Motorsports
Cleetus McFarland Sees Potential in Driver Vlogs: ‘The Audience is Begging For It’
By: Zach Catanzareti, Staff Writer The 2025 NASCAR season has seen the entrance of arguably the most influential driver from the social media realm turn laps on a racetrack in Cleetus McFarland. The YouTuber has more than 4.2 million subscribers and has amassed nearly 1.8 billion views since starting his channel in 2009. His real […]

By: Zach Catanzareti, Staff Writer
The 2025 NASCAR season has seen the entrance of arguably the most influential driver from the social media realm turn laps on a racetrack in Cleetus McFarland.
The YouTuber has more than 4.2 million subscribers and has amassed nearly 1.8 billion views since starting his channel in 2009.
His real name is Garrett Mitchell, but don’t be embarrassed if you’re learning this now. His online persona of “Cleetus” is used in various articles, on his race suit and even on the side of his No. Rette Jones Racing 30 Ford in the ARCA Racing Series.
He’s making his second career ARCA start Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway. His first was at Daytona in February where he crashed out after 19 laps.
But outside the confines of the racing surface — a.k.a Garrett Mitchell — the 30-year-old McFarland brings a lot of eyeballs to the sport of American stock car racing.
And though he’s in the developmental phase of learning to draft a heavy beast at 180 mph, he has advice of his own to give to the stars of the NASCAR Cup Series:
Get your iPhones out.
McFarland sees a lot of potential in Cup drivers showcasing their day-to-day lives on YouTube, where the bulk of his influence lies.
“I think a lot of drivers who are in Cup, they have been around for a while and social media didn’t really blow up when they were getting into it,” McFarland said Saturday at Talladega. “I do see a lot of drivers who are doing a really good job on social media and some that you don’t see much from.”
One of those drivers is Daniel Suarez, the Trackhouse Racing driver who began uploading YouTube vlogs of his race weekends this February.
McFarland recognizes Cup sophomore Carson Hocevar as a driver who’s “doing the most” at the moment.
“I do feel like there is a major lack of YouTube opportunity in the garages,” he said. “If I was a Cup guy, I personally would be filming all that stuff.
“We film all our videos on an iPhone. Maybe it does exist and we don’t know about it, but the same thing I do at my shop every day working on the drag cars — that can easily be done in the Cup garage. But I think there is a lot of secrecy about the car set-ups and stuff. But that can easily be avoided but like… there is so much to show.
“The audience is begging for it.”
NASCAR has put increased efforts into highlighting the sport in the digital space and beyond. With more content coming out via Tik Tok, Instagram, etc., Season 2 of “NASCAR: Full Speed” releases next month on Netflix. Earlier this year, Jeff Gordon revealed that he has spoken to actor Tom Cruise about a sequel to the famous NASCAR film “Days of Thunder.”
But more than the big budgets and high-tech cameras, McFarland believes real, raw and accessible content is what can raise Cup drivers, and the sport, for the younger generations.
“If a couple of these drivers, I don’t know who’s going to be first, start showing what’s going on in their day-to-day life — once someone picks up their iPhone and goes in the garages and is showing the day-to-day struggles.
“To me, it seems like all the Cup teams are so dialed in and so locked in. But we all know behind the scenes that they’re having some shitshow days, for lack of better words. And we would love to see it.
“Most of my videos that have done the best are on my worst days at the track. When I throw a rod out the side of the motor, people love those videos for some reason. It is hard some days posting it.
“But man, I am telling you, once one driver really throws some cool homemade-style YouTube videos up. It may exist, I just think it’s going to do really well for somebody.”
Motorsports
NASCAR All-Star Heat Race Results: May 17, 2025 (North Wilkesboro)
North Wilkesboro Speedway results from the heat races for the NASCAR All-Star Race Tomorrow, drivers will race for $1,000,000. 20 cars are locked into the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway. The field has been split into two heat races and the results from these races will set positions 1-20 in the All-Star feature. […]

North Wilkesboro Speedway results from the heat races for the NASCAR All-Star Race
Tomorrow, drivers will race for $1,000,000. 20 cars are locked into the NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway. The field has been split into two heat races and the results from these races will set positions 1-20 in the All-Star feature.
View NASCAR All-Star heat race results below.
North Wilkesboro Menu
CARS (PLM): Prac/Qual | Race
CARS (LMSC): Prac/Qual | Race
Trucks: : Prac/Qual | Race
Cup : Prac/Qual | Heats | Lineup | Open | All-Star Race
North Wilkesboro TV Schedule
Heat 1
Report
Brad Keselowski and Alex Bowman set the front row for the first heat race of the day. 75 laps of stock car racing are up next…
Green flag, Keselowski clears Bowman via the outside lane off turn two. Bowman is dropping quickly through the field. Austin Dillon takes 2nd away.
67 to go, Reddick works under Dillon in the battle for 2nd. After several laps, Reddick clears him for 2nd.
45 to go, the competition caution is out.
Four cars head for the pit lane. Keselowski stays out and holds the lead.
Green, Keselowski leads Reddick off turn two. Byron is flying through the field on new tires.
32 to go, Byron works to the right rear of Reddick. He drives by on the outside, Byron to 2nd.
25 to go, Ross Chastain has joined the battle. Three car battle for the lead. Reddick clears Reddick for 2nd.
21 to go, Chastain rubs doors with Keselowski in the battle for the lead. Keselowski holds him off.
12 to go, Keselowski opens the gap. Byron and Blaney are all over Chastain in the battle for 2nd.
Brad Keselowski wins heat one at North Wilkesboro Speedway!
North Wilkesboro Speedway
Race Results (Heat 1)
May 17, 2025
Pos | Driver
1. Brad Keselowski
2. Ross Chastain
3. William Byron
4. Ryan Blaney
5. Alex Bowman
6. Josh Berry
7. Tyler Reddick
8. Austin Dillon
9. Ricky Stenhouse Jr
10. Justin Allgaier (Kyle Larson)
North Wilkesboro Speedway
Video Highlights (Heat 1)
May 17, 2025
Pending
Heat 2
Report
Christopher Bell and Chase Briscoe set the front row for the final heat race of the day. 75 more laps of short track racing are up next…
Green flag, Bell is clear before turn one. Briscoe holds 2nd off turn two.
45 to go, the competition caution is out.
Briscoe stays out on old tires but he’s the only one as 9 other cars head for the pit lane. Bell wins the race to the pit exit but he only took two tires. Logano restarts 4th, the first car with four fresh tires.
Green, Bell drives it deep to the bottom and he clears Briscoe for the race lead. Briscoe is dropping quickly through the field.
34 to go, Briscoe is in the way and he’s turned off turn four with help from Daniel Suarez.
Green, Bell leads off turn two. Joey Logano slides Chase Elliott for 2nd into turn three.
10 to go, Bell leads Logano by 1.5 seconds. Logano is exploring lanes.
Christopher Bell wins heat two at North Wilkesboro Speedway!
North Wilkesboro Speedway
Race Results (Heat 2)
May 17, 2025
1. Christopher Bell
2. Joey Logano
3. Chase Elliott
4. Kyle Busch
5. Chris Buescher
6. Daniel Suarez
7. Chase Briscoe
8. Austin Cindric
9. Harrison Burton
10. Denny Hamlin
North Wilkesboro Speedway
Video Highlights (Heat 2)
May 17, 2025
Pending


NASCAR All-Star Race
Starting Lineup
North Wilkesboro Speedway
May 18, 2025
Pos | Driver
1. Brad Keselowski
2. Christopher Bell
3. Ross Chastain
4. Joey Logano
5. William Byron
6. Chase Elliott
7. Ryan Blaney
8. Kyle Busch
9. Alex Bowman
10. Chris Buescher
11. Josh Berry
12. Daniel Suarez
13. Tyler Reddick
14. Chase Briscoe
15. Austin Dillon
16. Austin Cindric
17. Ricky Stenhouse Jr
18. Harrison Burton
19. Kyle Larson
20. Denny Hamlin
21. All-Star Open (Winner)
22. All-Star Open (2nd Place)
23. Fan Vote Winner
Links
North Wilkesboro Speedway | NASCAR
Motorsports
Rivalry simmers after Chandler Smith’s NASCAR Truck win at North Wilkesboro
NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (NASCAR Wire Service) — Chandler Smith owes Front Row Motorsports teammate Layne Riggs a vote of thanks after Saturday’s Window World 250 at North Wilkesboro Speedway. After Riggs’ Ford slid up into the No. 11 Toyota of Corey Heim in Turn 2 of the final lap, Smith took the lead and held […]

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (NASCAR Wire Service) — Chandler Smith owes Front Row Motorsports teammate Layne Riggs a vote of thanks after Saturday’s Window World 250 at North Wilkesboro Speedway.
After Riggs’ Ford slid up into the No. 11 Toyota of Corey Heim in Turn 2 of the final lap, Smith took the lead and held on for the win, his first at the 0.625-mile short track and his second of the season in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series.
Heim, who led 162 of 255 laps, left North Wilkesboro with a 17th-place finish and a percolating rivalry with Riggs, his nemesis throughout the race.
Riding on tires that were 68 laps older than Smith’s, Heim had the lead for the overtime restart on Lap 254. He quickly cleared Smith on his inside and Riggs behind him, but Riggs mounted a strong run through Turns 3 and 4 on the white-flag lap and steered to Heim’s inside.
Riggs slid up into Heim’s truck, which turned sideways as Smith claimed the lead and headed for the finish line with Riggs in his wake. Smith’s margin of victory over his teammate was 0.611 seconds.
The final overtime lap was the only one Smith led on Saturday in collecting his seventh career Truck Series win.
“I feel like this place tires kind of mattered but they also kind of didn’t,” said Smith, who started from the rear of the field after unapproved adjustments to fix a break issue in his No. 38 Ford. “I didn’t think we were as good as the 11—obviously we had a tire advantage on him there.
“That last restart, I did everything but the right thing. My teammate, Layne Riggs, executed perfectly, and we came out on the right end of the stick.”
Heim doubtless would take exception to the characterization “perfect execution.”
On a Lap 81 restart after the first stage break, Riggs ran Heim up toward the outside wall, handing the lead and ultimately the Stage 2 win to Grant Enfinger.
Then came the controversy in overtime.
After the race, Heim briefly expressed his displeasure to Riggs on pit road.
“He tried to do it to the 7 (Carson Hocevar) last week for the win, and mission accomplished for him, I guess, this week,” Heim said. “And it cost him one, too. I don’t know. We’ve given up so many of them this year, after dominating the race.
“The 38 (Smith) was the only other guy that was rightfully good. I felt like he deserved to win over anyone else, not the 34 (Riggs). I got really loose into (Turn) 3. Just struggled being loose on the short runs, and he had an opportunity to wreck me. Just disappointed.”
Predictably, Riggs had a different perception of the final lap.
“I feel like he got really loose into (Turns) 3 and 4 and kind of gave the bottom up, and we’re side by side on the frontstretch,” Riggs said. “I had a huge run, and I went bottom. I didn’t fence him. I slid him up the track and gave him one lane there.
“It’s North Wilkesboro on the last lap for a truck win. I feel like I didn’t really do anything wrong there.”
After the last-lap melee, Tyler Ankrum finished third, followed by Daniel Hemric and Enfinger. Defending series champion Ty Majeski, Giovanni Ruggiero, Kaden Honeycutt, Kyle Busch and Sammy Smith completed the top 10.
Busch’s efforts were hampered by a pair of pit road speeding penalties in his second start of the season.
Heim retained the series lead by 47 points over Chandler Smith in second heading to next Friday’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Motorsports
Starting lineup for Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway
NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — Twenty of the 23 spots have been set for Sunday night’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway. The final three spots will be determined Sunday in the All-Star Open (green flag at 5:38 p.m. ET). The winner and runner-up will advance, along with the fan vote winner, to the All-Star […]

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — Twenty of the 23 spots have been set for Sunday night’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway.
The final three spots will be determined Sunday in the All-Star Open (green flag at 5:38 p.m. ET). The winner and runner-up will advance, along with the fan vote winner, to the All-Star Race (green flag at 8:14 p.m. ET).
The All-Star Race is 250 laps and pays $1 million to the winner.
Heat races set the lineup for Sunday’s All-Star Race.
Brad Keselowski was the fastest in qualifying and won his heat race and will start first in the All-Star Race. He seeks his first All-Star Race win.
Christopher Bell won his heat and will start second in the All-Star Race.
Joey Logano won last year’s All-Star Race. Kyle Larson won the event in 2023, the first year it was held at North Wilkesboro Speedway.
Larson will start at the rear Sunday because he missed qualifying and his heat race to practice and qualify for the Indianapolis 500.
Starting lineup for the All-Star Race
1. Brad Keselowski
2. Christopher Bell
3. Ross Chastain
4. Joey Logano
5. William Byron
6. Chase Elliott
7. Ryan Blaney
8. Kyle Busch
9. Alex Bowman
10. Chris Buescher
11. Josh Berry
12. Daniel Suarez
13. Tyler Reddick
14. Chase Briscoe
15. Austin Dillon
16. Austin Cindric
17. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
18. Harrison Burton
19. Kyle Larson (will move to the rear since Justin Allgaier qualified car)
20. Denny Hamlin
21. Winner of All-Star Open
22. Runner-up of All-Star Open
23. Fan vote winner
Motorsports
Ford Performance NASCAR: Keselowski Wins Heat 1 – Speedway Digest
Ford Finishing Results: 1st – Brad Keselowski 4th– Ryan Blaney 6th – Josh Berry BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Solomon Plumbing Ford Mustang Dark Horse – THAT WENT ACCORDING TO PLAN. IS THIS A SHOT IN THE ARM FOR THIS TEAM? “Yeah, it doesn’t hurt. It’s been a good two days for everyone on this 6 […]

Ford Finishing Results:
1st – Brad Keselowski
4th– Ryan Blaney
6th – Josh Berry
BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Solomon Plumbing Ford Mustang Dark Horse – THAT WENT ACCORDING TO PLAN. IS THIS A SHOT IN THE ARM FOR THIS TEAM? “Yeah, it doesn’t hurt. It’s been a good two days for everyone on this 6 crew and hopeful the other two cars can have good runs – the heat race and the Open so that we can get a great day for tomorrow. It’s good to be starting up front with the Solomon Plumbing Ford Mustang and to be running fast. This is fun.”
YOU TRIED SOMETHING DIFFERENT. WHAT DID YOU LEARN ABOUT THIS SETUP AND MAYBE TIRES. DO YOU WANT TIRES TOMORROW? “Those guys that put tires on, they were really hard to hold off. I had the preferred groove and just tried to use it to my advantage. We’ll see if that’s the case tomorrow.”
KESELOWSKI WINNER’S PRESS CONFERENCE
IS THIS STILL A ONE-GROOVE TRACK? “Oh, no. It’s definitely not a single groove racetrack. They were running me real hard. We had good pace and that was a little bit of a dogfight, so I thought it was great racing.”
HOW MUCH FUN WAS IT RACING SIDE-BY-SIDE WITH THOSE GUYS FOR ALL THOSE LAPS? “That’s what this is supposed to be. It’s supposed to be a fun race and I think I ran beside the 45, the 1, the 24 for at least a dozen or maybe two dozen laps. It was a good battle. I’m glad that we came out on top, but that’s the way it’s supposed to be, right?”
BEING OUT FRONT YOU GET BETTER AIR BUT IS IT ALSO TIRE THING? “Those guys were running hard and that’s what they’re supposed to do. It’s always a battle on these short tracks to have the right balance between driving the car hard enough to stay up front, but not driving it too hard to run the tires off of it and that’s part of the challenge of being a race car driver and I welcome it.”
ARE YOU GOING TO NEED TIRES TOMORROW NIGHT? “We’re gonna find out. It’s always hard to say. The track conditions are always changing, particularly when we’ll have the Open before the race tomorrow. I suspect the track will just become more and more favorable to tire wear.”
Ford Performance PR
Motorsports
NASCAR Cup Series NASCAR All-Star Race Heat 2 Results
Saturday At North Wilkesboro Speedway North Wilkesboro, N.C. Lap length: 0.62 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Christopher Bell,… Saturday At North Wilkesboro Speedway North Wilkesboro, N.C. Lap length: 0.62 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 75 laps, 0 points. 2. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 75, 0. 3. (5) Chase […]

Saturday At North Wilkesboro Speedway North Wilkesboro, N.C. Lap length: 0.62 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Christopher Bell,…
Saturday
At North Wilkesboro Speedway
North Wilkesboro, N.C.
Lap length: 0.62 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (1) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 75 laps, 0 points.
2. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 75, 0.
3. (5) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 75, 0.
4. (6) Kyle Busch, Chevrolet, 75, 0.
5. (8) Chris Buescher, Ford, 75, 0.
6. (10) Daniel Suárez, Chevrolet, 75, 0.
7. (2) Chase Briscoe, Toyota, 75, 0.
8. (9) Austin Cindric, Ford, 75, 0.
9. (7) Harrison Burton, Ford, 75, 0.
10. (4) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 75, 0.
___
Race Statistics were not immediately available.
___
NASCAR Driver Rating Formula
A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race.
The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
Copyright
© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.
Motorsports
Promoter’s Caution could add random layer of chaos in NASCAR All-Star Race
The fate of the NASCAR All-Star Race largely rests on the whims of Marcus Smith, who is giving few hints about how he’ll deploy a new “Promoter’s Caution.” It’s the latest goofy gimmick in an event defined by annual format changes designed to goose the competition in the name of fender-banging fireworks. At a randomly […]

The fate of the NASCAR All-Star Race largely rests on the whims of Marcus Smith, who is giving few hints about how he’ll deploy a new “Promoter’s Caution.”
It’s the latest goofy gimmick in an event defined by annual format changes designed to goose the competition in the name of fender-banging fireworks. At a randomly selected point Sunday night during the first 220 of 250 laps at North Wilkesboro Speedway, a yellow flag will fly and possibly wipe out a big lead while bunching the field for a race-altering restart.
The decision on when to throw the yellow rests solely with Smith, the president and CEO of Speedway Motorsports, which owns the 0.625-mile track in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina.
“I’ll have a very special mystery guest with a little All-Star Race history of his own to help me out when it’s time to drop the yellow,” Smith said. “Hopefully, we’ll create a little chaos for the teams and some fun for the fans at the same time.”
It’s an attempt to restore some luster to the All-Star Race, which has lost touch with its no-holds-barred origins. The past two events at North Wilkesboro produced runaway victories for Kyle Larson and Joey Logano, who led 199 of 200 laps in 2024.
The most memorable event last year came after the race when Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Kyle Busch engaged in fisticuffs after tangling for a mid-pack position. It was a far cry from the furious last-lap battles that once sent an All-Star Race winner to the emergency room (Davey Allison sustained a concussion in 1992 after crashing from contact with Kyle Petty at the checkered flag).
The Promoter’s Caution won’t guarantee a slam-bang ending, but it’s in the vein of an exhibition race with $1 million but no points at stake. While other pro sports have struggled to keep all-star events relevant, Cup Series drivers pride themselves on competing as hard as they would in a race with championship implications — and sometimes harder.
“The All Star Race is not just another race,” Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell said. “Everybody is more aggressive than a normal Sunday Cup race. Everyone has that win it or wear it attitude, and it races differently because of that.”
A sense of resignation from the All-Star Race’s annual format overhauls also makes it easier to accept the inanity of a random yellow.
“I have a hard enough time keeping up with all of the different format stuff,” Team Penske’s Austin Cindric said. “It doesn’t really bother me that much that we’re going to have a Promoter’s Caution because, unless I’m the caution, I can’t control it in any way. It’s just the racing gods, but maybe they’re on earth this time.”
Though its timing could cost him a win, Logano is fine with the Promoter’s Caution because “the All-Star Race presents the opportunity to try things outside of the box.
“I don’t think we should have a Promoter’s Caution in points-paying events,” he said. “But in this case, we do something different. It’s something everyone can talk about. And I just don’t know what they’re going to do. Are they going to put Marcus in the flag stand, and he’s just going to throw a yellow flag?”
The son of late NASCAR Hall of Famer Bruton Smith, who once lobbied for random yellows as the most bombastic promoter in Cup history, is coy about how the Promoter’s Caution will be unveiled.
“I’ve had no shortage of NASCAR experts from inside and outside of the garage giving me advice on what to do,” Marcus Smith said. “I’ve got a couple of scenarios in mind depending on what’s happening with the race. Or I could just go spur of the moment with my gut.”
Odds and ends
Christopher Bell (+350) is the BetMGM Sportsbook favorite, followed by pole-sitter Brad Keselowski (+600), Logano (+650), two-time defending Daytona 500 winner William Byron (+700) and Denny Hamlin (+800). Kyle Larson, who will start last after missing practice and qualifying while attempting to make the Indy 500, is listed at +1000. … Keselowski and Bell were the winners Saturday of the two 75-lap heat races that set the starting lineup for the All-Star Race. Keselowski already was guaranteed the top starting spot for Sunday night’s main event after qualifying on the pole position Friday. Bell will start second Sunday, followed by Ross Chastain, Logano and Byron. … After sitting essentially dormant for more than 35 years, North Wilkesboro Speedway is playing host to its third consecutive All-Star Race since a $20 million makeover. Keselowski wants to move a points race from Charlotte Motor Speedway’s “Roval” layout to North Wilkesboro Speedway and shift the All-Star Race back to Charlotte’s 1.5-mile oval (the host from 1987-2019). “This needs to be a points racetrack,” Keselowski said of North Wilkesboro. “I’m very strong about the Roval has got to go.”
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AP Auto Racing Writer Jenna Fryer in Indianapolis contributed to this report.
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AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
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