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F1 adds PepsiCo to growing sponsorship portfolio

Formula One has announced a new partnership with PepsiCo and expanded its existing agreement with MSC Cruises, with both deals set to run until the 2030 season. Contract: PepsiCo joins F1’s official partner tier Sting Energy becomes F1’s official energy drink, while Gatorade becomes official partner of the F1 Sprint and Doritos becomes official savoury […]

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Formula One has announced a new partnership with PepsiCo and expanded its existing agreement with MSC Cruises, with both deals set to run until the 2030 season.

Contract:

  • PepsiCo joins F1’s official partner tier
  • Sting Energy becomes F1’s official energy drink, while Gatorade becomes official partner of the F1 Sprint and Doritos becomes official savoury snack partner
  • PepsiCo’s wider brand portfolio of soft drinks and snacks will also be made available at all Formula One races
  • The partnership will also include F1 Academy, with more information to be released at a later date
  • MSC Cruises’ sister brand Explora Journeys will be promoted at select races as part of expanded deal

Context:

Formula One continues to capitalise on the growing interest in the sport by adding blue-chip brands to its sponsorship portfolio. The series’ official partner tier also includes the likes of American Express, KitKat and Louis Vuitton.

For PepsiCo, this presents an opportunity to promote its Sting Energy brand on a global stage, a product that has made an impact in countries like India, Pakistan, Egypt, and Vietnam.

Gatorade replaces Crypto.com as the title sponsor of the Formula One sprint races after the cryptocurrency exchange served as the inaugural naming rights partner of the events. The wider partnership with PepsiCo’s suite of brands will also lead to Formula One-themed packaging and promotions.

MSC Cruises, meanwhile, is one of Formula One’s global partners. It first teamed up with the series in 2022 before signing an extension until 2026 just a year later. This latest extension will see a continuation of existing rights including title races, trackside branding and hospitality activations.

Comment:

“Today is a moment to celebrate the partnership between two iconic and historic global brands,” Stefano Domenicali, president and chief executive of Formula One, said of the partnership with PepsiCo.

“A sparkling union that will bring together tradition and innovation, generating excitement, entertainment and unforgettable experiences for our fans and customers around the world.

“PepsiCo will tap into the unique potential of Formula One as a global platform to connect with new audiences and we will benefit from their energy, their extraordinary products and their loyal community.

“With a long-lasting history of creativity and ability to celebrate the fun and special moments in life, PepsiCo is the ideal partner to share together unique moments along our journey.”

Coming next:

Elsewhere in the world of Formula One, a government official has said that Thailand is planning to bid to host a street race in its capital of Bangkok in 2028. The proposal is set to seek cabinet approval in the coming weeks before proceeding.

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Loop North News – Southeast Side better fit for permanent NASCAR track

Residents and local officials are advocating for NASCAR to move its annual event out of Grant Park, citing disruptions to daily life and opportunities for more beneficial events. (Above) Driver Shane van Gisbergen competes in a NASCAR Cup Series race at Grant Park on July 6 (AP Photo/Erin Hooley). By Don DeBat Jul. 14, 2025 […]

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Residents and local officials are advocating for NASCAR to move its annual event out of Grant Park, citing disruptions to daily life and opportunities for more beneficial events.

(Above) Driver Shane van Gisbergen competes in a NASCAR Cup Series race at Grant Park on July 6 (AP Photo/Erin Hooley).

Jul. 14, 2025 – Whether you love NASCAR or hate it, now is the time to start planning to move this redneck racing show out of Grant Park to save Chicago’s Game, 16-inch slow pitch softball, and to promote other more profitable events.

“While NASCAR has brought Chicago business, tourists, and a spectacle unique to sports culture, it has also brought noise, disruption, and road closures,” noted 2nd Ward Alderman Brian Hopkins, who along with four other alderpersons – Bill Conway (34th Ward), Pat Dowell (3rd Ward), Brendan Reilly (42nd Ward), and Lamont Robinson (4th Ward) – is not a fan of the event.

Brian Hopkins

“This past year alone, I heard from numerous 2nd Ward residents whose commutes and daily lives were altered drastically by these street closures,” Hopkins (left) said in a letter to NASCAR officials. “Other large-scale downtown events, whose economic impacts are as much or greater than this event, cause less disruption.”

Hopkins said it is his hope that in the future, the city can create a NASCAR deal that “sufficiently benefits Chicago without putting undue burden on downtown residents and businesses.”

After three years of NASCAR madness, which essentially kicked Grant Park Chicago softball to the curb, the good news is the racing venue now is considering an offer to move its July 4th event to San Diego.

Sixteen-inch softball’s 138-year history started near Grant Park

Time for a history lesson. Sixteen-inch softball was invented in Chicago in 1887, and the first indoor game was played at the Farragut Boat Club at Lake Park & 31st Street, only a couple of miles from Grant Park.

(Right) The first softball team in action in Grant Park, circa 1897. Photo by X.O. Howe.

Photo by X.O. Howe

So, softball lovers are cheering any plan to move the annual NASCAR event out of Grant Park. Now is the time to stop closing parts of DuSable Lake Shore Drive and major downtown streets, building temporary bleachers, and breathing exhaust fumes every Independence Day weekend, they say.

To raise tax revenues and help Chicago avoid bankruptcy, city planners should follow the words of legendary Windy City architect and urban planner Daniel H. Burnham: “Make no little plans.”

Planners and politicians should back construction of a permanent NASCAR track for four to six major races a year on 440 acres of the toxic U.S. Steel land along South DuSable Lake Shore Drive south of 79th Street in the long-forgotten South Chicago section of the East Side neighborhood.

Now overgrown with weeds and dotted with relics of its industrial past, the U.S. Steel site has been vacant for 30 years and until recently wasn’t high on Alderman Peter Chico’s 10th Ward agenda.

However, 128 acres along the southeast edge of the site has recently been targeted by PsiQuantum, a Silicon Valley firm, and Chicago developer Related Midwest, as the anchor in the Southeast Side research park by the planned Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park at 8080 South DuSable Lake Shore Drive.

Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park

(Left) Rendering of the Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park. The 128-acre campus is planned as a hub for quantum computing and advanced microelectronics research and development. The north end of the site will be anchored by Advocate Health Care, which is planning a $300 million, 53-bed hospital on 23 acres.

Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker is an advocate for building a major quantum computer facility in Chicago, and the city would benefit greatly if anything positive happened on vacant South Works land, which has had several failed startups announced for the acreage over the past decade.

The city has already spent $60 million to bring in Route 41 (South DuSable Lake Shore Drive) and create Steelworkers Park and Park 566 on the site, but most of the land sits empty.

A big problem is the South Works site has serious environmental concerns that have blocked residential developers for decades and need to be addressed. Layers of slag, toxic waste caused by steelmaking, is buried underground and would need to be remediated or capped.

So, a permanent, concrete-paved NASCAR racetrack, paid for and leased by the racing giant, might be better long-term use for a major section of the site on weekends for six to eight annual race events.

The proposed NASCAR track, which could run for two or three miles around the perimeter of the Southeast Side research park, likely would not interfere with the weekday work for computer scientists at the microelectronics facility.

Imagine the TV skyline views of the Loop and downtown Chicago from the racetrack, which would have permanent stands and elite seating just like the arena provided at Grant Park, without traffic congestion and displacement of softball leagues and other summer park events.

Or just build a casino

Here are this writer’s other whimsical proposals to help anchor the South Chicago section of the East Side neighborhood as a major tourist attraction:

• Once the racing mecca is established, NASCAR could invite participants from the Road American races, currently run in Elkhart, Wisconsin, to participate and use the track. Now in its 70th year of racing, Road America currently sponsors a series of 50 motorsport events ranging from Formula 1 European and American sports cars to muscle cars and motorcycles. Maybe it is time for Road America to show off its talents in Chicago?

• With Indiana only minutes away by car, the track also could be utilized on weekends for other blue-collar sports such as drag racing and demolition derbies when NASCAR is out of town.

• Racing investors likely will jump at the chance to build the Chicago NASCAR Museum on land near the track, along with a 200-room South Works hotel and Country & Western concert venue for after-race entertainment and frolicking fans.

• Since the U.S. Steel site likely belonged to Native American Indians originally, why not toss in the land for the South Works Casino and plenty of parking? The casino will help Chicago and Illinois, which generated more than $1.7 billion in tax revenue last year, lock in its place as the third largest gaming market behind Las Vegas and Atlantic City.

• There still will be enough acreage left over to build a small airport, similar to the city’s long-gone private Meigs Field, to fly in music concert fans and politicians. Why not name the new airport after Richard M. Daley, who razed Meigs?

(Right) Meigs Field on April 6, 2003, a few days after its runway was closed. Wikimedia Commons.

Wikimedia Commons

All this activity will give Choose Chicago, the city’s official tourism organization, plenty of ammo to attract tens of thousands of tourists to the Windy City.



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Shane van Gisbergen wins intense NASCAR Cup race at Sonoma

Shane van Gisbergen started Sunday’s Cup race from Sonoma Raceway on pole position, and he stayed there for most of the day. SVG has now won the last three road/street courses on the schedule, securing Red Bull’s first win as a primary sponsor in the Cup Series since the 2011 season. “Yeah, it was pretty […]

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Shane van Gisbergen started Sunday’s Cup race from Sonoma Raceway on pole position, and he stayed there for most of the day. SVG has now won the last three road/street courses on the schedule, securing Red Bull’s first win as a primary sponsor in the Cup Series since the 2011 season.

“Yeah, it was pretty tough stuff,” said SVG, who led 97 of 110 laps. “We had an amazing car. Chase Briscoe, what a great racer and gave me respect. Jumped the last one a little bit and it was pretty tense, but amazing. So stoked for Red Bull, Trackhouse, Chevy. I believe we had a really fun weekend here, some great races, and I hope everyone enjoyed that.”

Watch: Cabernet Shane! No. 88 driver collects third Cup win of 2025 at Sonoma

Van Gisbergen was cruising out front when Cody Ware lost a wheel with 15 laps to go, setting up a dramatic sprint to the finish. SVG chose to stay out on older tires, and 13 other drivers did the same.

Chase Elliott led the way among the drivers who pitted for fresh rubber, but his forward progress was hindered by a series of cautions, burning up several laps.

Shane van Gisbergen, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Shane van Gisbergen, Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet

Photo by: Meg Oliphant / Getty Images

A crash from Noah Gragson and a spin into the tire barriers by Ricky Stenhouse Jr. both forced restarts, but in both situations, van Gisbergen remained in form control of the race.

Elliott got all the way up to third while Chase Briscoe finished exactly where he started — second. Michael McDowell and Christopher Bell rounded out the top five with Tyler Reddick, Ty Gibbs, William Byron, Joey Logano, and Kyle Busch filling out the rest of the top ten.

Stage 1  and 2

Chase Briscoe, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Chase Briscoe, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Photo by: Meg Oliphant / Getty Images

At the start of the race, things were mostly clean as SVG drove off with the lead. However, he and most of the field chose to flip the stage, short-pitting before the scheduled caution.

His teammate Ross Chastain took another path, staying out and earning his first stage win of the year. Despite pitting, van Gisbergen still managed to end the stage in second place.

Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Photo by: Chris Graythen – Getty Images

As the second stage got underway, there was some more contact throughout the pack, with A.J. Allmendinger and John Hunter Nemechek both going for a spin.

SVG again chose to pit from the lead while Kyle Larson stayed out to try and win the stage. However, that didn’t work out for him as van Gisbergen ran him down and passed him for the stage win.

Stage 3

Ryan Blaney, Team Penske Ford

Ryan Blaney, Team Penske Ford

Photo by: Chris Graythen – Getty Images

The final stage was the wildest of all as Ryan Blaney got sent into the dirt by Chris Buescher, getting stuck on a hill off-track and causing the first caution for an incident. 

At the same time, both Bubba Wallace and Denny Hamlin spun. And while tensions were rising on the track, it was also getting heated in the pit lane as the RFK Racing and Joe Gibbs Racing pit crews got into a small scuffle.

The final round of green-flag pit stops began with about 30 laps to go, but van Gisbergen waited until 26 laps to go to make his final stop. 

He continued to lead for the remainder of the race, despite multiple restarts where he had to fend off Briscoe.

Photos from Sonoma – Race

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Jimmie Johnson Hails Connor Zilisch for Holding off SVG in JR Motorsports’ Dominant Sonoma 1-2 Finish

Defeating Shane van Gisbergen on a road course is one of the most daunting tasks that a Cup Series driver can face today. The Australian Supercars champion reaffirmed his expertise once again at Sonoma Raceway on Sunday by capturing the checkered flag in style. But while all the stars struggled against him, 18-year-old Connor Zilisch […]

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Defeating Shane van Gisbergen on a road course is one of the most daunting tasks that a Cup Series driver can face today. The Australian Supercars champion reaffirmed his expertise once again at Sonoma Raceway on Sunday by capturing the checkered flag in style. But while all the stars struggled against him, 18-year-old Connor Zilisch gave him a run for his money.

The JR Motorsports recruit won Saturday’s Xfinity Series race at Sonoma after a long battle against SVG. Notably, the victory came in the aftermath of a 1-2 finish between them in Chicago the previous weekend, in which Zilisch finished as the runner-up. One of the many people impressed with the youngster’s talent was seven-time Cup Series champion, Jimmie Johnson.

Johnson was asked about van Gisbergen’s road course expertise during a press conference this weekend. He showered praise on the New Zealand native’s pedal management techniques and pointed out that it helps him manage the front tires and maintain speed through corners. In the wake of his appreciation, he also lauded Zilisch and his ability to defeat the ace.

He said, “You know to watch him (SVG) and Zilisch yesterday duke it out. What we saw in Chicago, SVG is really impressive, but to see a young driver come along and duke it out with him at this level is quite impressive as well.”

Van Gisbergen showers praise on Zilisch

Motorsports is a competitive field. Egos tend to get hurt when facing failure, and seldom do drivers take it in good spirit. But losing to Zilisch on Saturday did not make van Gisbergen feel the slightest of ill emotion. The icon delivered the biggest of compliments to the young driver following his victory on Sunday.

A member of the press asked him what he was going to tell Zilisch after securing his third Cup Series win of the season. He replied that he would thank the young gun for not being in the race and evoked rounds of laughter in the room.

“I’m going to have to race him a lot in the future, right? He’s a star of the sport, or going to be even more so. Racing him yesterday, he doesn’t look like he’s 18. You know, he’s placing the car in perfect spots, drives amazing and he’s an awesome young kid,” van Gisbergen continued.

With Daniel Suarez out of the No. 99 Chevrolet for 2026, Zilisch could soon be van Gisbergen’s teammate at Trackhouse Racing. As it seems, the Kiwi would love nothing more.



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NASCAR Cup Series race at Sonoma: Live updates, highlights, leaderboard

The NASCAR Cup Series returns to Sonoma Raceway on July 13 for the Toyota/Save Mart 350, with Shane van Gisbergen aiming for his third victory of the season. SVG is on the pole and coming off of a win in Chicago last week. A win on Sunday would tie SVG for the series lead this […]

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The NASCAR Cup Series returns to Sonoma Raceway on July 13 for the Toyota/Save Mart 350, with Shane van Gisbergen aiming for his third victory of the season.

SVG is on the pole and coming off of a win in Chicago last week. A win on Sunday would tie SVG for the series lead this year.

But there are several capable drivers that could contend at Sonoma and need a win to mix up the playoff picture, including AJ Allmendinger, Ty Gibbs and Michael McDowell.

Follow along with our live race updates, with green flag set for after 2:30 p.m. CT on Sunday.

SONOMA PICKS: NASCAR Sonoma predictions 2025: Expert picks for Cup Series race

Refresh for the latest live updates!

LIVE LEADERBOARD: Full field leaderboard of NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350

Recap | Results | Points standings | Winners and losers | In-season tournament quarterfinal results

SVG wins at Sonoma, taking the victory ahead of Chase Briscoe and Chase Elliott by 1.3 seconds.

Elliott needed a couple more laps (and also ran through the dirt with two laps to go) on the newer tires, but finishes where he would have restarted had he not pitted anyway.

SVG gets his third win of the season. Good run for Briscoe. Michael McDowell finishes fourth, also on newer tires.

Ryan Blaney and Kyle Larson crash, with Larson getting major damage to the rear after contact with John Hunter Nemechek. No caution.

Chase Elliott is fourth with three laps to go and newer tires.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. restarted in the top 10 but with older tires, and he spins into the tire barrier at turn 8. The tire barrier will need repairing.

Noah Gragson gets the worst of a multi-car crash in turn 7 on the restart. Several cars drove through the dirt there. Erik Jones also spun.

Chase Elliott is up to 11th and is the first car with newer tires. Ryan Preece has damage.

SVG is still the leader.

Cody Ware’s tire comes off, and the caution is out. 13 cars stay out, including SVG and Chase Briscoe. Chase Elliott pits, along with a good chunk of the top 10.

Shane van Gisbergen pits a couple laps after Chase Briscoe and Chase Elliott, but remains well in front of those two and in command. Michael McDowell is ahead of SVG in the lead but on old tires. A few laps later, SVG re-takes the lead.

Shane van Gisbergen continues to control the top spot on the restart and pushes out to a 1.5 second lead over Chase Briscoe, William Byron and Chase Elliott.

Ryan Blaney goes off road after contact from Chris Buescher, while Denny Hamlin and Bubba Wallace spin separately in a more eventful restart than we’ve seen so far today. Caution is out.

Shane van Gisbergen pits with two laps to go in Stage 2, comes out a couple seconds behind Kyle Larson, runs Larson down and passes Larson to win Stage 2 and get the playoff point. That was impressive.

The top 10:

  1. Shane van Gisbergen
  2. Kyle Larson (didn’t pit)
  3. Kyle Busch (didn’t pit)
  4. Bubba Wallace (didn’t pit)
  5. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (didn’t pit)
  6. Chase Briscoe
  7. Ty Dillon (didn’t pit)
  8. Chris Buescher
  9. Ryan Blaney
  10. William Byron

Shane van Gisbergen has picked up the pace the last 10 laps or so, extending his lead to 3 seconds over Chase Briscoe. Chris Buescher is up to fifth, while Ty Gibbs is back to 10th and struggling after pushing earlier in the run.

Brad Keselowski is running laps comparable to the top five once again late in a run, so watch out for him if he’s able to get better track position.

Ross Chastain and Daniel Suarez makes contact in turn 11, and Suarez spins. He’ll go from the top 15 back to 29th.

Meanwhile, Carson Hocevar is slow and off the pace. His team is trying to figure out what their next move will be, likely waiting out until the end of the stage at Lap 55.

Shane van Gisbergen is not running all that hard right now, and William Byron too appears to be pacing himself as the top nine cars have inched away from 10th-place Alex Bowman. Ty Gibbs is up to third and appears to be more willing to be racey up front.

Denny Hamlin is back outside the top 30 and has lost nine spots since the restart via an off-road excursion shortly after the restart. Hamlin complained about rear grip in Stage 1, but so has everyone.

AJ Allmendinger spins through turn 2 after Ty Gibbs got into the dirt. The Kaulig Racing Chevrolet was inside the top 5 at the time of the spin. Chase Elliott reports a rear toe link issue, though not sure it’s related to that incident.

Later in the lap, John Hunter Nemechek spins out of turn 7. No caution.

Shane van Gisbergen clears William Byron for the lead on the restart. An interesting nugget: Chase Elliott was told by his team that some leaders were reporting tire wear down to the cords after that first run. It’s almost certain that the final run will be longer than the 20-some laps in Stage 1.

Ross Chastain is the lone driver among the top 15 or so that stays out for the end of the stage, and he takes the stage win and playoff point. Shane van Gisbergen pitted but still will get stage points in second place. Christopher Bell pitted but spun after his stop.

The top 10:

  1. Ross Chastain
  2. Shane van Gisbergen
  3. Bubba Wallace
  4. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  5. William Byron
  6. Ty Dillon
  7. Chase Briscoe
  8. Ryan Blaney
  9. Ty Gibbs
  10. Chase Elliott

Bubba Wallace picks up eight points in Stage 1.

Christopher Bell, Ryan Blaney, Ross Chastain and AJ Allmendinger have been battling hard for position with the stage end in about 10 laps. Chase Elliott, in 10th, is approaching that group along with Tyler Reddick and Ty Gibbs.

SVG has extended his lead to 2.3 seconds over William Byron.

Looking at lap times, Brad Keselowski, in 17th, has been among the top 10 fastest laps later in this run. Meanwhile, Denny Hamlin is back to 26th and is 10 spots down from where he started. Kyle Busch is also struggling, down six spots to 23rd.

Shane van Gisbergen told his team he is “rear limited”; despite that, his lead over William Byron is 1.6 seconds. Third-place Ross Chastain is five seconds back. SVG’s team tells him Byron is driving harder and to keep managing his car.

William Byron passes Chase Briscoe for second place with a lot of fast cars behind the No. 19. Shane van Gisbergen tells his team that his car is loose and needs some more rear grip.

Shane van Gisbergen clears Chase Briscoe through turns 1 and 2 in an otherwise calm start throughout the field. 110 laps, so plenty of time to settle in.

Engines are fired, and cars are rolling around Sonoma Raceway. Green flag is coming in minutes.

Which four drivers will advance to the semifinals at Dover next week? The NASCAR in-season tournament quarterfinal matchups:

  • 32-seed Ty Dillon vs. 8-seed Alex Bowman
  • 12-seed John Hunter Nemechek vs. 20-seed Erik Jones
  • 6-seed Ty Gibbs vs. 14-seed Zane Smith
  • 23-seed Tyler Reddick vs. 15-seed Ryan Preece

Shane van Gisbergen is on the pole for the second straight weekend, ahead of Chase Briscoe.

The top 10:

  1. Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
  2. Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
  3. William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
  4. Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
  5. AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
  6. Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
  7. Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford
  8. Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
  9. Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
  10. Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Find the full starting lineup here.

The Toyota/Save Mart 350 will be aired on the radio by the Performance Racing Network. PRN has affiliates all across the country, and their feed can also be streamed on NASCAR.com as well as the NASCAR app. The race can also be heard on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, channel 90.

  • Green Flag Time:  Approx. 2:50 p.m. CT on Sunday, July 13
  • Track: Sonoma Raceway (1.99-mile road course) in Sonoma, California
  • Length:  110 laps, 218.9 miles
  • Stages:  25 laps, 30 laps, 55 laps
  • TV coverage: TNT
  • Radio:  PRN
  • Streaming: Watch FREE on Fubo;; MAX app for in-car cameras (subscription required); NASCAR.com and SiriusXM on Channel 90 for audio (subscription required)

The Toyota/Save Mart 350 will be broadcast nationally on TNT. Other streaming options for the race include MAX for in-car cameras for each driver.

  • 2024: Kyle Larson
  • 2023: Martin Truex Jr.
  • 2022: Daniel Suarez
  • 2021: Kyle Larson



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Sonoma NASCAR Cup results; driver points report

Shane van Gisbergen scored his third win in the last five races Sunday at Sonoma Raceway. He led 97 of the 110 laps on the 1.99-mile road course north of San Francisco. Chase Briscoe finished second and was followed by Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Christopher Bell. Advancing to the semifinals of the In-Season Challenge […]

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Shane van Gisbergen scored his third win in the last five races Sunday at Sonoma Raceway.

He led 97 of the 110 laps on the 1.99-mile road course north of San Francisco.

Chase Briscoe finished second and was followed by Chase Elliott, Michael McDowell and Christopher Bell.

Advancing to the semifinals of the In-Season Challenge were Tyler Reddick, Ty Gibbs, Ty Dillon and John Hunter Nemechek.

Bubba Wallace continues to hold the final playoff spot. He has a three-point lead on Ryan Preece with six races left in the regular season.





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Tempers Flare on Pit Road: Ty Gibbs and Brad Keselowski Crews Clash at Sonoma – Speedway Digest

The Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway delivered high drama both on and off the track Sunday, as pit crews for Ty Gibbs and Brad Keselowski were involved in a heated altercation during green-flag pit stops on Lap 52. The incident began when Gibbs, driving the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, entered his pit […]

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The Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway delivered high drama both on and off the track Sunday, as pit crews for Ty Gibbs and Brad Keselowski were involved in a heated altercation during green-flag pit stops on Lap 52.

The incident began when Gibbs, driving the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, entered his pit stall and clipped the adjacent stall occupied by Keselowski’s No. 6 RFK Racing Ford. In the process, Gibbs’ car reportedly struck a tire being carried by Telvin McClurkin, Keselowski’s front tire changer, twisting his wrist and slowing the stop.

Immediately after the stop, McClurkin approached Gibbs’ pit box to express his frustration. That confrontation quickly escalated into a shoving match between crew members from both teams before NASCAR officials intervened to break it up.

Crew Reactions:

  • Jeremy Bullins, Keselowski’s crew chief, stepped in to defuse the situation, telling Gibbs’ jackman, “If we were in that pit box, I would expect him [Keselowski] to do the same [expletive] thing, so we’re good”.
  • Ty Gibbs, when asked post-race, defended his actions: “It’s my right of way. They’re on the wall for a reason… that’s kind of the consequence you pay”.

NASCAR’s Verdict:

After reviewing the incident, NASCAR determined that Gibbs had done nothing wrong, citing his position as the lead car entering pit road and the tight spacing between stalls.

While the physical scuffle was brief and no serious injuries were reported, the confrontation underscored the intense pressure and razor-thin margins that define pit road during high-stakes races. With emotions running high and playoff implications looming, this flashpoint may not be the last between these two camps.

As the series heads to Dover Motor Speedway next weekend, all eyes will be on whether cooler heads prevail—or if this rivalry continues to simmer.



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