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Spire Motorsports releases crew chief Rodney Childers after 9 races of NASCAR season

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Spire Motorsports has parted ways with championship-winning crew chief Rodney Childers after only nine races with the team. Childers, one of the winningest active crew chiefs in the Cup Series, won the 2014 championship with Kevin Harvick at Stewart-Haas Racing. When that team closed at the end of last season, Childers […]

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Spire Motorsports has parted ways with championship-winning crew chief Rodney Childers after only nine races with the team.

Childers, one of the winningest active crew chiefs in the Cup Series, won the 2014 championship with Kevin Harvick at Stewart-Haas Racing. When that team closed at the end of last season, Childers moved to Spire to crew chief Justin Haley.

Through the first nine races of the season, Haley is 23rd in the Cup standings. His best finish this year is 10th at Homestead, but Haley is coming off a 13th-place finish at Bristol, where he scored a season-high 13 stage points.

The decision to release Childers came after NASCAR’s only off weekend of the season. The team announced Thursday that Ryan Sparks, competition director and former crew chief, will be Haley’s crew chief for the rest of this season.

“NASCAR is an ever-evolving sport and the path to improvement isn’t always comfortable,’’ Spire Motorsports co-owner Jeff Dickerson said in a statement.“The break in the Cup Series schedule gave us a chance to evaluate where we are as a program. We took the opportunity to discuss the best paths forward for everyone involved and the team and Rodney agreed that it would be best for us to part ways.

“Rodney has worked at the highest level of our sport for 20 years, and he knows what it takes to win championships. With that in mind, we collectively acknowledged challenges with the team dynamic. Having the right combination of talent is just as important as the results on track. As we move in a new direction it is not lost on us that Rodney has been an invaluable asset to our organization, as he will continue to be for others in this sport.”

Childers addressed his departure on social media, writing: “I know this is a shock. But also know that not everything works out perfect all the time. That’s how life works. This was just one of those things that just wasn’t working for either of us. I appreciate my time at Spire, working with JH and the entire 7 team. We did a lot of good that is yet to be seen, and I wish them the best in the future.”

He said he would take some time off, focus on his family and “honestly just see what the racing world holds for me next.”

Childers is tied for second in wins among active crew chiefs. Childers and Adam Stevens each have 40 Cup wins. Paul Wolfe ranks first with 42 series victories.

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Results, winner of Cup Series race at Sonoma Raceway

Jeff Gordon reflects on how to grow NASCAR’s popularity Jeff Gordon discusses the popularity of NASCAR and how the sport can continue to grow. Sports Seriously And so it continues. For the second straight week and third straight road-course race, Shane van Gisbergen is your winner. He captured the checkered flag during the Toyota/Save Mart […]

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And so it continues.

For the second straight week and third straight road-course race, Shane van Gisbergen is your winner. He captured the checkered flag during the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Somoma Raceway on Sunday, July 13.

It is the fourth career Cup Series victory and third this season for the driver of Trackhouse’s No. 88 car. All of them have come on road courses.

He, of course, already had a playoff spot wrapped up.

Chase Briscoe, Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Christopher Bell rounded out the top five. Let’s check out the full finishing order.

NASCAR standings: Results of Cup Series race at Sonoma Raceway

  1. Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88
  2. Chase Briscoe, No. 19
  3. Chase Elliott, No. 9
  4. Michael McDowell, No. 71
  5. Christopher Bell, No. 20
  6. Tyler Reddick, No. 45
  7. Ty Gibbs, No. 54
  8. William Byron, No. 24
  9. Joey Logano, No. 22
  10. Kyle Busch, No. 8
  11. Brad Keselowski, No. 6
  12. Ryan Preece, No. 60
  13. Josh Berry, No. 21
  14. Daniel Suarez, No. 99
  15. Justin Haley, No. 7
  16. Chris Buescher, No. 17
  17. Ty Dillon, No. 10
  18. AJ Allmendinger, No. 16
  19. Alex Bowman, No. 48
  20. Denny Hamlin, No. 11
  21. Austin Dillon, No. 3
  22. Cole Custer, No. 41
  23. Todd Gilliland, No. 34
  24. Ross Chastain, No. 1
  25. Riley Herbst, No. 35
  26. Bubba Wallace, No. 23
  27. Zane Smith, No. 38
  28. John Hunter Nemechek, No. 42
  29. Erik Jones, No. 43
  30. Austin Cindric, No. 2
  31. Katherine Legge, No. 78
  32. Carson Hocevar, No. 77
  33. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47
  34. Cody Ware, No. 51
  35. Kyle Larson, No. 5
  36. Ryan Blaney, No. 12
  37. Noah Gragson, No. 4



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Sonoma Xfinity results: Connor Zilisch holds off Shane van Gisbergen for win

Connor Zilisch held off Shane van Gisbergen over the final laps to win Saturday’s Xfinity Series race at Sonoma Raceway. It marked the second race in a row the two finished first and second but last weekend at Chicago it was van Gisbergen defeating Zilisch. Advertisement Saturday, Zilisch withstood van Gisbergen’s pressure on the final […]

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Connor Zilisch held off Shane van Gisbergen over the final laps to win Saturday’s Xfinity Series race at Sonoma Raceway.

It marked the second race in a row the two finished first and second but last weekend at Chicago it was van Gisbergen defeating Zilisch.

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Saturday, Zilisch withstood van Gisbergen’s pressure on the final lap around the 1.99-mile road course to collect his third series victory of the season and fourth of his career.

Zilisch’s victory gave JR Motorsports its series-best 10th win of the year and 98th in the series. It also was the team’s fourth 1-2 finish of the season. JR Motorsports has won the past six Xfinity road course races, the longest streak by a team in series history. All five JR Motorsports cars finished in the top 10.

Zilisch, who turns 19 on July 22, and van Gisbergen combined to lead 70 of the race’s 79 laps Saturday.

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William Sawalich was third, Nick Sanchez finished fourth and Riley Herbst was fifth.

Five rookies finished in the top 10, the most in series history on a road course. Those five rookies were: Zilisch (first), Sawalich (third), Sanchez (fourth), Taylor Gray (seventh) and Carson Kvapil (eighth).

Stage 1 winner: Sam Mayer

Stage 2 winner: Brandon Jones

Next: The series races at 4:30 p.m. ET Saturday, July 19 at Dover.



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ARCA Menards West Series: 2025 Sonoma Race Review

By Vincent Delforge, Staff Writer The sixth race of the 2025 ARCA Menards West Series season took place at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma, CA on July 11, 2025. The General Tire 200 was won in a commanding manner by Joe Gibbs Racing driver William Sawalich. The driver of the No. 18 Toyota was the fastest […]

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By Vincent Delforge, Staff Writer

The sixth race of the 2025 ARCA Menards West Series season took place at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma, CA on July 11, 2025. The General Tire 200 was won in a commanding manner by Joe Gibbs Racing driver William Sawalich.

The driver of the No. 18 Toyota was the fastest in practice, earned the pole position, set the fastest lap of the race, and led every lap. His dominance was completely challenged during the final lap of overtime when he was pushed off the track in turn 2 by Alon Day (Venturini Motorsports). Having moved back up to fourth, Sawalich first got rid of Jack Wood (Bill McAnally Racing) by pushing him into a spin coming out of Turn 3. He then took advantage of Alon Day’s opening of the inside line in the hairpin to get into the rear bumper of leader Christian Eckes and give him a “love tape” enough to slightly destabilize the Bill McAnally Racing driver as he accelerated again. Side by side in Turn 12, Sawalich, despite a brush with the outside wall, took advantage of his better speed to take the checkered flag first, 0.66 thousandths ahead of Eckes and 1.56 ahead of Alan Day! This was the closest finish in the history of the West Series at Sonoma in 46 races!

Fourth in the race, Trevor Huddleston (High Point Racing) made a good point day by finishing ahead of his main rivals for the championship. He now has 299 points, 14 more than Tanner Reif (Central Coast Racing), who finished ninth in the race, and 15 more than Kyle Keller (Jan’s Racing Team), who finished eighth on Friday.

It’s time to take a closer look at how the Sonoma race unfolded. 

ARCA West Practice/Qualifying

As mentioned above, William Sawalich was the fastest driver in practice, being the only driver to go under the 78-second mark with a lap time of 77.505 seconds. He finished ahead of Corey Day (Spire Motorsports), Alon Day, and Jack Wood. Jonathan Reaume (Strike Mamba Racing) didn’t do a lap, as his team finished preparing their new car in the pit lane. Nick Joanides (Performance P-1 Motorsports) encountered gearshift issues. Rookie Kaylee Bryson (Cook Racing Technologies) also had technical problem with a motor sensor issue. Finally, among the highlights of this practice, Spencer Gallagher’s (Clark Racing) accident who destroyed the left side of his No. 23 Chevrolet.

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In the qualifying session, Sawalich took pole position with a lap time of 77.507 seconds, finishing 1 thousandths of a second ahead of Alon Day. The second row was occupied by Corey Day and Tyler Reif (Sigma Performance Services). Bill McAnally Racing drivers Christian Eckes and Jack Wood shared the third row. Reaume made his first laps and was logically last. It’s worth noting that two drivers didn’t take part in the session: Joanides, whose team hadn’t resolved the aforementioned issues in time, and Gallagher, whose team was configuring the backup car loaned by Sigma Performance Services. It’s worth noting that last year, Joe Farrè (SPS) and T.J. Clark were partners. There was a great sense of solidarity between them.

GREEN!!!

Sawalich gave no one a chance to challenge him for first place as the green flag waved. Behind him, Tyler Reif made an excellent start and moved from fourth to second place in the first two turns. Joanides did not start the race, his car having stopped in his pit box. Eric Johnson, Jr. (Jerry Pitts Racing) experienced transmission issues and rejoined the pit lane before the first lap of the race. He would restart well behind the pack.

On lap four, Todd Souza (Central Coast Racing) rejoined the pit lane with suspension issues. Johnson, Jr. stopped briefly due to a broken left rear axle coming out of the hairpin but managed to restart, only to stop in his pit box the following lap. He would return to the track five laps down.

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By lap 10, the top 10 was as follows, with Sawalich leading ahead of Tyler Reif, Alon Day, Corey Day, Christian Eckes, Jack Wood, Trevor Huddleston, Will Rodgers (Naake Motorsports), Kyle Keller, and Eric Nascimento, Jr. (Nascimento-Joiner Motorsports). Kaylee Bryson, then 19th, reported that her engine was losing power but continued her race.

By lap 14, Sawalich was still leading, while Joanides finally took to the track. But he soon complained of the same broken shift linkage issue.

The first yellow flag was waved during the 17th lap when Will Rodgers went off the track on the climb to Turn 2, got a rock that broke the dry sump pump belt. The motor of his No. 88 Ford smoked, forcing the 2018 Sonoma race winner to stop in Turn 7A avoiding further engine damage. Rodd Kneeland, 17th, received the free pass. Joanides was again stopped in his pit box after slowing down for two laps. He wasn’t the only one stopped in his pit box, as Reaume was also there.

At the restart, Sawalich maintained the lead, while Corey Day took second place from Tyler Reif, who went wide in Turn 4. Christian Eckes tried to take advantage of the opening but spun while trying to pass Tyler Reif entering Turn 7A without triggering a yellow flag. Alon Day and Jack Wood also took advantage of the opportunity to pass Tyler Reif, who had to swerve to avoid the spinning car of Eckes. Joanides returned to the track on lap 23 but would eventually retire shortly after.

Quarterley in the wall!

On lap 26, Alon Day passed Corey Day for second place. One lap later, Dale Quarterley spun in turn 4 and hit the inside wall. The left front of his car was badly damaged, but he managed to reach the pit lane without causing a caution. However, he had to retire.

The next yellow flag came on lap 33 and marked the midway break. Kneeland received the free pass for the second time. Note that Bryson was again experiencing engine power losses.

The complete standings at the halfway point are as follows. Sawalich leads ahead of Alon Day, Corey Day, Wood, Nascimento, Huddleston, Keller, Caleb Shrader (Jerry Pitts Racing), Robbie Kennealy (Jan’s Racing Team), Tanner Reif, Eckes, Jeff Anton (Quarterley Racing), Ryan Philpott (Philpott Racing), Rodd Kneeland, Souza (-1), Bryson (-1), Davey Magras (Davey Magras Racing at -2 laps), Blake Lothian (Strike Manba Racing at -3 laps), Reaume (-3), David Smith (Shockwave Racing at -5 laps), Johnson, Jr. (-5), Gallagher (-5), Quarterley (out), Rodgers (out) and Joanides (-24).

The restart was given on lap 38, with Sawalich leading the way. This would be the quietest part of the race, aside from a few positional changes within the pack. But on lap 51, Johnson Jr. attempted to make an inside pass on Kneeland in turn 12, and the two drivers collided. While Johnson Jr. fared well, Kneeland spun off, hitting the outside wall hard and being hit at full speed by Kennealy, who had nowhere to go. The impact was very violent, and both cars were destroyed. The red flag was waved on lap 52 and lasted 13 minutes while the track was cleared of debris and the wall repaired. There was no free pass, as Kneeland was involved in the accident.

The restart was given on lap 55, and the top 10 was as follows. Sawalich led ahead of Alon Day, Corey Day, Wood, Eckes, Keller, Tyler Reif, Huddleston, Shrader, and Nascimento, Jr. Jack Wood pulled off a successful move, quickly passing both Days to move into second place. However, Israeli Alon Day managed to retake second place on lap 58. The following lap, Eckes overtook his teammate Wood for third place.

On the 61st and penultimate lap, Keller, well established in the top ten, ran out of fuel. Despite shaking his car, he stopped just after the starting line, triggering another yellow flag, the fourth. Bryson received the free pass and came back to within one lap of the leaders.

OVERTIME!

We’re treated to overtime. The race restarts on lap 65 for a one-lap dash. Sawalich is pushed off the track entering turn 2 by Alon Day, who also goes into the dirt. Sawalich gets back onto the track but lost momentum. Behind, Alon Day also gets back on the track and hits Eckes, who in turn hits Wood.

Eckes is the new leader ahead of Alon Day, Wood, and Sawalich. But in turn 3, Sawalich pushes Wood into a spin. Wood finishes the race in 13th place. In turn 7A, Huddleston takes the fourth position from Corey Day for fourth place. The championship leader has his best career race at Sonoma.

In the esses, Eckes and Alon Day are in the middle of a battle, which benefits Sawalich, who closes in on them. Arriving at turn 11 (hairpin), Sawalich took advantage of Alon Day’s opening of the inside lane to get into the rear bumper of leader Christian Eckes and give him a “love tape,” enough to slightly destabilize the Bill McAnally Racing driver, who widened his line and was hit by Alon Day. Upon re-accelerating, Sawalich was side-by-side with Eckes in turn 12. Sawalich, despite a brush with the outside wall, took advantage of his faster speed to take the checkered flag first, 0.66 thousandths ahead of Eckes and 1.56 ahead of Alan Day!

The rest of the top 10 was completed by Huddleston, Tyler Reif, Nascimento, Jr., Corey Day, Keller, Tanner Reif, and Anton.

“Yeah, I don’t really know what happened in [turn] 1. I don’t know if I overshot it or pretty sure I got ran into. Yeah, think so. But I mean it is what it is. It was a good race, good racing the No. 25 [Alon Day] and everybody else. That was definitely our race, but it sucks it had to happen that way. We did what we could to get our Starkey Camry in Victory Lane, so I’m glad that we’re here. It took me a while to figure out how to do a burnout.” Sawalich said on Victory Lane.

This is William Sawalich’s fourth West Series victory, his second on a road track after last year’s victory in Portland. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver will next race there on August 29th.

Meanwhile, the West Series will return to action on August 9th for the NAPA Auto Parts 150, which will take place on the half-mile tri-oval at Tri-City Raceway in W. Richland, WA. This race will mark the start of the second half of the series.

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ARCA Menards West Series: 2025 Sonoma Race Review 6



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Full Toyota/Save Mart 350 results

For the third time in the last five weeks, the NASCAR Cup Series is on a non-oval course this weekend, with Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 marking the third road course race and fourth non-oval race of the 2025 season just one week after the series’ lone street course race in Chicago. After briefly using the […]

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For the third time in the last five weeks, the NASCAR Cup Series is on a non-oval course this weekend, with Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 marking the third road course race and fourth non-oval race of the 2025 season just one week after the series’ lone street course race in Chicago.

After briefly using the full layout in 2019 and 2021, NASCAR returned to the Sonoma, California venue’s 12-turn, 1.99-mile (3.203-kilometer) track in 2022 and has used it ever since. Sunday’s race is scheduled to be a 110-lap race.

Notably, this is the first time NASCAR has ever raced at Sonoma in July, and it is the first time NASCAR has raced there in a month other than June since the race was held in May from 1993 to 1997.

In addition to serving as the 20th race on the regular season schedule, this race is also the third race of the inaugural five-race In-Season Challenge. Just eight of the initial 32 drivers remain in contention, and four more are set to be eliminated on Sunday.

Saturday’s two-group qualifying session determined the full starting lineup for Sunday’s event. Trackhouse Racing’s Shane van Gisbergen the pole position in Saturday’s qualifying session, and Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase Briscoe started beside him on the front row. A full starting lineup can be found here.

Follow along with our race updates from Sonoma Raceway.

NASCAR at Sonoma: Stage 1 results

1st – Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

2nd – Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

3rd – Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota

4th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Hyak Motorsports Chevrolet

5th – William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

6th – Ty Dillon, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet

7th – Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

8th – Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford

9th – Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

10th – Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

NASCAR at Sonoma: Stage 2 results

1st – Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

2nd – Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

3rd – Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

4th – Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota

5th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 Hyak Motorsports Chevrolet

6th – Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

7th – Ty Dillon, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet

8th – Chris Buescher, No. 17 RFK Racing Ford

9th – Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford

10th – William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

NASCAR at Sonoma: Full race results

The 21st race on the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series schedule is the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 at Dover Motor Speedway. This race used to be known as the Wurth 400, but the races at Dover and Texas Motor Speedway switched title sponsors this year. TNT Sports is set to provide live coverage beginning at 2:00 p.m. ET on Sunday, July 20.



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‘This Is Garbage’ — Hendrick Motorsports Draws Heat From NASCAR Fans Amid Kyle Larson’s Sonoma Disaster

Kyle Larson came into Sonoma needing a miracle. The defending race winner sat 19 points behind teammate William Byron in the championship hunt, and with Byron running like he’s got something to prove, Larson’s window for a comeback was getting smaller by the race. What happened next left his fans wondering if that window just slammed […]

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Kyle Larson came into Sonoma needing a miracle. The defending race winner sat 19 points behind teammate William Byron in the championship hunt, and with Byron running like he’s got something to prove, Larson’s window for a comeback was getting smaller by the race. What happened next left his fans wondering if that window just slammed shut.

Why Did Kyle Larson’s Sonoma Race Start So Poorly?

Kyle Larson hasn’t been in top form lately in the 2025 season. While he has managed three top 10s in the last six races, he hasn’t led a single lap in those races. The Sonoma race offered an opportunity to bounce back and maybe take the points lead, now that the regular season championship is in question.

However, the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports driver did not have the best start to his race, leaving fans frustrated.

Entering the 1.99-mile road course, Larson was third in the points table, 19 points behind points leader and teammate William Byron. While 19 points isn’t a lot, Byron has been in top form, so trying to take that lead from him in Sonoma wasn’t going to be a walk in the park.

Still, Larson managed to get a P11 start in qualifying, and coming in as the track’s defending winner, fans hoped for him to get a good finish in the race. However, things went south quickly after the race was green-flagged. Rather than climbing positions, the No. 5 dropped down, having some car troubles.

Read More: ‘Haven’t Been as Sharp’ – Kevin Harvick Digs Into the Quiet Collapse of Kyle Larson’s NASCAR Momentum

The No. 5 team wrote in an X post, “Larson slipping back in the runner order, Crew Chief Cliff Daniels getting a plan together to fix up their No. 5 @HendrickCars Chevy on a pit stop. Currently 19th.” [CAN’T VERIFY — NEED TO MANUALLY VERIFY | Google: | StatMuse: | Perplexity: ]

How Did Fans React to Larson’s Early Struggles?

Naturally, this left fans enraged, as Larson needed to finish better than Byron to close the points gap. But Byron ran in the top five in the race, while Larson dropped back.

One angry fan wrote, “Sebastian is correct. This is garbage.” Another fan echoing the same emotion wrote, “Pack it up. Car’s junk. Just zero winning speed since Charlotte.” This rings true, as the last time Larson led laps was seven races ago at the Charlotte Motor Speedway. Attempting the double, Larson had a P2 start to the race and led 34 laps before getting into a wreck and getting a DNF.

Some fans even sympathized with Larson as he continues to be in this slump. One fan wrote, “Looks like Kyle Larson is really struggling right now.” Another fan wrote, “Larson is terrible today, already going to the back.” Even Larson recently admitted to not being in top form lately.

In the pre-race interview, he said, “Yeah, it’s really tight. Hopefully, we can kind of get back on a run of being consistent and getting stage points. I feel like, you know, we’ve still kind of been consistent. We just haven’t finished as high as we have early in the year, and then we’ve been missing out on stage points.”

If things continue as they are in the Sonoma race, Larson could fall further back in the points standings. One disappointed fan already eyeing this possibility wrote, “Someone teach Larson how to drive.”

Larson tried to win Stage 2 over Shane van Gisbergen, who took back the lead in 17 seconds after a slight contact. But in the end, it’s a road course, so anything can happen. Only time will tell where Larson finishes in the race.





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Austin Beers Jumps To The Top Of NASCAR Modified Tour Standings Following Lancaster Win

Austin Beers Jumps To The Top Of NASCAR Modified Tour Standings Following Lancaster Win – RaceDayCT.com We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. Manage consent Copyright 2018 E-Media Sports […]

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