Motorsports
Cooper Shipman clinches championship, sets record with ninth-consecutive ictory
Cooper Shipman dominated to capture his ninth-consecutive victory in Formula 4 United States Championship (F4 U.S.) competition at VIRginia International Raceway (VIR) on Sunday afternoon.
The victory was enough to lock in his status as the 2025 F4 U.S. Champion, and secure the scholarship to compete in Formula Regional Americas Championship in 2026. The victory allowed Shipman (No. 14 Kiwi Motorsport Ligier JS F422) to break a record set by Cameron Das during the inaugural season of F4 U.S. competition, and set a new standard for consecutive wins in the FIA-certified championship.
Shipman didn’t just win at VIR on Sunday—he dominated. Immediately taking the point position, he held a 15.453-second margin by the time the checkered flag waved. Behind him, second-place starter Alex Popow (No. 55 Dr. Michael Thompson MS DDS PPLS / MLT Motorsports Ligier JS F422) defended his position, while Demitri Nolan (No. 5 Crosslink Motorsports Ligier JS F422) climbed from a fifth-place starting position to cross the finish line in third. Nolan faced a fierce battle with Luke Powers (No. 51 Corporate Commercial Group / Toney Driver Development Ligier JS F422) during the final laps of the race, but completed the pass just in time to see the white flag wave, and continued to hold the position all the way to the checkered.
Entering the weekend with the hope of carrying the championship battle in to the final round at Barber Motorsports Park, Kekai Hauanio (No. 29 N-E-Where Transport / Crosslink Motorsports Ligier JS F422) climbed from his ninth-place starting position to finish fifth, but the effort wasn’t enough to keep him in the championship fight. Instead, Hauanio will go head to head with Popow to contend for the Vice Championship, as the two enter the final round separated by just 10.5 points.
Stream Round 15 from VIR
Notes of Interest:
- Cooper Shipman won his ninth race of the 2025 season, while locking in the championship title and setting a new record for most consecutive victories in F4 U.S. competition.
- Finishing second, Alex Popow earned his 10th podium of the year, and second runner-up finish of the weekend.
- Demitri Nolan earned his second podium of 2025, finishing third in Sunday’s event.
- Both Luke Powers and Oliver Savoie tied their career-best finishes, crossing the line fourth and sixth, respectively.
Round 15 Official Results
“The record of nine wins in a row is great, but the main goal for this year, and for this weekend, was to wrap up the championship,” explained Shipman after climbing from the car. “I’m super glad that I was able to do that. When I saw that Kekai [Hauanio] got behind me at the beginning, I thought I might have a fight on my hands, but it looked like they were battling super hard behind me. Once I saw that going on, I just had to chill out and run my own race. It was great to be able to put in the pace like that and to stretch the lead, which is something we’ve been looking to do all year. Thanks to my parents, to Kiwi, Motorsport and everybody that’s been helping me be fast every single weekend.”
F4 U.S. will wrap up the 2025 season next month at Barber Motorsports Park during the Barber SpeedTour, October 17-19. The event, like all 2025 races, will be streamed live on SpeedTour.TV. Additional news and updates leading up to the event will be posted on the series’ Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Prospective drivers looking to learn more about FR Americas are encouraged to visit the championship’s website at F4USChampionship.com
Motorsports
Hyak Motorsports Introduces New 3-Race Sponsor for Stenhouse in 2026
Get the can opener ready, Chef Boyardee is set to become a primary sponsorship partner of Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and the No. 47 Hyak Motorsports team during the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season. On Monday, the race team announced a three-race primary sponsorship agreement with the iconic brand.
Additionally, Chef Boyardee will receive associate sponsorship placement for the entirety of the upcoming NASCAR season.
“We’re excited to welcome Chef Boyardee to the Hyak Motorsports family. They’re a brand everyone knows, and bringing them into NASCAR is something the entire team is looking forward to,” said Stenhouse in a team press release. “We’re ready to start the season off strong and represent Chef Boyardee throughout the year.”
The Chef Boyardee colors will adorn the No. 47 Chevrolet beginning with The Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium on Sunday, February 1. After the annual pre-season exhibition event, the brand will return to sponsor Stenhouse in the Daytona 500 on Sunday, February 15. Chef Boyardee’s three-race primary sponsorship stint will wrap up at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday, April 26.
Brynwood Partners, which owns the Chef Boyardee brand, has been aligned with Stenhouse for more than a decade as a primary sponsorship partner. The company couldn’t be prouder to continue its commitment to the 2023 Daytona 500 champion in the upcoming NASCAR Cup Series season.
“Ricky has been an incredible ambassador for our brands in the 12 years that we have been sponsoring his car in the Cup Series,” said Henk Hartong, CEO of Brynwood Partners. “We are excited to bring Chef Boyardee back to the track at Daytona and Talladega this season, both places where Ricky has taken the checkered flag previously. We look forward to bringing the Chef Boyardee 47 to Victory Lane at Daytona in February.”
According to the press release, Chef Boyardee will collaborate with Hyak Motorsports through on-car branding, team assets, and integrated fan-engagement activations designed to reach audiences both at the track and at home. Additionally, the sponsorship will include digital and social media content, behind-the-scenes features, and fan-focused activations, which will be designed to highlight the connection between Chef Boyardee, Hyak Motorsports, and NASCAR’s most ardent fans.
Stenhouse, 38, has collected four wins in the NASCAR Cup Series over a career that has spanned 475 starts. Stenhouse’s four wins have come at Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway, where he has collected two wins apiece. Stenhouse started off the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season strong, as he found himself in Playoff contention through an 11th-place finish in the Coca-Cola 600, the 13th race of the season.
However, Stenhouse found bad luck in the weeks after the Coca-Cola 600, which continued for the duration of the season. Among the bad luck was an ongoing one-sided feud with Spire Motorsports driver Carson Hocevar, which was seemingly resolved.
Stenhouse would end the 2025 campaign 30th in the championship standings. He’ll look to rebound in a big way in 2026.
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Motorsports
Hyak Motorsports introduces new sponsor to NASCAR
The No. 47 Hyak Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro will have a bright, new look during the 2026 season as the team brings a new sponsor to the NASCAR Cup Series.
The team announced on Monday morning that Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will have Chef Boyardee as a primary sponsor in select races and as a full-season associate sponsor. He will showcase the food brand with a red scheme featuring the Spaghetti & Meatballs and Beef Ravioli flavors.
Excited to welcome @ChefBoyardee to the team for the 2026 season!
Chef Boyardee will sponsor the No. 47 team for multiple races this season starting with The Clash and Daytona 500 👨🏻🍳 pic.twitter.com/0wphwIiM3z
— Hyak Motorsports (@HYAKMotorsports) January 12, 2026
The Chef Boyardee scheme will make its debut on Jan. 31 and Feb. 1 with The Clash weekend at Bowman Gray Stadium. It will then return for the season-opening Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 15. Stenhouse is a former two-time winner at the 2.5-mile superspeedway, which includes the 2023 Daytona 500.
The final race featuring the Chef Boyardee scheme will be at another track where the veteran driver has success. He will showcase the red and green scheme during the April 26 race at Talladega Superspeedway.
“We’re excited to welcome Chef Boyardee to the Hyak Motorsports family,” Stenhouse said in a press release.
“They’re a brand everyone knows, and bringing them into NASCAR is something the entire team is looking forward to. We’re ready to start the season off strong and represent Chef Boyardee throughout the year.”
The addition of the new sponsor comes as Stenhouse and Hyak Motorsports prepare to get back into contention for wins. The team missed the playoffs and went winless after posting back-to-back winning seasons in 2023-2024. The number of top-10 finishes fell from six in 2024 to only three last season.
Yet, Stenhouse said during the season finale weekend at Phoenix Raceway that he and crew chief Mike Kelley had many ideas about how to improve early in the race weekend. The practice and qualifying sessions particularly stood out for them.
“We know what we did to get our balance better, and now it’s just trying to figure out how to use all four tires better and just be faster,” Stenhouse told FanBuzz in November. “Looking at data (at Phoenix) I felt like we’re still good on the long run, which has been a good thing for us over the last month and a half. But it’s going fast early, qualifying.
“Looking at practice… after 16-17 laps, I felt like we actually started running some little better lap times than (Kyle Larson) at the same time that we were out there together. But early in the run, he’s going through the corner two-and-a-half, three miles an hour faster than I am through the center.
“And so just trying to figure out how to do that. We have some ideas, but it’s going to take more effort, more work in the offseason to get all that done.”
Motorsports
Dunne’s Decision to Leave McLaren Explained
(GMM) Alex Dunne (pictured) has played down speculation surrounding his shock decision to leave McLaren’s driver development program last year, insisting the move was a calculated step toward his ultimate goal of reaching Formula 1.
The Irishman’s mid-season exit in October raised eyebrows across the paddock, coming after a breakout rookie Formula 2 campaign with Rodin Motorsport and two Formula 1 practice appearances for McLaren – including a standout FP1 debut in Austria.
Speaking to Irish outlet Balls.ie, Dunne made clear that the call was his own, despite external assumptions about politics or stalled talks elsewhere. “For me, there’s a goal and a plan in place and that’s to be a Formula 1 driver,” Dunne said.
“From the options that I knew I had, the decision we made was one that had to be made to be in F1. I think it’s as simple as that – it was actually my decision.”
Dunne admitted the choice was not universally supported at home. “When my dad and I were talking about it, he wasn’t 100 percent sure,” he said. “Normally, he’s the one who is 100 percent sure.”

Now 20, Dunne’s McLaren departure was strongly linked with Red Bull, amid a turbulent period for the energy drink giant’s F1 program. Those rumors intensified late in the year with the departure of Dr Helmut Marko.
Related Article: Formula 1 News: Red Bull driver picture takes shape amid Dunne rumors
Dunne, meanwhile, stressed there was no fallout with McLaren and said he’ll “always thank” the Zak Brown-led outfit. He has since re-signed with Rodin Motorsport for the 2026 F2 season, keeping his F1 ambitions alive.
When asked whether another driver academy announcement could follow, he remained deliberately vague. “We’ll have to wait and see,” he smiled.
Related Article: Formula 2 News: Dunne leads the way on the final day of post-season testing at Yas Marina
Motorsports
NASCAR Horsepower Explained: New Testing Insights
With the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season just over a month away, teams are already hitting the track for crucial preseason testing. This week, one driver from each chartered organization will participate in a dedicated test at the historic North Wilkesboro Speedway — the short track north of Charlotte — to evaluate NASCAR’s new higher-horsepower package.
The test focuses on the updated configuration for short tracks (under 1.5 miles) and road courses, where baseline horsepower jumps from 670 to 750. This increase, first announced by NASCAR in October, pairs with reduced downforce through smaller three-inch rear spoilers and fewer strakes on the rear diffuser. The changes aim to boost tire wear, enhance driver control, and deliver more exciting racing by putting more emphasis on skill behind the wheel.
The one-day session at the revived 0.625-mile oval — which returns to the points-paying schedule in 2026 with its first regular-season race in 30 years on July 19 — offers teams an early look at how the package performs in real-world conditions.
Several storylines add extra intrigue to the test:
– Daniel Suárez will make his on-track debut with his new team, Spire Motorsports, after switching rides following the 2025 season. North Wilkesboro marks his first laps in the No. 7 Chevrolet.
– Two organizations — Rick Ware Racing and Haas Factory Team — will run Chevrolet for the first time in the Gen-7 era after switching from Ford and securing technical alliances with Richard Childress Racing and Hendrick Motorsports, respectively.
Here is the complete list of confirmed drivers participating:
– Ross Chastain – No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
– Daniel Suárez – No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
– Kyle Busch – No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
– Chase Elliott – No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
– AJ Allmendinger – No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
– Chris Buescher – No. 17 RFK Racing Ford
– Chase Briscoe – No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
– Josh Berry – No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford
– Joey Logano – No. 22 Team Penske Ford
– Zane Smith – No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford
– Cole Custer – No. 41 Haas Factory Team Chevrolet
– Erik Jones – No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
– Tyler Reddick – No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
– Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – No. 47 Hyak Motorsports Chevrolet
– Cody Ware – No. 51 Rick Ware Racing Chevrolet
This test serves as an important early checkpoint for teams preparing for the revamped rules package that will shape racing action across multiple venues in the upcoming season. Fans can expect more driver-focused competition and potentially closer battles as the changes take effect. The 2026 Cup Series kicks off soon — stay tuned for updates from North Wilkesboro!
Motorsports
Biffle crash witness says ‘Nobody alive’ in painful 911 call – Motorsport – Sports
An eyewitness to NASCAR legend Greg Biffle’s plane crash harrowingly claimed that “there is nobody alive” during a haunting 911 call.
On the morning of Dec. 18, a private jet owned by Biffle burst into flames upon attempting to make an emergency landing at Statesville Regional Airport in North Carolina. NASCAR confirmed that Biffle, along with his wife Cristina and their children Ryder and Emma, lost their lives in the crash, as did Dennis Dutton, his son Jack, and Craig Wadsworth.
The devastating news sent shockwaves through the racing community, with tributes pouring in from current and retired drivers alike, including Denny Hamlin and Richard Petty.
Moments after Biffle’s Cessna 550 Citation II erupted in a blazing fireball, a witness called first responders to inform them that the plane was “down and burning.” The individual described the scene as a “pretty big-sized fireball, a lot of black smoke,” before adding: “Whoever was on the plane probably didn’t make it. It’s a big fireball.”
When asked to elaborate on what occurred, the caller revealed that the aircraft was “fully engulfed” by flames. “I can see the tail section, but the rest of the plane…. Looks like a small private jet,” he said.
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The witness expressed little confidence that any passengers on board the jet could’ve survived the crash, stating: “There is nobody alive. There’s no way they could survive it. Looks like it hit short of the runway. Here comes the fire engines.”
As of writing, the official cause of the plane crash that took the lives of Biffle, his family, and three other passengers remains undetermined by authorities. Federal investigators began probing the wreckage of the Cessna 550 Citation II on December 19.
The National Transportation Safety Board reported that the aircraft had taken off from Statesville Regional Airport bound for Florida but attempted to return about 15 minutes into the flight.
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A joint statement issued by the families of the victims read: “We are devastated by the loss of our loved ones. This tragedy has left all of our families heartbroken beyond words. Greg and Cristina were devoted parents and active philanthropists whose lives were centered around their young son Ryder and Greg’s daughter Emma (mother – Nicole Lunders). Emma was a wonderful human being with a kind soul who was loved by many people. Ryder was an active, curious and infinitely joyful child.
“Dennis Dutton and his son Jack were deeply loved as well, and their loss is felt by all who knew them. Craig Wadsworth was beloved by many in the NASCAR community and will be missed by those who knew him. Each of them meant everything to us, and their absence leaves an immeasurable void in our lives.”
Motorsports
Why Williams doesn’t see F1 2026 as an acid test
Off the back of a much-improved 2025 campaign which yielded a comfortable fifth place in the Formula 1 world constructors’ standings, Williams is now a team that is looking up rather than over down.
Over the past 18 months the Grove-based squad harvested bountiful low-hanging fruit that was holding it back, and that meant that while its aerodynamic development has largely been focused on 2026 and beyond, it still found ways to improve its performance level with the FW47, guided by its experienced driver line-up of Alex Albon and Ferrari hire Carlos Sainz.
But while Williams’ trajectory has been likened to that of world champion McLaren three or four years ago, when the Woking-based squad was embarking on a similar rebuild, Vowles is also the first to admit Williams remains a work in progress and is not ready for life at the very top of F1 yet.
That’s why he sees 2026’s wholesale regulations changes as a big opportunity for Williams to take the next steps in its large-scale overhaul rather than the final exam of whether his team has succeeded.
“I think it’s harder within the current regulations set to be finding performance relative to others, when you’re constrained by perhaps a way of thinking or a construct you’ve had before, whereas 2026 really is just a clean sheet of paper, so you’re able to approach it a very different way,” Vowles explained to Motorsport.com in an exclusive interview.
“But I don’t think it’s an acid test. I think it’s just a continuation of the journey. I think, if anything, the opportunity to scrap a few things and start again gives us a bit of a leg up.”
Williams took two podiums with Carlos Sainz in Baku and Qatar as part of a much-improved 2025 campaign
Photo by: Andy Hone/ LAT Images via Getty Images
That journey has involved plenty of ups and downs, including the humiliation of not being able to field two cars in 2024’s Japanese Grand Prix due to a lack of spare chassis. At the time Williams was fighting to produce two cars that were on weight and on the same specification, an uncomfortable situation that it fully addressed for 2025.
It is just one public example of how its many behind-the-scenes changes have addressed some of the structural issues Vowles identified after joining from top team Mercedes, and the other is a – very limited – upgrade programme that showed the Grove factory was operating much more efficiently than before. But Vowles suggested the general lack of 2025 aero development was also an opportunity to focus on other areas, giving the team the freedom to use the 2025 season to experiment.
“We’ve only put a couple of weeks of aerodynamic development into the 2025 car during the year,” he said. “But what we’ve been working on instead is: ‘Do we have the right balance? Do we have the right way of working the tyres? Do we have the right way of communicating with the drivers? Do we have the right differential tools? All those are zero cost. They’re just about using a product in a different way to what we had before.
“Quite a bit of performance that was locked away has been coming out of that, and that’s what I’ve been focused on.
“It’s what I like about our sport. You constrain yourself in one way by not putting any more development in this car, but I give you the freedom every weekend to go out there and try something different. As long as it is backed up by logic and has a data-driven mechanism behind it, then I’m fine to support it and try it. And that’s what we’ve been doing, and it’s working. You could see across the year how, despite the car not changing, we were moving forward.”
More “honest” Williams ready for more change
That kind of approach is only possible within a transparent organisation. One of the biggest changes Vowles has had to make since taking over at Grove is stamping out the team’s previous blame culture and providing the “psychological safety” for departments to be brutally honest rather than fool itself.
“It’s very easy for you to produce a report that says I’ve added two tenths of performance this week through X, Y and Z – not validated, not backed up, not checked,” he explained.
Alex Albon, Williams
Photo by: Andrew Ferraro / LAT Images via Getty Images
“And actually, what we do now is very robust, peer reviewed checks on what performance we’re adding, how it’s adding, and it’s what I call honest, correct accounting. In aerodynamics, all too often you have something called drift, and there’s two ways to deal with drift. You can just go: ‘That’s our new benchmark’. Or you go: ‘No, I’ve lost a point, and I’m going to get that point back.’
“And we’re very good here at doing what I think is honest accounting because of the psychological safety and belief in the culture to do so.
“I’m giving you a lot of detail, but actually the biggest change is we have a culture that is ready for more. We know we’re not at a championship level yet, but that scrutiny we apply to ourselves allows us to be stronger.”
Any change is difficult at first, but the results Vowles’ approach has been yielding means the Williams’ organisation has become much more amenable to it.
“As an organisation the first change you make is hard, but then you become more agile and more accommodating to it as you see that the change is net beneficial,” he explained. “So I’d actually say globally, we’ve changed more in 2025 than we did in 2023 and 2024, but the business is also ready for it.
“And now we have a really interesting situation where the business is going: ‘Okay, what next? What else do we do? Let’s go.’ It’s great. And now we have to move faster than we did before.”
F1 2026 rules ‘in a good place’
Quite how that will pan out for Williams in 2026 is anyone’s guess right now, and it will likely take several races into the new campaign to have a clear picture of F1’s new world order.
James Vowles, Team Principal, Williams Racing
Photo by: Shameem Fahath / Motorsport Network
“This is just guesswork,” Vowles said. “But clearly, we won’t see the same gaps we had in 2025 where a few tenths separates a few cars. But conversely, it won’t be anywhere near 2014 where there’s like three and a half seconds, it’ll be somewhere between the two.
“That said, there’ll be a couple of teams who have now done a power unit for the first time, have done a car for the first time. It really is hard and competitive now. Let’s be completely blunt, that’s why we fell back to 10th for a period of time.
“I think the gaps will be a couple of seconds front to back, but I still think you’ll have competition at the sharp end, which is a good point. And the sport has understood that we need competition, so therefore we will close the regulations up in a way that will create that.”
He added: “I think the regulations are in a good place now. I’m sure we’re going to see overtaking, it just won’t be in the places you normally expect it to be, because it is an electrical energy chess game that you’ll be playing.
“But I think it’s worth saying the regulations from where they were when we were talking in Montreal in 2024 [when they were first revealed by the FIA] to where they are today are quite different, and it’s produced a much better package.”
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