Connect with us

Motorsports

FOX NASCAR Honors the Late Jon Edwards with ‘The Byrnsie Award’ – Speedway Digest

FOX NASCAR honored the late Jon Edwards, longtime motorsports communications professional, with “The Byrnsie Award” during Sunday’s NASCAR RACEDAY prerace telecast on FS1 from North Wilkesboro Speedway. In honor of the late FOX NASCAR broadcaster Steve Byrnes, nicknamed ‘Byrnsie,’ FOX Sports established the award in 2016 to celebrate an individual in the NASCAR Cup Series […]

Published

on


FOX NASCAR honored the late Jon Edwards, longtime motorsports communications professional, with “The Byrnsie Award” during Sunday’s NASCAR RACEDAY prerace telecast on FS1 from North Wilkesboro Speedway.

In honor of the late FOX NASCAR broadcaster Steve Byrnes, nicknamed ‘Byrnsie,’ FOX Sports established the award in 2016 to celebrate an individual in the NASCAR Cup Series who exemplifies principles Byrnes embodied in his professional and personal life — preparation, teamwork and family. 

Edwards was voted the recipient by Byrnes’ colleagues on the FOX NASCAR broadcast team, of which he was a member since the network’s first NASCAR race broadcast in February 2001.  Byrnes passed away in April 2015 following a courageous battle with cancer.

“Jon was the prototype for great PR reps with Jeff Gordon, and he was the perfect choice to guide Kyle Larson’s return to NASCAR and his rise to stardom,” FOX NASCAR play-by-play announcer Mike Joy said. “In an arena with massive egos, Jon’s own was never on display. As an enabler — not a gatekeeper – Jon set a very high standard, all the while being a good and loyal friend. He truly embodied the way Steve Byrnes lived his life.”

Bryson Byrnes, Steve Byrnes’ son, announced Edwards as the recipient during the NASCAR RACEDAY telecast. Joy presented the award to Edwards’ parents, Randy and Judy Edwards, his brother, Jay Edwards, Jay’s wife, Roxanne, and nephew Jayden.

Past recipients include:

2015 – Rodney Childers

2016- Chris Osborne

2017 – Tony Gibson

2018 – Jimmie Johnson

2019 – Darrell Waltrip

2020 – Bubba Wallace

2021 – Rick Hendrick

2022 – Justin Marks

2023 – Peter Larsson

2024 – Nelson Hastings

FOX Sports PR



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Motorsports

Chase Elliott’s Team Slammed With Penalty Following Pocono

What’s Happening? NASCAR has fined Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 17 team $40,000 and penalized HMS 40 owner points and 10 NASCAR Playoff owner points following Chase Elliott’s fourth-place finish at Pocono Raceway. NASCAR says that this is a violation of Sections 14.3.3.2.1.1 K&L: Main Frame Rail Conical Receivers. Per the NASCAR Xfinity Series Rule Book: K. […]

Published

on


What’s Happening?

NASCAR has fined Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 17 team $40,000 and penalized HMS 40 owner points and 10 NASCAR Playoff owner points following Chase Elliott’s fourth-place finish at Pocono Raceway.

NASCAR says that this is a violation of Sections 14.3.3.2.1.1 K&L: Main Frame Rail Conical Receivers. Per the NASCAR Xfinity Series Rule Book:

K. Main frame rail conical receivers will not be permitted to be moved without having the chassis re-certified prior to the Event at which that chassis will compete.

L. Modifications to main frame rail conical receivers that were made to circumvent NASCAR inspection processes, measurement equipment, and/or gauges will not be permitted.

HMS has yet to comment on the matter. In addition to the financial and points implications for the No. 17, the car’s primary Crew Chief, Adam Wall, will serve a three-race suspension from NASCAR Xfinity Series races.

Prior to this penalty, the car sat 16th in owner points, with 365; after assessment, the team will drop to 20th with 325 points. This penalty will have little effect on the HMS car’s plans, as it does not compete full-time, having entered ten of the season’s 16 races so far.

Elliott will remain unaffected by this penalty, as he is one of a handful of part-time drivers of HMS’s No. 17. This year, all four of Hendrick’s Cup Series drivers, alongside their prospect, Corey Day, have driven the No. 17 car. The car has not entered EchoPark Speedway in Atlanta this weekend.

So far this season, the No. 17 has two wins, one with Kyle Larson and another with William Byron. Per a release from Hendrick, the car is not scheduled to compete until the Jul. 12 race at Sonoma Raceway with Day behind the wheel. This is a developing story.

What do you think about this? Let us know your opinion on Discord or X. Don’t forget that you can also follow us on InstagramFacebook, and YouTube.





Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Atlanta weekend schedule, TV, weather info for NASCAR Cup and Xfinity

As NASCAR reaches the halfway mark of its 2025 season, the Cup and Xfinity series will make their first return visits with EchoPark Speedway. It’s the second NASCAR race weekend this year for the 1.54-mile speedway south of Atlanta. In the previous visit to the drafting track four months ago, there were two last-lap passes […]

Published

on


As NASCAR reaches the halfway mark of its 2025 season, the Cup and Xfinity series will make their first return visits with EchoPark Speedway.

It’s the second NASCAR race weekend this year for the 1.54-mile speedway south of Atlanta. In the previous visit to the drafting track four months ago, there were two last-lap passes for the win.

Austin Hill won the Xfinity race Feb. 22 by snatching the lead from Aric Almirola. In the Cup race a day later, Christopher Bell won by leading only one lap — passing Kyle Larson for first ahead of the checkered flag.

Saturday will mark the 17th of 33 races for Xfinity this season, and Sunday will bring the 18th of 36 races for Cup in 2025. The Craftsman Truck Series also will race Saturday at Lime Rock Park in Connecticut (1 p.m. ET, Fox).

NASCAR Cup Series The Great American Getaway 400 - Practice

Kyle Busch has finished in the top 10 in all five races at Atlanta with Richard Childress Racing.


Atlanta weekend schedule

(All Times Eastern)

Friday, June 27

Garage open

  • 10 a.m. – 7 p.m. — Cup Series
  • 1:30 – 11:55 p.m. — Xfinity Series

Track activity

  • 3 – 4:30 p.m. — Xfinity qualifying (CW App)
  • 5:05 – 6:30 p.m. — Cup qualifying (truTV; PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)
  • 7:30 p.m. — Xfinity race (163 laps, 251.02 miles; Stage 1 at Lap 45, Stage 2 at Lap 90; CW Network; PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Saturday, June 28

Garage open

  • 4 – 11:55 p.m. — Cup Series

Track activity

  • 7 p.m. — Cup race (260 laps, 400.4 miles; Stage 1 at Lap 60, Stage 2 at Lap 160; TNT, PRN SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Weekend weather

Friday: Partly cloudy with showers and thunderstorms with winds light and variable and a high of 89 degrees. It’s expected to be 80 degrees with a 30% chance of rain at the start of the Xfinity race.

Saturday: Partly cloudy with afternoon showers and scattered thunderstorms in the evening with a 50% chance of rain and a high of 89 degrees. It’s expected to be 82 degrees with a 41% chance of rain at the start of the Cup race.





Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

NASCAR Teams Must Share Financial Data With NASCAR, Judge Rules

NASCAR has argued it can’t effectively defend itself against accusations by 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports that the association doesn’t fairly share industry revenues with teams unless it knows how much revenue teams actually generate. On Wednesday, a federal district agreed.  U.S. District Judge Kenneth D. Bell ordered Joe Gibbs Racing, Hendrick Motorsports, Spire Motorsports IV, […]

Published

on


NASCAR has argued it can’t effectively defend itself against accusations by 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports that the association doesn’t fairly share industry revenues with teams unless it knows how much revenue teams actually generate.

On Wednesday, a federal district agreed. 

U.S. District Judge Kenneth D. Bell ordered Joe Gibbs Racing, Hendrick Motorsports, Spire Motorsports IV, Trackhouse Racing, Penske Motorsports, Richard Childress Racing Enterprises, Wood Brothers Racing, RFK Racing, Legacy Motor Club, Hyak Motorsports, Rick Ware Racing and Haas Factory Team to turn over documents that will provide financial insights to NASCAR. These teams aren’t suing NASCAR and aren’t parties to the antitrust litigation, but they do possess evidence that is relevant to the legal claims and defenses.

Bell ruled that as soon as reasonably practicable, these teams must provide annual top-line financial data to an account they and NASCAR select. This data will include total revenue, total costs and net profits/losses, and should be offered on an anonymized, average per-car basis for each year since 2014. Bell also emphasized that teams must reveal sponsorship income—which NASCAR insists is a “major component of the industry revenue” at issue and which is separate from revenue teams receive from NASCAR in charters—in calculating total revenue. 

Bell has ordered NASCAR and the teams to jointly select an independent accounting firm by this Friday at noon local time. If they can’t agree, Bell says each must suggest one name to him by Friday at noon. 

The accountant will be tasked with confidentially sharing information with NASCAR but is barred from providing an individual team’s information to other teams. Along those lines, Bell specified the accountant must use a spreadsheet that includes a “Highly Confidential Attorneys Eyes Only” designation and lists the per-car annual averages for each team “without identifying the team associated with each set of numbers.”

The teams have refused to voluntarily turn over their financial data. They have mainly cited privacy concerns, with sponsorship information potentially comprising trade secrets and other categories of documents that businesses normally prefer to keep confidential. Bell reasoned that his order, which limits the necessary disclosures and includes anonymized features, protects “the legitimate interests of the non-party teams.”

NASCAR will be on the hook for the accountant’s costs, but the teams, Bell wrote, “must bear their own expenses, including attorneys’ fees.”

Penske Motorsports is owned by Roger Penske and is not related to Penske Media, the parent company of Sportico.



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

T.J. Puchyr agrees to buy Rick Ware Racing with plans to build a 3-car NASCAR team | National News

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — One of the founders of Spire Motorsports has entered an agreement to purchase the NASCAR team owned by Rick Ware and is jumping back into the stock car series because he believes the current charters are grossly undervalued. T.J. Puchyr, who in 2018 alongside Jeff Dickerson launched the Spire team to […]

Published

on


CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — One of the founders of Spire Motorsports has entered an agreement to purchase the NASCAR team owned by Rick Ware and is jumping back into the stock car series because he believes the current charters are grossly undervalued.

T.J. Puchyr, who in 2018 alongside Jeff Dickerson launched the Spire team to take over the charter that Furniture Row Racing could not unload, told The Associated Press on Thursday he and Rick Ware Racing have a deal for him to take over Ware’s organization next season.

When Puchyr and Dickerson bought the Furniture Row charter, the market for NASCAR’s version of franchise models was essentially dead. Their agency had been hired by Furniture Row owner Barney Visser to sell the charter and when they couldn’t find a buyer, the two decided to purchase it themselves for $6 million and launch their own team.

That decision jump-started the charter market and the most recent charters sold — when Stewart-Haas Racing went out of business at the end of last season — went for approximately $30 million. Puchyr and Dickerson are largely credited with pumping life and value into an otherwise dormant charter system.

Puchyr last year sold his shares of Spire to Dan Towriss, the CEO of TWG Motorsports and head of the new Cadillac F1 team. Puchyr has spent 2025 consulting with various teams, including RWR and Legacy Motor Club. He’s watched the market closely and has attended several of the recent court hearings involving NASCAR against 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, who have filed an antitrust lawsuit over the charter agreement those two teams refused to sign last September.

There are only 36 Cup Series charters, which guarantee a team entry into every NASCAR race and a steady revenue stream. Puchyr believes they are greatly undervalued and in one of his final deals with Spire, he helped acquire a charter from Live Fast Motorsports for $40 million.

“I am bullish on wanting to build a three-car team. I believe in the France family and the direction of the sport and I want the rest of the shareholders and industry to know that I believe the charters are worth $75 million or more,” he told AP.

What about Ware’s second charter?

In his deal with Ware, Puchyr will keep Ware on board as a partner, also keep Ware’s son, Cody, in the No. 51 Ford, and retain all of the current RWR employees. Ware’s current second charter is leased to RFK Racing, but Legacy Motor Club made a legal claim that it had entered an agreement to buy that charter next season.

A judge did not agree with Legacy, and said Ware has a lease deal with RFK for 2026 on a second charter. Puchyr believes none of the parties can perform to the Legacy-RWR contract — which he said was written by Legacy — and there is no charter available from Ware for Legacy for either lease or purchase in 2026. Ware has filed a countersuit against Legacy.

Legacy, a two-car Cup team, is currently owned by seven-time NASCAR champion and Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson. He has recently taken on partnership from private equity firm Knighthead Capital Management, which alongside Johnson is exploring expansion into several other motorsports series.

“If anybody deserves a pass it is Jimmie and if he wants to sit down and talk about it like men, I’d entertain the conversation,” said Puchyr, who was offended that Legacy sued Ware.

“I don’t think Jimmie has all the facts, doesn’t understand the deal we had, and they tried to humiliate Rick publicly. We don’t do business that way.”

Now, Puchyr and Ware are confident the second charter currently leased to RFK will be returned to their team in 2027, allowing Puchyr to expand the organization. He wants to buy a third charter that makes the organization a three-car Cup team by 2027.

Can Puchyr build a winning team?

Ware has done the second-most charter transactions in the industry only to Spire and at one point held four. Now he’s trying to rebuild his organization and win races with his son as the driver, something Puchyr wants to help him achieve.

“I’ve won at everything I’ve done at every level and I think we can compete with these guys,” Puchyr said. “I think we can build it brick-by-brick and it’s going to take people, money and time. It’s not lost on me that (RWR) is the 36th-place car in the garage, we all see it. But I believe we can make this a competitive organization, even a winner.

“And I believe we can get these charters valued at their true worth.”

Ware fields winning organizations in other motorsports series, including NHRA with Clay Millican. A Ware-owned team won the 2024 American Flat Track championship, the 2022 FIM World Supercross Championship and the 2019-2020 Asian Le Mans Series prototype title.

Puchyr did not reveal to the AP how much he’s paying for Ware’s organization, which technically only holds the charter for Cody Ware’s car this season and runs Corey Lajoie in a second “open” car in select races. Once it gets its leased charter back from RFK in 2027, the team will have at least two cars with the focus on purchasing a third.

Purchasing charters is not easy at this time as multiple teams have interest but lack the monetary funds to buy them at the ever-increasing rates. Among them is Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr., who has not been able to get his hands on charters to take his Xfinity Series team to NASCAR’s top Cup Series level.


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.



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Judge orders NASCAR teams to turn over financial data to stock car series

CHARLOTTE, NC – A federal judge on Wednesday ordered a dozen NASCAR teams to provide 11 years of financial data to the stock car series as part of an ongoing legal fight but sharply limited what they need to share. A day after hearing arguments from both sides, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the […]

Published

on


CHARLOTTE, NC – A federal judge on Wednesday ordered a dozen NASCAR teams to provide 11 years of financial data to the stock car series as part of an ongoing legal fight but sharply limited what they need to share.

A day after hearing arguments from both sides, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the Western District of North Carolina said the information will “allow NASCAR to have much of the arguably relevant substance of the requested information, while protecting the legitimate interests” of the 12 teams. They had raised concerns that the private financial details could end up being made public and would hurt competitive balance.

Under the decision, the teams must provide top-line data — total revenue, total costs, and net profits and losses — dating to 2014. The teams and NASCAR were ordered to settle on an independent accounting firm to handle the details by Friday, with that work paid for by NASCAR.

Earlier this week, attorneys for 12 of the 15 overall race teams argued against disclosing their financial records to become part of NASCAR’s antitrust lawsuit. They are not parties in the ongoing suit filed by 23XI Racing, which is owned by the NBA Hall Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports, owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins.

23XI and Front Row are the only two organizations of the 15 that refused last September to sign take-it-or-leave offers on a new charter agreement. Charters are NASCAR’s version of a franchise model, with each charter guaranteeing entry to the lucrative Cup Series races and a stable revenue stream. Of the 13 teams that signed, only Kaulig Racing has submitted the financial documents NASCAR subpoenaed as part of discovery.

Teams have long argued that NASCAR is not financially viable and they need a greater revenue stream and a more permanent length on the charter agreements, which presently have expiration dates and can be revoked by NASCAR. Two years of negotiations ended last fall with 13 teams signing on and 23IX and FRM instead heading to court.





Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage to Sponsor Landmark NASCAR Event at Lime Rock Park

UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage to Sponsor Landmark NASCAR Event at Lime Rock Park UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage to Sponsor Landmark NASCAR Event at Lime Rock Park PR Newswire LAKEVILLE, Conn., June 26, 2025 Lakeville Track Hosts NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series for First Time in Its 68-Year History LAKEVILLE, Conn., June 26, 2025 /PRNewswire/ […]

Published

on


UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage to Sponsor Landmark NASCAR Event at Lime Rock Park

UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage to Sponsor Landmark NASCAR Event at Lime Rock Park

PR Newswire

LAKEVILLE, Conn., June 26, 2025

Lakeville Track Hosts NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series for First Time in Its 68-Year History

LAKEVILLE, Conn., June 26, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage is proud to serve as primary sponsor of the LIUNA 150, a historic NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race taking place Saturday, June 28 at Lime Rock Park. This will mark the first time a NASCAR national touring series event has ever been held at the legendary Connecticut road course.

The race will also make history as the first-ever Lime Rock Park event to be broadcast live on a major television network, with FOX airing the event at 1:00 p.m. ET. Only three NASCAR Truck Series races will be featured on the FOX network this season, making this a major milestone for both the track and the surrounding community.

“We’re thrilled to support this groundbreaking moment at Lime Rock Park,” said Michael McAlhany, CEO of UNITS Moving and Portable Storage. “As a longtime NASCAR sponsor, it’s an honor to partner with Hill Motorsports and help bring national attention to such a historic and beloved track.”

UNITS currently sponsors NASCAR driver Timmy Hill, who will compete in the LIUNA 150 as part of a 14-race schedule in 2025. The company has supported Hill Motorsports for the past four years and previously worked with Starcom Motorsports and 2000 NASCAR Cup Champion Bobby Labonte in other national series.

Lime Rock Park, nestled in the Litchfield Hills of Lakeville, has long been a favorite for road racing fans. This NASCAR Truck Series debut and national TV spotlight represent a major step forward for the track and an exciting opportunity for Connecticut racing fans.

To learn more about Units Moving and Portable Storage please visit https://unitsstorage.com.

ABOUT UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage

Established in 2004, UNITS® Moving and Portable Storage was founded by Michael McAlhany during the emergence of the moving and portable storage industry. The company’s mission is to provide personal customer service and supply the most innovative and highest quality equipment. Nationwide UNITS Moving and Portable Storage are locally owned and operated and familiar with the communities they serve. UNITS Moving and Portable Storage offers high-quality constructed containers featuring barn-style doors and all-steel construction. 

The UNITS Moving and Portable Storage container is clean, weather-resistant, spacious, and available in 12-ft and 16-ft. lengths. The UNITS Moving and Portable Storage ROBO Delivery System is the most technologically advanced in the industry, virtually eliminating any shift in contents when lifting containers on and off transport vehicles and placing them in tight areas where competitors cannot. The container may be placed in a UNITS Moving and Portable Storage service center or at the customer’s desired location, always at ground level for easy access. The national network of UNITS Moving and Portable Storage and Service Centers currently services over 3,000 cities in over 30 states throughout North America and continues to grow. Please visit www.unitsstorage.com for more information.

Media Contact:
Tammy Delgado
tdelgado@fish919.com
919-459-7147

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/units-moving-and-portable-storage-to-sponsor-landmark-nascar-event-at-lime-rock-park-302491606.html

SOURCE Units Moving & Portable Storage



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending