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Joey Logano, the NASCAR champ some fans love to hate, might just do it again

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HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — As usual, Joey Logano’s laugh precedes him.

It floats down the hallway of the production studio owned by the three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion — fittingly named Clutch Studios — and serves as trumpet-like fanfare for his arrival.

Except Logano doesn’t have a royal aura when he enters a room. Wearing his typical squinty smile and business-casual office attire — a golf polo shirt, slacks and sneakers — he looks like any typical 30-something father of three.

But despite being an unassuming and affable figure away from the racetrack, the Team Penske driver also happens to be one of the biggest irritants for NASCAR fans. That annoyance is thanks in part to how he has mastered winning championships under the current playoff format — a system that has recently grown less popular in fan sentiment.

In fact, NASCAR may change the format as soon as next season. But before any change can occur, there’s bad news for Logano’s detractors: He just might win it again.

“I mean, don’t get mad at me for it,” he said.

The expression, “Don’t hate the player, hate the game,” doesn’t really apply to Logano when it comes to NASCAR’s championship format, because Logano loves the game. He defends the game. He may even be the No. 1 advocate for the game.

So when fans criticize the format, Logano is inextricably linked to it. And when he keeps winning, particularly in the survive-and-advance, how-did-they-do-that method his No. 22 team has employed, Logano has become the face of it.

“As a fan, I want to see (drivers) scared, and our playoff system now does that,” Logano said. “I’ve always been the person to say, ‘If you’re complaining about it, then just do better.’ If you scored a bunch of points during a regular season and you didn’t make it to the Championship 4, then shame on you. You had a head start, and you still couldn’t do it.

“But don’t say it’s not legit. You could have gone out there and won to get in. You didn’t. Just because it didn’t work for you, it doesn’t mean change the rules.”

While Logano feels strongly about the merits of the current system, many fans (and some drivers) do not agree. When The Athletic asked fans on X what championship format NASCAR should use, only 8.5 percent in a poll with more than 30,000 respondents voted for the current system to remain.

To that end, Logano said he realizes there’s an opportunity “for some tweaks to be made” that would increase the credibility of the championship and added he’s “come to be OK with a lot of the ideas.”

Joey Logano


Joey Logano’s win at Texas in May was his only victory of the regular season. In an underwhelming statistical season, he’s still a top threat for the championship. (Tim Heitman / Getty Images)

But he’d certainly be just fine if NASCAR decided not to change anything.

Logano isn’t the first driver to be the face of the negatives about a championship format. When Jimmie Johnson won five straight Cup Series titles in the old “Chase,” in which the title was determined over a 10-week mini-season, fans grew restless and bored.

NASCAR then changed the format months after Johnson won his sixth championship, and Logano has been the most successful driver in the present playoff format, which has a series of three-race elimination rounds ending in a championship race among four remaining eligible drivers.

In the 11 editions of the current system, Logano has made it to the “Championship 4” race six times, won the title in half of them and has 15 victories during the playoffs. He leads every driver in those categories.

So in a system that emphasizes big moments over the traditional season-long consistency of motorsports greatness, Logano believes he has excelled as someone built to embrace pressure.

After all, that type of pressure has been present for the 35-year-old’s entire life.

As a child racing prodigy, Logano was always the youngest driver on the track. His father, Tom, forged Joey’s birth certificate so his 9-year-old son could race Legend cars before the required minimum age; that made Joey feel the pressure of being “one mistake away from not getting to drive anymore,” he said.

The pressure continued when Logano moved into bigger cars as a 14-year-old, which Logano noted was four years younger than the next-closest driver at the time. By age 15, Logano was labeled as the next racing superstar by NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin; Logano said that spotlight made him feel like he had to live up to the hype.

Then, as an 18-year-old, he replaced Hall of Famer Tony Stewart at NASCAR’s top level, driving Joe Gibbs Racing’s famed No. 20 car.

So in Logano’s eyes, there has never been anything but high-pressure situations when it comes to his racing career. The playoffs are just a concentrated version.

“Everyone is going to say they love pressure, because that’s the thing you tell a reporter to make it sound good,” he said. “But the truth is, it’s hard. There’s a ridiculous amount of pressure from everybody — fans, sponsors, yourself. Some people just don’t handle it.

“I’ve learned you can’t hide from it, you can’t run from it. You have to find a way to manage it.”

Because the Connecticut native has been in the Cup Series for so long, he has lived through NASCAR’s decline from its peak in the mid-2000s — something many current drivers have only heard about and did not experience themselves.

That leaves Logano, an optimist by nature anyway, feeling more positive about the sport’s direction than some of his peers. There was a decline, he acknowledged, but “if you zoom out, there’s an uptick. We’re better than a few years ago.”

Logano said the outside perception of NASCAR is trending positive, too. When he travels the country to promote it — which he does more frequently than any driver, as evidenced by earning the top prize in a NASCAR driver incentive program earlier this season — Logano notices people ask about what NASCAR is doing right, not wrong.

“What I hear from people is that we’ve done a good job telling the story of the sport’s momentum,” Logano said. “There are a lot of positives right now. People are showing up at racetracks. Our racing has been exciting. Our schedule is changing and going to new places.”

But inside the NASCAR bubble, there’s still much hand-wringing about topics like the playoff format — which was only exacerbated when Logano won again last year, this time with the worst season average finish of any champion in NASCAR’s 76-year history. Because Logano took advantage of the system by winning races just at the right time, sometimes in strange circumstances, he was viewed by some as an undeserving participant in the 2024 championship race.

Except then he won it, again, and became one of just 10 drivers in NASCAR history to win at least three Cup titles.

Joey Logano


A wild, unlikely win in Nashville in June 2024 is the only reason Joey Logano made the playoffs last year. Then he carved his way to another championship. (James Gilbert / Getty Images)

Both fans and those in the garage have wondered what role the championship system has played in NASCAR’s lack of popularity compared to its glory days, and NASCAR has formed a committee to examine whether changing the system for next year is the right move.

Logano acknowledged to The Athletic that he is a member of that committee. As such, he’s been privy to various models of alternative playoff systems — and Logano said some show “I would have won four times instead of three.”

“I wish people knew that, because I’m sick of people talking crap about our championships,” he said.

That talk is highly unlikely to end if Logano wins again this season. He enters the playoffs as the No. 12 seed and with only the seventh-best odds among bookmakers despite winning two of the last three championships.

If he’s being overlooked, it’s for good reasons statistically: Logano has won just one race this season — in early May — and has been among the top five finishers in only two other races. And yet as crew chief Paul Wolfe told members of the No. 22 team when he gathered them for a meeting last week: “There’s a pretty realistic pathway to make it to Phoenix (for the championship race) if we all just execute and do our part.”

That’s in part because this year’s playoff schedule plays exceptionally well to the strengths of the Team Penske cars — which are best on flatter, shorter tracks. Penske has won three straight titles by excelling at Phoenix, a 1-mile track that fits that description. But this year, two of Phoenix’s cousins — World Wide Technology Raceway near St. Louis and New Hampshire Motor Speedway — have joined the playoff schedule.

Additionally, all of the Penske drivers (which also include 2023 champion Ryan Blaney and former Daytona 500 winner Austin Cindric) are exceptional at superspeedways — and Talladega Superspeedway has moved into Round 3, which means a victory there can secure a Championship 4 berth.

“There’s no reason we shouldn’t be the favorite going into it,” Wolfe said. “Up to this point in the season, nothing looks any different than it did in those two years we won with this car.”

That should be alarming for the field, as if Logano’s record wasn’t enough already. He has won at least one race on nine of the 10 tracks on the playoff schedule and has multiple wins at six of them.

“As Paul says, you’ve got to find that last little bit,” Logano said. “It sounds simple, but it’s hard to do, and that’s the difference-maker now.

“At most tracks, I’m probably not the fastest, but I can be close enough to capitalize when people make mistakes. That’s been our strength.”

(Top photo of Joey Logano: Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)



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Wisconsin racing in 2026 at Road America, Mile, Slinger, Outaws, more

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Dec. 23, 2025, 5:08 a.m. CT



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BangShift.com Racing With Heavy Hearts…..The KSR Crew Heads To Bradenton Motorsports Park’s Christmas Tree Drags 2025!

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Racing With Heavy Hearts…..The KSR Crew Heads To Bradenton Motorsports Park’s Christmas Tree Drags 2025!


Racing With Heavy Hearts…..The KSR Crew Heads To Bradenton Motorsports Park’s Christmas Tree Drags 2025!

Kevin and the KSR Performance and Fab crew headed out to Bradenton for Cleetus McFarland’s Christmas Tree Drags, but like most folks in the motorsports world it was with a heavy heart after the unfortunate death of Greg Biffle and his family. He wasn’t alone, as he and many of the other racers at the Christmas Tree Race were friends with Biffle or raced with him in a variety of races at Bradenton and the Freedom Factory. But even though Greg’s death put a big of a dark cloud over the weekend, the race went on like he’d have wanted. Watch the racing action and see just how well KSR and Soccer Mom did with a Christmas tree strapped to it.


These Railroad Speeders Got A Unique View Of The Oregon Coast While Spreading Christmas Cheer!

Illinois Puts Out A Video Every Year Of Some Of Their More Entertaining Rejected Personalized Plates And Here It Is!

 






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Chase Elliott 2025 season in review: Two wins, Round of 8 appearance highlight big year for the 9 team

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Editor’s note: This is part of a series from NASCAR.com reviewing the top 30 drivers in the NASCAR Cup Series in reverse order of the 2025 final standings. 

  • Driver: Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 
  • Crew chief: Alan Gustafson 
  • Final 2025 ranking: 8th 
  • Key stats: 2 wins, 11 top fives, 19 top 10s, 454 laps led
  • How 2025 ended: Elliott qualified for the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs for the ninth time in his 10-year career, winning the Kansas Speedway postseason race in the Round of 12 and earning six top-10 finishes during the 10-race playoff stretch. A 10th-place finish in the Phoenix Raceway finale placed Elliott eighth in the championship final standings. 

RELATED: Check out Chase Elliott’s Kelley Blue Blook Chevrolet for the 2026 season

  • Best race: A last-lap pass at Atlanta Motor Speedway in June thrilled a sold-out crowd and earned Elliott his second career Cup Series victory at his “home” track. Although it was a dramatic last-lap pass that earned the trophy at Atlanta, Elliott led 41 laps on the day at the 1.5-miler and snapped a 44-race winless streak. 
  • Other season highlights: His best race statistically came in a sixth-place finish after leading 238 of 407 laps at Dover Motor Speedway. His six-race top-10 showing in the 10-race playoff stretch was certainly a sign that the No. 9 team was prepared for a real fight for the championship. Three times Elliott strung together three consecutive top-10 runs, including an impressive stretch in the playoffs at three vastly different venues; he scored fifth at the one-mile New Hampshire Motor Speedway, tallied a win at the Kansas 1.5-miler and landed eighth at the Charlotte ROVAL.
  • Stat to know: Remarkably, Elliott’s final season statistics beyond the two wins – his 11 top fives and 19 top-10 finishes – exactly matched his 2024 output. His 454 laps led were his most out front since 2022. His 12.6 average finish was impressive.

RELATED: All of Hendrick Motorsports’ 2026 paint schemes in one place!

  • Quotable: “The way I’ve kind of progressed through the playoffs this year is just to fight as hard as I can each week, try to earn myself and our team three more weeks, and you never know what can happen in three weeks. … That can be the difference in somebody being mediocre to potentially getting on a hot streak or even a team collectively getting better throughout that course of time.” – Elliott said of his 2025 playoff strategy.
  • Looking ahead: A multi-time winner for the sixth time in his career and first time in three years, Elliott and Alan Gustafson, his longtime crew chief, finished the year feeling optimistic about their progress. Elliott led the most laps since 2022 and advanced to the Round of 8, all positive progress for a former series champion.



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Big Machine Racing Welcomes Retina Surgeon Dr. Patrick Staropoli to the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series for Full-Time Competition Beginning at Daytona – Speedway Digest

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Big Machine Racing announced today that retina surgeon and stock car driver Dr. Patrick Staropoli will join the team full time in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, beginning with the season opener at Daytona International Speedway this February. Staropoli will pilot the No. 48 SYFOVRE® (pegcetacoplan injection) Chevrolet, marking a unique blend of elite medical expertise and high-performance motorsports on one of racing’s biggest stages.

“From the moment I buckled into a pure stock at Hialeah Speedway in 2003, my life’s goal has been to compete at the top levels of this sport. The path has taken many unexpected turns but after working every day for 23 years in pursuit of this dream, I now have the opportunity of a lifetime thanks to Scott Borchetta, Patrick Donahue, and Chevrolet. I am ready to do whatever it takes to put this SYFOVRE Chevy up front and raise awareness for Geographic Atrophy secondary to Age-Related Macular Degeneration by combining my passion for motorsports and medicine.”

A third-generation driver from Plantation, Florida, Staropoli first gained national attention after winning the 2013 PEAK Stock Car Dream Challenge to become a Michael Waltrip Racing development driver, emerging ahead of top talents including runner-up Chase Briscoe. The Harvard University graduate went on to earn a seat with Bill McAnally Racing in the ARCA West Series for the 2014 season, where he quickly proved himself as a frontrunner.

Staropoli competed in four Xfinity Series and four Truck Series races in the 2025 season. Across his career, he has accumulated 17 starts in multiple ARCA series divisions. His breakthrough victory at Irwindale Speedway in 2014 made him the first medical doctor in NASCAR history to win a race.

Dr. Staropoli is a board-certified medical and surgical retina specialist. His research on retinal detachment repair, macular disease, and resident education has been widely published. He completed both his ophthalmology residency and vitreoretinal surgery fellowship at Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, the nation’s top-ranked eye hospital.

“We’re pleased to welcome Dr. Patrick Staropoli to the #48 Big Machine Racing team for the 2026 season,” said Patrick Donahue, Crew Chief and Team Manager. “He brings a rare blend of professionalism, focus, and drive that will continue to strengthen our organization. This partnership reflects our commitment to surrounding the team with individuals who share our values and vision for building long-term success.”

Big Machine Racing PR



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Greenville land use ordinance addition moved to June town meeting -Piscataquis Observer

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GREENVILLE — A proposed revision to Greenville’s land use ordinance which involves a new definition pertaining to motorsports businesses has been moved to the 2026 annual town meeting in June.

The select board gave its approval to the addition developed by the planning board during a Dec.

GREENVILLE — A proposed revision to Greenville’s land use ordinance which involves a new definition pertaining to motorsports businesses has been moved to the 2026 annual town meeting in June.

The select board gave its approval to the addition developed by the planning board during a Dec. 17 meeting, two weeks after tabling a decision.

“We’ve had a lot of special town meetings lately and neither one of these are an emergency,” Selectperson Bonnie Dubien said, also mentioning the decommission of Crescent Street. “So I would like to move that this be put on the June town meeting.”

When asked, Planning Board Chair John Contreni said he was fine with a June vote.

Two weeks prior Contreni said the addition to the list of definitions in the land use ordinance is called motorsports sales/service/repair.

A motorsports sales, service and repair establishment is a commercial use involving the retail sale, servicing, maintenance and mechanical repair of recreational and utility vehicles powered by internal combustion or electric engines. This use includes but is not limited to boats and electrical watercraft, snowmobile, all terrain vehicles, utility vehicles, small engine recreational vehicles, for example dirt bikes, go karts, and lawn and garden equipment, for example mowers, chainsaws and trimmers.

Such a business would not be permitted in the residential, downtown district 1 and 2, rural, airport and resource protection districts. These would be available for conditional use in village, village commercial, commercial industrial, rural development 1 and 2 districts, meaning the owner needs to come before the planning board to get a permit. 

A resident has expressed interest in opening a shop to repair 4-wheelers and side by sides and small engines. Some discussions with neighbors revealed they were worried the business could evolve into an automobile garage so instead a specific motorsports definition was developed by the planning board. 

In other business, the select board approved a letter of engagement for consultant and Tax Increment Financing work with a proposal to be voted on in the future.

Greenville officials are looking at establishing TIF districts and the hope is to have a plan ready for a town meeting, Select Chair Geno Murray said.

“So I’m assuming this is our first step?,” Selectperson Richard Peat asked and was told yes.

Murray said there will be a lot of education involved in the process and residents will have the opportunity to participate.

A committee will be in place at some point, Town Manager Michael Roy said. “Part of pushing it out until 2027 is making sure everybody’s well educated on this,” he said. 

The skating rink warming hut has been delivered and is in place, Roy said in his report. Electricity has been connected and water was set to be connected in the next few days.

Recreation Director Sally Tornquist told Roy that A.E. Robinson came to install the warming hut heater and thought the appliance was too small, so the business donated a larger model. Upon asking Roy what should be done with the older heater she was told to pay it forward. The older heater has been given to A.E. Robinson so the company can donate it to someone in need.

Roy also reported on the Piscataquis County budget, which was approved by the county commissioners the morning prior. The town manager served on the 8-member budget advisory committee.

The group met during the fall and was called back on Dec. 4 as county commissioners explained why some funding was restored for a dozen non-profit organizations.

“$102,834 was put back into the county budget,” Roy said.

On Dec. 16 Commissioner Paul Davis made a motion then to fund $1,500 for the Moosehead Lake Economic Development Corporation, $1,500 for Destination Moosehead Lake, $30,000 for the Piscataquis County Economic Development Council, $500 for Penquis CAP, $500 for Eastern Area Agency on Aging, $1,800 for the Piscataquis Regional Food Center, $20,000 for the Piscataquis Area Community Center, $2,200 for hospice, $13,500 for the Piscataquis County Soil & Water Conservation District, $27,534 for University of Maine Cooperative Extension and $1,800 for the Bangor Area Homeless Shelter.

Davis’ motion also had county salaries being held to a 4.25% increase, per the recommendation of County Manager Michael Williams.

At the commissioners second meeting in November, six of the 12 program grants were restored following a public hearing the night before in which about two dozen people attended with 10 speaking against the program grant cuts. The figures for these half dozen remained the same in Davis’ proposal.

The commissioners wanted to be respectful to the spirit of what the budget advisory committee sent to them, Commissioners Chair Andrew Torbett said last month. The committee wanted to see spending reigned in where the budget has been climbing quite a bit in the last few cycles.

The current year’s county budget, which follows a calendar year timeline, includes the same figures for Cooperative Extension, the soil and water district, hospice and homeless shelter. The food center share would be down from $5,000 and the community center’s is a brand new request with the organization launching earlier this year. These were all added back into the budget two weeks prior.

The $500 for Penquis CAP is the first Piscataquis County funding for the organization in several years.

Program grants restored on Dec. 2 that are down from 2025 are Piscataquis County Economic Development Council, $30,000 from $60,000; Piscataquis Chamber of Commerce, $1,500 from $4,500; Destination Moosehead Lake and Moosehead Lake Economic Development Council, $1,500 from $3,500 for each; and Eastern Area Agency on Aging, $500 from $5,000.

Roy said Greenville is currently paying $977,684 for a county tax allocation, 13.43% of the total and the highest rate among Piscataquis County communities.

The town would still have the highest total (13.26%) in 2026 at $833,879.

“A lot of these towns have been able to shelter their assessed values for new construction with TIF districts,” he said, which is why Greenville is looking to do this.

TIF districts will shelter new construction and development from the state assessed value which trickles down to the county tax and keeps the bill down for Greenville residents.

“Kudos to the fire department, all the fire departments all over the place for the job well done,” Selectperson Burt Whitman said. “This is ugly this time of the year.”

“They did a good job on the Masonic building and everything else,” he said. “Unfortunately we lost it but no one was hurt so that’s the best thing.”

Fire broke out at the Masonic Hall on Pritham Avenue shortly after 1 a.m. on Dec. 15.

When firefighters arrived, they discovered heavy flames, and video and photos from the scene showed flames roaring up from the lodge’s roof.

Investigators have concluded that the fire began in the basement kitchen. The extent of the damage has prevented the fire marshal’s office from determining the blaze’s cause.

Investigators have found no evidence to suggest the fire was intentionally set.

The lodge has loomed over Pritham Avenue since its construction in 1929, paid for by merchant Arthur Crafts.

The Bangor Daily News’ Christopher Burns contributed to this story.



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CLIMBING: How the All-Time Win List Looks After 2025 – Speedway Digest

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The World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series all-time win list is hallowed ground.

Since The Greatest Show on Dirt was born in 1978, thousands and thousands of drivers have attempted to add their name, and only a small percentage have succeeded. To earn a spot means beating the best Sprint Car drivers in the world.

The 2025 campaign delivered 16 different winners over 68 Features. Some made major strides. Some hit milestones. Some kept streaks alive. What they all have in common is every single victory is a cherished piece of history.

Let’s look at how the all-time win list shakes out after the 2025 season: 

David Gravel – 120 Wins (seventh all-time): David Gravel led the Series in victories for the third year in a row, topping 17 races aboard the Big Game Motorsports No. 2. The closer toward the top of the all-time win list you get, the harder it becomes to advance spots. That’s the area where Gravel now resides, but he was able to leap Joey Saldana for seventh. The two-time champion is only two triumphs away from equaling Danny Lasoski for sixth. The top five is also within reach next year as Doug Wolfgang sits at 140 – 20 wins ahead.

Carson Macedo – 58 Wins (tied-16th all-time): Carson Macedo continues to climb the historical ladder with Jason Johnson Racing. Eleven victories this year made it four double-digit win seasons in five tries since jumping in the JJR No. 41. That elevated his career total to 58, equaling the Lemoore, CA native with one of his heroes, Jason Meyers. A similar output in 2026 would move Macedo ahead of Meyers, Craig Dollansky, and Bobby Davis Jr. A career-best season could also push him beyond Jac Haudenschild’s total of 72.

Sheldon Haudenschild – 46 Wins (19th all-time): The all-time win list remains one of Sheldon Haudenschild’s biggest motivations, and he added another four checkered flags to his total in 2025. The Wooster, OH driver entered the year tied with Andy Hillenburg and Logan Schuchart, and he cleared both. Jeff Swindell (51 wins) is Haudenschild’s next target.

Logan Schuchart – 44 Wins (20th all-time): The 2025 season made it 10 straight years of at least one triumph for Logan Schuchart in the Shark Racing No. 1S. The Pennsylvanian tallied two this year, enough to break a tie with Andy Hillenburg.

Kyle Larson – 39 Wins (22nd all-time): Kyle Larson continues to make the most of every opportunity to get in a Sprint Car. The now two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion won four of his 13 starts aboard the Silva Motorsports No. 57 with the World of Outlaws in 2025. That gives him 39 victories in 157 races, a nearly 25-percent clip. He passed his former driver, Shane Stewart (36 wins), in the history books this year.

Michael Kofoid – 22 Wins (29th all-time): Nobody was on the move up the list more in 2025 than Michael “Buddy” Kofoid. A dozen scores with the Roth Motorsports crew upped his total to 22 and elevated him all the way into the top 30 all-time. The spots become more spaced out from here, but the five ahead of him are well within striking distance next season. A superb 2026 could even allow him to catch Shane Stewart for 23rd all-time.

Rico Abreu – 21 Wins (tied-30th all-time): In 13 World of Outlaws races, Rico Abreu managed to bag an impressive four victories in 2025. That pushed the St. Helena, CA driver into a tie with fellow Californian Tim Kaeding and the “Ohio Traveler,” Rick Ferkel.

Anthony Macri – 7 Wins (tied-57th all-time): Dillsburg, PA’s Anthony Macri entered 2025 with a trio of World of Outlaws victories on his résumé, and he more than doubled that number. Macri defended the porch three times in Pennsylvania. He also changed his nickname from the “Concrete Kid” to the “Concrete King” in one night by claiming the Kings Royal at Eldora Speedway, banking $200,000 in riches. He’s now alongside Jeff Shepard, Chad Kemenah, Brian Brown, and Aaron Reutzel.

Bill Balog – 4 Wins (tied-75th all-time): One of Bill Balog’s main goals in his sophomore season was to snag at least one win, and he did so and then some. The “North Pole Nightmare” visited Victory Lane on a trio of occasions, putting his name in the company of Dub May, Jack Hewitt, and Ian Madsen on the all-time list.

More Movement: A handful of more competitors already established on the list added a single tally to their total. Christopher Bell, Giovanni Scelzi, Brad Sweet, Corey Day, and Dale Blaney all won once in 2025.

New Names: Two drivers added their presence on the all-time win list. First, Ryan Timms did so in spectacular fashion by leading all 50 laps of the Knoxville Nationals, becoming the first to ever have “The Granddaddy of Them All” be their first Series score. The other was Chase Dietz, who helped deliver bragging rights for the Pennsylvania Posse by winning night one of the National Open at Williams Grove Speedway.

For the complete all-time World of Outlaws win list, CLICK HERE.

The 2026 World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car season will begin at Volusia Speedway Park’s Federated Auto Parts DIRTcar Nationals, Feb. 4-7. For tickets, CLICK HERE.

For the complete 2026 schedule, CLICK HERE.

If you can’t make it to the track, catch every lap live on DIRTVision.

DIRTcar Series PR



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