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Front Row owner testifies, NASCAR exec grilled in court

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On the third day of the 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports v NASCAR antitrust trial, testimony was concluded from Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer Scott Prime and began for FRM team owner Bob Jenkins.

Prime spent the second half of Tuesday on the stand, examined by 23XI and FRM attorney Jeffrey Kesseler and then cross-examined by a friendly attorney before being reexamined by Kessler.

First a recap of Prime’s testimony from Tuesday is in the link below.

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On Wednesday, Kessler continued his examination of Prime and their exchange was occasionally contentious, with the attorney even apologizing to Prime and the court for raising his voice.

“It’s okay — I understand there are passions,” Prime said in response.

Kessler’s initial line of questions to open the morning surrounded the goodwill provision, which is basically the clause in the charter agreement that prevents team owners from competing in another competitor series or owning one without NASCAR approval.

Kessler: “Why not call it what it really is?”
Prime: “I’m not a lawyer.”
Kessler: “It should be called anti-competitive will.”

This got an objection from the NASCAR bench and Kessler moved on.

Specifically, anyone who has a 10 percent ownership stake in a team is subject to the goodwill provision. Further, if a team owner or partial team owner decides to leave the Cup Series, that individual must wait 12 months before owning a car in a different series or ownership in a different series.

Kessler: “And you think that’s goodwill?”
Prime: “I do.”

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Then attention was turned to the NextGen car, with Kessler seeking to paint its intellectual property restrictions as a tool utilized to restrain trade and prevent competition — one of the pillars of the lawsuit.

In previously discovered documents, Prime had expressed concern that the previous generation of car, known within the community as Gen-6, had an ‘increased risk to NASCAR of copycat series’ due to looser Intellectual Property restrictions.

In other words, NASCAR was concerned that teams could seek to race their cars in non – NASCAR series or race cars similar to those used in the Cup Series. When asked about it, Prime said that was never a point of contention.

“It was never an issue with the teams,” Prime said. “They understood the Next Gen car design and all the protections that went with it, yes.”

Kessler: “Did teams vote … were they asked if they wanted restrictions?”
Prime: ‘My understanding is that there was never an issue with the teams…’ and that they wanted protections and a degree of cost containment. ‘They understood the NextGen’s protections and endorsed it.’

Kessler pointed out that the teams don’t have a formal vote under charter rules.

During the negotiations over what became the 2025 charter extension, an email on February 10 from Prime to Phelps said he was ‘quite disappoint(ed)’ over the decision from the race teams to cease negotiating with NASCAR and instead were ‘forced to recommit our energy to exploring all our options.’

The teams wanted four things before that point — 1) 45 percent of industry revenue, 2) not having to pay into the Driver Ambassador Program, 3) 30 percent of new revenue where team IP was leveraged and permanent charters.

That wasn’t agreed upon and Prime, through the discovered documents, was concerned that the teams would look to join or otherwise create a ‘breakaway series’ and then pondered options that included the following:

Reduce charters to 32 and offer them ‘first come first serve’ amongst the preexisting 36, which Kessler likened to musical chairs, and was a tactic to create scarcity and competition. Another option was a hard deadline, which is more or less what happened on September 6, 2024. Another idea was Project Gold Codes, where NASCAR would take the sport vertical, and runs races independent of teams and hires drivers and fields cars themselves.

That is detailed at the link below.

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“You accurately reflected our options,” Phelps replied over an email. “They are playing with fire. Lots of options but all have the same theme: Pick a date and they can sign or lose their charters. It is that simple.”

Kessler said that was an example of what encouraged the lawsuit.

“Only a monopolist could say this,” Kessler said. “Only a monopolist has the power to say, ‘Take my offer and if you don’t take it, you will no longer be in this business, and someone else will take your place.’”

For his part, during friendly negotiations, Prime said there was more to that email, which is true. Those options were just ‘Path 1’ and the ‘Path 2’ was the continued efforts to ‘find a middle ground with the teams,’ which is actually what happened.

Despite the deadline passing, NASCAR did not enter into an agreement with any new team owners for the 2025 season.

Prime’s position was that NASCAR just needed to have contingency plans in the case the teams former their own breakaway series.

Kessler asked where they would race since NASCAR’s track exclusivity clauses prevent such a division from racing on Cup Series caliber facilities.

Prime said there were plenty of tracks, citing short tracks and street courses. He said that NASCAR didn’t start with superspeedways. Kessler said this isn’t 1948. And regardless, Kessler said it wasn’t realistic to expect a potential competitor to just race on street courses since NASCAR lost $50 million over three years in Downtown Chicago.

Prime said messages of ‘locking up tracks’ had nothing to do with a breakaway series but was just a part of a multi-year agreement to schedule races. The example he gave was that TNT wanted Atlanta on their slate because it was in Turner Sports’ back yard.

Kessler said that didn’t require the new exclusivity clause built into it for multiple years.

Kessler: “Has any track asked you to be excluded from any other events that could make them money?
Prime: “I have never considered the question.”

The Amanda Chart

 

 

Kessler turned his attention back to a topic from the day before, The Amanda (Oliver) Chart, which reflected a series of 22 asks made by the race teams and showed only a single ‘win’ for the teams as they negotiated with NASCAR.

Oliver is NASCAR’s chief legal officer and the subject of a May 20-21 text thread between Prime, O’Donnell and Phelps showed that the senior leadership disagreed to a point with how CEO Jim France was posturing his approach.

O’Donnell: Lesa called. “Spoke to Gary (Crotty, NASCAR legal), Mike (Helton, president emeritus) and Jim (France). They all thought meeting was productive and that we just need to keep trying to move the needle. Teams won’t get everything they want and hopefully we can just meet in the middle. I just listened as she didn’t want to hear any opinions but I of course didn’t hold back. I just asked for someone in the mtg to point out how any of our positions are going to grow the sport and position us for a big rights renewal in the future.

Phelps: Productive? Insanity. Look at the Amanda (Oliver, Chief Legal Officer) chart – zero wins for the teams.

Phelps: The draft must reflect a middle position of we are dead in the water – they will sign them but we are fucked moving forward. I feel better now. Thanks for that.

Prime: The approach of ‘here is a bit more money, fuck off everywhere else’ is a bold strategy

O’Donnell: And one that Lesa said both Mike and Gary thought is getting us close. Close to a comfortable 1996, fuck the teams, dictatorship, motorsport, redneck, southern, tiny sport.

Despite the best efforts for the leaders to persuade France and the NASCAR board, the teams were given a hard deadline of September 6 on September 6 to sign an extension agreement that carried only that single win to the teams. They were told to sign it within an hour, although NASCAR did eventually relent and gave the teams until midnight that day to sign it.

Prime called it a ‘gun to the head’ offer and Kessler seized on that moment in the questioning.

Kessler: “Gun to the head. Isn’t that what Jim wanted?”
Prime: “I don’t know what Jim wanted.”

13 of the 15 teams that compete in the Cup Series signed by midnight, but 23XI and Front Row did not, and eventually issued this lawsuit against NASCAR.

For his part, Prime did say in a May 20 text message to Phelps that he really did try to get teams permanent charters when he met with the Board of Directors.

Prime: “No bueno with Jim on Charters. Can say OD and I put our best foot forward but it was a brick wall. Ben (Kennedy) didn’t speak up at all, Gary just rolled over on everything.
Phelps: “I heard from steve. I’m sorry to hear this – super disappointing. I’m going to speak with Lesa at 1:30.

But Prime said repeatedly over the past two days that NASCAR never considered taking charters away teams, which is true to a point, because two deadlines passed and no charters were issued to other parties.

But Kessler wanted to know what would happen if 23XI and Front Row, or any other team, ultimately didn’t sign before the 2025 season.

“There was a deadline.”

What would happen if they didn’t sign?

“There needed to be a deadline set so NASCAR could prepare for 2025.”

Kessler said ‘you said gun to the head and that’s what happened right?’

‘There was a deadline.’

Kessler again asked what would happen?

“The charter agreement would expire.”

So what would happen?

“Their terms would no longer be valid.”

He let it go, but his point was made, that NASCAR would indeed take the charter away at a certain point … because they are not evergreen.

Bob Jenkins testifies 

Bob Jenkins is the party to this lawsuit that garners the least amount of attention compared to Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan but he took center stage for testimony and partial cross examination in the second half of Wednesday.

There, Jenkins said he loses $6.8 million per year and has never turned a profit under the race team banner and doesn’t draw salary for his ownership of the team either. Under cross-examination, Jenkins said he only attends a dozen races a year and goes to the shop 6-7 times a year.

He says he spends $4.7 million a year on car components now under the NextGen model where he spent $1.8 million before under the previous generation of car.

Specifically, he cited that when the NextGen came out teams were allowed to repair the parts and pieces themselves and now the parts have to be sent back to the NASCAR-mandated vendor to repair.

Jenkins said it costs him $30,000 a week to get an undamaged car refurbished. So why does he do it?

“That sounds like something my wife would say,” Jenkins said. “I just believe in it. It’s why I feel so strongly about changing this system. There are 150 employees at that race shop who believe in me to make this work.”

The moment the aforementioned ‘take it or leave it’ offer came in on September 6 of last year, he was at dinner with his parents, having no idea this was coming. He didn’t even have cell service.

When he left the restaurant, he says he had dozens of texts and phone calls.

“There was a lot of passion, a lot of emotion, especially from Joe Gibbs, he felt like he had to sign it,” Jenkins said. “Joe Gibbs felt like he let me down by signing. Not a single owner said, ‘I was happy to sign it.’ Not a single one.”

Jenkins called the final agreement ‘backwards’ in some many ways.

“It was insulting, it went so far backward,” Jenkins said. “NASCAR wanted to run the governance with an iron fist, it was like taxation without representation. NASCAR has the right to do whatever it wants.”

Jenkins testified to that while also saying that charter system, which was first introduced in 2016 was conceptually sound, but just needed refinement that didn’t ultimately come with the 2025 document.

And that’s to say nothing of the well-documented process that led up to the 13 teams signing it but two others that sued NASCAR instead.

“If we ever do get this right, NASCAR teams will be valuable.”

“This is not about bashing the France family. They’ve made a lot of great decisions. This charter is not one of them.”

“I think it was a step forward but it wasn’t fair.”

During his cross-examination, Jenkins received the same line of questioning from NASCAR attorney Lawrence Buterman that Denny Hamlin received on Tuesday. How could he sue NASCAR for placing non-compete clauses in their schedule and charter contracts while placing non-compete clauses in his driver contracts.

Like Hamlin, Jenkins said it’s because he’s not a monopoly and that drivers have options for where to sign.

Buterman questioned Jenkins’ claims of losses and accused him of hiding profits through his other companies. For example, Jenkins has frequently offered potential sponsors or pay drivers the chance to donate to the  Lakeway Christian Schools he founded instead.

Matt Tifft paid $2.6 million to race for Front Row in 2020 but was given that same option and would have paid $500,000 to the school before a health issue ended that season prematurely. Chandler Smith paid $1.5 million this year to race for FRM’s Truck Series team.

Jenkins testified that, despite the option, no sponsor or driver has donated to Lakeway.

Buterman, like he did with Hamlin, then asked why Front Row only pays its drivers 8.5 percent of team revenue while claiming that NASCAR underpaid teams at 25 percent of Sanctioning Body revenue.

He repeatedly called it ‘apples and oranges’ since teams incur larger expenses like the $350,000 NextGen.

“A basketball doesn’t cost $350,000,” Jenkins said. “You don’t wreck a $350,000 basketball.”

Buterman questioned the losses Jenkins said he incurred despite choosing to run Long John Silvers on cars that didn’t have sponsorship for five races. Long John Silvers is a franchise he owned and gave to his four sons.

The NASCAR lawyer said Jenkins chose to run that car unsponsored as opposed to taking less.

Jenkins said the sponsorship costs what it costs, and he couldn’t sell those five races for less, and then turn around to Love’s and justify making them spend more. It would unravel his entire business.

Buterman said Front Row is just asking NASCAR for more money to compensate for a business that was losing money even before the charter system was instituted.

He said that Jenkins was an advocate for smaller field, and getting rid of open entries just to give his team a larger split of the NASCAR pie, to which Jenkins said a more exclusive entry point raises the value of everyone inside the system.

Jenkins also said that open teams are generally slower field-filler that ‘do not add value’ to the series with the exception of the Daytona 500.

His cross examination will continue on Thursday.

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Northampton’s Austin Beers win NASCAR title

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The Whelen Modified Tour is the oldest division in NASCAR racing.

It began in 1947, and while it has undergone many name changes over the years, from the Winston Modified Tour to the Featherlite Modified Series to the Whelen Modified Tour in 2005, when Whelen Engineering began sponsoring, it is the only open-wheel division that NASCAR sanctions.

It is a style of racing with great tradition and history, and history was made last year.

Northampton native Austin Beers became the Whelen Tour’s youngest champion at 22 years, seven months, and five days. He broke the record set by current NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece, who was 22 years, 11 months, and 25 days old when he won the title in 2013.

Beers, who grew up in a racing family (his father Eric competed in the series from 1997 to 2012) has earned his share of wins and championships while racing at local tracks.

But this is his biggest accomplishment so far and could be a stepping stone to bigger circuits and championships.

“For sure, this is my biggest,” Beers said. “It’s a 16-race series where you need to be super consistent all year. You can’t have bad races. It’s a long, hard-fought year, and it came down to the last race at Martinsville in Virginia, and I was going against a four-time champion in the series [Justin Bonsignore] and someone who is second on the all-time win list. We were able to do what we needed to do and finished second in that last race at Martinsville. That allowed us to have enough points to win the championship.

“To be the youngest champion ever in the oldest series in NASCAR means a lot. It was not only special for me, but also for my family, who sacrificed all of their weekends throughout the year to support me and for my car owner, Mike Murphy, who got his first championship.”

Murphy is a story in his own right. He is a 68-year-old Irish immigrant who, according to NASCAR.com, bought his first race car in the mid-1990s and underwent a lung transplant last January.

“This is the best year of my life. I got a second chance at life,” Murphy told NASCAR.com. “Hard work, I would say, is all it takes. This is a great country. A country of opportunity. The only thing that is going to stop you is yourself.”

Murphy and his KLM Motorsports team took a chance on Beers in 2021 when he was 18.

So, learning they won the championship was emotional for Beers and Murphy.

“He took a gamble on me, and it has been all good ever since,” Beers said.

It is Murphy who believes in Beers as much as anyone. He said, again to NASCAR.com, “I hope this is a stepping stone. He’s still young. He’s only 22. Hopefully, there is somebody out there watching and will see how good he is, and maybe they’ll offer him a ride somewhere along the way.”

Beers was a model of consistency throughout the year.

In 16 races, he never finished lower than ninth. He scored two wins along with 12 top-5s and 16 top-10s. He was the tour’s only driver to finish every led and led all drivers with a 4.6 average finish.

“Hopefully this helps me move into a bigger series, whether it’s the NASCAR truck series or the Xfinity series, but in NASCAR, like in all of racing, it comes down to funding and money,” Beers said. “This is definitely something that should be eye-catching on a resume, I hope. Obviously, it’s only been a couple of months, but hopefully it does catch some people’s eyes. We’ve sent out our resumes to companies, hoping it will attract some sponsorship, and hopefully they can see it and know what I am capable of.”

Beers said the tour championship didn’t sink in until a month after he won it, and he went to the NASCAR Hall of Fame and pulled the tape off, and got to see his name on the championship trophy.

“That’s when it truly sank in, and I got to go to the awards dinner with the higher-ups in NASCAR, and I got to meet the other champions as well,” Beers said. “I talked with them and got some advice from them. I talked to Brenden Queen, who is running full-time on the truck series for Kaulig Racing, and I asked him what I could do because he does a really good job on social media finding sponsorships. It was great to get his advice.”

Beers is getting another avenue to promote his name and boost sponsorship potential.

UFC CEO Dana White is backing an eight-part series called “Race for the Seat,” a new reality competition series featuring 15 aspiring drivers and giving them a chance to compete for a spot on the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series for Kaulig Racing.

Beers is one of the participants in the series, which is sponsored by Ram Trucks. It was already filmed in November, and while Beers can’t reveal the results, he said it was an awesome experience and race fans should watch when it premieres on Fox on Jan. 25 on the day of the NFC Championship Game in pro football. Subsequent episodes will be on Ram’s YouTube Channel through Feb. 6, and the winner is expected to be on the Kaulig team for the Craftsman Truck Series opener Feb. 13 at Daytona.

“I was competing for a NASCAR truck series ride with 14 other talented drivers,” Beers said. “It was pretty special. It was an absolute blast, especially because of the people you’re dealing with. You are basically hanging out with 14 of your friends, and you get to drive race cars some days. For someone like me, that’s a dream. It was so much fun and an awesome experience. It was like a racecar boot camp. I think it will do something not only for my career, but also for the other 14 drivers. It will be huge for our racing careers. I am excited for it to come out and have everybody see it.”

Beers said he can’t go too in-depth on the series, but said it was about racing different types of cars and at different tracks.

“We were competing against each other to see who’s the best,” Beers said.

Meanwhile, Beers just hopes to keep getting better and looking for better and bigger opportunities.

“It’s just like a basketball player practicing 3-pointers or free throws,” he said. “The more laps you do, the better you’re going to get. Over these past two years, I’ve run over 50 races per year. On the asphalt side of racing, that’s a lot. I’ve just been trying to do as many races as possible, trying to perfect my craft and put myself in a situation where if I am in a certain situation, I know what to do because I’ve been in that scenario before. It becomes muscle memory and you know what to do with pit strategy and adjustments. The more laps you make, the better you’re going to get.”

But as good as he gets, you still need someone to notice.

“Winning a championship at a regional touring level is beyond what my dreams were when I started,” he said. “My dream was just to run the Whelen Modified Tour, and to have this kind of success has been amazing. I saw my dad get emotional, and that’s very rare. It meant a lot to my family and to my racing team. We kept building and building toward it. It’s not easy by any means. It’s a lot of work, a lot of hours, and long days at the race track. I owe so much to my sponsors and my family.

“Racing is such a different type of sport. A kid can go outside and shoot free throws or go out and put the ball on the tee in golf. In this sport, it costs money just to go to these race tracks and get practice laps. It’s not something you can practice. You have to be on your ‘A game’ at all times. You have to have a lot of support behind you, funding-wise, just to be able to try to do it. But I love it and hope we can continue to be successful.”



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Motorsports: NASCAR Returns To Chase Format This Season

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1/13/26

Yesterday, NASCAR announced a return to The Chase format in crowning a champion in its three highest series. From 2014 through last season, NASCAR developed a playoff format that was largely met with a negative reaction amongst the most ardent NASCAR fans. The Chase was used from 2004 to 2013, and The Chase 2.0 has some tweaks in the format from the old format.

In the revamped Chase format, there will still be 16 drivers in the Cup Series, 12 in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, and 10 drivers in the Truck Series, but the win-and-in part of the playoffs is gone. Race winners receive 55 points for a win, up from 40 points. Playoff points are gone, and at the start of The Chase, the regular season points winner earns an additional 25 points. They will start The Chase at 2,100 points, second at 2,075, third at 2,065, and a five-point gap from fourth to 16th place. The Chase is 10 races in the Cup Series, nine in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, and seven in the Truck Series. There are no points reset after a certain number of races, like in the playoff format, and the driver with the most points at the end of The Chase is the champion.

Fans have been opining for a new format, and this change has been met with a positive response. NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell said that “everything was on the table” regarding shaking up the format for determining a champion. The straw that broke the camel’s back was last November’s Championship Race weekend. Corey Heim in the Truck Series won 12 races, but needed a green-white-checkered finish to pull off the win for the Championship after having a dominant season. Connor Zilisch took the NASCAR world by storm with his record-setting year in 2025, but finished second in the Championship Race to Jesse Love, and despite winning 10 races, including The Pacific Office Automation 147 in Portland, didn’t win the championship due to a late restart. The final nail in the coffin came in the Cup Series race. Denny Hamlin, who had suddenly turned into a crowd favorite after news of his father’s deteriorating health, was leading with three laps to go. William Byron’s tire blew, and Hamlin’s three-second lead evaporated as the caution came out, and Hamlin couldn’t get by Kyle Larson in the last two laps to lose the championship.

NASCAR’s history is treasured by its fans more than any other sport or sports league. Fans embrace tradition and don’t welcome unnecessary change. NASCAR is also unique in the sense that it’s a family-run sport, with the France family still owning NASCAR. NASCAR took a leap of faith in bringing the glory days of the sport from the 1980s through the 2000s back into the modern sports cycle, but ultimately it didn’t work. The sport is still trying to create stars that can crossover into the mainstream culture like Dale Earnhardt, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and others were able to do.

Listening to the fans’ complaints and considering their thoughts has been something NASCAR does pretty well at. They’ve made changes to the car (i.e., adding horsepower), attempting to build tires with more tire wear from Goodyear, and now the overhaul of determining a champion. Perhaps other leagues should take a look at the value of not pissing off their most ardent fans at the risk of blindly and wildly adding new ones.

NASCAR won’t be racing in the Pacific Northwest in 2026, but hopefully one of the series will head back. The Cup Series won’t head to Portland International Raceway, as the facilities aren’t up to their standards, but maybe a street race awaits the PNW. Seattle was a city that was brought up in preliminary discussions about future street races. With Amazon streaming five NASCAR races per year in the new media rights deal, maybe they can get a “home race” in the future.

Until then, PNW NASCAR fans will sadly watch from afar. At least there is a more legitimate championship format.

www.elisportsnetwork.com



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Hyak Motorsports Announces Multi-Race Sponsorship with Chef Boyardee – Speedway Digest

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Hyak Motorsports is proud to announce a multi-race sponsorship with Chef Boyardee, welcoming the iconic brand to the NASCAR Cup Series. Chef Boyardee will serve as the primary sponsor for 3 Cup Series races for driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and the No. 47 team and will be an associate sponsor for the 2026 season.

The collaboration aligns two brands built on consistency, reliability, and connecting with fans across generations. Chef Boyardee, a longtime household name, will be showcased through on-car branding, team assets, and integrated fan-engagement activations designed to reach audiences both at the track and at home.

“We’re excited to welcome Chef Boyardee to the Hyak Motorsports family. They’re a brand everyone knows, and bringing them into NASCAR is something the entire team is looking forward to,” said Stenhouse. “We’re ready to start the season off strong and represent Chef Boyardee throughout the year.”

This iconic paint scheme will debut at NASCAR Clash on Sunday, February 1, at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston Salem, NC. Chef Boyardee’s sponsorship with Hyak Motorsports will then continue at the Daytona 500, a marquee event with added significance for the team and driver. Stenhouse Jr., the 2023 Daytona 500 winner, has established himself as one of the sport’s most competitive drivers on superspeedways, making the regular season-opening event an ideal launch point for the sponsorship.

“Ricky has been an incredible ambassador for our brands in the 12 years that we have been sponsoring his car in the Cup Series,” said Henk Hartong, CEO of Brynwood Partners. “We are excited to bring Chef Boyardee back to the track at Daytona and Talladega this season, both places where Ricky has taken the checkered flag previously.  We look forward to bringing the Chef Boyardee 47 to Victory Lane at Daytona in February.”

In addition to race-day visibility, the sponsorship will include digital and social media content, behind-the-scenes features, and fan-focused activations highlighting the connection between Chef Boyardee, Hyak Motorsports, and NASCAR’s passionate fan base.

After Daytona, Chef Boyardee will be on the No. 47 Chevrolet on April 26 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.

Hyak Motorsports PR



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NCS: NASCAR returns to 10 race Chase format to determine champion – Speedway Digest

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“The Chase” is returning to NASCAR in 2026, which NASCAR unveiled a new format that favors a season long battle for the championship rather than a winner take all format that we saw in previous years.

“The Chase” format was used in NASCAR’s premier series from 2004-2013 with NASCAR determining the seasons champion with a cumulative points accumulated over the course of the 10 race playoff races.

Beginning this season the champion crowned at seasons end in Homestead will have accumulated the most points throughout the 10 race playoff span.

Prior to the beginning of the 2025 season, NASCAR formed the “Playoff Committee”, which consisted of drivers, members of the media and executives. The panel discussed throughout the 2025 season plans for a change of the playoff format after NASCAR’s previous format which gave drivers a free ride to the playoffs with a win in the regular season and a winner take all format for the final race. Fans voiced their opinions on social media for a change in the format favoring a champion crowned with a culmination of points rather than one race deciding the champion.

“Was it the best format we could go with?,” Steve O’Donnell said during the press conference referring to the previous format NASCAR used.

Once the playoff field is set, the leader in points standings will have 2100 points heading into the 10 race playoff races. A ten point interval will separate second and third place while a five point interval will separate all other drivers.

Total points once “The Chase” begins: 1st: 2100 points, Second: 2075 points, Third: 2065 points, Fourth: 2060 points, Fifth: 2055 points, Sixth: 2050 points, Seventh: 2045 points, Eighth: 2040 points, Ninth: 2035 points, Tenth: 2030 points, Eleventh: 2025 points, Twelfth: 2020 points, Thirteenth: 2015 points, Fourteenth: 2010 points, Fifteenth: 2005 points, Sixteenth: 2000 points

Drivers in attendance included Chase Elliott, Chase Briscoe and Ryan Blaney. Also in attendance were NASCAR hall of famers Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mark Martin as well as Steve O’Donnell from NASCAR.

Chase Briscoe said during the press conference that he believes this format is easier for the fans to follow.

“I’m a fan of the sport and now I know I’m compelled to plug in every week,” Chase Briscoe said. “Every single race, every single lap will have more importance.”

The 2026 NASCAR season gets underway with “The Clash” at Bowman Gray Stadium on Sunday, February 1st and the 68th running of the Daytona 500 on Sunday, February 15th.



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NASCAR restores 10-race ‘Chase’ championship format – Pasadena Star News

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By JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR’s nearly two-year study into an overhaul of its championship-deciding format concluded Monday with the reveal that in 2026 the stock car series will return to a 10-race version closely resembling the very first iteration introduced 22 years ago.

The system will return to a 10-race format consisting of the top 16 drivers in the regular-season standings. There will be no driver eliminations every three races, winning will be incentivized and its name will return to “The Chase.” The driver with the most points at the Nov. 8 finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway will be the champion.

“As NASCAR transitions to a revised championship model, the focus is on rewarding driver and team performance each and every race,” NASCAR President Steve O’Donnell said. “At the same time, we want to honor NASCAR’s storied history and the traditions that have made the sport so special.

“Our fans are at the heart of everything we do, and this format is designed to honor their passion every single race weekend.”

The changes come amid fan complaints to periodic tweaks of a system that was largely unchanged from its 2004 introduction to 2013, when Jimmie Johnson won six of his record-tying seven championships.

Changes slowly followed, with eliminations, an expanded field, a win-and-in guarantee and finally a winner-take-all season finale.

Fans had grown weary of the changes. Regular-season victories guaranteed a slot in the 10-race playoffs, a win in any of the first three three-race rounds advanced a driver into the next round, while the bottom three drivers at the end of each round were eliminated.

Finally, the winner was simply the highest-finishing driver among four remaining title contenders in the season finale.

THE TIPPING POINT

That system reached its breaking point in November when Denny Hamlin dominated the race until a late caution changed the final sequence and Kyle Larson won his second title by simply finishing ahead of Hamlin despite Larson not leading a single lap at Phoenix Raceway while mired in a 25-race losing streak.

Hamlin had won two playoff races – a Cup Series high six victories on the season – and led 208 of the 319 laps at Phoenix. He was the leader with three to go when a late caution changed the outcome and sent the race into overtime; Larson finished third, two spots ahead of Hamlin, to automatically claim the championship.

It wasn’t the only race on the final weekend of 2025 that didn’t finish as expected.

Corey Heim had 11 victories at the start of the Truck Series finale at Phoenix but needed to dip his truck low in an outrageous seven-wide scramble in overtime to secure the title. He did pull out the win and NASCAR dodged the controversy of the most consistent driver being denied a championship because of a gimmicky format.

NASCAR wasn’t so fortunate the next night in the Xfinity Series when 10-race winner Connor Zilisch lost the championship because Jesse Love won the race. Love opened the season with a win at Daytona and closed it with a win at Phoenix – his only two victories of the season but good enough in that format for a championship.

Fan discourse – which had been building for several years and intensified after Joey Logano won two titles in three years including in 2024 when he advanced on another’s driver elimination – exploded after Hamlin.

The changes announced Monday were already in the works and came after an extensive review that included collaboration between owners, drivers, automobile manufacturers, tracks, broadcast partners, and fans.

“Going into Phoenix was a hold your breath moment,” O’Donnell said. “We recognize someone winning the championship, absolutely they won it by the rules. But was it the best format that we could go with? The tide had turned in the garage.”

The new format is designed to bolster the importance of each race and reward consistency while maintaining the importance of winning. It will be known as its original name, ‘The Chase,’ with an also accepted use of ‘postseason,’ NASCAR is eliminating the vernacular ‘playoffs’ and ‘regular-season champion.’

NASCAR’S NEW FORMAT

Moving forward, the driver with the most points after the postseason finale will be champion in all three NASCAR national series. The Chase will comprise of the final 10 races for the Cup Series.

NASCAR has eliminated the automatic berth into the playoff field earned by winning during the regular season, a move designed to increase the importance of every event on the schedule and emphasize consistency throughout the regular season.

A race victory win will now earn the winning driver 55 points, up from 40 points, to reward drivers who battle for wins instead of settling for a solid points days. NASCAR hopes it encourages aggressive racing and strong team performance.

Points for all other positions, including stage points, remain the same.

The points leader after the regular season will receive a 25-point cushion over the second seed as the points will be reset for the 16 Chase drivers. A win in a playoff race no longer earns the automatic advancement into the next round – a move NASCAR says prevents teams from using the remainder of that particular round as preparation time for the finale.



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Motorsports

Milwaukee youth motorsport riders find their way to racing through local program

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Youth motorsport riders of the Sliders Flat Track Racing Program have spent countless hours in recent months learning how to ride dirt and electric bikes and build motorcycles while gaining personal development. 

The Milwaukee youths are preparing for Flat Out Friday, an international motorcycle race that will take place at Fiserv Forum on Feb. 21. The race features over 300 riders of all skill levels.

The Sliders Flat Track Racing Program gives underrepresented youths in Milwaukee free access to electric and dirt bikes, and eventually motorcycles, while introducing them to science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM, components. 

“Motorsports is not something that people of color typically participate in and sometimes we’re the only people of color there when we race,” said Venisha Simpson, founder of the Sliders Flat Track Racing Program.  Parents, volunteers and new Sliders pose for a photograph on Dec. 6, 2025. (Photo by Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

“Motorsports is not something that people of color typically participate in and sometimes we’re the only people of color there when we race,” said Venisha Simpson, founder of the Sliders Flat Track Racing Program.  

Lately, Simpson and co-founder Tiger Mabato have been coaching the riders inside the Boys & Girls Club and on a dirt road in Sheboygan County for Flat Out Friday.

“I love this sport because it’s intergenerational and you’ll find people between 4 to 84 racing on the same track,” Simpson said. “The respect level is low between the young and old in the Black community, so with this event and program we’re absorbing from each other.” 

Tiger Mabato and Venisha Simpson run through safety guidelines with new students during a Sliders orientation last year. (Photo by Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

A young engineer on the track

One of the riders in the program is Tiger Mabato’s 11-year-old son Noah. 

His interest in motorbikes started when he was 6 and he complained about the condition of a junkyard dirt bike his dad gifted him. 

By 7, his dad gave him the opportunity to take the dirt bike apart and rebuild it on his own. 

“Engineering and building things is fun to me, but I have to learn to do this on my own without any help,” Noah said. 

After rebuilding the dirt bike, he crashed into a tree, leaving him hesitant about the sport and even joining the program. 

Noah regained interest after seeing another kid from the program race on a dirt bike.

“I crash often when practicing and racing, but now I know what to do,” Noah said. 

Currently, Noah is building a Suzuki RM 85cc dirt bike for his third Flat Out Friday competition.

“This will become my official bike because my last bike was causing me to lose pretty badly,” he said. 

He placed ninth last year in the open youth class after falling and crashing his bike, but this year wants to come back stronger.

“It took me a while to get back up last year, but I’m more excited about trying it again,” he said.  

According to Tiger Mabato and Simpson, Noah Mabato and Donald Amartey are the only Black youth racers that ride vintage Harley-Davidson bikes in Milwaukee. 

“Noah and Donald are making history right now,” Tiger Mabato said.

Noah Mabato, age 11, waits to ride his electric bike during practice. (Photo by Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

Adjusting quickly

Justice Osei, 9, is a second-year rider in the Sliders Flat Track Racing Program. 

He started without knowing how to ride a regular bike but caught on quickly. 

“They taught him that day in just a couple hours how to ride one,” his mom, Malaika Osei, said. 

Justice wasn’t drawn into traditional sports or video gaming, but with motorsports found a connection to the people and skills he learned. 

“When I’m racing and sometimes make a mistake, I try to lock in and stay focused after it,” he said. 

Tiger Mabato is amazed to see kids like Justice latch onto the sport.

“These kids go through so many ups, downs and tears, it’s crazy how quickly they adapted to everything,” Mabato said. “This is a different level of excitement.”

Justice Osei, 9, helps another rider adjust their helmet during practice. (Photo by Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

Prioritizing safety

Before getting on a motorbike, every rider and parent is made aware of how dangerous the sport can be. 

“The hardest thing is seeing your kid crash and tumble at times, but we prepare them for that, and our biggest thing is safety,” Mabato said. 

To ensure safety, the program provides students with motorbikes, helmets, gloves, padding and vests. Parents are responsible for purchasing jeans, long-sleeve shirts and racing boots.

“It’s dangerous, but it’s fun,” Justice said.

Justice broke three toes during a practice from not wearing the proper racing boots. 

His mom saw him take a tumble that day on the dirt road 

“I took off running once I saw him crying and grabbing his foot,” Malaika Osei said. 

Justice didn’t even realize at first that his toes were broken. 

“I didn’t even know until a week later,” he said. 

After purchasing a new pair of boots, Justice was ready to ride again.

Building other skills

Jeremey Prach, co-founder of Flat Out Friday, explains to a new rider the different pieces of the bike. (Photo by Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

Motorsports is more than just racing and maintenance.

Flat Out Friday co-founder Jeremy Prach wants riders to know the sport is about developing skills that keep you improving. 

“I think the thing that hurts the most is your pride when you fall because many think they’re going to do awesome in a race,” Prach said. “But without a skill base, it’ll be hard to do awesome.”

At the Sliders Flat Track Racing Program, Simpson and Tiger Mabato teach the riders confidence, self-regulation, quick problem solving and self-respect. 

“These kids are tough and it takes a different type of mentality to race with these bikes,” Mabato said. 

Simpson and Mabato also teach the youth riders how to network and maintain relationships with people like Cameron Smith, one of the few professional Black racers in the country.

Cameron Smith, one of the few professional Black racers in the country, signs Donald Amartey’s motorbike at the 2025 Flat Out Friday (Photo provided by Jennifer Ellis)

It takes a community

To ensure the program has everything it needs, places like Cream City Moto, STACYC, Southeast Sales, Proplate and other local organizations pitch in to donate equipment, design graphics, cover fees for events and more. 

The program also received grants from the Greater Milwaukee Foundation and Comoto Cares. 

“The race community is very supportive and I love that,” Simpson said. 

Tiger Mabato encourages parents to get their children involved in things that spark their interest even if it’s scary and wants them to know that the race part of the program is optional.

“There’s no better feeling than seeing your kid go around the track,” he said. 


For more information

If you are interested in becoming a part of the program, click here to register and join the waitlist for spring.

To watch, support and cheer the youth riders on at Flat Out Friday, tickets start at $28. 

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