Motorsports
Alabama racing legends honored ahead of race weekend at Talladega
Race weekend is here at Talladega, and the International Motorsports Hall of Fame kicked off the weekend by honoring members of the Alabama Gang and the Allison family.Friday afternoon, the festivities began with the unveiling of the Red Farmer Tribute Car, a car designed to honor Farmer’s legendary racing career.Video below: Racing legend Red Farmer […]

Race weekend is here at Talladega, and the International Motorsports Hall of Fame kicked off the weekend by honoring members of the Alabama Gang and the Allison family.Friday afternoon, the festivities began with the unveiling of the Red Farmer Tribute Car, a car designed to honor Farmer’s legendary racing career.Video below: Racing legend Red Farmer honored in TalladegaWVTM 13 caught up with Farmer after the unveiling to talk about that legendary career. Even at 92 years old, Farmer said he’s not done yet.”I’m just still going,” he said. “We’ve all been racing for many years, we won a lot of championships, a lot of races, and it’s been a great career for me. I don’t regret anything I’ve done in the last 76 years, and I still enjoy racing now. I go over to my shop and work on my cars.”After that, the ribbon was cut on the new Allison Room in the Alabama Gang wing of the Hall of Fame. The new room holds memorabilia honoring Bobby, Donnie, David and Clifford Allison and their racing careers.Video below: The Allison Room is unveiled at the International Motorsports Hall of FameOf the four, Donnie is the only one still living, but many members of the Allison family attended the ceremony to see the new room. After touring the room, Donnie was happy to see his family honored.”What I’ve seen, it’s astonishing,” he said. “It’s hard to tell you what I feel right now.”Allison said when they all started racing, he never imagined they would accomplish so much. “Kenny Andrews, the guy that owned the car, said to Bobby, ‘Who should I get to drive my cars?’ said ‘Donnie,’ so I started my modified career in Montgomery, Alabama,” Donnie Allison said. “We never had any idea we were going to build something like this, of course, we wanted to win as many races as possible.”Video below: NASCAR driver Joey Logano on being inducted into the Talladega Walk of FameWin, they did. Bobby Allison currently holds the fourth place spot on NASCAR’s all-time win list for its premier series, and other Alabama Gang members are still well known for their wins on the track.According to the NASCAR Hall of Fame, Red Farmer won over 700 races in his career, leaving a legacy Farmer is proud of.”You get a legacy when you’ve been around for a long time, and I raced for 75 years,” Farmer said.Though he doesn’t compete as much anymore, Farmer still spends his free time with racecars.”Now I go over to my shop and work on my cars,” he said. “In fact, I’m going to change engines next week, put a new engine in my car for the dirt track, and keep going. It’s what really keeps me going.”Sunday, before the checkered flag drops on the Jack Link’s 500, Bobby Allison’s grandson will drive one of his grandfather’s cars around the track for the pace lap, to continue honoring the Allison legacy.
Race weekend is here at Talladega, and the International Motorsports Hall of Fame kicked off the weekend by honoring members of the Alabama Gang and the Allison family.
Friday afternoon, the festivities began with the unveiling of the Red Farmer Tribute Car, a car designed to honor Farmer’s legendary racing career.
Video below: Racing legend Red Farmer honored in Talladega
WVTM 13 caught up with Farmer after the unveiling to talk about that legendary career. Even at 92 years old, Farmer said he’s not done yet.
“I’m just still going,” he said. “We’ve all been racing for many years, we won a lot of championships, a lot of races, and it’s been a great career for me. I don’t regret anything I’ve done in the last 76 years, and I still enjoy racing now. I go over to my shop and work on my cars.”
After that, the ribbon was cut on the new Allison Room in the Alabama Gang wing of the Hall of Fame. The new room holds memorabilia honoring Bobby, Donnie, David and Clifford Allison and their racing careers.
Video below: The Allison Room is unveiled at the International Motorsports Hall of Fame
Of the four, Donnie is the only one still living, but many members of the Allison family attended the ceremony to see the new room. After touring the room, Donnie was happy to see his family honored.
“What I’ve seen, it’s astonishing,” he said. “It’s hard to tell you what I feel right now.”
Allison said when they all started racing, he never imagined they would accomplish so much.
“Kenny Andrews, the guy that owned the car, said to Bobby, ‘Who should I get to drive my cars?’ [Bobby] said ‘Donnie,’ so I started my modified career in Montgomery, Alabama,” Donnie Allison said. “We never had any idea we were going to build something like this, of course, we wanted to win as many races as possible.”
Video below: NASCAR driver Joey Logano on being inducted into the Talladega Walk of Fame
Win, they did. Bobby Allison currently holds the fourth place spot on NASCAR’s all-time win list for its premier series, and other Alabama Gang members are still well known for their wins on the track.
According to the NASCAR Hall of Fame, Red Farmer won over 700 races in his career, leaving a legacy Farmer is proud of.
“You get a legacy when you’ve been around for a long time, and I raced for 75 years,” Farmer said.
Though he doesn’t compete as much anymore, Farmer still spends his free time with racecars.
“Now I go over to my shop and work on my cars,” he said. “In fact, I’m going to change engines next week, put a new engine in my car for the dirt track, and keep going. It’s what really keeps me going.”
Sunday, before the checkered flag drops on the Jack Link’s 500, Bobby Allison’s grandson will drive one of his grandfather’s cars around the track for the pace lap, to continue honoring the Allison legacy.
Motorsports
NASCAR drivers, local teachers rappel 10 stories for fundraiser
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — The NASCAR Hall of Fame took on a different kind of extreme event Thursday to support the organization’s scholarship program. The “Over the Edge” event saw NASCAR drivers and local teachers rappelling 10 stories down the side of the Embassy Suites in Uptown. Advertisement The funds for the scholarship […]

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — The NASCAR Hall of Fame took on a different kind of extreme event Thursday to support the organization’s scholarship program.
The “Over the Edge” event saw NASCAR drivers and local teachers rappelling 10 stories down the side of the Embassy Suites in Uptown.
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The funds for the scholarship program go towards the NASCAR Hall of Fame’s STREAM-based educational program.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to Queen City News.
Motorsports
NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 drivers honor troops
Daytona Motor Mouths: NASCAR to rotate championship race host sites The guys talk about NASCAR changing its championship race location, Joey Logano’s win at slippery Texas, the upcoming weekend at Kansas and more. Even though Kansas Speedway is next on the Cup Series schedule for Sunday, May 11, followed by the special non-points All-Star event […]


Daytona Motor Mouths: NASCAR to rotate championship race host sites
The guys talk about NASCAR changing its championship race location, Joey Logano’s win at slippery Texas, the upcoming weekend at Kansas and more.
Even though Kansas Speedway is next on the Cup Series schedule for Sunday, May 11, followed by the special non-points All-Star event scheduled for May 17, NASCAR’s longest Cup Series event is set for May 25. Drivers are already talking about the Coca-Cola 600, the 400-lap event held at the 1.5-mile Charlotte Motor Speedway. It’s been a part of NASCAR since the track opened in June of 1960.
The Memorial Day weekend tradition honors our nation’s heroes and delivers one of the most iconic races in NASCAR.
“Memorial Day Weekend is always special because you’re racing for so much more than just racing, and it’s to honor and remember all the people who have given and who are currently giving to our great country,” said Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell, the defending winner of the race. “Memorial Day Weekend is always special because you’re racing for so much more than just racing, and it’s to honor and remember all the people who have given and who are currently giving to our great country.”
A lot of preparation goes into making sure the team’s Chevrolets, Fords and Toyotas hold up for the full 600-mile distance. It’s a grueling event that has tested the mental and physical strength of all competitors that will make up the highly competitive field.
Austin Dillon, driver of the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, is a past winner of the 600. The native of Welcome, North Carolina, shows a great deal of appreciation when talking about the service men and service women who defend our country.
“Well, to me, it’s probably one of the most special weekends of the year,” Dillon said. “The patriotism that we show at the Coke 600, there’s no bigger weekend in our sport, getting to honor all of our military men and women out there who pay the ultimate sacrifice.”
Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, feels the 600 offers the perfect stage of appreciation.
“It’s honoring our troops and our service members, which I think NASCAR’s done a great job of over the years. It’s really become a great tradition of that race and that whole race weekend. I’ve always felt like NASCAR and Charlotte (Motor Speedway) and everyone there has done a great job of honoring them and I hope we continue to do that.”
Every car in the starting lineup will once again carry the names of those who have died while in service of our country. They are honored with every lap completed from the green flag to the checkered flag when the race starts in the late afternoon and ends at night.
“My favorite thing about the Coca-Cola 600 is the Honor and Remember Program and remembering all the soldiers who have paid the ultimate sacrifice,” said Ty Dillon, driver of the No. 10, Kaulig Racing Chevrolet. “That whole weekend is so special. We always carry fallen soldiers’ names on our cars and get to interact with their families, and that race is so much bigger than just about us, also the pageantry. The longest race of our year, it’s one of the special ones. Also, it’s in my backyard where I grew up here in North Carolina.”
Chase Briscoe, driver of the No. 19, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota and teammate to Bell, looks at the race from a very personal viewpoint.
“Every weekend I always look up in the stands and I kind of have this pinch-me moment, but there are certain races throughout the year that have a little bit more extra significance and the Coke 600 is certainly one of those races that every single year I’m just like, ‘I cannot believe I’m racing in the Coke 600.’
“As a kid, we would always watch the Indy 500 and watch the Coke 600. So, for me now to know that I’m part of this iconic race on this huge day of motorsports, but then also on Memorial Day Weekend, is the significance of that. It’s really, really special. It’s a race that every driver dreams of winning and even just competing in it is always a super special privilege. I’m honored to get to do it every single year.
Reigning Cup Series champion Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford, cites Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Mission 600 annual campaign that pairs drivers and regional military bases as a build-up to the Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day Weekend.
“The Mission 600 appearances are my favorite appearances of the year,” Logano said. “Where you get to go to a military base and see, boots on the ground, what these men and women are doing for our country, for our freedom. People who are making the ultimate sacrifice. Not only them but their families too, for complete strangers, like you and I, that is the most incredible thing. So, for us to say thank you is really neat to build a relationship. Those days that I spent there were awesome.
“Last year, we went to fly in an F-16, and that was really cool. I became friends with the whole squadron and our tagline this year is ‘Double Down’, that’s their squadron name and that’s what our tagline is going to be this year. So, we got kind of a thing going together and it’s really neat because they all came from Mission 600.”
AJ Allmendinger, driver of the No. 16, Kaulig Racing Chevrolet, feels the race is one of NASCAR’s greatest events of the year and has been for over 60 years.
“I think it’s unique because it’s obviously the longest race we have in our sport,” Allmendinger said. “it’s one of the Crown Jewels, but it goes back to what it represents and with Memorial Day Weekend and everything that it represents and everything. To me, it’s the one event that is bigger than the race and the 600 (miles) is secondary to that.”
Motorsports
Previewing the NASCAR Cup Series AdventHealth 400 at Kansas
The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Kansas Speedway this weekend for the AdventHealth 400. Here’s a look at this Sunday’s race in Kansas City, Kansas. Date: May 11, 2025Track: Kansas Speedway (Kansas City, Kansas)Time: 3:00 p.m. ETTV: FS1Stages: 80/165/267Defending Winner: Kyle Larson Date Time Session TV Sat., May 10 4:30 p.m. ET Practice Prime Video […]

The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Kansas Speedway this weekend for the AdventHealth 400. Here’s a look at this Sunday’s race in Kansas City, Kansas.
Date: May 11, 2025
Track: Kansas Speedway (Kansas City, Kansas)
Time: 3:00 p.m. ET
TV: FS1
Stages: 80/165/267
Defending Winner: Kyle Larson
Date |
Time |
Session |
TV |
---|---|---|---|
Sat., May 10 |
4:30 p.m. ET |
Practice |
Prime Video |
Sat., May 10 |
5:40 p.m. ET |
Qualifying |
Prime Video |
Sun., May 11 |
3 p.m. ET |
AdventHealth 400 |
FS1 |
VIEWING GUIDE: How to Watch the NASCAR Cup Series AdventHealth 400 at Kansas
One Year Away From 0.001 Seconds
Last year’s AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway saw the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history. Kyle Larson edged out Chris Buescher by just one-thousandth of a second to score the victory.
It’s unlikely we’ll see a repeat of that this year, but Kansas has seen some close finishes over its time. That includes the 2004 NASCAR Cup Series race won by Joe Nemechek, as well as a 2014 race won by Jeff Gordon.
The final lead change has come in the final two laps in three of the last four NASCAR Cup Series events at Kansas Speedway. Two of those have come on the final lap.
Rising Stars Part of This Week’s Lineup
Corey Heim and Jesse Love are part of this Sunday’s entry list for the AdventHealth 400 at Kansas.
Heim is making his first NASCAR Cup Series start of 2025 after three appearances one year ago. The 14-time NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race winner will pilot the No. 67 Toyota Camry XSE for 23XI Racing.
Jesse Love makes his third NASCAR Cup Series start of the year, climbing back into the No. 33 Chevrolet Camaro for Richard Childress Racing after making his debut with the team at Bristol. Love won the NASCAR Xfinity Series season opener this year at Daytona International Speedway.
Can Penske Run Continue?
Through the first nine races of the 2025 season, Team Penske was winless despite a plethora of strong performances. Now, they roll into Kansas on back-to-back wins.
Austin Cindric took the team to victory lane at Talladega Superspeedway in the 10th race of the season. One week ago, Joey Logano made it two in a row with a win at Texas Motor Speedway.
Interestingly, Ford hasn’t won at Kansas Speedway in the last eight NASCAR Cup Series events at the track. Logano won there in the fall of 2020, the most recent victory at Kansas for the blue oval brigade. Can they keep their winning streak alive and snap Ford’s Kansas drought?
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Motorsports
NASCAR Kansas Spring Race TV schedule: Where to watch, free live stream
NASCAR arrives at the Kansas Speedway this weekend, for the three action-packed races culminating in the AdventHealth 400 on Sunday, May 11. It’s the first of two trips to the Kansas City race course during the 2025 NASCAR Season. There will be televised practices and qualifying races throughout the weekend leading up to the AdventHealth […]

NASCAR arrives at the Kansas Speedway this weekend, for the three action-packed races culminating in the AdventHealth 400 on Sunday, May 11. It’s the first of two trips to the Kansas City race course during the 2025 NASCAR Season.
There will be televised practices and qualifying races throughout the weekend leading up to the AdventHealth 400. Kansas’ Spring Race weekend includes racing events for the ARCA Menards Series (Tide 150) and the NASCAR Truck Series (Heart of Health Care 200) along with the NASCAR Cup Series.
NASCAR’s 2025 Kansas Spring Race Televised Schedule
Friday, May 9
ARCA Menards Tide 150, 8 p.m. on FS1 (STREAM)
Saturday, May 10
Truck Series Practice, 2:05 p.m. on FS2 (STREAM)
Truck Series Qualifying, 3:10 p.m. on FS2 (STREAM)
Cup Series Practice, 4:30 p.m. on Prime Video
Cup Series Qualifying, 5:40 p.m. on Prime Video
NASCAR Truck Series Heart of Health Care 200, 7:30 p.m. on FS1 (STREAM)
Sunday, May 11
NASCAR Cup Series AdventHealth 400, 3 p.m. on FS1 (STREAM)
Where to watch the AdventHealth 500, all Spring Race events
The AdventHealth 400 will air nationally on FS1, but can also be streamed on fuboTV (free trial), DirecTV Stream (free trial) and Sling (half off first month).
All events on FS1 and FS2, including the qualifying events, can also be streamed on fuboTV (free trial), DirecTV Stream (free trial) and Sling (half off first month).
NASCAR Cup Series qualifying events are exclusive to Prime Video (free trial) in 2025.
What to know about the Kansas Speedway
Kansas Speedway, located in Kansas City, Kansas, is a 1.5-mile tri-oval track that also features an infield road course that combines with the oval to make a “roval,” but that will not be used during the weekend’s trio of races.
Since it opened in 2001 as the Kansas International Speedway, it has been home to multiple racing leagues, including NASCAR, Indycar, IMSA Prototype racing and more. It’s home to both the AdventHealth 400 and the Hollywood Casino 400 during the Cup Series Playoffs.
The AdventHealth 400 is 267 laps and 400.5 miles of thrilling NASCAR action. Last year, Kyle Larson won in finish with Chris Buescher that was too close to call to the naked eye. Scoring originally had Buescher as the winner, but a replay showed Larson with a slight edge.
Can I bet on the Jacks Link’s 500?
Yes, you can bet on NASCAR from your phone in New York State, and we’ve compiled some of the best introductory offers to help navigate your first bets from BetMGM, FanDuel, DraftKings, Bet365 and more.
Kyle Larson is the favorite to win the race at +400 on DraftKings. Larson is the race’s defending champion, and is coming off a fourth place finish last week in Texas. Last week’s winner, Joey Logano, is +1600 to go two in a row.
What is fuboTV?
fuboTV is a live TV streaming service focused on live sports, including U.S. and international soccer, the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL and more. It also includes its own fubo Sports Networks with exclusive programming. It offers 212 channels starting at $64.99 (for one month, then $84.99), includes unlimited DVR, and streams on most devices. Right now you can try fuboTV free.
Motorsports
Inside the chaotic Texas finish for a NASCAR Cup team that didn’t win but had reason to celebrate
Sitting 18th ahead of the overtime restart last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, a rough day was about to come to an end for Ty Dillon and his No. 10 Kaulig Racing team. “I was pouting pretty much in my head inside the car,” Dillon told NBC Sports this week. “We had so much opportunity […]

Sitting 18th ahead of the overtime restart last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, a rough day was about to come to an end for Ty Dillon and his No. 10 Kaulig Racing team.
“I was pouting pretty much in my head inside the car,” Dillon told NBC Sports this week. “We had so much opportunity for this day to be a strong day. Now we’re back to … 18th on this last restart. Man, that’s not going to feel good if this is where we end up.”
But something special happened over the next minute of the race. By the time the checkered flag waved, there was celebratory screaming on Dillon’s radio channel.
The only other team with such excitement on its radio was winner Joey Logano’s team. Many of the other team radio channels were filled with apologies, attaboys or, in some cases, silence after the race.

As the field came to the green flag to begin overtime, disaster nearly struck Dillon.
The outside line — where Dillon was in the ninth row — got bunched coming to the restart zone. Cars hit the brakes. Riley Herbst, restarting in the row ahead of Dillon slowed to avoid slamming the car in front of him.
With what had happened to Dillon and his team in recent weeks, it wouldn’t have been surprising if he had ran into the back of Herbst’s car and been unable to continue.
The previous two races — Bristol and Talladega — proved painful for the team. Dillon ran out of fuel twice at Bristol, including a few laps before the finish. He was set to score his first top-10 finish of the season — and possibly a top-five finish after two cars were disqualified — when he ran out of fuel on the final lap at Talladega.
Now this, the field stacking up on the restart.
“I didn’t hit him,” Dillon said of Herbst. “Luckily, I got stopped. Sometimes when that happens, it kills your momentum. The RPMs drop out and you never get going. Luckily, I was able to keep the RPMs up … and we were able to keep the momentum of the run.”
Dillon’s charge was about to begin.

Cole Custer restarted behind Dillon and moved a lane up after crossing the start/finish line. Dillon mirrored Custer’s move to protect his spot.
“I knew the momentum (Custer) had behind me coming to the start/finish line, which helped me kind of maintain my speed,” Dillon said. “ … I see him going up, so I cover his nose. When I do, Riley hesitates up. I just got a little bit further and that puts me in the spot where, OK, now I can see clean track in front of me. Let’s make this thing happen.”
Entering Turn 1, Dillon heard spotter Joe White tell him: “Top of four. Top of four. Top of four.”
Dillon had three cars underneath him.
It was only about 30 laps earlier when he had one car underneath him entering Turn 1 and that nearly ruined his race.
Brad Keselowski drifted up the track and Dillon said he either got hit from behind or that the car behind was so close it disturbed the air on his car. Either way, Dillon drifted up the track, lost his momentum and fell from 13th to 27th in a few seconds.
That seemed to be it for Dillon, who had overcome a penalty for a crewmember over pit wall too soon on the team’s first pit stop at Lap 22. He ran 30th or worse for much of the next 100 laps. A two-tire pit stop helped him climb into the top 20 but obstacles continued.
A slow pit stop on Lap 221 dropped him from 10th to 18th. Getting forced up the track put him almost back to where he had been stuck earlier in the race.
“Frustration is setting in,” Dillon said, “because you climb this mountain three times already and now you’re running out of laps, you don’t really see how it’s going to get any better, but my team did a good job of keeping me in the game and that’s something we’ve been preaching to each other.”
But it almost got worse.

In Turn 2, the message was the same to Dillon from his spotter. “Still top of four. You’ve got the momentum, though. Top of four.”
It was on the exit of Turn 2 that Carson Hocevar, running beside Ryan Preece, made contact with Preece, causing an accident that brought out the caution on Lap 238.
As Dillon exited the corner after the overtime restart, he had three cars to his inside.
But it’s what William Byron, running ahead of Dillon, did that made the difference between Dillon exiting that corner cleanly or crashing.
“The biggest thing that helps is when (Byron) slides down just a little bit in the middle of the corner,” Dillon said. “I’m able to attach air to the nose of my car, which keeps front grip in it. This whole time I’m trying to keep air on the front of my car to make sure my front tires have feeling in (them). … If (Byron) comes up into my lane in front of me, covers my nose, I’m done. I’m going to have to lift all the way out or probably hit the wall.”
With Byron staying a lane lower, Dillon squeezed out of Turn 2. By the time Dillon reached Turn 4, he had passed Zane Smith, Chris Buescher, Ty Gibbs, Justin Haley and Herbst, putting him 13th.

Todd Gilliland and Byron engaged in a spirited duel ahead of Dillon on the final lap.
“I’m starting to expect maybe these two are going to crash in front of me,” Dillon said. “I need to be checked up. I kind of back my corner up (entering Turn 3) to get a big run, get some air back on my nose, and I think William gets tight over the bump (in Turn 3).”
Dillon was on the inside line, while Byron ran a lane up. Dillon got his car underneath Byron’s car as they headed for the checkered flag.
“I knew he had some splitter damage (from a pit road incident earlier),” Dillon said. “Then it was just a matter of using the air on his door (coming to the finish). We did not hit. There was no contact there, but it was super close.”
Dillon nipped Byron for 12th, triggering an excited and colorful celebration on the team’s radio.
“Nice … work man! P12! Come on!” crew chief Andrew Dickeson shouted on the radio.
“ … Yeah!” Dillon responded.
“What a … restart man,” White said on the radio.
“Way to go boys. That’s something to be proud of,” Dillon radioed.
A few days removed from that emotional moment, Dillon reflects on what the restart and even passing Byron, the points leader, meant.
“The thing about me beating William to the line there, it’s probably insignificant at the end of the day, it’s one point different that’s it … but for me it was a check on my list,” Dillon said. “OK, I feel confident in making that move for when it is for something super important.
“That was just another (element) added to the emotion at the end of the day because you have such an up-and-down day, you really want to leave with some positives.”
After he the finish, there were high-fives and fist bumps for the team.
“This is what we can do,” Dillon said. “And that’s kind of the conversations, like, ‘Hey, let’s remember this moment for the future. This is what we’re capable of in good situations.”
Motorsports
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Sends Strong Message After Suggested NASCAR Texas Changes
NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. has issued a firm response to social media discussions about changing the Texas Motor Speedway. After the dramatic race weekend last week, some took to social media to suggest the circuit could see similar changes to the Atlanta Motor Speedway. During an episode of the Dale Jr. Download […]

NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. has issued a firm response to social media discussions about changing the Texas Motor Speedway.
After the dramatic race weekend last week, some took to social media to suggest the circuit could see similar changes to the Atlanta Motor Speedway.
During an episode of the Dale Jr. Download podcast, the former driver set the record straight, stating:
“I’d seen some messages on social about someone thinking that there was a track that was considering that, but it is not Texas. And I know a lot of people were going, ‘Oh, it’s got to be Texas because, well, Marcus Smith owns Atlanta and he loves what’s happened there, so why wouldn’t he try to take it to Texas?

Meg Oliphant/Getty Images for SiriusXM
“I think Texas right now is starting to get into its peak in terms of the age of the asphalt, how slick it was. Dude, those Xfinity guys were busting their a** all over the place. That’s what we need. Don’t change nothing. Don’t. Don’t touch it. Don’t change anything. Don’t move anything, right? Leave it.”
Team Penske driver Joey Logano clinched the victory in the Cup Series at Texas Motor Speedway last weekend after starting the race from 27th.
He commented after the race:
“The sport changes so quickly. It is crazy how you can just ride these roller coasters. I am so proud of the team. Proud to finally get AAA Insurance into victory lane. They have been a partner of mine since I have been at Penske, so 13 or 14 years and we have yet to win with them so it was awesome to get that done here.
“The JL Kids Crew is here so we will have fun with them in victory lane. A lot of people here. My family is at home, but hey, Brittany and the kids, I love you guys. It is going to be a fun night. … A couple of times we had a really tough pit stall situation and the pit crew did a good job of managing that. We just grabbed a couple here and there.
“The car was fast, I knew that yesterday, I just did a poor job qualifying. We just were grinding it out, a couple here and a couple there and eventually we get the win. It is nice to get one, really nice.”
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