The Place: Pocono Raceway
Track Length: 2.5 Mile Asphalt Paved Tri-oval
The Date: Friday, June 20
The Time: 5 p.m. ET
The Purse: $782,900
TV: FS1, 5 p.m. ET
Radio: NRN, SiriusXM NASCAR (Channel 90)
Distance: 200 miles (80 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 20),
Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 40), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 80)
Where To Watch NASCAR This Weekend:
Friday, June 13
NCS Practice 1 (Amazon Prime at 1 p.m. ET)
NXS Practice 1 (CW App at 2 p.m. ET)
NCS Practice 2 (Amazon Prime at 3 p.m. ET)
NXS Practice 2 (CW App at 3:30 p.m. ET)
Saturday, June 14
NXS Kennametal Pole Qualifying (CW App at 10:30 a.m. ET)
NCS Busch Light Pole Qualifying (Amazon Prime, MRN, SiriusXM at Noon ET)
NXS Race: The Chilango 150(CW Network, MRN, SiriusXM at 4:30 p.m. ET)
Sunday, June 15
NCS Race: Viva Mexico 250 (Amazon Prime, MRN, SiriusXM at 3 p.m. ET)
NASCAR Cup Series
Mexico City Storylines and Insights:
· This is the first NASCAR Cup Series points-paying race held in Mexico and the third held outside of the continental U.S., the other two were held in Canada.
· Mexico City is the first NASCAR Cup Series point-paying race held outside of the continental United States since July 1958, when the Cup Series raced in Toronto, Lee Petty won the race, and Richard Petty made his Cup debut.
· Mexico City is the 16th different road course to host a NASCAR Cup Series race.
· Including Mexico City, six of the last 10 new tracks to host a Cup race were road courses.
· Mexico City is only the 13th new track added to the Cup schedule this millennium.
· The NASCAR Xfinity Series competed in Mexico City between 2005 and 2008.
· Chase Elliott (three), Ryan Blaney (two) and Joey Logano (two) combined have won seven of the last 11 Cup Series point-paying races hosted at new tracks.
· It takes 36 hours to drive the 2,167 miles from Michigan International Speedway to Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez and 31 hours to drive the 1,975 miles from Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez to Charlotte Motor Speedway (all 15 teams are based within 53 miles of Charlotte Motor Speedway).
· Four of the 11 races remaining in the regular season are on road courses.
· Hendrick Motorsports leads all teams in poles, wins, top fives, top 10s, laps led and average finish on road courses in the Next Gen era.
· Hendrick Motorsports won at eight different road courses, more than any other team in Cup history.
· Hendrick Motorsports won five of the last eight road course races with three different drivers winning: Byron (twice), Larson (twice) and Bowman (once).
· The last six road course poles were won by six different drivers, the last five were won by five different teams.
· The driver leading the most laps failed to win four of the last five road course races after winning the prior four.
· The driver earning the most points won 13 of the 18 road course races in the Next Gen era.
· Five of the last 10 road course races were won by drivers getting their first road course win.
· A stage winner is winless in the last seven road course races.
· Chris Buescher has the best average finish on road courses in the Next Gen car (8.7) but ranks 21st in stage points earned, fourth in overall points scored.
· Hendrick Motorsports has led 1,824 laps this year, the third most through a season’s first 15 races in team history, the most for the organization since 1996, and the most for any Cup team since 2016 (Joe Gibbs Racing – 1,892).
· William Byron will make his 268th Cup start with Hendrick Motorsports this weekend, passing Ken Schrader for seventh most all-time with the team.
· In the Next Gen, winless drivers above the cutline after Race 15 have made the Playoffs without a win only 50% of the time.
· Six of the 14 road course regular season races in the Next Gen were won by a driver ranked 16th or worse in the Playoff standings.
· Five of the 13 drafting track regular season races in the Next Gen were won by a driver ranked 19th or worse in the Playoff standings (not including the Daytona 500).
· Chase Elliott leads all active Cup Series drivers in road course wins with seven. If he were to win this weekend, he would tie Tony Stewart for second-most on the all-time Cup Series road course wins list with eight each.
· Only three drivers entered in this weekend’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Mexico competed in the NASCAR Xfinity Series races at Mexico from 2005-2008 – Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin and Brad Keselowski. Busch (2008) and Hamlin (2006) each won at Mexico in the NXS.
Understanding the In-Season Challenge:
· The top 32 in driver points following the Nashville race are eligible (Shane van Gisbergen, Cole Custer, Riley Herbst and Cody Ware failed to qualify among full-time drivers).
· Three races (Michigan, Mexico City, Pocono) establish the seeding for the challenge based on the best driver finishing positions over those races. Tiebreakers are decided by the second-best finish and then the third-best finish among those races. If needed, the final tiebreaker is points standings after Pocono.
· The first of five races for the In-Season Challenge is Atlanta, with drivers competing in a bracket-style tournament until the final two drivers face off in the finale at Indianapolis with the best-finishing driver winning $1 million.
· Select this link for the In-Season Challenge Infographic & Bracket
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Mexico City Storylines and Insights:
· This weekend will mark the fifth running of a NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez all-time, and the first since the series last competed there in 2008. NASCAR didn’t race at Mexico City between 2009-2024.
· 6,264 days between races is the second-longest gap all-time, the longest was 7,728 at Rockingham which ended earlier this season.
· Mexico City is the second of seven road course races this season.
· NASCAR added an International Provisional at Mexico City, so all 39 cars can race, but the 39th qualifier will not be eligible for prize money, points or Playoff benefits.
· Mexico City is at an elevation of 7,315 ft, more than 5,300 feet higher than any other NASCAR track.
· Five drivers celebrated birthdays between Nashville and Mexico City: Josh Bilicki (June 3), Sammy Smith (June 4), Justin Allgaier (June 6), Nick Sanchez (June 10) and Thomas Annunziata (June 14 – race day).
· There are 12 races left in the regular season and six Playoffs spots remain open.
· The first four drivers below the cutoff are all rookies.
· Justin Allgaier won at Nashville, his third win of the season.
· Nashville was the 28th career win for Justin Allgaier, he is ninth on the all-time wins list and one away from tying Matt Kenseth.
· This is the fifth time Justin Allgaier won 3+ races in a season, all in the last eight years.
· Justin Allgaier is eight top 10s away from 300 in his career, he would be the first driver with 300 top-10 finishes.
· Justin Allgaier leads all drivers with 10 top-five finishes and 638 laps led in 2025.
· Justin Allgaier’s 10 top-five finishes in 2025 are his most ever after 14 races in a season.
· Justin Allgaier has won Fastest Lap Award five times this season, no other driver has more than two.
· JR Motorsports placed all five cars in the top-10 at Nashville.
· JR Motorsports is six wins away from 100, only three other teams won at least 100 NXS races (Joe Gibbs Racing-217, Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing-138, Richard Childress Racing-100).
· Daniel Suarez (#9 JRM), Ty Gibbs (#19 JGR) and Christopher Bell (#24 SHR) will be in the field this weekend.
· Daniel Suarez is from Monterrey, Mexico and won three times at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in NASCAR Mexico Series.
· Daniel Suarez won the 2016 Xfinity Series championship, making him the first international driver to win a NASCAR national touring series championship.
· Ty Gibbs won the 2022 Xfinity Series championship and four of his 12 career NXS wins have come on road courses, his most on any track type.
· Truck Series rookie and 2024 ARCA champion Andres Perez will be making Xfinity Series debut in DGM #91.
· Daniel Suarez, Ruben Rovelo & Andres Perez are the only drivers in the field with experience at Mexico City.
· Four different drivers won the four races at Mexico City from 2005-2008: Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin, Juan Pablo Montoya and Kyle Busch.
· Denny Hamlin and Juan Pablo Montoya earned their first career Xfinity Series win at Mexico City.
· Drivers who led the most laps won three of four Mexico City races.
· Sam Mayer and Ty Gibbs lead active drivers with four career road course wins.
· Nine of the last 11 road course races were won by just three drivers: Sam Mayer, Shane van Gisbergen and Connor Zilisch.
· JR Motorsports and Kaulig Racing won the last six road course races, with JRM winning the last three.
· Ten of the last 18 road course races were won from pole.
· Sam Mayer is the only driver to finish top-15 in 12 of 14 races this season.
· Five races this year ended with a last lap pass. Three of the last four races this season had a pass for the win in the final two laps.
· Seven of the 14 races this season went to overtime.
· Three crew chiefs got their first NXS win in 2025: Adam Wall at Bristol, Sam McAulay at Darlington and Chad Haney at Atlanta.
· Chevrolet led 2,061 of 2,636 laps this season.
· Chevrolet has won 12 of the first 14 races, the most all time by a manufacturer through 14 races in series history.
NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series
Looking Ahead – Pocono Storylines and Insights:
· Next weekend will mark the 16th running of a NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race at Pocono Raceway.
· Stages for Pocono: Lap 20, Lap 40 Lap 80.
· Matt Crafton is the only driver to compete in all 15 of the previous CRAFTSMAN Truck Series races held at Pocono Raceway.
· Truck Series qualifying has been cancelled at Pocono Raceway five times, the other 10 qualifying events have produced 10 different pole winners, no repeats.
· Only one of the 10 previous Truck Series Pocono pole winners is fulltime this season – Ben Rhodes (2017).
· The Truck Series has produced six different winners in the last six Pocono races.
· Kyle Busch leads the CRAFTSMAN Truck Series in wins at Pocono Raceway with three.
· A total of 13 different drivers have won in the CRAFTSMAN Truck Series at Pocono Raceway, and two are fulltime Truck Series regulars this season – Corey Heim (2024) and Chandler Smith (2022).
· Toyota has won eight of the last 10 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series races at Pocono (2015-2024), the two exceptions were won by Chevrolet (2019, 2023).
· Corey Heim led 55 laps of the 70-lap Pocono race last season, the most of any Truck Series winner at Pocono.
· Nine of the 15 CRAFTSMAN Truck Series races at Pocono were won from a front row starting position.
· Two of the last five Pocono Truck Series races were won with a last lap pass (2020, 2023).
· Of the 15 Truck Series races at Pocono Raceway only two have been won by active organizations in the series – Niece Motorsports (1) and TRICON Garage (1). Kyle Busch Motorsports leads the series with eight Pocono wins.
· Five organizations have won in 2025, four have won multiple races: Spire (4), TRICON (4), Front Row (2), McAnally-Hilgemann (2) and Halmar-Friesen (1).
· The driver who has led the most laps has won seven of the 13 CRAFTSMAN Truck races in 2025.
· The last five races of 2025 were won by different drivers.
· Stewart Friesen’s win last weekend was the second winless streak of 70+ races to end this year (Tyler Ankrum: 130 – Rockingham)
· Ty Majeski holds the 10th and final Playoff transfer spot on points, up +4 points on Jake Garcia in 11th.
NASCAR & Mexico City, Etc.
Historical & Significant Events at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez:
· The Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is a racetrack located within the large Ciudad Deportiva Magdalena Mixiuhca sports complex in the southeastern part of Mexico City, near the city center and just a couple of kilometers from the airport.
· The track was designed in 1955 by engineer Oscar Fernández Gómez Daza as his thesis project, due to the lack of a racetrack in Mexico City at the time.
· Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez was built in 1959 and is owned by the Government of Mexico City.
· Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is the fastest circuit in Formula 1, as Felipe Massa reached 364 km/h during the 2015 Mexican Grand Prix.
· The track was named in 1973 in honor of brothers Ricardo and Pedro Rodríguez, considered the best Mexican Formula 1 drivers of the 1960s.
· Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is known for its very bumpy surface, primarily because Mexico City is located in a geologically active region.
· The track sits at an elevation of 2,285 meters (7,500 feet), which causes a significant loss of engine power and makes breathing difficult for drivers.
· The Formula 1 Mexican Grand Prix was held at this track from 1962 to 1970.
· For safety reasons—following an accident in which a spectator died—the race was discontinued in this category until 1986. After the circuit was upgraded with improved safety measures, it was raced again from 1986 to 1992. In 2015, it rejoined the Formula 1 calendar.
· The racetrack has also hosted prestigious international motorsport events such as the World Endurance Championship, Formula E, Champ Car, NASCAR Xfinity Series, A1 Grand Prix, and the IMSA WeatherTech Championship.
· It also hosts rounds of NASCAR Mexico Series, Super Turismos, Copa TC2000 México, GT Pro Series, Super Copa Telcel, Racing Bike México, Night Drags, and the traditional 24 Hours of Endurance.
· At the end of the track, there is a very fast corner (the Peraltada) leading into the main straight toward the finish line, very similar to the Monza circuit.
· After the last Mexican Grand Prix in 1992, a large event venue (Foro Sol) was built inside that corner.
· When the Champ Car World Series began using the track in 2002, the Peraltada was partially bypassed with a series of tight corners that pass through the Foro Sol, rejoining the Peraltada halfway through.
· The circuit is operated under concession by the Corporación Interamericana de Entretenimiento, S.A. de C.V. (CIE), through OCESA, one of CIE’s subsidiaries.
· In 2005 the NASCAR Xfinity series raced for the first time in Mexico City. To accommodate the heavy stock cars, a temporary chicane was constructed on the main straight and a new ‘stadium’ curve added in place of the Lake esses. For the 2007 event, the slightly clumsy chicane on the start/finish straight was removed. The series raced there from 2005-2008.
· In 2015 in order to host a Formula 1 Grand Prix once again, the racetrack had to be rebuilt almost in its entirety, with the construction of a new race control building, a VIP area, a hospital, the construction of new stands and a complete repave of the track, all this so that the FIA (International Motoring Federation) considered it suitable in terms of safety and logistics.
· The NASCAR Mexico series has run the oval layout which measures just under one mile in length and incorporates the Peraltada curve outside the Foro Sol and the Curva Plana.
· Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez has multiple track layouts, the Grand Prix Circuit Formula 1 uses is a 2.67 mile 17 turn course. NASCAR will use the National Circuit which includes the Foro Sol, this layout is 15 turns and 2.42 miles long. The Recta Pricipale straight runs from turn 15 to turn one and is 3,937 feet (1,200 meters) long.
· This weekend marks the first time the NASCAR Cup Series has raced in a point-paying international event in the modern era (1972-2025), and also the first time the series has competed at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez.
NASCAR PR