Motorsports
Elite USAC Midget Field Set To Race July 1-2 in BC39 at IMS
More than 70 drivers are expected to compete for one of the spots in the feature in this prestigious USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship event. A field of more than 70 cars is expected to compete July 1-2 at The Dirt Track at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for one of the most prestigious prizes […]

More than 70 drivers are expected to compete for one of the spots in the feature in this prestigious USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship event.
A field of more than 70 cars is expected to compete July 1-2 at The Dirt Track at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for one of the most prestigious prizes in the United States Auto Club NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship – victory in the BC39 Presented by Avanti Windows & Doors.
The list of past winners is impressive, with stars Brady Bacon (2018), Zeb Wise (2019), Kyle Larson (2021), Buddy Kofoid (2022), Justin Grant (2023) and Cannon McIntosh (2024) kissing the bricks on the outside wall at the start-finish line of the 1/5th-mile dirt oval inside Turn 3 at IMS.
Grant and McIntosh are among the drivers competing this year, trying to become the first two-time winners of this event that honors late USAC champion and three-time Indianapolis 500 starter Bryan Clauson.
Drivers representing 18 states and three countries (USA, Canada, England) are entered, with more expected early next week.
On-track action begins Tuesday, July 1 at IMS with a full program of events for both the USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship and the Stoops Junior Sprint Invitational. Owen and Audrey Larson, the young son and daughter of NASCAR superstar and BC39 winner Kyle Larson, are expected to drive in the Junior Sprint race.
Public gates open at 4 p.m. ET Tuesday, with hot laps at 6 p.m. and competition at 7 p.m. A 30-lap feature for the midgets will be the main event of the evening. Fans then can enter the track after the checkered flag for the feature and talk with drivers and see the race cars up close.
Championship night of the BC39 on Wednesday, July 2 will consist of full programs for both the USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship and the Stoops Junior Sprint Invitational. Public gates open at 4 p.m., followed by a driver autograph session at 4:30 in the driver merchandise area and hot laps at 6 p.m. Racing starts immediately after the opening ceremonies at 7 p.m., culminating in a 39-lap feature event for the midgets paying $20,039 to win.
Tickets are on sale at ims.com/BC39. Spectators must enter IMS via Gate 10 off 30th Street to access The Dirt Track. No entrance will be allowed through Gate 2.
For more spectator information, fans should visit the Plan Ahead site for the BC39.
2025 BC39 PRESENTED BY AVANTI WINDOWS & DOORS ENTRIES
(As of June 26, 2025)
00 BRECKEN REESE/Canyon, Texas (Chandler Grand Prix)
0G GLENN STYRES/Ohsweken, Ontario (Glenn Styres Racing)
2 KYLE SIMON/Covington, Ohio (Nick Poe)
3G KYLE CUMMINS/Princeton, Indiana (Glenn Styres Racing)
3J J.J. YELEY/Phoenix (Petty Performance Racing)
3p JUSTIN PECK/Monrovia, Indiana (Team Petty-Rossi Racing)
4 STEVEN SNYDER JR./Rising Sun, Maryland (RMS Racing)
4B CHELBY HINTON/Dubberly, Louisiana (Klatt Enterprises)
5 P.J. GARGIULO/Morton, Pennsylvania (P.J. Gargiulo)
5J JOSH HODGE/Brownsburg, Indiana (Josh Hodge)
7s CHASE STOCKON/Fort Branch, Indiana (Tim Engler)
7x THOMAS MESERAULL/San Jose, California (Tim Engler)
8 ZACH WIGAL/Belpre, Ohio (Cornell Racing Stables)
8D MILES DOHERTY/Delmar, Iowa (Miles Doherty Racing)
8J COOPER MILLER/Graham, Texas (Cooper Miller)
8K JEFFREY ABBEY/Rhome, Texas (Jeffrey Abbey)
8m KADE MORTON/Coweta, Oklahoma (Blane Morton)
11 KAYLEE BRYSON/Muskogee, Oklahoma (Abacus Racing)
11G LANE GOODMAN/Broken Arrow, Oklahoma (Blane Morton)
14 KEVIN THOMAS JR./Cullman, Alabama (4 Kings Racing)
14B JONATHAN BEASON/Broken Arrow, Oklahoma (Holley Hollan)
14JB JAKEB BOXELL/Zanesville, Indiana (4 Kings Racing)
16 ZACH DAUM/Pocahontas, Illinois (Dan Minear)
16TH KEVIN NEWTON/Farmersburg, Indiana (2nd Law Motorsports)
17K COLE PARKER/Coal City, Indiana (Robert Cummings)
17L TBA (Robert Cummings)
19 MITCHEL MOLES/Raisin City, California (Reinbold-Underwood Motorsports)
19AZ HAYDEN REINBOLD/Gilbert, Arizona (Reinbold-Underwood Motorsports)
19m ETHAN MITCHELL/Mooresville, North Carolina (Bundy Built Motorsports)
19R RICKY THORNTON JR./Chandler, Arizona (Reinbold-Underwood Motorsports)
20w CODY WEISENSEL/Sun Prairie, Wisconsin (Bill Burrington Motorsports)
21 CORD KISTHARDT/Hershey, Pennsylvania (Cord Kisthardt)
23 DEVON DOBIE/Wapakoneta, Ohio (Dennis Dobie)
26 CORBIN RUESCHENBERG/Mesa, Arizona (Scott Rueschenberg)
27x KYLE JONES/Kennedale, Texas (Joyner Motorsports)
35s CHRIS HARTMAN/Boulder, Colorado (Josh Hodge)
36 CHRIS BAUE/Indianapolis (Bill Baue)
40 CHASE McDERMAND/Springfield, Illinois (Chase McDermand Racing)
40x BRIGGS DANNER/Allentown, Pennsylvania (Chase McDermand Racing)
41 CONNOR WOLF/Lafayette, Indiana (OMR / Rase Motorsports)
41B CLINTON BOYLES/Greenwood, Missouri (Scott Beierle)
43 GUNNAR SETSER/Columbus, Indiana (Kevin Arnold)
45 BRADLEY COX/Burkburnett, Texas (Lonnie Cox)
55 TREVOR CLINE/Mooresville, North Carolina (Troy Cline)
57 LOGAN SEAVEY/Sutter, California (Abacus Racing)
57F TYLER FITZPATRICK/Columbia City, Indiana (Tyler Fitzpatrick)
60 DUSTY YOUNG/Benton, Arkansas (Chappue Motorsports)
60x DILLON WELCH/Carmel, Indiana (John LeVecque)
61 CHRIS SHEIL/Aurora, Colorado (Cappy Mason)
63 CALE COONS/Greencastle, Indiana (Joe Dooling-Curb/Agajanian)
63G FRANKIE GUERRINI/San Rafael, California (Frankie Guerrini)
67 JACOB DENNEY/Galloway, Ohio (Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports)
67K COLTON ROBINSON/Titusville, Florida (Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports)
71B BRAXTON CUMMINGS/Bedford, Indiana (Robert Cummings)
C71 CARTER JENSRUD/River Falls, Wisconsin (Carter Jensrud)
71K CANNON McINTOSH/Bixby, Oklahoma (Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports)
81G RYLAN GRAY/Greenfield, Indiana (Gray Brothers Racing)
83 DRAKE EDWARDS/Peoria, Arizona (CB Industries)
86 DAISON PURSLEY/Locust Grove, Oklahoma (CB Industries)
86x MACK LEOPARD/Beavercreek, Ohio (CB Industries)
87 JUSTIN GRANT/Ione, California (CB Industries)
91 LANCE BENNETT/Aurora, Colorado (Cappy Mason)
92 MIKE HESS/Petersburg, Illinois (Stephen Fairfield)
95 CHRIS ANDREWS/Tulsa, Oklahoma (Jim Miller)
97 GAVIN MILLER/Allentown, Pennsylvania (Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports)
97K KALE DRAKE/Collinsville, Oklahoma (Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports)
98 BRANDON CARR/Sheffield, England (Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports)
Motorsports
Predicting the Finals for the NASCAR In-Season Challenge!
After weeks of bracket chaos, upsets, and surprises, the in-season challenge comes down to the most unexpected final: Ty Gibbs vs. Ty Dillon. One is the young phenom in top-tier equipment. The other? The journeyman nobody expected to make it past round one. And now, somehow, we’re here. Ty Dillon at the Brickyard? Believe it […]

After weeks of bracket chaos, upsets, and surprises, the in-season challenge comes down to the most unexpected final: Ty Gibbs vs. Ty Dillon. One is the young phenom in top-tier equipment. The other? The journeyman nobody expected to make it past round one. And now, somehow, we’re here.
- Ty Dillon at the Brickyard? Believe it or not, it’s one of his best tracks
- Ty Gibbs has the car, the pace, and the hype—but will that be enough?
- Dillon has an Xfinity win here, and his worst Cup finish is 21st. Coincidence?
- Is this the start of a Cinderella story or the final chapter?
It’s the most improbable finale yet. On paper, Gibbs should run away with it. But Dillon’s form in the challenge—and his quiet history at Indy—says don’t count him out. Stranger things have happened in NASCAR. And at this point? Why not Ty Dillon? Let us know who you’ve got in this Ty vs. Ty showdown. Will it be a legacy launch or a legacy upset?
Watch Also:
Motorsports
CHEVROLET NCS AT INDIANAPOLIS: Justin Haley Media Availability Quotes – Speedway Digest
Justin Haley, driver of the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series qualifying session at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Media Availability Quotes: What does racing at Indianapolis Motor Speedway mean to you? “Yeah, this is obviously my home track. Gainbridge has a large presence here, as well. […]

Justin Haley, driver of the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series qualifying session at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Media Availability Quotes:
What does racing at Indianapolis Motor Speedway mean to you?
“Yeah, this is obviously my home track. Gainbridge has a large presence here, as well. So, yeah, just an important race for our team. Hopefully we unload here fast in practice and can put on a good show. So, yeah, obviously important for me. I grew up racing here — not racing here, but watching a lot of the Indianapolis 500’s. We have a strong relationship with Gainbridge, who’s been one our main sponsors this year. So, yeah, I’m excited to get going here. It’s always good to be home.”
How would you describe the season so far for you and the No. 7 team? What are the boxes you’re trying to check as we get closer to the end of the regular season here?
“I think it’s just been interesting. I mean, that’s really all I can think about when I think about our season. Obviously, I feel like at the start of the season, we were pretty good, and then the car chief and crew chief change happened. We kind of went through a section through May and June where I thought we were pretty decent; had good speed but just caught up in a lot of incidents that kind of tanked us back in the points.
But again, I feel like anytime we got into an incident, it really wasn’t our fault. It was just a bad stretch. So, yeah, we’ve kind of tried to climb back through the metric and have decent days. I feel like we’re coming off two okay finishes right there inside the top-20. I feel like we’ve had good speed, but just trying to find our groove again. Obviously, it’s been a pretty difficult season, in general, with where we are in the points standing and kind of what we’ve gone through. Definitely not what I expected when I started in Daytona, to go through all we’ve been through. But just trying to find a little bit of silver lining and get some good finishes by the end of the year.”
How old were you when you first came to Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and what is your first memory of this track?
“Yeah, I’m not sure. I know I skipped school a few times. I was definitely in elementary school. My parents had some friends that still live right here, not but a quarter mile away. We used to stay at their house and used to watch a lot of Indy 500’s — come up here for Carb Day, all the practices and spent a lot of time here watching the INDYCAR’s.
I’m not sure if I ever came to a Brickyard, but yeah, I would say I was pretty young… probably six or seven. I knew it was before I started racing. I started racing when I was nine. So yeah, spent a lot of time here; had a lot of fun with it. I enjoy coming here.”
It’s been a tough season so far. What’s your outlook going forward for the rest of the year and trying to get things back on the right track for yourself and the team?
“Yeah, I mean, I kind of hit on that earlier. It’s just been interesting. I’m not really sure why or how I’ve gotten to this point. But yeah, it was tough, obviously losing what we lost and just trying to find our footing after that.
I feel like we have speed. I feel like there’s been weeks where we show a lot of promise, and a lot of those weeks we got caught up in someone else’s mess. So yeah, we’ve kind of climbed back up the metric. I feel like we’re in a good spot here for qualifying. I feel like the past two weeks, we’ve had decent speed. We had the fastest lap at Sonoma. Unfortunately, it took us a day-in-a-half to get there to be the fastest car. But yeah, it’s been fine. I feel like it’s just been difficult. Not what I expected at all, but just trying to find a little bit of speed and get some finishes.
I’m glad to have (Michael) McDowell on my side. He’s been a big part of this year and helping me. He’s been an awesome teammate. Can’t say enough about Michael and what he’s done for our organization and our team.
So yeah, I feel like we’re okay. We just got to get a little bit better.”
Practice was cancelled yesterday and moved to today. Does that change your approach to practice today with the shortened time and the boxes you check to get ready for tomorrow?
“Yeah, it certainly does. I feel like that’s kind of hurt us, too. I’ve been trying to find a feel that I haven’t quite found yet. We had some packages we wanted to run through yesterday to try to hopefully find that feel and get translation from the simulator. So yeah, we kind of had to go with the package and stick with it today. And tomorrow, obviously with the shortened practices that we normally have, you really can’t do much to it.
I was kind of looking forward to yesterday. I know we brought some extra people to try to run through some more changes on my car and figure out something that I liked. I mean, I’m confident that it’ll be fast. Hopefully I have a good feel for it and we’ll be all right.”
You mentioned that this just hasn’t gone the way that you expected it to go from when you started at Daytona. What have you learned about yourself and the guys who are still around you on the No. 7 team throughout the course of this season? Also, what has Michael done specifically to help you out throughout the course of this season?
“I think Michael (McDowell) is just like a good glue guy, right? Like he just, I feel like, ties up all the loose ends that there might be and just kind of brings everyone together.
So yeah, just having teammates like him. I relate to him a lot like I did AJ (Allmendinger), right? Like just a figure that’s been around and seen it all. He just has a good overview perspective on maybe where your team’s at, where your car’s at or where you’re at as a driver. I’m living in it and trying to do it all, but having a neutral figure like Michael who is just there for your best interest has been a big help.
So yeah, I’m glad he’s taken me under my wing, and obviously I’m fully supportive of him and his team, as well. If it’s at 5 a.m. when we’re hitting pickleballs at his house or if we’re hashing it out in a competition meeting about something, he’s just been a great human being.”
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Motorsports
Connor Zilisch makes it three in a row at IMS
Credit: James Gilbert / Getty Images Connor Zilisch wins his third race in a row, fifth of the season, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway after a late caution, and this marks JR Motorsports’ 100th team win. Sam Mayer secured his fourth career pole after not running a single lap at last year’s race at IMS, […]

Credit: James Gilbert / Getty Images
Connor Zilisch wins his third race in a row, fifth of the season, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway after a late caution, and this marks JR Motorsports’ 100th team win.
Sam Mayer secured his fourth career pole after not running a single lap at last year’s race at IMS, while rookie Nick Sanchez rolls off alongside him.
Prior to starting, Christian Eckes started smoking out of the dash on the formation and pitted. The No. 16 team was able to fix the issue, and Eckes rejoined where he was originally starting in 15th.
Mayer and Sanchez led the field to green with Sheldon Creed behind his teammate Mayer, and Jesse Love behind Sanchez.
Creed gives a push to Mayer and clears Mayer into the lead. Creed slots into third as Sanchez keeps second.
Logan Bearden slows on the opening lap and goes into the pits.
Justin Allgaier grazed the wall on Lap 2 after being run out of room by Aric Almirola while battling for fifth.
Harrison Burton spins from 19th and brings out the first caution on Lap 3.
Mayer and Sanchez lead the way again on Lap 7, but this time, Creed and Brandon Jones are behind them. Sanchez had a bad restart as Mayer and Creed immediately cleared for the lead into Turn 1.
Jones fell out of the top five, allowing Almirola, Zilisch and Allgaier to get ahead on Lap 8.
Zilisch passes Almirola for fourth on Lap 13 out of Turn 2, and moves up to third on Lap 14, passing Sanchez in Turn 3.
By Lap 15, Mayer had built a gap of 2.5 seconds to the rest of the field.
Zilisch goes on the inside of Creed on Lap 17 and moves up to second.
Kyle Larson, who started down in 19th, broke into the top 10 on Lap 18.
On Lap 22, Almirola passed Zilisch down the backstretch but still trails Mayer by over 2 seconds.
On Laps 24 and 27, Allgier passed Zilisch and Almirola. Both in Turn 3.
In the last lap of the stage, Allgaier got pretty close to Mayer, but was not able to take the lead.
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No. 41 – Sam Mayer (Haas Factory Team)
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No. 7 – Justin Allgaier (JR Motorsports)
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No. 19 – Aric Almirola (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 20 – Brandon Jones (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 88 – Connor Zilisch (JR Motorsports)
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No. 00 – Sheldon Creed (Haas Factory Team)
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No. 2 – Jesse Love (Richard Childress Racing)
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No. 17 – Kyle Larson (Hendrick Motorsports)
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No. 54 – Taylor Gray (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 1 – Carson Kvapil (JR Motorsports)
After a cycle of pit stops, Almirola, Allgaier and Zilisch are the biggest movers off pit road as Mayer falls three places. Creed also had a slow stop, dropping him out of the top 10.
Almirola and Allgaier lead the way on Lap 37.
Taylor Gray makes it three wide in turn 2 with Mayer and Sanchez. Gray gets ahead of them as Sanchez gets bumped into the wall by Eckes.
Allgaier and Almirola stayed door to door though Lap 38 before Zilisch got behind Allgaier and helped him into the lead. Zilisch also moved up to second.
Sanchez goes onto pit road as he started smoking on Lap 40.
Eckes starts smoking again on Lap 49, but this time, it was a right front tyre issue. He pits to change both right tyres.
Larson also passed Almirola for third on Lap 50. Larson is still about 2.5 seconds back from Zilisch and Allgaier.
On Lap 52, Zilisch goes underneath Allgaier and passes for the lead entering Turn 3. This makes it 10 consecutive races that Zilisch has led a lap.
On the last lap of the stage, Allgaier battled with Zilisch for the lead and was narrowly able to take it across the line.
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No. 7 – Justin Allgaier (JR Motorsports)
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No. 88 – Connor Zilisch (JR Motorsports)
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No. 17 – Kyle Larson (Hendrick Motorsports)
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No. 19 – Aric Almirola (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 54 – Taylor Gray (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 20 – Brandon Jones (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 41 – Sam Mayer (Haas Factory Team)
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No. 1 – Carson Kvapil (JR Motorsports)
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No. 2 – Jesse Love (Richard Childress Racing)
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No. 18 – William Sawalich (Joe Gibbs Racing)
After another cycle of pit stops, Allgaier gets off pit road first, followed by Larson and Jones. Almirola and Love have slow stops, and both drop out of the top 10.
Allgaier and Larson led the way on Lap 65, and Jones made it three wide for the lead. Larson comes out on top.
Kvapil goes sideways and hits the wall backward on the restart lap after going three wide with William Sawalich and Leland Honeyman and brings out the caution. Honeyman got loose from the inside and spun Kvapil out.
The restart was delayed due to some raindrops beginning to fall.
Larson and Allgaier led the field back to green on Lap 73. Mayer pushed Larson, but Allgaier was able to sweep for the lead alone.
Zilisch goes out of line and is able to jump into fourth as Mayer falls back. Zilisch moves up to third on lap 76.
Allgaier is ahead when the fifth caution comes out for rain with 20 laps to go.
Allgaier and Larson take them back racing with 14 laps to go. Zilisch lined up behind Larson on the inside while Jones took the outside behind Allgaier.
Larson has a slight advantage before Allgaier got slight contact from Larson and the two fell back as Zilsich goes inside to the lead. Jones also got a little loose, allowing for Gray to get up to second. Allgaier pitted to retire the car.
On Lap 90, Austin Hill and Almirola had slight contact. Hill was able to save it for a second before he clipped the back of Almirola, sending him into the wall. Almirola had to retire while Hill pitted.
Hill was penalized for reckless driving and was held for 5 laps.
The race was upgraded to a red flag due to fluid on the track and for weather with 8 laps to go.
About 15 minutes later, the race was back to caution.
With 4 to go and Zilisch on the inside and Gray on the outside, they lead the way back to green.
Gray gets the lead after a big push from Creed and Zilisch slots into second.
Zilisch goes to the inside of Gray with three to go and Mayer helps Gray on the outside, so Gray stays ahead.
One lap later, Zilisch goes on he inside of Gray again, but Mayer gives the push to Zilisch, getting him up to the lead.
Connor Zilisch scores his fifth win of the season and JR Motorsports’ 100th win at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway!
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No. 88 – Connor Zilisch (JR Motorsports)
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No. 41 – Sam Mayer (Haas Factory Team) [FL]
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No. 54 – Taylor Gray (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 17 – Kyle Larson (Hendrick Motorsports)
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No. 39 – Ryan Sieg (RSS Racing)
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No. 18 – William Sawalich (Joe Gibbs Racing)
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No. 8 – Sammy Smith (JR Motorsports)
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No. 10 – Daniel Dye (Kaulig Racing)
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No. 2 – Jesse Love (Richard Childress Racing)
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No. 26 – Dean Thompson (Sam Hunt Racing)
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No. 99 – Matt DiBenedetto (Viking Motorsports)
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No. 51 – Jeremy Clements (Jeremy Clements Racing)
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No. 16 – Christian Eckes (Kaulig Racing)
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No. 4 – Parker Retzlaff (Alpha Prime Racing)
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No. 27 – Jeb Burton (Jordan Anderson Racing)
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No. 28 – Kyle Sieg (RSS Racing)
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No. 00 – Sheldon Creed (Haas Factory Team)
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No. 25 – Harrison Burton (AM Racing)
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No. 91 – Josh Bilicki (DGM Racing x JIM)
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No. 44 – Brennen Poole (Alpha Prime Racing)
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No. 71 – Ryan Ellis (DGM Racing + JIM)
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No. 11 – Josh Williams (Kaulig Racing)
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No. 42 – Anthony Alfredo (Young’s Motorsports)
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No. 45 – Mason Massey (Alpha Prime Racing)
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No. 14 – Garrett Smithley (SS-Green Light Racing)
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No. 70 – Leland Honeyman (Cope Family Racing)
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No. 31 – Blaine Perkins (Jordan Anderson Racing)
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No. 53 – Joey Gase (Joey Gase Racing)
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No. 35 – David Starr (Joey Gase Racing)
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No. 1 – Carson Kvapil (JR Motorsports)
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No. 74 – Dawson Cram (Mike Harmon Racing)
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No. 20 – Brandon Jones (Joe Gibbs Racing) +3 laps
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No. 48 – Nick Sanchez (Big Machine Racing) +4 laps
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No. 21 – Austin Hill (Richard Childress Racing) +5 laps
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No. 19 – Aric Almirola (Joe Gibbs Racing) [DNF]
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No. 7 – Justin Allgaier (JR Motorsports) [DNF]
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No. 32 – Katherine Legge (Jordan Anderson Racing) [DNF]
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No. 7 – Logan Bearden (SS-Green Light Racing) [DNF]
Next week, NASCAR Xfinity heads to Iowa on Saturday, August 2, at 16:30 EST (21:30 BST). Be there, or be square.
Motorsports
Richard Childress reacts to Austin Hill penalty, provides fiery response to NASCAR
Tonight’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Indianapolis is likely going to lead to penalties for Richard Childress Racing driver Austin Hill. It appeared that Hill right rear hooked Aric Almirola and caused both drivers to wreck. Now, RC himself is commenting on the situation. What isn’t going to help Austin Hill is how he reacted […]

Tonight’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Indianapolis is likely going to lead to penalties for Richard Childress Racing driver Austin Hill. It appeared that Hill right rear hooked Aric Almirola and caused both drivers to wreck. Now, RC himself is commenting on the situation.
What isn’t going to help Austin Hill is how he reacted on his radio after being held for five laps by NASCAR. Hill went on to finish P34 by the time the race finished, one spot above Almirola.
Richard Childress was asked about the situation. He came off as defensive and stood up for his driver.
“I’ll be in bigger trouble than I already am with NASCAR, period,” Richard Childress said when initially asked about the incident. He then weighed in after being asked if Austin Hill should be suspended.
“Hell no. They didn’t do a damn thing to the 2 car [of Austin Cindric] when they, he wrecked Ty [Dillon] and admitted to it,” Childress said, via Dustin Long of NBC Sports. “Drove him in the right rear and wrecked him at COTA. It’s who you are. We’re a blue-collar team, they give us trouble all the time.”
Richard Childress is always going to stand up for his drivers. That’s just how it is. But Austin Cindric was penalized for his right rear hook on Ty Dillon at COTA. Some felt it wasn’t enough, but he was penalized 50 points and received a fine.
Richard Childress sticking up for Austin Hill
There are serious consequences at stake for Richard Childress and Austin Hill. If NASCAR finds that this right rear hook was intentional, they are going to throw the book at Hill, and they should.
He is a driver who not only has a past of questionable decisions, but one that stood up in front of the entire series and said he was going to be a good example of how to race. Today, he threw that all out the window when he wrecked Almirola.
If NASCAR suspends Hill for a week or two, that’s going to sink his chances of an Xfinity Series championship. It could also be the first time we see a driver in the three national series lose all playoff points for the season. That is the punishment for an unexcused absence from a race, and a suspension via penalty is not a valid excuse.
Richard Childress doesn’t think his driver should be suspended. I get that. But NASCAR is likely going to feel a lot different. Hill has to get his act together. This is not when you need to make these mistakes and poor decisions. All of his hard work could go out the window. Hill has won races, and he has playoff points. A suspension takes all of that away.
Motorsports
Dale Earnhardt Jr. reacts to 100th win for JR Motorsports, performance from Connor Zilisch
Today, JR Motorsports got its 100th win in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Dale Earnhardt Jr. was in attendance to witness it. A very popular win among race fans. Connor Zilisch went out there and took it at the end of today’s race. Connor Zilisch has won five races this season. He is starting to […]

Today, JR Motorsports got its 100th win in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Dale Earnhardt Jr. was in attendance to witness it. A very popular win among race fans. Connor Zilisch went out there and took it at the end of today’s race.
Connor Zilisch has won five races this season. He is starting to make it look easy out there. Late race situations are nothing for Zilisch at this point, or it at least seems that way.
In the last nine races, Zilisch has four wins and no finishes worse than P5. Dale Earnhardt Jr. knows he has a special driver behind the wheel of the 88 car.
“Yeah, I was, uh, a lot of people to thank,” Dale Jr. said after the race on The CW. “But he [Zilisch] did a good job, man. Just awesome driving to him. We got some help from Sam on the back straightaway. Just a good little driver. Hey, these races are tough on your heart. Up and down, up and down. 100 wins for our team. That’s a big deal. I know my sister and everybody’s very emotional, and we’re going to enjoy this one.”
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was asked what he thought at the end when Zilisch temporarily lost the lead. What was that like? Well, it wasn’t fun. But he had the right driver for the job.
“Oh man. He’s a hell of a driver,” Earnhardt continued. “You know, he just went up there and got it back. We’ve got great race cars, a good race car underneath him to do what he needed to do. So, it takes a lot of us and want to thank the engine shop. Hendrick Motorsports engine shop, that’s what wins races in places like this and at Dover. So, thank y’all for all the hard work, they’ve worked hard this year. And all the support we get from HMS, it’s important to our performance.”
While Connor Zilisch won, it could have easily have been Justin Allgaier. The 7 led the most laps, 37, on the day. However, an incident with Kyle Larson late ended Allgaier’s hopes of a victory. So, Zilisch picked up the pieces and delivered the 100th win to JRM.
When Dale Earnhardt Jr. goes to sleep tonight, he will have 100 wins to his name as an owner. What an accomplishment for that organization.
Motorsports
William Byron hopes to shake bad luck in battle for regular-season title – Speedway Digest
A rash of ill fortune finally caught up with William Byron. When he crashed out of last Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover Motor Speedway—through no fault of his own—the 31st-place finish cost him the series lead. Byron now trails Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott, a model of consistency this season, by 16 points. […]

A rash of ill fortune finally caught up with William Byron.
When he crashed out of last Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover Motor Speedway—through no fault of his own—the 31st-place finish cost him the series lead.
Byron now trails Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott, a model of consistency this season, by 16 points. Three-time winner Kyle Larson, another Hendrick teammate, is third in the standings, 38 points behind Elliott.
For his part, Byron relishes a battle that’s staged within the same shop.
“I think it’s great,” he said. “I think it’s a really good thing, because it’s elevating all of our programs and elevating the importance of this part of the season.
“It’s obviously always important, but when you have three of us going for it, it’s like, ‘OK, it’s going to take your best for the next five weeks.’ I look at it like it’s going to give you more of an idea of what the Playoffs are going to be like.”
Before the Dover race, Byron had held the series lead for 17 of 20 weeks, but only one finish better than 27th in the last five races has proven costly. That streak has been unlucky enough for Byron to acknowledge he might have been “snakebit.”
“You could definitely say that,” he acknowledged. “I try not to use the ‘luck’ word a lot, but if you look at Atlanta and Dover and how we got crashed, I mean we just got run over from behind. Like, I check up for the wreck, and not everyone does.
“So I guess in those two instances you could say that definitely we weren’t in control of those two results… It’s just part of the nature of the schedule and the way things play out.
“We’ve had top-five speed everywhere, but the results haven’t been there every week. Chicago was definitely on me in practice (a clutch issue), and Pocono was also on me in qualifying, and unfortunately those race results weren’t there. Then other things happened, but yeah, I think it’s still within reach—we’ve just got to do it.”
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