Motorsports
Corey Heim vs the Trucks world set up after Martinsville
Corey Heim
Ty Majeski
Tyler Ankrum
Kaden Honeycutt
And with that, the stage is set for a NASCAR Truck Series championship race that wouldn’t feel right being won by anyone other then Heim, crew chief Scott Zipadelli and the Tricon Garage No. 11 team after winning for a record setting 11th time this season.
And yet, there are three other contenders, including the one that won last year that would have no qualms in breaking the system and taking home the big trophy in less than a week.
But make no mistake, while Heim and Company have had all summer to build this truck, there is already a part of this team lamenting the very concept that they couldn’t leave with the hardware after their body of work.
11 wins
18 top-5s
20 top-10s
5.2 average finish … in 24 starts
“I think (Majeski) will be the one we have to beat for sure, but I mean, you can kind of suck all year and bring your best truck to Phoenix and you can win the whole championship,” Heim said. “It doesn’t matter how good you’ve been all year.
“Like, look at (Majeski, Joe Shear and the Thorsport No. 98), they have not been the best. I don’t think they have a win to their name this year but they are probably the truck to beat alongside us next weekend.
“It’s interesting the way it works but I am going to be looking out for him, plus the other two, because you never know what someone can bring to a one race take all.”
Heim said it in a way like he is almost resigned to it, not due to a lack of confidence in his team, but just in all the ways a small sample size can create something not reflective of their season.
His crew chief already said ‘this format literally sucks,’ and that’s kind of a prevailing narrative.
“I try not to look at it with negativity, and if you look at last year, (Christian Eckes) would have won if not for the format,” Heim said. “We had an opportunity to go to Phoenix and he finished third out of everybody and he had no business finishing third in the full season points with one of the best season averages ever.”
He is now that driver.
“At the end of the day it’s what I signed up for. This what I have to deal with as a NASCAR driver but it just promotes and rewards mediocrity in a sense that no one wants to take risks unless you have playoff points and the guys that are just good at either not getting wrecked or can just finish well in these rounds and sneak into the playoffs.”
When asked if next Friday was a chance to validate his team, Heim just would not let go of what could go wrong.
“Like we’ve won 11 races this year,” Heim said. “We’ve proven everything to this point and now all someone has to go do is go into Turn 1 and absolutely wipe you out … and that proves that they’re the best driver?
“That’s kind of my main gripe at the end of the day, and you saw it in (2023) we probably didn’t deserve to win the championship in the sense of wins but we had a really good consistent average finish and then we got wiped out.”
That was the year Carson Hocevar crashed him while leading.
“So, what does this prove? That’s my main gripe.”
Buzzer Beater
With the benefit of hindsight, Layne Riggs was actually eliminated from the Playoffs halfway through the first stage because he couldn’t get going through the gears from the front row on the restart and ultimately finished sixth in the first stage.
If he finished fifth, that’s one more point that would have seen him through to the finals. Fourth? In easily.
Instead, Riggs finished third behind Honeycutt, with them ending this round in a tie. Riggs drew even with a point for the fastest lap but Honeycutt’s best finish this round, second, was better than Riggs’ third.
And that was that.
“Battling back there at the end, we thought that we were the tiebreaker winner, and I got told that we were in, and I was still just kind of upset,” Riggs said. “I don’t like how those races finish like that. You have to do what you have to do. That’s just not my kind of mentality, I don’t like doing that …
“But I’m hearing, ‘Gotta get a spot, gotta get one,’ I’m going to do what my team tells me to do to get into this championship. Roughing guys up, I don’t really want to rough up; they have done nothing to me in the past. I don’t like how it comes down to the end like this, and how people race, especially here at Martinsville.”
It just left the second-generation racer overall dismayed with the format, especially given him three wins and two winless drivers advancing over him.
“We thought we were the tiebreaker winner. I got told that we were in and I was still upset. I just don’t like how those races finish like that. You have to do what you have to do. That’s not my kind of mentality and I don’t like doing that. Either way, we’ve had a great year all the way around.”
Riggs thought he was in even upon climbing out of the truck. Conversely, Honeycutt thought he was out until Todd Bodine congratulated him after getting out.
“All (spotter Chris) Lambert told me was to not lose a spot and fight like hell,” Honeycutt said. “I didn’t do the best job of executing the restart and Corey did an excellent job of executing. Just had to hold on and hoped that everything worked out. Thankfully it did, and now we get the chance to go have fun next week and try to mix it up.”
He was considerably emotional climbing out.
“I was just a dirt track kid from Texas and I didn’t really have any business being in NASCAR,” Honeycutt said. “Thanks to all the nights of my dad out there in the shop at 2 and 3 o’clock in the morning working on dirt cars every night and to all the people that I’ve been able to race for my career and get to this point to have the opportunity to go to Phoenix now.”
His championship run is one of the more unique in the Truck Series history because he started the season with Niece Motorsports. When he brokered a deal to join Tricon Garage next season, a Toyota team, it meant that he lost all data from Chevrolet and could not finish at Niece.
At the same time, Stewart Friesen had gotten injured in a Dirt Modified, and his Toyota team needed a driver to finish out the year. Friesen had won to advance his truck into the playoffs and found a driver who could finish the year and win a title for both.
“It’s unbelievable, man,” Honeycutt said. “I should have very easily been on the couch in July after I made my decision on what to do. And I’m so grateful to be a part of Toyota and this amazing manufacturer. To carry on this championship now, we got a 50 percent chance of winning it at least. So I’m very much looking forward to next weekend. Regardless of how everything goes, I’m just extremely thankful.”
Ty Majeski, ThorSport Racing Ford
Photo by: James Gilbert / Getty Images
Meanwhile, Majeski did not have his best night, struggling with an ill-handling car and a soft brake pedal at some point.
“Obviously, I have mixed emotions,” Majeski said. “We come to a short track and we expect to be a little bit more competitive than that, but we qualified good, got good stage points and that was the difference tonight. I knew once we got back in traffic we were in pretty big trouble. I kind of knew from when we unloaded this thing today that it wasn’t quite right, but we persevered and got good stage points. The crew guys had a hell of a pit stop and kept our track position and I was just kind of playing defense at the end. It was just good enough.”
And does he feel good about next week?
“Oh yeah.”
And then that leaves Ankrum, a seven-year veteran of the Truck Series, who is making his first ever appearance in a championship race in this division.
“To fire off the way we did the first six or seven races of the year and then to have that big slump in the middle of the summer and still get here, by just racing smarter than everyone else, that’s a huge tip of the cap to this team,” Ankrum said. “We did it quietly and safely and proud to be in the final four.”
Grant Enfinger and Daniel Hemric faced must-win odds due to how the Roval and Talladega went for them. Enfinger had about a fifth place car, but that wasn’t enough and he took tires late just to try to make something happen.
He finished 12th, as making his way through the field in a track position race was just a grind. Hemric had a radiator and oil cooler puncture during the stack-up caused by the Riggs missed shift and was not running at the finish.
Caruth denied
Rajah Caruth entered the race 14 points above the cutline, best amongst the drivers not named ‘Corey Heim’ but was eliminated following contact with Honeycutt.
The incident occurred in Turn 4 on Lap 73 and cut the left rear tire on the Spire Motorsports N0. 71, and sent Caruth into the wall.
“Just tight racing with steel bodies and stuff you can’t really rub. You’ll cut a tire,” Caruth said after being evaluated and released from the infield care center. “And as soon as it cut, it was on the rim, so I kind of was just out of control. So not anything deliberate obviously, just things happen and hate I was on the bad end of it.”
Caruth had won the race at Nashville earlier in the season, his second full-time year in Trucks, and will move up to the Xfinity Series next year in a part-time capacity with JR Motorsports.
“Definitely heartbroken, for sure,” Caruth said. “It’d be different if it was something that I did, if I messed up, but it was pretty much out of my control. Definitely a heartbreaker.”
For his part, Honeycutt was remorseful.
“I was pretty mad at myself, to be honest. I really hate that,” Honeycutt said. “I didn’t want any of that to happen. I know me and him came off the corner pretty close, and I really just need to look and see if he tracked out enough or if I just came up into him. So I’m definitely going to talk to him about that. I hate that it happened. He’s a good buddy. Thankfully, we were able to move past that and just execute all night and put ourselves in a spot to be tied to go on to Phoenix.”
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Motorsports
Spire Motorsports opens full-time dirt racing team for 2026
“We are not a NASCAR team that is going dirt racing. We are dirt racers who happen to have a NASCAR team.”
Spire Motorsports is going dirt track racing on a much larger scale in 2026. In addition to their NASCAR efforts, they’ll also field a 410 winged sprint car entry. The new team will race full time in the Kubota High Limit Racing series.
In the middle of the 2025 season, Scelzi parted from KCP Racing. He finished the season with Clauson Marshall Racing, filling the seat for the injured Tyler Courtney. Now, he has a new ride…
Giovanni “Gio” Scelzi has been signed as the driver. He was previously awarded the 2023 World of Outlaws Rookie of the Year. Scelzi has 12 race wins in national competition.
Eric Prutzman will join the team as the crew chief after taking Brad Sweet to six national championships.
He’ll also race in the 40th annual Chili Bowl Nationals in Tulsa. The car is a Spire Motorsports’ Chili’s-sponsored entry fielded by Keith Kunz.
Spire Motorsports has acquired a High Roller Club membership (charter) ahead of the 2026 season. It was purchased from Jason Myers Racing.
High Limit Sprint Cars introducing charter system to dirt racing
Spire Motorsports Co-Owner Jeff Dickerson comments
“Going on the road with High Limit is like a dream come true and to do this with people I have deep respect and appreciation for makes it even better,” said Spire Motorsports Co-Owner Jeff Dickerson in the team release.
“We’ve worked with and for Kyle (Larson), Brad (Sweet), Kendra (Jacobs) and JP (Josh Peterman) for years and I have an immense amount of gratitude to them for not only building a great series but for making a series that offers long-term growth to all of us in a sport we all love.”
“I’m thankful to Tim Clauson and the Marshalls for providing us a launch pad to make this jump and look forward to working closely this season.”
He added, “We are not a NASCAR team that is going dirt racing. We are dirt racers who happen to have a NASCAR team. This is in our blood and we can’t wait to get to Vegas in March.”
Gio Scelzi comments
“To see the enthusiasm from the employees at Spire Motorsports, that’s really something that made an impact on me,” said Scelzi.
“The NASCAR stuff is their job but it’s pretty obvious they enjoy sprint car racing. We’ll likely run 80 to 90 times a year at probably 50 different race tracks, but when you have an owner like Jeff (Dickerson) who truly loves sprint car racing and comes from that background, it really makes this an exciting opportunity.”
“I’ve known Eric (Prutzman) for a long time. When I was probably 10- or 12-years-old, when Donny Schatz was driving for Tony Stewart Racing, those guys would work out of my dad’s shop during that three-week West Coast swing and Eric was the tire guy at the time, so we became friends and stayed in touch.”
“I’ve watched Eric’s career and he’s had amazing success. The guys who run up front all have really good equipment so, now more than ever, it’s the people. Having someone as accomplished as Eric is just as important as the equipment.”
“I’m thrilled to race the Chili Bowl, again. I’ve run it three times in the past. I ran for Clauson Marshall Racing my first time and made the show.”
“The two years after that, I was there with Chad Boat Racing. To race a car prepared by Keith Kunz at the Chili Bowl is a dream come true. They’ve won prelim after prelim and Saturday after Saturday. The Chili Bowl is an event where being lucky is just as important as having a fast race car and putting yourself in position to win a race.”
“I’m really looking forward to getting back there. I’m really grateful to Jeff, Keith and the whole team at Chili’s for the opportunity.”
NASCAR charter sold for $40M to Spire Motorsports; New record
Links
Gio Scelzi | Spire Motorsports | High Limit Racing | NASCAR
Motorsports
Ten Tenths Motor Club Names Veteran Automotive Executive Andy Thomas as Vice President of Manufacturer Relations – Speedway Digest
Ten Tenths Motor Club has named longtime automotive executive Andy Thomas as its new Vice President of Manufacturer Relations, bringing more than three decades of global experience in luxury automotive sales, marketing and brand management to the newly opened motorsports and lifestyle destination.
In his new role, Thomas will develop and maintain relationships with OEM partners to understand their needs, perspectives and objectives, while working to identify opportunities for growth by leveraging new and existing partnerships to increase facility usage.
Thomas joins Ten Tenths Motor Club after serving as Vice President of Marketing and Communications for McLaren Automotive North America since 2015, where he led strategic marketing, communications and global strategy that helped drive record sales growth. During his decade with McLaren, Thomas oversaw experiential events in over 30 major metro markets and developed retail programs that significantly increased sales conversions and owner engagement.
“Andy’s reputation and relationships within the global automotive community are unmatched,” said Rick Hendrick, who founded Ten Tenths Motor Club in partnership with Speedway Motorsports. “His leadership will be instrumental in strengthening our partnerships with manufacturers and luxury brands as we continue to establish Ten Tenths as a world-class venue for automotive experiences.”
Prior to McLaren, Thomas served in leadership roles with Rolls-Royce Motor Cars in both Goodwood, U.K. and North America, where he guided global brand alignment and oversaw international marketing strategy across Europe, Asia-Pacific and the Middle East. Earlier in his career, he held key marketing and sales roles with BMW of North America, Ferrari North America and Land Rover North America, gaining experience in dealer relations, product marketing and luxury customer engagement.
“Our vision for Ten Tenths Motor Club is to establish the facility as not only a premier experience for passionate automotive enthusiasts, but also to create a destination for corporate events that is unmatched in the automotive industry,” said Speedway Motorsports President and CEO Marcus Smith. “We look forward to Andy joining our efforts to invite manufacturers from around the world to Ten Tenths Motor Club and the greater Charlotte region.”
A Clemson University graduate with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering, Thomas also serves on the Board of the Erwin Center for Brand Communication at his alma mater. In that role, he mentors students, sponsors real-world marketing projects and connects students with opportunities across the automotive and luxury brand landscape.
A native of Salisbury, Maryland, Thomas began his career in dealer operations at Fox Chevrolet in Baltimore before joining the OEM side of the industry. His work has taken him across the United States, the United Kingdom and Europe, building a broad network and a deep understanding of international brand collaboration.
“I’m thrilled to join Ten Tenths at such an exciting time,” Thomas said. “The club’s vision represents the next evolution of automotive lifestyle and performance culture. I look forward to connecting global manufacturers with this extraordinary facility and to becoming part of the Charlotte community.”
Located adjacent to the iconic Charlotte Motor Speedway, Ten Tenths Motor Club combines exclusive track access, curated events and premium hospitality to create an unparalleled environment for members and partners. The facility has quickly become a premier destination in the Charlotte metropolitan area for automotive launches, luxury brand activations, enthusiast experiences and special events. Tickets are now on sale for Ten Tenths Motor Club signature public event, Heritage Invitational, April 9-11, 2026.
CMS PR
Motorsports
Short Track Racing Gets Major Boost With $6.7 Billion Backed Chili Bowl Nationals Coverage
Short-track racing is set for a significant commercial and visibility boost, one that points to growing confidence from corporate players in the grassroots motorsport ecosystem.
As the Chili Bowl Nationals approaches next January, developments off the track suggest the event is entering a new commercial phase. The move will inject major corporate backing into one of grassroots motorsport’s most prestigious events.
Chili Bowl Nationals Gain Momentum As Major Brands Look Beyond Top-Tier Series
In a new announcement, it has emerged that Chili’s will sponsor FloRacing’s streaming coverage of the Chili Bowl Nationals in January 2026.
A motorsports journalist first reported the development on X, revealing, “@Chilis will sponsor @FloRacing’s streaming coverage of the Chili Bowl Nationals in January as part of a new deal, with assets including ad integration during pre- and post-race and shoulder programming, along with on-site signage, jumbotron commercials and a hospitality area.”
The deal includes extensive ad integration across FloRacing’s Chili Bowl coverage. The partnership will also feature branded elements during pre- and post-race shows, shoulder programming, on-site signage, jumbotron commercials, and a dedicated hospitality area at the venue.
Chili’s is owned by Brinker International, a publicly listed restaurant company valued at approximately $6.6 billion, underlining the scale of investment now flowing into short track and dirt racing.
While the Chili Bowl has long been a fan favorite on the racing calendar, the association of a corporate company of this size with the Chili Bowl further elevates the event’s commercial credibility and fan appeal.
The Chili Bowl Nationals, held annually in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is widely regarded as the crown jewel of midget racing, drawing elite drivers from dirt racing, IndyCar, and even NASCAR disciplines. While the event has long enjoyed strong grassroots support, this sponsorship shows how close the gap between short-track racing and central corporate America is getting.
For FloRacing, the deal reinforces its strategy of pairing grassroots motorsport with blue-chip advertisers. As streaming continues to transform how fans consume motorsport, securing a nationally recognized brand like Chili’s adds credibility to FloRacing’s model and demonstrates the platform’s ability to deliver measurable value to sponsors.
At a broader level, the partnership reflects a shifting landscape within American motorsport. Short track racing, once viewed primarily as a regional niche, is increasingly attracting major corporate interest due to its authenticity and strong fan engagement.
The move could also have a ripple effect across the short track ecosystem, encouraging other major sponsors to explore similar partnerships. This will further narrow the gap between grassroots racing and top-tier motorsport in terms of commercial and media appeal.
Motorsports
F1 Aero Tricks for Enhanced Car Performance
Every new F1 season reshapes the grid, and the 2025 cars push aerodynamic complexity even further with intricate sidepods, sculpted floors, and finely tuned wings. While these features exist to win races under strict regulations, the principles behind them are already transforming how high-performance road cars cut through the air and stay planted at speed.
Just as enthusiasts compare online casinos that pay out the most to maximize return on risk, performance drivers now compare brands that deliver the greatest transfer of F1 aerodynamic knowledge into cars that occupy real garages. The models that benefit from this pipeline feel calmer at 250 km/h, corner harder on track days, and waste less fuel or battery charge at highway speeds.
From Wind Tunnels to Showrooms
F1 teams and manufacturers now work inside shared technical ecosystems, where aerodynamic research rarely remains confined to the race shop. Computational fluid dynamics and wind tunnel data feed common databases that road-car engineers interrogate when they design a new supercar or performance sedan.
Key channels that transfer F1 aero learning into road cars include:
- Shared CFD platforms that simulate similar flow conditions for race and road projects.
- Common wind tunnel facilities with interchangeable models and measuring systems.
- Track data that validates how cars behave in crosswinds and turbulent air.
- Joint technical groups that translate race concepts into street-legal solutions.
Through these mechanisms, investment in F1 development produces measurable benefits in the road division instead of existing as a pure marketing exercise.
Ground Effects and Venturi Floors in Road Cars
The 2025 F1 floors generate huge downforce through Venturi tunnels and powerful diffusers, and road-car departments have revived the same philosophy in a moderated form. Underbody tunnels, extended diffusers, and subtle vortex generators create suction without resorting to oversized wings that would look out of place in city traffic.
Examples of ground-effect DNA in current road cars include:
- Mid-engine supercars with flat floors and deep rear diffusers
- Hypercars that channel air through underbody tunnels to generate downforce
- Performance sedans that reduce high-speed lift with tuned diffusers
- Track-focused editions with removable front splitters and underbody strakes.
These solutions respect everyday ride-height constraints while retaining the stability advantages that F1 teams exploit.
Active Aero and Smart Surfaces
While F1 cars use limited movable devices, the control logic behind ride height, temperatures, and hybrid deployment inspires sophisticated active systems on road cars. High-performance models now coordinate adjustable rear wings, deployable spoilers, and intelligent grille shutters through central controllers that read speed, steering angle, and thermal load.
Common active aerodynamic components in modern performance cars include:
- Multi-position rear wings that alter angle during braking and acceleration
- Front lips that extend at higher speeds to increase front axle grip
- Adaptive grille shutters that open for cooling and close to cut drag
- Underbody flaps that direct airflow toward diffusers or brake ducts.
In practice, the car behaves as a dynamic object that reshapes itself for each phase of a drive, echoing the adaptive philosophy of race setup work.
Aero Efficiency for Everyday Driving
Although F1 teams chase maximum downforce within tight drag limits, road cars often prioritize efficiency because emissions regulations and electric range targets are strict. Designers therefore apply F1-style flow management around mirrors, wheels, and rooflines to preserve stability while minimizing wake turbulence.
Typical efficiency tricks derived from F1 thinking include:
- Air curtains that guide flow cleanly around the front wheels.
- Sculpted side sills that feed air toward the rear diffuser.
- Tapered roof and tail profiles that shrink the turbulent wake.
- Subtle rear lips that reduce lift without large wings.
Each detail may seem minor when viewed alone, yet in combination they deliver measurable improvements in drag coefficient and high-speed composure.
What This Means for Drivers and Engineers

For drivers, the influence of 2025 F1 aerodynamics appears as calmer behavior at velocities that once felt nervous. Steering remains more precise under heavy braking, crosswinds disturb the car less, and lap times on track days improve as tires operate within more consistent load windows.
For engineers, the convergence of race and road programs enforces disciplined development processes. Shared wind tunnel hours, CFD runs, and correlation tests reduce the temptation to add ineffective vents or decorative wings, because every visible feature must justify itself through quantifiable aerodynamic benefit.
The Next Aero Generation
The trajectory from 2025 indicates that future performance cars will deepen the integration between sensors, software, and active surfaces. Vehicles may adapt their aero profiles in response to real-time traffic, weather, and road-surface data, rather than relying solely on speed-based maps.
For enthusiasts who watch F1 qualifying and then drive home in high-performance coupes or sedans, the connection between what happens on Saturday and what they feel on Monday morning will continue to tighten. Each new F1 regulation cycle forces teams to reinvent the language of airflow, and that vocabulary keeps migrating into cars parked in ordinary driveways, quietly transforming everyday journeys with technology proven at racing speed.

Motorsports
Dr. Patrick Staropoli Lands Full-Time O’Reilly Ride with Big Machine Racing
Ladies and Gentlemen, the doctor is in!
Dr. Patrick Staropoli, a board-certified medical and surgical retina specialist, has been tapped by NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series operation Big Machine Racing to compete full-time in the second-tier division in 2026.
Staropoli will get behind the wheel of the No. 48 SYFOVRE (pegcetacoplan injection) Chevrolet, beginning with the February 14 season-opener at Daytona International Speedway.
“From the moment I buckled into a pure stock at Hialeah Speedway in 2023, my life’s goal has been to compete at the top levels of this sport,” said Staropoli. “The path has taken many unexpected turns, but after working every day for 23 years in pursuit of this dream, I now have the opportunity of a lifetime thanks to Scott Borchetta, Patrick Donahue, and Chevrolet. I am ready to do whatever it takes to put this SYFOVRE Chevy up front and raise awareness for Geographic Atrophy secondary to Age-Related Macular Degeneration by combining my passion for motorsports and medicine.”
A third-generation driver from Plantation, Florida, Staropoli first gained national attention after winning the 2013 PEAK Stock Car Dream Challenge to become a Michael Waltrip Racing development driver, emerging ahead of top talents like NASCAR Cup Series race-winner Chase Briscoe. The 36-year-old earned himself a seat with Bill McAnally Racing in the ARCA Menards Series West, where he captured a victory at Irwindale in 2014.
“We’re pleased to welcome Dr. Patrick Staropoli to the No. 48 Big Machine Racing team for the 2026 season,” said Patrick Donahue, Crew Chief and Team Manager. “He brings a rare blend of professionalism, focus, and drive that will continue to strengthen our organization. This partnership reflects our commitment to surrounding the team with individuals who share our values and vision for building long-term success.”
After nearly a decade on the sidelines, Staropoli returned to the ranks of NASCAR’s National Series in 2025, competing in four NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series (Xfinity Series) events for Sam Hunt Racing and four NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series events for Cook Racing Technologies — earning two top-20s in both the O’Reilly Series and Truck Series.
The hiring of Dr. Patrick Staropoli comes after the surprising news earlier this month that Nick Sanchez, who earned the team’s second victory last Summer at EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta), had been released from the organization ahead of the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series campaign. Sanchez said in an interview with SiriusXM NASCAR Radio that the move was “strictly business” on the part of Big Machine Racing.
Staropoli will take on the 33-race NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series campaign in 2026 with Big Machine Racing, starting with the season-opening event at Daytona International Speedway on February 14. Coverage will be at 5:30 PM ET on The CW, Motor Racing Network, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
Motorsports
NASCAR champion Kyle Larson open to Rolex 24 return
Kyle Larson is ready to go back to Daytona for the Rolex 24 Hours.
The two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion has three starts in IMSA’s season-opening crown jewel event, but none since 2016. He took overall victory with Chip Ganassi Racing in 2015, co-driving with Scott Dixon, Tony Kanaan, and Jamie McMurray.
On a recently-released episode of Dinner with Racers, a podcast co-hosted by Ryan Eversley and Sean Heckman, Larson was asked about his interest in returning for the endurance classic if Chrevolet came calling.
“I think at this stage in my career, yeah, I’d do it again,” said Larson, driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in NASCAR. “I had fun those three years I did it. I didn’t want to keep doing it every year.”
#02 Chip Ganassi Racing Riley DP Ford: Scott Dixon, Tony Kanaan, Jamie McMurray, Kyle Larson
Photo by: Alexander Trienitz
Few are as well-equipped as Larson to handle a busy racing schedule. Beyond his Cup commitments, he also competes in High Limit Racing, a Sprint Car Series he co-owns with five-time World of Outlaws champion Brad Sweet. There’s also the random Midget races, and offseason racing trips to the other side of the globe.
“The offseasons have only gotten busier,” Larson said. “There’s more races and stuff. I go to Australia now, Chili Bowl, and West Coast Midget races. It’s just a lot and I, kind of, want time off. But it’s been so long since I ran it that you almost get to the point where you forget a little bit about it, right? And I just remember having a blast doing that race, so I just want to go there and relive it.”
The 33-year-old California native would also relish the opportunity to share the experience with his family, noting his oldest of three children, Owen, is 11 but was a newborn when Larson won the event.
“To have my kids be a part of it would be cool,” said Larson, who also has two starts in the Indianapolis 500 each of the last two years.
It also helps bolster a family vacation when Disney World is roughly an hour away, too.
“Yeah, that, too,” he said. “So yeah, I would probably do it again.”
However, Larson, who attempted to express not knowing anyone in IMSA to move the idea forward, does have one requirement: “I want to be in the best car.”
As the subject started to fade off, Larson pressed his level of interest into more of a declaration.
“I definitely want to do it again in the future.”
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