Motorsports
Former F1 & IndyCar Driver Tarso Marques arrested
In the high-octane world of open-wheel racing, few careers capture the raw unpredictability of motorsport like that of Tarso Marques. Born on January 19, 1976, in Curitiba, Brazil, Marques burst onto the scene as a prodigy, winning the Brazilian Formula Chevrolet championship at just 16 years old.
–by Mark Cipolloni–
By 1993, he was dominating Formula Three Sudamericana, and soon after, he became the youngest driver to claim victories in both that series and the European Formula 3000, showcasing a blistering pace that turned heads across the Atlantic.
His talent was undeniable, but as with many drivers from modest backgrounds, the path to the top was paved with financial hurdles and fleeting opportunities. Marques’ journey would take him from the glamour of Formula 1 to the gritty ovals of American open-wheel racing, and ultimately, to an unexpected arrest in his home country—a stark reminder of how quickly fortunes can shift in the racing world.
The Formula 1 Dream: Teammate to a Future Legend
Marques’ big break came in 1996 when he debuted for the Minardi team in Formula 1, the pinnacle of motorsport. At 20 years old, he raced in the Brazilian and Argentine Grands Prix, filling in for the injured Giancarlo Fisichella. Though both outings ended in retirements, his raw speed impressed team principal Giancarlo Minardi.

The following year, 1997, saw him return for nine races, replacing Jarno Trulli mid-season. Again, results were modest—no points in an era when only the top six scored—but Marques showed flashes of potential amid Minardi’s perennial struggles with funding and reliability.
After a year off the grid in 1998, Marques made a triumphant return in 2001, this time as a full-season driver for the newly acquired Minardi team under Australian owner Paul Stoddart.
It was here that his career intersected with one of Formula 1’s greatest talents: Fernando Alonso. The young Spaniard, just 19, was making his rookie debut alongside the more experienced Brazilian.
The pairing was a study in contrasts—Alonso, a prodigy backed by Renault’s junior program, versus Marques, a journeyman fighting for every lap. Neither scored points that season, but Marques edged out his teammate in the final standings on countback, thanks to two ninth-place finishes at his home race in Brazil and in Canada. Those results stood as Minardi’s best of the year, a small victory in a car that often qualified last.
Yet, the season was bittersweet. Minardi’s chronic financial woes meant drivers like Marques, who brought no sponsorship dollars, were on precarious race-by-race contracts.
Stoddart was candid: “Tarso is not a pay driver… but if somebody came along that provided the team with a serious budget and talent, we would change.”
That somebody was Alex Yoong, whose Malaysian government backing injected vital funds. With three races left, Marques was replaced, graciously stepping aside and noting, “Yoong brought the sponsor for the team already two or three races ago, so he should be in the car.”
It was a poignant end to his F1 tenure—24 starts over three seasons, zero points, but forever linked to Alonso, who would go on to win two world championships with Renault in 2005 and 2006.
Marques later reflected warmly on their time together, calling Alonso “by far the best” of his teammates and even rating him above legends like Michael Schumacher and Ayrton Senna.
“If I had to pick one driver for my team, I would choose Fernando,” he said in a 2024 interview. Their bond endured, a testament to the camaraderie forged in the backmarkers.
Venturing to America: The CART IndyCar Chapter
With F1 doors closing, Marques sought greener pastures across the Atlantic in 1999, diving into the cutthroat world of CART—the Champ Car World Series, a high-speed oval and road-course spectacle that rivaled IndyCar during the infamous “split era” of American open-wheel racing.
This period, from 1996 to 2003, saw CART and IndyCar divided by philosophical and financial disputes, with CART emphasizing road courses and attracting international talent like Juan Pablo Montoya and Gil de Ferran. It was a bold move for Marques, who had no prior experience in the series’ powerful Reynard chassis and turbocharged engines.
His CART debut came with none other than Team Penske, the legendary squad owned by Roger Penske. Stepping in for the injured Al Unser Jr., Marques contested six races that year, scoring four points with a best finish of ninth at Interlagos in Brazil.

It was a solid if unspectacular start, hampered by mechanical gremlins and the learning curve of ovals like Michigan and California Speedway.
In 2000, he switched to the underfunded Dale Coyne Racing, a perennial backmarker, where he ran most of the 20-race season. His highlight was a career-best seventh place at the California Speedway (Fontana), earning 11 points and finishing 25th in the championship.
These results showcased Marques’ adaptability—he thrived on road courses like Road America but struggled on the high-banked ovals that defined CART’s spectacle.
Marques returned sporadically in 2004 and 2005 with Dale Coyne, making four more starts but without the same spark. By then, CART was crumbling under financial strain and the IRL-IndyCar dominance, collapsing in 2003 before a brief revival as Champ Car until its 2008 merger with IndyCar.
Marques’ CART stint—14 races, 15 points, no podiums—highlighted the era’s chaos: immense speed (cars hit 240 mph on ovals) but instability for drivers like him, who lacked the deep pockets of stars like Cristiano da Matta. It was a far cry from F1’s global spotlight, yet it kept him racing, honing skills that later fueled his success in Brazil’s Stock Car series, where he competed until 2018 and even won races.


The Arrest: A Dramatic Turn Off the Track
Fast-forward to August 31, 2025, and Marques, now 49, found himself in headlines for all the wrong reasons. In the early hours of the morning, São Paulo police pulled over a red Lamborghini Gallardo speeding along the Ponte Cidade Jardim bridge. The car had no license plates, a glaring red flag during a routine Operation Direction patrol.
As officers approached, Marques—accompanied by two women—attempted to hastily affix plates, claiming the vehicle was a “show car” for exhibition purposes. But a quick database check revealed a nightmare: the Lamborghini, owned by a company previously convicted of illegal practices like financial pyramids, carried a staggering 1.3 million Brazilian reals (about $240,000 USD) in unpaid taxes, fines, and IPVA fees dating back to 2013. It also had judicial restrictions and a prior report of embezzlement.
Marques was arrested on the spot for alleged illegal possession (receptação) and tampering with vehicle identification signals, per São Paulo’s police statement.
Taken to the 14th District Police Station in Pinheiros, he was held briefly before posting 22,000 reals ($4,000 USD) in bail during his custody hearing. In a statement to Brazilian media like Estadão and Motorsport.com, Marques denied any wrongdoing, insisting the car belonged to a client and that he was unaware of its issues.
“I was just the faithful depositary,” he explained, noting he was driving it to a nearby gas station after it arrived without plates for a video shoot. “If they wanted to seize it, I would resolve everything later.” His lawyer has yet to comment publicly, but the incident has sparked speculation about his post-racing ventures.
These days, Marques has pivoted from the cockpit to the screen and studio, serving as a Formula 1 commentator for Rádio Jovem Pan since 2014 and hosting segments on TV Globo’s Caldeirão do Huck, where he customizes vehicles in the “Lata Velha” feature. He also runs Tarso Marques Concept (TMC), a thriving design firm specializing in bespoke cars, motorcycles, yachts, and even aircraft—earning accolades like “Best of Show” at the 2018 Daytona Bike Week for his hubless-wheeled TMC Dumont. A planned 2022 NASCAR comeback fizzled out, but his entrepreneurial spirit has kept him in the public eye.
Marques’ saga is a microcosm of motorsport’s highs and lows—prodigy to pay-driver, F1 teammate to TV host, CART warrior to arrested entrepreneur. As he resolves this chapter, fans can’t help but wonder: in a sport that chews up dreams, has the Brazilian finally found his off-ramp?

Motorsports
NASCAR legend set strict rule before daughter’s Tulsa Shootout debut – Motorsport – Sports
Legendary NASCAR driver Ryan Newman will see his 14-year-old daughter race at the Tulsa Shootout this weekend – an event at which many have looked to make a name for themselves.
The largest event for micro sprint racing in the world, the Tulsa Shootout begins this week with Brooklyn Newman set to be competing. Newman is not the only driver to see his kids race in the event this weekend, with Kyle Larson’s son and daugher both set to be behind the wheel.
A hectic and unforgiving race, a 13-year-old had a helmet thrown at him by a fellow driver this week after an ugly incident on the track.
Newman is all too knowing of the risks that come with the sport, but has trust in his daughter and allowed her to race in the event after making a deal with her.
The former Daytona 500 winner had spoken on why he’s allowing her to compete, stating that at the start of last year, she asked him: “Dad, I want to go Tulsa”.
Newman responded to his daughter: “We have a good year. I’ll take you to Tulsa, so here we are in Tulsa and it’s the end of the year. So we’ll see how we finish up.”
The 14-year-old is seen as an exciting prospect in motorsports, competing across multiple events including at the Winged Micro, Outlaw Dirt Intermediate and 602 Modified classes.
She impressed her father enough to enter her in the Tulsa Shootout this week, where she’ll be in Race 67 of the Outlaw micro sprint class.
Ahead of the race, she said: “We had a pretty fast car. I’m excited.”
Meanwhile, NASCAR Cup Series Championship winner Larson will see his son and daughter enter the same event this weekend.
Larson said on his children competing: “That’s what I’m most excited about is just getting to see the kids participate in a big event, have fun and, hopefully, do a good job.
“Audrey, she’s getting to run her first Shootout in the junior sprint—and she takes it very seriously. We’ve watched every lap of the 2024 Shootout, every lap of the Junior Sprint. So she’s been studying. Hopefully, she can do good.
“And then Owen, he has been doing a good job this year, but he’s going to be in a lot of tough divisions, so I don’t know what to expect there. Obviously, it takes a little bit of luck along the way.”
Motorsports
Watkins Glen International Statement on the Passing of Michael Printup – Speedway Digest
“Watkins Glen International is saddened by the passing of former President Michael Printup, who led the facility for 15 years.
During his tenure, Michael played a key role in the continued growth and success of Watkins Glen International, helping to strengthen its operations, partnerships, and standing within the motorsports industry while honoring the venue’s storied history.
Michael was a respected leader who left a lasting impact on the organization and those who worked alongside him. We extend our sincere condolences to his family, friends, and colleagues.”
WGI PR
Motorsports
NASCAR predicted to have paid big to end antitrust lawsuit – Motorsport – Sports
The long-running feud between NASCAR and two of its teams — 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports — finally came to an end on Dec. 11 when it was announced that the two teams had reached a settlement agreement in the antitrust lawsuit filed against the organization. And according to one litigator, NASCAR likely had to pay up big to bring the damaging suit to an end.
The lawsuit alleging “monopolistic” behaviour had been filed in October 2024, the month after they were the only teams to refuse to sign NASCAR’s new charter agreement, which was meant to align with the new seven-year $7.7 billion TV broadcasting rights deal.
Ultimately, the trial in Charlotte, North Carolina, lasted just eight days before a settlement was reached. During the course of the trial, both sides revealed less-than-flattering messages exchanged privately from their counterparts.
A prime example came from 23XI co-owner Michael Jordan calling Joe Gibbs Racing “f——” and the teams that signed the agreement “p——.”
As for NASCAR, it arguably emerged far worse off than its opponents, thanks in no small part to commissioner Steve Phelps, who was revealed to have called Hall of Fame team owner Richard Childress “an idiot” and a “stupid redneck” who he said should be “taken out back and flogged.”
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NASCAR CEO Jim France also didn’t fare well, having supposedly responded to Joe Gibbs’ plea for further negotiations by simply saying, “If I wake up and I have 20 charters, I have 20. If I have 30, I have 30.”
Thankfully, the sides were able to come to an amicable agreement in the end, halting the need for further embarrassment.
“This resolution reflects our shared commitment to maintaining a fair and equitable framework for long-term participation in America’s premier motorsport, one that supports teams, partners and stakeholders while ensuring fans enjoy uninterrupted access to the best racing in the world,” a joint statement said.
“The agreement allows all parties to move forward with a unified focus on advancing stock car racing and delivering exceptional competition for our fans.
“With this matter now resolved, all parties look forward to working together, alongside all chartered race teams, to deliver world-class events, dynamic sponsorship and partner activation opportunities, and continued growth for generations to come.”
While the terms of the agreement were not made public, barring the implementation of “evergreen” charters, antitrust litigator Meegan Hollywood told the Sports Business Journal, NASCAR may well have forked up around 10-25 percent of the $365 million in damages the teams were seeking, meaning anywhere from $36.5 to $91.25 million.
However, another antitrust lawyer, who opted to remain anonymous, believed the payment could have been at least 50 percent, or $182.5 million.
The trial was a costly one for all involved, with the combined attorney fees suspected by Hollywood to be in the region of $50 million, with the second lawyer suggesting this estimation could only be half of the true amount.
“I suspect also that this particular settlement allowed them to have a little bit more control in the changes that they made to the charter system,” Hollywood suggested, adding, “Because in addition to the sort of financial risk, NASCAR did run the risk of having court-mandated changes and then they sort of would have had to do that not on their own terms. This probably allowed them to make certain changes on their own terms and have some more internal control.”
Motorsports
Joey Logano sends touching message to Denny Hamlin after NASCAR tragedy – Motorsport – Sports
Joey Logano sent his thoughts and prayers to Denny Hamlin and his family in the aftermath of a devastating housefire.
On Sunday, the home where Denny Hamlin’s parents, Dennis and Mary Lou Hamlin, lived in North Carolina was destroyed in a massive blaze. On Monday, Dennis Hamlin, who already had been seriously ill, was confirmed to have died while Mary Lou Hamlin continued to recover from her injuries.
Now, Logano is the latest NASCAR star to reach out to the grieving Hamlin family amid their tragedy. The 35-year-old’s social media post comes just hours before Denny Hamlin broke his silence on the death of his father while simultaneously giving an update on his mother.
“My thoughts and prayers go out to @dennyhamlin,” the three-time Cup Series champion posted on X. “Such a horrific situation. The Logano family will continue to think of and pray for everyone impacted, and we’ll pray for Mary Lou and hope the best for her full recovery.”
It wasn’t just Logano that sent his thoughts and prayers to Hamlin and his family; A large majority of the NASCAR community sent their condolences to the 45-year-old. 23XI Racing, the team he co-owns with Michael Jordan, posted a statement on social media regarding the tragedy.
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“Everyone at 23XI Racing is deeply saddened by the tragic news concerning the Hamlin family. We extend our deepest condolences to Denny and the entire Hamlin family during this difficult time. Our thoughts and prayers remain with the family and his mom,” the statement read.
Kyle Larson, who defeated Hamlin at Phoenix to win his second Cup Series championship, also sent his thoughts and prayers to the star, as did Kaden Honeycutt and Rodney Childers, a crew chief for JR Motorsports. NASCAR also released a statement on social media, offering its condolences to the Hamlin family after it was confirmed that Dennis Hamlin had died.
“NASCAR extends its deepest condolences to Denny Hamlin and the entire Hamlin family,” the statement began.
“Dennis Hamlin instilled a love of racing in his son, and sacrificed greatly to develop Denny into a world-class talent in the sport. We also continue to offer our thoughts and prayers to Denny’s mother, Mary Lou, and hope for her full recovery.”
On Wednesday, Denny Hamlin broke his silence and took to social media to express his gratitude for the outpouring of support he’s received in the days following the fire and his father’s death.
The NASCAR star wrote: “Thank you to everyone who has reached out with condolences on my father’s passing. My mother continues to improve, and our family truly appreciates the outpouring of support and the respect for our privacy during this time.”
Motorsports
Kenny Wallace sends plea to NASCAR boss over growing issue – Motorsport – Sports
Former NASCAR driver Kenny Wallace joined in on the ongoing debate regarding the value fans receive for the price of their tickets to attend races.
Speaking on his ‘Coffee with Kenny’ segment on X, Wallace detailed his frustrations with NASCAR’s ticketing strategy in recent years, which has prevented fans from enjoying a full and affordable experience at the racetrack and caused a decline in attendance.
Through the introduction of the one-ticket-for-everything bundle, which prohibits fans from buying a ticket to just the race or practice, many fans’ interest in attending live races has deteriorated, Wallace claimed.
“People say that the price of the ticket is relatively cheap when you consider inflation, people aren’t complaining about the price to get in the race track,” Wallace said, detailing a phone call he had with a NASCAR track owner.
“Here’s what they’re complaining about… what I’m hearing through a NASCAR track owner is that the fans are upset there’s nothing going on at the racetrack.”
Entry level tickets at low-end races fall within the $40 to $60 range, but most tracks have increased general admission and basic grandstand seats closer to $100. Single tickets to higher profile events, such as the Daytona 500, can cost $350 or more.
But that is just the base level. Camping, VIP passes, infield access and other experiences add to those costs significantly, sometimes exceeding four figures for one individual, much less a family.
Most fans’ gripes, Wallace said, come from the lack of action around the grounds for what a multi-day ticket costs. Track owners want to pack the campgrounds and encourage fans to come on Thursday night and stay through Sunday’s race, but there just isn’t enough exposure to Cup Series action throughout the weekend.
In recent seasons, the Cup Series moved most practice and qualifying activity into tight windows on Saturday afternoon, giving fans eager to see the stars of the sport little reason to show up as early as Thursday night.
“Back in the day, say, I don’t know, 15 years ago, when you went to the racetrack you had a reason to get there on Thursday night,” Wallace said.
“My track owner says that’s why the camping grounds are not packed anymore because Cup practice is at 4:30 on Saturday night right now. And the times change for everything, nothing is consistent. Nobody knows what the f— is going on.”
Wallace then sent a plea to NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell to enact change.
“Steve O’Donnell, my dear friend, if you’re listening to this, ‘You are the president of NASCAR. Let’s get some practice in on Friday and Saturday. Let’s do some things. Let’s give, let’s give these, these fans a reason to get to the racetrack early.”
Motorsports
Statement from Racing America on the Passing of Michael Printup
January 1, 2026

Racing America is devastated to confirm the sudden passing of Chief Operating Officer Michael Printup. Michael was an icon in motorsports, a great partner and a friend. His passion for racing and commitment to the industry made a lasting impact on the sport. He will be deeply missed. Racing America sends our thoughts and condolences to Michael’s family, friends and colleagues.
Michael first joined Racing America in July 2023 as the President of Sportscar Vintage Racing Association (SVRA). In January 2024, he was promoted to Chief Operating Officer, where he oversaw the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli, as well as all racing operations. A native of Hamburg, N.Y., Michael spent nearly three decades working for NASCAR, most notably in the role of president of Watkins Glen International. He was also president of Americrown and oversaw the Levy food service contract for 12 NASCAR-owned racetracks.
“For more than 15 years, Michael has been a great friend, from a lot of fun times together at Watkins Glen to being massively helpful to me in my new role this past year,” said Trans Am President Andy Lally. “I leaned on him a lot for advice in so many areas, and he was incredibly generous with his time. I’m going to miss him terribly.”
Michael leaves behind his wife, Stephanie, two boys Brendan (Caitlin) and Matthew, and two granddaughters, Sophia and Vivienne.
A memorial service for Michael will be held on Wednesday, January 7, 2026 from 2-4 p.m. at James A. Dyal Funeral Home (303 S. Main Street, Summerville, SC 29483).
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