they saw that I was getting it sideways and correcting it, and they’re like… “oh, he’s got good car control” so–like maybe we’ll put him in a race in a few weeks, so they put me in a race and I won my very first race. You give an 8 year-old a trophy and a go-cart and it’s like… this is what I want to do, I want to be a race car driver!”
Jett: “And um…What do you think about SVG at Watkins Glen, do you think he’ll be a challenge to race with?”
Denny Hamlin: “Yes, I think he’s going to be a challenge to keep up with, more than anything. He’s just really good on the road courses obviously, he almost won last year and then if you think about it, the team he was with was not as good as the team he’s with now. So, I think he’s going to be extremely hard to beat, I’ll be lucky, I just want to keep him in sight during that race, that’s my goal at Watkins Glen, I’m going to keep him in sight, get us a top 5 and get out of there.”
Jennifer Lewke: “Thank you so much for your time and for taking Jett’s questions. He’s always one, when we were at Daytona last year, he’s always one to stick up for you against people in the crowd who throw those boo’s your way.”
Denny Hamlin: “I like that! Yea, you cheer alright!”
Jett: “Yea!”
A limited number of tickets are still available for NASCAR weekends at Watkins Glen International. For more information, Click here.
NASCAR News: Dale Earnhardt family feuds as $30billion land battle gets ugly
NASCAR icon Dale Earnhardt’s family is involved in a bitter dispute over a planned $30billion land development in North Carolina.
Teresa Earnhardt, third wife and widow of the late racing superstar, wants to use 400 acres of land she owns in Mooresville for a massive project to build a new business park.
READ MORE: NASCAR […]
NASCAR icon Dale Earnhardt’s family is involved in a bitter dispute over a planned $30billion land development in North Carolina.
Teresa Earnhardt, third wife and widow of the late racing superstar, wants to use 400 acres of land she owns in Mooresville for a massive project to build a new business park.
READ MORE: NASCAR Cup Series star set to drive for new team as official statement released
The 66-year-old has requested rezoning of the land to industrial to allow the project to go ahead.
Denver-based developer Tract claims the proposed Mooresville Technology Park would create 277 “recession-resistant” jobs, including some 195 paying $125,000 a year.
It also claims hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenues would be generated for Mooresville, Iredell County, and local public schools over 20 years.
Earnhardt vs Earnhard as battle ramps up
But neighbors, including some Earnhardt family members, are fighting hard to stop the plan. Opponents have even set up a website to rally support against it, and the bad blood is ramping up.
The whole things is now a very public Earnhardt family feud, with Dale’s son Kerry (Teresa’s stepson) coming out in strong opposition.
Writing on Facebook, he said his father – who was tragically killed in an accident at the Daytona 500 in 2001 – would be “livid”.
“Frankly, I’m ashamed our family name is involved in the request to rezone a community that is thriving as a rural residential/agriculture zone to be changed to Industrial.
“Infrastructures like this don’t belong in neighborhoods where people’s natural resources will be depleted, wildlife will be uprooted, and the landscape and lives of the people that call this area home will forever be changed. I’d rather see homes built with people loving the land we live on…. the way this area was intended to be!”
READ MORE: NASCAR team in show of defiance after driver handed major Iowa penalty
Date officially set for public hearing
Per the Charlotte Observer, Kerry’s wife Rene spoke at a packed public meeting Monday night, describing the project as a “monstrosity of a complex….gobbling away resources”.
She requested that the rezoning proposal be rejected, pleading: “We hope you will preserve the last sliver of agricultural land in the area”.
The bitter dispute is now expected to reach a conclusion on Monday September 15 after commissioners settled on that date for a formal public hearing.
A decision on rezoning will likely be taken that same night.
READ MORE: NASCAR Cup Series star puts family first as retirement decision confirmed