Motorsports
Beard Motorsports: Jesse Love Jr. Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Race Recap
BEARD MOTORSPORTS
Brickyard 400
Date: July 27, 2025
Event: Brickyard 400
Series: NASCAR Cup Series
Location: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (2.5-mile rectangular oval)
Format: 160 laps, broken into three stages (50 laps/50 laps/60 laps)
Note: Race extended eight laps past its scheduled 160-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.
Race Winner: Bubba Wallace of 23XI Racing (Toyota)
Stage 1 Winner: Chase Briscoe of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 2 Winner: Ryan Blaney of Team Penske (Ford)
Beard Motorsports Finish:
● Jesse Love Jr. (Started 35th, Finished 24th / Running, completed 167 of 168)
Notes:
● Love made his fourth career Cup Series start and second with Beard Motorsports from 35th on the grid. He held that relative position over the opening green-flag run of the race, which ended on lap 19 when the spinning car of Ross Chastain brought out the first caution flag of the day. Love reported being a little tight in traffic during the opening run but overall felt pretty happy with the handling of the No. 62 C4 Ultimate Energy Chevrolet. He pitted for four tires and fuel before restarting 32nd on lap 23.
● After dropping a pair of positions on the ensuing restart, Love climbed to 27th by the end of Stage 1 on lap 50, reporting that as more and more rubber was laid down on the racing surface, he felt the track was “coming to us.” Love pitted for four tires and fuel during the stage break, again reporting he was happy with the car’s balance.
● Stage 2 went green with Love in the 32nd spot, from where he advanced steadily to 19th by the time he pitted under green for four tires and fuel on lap 80, 20 laps ahead of the second stage break. He rejoined the race in 31st, one lap down, with the top 16 cars yet to make their green-flag stops. Love reported still being a tad tight in traffic but also still feeling good with the overall handling of the No. 62 Chevrolet.
● The caution flag flew on lap 90, 10 laps ahead of the stage break, with Love running 25th. He found himself in 24th, the first car a lap down, as cars throughout the field employed varying pit strategies during the caution. The No. 62 team opted to stay out on track as it was in position to earn the “lucky dog” free pass back onto the lead lap if Love could hold his spot over the final laps of the stage. The race returned to green on lap 96, with four laps to go in the stage, and from there Love couldn’t hold off a handful of cars that did pit and restarted on fresh tires. He finished Stage 2 in 27th, one lap down.
● Love started the final stage 27th, the third car one lap down, and drove up to 25th when he came down pit road for a two-tire, green-flag stop on lap 140. Rain that wetted a portion of the track brought out the red flag with four laps to go in regulation. When the race went back to green for the first attempt at a green-white-checkered finish on lap 161, Love restarted 25th and emerged from multicar mayhem on that lap with slight front-end damage and was able to continue. He restarted 23rd for the second attempt at a green-white-checkered finish on lap 166 and took the checkered flag in 24th, his best finish in four career Cup Series starts, all this season.
Race Notes:
● Bubba Wallace won the Brickyard 400 to score his third career NASCAR Cup Series victory, his first of the season and his first at Indianapolis. His margin of victory over second-place Kyle Larson was .222 of a second.
● There were six caution periods for a total of 30 laps.
● Only 22 of the 39 drivers in the race finished on the lead lap.
● Chase Elliott remains the championship leader after Indianapolis with a four-point advantage over second-place William Byron.
Jesse Love Jr., driver of the No. 62 C4 Ultimate Energy Chevrolet:
“It absolutely smoked us getting trapped a lap down pretty early. We short-pitted trying to gain some track position under caution. But unfortunately a caution came out right before the stage break and that knocked us a lap down. Yeah, super unfortunate that happened but I felt like we could have somehow battled back into the top-20. We had a good bit of speed and I felt like we had the right strategy after that. Just a bummer that happened early on, but still a really cool day in the Cup car and we felt competitive.”
Next Up:
Beard Motorsports is scheduled to make its next appearance at the Aug. 23 Coke Zero Sugar 400 NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway. Driver and sponsor information are to be announced.
Motorsports
The Comeback with a Backbone: Single-Mom Alli Owens Charges into ARCA to Champion Blue-Collar America and Empower the Next Generation of Women – Speedway Digest
| Alli Owens is no stranger to grit. As a sole-custody single mother of three, a lifelong racer, and a woman carved from the blue-collar foundation of grassroots America, she is officially announcing her return to the ARCA Menards Series — and she’s coming back with purpose, conviction, and a message the sport needs to hear. |
![]() |
The Daytona Beach, Fla. native will make her official return in next month’s open practice session at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway, before arriving for her return to series competition at the “World Center of Racing” for the season-opening race on Saturday, February 14, 2026.
She will pilot a car for Kimmel Racing, a mainstay organization in the ARCA Menards Series.
Owens’ comeback to the high banks isn’t just about racing again; it’s about reshaping the narrative of who belongs in motorsports.
Raised on hard work, built by real American families, and strengthened by the battles she’s faced off the track, Owens is stepping back into the driver’s seat to represent those who rarely get the spotlight — the working moms, the dreamers, the underdogs and the girls who need someone in the arena showing them what strength looks like.
“This comeback isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about responsibility,” said Owens.
“I’m returning to ARCA to carry the stories of the families who built this sport. The blue-collar men and women who passed racing down through generations.
“And I’m doing it to show young girls — including my daughters — that even when life hits hard, you can still rise, rebuild and lead.”
Her return also aligns with the community-focused nonprofit Raising Hearts Building Futures Foundation (RHBFF), run by Owens and founded by Terri Lynn Brearey, which works directly with middle – and high-school students, single parents and struggling families.
Together, the mission is simple: bring heart, history, mentorship, and human connection back into communities that feel overlooked.
Owens plans to bridge the world of motorsports with real-life impact by integrating career-driven programs, school engagement, youth sports empowerment, and storytelling rooted in lived experience.
Through the ARCA Menards Series, she aims to give a platform to the families and kids who deserve to be seen, heard and believed in.
Her presence in ARCA marks a refreshing shift at a time when NASCAR’s grassroots audience craves authenticity.
Owens isn’t returning quiet, polished or packaged — she’s returning real, driven by the people who built the sport: blue-collar, hardworking Americans who understand grit better than anyone.
“Women aren’t here just to fill a quota, we’re here to lead,” explained Owens. “My journey has been messy, painful, beautiful and brave — and I’m stepping back into ARCA to prove that motherhood doesn’t end dreams; it multiplies the purpose behind them.”
As anticipation builds for her Daytona return, Owens is inviting partners, brands and organizations who share her passion for impact, authenticity and community storytelling to join her mission.
Her comeback isn’t about getting back in the game. It’s about changing it.
Alli Owens PR
Motorsports
Jade Avedisian Continues Climb With Part-Time ARCA Ride at Nitro Motorsports
Jade Avedisian, who continues to see her star rise in the stock car racing world, will take another step forward in her trajectory in 2026. The 19-year-old racer has signed with Nitro Motorsports and will compete part-time in the ARCA Menards Series in 2026.
Avedisian will pilot a Toyota Camry for the race team with Mobil 1 and Yahoo serving as the partners for the effort. The California native says she is ready for the challenge in 2026.
“I’m really excited to take the next step in my career with Nitro Motorsports,” said Avedisian in a press release. “Nitro Motorsports has been a huge part of my growth and transition into asphalt competition. Each level has taught me something new, and now getting the opportunity to move into ARCA is something I’ve worked hard for. I know there’s a lot to learn with these cars and these tracks, but I’m ready for the challenge and grateful to have Mobil 1, Yahoo, and Toyota supporting this next chapter.”
Nitro Motorsports, which teamed with Avedisian in the 2025 Toyota GR Cup North America Series, feels that the young driver is perfect for its lineup as she has proven to be quite adaptable.
“Jade is exactly the kind of talent our program is designed to support,” added Nick Tucker, co-owner of Nitro Motorsports. “Her professionalism and her ability to adapt across different platforms make her an exciting young driver. She’s been impressive at every step, and now we’re looking forward to helping her succeed in ARCA. With the support of Mobil 1, Yahoo, and Toyota, we believe Jade will turn heads in 2026.”
The team has not revealed the full 2026 part-time schedule for Avedisian in the ARCA Menards Series, but will do so at a later date. The team will also have additional sponsorship announcements coming.
In 2025, Avedisian became the first-ever female race winner in the zMAX CARS Tour Pro Late Model division as she took the win on March 1 in the National Dodge 225 at New River All-American Speedway. Avedisian came home ahead of Spire Motorsports development driver Tristan McKee, who had led 96 of the race’s 100 laps, to score the milestone win.
Avedisian was initially credited with a runner-up finish to T.J. DeCaire in that event, but in post-race inspection, DeCaire’s car was deemed illegal, and he was disqualified as a result.
Avedisian got her feet wet in the ARCA Menards Series-level of competition as she competed in the ARCA Menards Series event on the dirt at the DuQuoin State Fairgrounds, where she finished 17th, and two ARCA West events in 2025. She finished 12th in her West series debut at the LVMS Bullring, and followed that up with a 19th-place result in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway.
Motorsports
Denny Hamlin Torches NASCAR Unity Plea With Brutal 4-Word Reality Check
Even with 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports settling their dispute with NASCAR, Denny Hamlin remains in attack mode, rattling cages. Last year, the Joe Gibbs Racing veteran went after the media, citing that some sources were spreading “disinformation” about the charter dispute.
Now, the three-time Daytona 500 winner is reopening old wounds, turning his attention to Channel 90, even after a court-mediated settlement designed to unify the sport.
‘Animosity Ends With Accountability’ – Denny Hamlin Goes Ballistic
Hamlin’s frustration with the media didn’t start yesterday. In November 2024, the JGR driver publicly challenged veteran broadcaster Larry McReynolds, accusing him of muddying the water with false information in the early coverage of the 23XI and FRM lawsuit against NASCAR. More than a year later (13 months), the legal battle has finally reached its conclusion.
After nine days inside a courtroom, the sanctioning body and the two Cup Series teams settled the dispute this past Thursday, formally closing the case. But while the lawsuit may be over on paper, Hamlin made it clear the reckoning isn’t. When McReynolds, the SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, posted a promotional teaser for Tuesday’s show, Hamlin stepped into the conversation himself.
“Good morning,” the 45-year-old began cordially, then came the wake-up call. “Now that the case is settled and the evidence is out, will you or anyone on channel 90 be issuing an apology for what you all said about 23XI/FRM when the lawsuit was filed?”
The roots of the dispute trace back to October 2024, when 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports refused to sign NASCAR’s proposed Charter Agreement, labeling it a nonstarter. Their antitrust lawsuit, which also named NASCAR CEO Jim France, accused the sanctioning body of maintaining monopolistic control over the sport.
At the time, McReynolds openly criticized the teams, arguing they were attempting to disrupt the way Charlotte has done business for 76 and a half years.
Now, with Hamlin rattling the cage once again, McReynolds found support from a familiar voice. Fellow SiriusXM NASCAR Radio co-host and PRN podcaster Brad Gillie stepped in to defend him.
Responding to Hamlin’s comments, Gillie wrote, “I realize you’re responding to Larry, but shouldn’t we let the animosity end? I would love to see us all positively move the sport forward with unity and grace.”
Hamlin, however, wasn’t interested in smoothing things over. The 23XI co-owner fired back with a brief yet blunt response: “Animosity ends with accountability.”
The remark struck a nerve, quickly lighting up social media as fans flooded the comments and pushed the post past thousands of likes, an unmistakable show of support for Hamlin’s hard-line stance.
Motorsports
Dale Jr warns Richard Childress’s grandson he’s in for rough future – Motorsport – Sports
Ty Dillon, the 33-year-old youngest grandson of racing icon Richard Childress, will return to Kaulig Racing in 2025 in the No. 10 Chevrolet.
Outside of a surprising run in the maiden mid-season tournament, where he made a run all the way to the final, it wasn’t a 2025 to remember for Dillon. The Kaulig driver finished 33rd overall in the NASCAR Cup Series standings.
Speaking on his ‘Dale Jr. Download’ podcast, Dale Earnhardt Jr. seemed pessimistic about Dillon’s chances in 2026, partially due wit the changes at Kauli, who are moving away from their deal with Dodge cars. Kaulig also paused its Xfinity team (now the O’Reilly Auto Parts circuit).
“Man, is it going to be a frustrating year? I would predict that next year for him will be one of his toughest personally, physically, mentally,” Earnhardt warned.
“He’s racing for Kaulig, and they’ve got little to no support in terms of engineering and resources…Chevrolet is not going to be helping them. They’re not driving Dodges in Cup,” the former driver continued. “It’ll be a hot mess.”
Dillon raced for Richard Childress Racing in the Cup Series in 2015 and in the Xfinity Series from 2012 to 2019. He switched to Germain Racing in 2017, Gaunt Borther Racing in 2021, Petty GMS Motorsports in 2022, SPire Motorsports in 2023, before joining Kaulig in 2024.
“Ty Dillon is returning to Kaulig. I’m surprised by that because I thought when Kaulig got shut out of the Chevrolet deal,” Earnhardt continued.
DON’T MISS:
“[Because] I thought Ty Dillon was at Kaulig because of RCR and that connection….So RCR is now going to be working with Rick Ware. So, Kaulig is shoved off the Chevrolet ship.”
Dillon finished a career-best 24th in the Cup Series in both the 2017 and 2019 seasons. He has zero wins in 281 career starts, including eight top 10s.
The younger brother of fellow driver Austin Dillon expressed excitement about his deal with Kaulig. “I am incredibly grateful for another opportunity to run full-time in the Cup Series and honored to do it with the men and women at Kaulig Racing, which means a lot to me personally,” Dillon said in a press release
Motorsports
404 Page Not Found
Sorry about that, but the page you were looking for can not be found on http://www.gotransam.com/. We have found
that the most common reason that users end up on this page are:
– Pages have been moved, or no longer exist (our bad!)
– Typos, or spelling mistakes when typing to a page directly
To remedy, you can simply try starting from the home page, or use the feedback form below
to let us know what you were looking for.
Motorsports
Caulder Construction to Sponsor White Mountain Dwarf Car Division in…
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoJo Shimoda Undergoes Back Surgery
-
Motorsports7 days agoSoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener
-
NIL2 weeks agoBowl Projections: ESPN predicts 12-team College Football Playoff bracket, full bowl slate after Week 14
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoHow this startup (and a KC sports icon) turned young players into card-carrying legends overnight
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoRobert “Bobby” Lewis Hardin, 56
-
NIL3 weeks agoIndiana’s rapid ascent and its impact across college football
-
Sports3 weeks ago
Wisconsin volleyball sweeps Minnesota with ease in ranked rivalry win
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoPohlman admits ‘there might be some spats’ as he pushes to get Kyle Busch winning again
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoIncreased Purses, 19 Different Tracks Highlight 2026 Great Lakes Super Sprints Schedule – Speedway Digest
-
Motorsports1 week agoDonny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum






