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Motorsports

The Mustang FR500 Proved There Was Life After the Ford 302

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The Ford Mustang faced an identity crisis when it made the switch from its time-tested overhead-valve 5.0-liter V-8 to an entirely new DOHC “modular” eight-cylinder engine family in the mid-1990s. While the tried-and-true small block motor enjoyed enormous, and affordable, aftermarket support, the new 4.6-liter unit wasn’t quite as mighty right out of the box, and was dogged by complaints from the pony-loving crowd that modifications were complex and much more expensive than they were for its predecessor.

Ford initially attempted to dispel these negative vibes with the SVT Cobra edition of the car. Arriving in 1996, and outfitted with a 32-valve, all-aluminum version of the 4.6-liter V-8, it claimed 305 horsepower and 300 lb-ft of torque versus the 215 horses and 285 lb-ft that the iron-block, two-valve Mustang GT delivered.

Those are decent numbers, to be sure—but they were no better than the “regular” Chevrolet Camaro SS or the Pontiac Trans Am, which featured LT1 power and weren’t far from the LS1’s 1998 F-Body debut. With the Mustang GT increasingly left behind, and the SVT Cobra barely making the grade, Ford decided to push these modular engines harder for the 1999 model year.

It’s here that disaster struck: despite an advertised 320 horsepower and 317 lb-ft of torque, it turned out that customer cars were actually slower than the weaker SVT Cobras that had preceded them. A quick trip to the dyno easily proved that these ersatz Cobra drivetrains weren’t meeting the performance metrics measured out in the brochure, leading to lawsuits, a stop-sale and recall from Ford, and a frantic re-tuning program to quell the outrage from the Mustang faithful.

At this point, the Blue Oval need a win. The SVT Cobra was canceled for the 2000 model year, and in its place, the automaker rolled out two special projects designed to prove to the public that the Mustang’s modular engines deserved a second chance. Most muscle car fans are familiar with the 2000 Ford Mustang Cobra R, a low-production (just 300 examples) street terror that borrowed a larger 5.4-liter V-8 from Ford’s pickup truck assembly line and milked it for 385 horsepower and 385 lb-ft of torque.

Ford

Far fewer, however, have heard of the Ford Mustang FR500. Debuting in 1999 in the midst of the heat surrounding the SVT Cobra debacle, it was aimed exclusively at the track—with the idea that the pony car crowd, after witnessing its high performance extremes, would be able to eventually order specific FR500 parts to hop up their own rides.

That’s not exactly what happened after the FR500 concept rolled out into the auto show spotlight—but this Rad-era racer’s true legacy as the car that proved modern Mustangs could compete on the race track turned out to be an even more important part of pony car history.

The FR500 Concept Showed The Mod Motor’s Potential

When the Special Vehicle Team got to work on the FR500, they weren’t bound by the same street-legal restrictions that kept the Cobra R closer to Earth. In addition to having carte blanche to alter the Mustang’s platform to maximize performance, they were also given a free hand to scour the  Ford Racing skunk works for anything that might boost the coupe’s capabilities.

Ford

One of the most noticeable changes to the vehicle was its extended wheelbase. The front wheels were pushed nearly five inches towards the front and gained an inch of track width by way of double-A arm suspension that replaced the factory struts, an update that came courtesy of the Lincoln LS sport sedan’s parts bin (and SVT’s own fabrication department). Matched with a unique crossmember up front (and a reconfigured oil pan to get the sump out of the way), the move gave the car better weight distribution across both axles, improving straight-line and high-speed stability.

Also obvious to even casual Mustang fans was the car’s front grille delete (courtesy of a new carbon fiber hood), enormous front bumper air intakes, and carbon fiber fenders. The side scoops were further wiped clean from the body to help further improve slipperiness at speed.

Ford

Between the front fenders, the modular V-8 ruled supreme—after it had been bored out to 5.0 liters and assembled by McLaren Engines (at their Livonia, Michigan location). Ford Racing contributed the cylinder heads and a bespoke magnesium intake manifold, while keeping the SVT Cobra’s rods and crank in place. The throttle bodies were borrowed from the same 5.4-liter motor used by the Cobra R, while a set of headers unique to the FR500 helped the engine breathe as deeply as possible.

The end result was 415 horsepower and 365 lb-ft of torque, with the engine’s high-revving nature indicative of its intended competition use. A six-speed T56 transmission sent that output to the Mustang’s rear axle, where a Torsen limited-slip differential managed traction.

A Dream Deferred

Ford-Mustang_FR500-2000-silver
Ford

The FR500 was a hit with the press and at car shows and events, but the planned parts program roll-out stalled. Estimates at the time placed the full kit at more than $25,000, making the car more expensive than a contemporary C5 Corvette. Enthusiasts who wanted to snag just a few bits of FR500 fun for their own Cobras were eventually denied even that pleasure, as Ford never implemented the implied upgrade path for existing owners, and only built a trio of finished cars.

Hardcore fans willing to scour the Ford Racing parts list could locate a modified version of the FR500 intake, as well as its exhaust system, but that was the extent of what leaked out of Dearborn and onto the streets.

Although the prognosis looked grim from the outside, the Mustang FR500 as a concept was far from dead. Ford had a major redesign of its icon planned for the 2005 model year, and having asserted that the modular engine could hang with some of the most powerful factory power plants out there, it was ready to take the next step.

FR500 Racing Built The Modern Aftermarket For The Mustang Mod Motor

Ford

The intent, as before, was to ignore the legalities of emissions and safety regulations and instead build a Mustang for the track—only this time with the full backing of the factory as a turnkey competition car with a fully thought-out parts support program to match. This version of the FR500 went on sale in 2005, the same year as the new S197 platform debuted in showrooms, and it was an instant success among the competition crowd.

There were multiple editions of the FR500 on offer between 2005 and 2008, all based around the modular motor. The “base” FR500S relied on an all-aluminum, 4.6-liter engine, while the top-tier FR500GT3 made use of the hand-built R50 “cammer,” which punched out displacement to 5.0 liters. There were also a number of flavors (FR500GT, FR500GT4) available in between that crested the 400-hp threshold, and even a drag-oriented FR500CJ, featuring a whopping 900 horsepower from a supercharged version of that same 5.0-liter mill.

Ford

Initially built to make waves in Grand-Am racing, this version of the Mustang won the GrandSport manufacturer’s championship in its very first year, taking the checkered flag in nearly half of the dozen events in the series. In fact, the FR500 was a little “too” good, with Grand-Am officials hitting it with both weight and gearing penalties before the end of the season to help level the playing field somewhat.

Ford not only offered a complete car to race teams (assembled by Multimatic for between $110,000 and $125,000), but it also made good on the parts promise of the original FR500 by providing a long list of engine, chassis, suspension, and aero components that could be ordered a la carte. This was a boon to privateer teams on more limited budgets seeking to put together their best possible FR500 with the cash they had on hand and incrementally improve a car across multiple seasons.

Ford

On top of that, it was a big plus for those campaigning their Mustang on the street, too. More than a little of the parts development prowess Ford Racing poured into the FR500 ended up trickling down to enthusiasts looking for a quicker, better-handling daily driver. This sudden rush of mod motor parts lit a fuse that helped explode the S197 aftermarket, ultimately fulfilling the promise of the ’99 FR500, if only one generation late.

The FR500 Legacy Extends To Today

Today, no one questions the competence of Ford’s modular V-8, which has pulled duty in performance vehicles as diverse as the revived Ford GT, endless variants of the Shelby Cobra, and, of course, the Coyote and Voodoo engine variants that live on with the current edition of the Mustang.

Ford

It’s also no longer the case that Mustang owners struggle to find the equipment and expertise necessary to modify whatever engine they have sitting under the hood. The original small block Ford 5.0 remains revered by many, but it’s far from the be-all, end-all for Mustang builders—and certainly not seen as superior to the mod motor within that community.

There’s no question that the Ford FR500—which you can still find competing at tracks across the country on any given weekend—helped turn public perception of the automaker’s modular V-8 around. By acting as the thin end of the development wedge that helped crack open mods for the mod on the street, while regularly finding its way to the grassroots racing winner’s circle, it’s difficult to overstate how important a role it played in modern Mustang history.

Ford



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Motorsports

The Failed NASCAR Superteam Everyone Forgot

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The collapse of two promising, historic teams led to a failed superteam. That team was HScott Motorsports. Started in 2013 after Turner Scott Motorsports’ shutdown, co-owner Harry Scott Jr. bought out long-time Cup Series backmarker Phoenix Racing to form the team. Moves like moving the team’s operations from Spartanburg, South Carolina, to Mooresville, North Carolina, and hiring young, promising drivers with sponsorship.

Like Justin Allgaier and Michael Annett, plus getting equipment from the most outstanding NASCAR team in history, Hendrick Motorsports. With such a successful history behind him from TSM, and all this behind him. It looked like a sure success. But it was a failure, so why did it fail?

The Lawsuit That Ended Turner Scott Motorsports

The Ganassi-aligned team was a superteam in and of itself. The team won the 2012 Truck Series title with James Buescher, who moved up to the Nationwide Series to race with the team. They also had great success, with eight total wins, only beaten by their truck series success, where they had eleven total wins, plus three wins in the ARCA series.

Even helping to develop drivers like Kyle Larson, Jeb Burton, Brandon Jones, and Justin Allgaier. But then the owners sued each other, which put the brakes on the whole superteam. Turner Scott’s other co-owner, Steve Turner, accused Harry Scott of owing the team 2 million for a debt he agreed to in 2012, but two years later, he still hadn’t paid.

Scott sued Turner in a North Carolina court soon after. But the suits wouldn’t last long. As Harry Scott won the lawsuit against Turner, Scott took the remaining equipment from the team to start HScott Motorsports with Chip Ganassi.

Harry Scott’s Attempt At A NASCAR Superteam

It wasn’t only HScott’s beginnings that showed Harry Scott’s ambitions to become a NASCAR superpower. In 2015, HScott collaborated with Chip Ganassi again to run the No. 42 Xfinity team together, which did actually win with Kyle Larson in the finale. However, the partnership would end after 2015.

Where Harry Scott showed his ambition, and the series where HScott was actually a superteam was the K&N Pro Series East, which was also in partnership with Justin Marks, who now co-owns Trackhouse. They won the 2015 title with future Hendrick star William Byron and his Liberty University sponsorship, establishing themselves as a fourth-tier superteam.

The team would include future Cup driver Justin Haley, who Braun Auto Group sponsored. Scott Heckert finished second in the points, while Rico Abreu, fresh from his Chili Bowl win, joined the thriving team. Bringing his sponsors, Accu-Doc Solutions and GoPro Motorplex.In 2016, they signed on Harrison Burton, the son of former driver Jeff Burton, who began driving the No. 12 DEX Imaging Chevy.

HScott also signed promising dirt drivers Tyler Dippel and Hunter Baize. But along with the Cup team, the K&N East Series superteam would also shut down due to a lack of viable driver/sponsor options for 2017. This showed how massive a priority sponsorship was, which, of course, is essential for starting any kind of superteam.

Living and dying by the sponsorship dollars!

HScott Motorsports made sure there was as much sponsorship as possible for a mid-2010s NASCAR team. With the team’s two Cup drivers, Allgaier and Annett, both came with sponsorship. Michael Annett’s father, Harrold, was the CEO of TMC Transportation, which sponsored Michael’s racing efforts. Justin Allgaier was sponsored by Brandt, which he earned by being the best young driver from Illinois. BRANDT’s home state.

This was, on paper, a very savvy move by Harry Scott. NASCAR in the mid-2010s was going through an all-time ratings drop, and full-season sponsorship was something valuable that used to come easily to teams but was now incredibly rare. So, it brought short-term stability to the attempted superteam.

But HScott would become the best example of a struggle many teams have faced before and since. The struggle between sponsorship and development. Annett and Allgaier showed promise in the Nationwide Series; both had top-five points finishes in Nationwide, and Allgaier even earned a few wins. Some of which were even with Harry Scott’s old team TSM.

But while they were fast, they weren’t the fastest and were constantly beaten by those who went on to have success in the Cup Series, like Stenhouse and Austin Dillon. Anyone could see they needed more development, but when you value sponsorship money above all, that becomes something you can figure out later. But could they really?

That was always going to be hard, but it would be even harder on a new team with no veterans to lean on and with high expectations. At this point, they’d have to call Tom Cruise for this mission impossible. So was it a shock that it backfired?

From 2014 to 2015, between them, HScott only got a single top ten, an eighth at Bristol by Allgaier. Never even finishing top 25 in points. By 2016, the team was already on the ropes due to the terrible twos of bad results mixed with ambitious expansion, so in 2016, they went on an all-out push.

HScott’s 2016 Hail Mary Run

HScott tried everything they could to finally establish themselves as the superteam Harry Scott wanted them to be. They cut ties with CGR and aligned with Hendrick Motorsports, the consistently dominant team in NASCAR history.

Their most shocking move, though, was signing Clint Bowyer, which best showed Scott’s superteam ambitions. A driver who almost won the title a couple of times and had a handful of Cup wins. Expect they didn’t really sign him well permanently.

Bowyer really signed with SHR, a real NASCAR superteam to replace co-owner Tony Stewart, but he was on his retirement tour for 2016, and HScott swooped in and got the rights to sign him through a loophole in his contract. His old team, MWR, shut down after 2015, which is why he was a free agent.

The Contract That Changed Everything For Bowyer

According to his contract, Bowyer and his sponsor, 5-Hour Energy, were signed to the #15 car. So HScott flipped the #51 they started with after buying out Phoenix, who used 51 around to 15, and like that, Bowyer and Five Hour Energy were HScott. Plus, there weren’t any good rides open for 2016 from anything close to a superteam, so Bowyer didn’t buy out his deal and decided to rock with them for the year.

While that would result in Bowyer’s career-worst year, it would be HScott’s best in the Series. Bowyer in the HScott 15 had three top tens throughout the year, and heading into the regular-season finale, they were still in contention for the playoffs, though it was a long shot. But that hope was significant.

Scott had used the money from Five Hour Energy to pay off his debts, so if Bowyer got into the playoffs and got HScott those playoff winnings. They could sign a good driver to replace him and rebuild from there, while keeping their young talents to become a superteam in a few seasons. However, HScott’s last hope of becoming the superteam they were aiming to be would be gone when Bowyer crashed with Bayne in Indy. Eliminating him from the playoffs.

HScott’s Shutdown And Legacy

In December 2016, Harry Scott announced HScott’s shutdown to the world, a somber and sobering moment. Ending his dream of a NASCAR superteam, “Over the past several months, I considered a number of options for moving forward with the team,” Scott said in the statement. “Regrettably, there are no viable sponsor/driver options immediately available to allow the team to participate in 2017.”

“I love this sport and being part of it. I invested in NASCAR because I truly believe it represents the best racing competition in the world and the best people in all sports.” Justin Marks hoped their hiatus from the K&N East Series would be temporary, but tragically, the whole racing world would learn how permanent it really was.

At the beginning of August 2017, news began to spread that Harry Scott Jr. had been confirmed dead at the age of 51. This only came months after TSR’s other owner, Stevie Turner, was also confirmed dead.

Justin Marks’ Take On HScott

Team co-owner Justin Marks posted on Twitter: “I know he took tremendous pride in seeing every one of our drivers at HScott Motorsports … realizing their dreams and starting their journey in our cars. Harry loved racing and was truly committed to seeing success across all of his teams.

Without his commitment to the sport, many would not have had the opportunity to ascend to the positions they hold today. My thoughts are with Harry’s friends and family during this difficult time.

“I’ll always remember my first business partner in NASCAR with gratitude, pride, and joy.”Marks is correct: despite his failed superteam ambitions, his legacy can be seen all over the sport today, with Byron and Larson winning races and titles with Hendrick now.

Final Thoughts

Justin Marks used this experience to co-own a legit NASCAR superteam in Trackhouse, Allgaier winning races regularly in the Xfinity Series with JRM, even earning a title of his own, and the likes of Brandon Jones, Jeb, Harrison Burton, and Rhodes, who also drove with them in K&N, being regulars in the lower series.

And all the races and titles he won as HScott’s owner in K&N, plus the Truck and K&N titles he earned as co-owner with TSR, put him in the history books forever. Thanks a bunch for reading!



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Fmr State Sen. Gerald Dial ‘50/50’ on 2026 comeback bid, denies grand jury investigation rumor

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Former State Sen. Gerald Dial (R-Lineville) denied on Tuesday knowledge of a rumored grand jury investigation regarding his tenure on the embattled Motorsports Hall of Fame Commission, but said he was still considering a 2026 run for State Senate.

Governor Kay Ivey recently dismissed and replaced the entire appointed Motor Sports Hall of Fame Commission, including Dial, the former board chairman, according to Alabama Daily News.

Karen Lakey, former Motorsports Hall of Fame Commission accounts manager, allegedly stole $236,610 from the Commission. The theft was revealed in an audit released by the Alabama Department of Public Examiners, which detailed numerous improprieties, and is being investigated by the Attorney General’s Office.

Other findings from the report include a former Motorsports Hall of Fame executive director purchasing a 1968 Camaro Convertible pace car from the Commission for $15,000 in April 2023. The Commission indicated to auditors that the vehicle was advertised for bid and that the former executive director was the only individual who bid on it. The Commission placed an advertisement in a local newspaper stating that bids were being accepted for a “1968 Chevrolet.” The advertisement provided no additional information regarding the car, including the model, according to the audit.

The spouse of the former executive director also purchased a 1998 Ford F-150 truck from the Commission for $1,000.00 in March 2024. 

Dial denied any knowledge of any rumored grand jury investigation into his tenure on the Motorsports Hall of Fame Commission.

“I can’t understand why they haven’t arrested that woman. All the evidence that’s there. If you rob a bank, they go out and arrest you the next day, and she basically robbed the bank, and they’ve not done anything. It’s kind of weird,” Dial told 1819 News on Tuesday. “Ever since I announced I might run for my office, there’s been all kinds of rumors about me. I think there’s some people in Montgomery that would be real frightened if I came back.”

Dial, 88, has said he is considering a run for State Senate District 13, currently held by State Sen. Randy Price (R-Opelika).

“We keep getting phone calls from people in the district encouraging us to run,” Dial told 1819 News on Tuesday. “We haven’t made a decision yet. They’re going to do a poll, probably starting next week. We’re going to look at it. We haven’t made any decisions, yes or no. We haven’t ruled it out, but I guess you’d say it’s 50/50 right now. We’re looking at our options and all those things.”

To connect with the author of this story or to comment, email [email protected].

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The Failed NASCAR Superteam Everyone Forgot

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The collapse of two promising, historic teams led to a failed superteam. That team was HScott Motorsports. Started in 2013 after Turner Scott Motorsports’ shutdown, co-owner Harry Scott Jr. bought out long-time Cup Series backmarker Phoenix Racing to form the team. Moves like moving the team’s operations from Spartanburg, South Carolina, to Mooresville, North Carolina, and hiring young, promising drivers with sponsorship.

Like Justin Allgaier and Michael Annett, plus getting equipment from the most outstanding NASCAR team in history, Hendrick Motorsports. With such a successful history behind him from TSM, and all this behind him. It looked like a sure success. But it was a failure, so why did it fail?

The Lawsuit That Ended Turner Scott Motorsports

The Ganassi-aligned team was a superteam in and of itself. The team won the 2012 Truck Series title with James Buescher, who moved up to the Nationwide Series to race with the team. They also had great success, with eight total wins, only beaten by their truck series success, where they had eleven total wins, plus three wins in the ARCA series.

Even helping to develop drivers like Kyle Larson, Jeb Burton, Brandon Jones, and Justin Allgaier. But then the owners sued each other, which put the brakes on the whole superteam. Turner Scott’s other co-owner, Steve Turner, accused Harry Scott of owing the team 2 million for a debt he agreed to in 2012, but two years later, he still hadn’t paid.

Scott sued Turner in a North Carolina court soon after. But the suits wouldn’t last long. As Harry Scott won the lawsuit against Turner, Scott took the remaining equipment from the team to start HScott Motorsports with Chip Ganassi.

Harry Scott’s Attempt At A NASCAR Superteam

It wasn’t only HScott’s beginnings that showed Harry Scott’s ambitions to become a NASCAR superpower. In 2015, HScott collaborated with Chip Ganassi again to run the No. 42 Xfinity team together, which did actually win with Kyle Larson in the finale. However, the partnership would end after 2015.

Where Harry Scott showed his ambition, and the series where HScott was actually a superteam was the K&N Pro Series East, which was also in partnership with Justin Marks, who now co-owns Trackhouse. They won the 2015 title with future Hendrick star William Byron and his Liberty University sponsorship, establishing themselves as a fourth-tier superteam.

The team would include future Cup driver Justin Haley, who Braun Auto Group sponsored. Scott Heckert finished second in the points, while Rico Abreu, fresh from his Chili Bowl win, joined the thriving team. Bringing his sponsors, Accu-Doc Solutions and GoPro Motorplex.In 2016, they signed on Harrison Burton, the son of former driver Jeff Burton, who began driving the No. 12 DEX Imaging Chevy.

HScott also signed promising dirt drivers Tyler Dippel and Hunter Baize. But along with the Cup team, the K&N East Series superteam would also shut down due to a lack of viable driver/sponsor options for 2017. This showed how massive a priority sponsorship was, which, of course, is essential for starting any kind of superteam.

Living and dying by the sponsorship dollars!

HScott Motorsports made sure there was as much sponsorship as possible for a mid-2010s NASCAR team. With the team’s two Cup drivers, Allgaier and Annett, both came with sponsorship. Michael Annett’s father, Harrold, was the CEO of TMC Transportation, which sponsored Michael’s racing efforts. Justin Allgaier was sponsored by Brandt, which he earned by being the best young driver from Illinois. BRANDT’s home state.

This was, on paper, a very savvy move by Harry Scott. NASCAR in the mid-2010s was going through an all-time ratings drop, and full-season sponsorship was something valuable that used to come easily to teams but was now incredibly rare. So, it brought short-term stability to the attempted superteam.

But HScott would become the best example of a struggle many teams have faced before and since. The struggle between sponsorship and development. Annett and Allgaier showed promise in the Nationwide Series; both had top-five points finishes in Nationwide, and Allgaier even earned a few wins. Some of which were even with Harry Scott’s old team TSM.

But while they were fast, they weren’t the fastest and were constantly beaten by those who went on to have success in the Cup Series, like Stenhouse and Austin Dillon. Anyone could see they needed more development, but when you value sponsorship money above all, that becomes something you can figure out later. But could they really?

That was always going to be hard, but it would be even harder on a new team with no veterans to lean on and with high expectations. At this point, they’d have to call Tom Cruise for this mission impossible. So was it a shock that it backfired?

From 2014 to 2015, between them, HScott only got a single top ten, an eighth at Bristol by Allgaier. Never even finishing top 25 in points. By 2016, the team was already on the ropes due to the terrible twos of bad results mixed with ambitious expansion, so in 2016, they went on an all-out push.

HScott’s 2016 Hail Mary Run

HScott tried everything they could to finally establish themselves as the superteam Harry Scott wanted them to be. They cut ties with CGR and aligned with Hendrick Motorsports, the consistently dominant team in NASCAR history.

Their most shocking move, though, was signing Clint Bowyer, which best showed Scott’s superteam ambitions. A driver who almost won the title a couple of times and had a handful of Cup wins. Expect they didn’t really sign him well permanently.

Bowyer really signed with SHR, a real NASCAR superteam to replace co-owner Tony Stewart, but he was on his retirement tour for 2016, and HScott swooped in and got the rights to sign him through a loophole in his contract. His old team, MWR, shut down after 2015, which is why he was a free agent.

The Contract That Changed Everything For Bowyer

According to his contract, Bowyer and his sponsor, 5-Hour Energy, were signed to the #15 car. So HScott flipped the #51 they started with after buying out Phoenix, who used 51 around to 15, and like that, Bowyer and Five Hour Energy were HScott. Plus, there weren’t any good rides open for 2016 from anything close to a superteam, so Bowyer didn’t buy out his deal and decided to rock with them for the year.

While that would result in Bowyer’s career-worst year, it would be HScott’s best in the Series. Bowyer in the HScott 15 had three top tens throughout the year, and heading into the regular-season finale, they were still in contention for the playoffs, though it was a long shot. But that hope was significant.

Scott had used the money from Five Hour Energy to pay off his debts, so if Bowyer got into the playoffs and got HScott those playoff winnings. They could sign a good driver to replace him and rebuild from there, while keeping their young talents to become a superteam in a few seasons. However, HScott’s last hope of becoming the superteam they were aiming to be would be gone when Bowyer crashed with Bayne in Indy. Eliminating him from the playoffs.

HScott’s Shutdown And Legacy

In December 2016, Harry Scott announced HScott’s shutdown to the world, a somber and sobering moment. Ending his dream of a NASCAR superteam, “Over the past several months, I considered a number of options for moving forward with the team,” Scott said in the statement. “Regrettably, there are no viable sponsor/driver options immediately available to allow the team to participate in 2017.”

“I love this sport and being part of it. I invested in NASCAR because I truly believe it represents the best racing competition in the world and the best people in all sports.” Justin Marks hoped their hiatus from the K&N East Series would be temporary, but tragically, the whole racing world would learn how permanent it really was.

At the beginning of August 2017, news began to spread that Harry Scott Jr. had been confirmed dead at the age of 51. This only came months after TSR’s other owner, Stevie Turner, was also confirmed dead.

Justin Marks’ Take On HScott

Team co-owner Justin Marks posted on Twitter: “I know he took tremendous pride in seeing every one of our drivers at HScott Motorsports … realizing their dreams and starting their journey in our cars. Harry loved racing and was truly committed to seeing success across all of his teams.

Without his commitment to the sport, many would not have had the opportunity to ascend to the positions they hold today. My thoughts are with Harry’s friends and family during this difficult time.

“I’ll always remember my first business partner in NASCAR with gratitude, pride, and joy.”Marks is correct: despite his failed superteam ambitions, his legacy can be seen all over the sport today, with Byron and Larson winning races and titles with Hendrick now.

Final Thoughts

Justin Marks used this experience to co-own a legit NASCAR superteam in Trackhouse, Allgaier winning races regularly in the Xfinity Series with JRM, even earning a title of his own, and the likes of Brandon Jones, Jeb, Harrison Burton, and Rhodes, who also drove with them in K&N, being regulars in the lower series.

And all the races and titles he won as HScott’s owner in K&N, plus the Truck and K&N titles he earned as co-owner with TSR, put him in the history books forever. Thanks a bunch for reading!





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KohR Motorsports to run Biffle tribute livery | Highlands News-Sun

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KohR Motorsports has announced plans to use special Greg Biffle livery for next month’s IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge season-opening BMW Endurance Challenge at Daytona. The car will sport a similar look as the No. 60 Grainger Ford Taurus Biffle raced to the 2002 NASCAR Busch Series championship.

The team announced its plans for the tribute on social media and said they’ve already received numerous requests for shirts and diecast cars of the livery, which will also be on the car for the preseason Roar Before the Rolex 24 test.



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Noah Gragson’s 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season preview

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Dec. 31, 2025, 7:10 a.m. ET

Noah Gragson left the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season with some momentum. Gragson had a few good runs during the 2025 campaign, but it was full of mistakes and wrecks that didn’t allow him to finish. Now, the Front Row Motorsports driver is ready to put it all behind him.

Gragson’s biggest priority for the 2026 NASCAR season must be finishing races. The driver of the No. 4 car was involved in too many accidents that hurt his ability to finish and run well. It has been a rollercoaster tenure for Gragson in the Cup Series; however, returning to Front Row Motorsports should help.

There was plenty of speculation regarding Front Row Motorsports during the offseason, as the team’s future could have gone downhill if it lost the trial. Instead of worrying about the future, Gragson can now focus on improving his performance with the No. 4 team ahead of the 2026 NASCAR season.



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Motorsports Bombshell Lindsay Brewer Heats Up Laguna Beach in Skimpy Tank and Bikini Top – Star Magazine

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Lindsay Brewer/Instagram

Lindsay Brewer grabbed attention with a playful new Instagram post shared on Monday, December 29.

“I’m your Uber driver, get in!” the professional race car driver and social media personality, 28, captioned photos in which she posed inside a parked vehicle in Laguna Beach, California. Brewer sat sideways in the driver’s seat with the door open, smiling directly at the camera as palm trees and a bright blue sky framed the background.

For the look, Brewer wore a fitted white cropped tank that highlighted her toned midsection, layered over a bright yellow bikini top. She paired the top with loose-fitting, light-wash jeans. White sneakers completed the outfit, keeping things sporty and practical while still photo-ready.

Lindsay Brewer/Instagram

Her long blonde hair was styled in soft waves that fell over her shoulders, and her makeup appeared natural, with a fresh glow that fit the sunny beachside setting. Brewer accessorized minimally, letting the outfit and setting do most of the talking.

Known for balancing her racing career with a strong social media presence, Brewer has built a loyal following by blending high-speed motorsports with lifestyle content.





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Motorsports3 weeks ago

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23 عاما من الفضائح السياسية والجنسية منذ انقلاب حمد بن خليفة.. استغلال الفتيات الصغيرات في الدعارة.. ضبط ابنة رئيس وزراء قطر خلال ممارستها لجنس الجماعي.. ملامح الحكم تتخبط بين المنفي وتدخلات النساء

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