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Where to stream NASCAR Cup Series Wurth 400 at Texas for free today

After another entertaining race at a superspeedway, the NASCAR Cup Series heads back to one of its cookie-cutter ovals on Sunday afternoon, as drivers get set to compete in the Wurth 400 at Texas Motor Speedway. Last week, at the famous Talladega Superspeedway, Austin Cindric shows how he knows what to do with a restrictor […]

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After another entertaining race at a superspeedway, the NASCAR Cup Series heads back to one of its cookie-cutter ovals on Sunday afternoon, as drivers get set to compete in the Wurth 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Last week, at the famous Talladega Superspeedway, Austin Cindric shows how he knows what to do with a restrictor plate. The 2022 Daytona 500 champion was able to overcome some bumps in the road earlier in the race to win the 500-mile event in Alabama, grabbing the checkered flag for the first time this season, punching his ticket to the 2025 NCS Playoffs.

NASCAR STREAMING OPTIONS

Streaming Options Price/month Free Trial? Length Deal
FuboTV $84.99 Yes 7 days No
DirecTV Stream $79.99 Yes 5 days No
Sling $45.99 No N/A 1/2 off first month

The Hendrick Motorsports cars were right in the thick of it last Sunday. Kyle Larson narrowly finished second next to Cindric, while this year’s Daytona 500 winner, William Byron finished third. Chase Elliott ended up finishing fifth, while Noah Gragson was between the bunch in fourth.

Byron still leads the drivers in points, while Larson have moved back up into second ahead of two-time race winner Denny Hamlin. Christopher Bell, who has won three times so far this season, falls to fourth behind Elliott.

NASCAR CUP SERIES

Wurth 400

When: Sunday, May 4

Time: 3:30 p.m. ET

Where: Texas Motor Speedway (Forth Worth, Texas)

Channel: FOX Sports 1

Check out the NASCAR schedule and results here



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Kyle Larson not alone up there

Daytona Motor Mouths: Nashville brings sigh of relief for Ryan Blaney The guys talk about Ryan Blaney’s win for Team Penske at Nashville, Carson Hocevar’s current spot in NASCAR and Kyle Larson’s merchandise sales. Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin are co-favorites to win the NASCAR race at Michigan. Odds for various drivers are provided, ranging […]

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  • Kyle Larson and Denny Hamlin are co-favorites to win the NASCAR race at Michigan.
  • Odds for various drivers are provided, ranging from favorites to longshots.

It’s rare for us to trot out some breaking news here at the Odds Store.

But lordy, talk about odd! Kyle Larson isn’t the odds-on favorite for this weekend’s NASCAR race at Michigan.

But hold off on the pity or concern, and certainly don’t bake Kyle a ham.

Turns out, he’s the co-favorite, with Denny Hamlin. Neither has won at Michigan during the three previous seasons of Next Gen racing, but both post consistently strong finishes there (when not wrecked, as Kyle was last year).

Horsepower, you’d think, would play a big role every week in an auto-racing series. And it does, but at Michigan, it’s a very big factor. Why? Because the 2-mile oval, with 18-degree banking, is NASCAR’s fastest track.

Unlike the “plate tracks” — Daytona, Talladega and Atlanta — NASCAR doesn’t restrict speeds at Michigan. The 200 mph barrier has long been a magical number in stock-car racing. You should see it on the straights Sunday when the TV folks give us the in-car camera shots with telemetry. 

Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson and other NASCAR betting faves

+525: Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson

+700: Ryan Blaney

+750: Tyler Reddick, William Byron

+1000: Christopher Bell

Of this group, Reddick is the only one to have won at Michigan in a Next Gen car. That win came last year. But in five other starts, he’s finished no better than 18th. Also, he’s had just one top-10 in two months, and that was a ninth last week.

Remember Chase Elliott? How about Kyle Busch?

+1400: Joey Logano, Chase Elliott

+1500: Ross Chastain

+1600: Carson Hocevar

+1750: Chris Buescher, Chase Briscoe

+2000: Kyle Busch

+2250: Brad Keselowski, Bubba Wallace

If Ricky Stenhouse decides to exact his revenge on Hocevar this week, it could get nasty, considering the aforementioned speeds at Michigan. Ricky might trend toward something more subtle and make Carson keep his head on a swivel for a few weeks before giving him the chrome horn.

A whiff of lost potential in this group of drivers

+3000: Josh Berry, Alex Bowman

+4000: Ty Gibbs

+5000: Ryan Preece, Austin Cindric

+6000: Erik Jones

+7500: Daniel Suarez

+10000: Michael McDowell, Zane Smith, Austin Dillon, AJ Allmendinger

Every week or two, you’re tempted to take a flier on Bowman because, you tell yourself, he just has to eventually win again, right? Then you look at his Michigan record (bad) and recent run of 2025 results (worse). 

What to do with longshots? Maybe some top-10 action

+15000: Noah Gragson

+20000: Ricky Stenhouse Jr., John Hunter Nemechek

+25000: Shane van Gisbergen, Todd Gilliland, Justin Haley

+50000: Riley Herbst, Ty Dillon, Cole Custer

+100000: Cody Ware

Gragson is +525 for a top-10 at Hard Rock. Not the worst idea out there. As for van Gisbergen, don’t expect to see him here much in the coming weeks. Beginning next week in Mexico, three of the next five races are on road courses. 

Odds from Hard Rock Bets.





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Amazon Prime Video’s AI NASCAR Graphic Explained

Amazon Prime Video’s newest NASCAR stat incorporates tens of thousands of incoming data points in real time, using machine learning over the course of a race for more accurate outputs. But when “The Burn Bar” pops up on screen, senior coordinating producer Alex Strand doesn’t want viewers to spend time thinking about the math involved. […]

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Amazon Prime Video’s newest NASCAR stat incorporates tens of thousands of incoming data points in real time, using machine learning over the course of a race for more accurate outputs. But when “The Burn Bar” pops up on screen, senior coordinating producer Alex Strand doesn’t want viewers to spend time thinking about the math involved. Instead, the miles-per-gallon readout, along with a color-coded guide, is meant to instantly convey the story of a driver conserving fuel or maxing out. 

“That’s ultimately our North Star at Amazon,” Strand said. “How do we bring more data to viewers, but do it in a way that they can digest?”

The graphic package was 18 months in the making, stretching back to Strand’s first meetings with analysts Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Steve Letarte, as they watched a race and discussed what Amazon could add to the picture when it began streaming races this year. 

“We actually think fuel is a really, really cool part of racing,” Strand said. “It’s just no one’s really figured out how to tell that story yet.”

Letarte added that fuel strategy would be a particularly relevant talking point during Amazon’s stretch of races this spring, including Sunday’s showdown at Michigan International Speedway. 

Back in 2008, for instance, Earnhardt Jr. cut off his engine during a late caution at MIS, coasting to save every ounce of gas and outlasting his competition for the checkered flag. 

It’s exactly the kind of maneuver—nearly invisible to the untrained eye—that Prime Video’s booth hopes to spotlight, similar to the company’s work on pre-snap cat-and-mouse games during Thursday Night Football broadcasts.    

“This is awful because I’m an announcer, but I think the more a sport can be displayed, both visually by the director and graphically by the great graphics director and producer—that’s my goal,” Letarte said.

Amazon says it has developed a proprietary artificial intelligence model to track fuel mileage for every car on a lap-by-lap basis, primarily based on throttle and RPM measurements, while race teams are likely only viewing similar data for select vehicles. Amazon data scientists, computer vision experts, engineers and producers—including Prime Video producer for analytics and insights Sam Schwartzstein, a former football player who helps lead Thursday Night Football’s Prime Vision with Next Gen Stats efforts—contributed to the development process, which also relies on Amazon Web Services’ cloud computing power. 

So far, the Burn Bar has largely been broken out for specific drivers in key moments, though it could also be used to compare a car’s race to previous events, or even more significantly, to the rest of the field.

“That’s really where the story unfolds as the race unfolds,” Letarte said.

Viewers are now getting to see it for themselves.



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USA Network NASCAR Broadcast Team: Everything to Know

As the NASCAR Cup Series continues to motor deep into the 2025 season with the Firekeepers Casino 400 this weekend at Michigan International Speedway, the hard-fought, blistering battles on the track have been nothing short of exceptional, producing nine different winners to date. Familiar faces like Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Christopher Bell, William […]

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As the NASCAR Cup Series continues to motor deep into the 2025 season with the Firekeepers Casino 400 this weekend at Michigan International Speedway, the hard-fought, blistering battles on the track have been nothing short of exceptional, producing nine different winners to date. Familiar faces like Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Christopher Bell, William Byron, Ryan Blaney, and Denny Hamlin headline a pack of veteran race winners, while Carson Hocevar, Austin Cindric, and Josh Berry have each scored one win apiece.

How to Watch

Catch up on past episodes of Race For The Championship on Peacock

That said, summer’s only getting started, and once August rolls around – when Cup Series competition is at its fiercest with would-be contenders all seeking to punch their postseason tickets – USA Network will officially take the broadcast wheel for the remainder of the regular season, as well as the playoffs, with NBC also airing four races. But before the Cup Series switches broadcast gears, let’s take a closer look at the veteran team calling all the action from the track.  

Here’s a rundown of the key names to know in USA Network’s NASCAR coverage.

Leigh Diffey – Play-by-Play

In addition to being NBC’s primary Olympics announcer, Leah Diffey has become a go-to, trusted voice in motorsports. Before anchoring USA Network’s Cup Series broadcast, Diffey served as the chief play-by-play commentator for NBC Sports’ coverage of the NASCAR Cup Series, its Supercross coverage, and the IMSA WeatherTech Sportscar Championship. In 2019, the Australian broadcaster spearheaded NBC’s inaugural coverage of the Indianapolis 500, repeating the role annually ever since.

Jeff Burton – Analyst, Pre/Post-Race

After amassing 21 wins in the NASCAR Cup Series along with 27 victories in the Xfinity Series, Jeff Burton has served as a NASCAR analyst since joining NBC’s coverage of the sport in 2015. Burton, who was the 2014 Cup Series Rookie of the Year and became just the sixth driver to eclipse 1,000 NASCAR career starts in 2013, is a pillar of the racing community. Dubbed “The Mayor” by fans, the living legend’s relatable demeanor makes him a fan-favorite, and his special position in the league has allowed him to pursue helping NASCAR enhance driver safety throughout the different levels.

Steve Letarte – Analyst, Pre/Post-Race 

Steve Letarte began his career with Hendrick Motorsports (HMS) at the age of 16 and has never looked back. From mechanic to tire specialist, Letarte worked his way up the racing ranks until he landed the coveted role of crew chief on the No. 24 team for Jeff Gordon in 2005. After achieving 10 wins and 76 top-five finishes with the four-time champ, Letarte partnered up with Dale Earnhardt Jr., serving as his crew chief on the No. 88 HMS team. 

Marty Snider – Reporter, Pre/Post-Race Host

After starting his career in 1994 as a sports reporter for NBC, Marty Snider quickly found his niche within motorsports. Between producing ESPN’s NASCAR Today, co-hosting The Morning Drive on Sirius XM’s NASCAR channel, and a myriad of other endeavors, Snider’s amassed six network Emmy awards and NASCAR.com’s “Pit Reporter of the Year” in 2007.

Dale Jarrett – Pre/Post-Race

Inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2014, Dale Jarrett captured 32 Cup victories during his storied 24-year career in racing’s top flight, including three Daytona 500 wins. Like his father Ned Jarrett, who earned a pair of Cup Series titles, Jarrett hoisted the Bill France Cup in 1999. As a long-time collaborator with NBC, Jarrett’s wealth of knowledge and extensive experience are integral components to USA Network’s pre/post-race coverage. 

Brad Daugherty – Pre/Post-Race

From the hallowed hardwoods of UNC-Chapel Hill to the Cleveland Cavaliers, former standout center Bad Daugherty was always destined to play basketball in the NBA. Still, his skill on the court would never exhaust his passion for the track, and the native of Black Mountain, North Carolina, who wore No. 43 to honor Richard Petty, now co-owns Hyak Motorsports (formerly JTG Daugherty Racing). He joined NBC Sports during the 2020 NASCAR season.

Pit Reporters

Backing up USA Network’s illustrious crew of veteran broadcasters is a deep bench of energetic pit reporters, whose savvy knowledge about the sport and its myriad of elite competitors help craft compelling narratives around each race. This year, USA Network and NBC have tapped long-time collaborators Kim Coon, Dave Burns, and Parker Kligerman to lead those efforts. 

The first NASCAR Cup Series race lands on USA Network on August 3 with the Iowa Corn 350 Powered by Ethanol. Coverage then shifts to NBC on August 23 for the Coke Zero Sugar 400. The remainder of the post-season will air on USA Network except for the final two playoff races and the NASCAR Cup Series Championship in Phoenix, Arizona, which will air on NBC. To find out more, please check local listings and the Cup Series schedule.



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NASCAR Saturday schedule at Michigan International Speedway

Michigan International Speedway will feature more than six hours of virtually nonstop action Saturday as the NASCAR Truck and Cup series hit the 2-mile oval. The Craftsman Truck Series will qualify to set the starting lineup for a 125-lap race starting at noon. The only time the NASCAR Cup Series has had a podium celebration […]

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Michigan International Speedway will feature more than six hours of virtually nonstop action Saturday as the NASCAR Truck and Cup series hit the 2-mile oval.

The Craftsman Truck Series will qualify to set the starting lineup for a 125-lap race starting at noon.

NASCAR Cup Series Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum

The only time the NASCAR Cup Series has had a podium celebration was for the Clash at the LA Memorial Coliseum exhibition races from 2022-24.

In between, the Cup Series will hold a one-hour practice at 9:30 a.m., followed by qualifying for Sunday’s 200-lap race. Tyler Reddick is the defending winner at Michigan.

The Truck Series will race at Michigan for the 22nd time but the first since Aug. 7, 2020, making the Brooklyn, Michigan, track one of six new tracks in 2025 (and one of four that are returning to the schedule). Zane Smith was the most recent Truck winner at Michigan.


Michigan International Speedway schedule

(All Times Eastern)

Saturday, June 7

Garage open

  • 7:30 a.m. – 12 p.m. — Cup
  • 6:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. — Truck

Track activity

  • 8:05 – 9 a.m. — Truck qualifying (FS1)
  • 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. — Cup practice (Prime, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
  • 10:40 – 11:30 a.m. — Cup qualifying (Prime, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
  • 12 p.m. — Truck race (125 laps, 250 miles, Stage 1 at Lap 30, Stage 2 at Lap 60; Fox, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Weather

Saturday: Cloudy with a high of 76 degrees and light winds. It’s expected to be 71 degrees with a 2% chance of rain at the start of the Truck race.





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NASCAR hopes for Cup Series race in Brazil, but unsure of timeline

NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps said he doesn’t “know when we’ll get to Brazil” for a Cup Series race, but added that he would “like to see it happen” as NASCAR prepares for its race in Mexico City, according to Erick Gabriel of MOTORSPORT. Phelps, who came to Brazil during the NASCAR Brazil round at Interlagos, […]

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NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps said he doesn’t “know when we’ll get to Brazil” for a Cup Series race, but added that he would “like to see it happen” as NASCAR prepares for its race in Mexico City, according to Erick Gabriel of MOTORSPORT. Phelps, who came to Brazil during the NASCAR Brazil round at Interlagos, said, “Obviously, we need all parties to come together and understand how important that would be for NASCAR in general and for the category.” There were “previously talks to get ‘The Clash’ to Brazil, but those talks never advanced” and the race will remain at Bowman Gray Stadium for 2026. NASCAR VP & Chief International Officer Chad Seigler said, “I personally think we are exceeding expectations of where we thought we would be.” Seigler: “You could hear this week the excitement when overtaking was done. You can see that the fans are getting used to our style of racing.” On June 15, for the first time in the “modern era of the Cup Series,” a points race will take place “outside the borders of the United States as they head to Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City” (MOTORSPORT, 6/5).

NEW ON PRIME: In Daytona Beach, Ken Willis wrote NASCAR’s partnership with Amazon’s Prime Video involves “just five midseason races” within a 36-race season, but it has “thrown a definite monkey wrench into the clutch assembly.” The reviews of Prime’s coverage “are solid to great, and the reviewers aren’t wrong.” The product is “really good.” Willis: “Struggling with the labyrinth of streaming TV offerings isn’t a made-up malady. It’s a real thing, and quite maddening for folks who are already being nickel-and-dimed to death by phone and cable companies selling us air at ever-increasing prices.” Viewership numbers are OK through two weeks of NASCAR on Prime.” Prime is “averaging between” 2-3 million viewers per race, which is “right in line” with races on Fox’s cable arm, FS1. If the numbers were “in the ditch, meetings would be held.” Most important is “future potential,” and the parties are “betting that Prime offers the opportunity to attract new viewers and fans that might not otherwise pay attention” (Daytona Beach NEWS-JOURNAL, 6/5).



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NASCAR Sets Sight On International Drivers as Commissioner Speaks Out On Expansion

NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps has spoken about his hopes of attracting Brazilian drivers to the sport with the possibility of the country hosting a race in the future. As one of NASCAR’s four international series alongside Canada, Mexico, and the Euro Series, Brazil has hosted the NASCAR Brasil Series since 2012, and Phelps is keen […]

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NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps has spoken about his hopes of attracting Brazilian drivers to the sport with the possibility of the country hosting a race in the future.

As one of NASCAR’s four international series alongside Canada, Mexico, and the Euro Series, Brazil has hosted the NASCAR Brasil Series since 2012, and Phelps is keen to see some of the drivers from the series join either the Craftsman Truck, Xfinity, or Cup Series.

During an interview with Motorsport.com, Phelps explained:

“We have a driver who is from Mexico, Daniel Suarez, and that’s a great victory for us. Not through our driver development program, [but] we also have Shane Van Gisbergen from New Zealand [who] used to race in Australia.

NASCAR Cup Series
Joey Logano, driver of the #22 Shell Pennzoil Ford, and Erik Jones, driver of the #43 Dollar Tree Toyota, race during the NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway on June 01, 2025…


James Gilbert/Getty Images

“We’d like to have drivers from all over the world coming to race with us, in our three national categories, but in particular in our main category, like what Daniel and SVG are doing.”

He added:

“We’d like to have a Brazilian come out of NASCAR Brazil, come and race with us full-time, and, you know, compete for wins and championships. So we’re excited about this prospect, I was very impressed with the number of drivers I saw and how fast they were and their abilities, and we’re excited about this happening in the future.”

Phelps was promoted to the newly formed role of NASCAR Commissioner in March. He commented at the time of the announcement:

“I’m honored to take this next step in helping to guide NASCAR, the sport I’ve loved since my father took me to my first race at 5 years old, continue to grow and welcome new fans, competitors and partners that together create some of the most extraordinary moments in sports.

“I cannot thank the France family enough for their unwavering commitment to our fans, their steady leadership, and most importantly, their stewardship of stock-car racing since its inception nearly eight decades ago. This sport is truly one of the great American business stories and I’m privileged to continue as part of that legacy – and especially its bright future.

“We are thrilled to name Steve Phelps as NASCAR’s first Commissioner. His leadership, professionalism and well-earned respect from across the sports industry speak to his unique value for the sport,” said NASCAR Chairman & CEO Jim France added.

“With more than 50 years of expertise between them, both Steve Phelps and Steve O’Donnell bring tremendous expertise, stability and a commitment to the bold racing innovations that will continue to serve fans, teams and stakeholders for many years to come.”



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