Festival season kicks off with Little 500 events | Local News
ANDERSON — The festival season kicks off in Madison County with the 77th running of the Unified Group Services Little 500 and the annual Little 500 Festival. The festival, started in 1988, has generated more than $4 million for local nonprofit organizations. During a press conference Wednesday at Anderson Speedway, Clayton Whitson, president and CEO […]
ANDERSON — The festival season kicks off in Madison County with the 77th running of the Unified Group Services Little 500 and the annual Little 500 Festival.
The festival, started in 1988, has generated more than $4 million for local nonprofit organizations.
During a press conference Wednesday at Anderson Speedway, Clayton Whitson, president and CEO of the Madison County Chamber of Commerce, said the week of the Little 500 at Anderson Speedway is expected to have an economic impact of more than $2 million on the county.
“This is a special track and environment,” Whitson said. “It feels like family.”
Tim Lanane, representing the city of Anderson, said the city wants to welcome people to all the events during the festival and race.
“This is a great tradition at the speedway,” he said. “It places Anderson within the motorsports industry in Indiana.”
Patty Lovins, chairperson of the festival, said events are scheduled throughout the month of May.
“We have a good time and raise money for the not-for profit organizations,” she said.
Rick Dawson, owner of Anderson Speedway for the past 29 years, said his first Little 500 was intimidating.
“The race brings the world to Anderson and promotes our community,” he said.
Dawson said ticket sales are up by 13% over a year ago and seats are still available.
“This event is more like a family reunion, people you only see once a year,” he said. “We want to showcase our community and make everyone want to come to our city.”
NASCAR star Ryan Newman is looking to make his third start in the Unified Group Services Little 500 presented by the Ed Martin Automotive Group.
Newman said he witnessed his first Little 500 in 1986 and has been a fan of the race before he first raced at Anderson Speedway in 2022.
“It’s the Little 500 at Anderson,” he said. “It’s a really big deal. I would rather race the Little 500 than the Indianapolis 500. This is a really big deal for me.
“We’re here to win,” Newman said. “I’ve been fortunate to race a lot of different race cars at different tracks.”
Newman said he won an Emge 50 race at Anderson Speedway 25 years ago and likes to compete against his friends.
“We love sprint cars,” he said. “Anderson is significant to the pavement sprint car world, like Knoxville (Iowa) to dirt track racing.”
Newman said Indiana has always been about open wheel racing, unlike the southern U.S. that is stock car country.
“People need to experience the race in person and get the opportunity to meet the drivers,” he said.
Follow Ken de la Bastide on Twitter @KendelaBastide, or call 765-640-4863.
NASCAR Nashville: Ryan Blaney gets first Cup win of 2025
LEBANON, TENN. — Ryan Blaney broke through at Nashville Superspeedway for his first win of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season. Photo courtesy of Team Penske Blaney led a race-high five times for 139 of 300 laps, including the final 33 laps. It is his 14th career win in the NASCAR Cup Series and first […]
LEBANON, TENN. — Ryan Blaney broke through at Nashville Superspeedway for his first win of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season.
Photo courtesy of Team Penske
Blaney led a race-high five times for 139 of 300 laps, including the final 33 laps. It is his 14th career win in the NASCAR Cup Series and first at Nashville Superspeedway. Most importantly, he is no longer the only other Team Penske driver who is winless on the season.
“The 12 boys are awesome. They stick with it, no matter how it goes, and it was great to finish one out tonight,” Blaney said after doing a rare burnout. “It’s nice that it’s finally happening so I’m going to go celebrate.”
Blaney’s closest competitor throughout the night was Denny Hamlin who, in his 700th start, finished third. Hamlin matched an all-time best mark Jeff Gordon set when he made his 700th start at Darlington Raceway in May 2013.
In total, Hamlin led five times for 79 laps. Toward the end, he didn’t have the pace he needed as the track changed. Worse yet, he also didn’t have any cooler air pumping in nor any water to drink.
“I got hot,” Hamlin said. “I just couldn’t run with the 12 [Blaney] in the super long run. Our best strategy was to run long, catch a caution… but then we got jumped by the 77 [Hocevar]. Then the track went through a really weird phase in the last 30 laps where everyone was pinned to the bottom. There weren’t enough cars running the middle so it threw dust up there and made it like ice so that definitely hurt the passing.”
Sandwiched between the favorites was Carson Hocevar who backed up a stellar run in the Coca-Cola 600 with a second-place finish. Hocevar pitted four laps before Blaney which put him in clean air for those laps and boosted him to second during the final green-flag pit stop cycle.
“This proves how strong this group is to go from the disappointment last week to having a really bad qualifying draw, qualifying bad, to sticking through and having a shot, like a straightaway, I’m just proud of this group. Our average with this car is 38th so this is a big upgrade,” Hocevar said.
Photo: Dominic Aragon/TRE
Hocevar had a great drive Sunday night, going from 26th in the first stage to seventh in the second stage and second in the end.
STAGE 1 TOP-10 (LAP 90): Denny Hamlin, Tyler Reddick, Chase Briscoe, William Byron, Christopher Bell, Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney, Michael McDowell, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain.
In contrast to the first stage, which went caution-free, the second stage featured four cautions.
On lap 107, Carson Hocevar ran hard into turn three and spun Ricky Stenhouse Jr. into the wall, ending his night last (39th).
Photo: Dominic Aragon/TRE
Stenhouse wasn’t happy.
“A lap or two before, he tried to dive in there from around 10 car lengths. That time, I opened my entry and he drilled us in the bumper. I’d say it’s not out of the ordinary for him but I wasn’t expecting it,” Stenhouse said. “I definitely have something to do about this at some point.”
Photo: Jeff Ames/TRE
Hocevar said he needed to see a replay but defended himself.
“I’ve seen a bunch of people do that same move and get shipped. He was the only one who got wrecked. I feel like it was a common move with how big of a run I had,” Hocevar said.
On the restart seven laps later, in the same corner on lap 114, Alex Bowman got loose and bumped Noah Gragson. The contact left both of them crashed and relegated to 36th and 38th on the night.
Six laps later, on lap 120, Christopher Bell threw a block on Erik Jones as they ran well inside the top-10. Jones fought back and spun Bell around. Bell hit the wall while Jones carried on.
On lap 132, Corey Heim received a “Welcome to the NASCAR Cup Series” gesture from Brad Keselowski. Heim tried to get around Keselowski exiting turn four but wasn’t clear, causing him to hit the wall and end his night in 37th.
When the race went green again, Denny Hamlin controlled the race but Ryan Blaney kept him honest. Blaney challenged Hamlin until William Byron got by and led a lap on lap 167. Then, Hamlin led a lap before Blaney and Byron took control to the end of the stage.
Bell grinded out a top-10 stage finish and held on to the track position through the end of the race. Bubba Wallace rose to the top-10 after a drive-through penalty in the first stage. Kyle Larson and Tyler Reddick also made their way into the top-10 after they each had to pit under green for tire issues.
Despite all of the storylines swirling around, Blaney took control. He led 81 of the final 102 laps and took home his first win of 2025.
NASCAR CUP SERIES AT NASHVILLE SUPERSPEEDWAY TOP-10 FINISHERS (LAP 300): Ryan Blaney, Carson Hocevar, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, William Byron, Bubba Wallace, Erik Jones, Kyle Larson, Tyler Reddick, Christopher Bell.
Leaving Nashville, 17 drivers are within a race worth of points of the cutline — either above or below:
Bubba Wallace: 343 (+54 points to the cutline)
Chase Briscoe: 342 (+53)
Alex Bowman: 334 (+45)
Chris Buescher: 297 (+8)
Kyle Busch: 291 (+2)
Ryan Preece: 289 (-2 points to the cutline)
Carson Hocevar: 287 (-4)
Ricky Stenhouse Jr: 285 (-6)
AJ Allmendinger: 284 (-7)
Michael McDowell: 278 (-13)
John Hunter Nemechek: 267 (-24)
Todd Gilliland: 261 (-30)
Erik Jones: 259 (-32)
Zane Smith: 255 (-36)
Austin Dillon: 252 (-39)
Ty Gibbs: 236 (-55)
Daniel Suarez: 231 (-60)
Jonathan Fjeld is the co-owner of the The Racing Experts, LLC. He has been with TRE since 2010.
A Twin Valley, MN, native, Fjeld became a motorsports fan at just three years old (first race was the 2002 Pennsylvania 500). He worked as a contributor and writer for TRE from 2010-18. Since then, he has stepped up and covered 24 NASCAR race weekends and taken on a larger role with TRE. He became the co-owner and managing editor in 2023 and has guided the site to massive growth in that time.
Fjeld has covered a wide array of stories and moments over the years, including Kevin Harvick’s final Cup Series season, the first NASCAR national series disqualification in over 50 years, Shane van Gisbergen’s stunning win in Chicago and the first Cup Series race at Road America in 66 years – as well as up-and-coming drivers’ stories and stories from inside the sport, like the tech it takes for Hendrick Motorsports to remain a top-tier team.
Currently, he resides in Albuquerque, N.M., where he works for KOB 4, an NBC station. He works as a digital producer and does on-air reports. He loves spending time with friends and family, playing and listening to music, exploring new places, being outdoors, reading books and writing among other activities. You can email him at fjeldjonathan@gmail.com
NASCAR RECAP: Blaney executes down the stretch to win at Nashville
NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Blaney (12) during the Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. Photo by Randy Sartin-Imagn Images/Reuters For the second consecutive week, the NASCAR Cup Series raced under the lights, this time at Nashville Superspeedway. Chase Briscoe started on the pole and led 53 laps in the early run, but Denny Hamlin […]
NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Blaney (12) during the Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. Photo by Randy Sartin-Imagn Images/Reuters
For the second consecutive week, the NASCAR Cup Series raced under the lights, this time at Nashville Superspeedway. Chase Briscoe started on the pole and led 53 laps in the early run, but Denny Hamlin came through down the back stretch of that 90-lap run to win the first stage of the night and give himself a playoff point.
On pit road after Stage 1, Ryan Blaney took gas and just two tires to take the lead off of pit road and jumped ahead at the restart while Hamlin started to tail off. At Lap 106, Rickey Stenhouse Jr went around after contact from Carson Hocevar put him into the wall and suffered rear tire damage. After trying to get back in the race, more damage was discovered and he ended with a DNF.
Seven laps later, Alex Bowman overrode the corner and collected Noah Gragson in the process, as both cars would end up out of the race a third of the way through.
On the restart, Christopher Bell went around and nearly wrecked Chase Elliott in the aftermath, but the #9 was able to avoid it. Elliott then fell through the field as far as 21st, but was very quiet on the radio about the issues he was facing.
At the end of stage 2, Ryan Blaney got the playoff point and would propel himself to a big run down the early stretch of Stage 3 as the #12 car had a 2.5-second lead over Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano, Blaney’s teammate, with 56 laps to go.
With around 55 laps to go, green flag pit stops were underway and Blaney’s crew was excellent, getting the 12 car back on the track in under 10 seconds to regain the lead once pit stops cycled through with abou 30 laps to go. However, during those final five or so laps of stops, Blaney ran into lapped traffic, which shortened the distance between himself and the second-place car of Hocevar.
Blaney was able to space his lead to over 3 seconds as the laps ran down, and he picked up the win on Sunday night in Nashville. Carson Hocevar, Denny Hamlin, Erik Jones, and William Byron round out the top 5.
Blaney beat Carson Hocevar by nearly three seconds for his first win of 2025. LEBANON, Tenn. — Ryan Blaney captured a NASCAR Cup Series win at Nashville Superspeedway for his first win of 2025. Blaney’s team used pit strategy to get the Team Penske driver to the front with a two-tire call, putting him in […]
Blaney beat Carson Hocevar by nearly three seconds for his first win of 2025.
LEBANON, Tenn. — Ryan Blaney captured a NASCAR Cup Series win at Nashville Superspeedway for his first win of 2025.
Blaney’s team used pit strategy to get the Team Penske driver to the front with a two-tire call, putting him in the lead mid-race. He stayed in the lead for most of the final stage. Blaney is the third Penske driver to win this year.
“We’ve had great speed all year, but it hasn’t always worked out for us,” Blaney said after the win. “I thought it was a good call [to take two tires].”
Carson Hocevar finished second, about three seconds behind the winner. Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, and William Byron rounded up the top five.
Chase Briscoe started on the pole for the second week in a row. He led for much of the first stage but lost the lead to Hamlin, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate. Hamlin went on to win the first stage.
Blaney’s long quest for the win began in the first stage when he stayed on track much longer than most of the field during the first cycle of green flag pit stops. The move shifted Blaney from outside the top 10 to inside the top 10. He regained the lead by taking two tires on the next stop under yellow.
The first stage ran caution-free, but chaos ensued in the second stage.
First, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. spun out and hit the wall, bringing out a caution. On the next restart, Alex Bowman got loose and hit Noah Gragson, effectively ending both drivers’ nights. Kyle Larson was also involved but recovered to finish eighth.
Truck series regular Corey Heim brought out the next caution after making contact with Brad Keselowski.
Blaney, Hamlin, and Byron battled for the lead late in stage two, each holding the lead for multiple laps. Blaney prevailed and won the second stage.
Logano, though, became the leader in the final stage after a great pit stop from his crew. Blaney quickly took the spot when the race went green and did not look back.
Blaney led 129 of the race’s 300 laps after starting in 15th.
The NASCAR Cup Series is next in action at the Michigan International Speedway on Sunday, June 8. Tyler Reddick is the defending race winner.
Ryan Blaney races to first NASCAR Cup Series victory of the year at Nashville | National News
LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — Ryan Blaney gave fans a burnout to celebrate kicking off the second half of the NASCAR season by running away down the stretch for his first Cup Series victory of the year Sunday night at Nashville Superspeedway. “I’m ready to go celebrate,” Blaney said. The 2023 Cup champ had been racing […]
LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — Ryan Blaney gave fans a burnout to celebrate kicking off the second half of the NASCAR season by running away down the stretch for his first Cup Series victory of the year Sunday night at Nashville Superspeedway.
“I’m ready to go celebrate,” Blaney said.
The 2023 Cup champ had been racing well with five top-five finishes over the first half of this season. He finally got to victory lane in the No. 12 Ford Mustang for Team Penske for his 14th career victory and first since Martinsville in November.
“I never gave up hope that’s for sure,” Blaney said. “We’ve had great speed all year. It just hasn’t really been the best year for us as far as good fortune. But (No.) 12 boys are awesome. They stick with it no matter how it goes.”
He became the ninth different winner this season and the fifth driver to win in as many races at Nashville. He also gave Team Penske a second straight Cup win at Nashville’s 1.33-mile concrete track.
Blaney, who started 15th, quickly drove his way to the front as he won the second stage. He easily held off Carson Hocevar by 2.83 seconds. Hocevar matched his career-best finish at Atlanta in February after complaining during the race that his No. 77 Chevrolet was undriveable.
“Either I’m really dramatic or they’re really good on adjustments,” Hocevar said. “Probably a little bit of both, but, yeah, proud of this group proud of this car. A place that is really, really difficult to pass, we’re able to go 26th to second.”
Denny Hamlin finished third in his 700th career Cup Series race, matching the third-place finish by Jeff Gordon at Darlington in 2013 for the best finish in a driver’s 700th race. Joey Logano, who won here last year, was fourth and William Byron fifth.
Hamlin was hoping for one more caution that never came after seven cautions for 35 laps.
“Just couldn’t run with the 12 (Blaney) there in the super long run,” Hamlin said. “After 40 laps, I could maintain with him. But then after that, he just pulled away and stretched it on us.”
There was a sprint to the finish under green forcing teams and drivers to pick and choose went to pit. Blaney had led 107 laps when he went to the pits under green flag on lap 248. Hamlin took the lead before going to pit road on lap 256.
Brad Keselowski had the lead when he went to the pits on lap 269, and Blaney took the lead for the final 31 laps.
Waiting on a call
Hamlin raced Sunday night hoping to take advantage of his starting spot spot beside pole-sitter Chase Briscoe. Whether Hamlin would chase his third win this season had been in question with his third child, a boy, due the same day.
Hamlin practiced and qualified well, so he drove his No. 11 Toyota even as Joe Gibbs Racing had Ryan Truex on standby in case Hamlin got the call that his fiancee was in labor. Hamlin won the first stage.
Tyler Reddick beat his boss Hamlin, a co-owner of his 23XI Racing team, to new parent status, which Reddick announced on social media earlier Sunday.
His family welcomed their second son at 2:20 a.m. on May 25, then Reddick followed up hours later by finishing 26th in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte.
Early night
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. didn’t finish his first race this year. He was the first out when Hocevar tapped his No. 47 Chevrolet, spinning Stenhouse into the wall between Turns 3 and 4 for the second caution of the race on lap 106.
Punishment and more penalties possible?
AJ Allmendinger started at the back of the field and served a stop-and-go penalty after the green flag for an unapproved adjustment to the splitter during Saturday’s practice. His No. 16 Chevrolet was sent back to the garage and then the scanning station before practice and qualifying.
The No. 66 Ford of Chad Finchum failed inspection twice leading to engineer Austin Webb’s ejection. The Garage 66 team also lost pit stall selection.
Up next
NASCAR heads to Michigan International Speedway for the Cup Series on June 8.
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Ryan Blaney emerged victorious in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway as he defeated Carson Hocevar for the win by 2.830 seconds. For Blaney, it’s his first win of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season. Denny Hamlin finished the race in third, and he was followed by Joey Logano, and William […]
Ryan Blaney emerged victorious in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway as he defeated Carson Hocevar for the win by 2.830 seconds. For Blaney, it’s his first win of the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season.
Denny Hamlin finished the race in third, and he was followed by Joey Logano, and William Byron inside the top-five.
Here are the complete race results from Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. Race 14 of 36.
Fin
Car
Driver
Laps
Diff
1
12
Ryan Blaney (S2)
300
—
2
77
Carson Hocevar
300
2.830
3
11
Denny Hamlin (S1) (X)
300
3.193
4
22
Joey Logano
300
5.365
5
24
William Byron
300
5.890
6
23
Bubba Wallace
300
6.777
7
43
Erik Jones
300
8.122
8
5
Kyle Larson
300
9.112
9
45
Tyler Reddick
300
10.567
10
20
Christopher Bell
300
11.029
11
1
Ross Chastain
300
12.766
12
8
Kyle Busch
300
13.292
13
38
Zane Smith
300
15.431
14
17
Chris Buescher
300
17.966
15
9
Chase Elliott
300
18.848
16
99
Daniel Suarez
300
19.413
17
19
Chase Briscoe
300
19.442
18
2
Austin Cindric
300
20.481
19
41
Cole Custer
300
23.434
20
16
AJ Allmendinger
300
23.702
21
71
Michael McDowell
300
26.713
22
34
Todd Gilliland
300
28.201
23
6
Brad Keselowski
300
28.978
24
35
Riley Herbst #
300
29.449
25
88
Shane van Gisbergen #
300
30.379
26
10
Ty Dillon
299
1 lap
27
42
John Hunter Nemechek
299
1 lap
28
60
Ryan Preece
299
1 lap
29
3
Austin Dillon
299
1 lap
30
21
Josh Berry
299
1 lap
31
54
Ty Gibbs
299
1 lap
32
7
Justin Haley
299
1 lap
33
51
Cody Ware
297
3 laps
34
44
JJ Yeley * (i)
297
3 laps
35
66
Chad Finchum *
288
12 laps
36
48
Alex Bowman
188
112 laps
37
67
Corey Heim * (i)
130
170 laps
38
4
Noah Gragson
112
188 laps
39
47
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
110
190 laps
# indicates Rookie of the Year contender * indicates “Open” entry (i) indicates the driver is ineligible to score points (S1) indicates Stage 1 winner (S2) indicates Stage 2 winner (X) indicates Xfinity Fastest Lap
Results, winner of Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville
College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs. Ryan Blaney returned to Victory Lane for the first time in 2025 Sunday. The 31-year-old led a race-high 139 laps during the […]
College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD
College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs.
Ryan Blaney returned to Victory Lane for the first time in 2025 Sunday.
The 31-year-old led a race-high 139 laps during the Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. It’s the 14th win of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion’s career. He had not won since the penultimate race of last year’s playoffs at Martinsville.
So far this season, nine different drivers have taken checkered flags and punched their postseason tickets.
Behind Blaney, Carson Hocevar, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano and William Byron filled in the rest of the top five. Here’s the full finishing order:
NASCAR standings: Results from Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville today