Motorsports
Good news, bad news for NASCAR Cup drivers ahead of Bristol playoff elimination race
NASCAR makes its annual return this weekend to Bristol for the night race, which will see four Cup drivers eliminated from the playoffs.
Denny Hamlin (three wins) and Kyle Larson (three) have combined to win six of the last nine Cup races at Bristol. Will their dominance continue?
With help from Racing Insights, here is a look at the good news and bad news for Cup drivers and teams heading to Bristol.
23XI Racing — Good news: Bubba Wallace enters Bristol 50 points above the cutline after back-to-back top-10 finishes. … Wallace has six top 10s in the last eight races. … Wallace finished third in last year’s Bristol night race, his best result in 12 Bristol Cup starts. … Corey Heim is back in the No. 67 car this weekend, making his fourth start of the season. … Tyler Reddick has completed all but 14 of the 7,118 laps run this season, most in the series. Bad news: Riley Herbst has one top-20 finish in the last 17 races. … Reddick, who is 37 points above the cutline, has one top-10 finish in eight starts on the Bristol concrete surface. … Reddick has finished 16th or worse in five of the last seven races this season.
Front Row Motorsports — Good news: Zane Smith finished 11th last month at Richmond for his best Cup finish on a short track in 12 starts. Bad news: All three teams finished 30th or worse last weekend at WWT Raceway. … Noah Gragson has failed to finish three of the last eight races. … Todd Gilliland has six finishes of 25th or worse in the last eight races.
Haas Factory Team — Good news: Cole Custer has completed 1,774 of the 1,775 laps run in the last seven races. Bad News: Custer has one top-10 in 20 Cup short track starts, an eighth-place finish at Bristol in Sept. 2022.
Hendrick Motorsports — Good news: The organization has led 946 of the 1,000 laps run in the last two Bristol races. … Kyle Larson has won the last two Bristol races, leading 873 of the 1,000 laps. … Larson can become the fifth driver to win at least three consecutive races at Bristol (Darrell Waltrip holds the track record with seven wins in a row). … Larson has three wins and not finished worse than fifth in six starts at Bristol with Hendrick Motorsports. … Larson led 52 laps last weekend at WWT Raceway, his most in the last 16 races. … Alex Bowman has won the pole for the last two Bristol races. … Chase Elliott’s third-place finish at WWT Raceway was his first top five since Sonoma in July. … All five of William Byron’s top-10 finishes at Bristol have come in the last eight races there. Bad news: Bowman is 35 points below the playoff cutline. … Bowman has finished 26th or worse in the last three races. … Byron, the regular season champion, has only two top-five finishes in the last 14 races after having seven top fives in the season’s first 14 races. … Bristol is the only active Cup track where Byron has not led a lap.
Alex Bowman will have new tire changers, a new tire carrier and a new jackman after his pit crew struggled in the first two playoff races.
Hyak Motorsports — Good news: Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s 20th-place finish last weekend was his best since Atlanta in late June. … Stenhouse has twice finished runner-up at Bristol (March 2014 and August 2016). Bad news: Stenhouse has finished 20th or worse in 10 of his last 11 Bristol starts on the concrete.
Joe Gibbs Racing — Good news: Organization has won the first two playoff races with Chase Briscoe winning at Darlington and Denny Hamlin this past weekend at WWT Raceway. … Briscoe has scored eight playoff points in the opening round of the playoffs (he had 10 playoff points entering the postseason). … Briscoe finished fourth at Bristol in April and was eighth at the track last September. … Hamlin has four wins at Bristol, including three in the last nine races on the concrete surface there. … Hamlin has finished in the top 10 in six consecutive races at Bristol. … Christopher Bell has five consecutive top 10s at Bristol. … Bell has finished in the top three in eight of the 28 races this season. … Ty Gibbs’ average finish of 13.4 at Bristol is his best among all short tracks. Bad news: After finishing seventh last weekend at WWT Raceway, Bell yelled on his radio: “We just (expletive) ran seventh with the best car on the track! Every (expletive) week it’s the same (expletive)! We’re the last car to pit road! I’m over it!”
Denny Hamlin has fun with fans after another victory but his success shows the depth of his preparation, focus and drive.
Kaulig Racing — Good news: AJ Allmendinger has two top 10s in his last five Cup starts at Bristol. … Allmendinger placed ninth at Bristol in April. Bad news: Ty Dillon has finished 30th or worse in four of the last six races. … Dillon has not scored a top 10 in 40 Cup short track races (his best finish is 13th at Martinsville in March 2019). … Allmendinger has finished 22nd or worse in five of the last eight races.
Legacy Motor Club — Good news: Organization has had a car place in the top six in each of the last three races, which is tied for its longest streak of the season. … John Hunter Nemechek followed his career-best fourth-place finish in the Southern 500 by placing sixth last weekend at WWT Raceway. … Nemechek’s average finish of 18.6 at Bristol is his best among all Cup short tracks. … Erik Jones has two top-five finishes in the last three races. Bad news: Jones has placed 20th or worse in each of the last five Bristol races.
Richard Childress Racing — Good news: Austin Dillon has won two of the last seven Cup races at short tracks. … Dillon finished 10th at Bristol in April. … Austin Hill is back in the No. 33 car this weekend, making his fourth start of the season. Bad news: Dillon is the first driver below the playoff cutline, 11 points out of a transfer spot. … Kyle Busch, who has eight wins at Bristol, has not finished better than 14th in the last six races there. … Busch does not have a top-10 finish in the last 13 Cup short track races. … Dillon’s best finish at Bristol (fourth) came in August 2016.
Austin Dillon enters the cutoff race the first driver below the cutline.
Rick Ware Racing — Good news: Cody Ware’s best Bristol finish is 17th in the 2022 night race. Bad news: Ware has finished 29th or worse in eight of the last nine races.
RFK Racing — Good news: Chris Buescher has scored three consecutive top-10 finishes. … Buescher has four top 10s in the last seven Bristol races. … Brad Keselowski has eight top 10s in the last 16 races. … Keselowski has three wins at Bristol. … Ryan Preece finished seventh in last year’s night race, his best Bristol result in nine starts on the concrete surface. … Preece ranks second in the series in laps completed, having run 7,071 of 7,118 laps (99.34%). Bad news: Buescher has failed to finish in the top 10 in the last nine short track races.
Spire Motorsports — Good news: Michael McDowell has finished 11th or better in five of the last seven Bristol races. … Carson Hocevar has five top-15 finishes in the last seven races. Bad news: Justin Haley has finished 27th or worse in four of the last five races.
Team Penske — Good news: Both of Austin Cindric’s top-five finishes at short tracks have come in his last five starts. … Ryan Blaney has finished sixth or better in the last two Bristol races. … Blaney has led 555 laps at Bristol, most for him at any Cup track. … Blaney’s three short track wins have come in his last 12 Cup races. … Joey Logano has two top-five finishes in the last four races. Bad news: Logano has finished outside the top 20 at Bristol in the last five races and finished outside the top 10 there in the last nine races on the concrete surface. … While Logano has five short track wins, his last one came in October 2018 at Martinsville. … Cindric, who holds the final transfer spot to the next round of the playoffs, has not finished in the top 10 in five starts at Bristol.
Both drivers build a cushion to the cutline heading into this weekend’s cutoff race at Bristol.
Trackhouse Racing — Good news: Ross Chastain is in position to advance to the next round, sitting 19 points above the cutline. … Chastain has three top-10 finishes in the last five Bristol races. Bad news: Shane van Gisbergen is 15 points below the playoff cutline after placing 32nd at Darlington and 25th at WWT Raceway. … van Gisbergen finished 38th at Bristol in April in his lone Cup start there. … Daniel Suarez has not finished better than 18th in the last eight races on the Bristol concrete surface. … Suarez has placed 25th or worse in seven of the last 11 races. Chastain has four top-10 finishes in the last 17 races.
NASCAR’s Brad Moran told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio that what Trackhouse’s two playoff cars did after the race “caught our radar.”
Wood Brothers Racing — Good news: Josh Berry has placed 12th in two of his three Cup starts at Bristol. Bad news: Berry finished 36th at WWT Raceway a week after placing 38th (both due to wrecks). … Berry is 45 points below the playoff cutline and is essentially in a must-win situation at Bristol to advance to the second round of the playoffs.
Motorsports
TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Announces GR Yaris MORIZO RR | Toyota | Global Newsroom
The GR Yaris MORIZO RR is a special-edition model created with Toyota Motor Corporation Chairman and Master Driver Akio Toyoda, aka Morizo, by applying insights gained through the challenge of competing as TOYOTA GAZOO ROOKIE Racing (TGRR) in the 2025 Nürburgring 24 Hours endurance race.
TGR, with its core mission of making ever-better motorsports-bred cars, and ROOKIE Racing, which hones GR vehicles, transcended organizational boundaries and came together based on roles rather than titles under Morizo’s leadership to form TGRR, aiming to further accelerate the making of ever-better cars.
In the Nürburgring 24 Hours, Morizo, as a team driver, took the wheel of the GAZOO Racing Direct Automatic Transmission-equipped No. 109 GR Yaris fielded by TGRR, logging more laps than scheduled despite the course’s grueling conditions. Upon the team’s successful completion of the race, Morizo was quick to convey how good he found the GR Yaris to be, and he credited its 8-speed automatic transmission with enabling him to conquer 15 laps.
The GR Yaris MORIZO RR is exceptional for its Nürburgring-cultivated delivery of car-driver unity for a high level of driver-vehicle interaction, its reliability and security, and its ability to make car-lovers smile and want to keep on driving it.
The GR Yaris MORIZO RR for the Japanese market is to be available in a total of 100 units from spring 2026, with purchasing lottery applications now being accepted via the TGR official smartphone application “GR app”. The model is also to be released in certain European markets in a limited run of 100 units.
Motorsports
Mando Deodorant to Sponsor Josh Bilicki in Seven Races
Mando Deodorant will expand its relationship with NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series driver Josh Bilicki in 2026, serving as an anchor partner of the No. 07 Chevrolet Camaro for SS-GreenLight Racing.
The company will serve as the primary sponsor of Bilicki’s Chevrolet in multiple events in NASCAR’s second-tier division in 2026, including the season-opener at Daytona International Speedway on February 14.
“Josh [Bilicki] is the kind of racer you want to root for,” said a representative from Mando. “He’s talented, humble, and puts in the work – just like the guys who count on Mando every day. We’re proud to expand our partnership with him in 2026 and to be part of what he’s building with SS-GreenLight Racing. He’s the kind of competitor who keeps fighting when others fade, and that grit is why he’s such a natural fit for Mando.”
Bilicki and Mando first partnered for a one-off last Summer in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series event at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where the Wisconsin-native picked up a top-20 finish in the No. 91 for DGM Racing.
The 30-year-old driver moved away from his role as the anchor driver for DGM Racing at season’s end, to instead pursue a full-season effort in the No. 07 for SS-GreenLight Racing. Bilicki has worked with the organization previously, but 2026 will mark the first time the two parties have united for a full-season effort.
“I’m extremely excited to welcome Mando as an anchor partner for the 2026 season,” said Bilicki. “Their focus on confidence and performance aligns perfectly with what it takes to compete at this level, and having them on board for seven races, starting at Daytona, is huge for our team.”
Mando Deodorant will also expand its relationship with Bilicki beyond just the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, with the company serving as a partner for the Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin-native in the Chili Bowl Nationals next week in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Bilicki is a veteran of more than 250 starts across NASCAR’s National Series, having competed in NASCAR since 2016. The lion’s share of those starts, though, have come in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, where he’s collected four top-10 results — three for DGM Racing and one for Joe Gibbs Racing. Over the last decade, Bilicki has made starts for several organizations, including BJ McLeod Motorsports, RSS Racing, DGM Racing, Joe Gibbs Racing, and SS-GreenLight Racing.
The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series campaign will begin at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, February 14 at 5:30 PM ET on The CW, Motor Racing Network, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
Motorsports
An Insider’s Account of NASCAR’s Tabasco Fiasco
What looked like a perfect NASCAR startup, a rising driver, massive funding, and veteran leadership, collapsed almost instantly. The Tabasco-backed Todd Bodine program promised the world, but became one of the fastest implosions of the modern era, leaving chaos in its wake and unexpectedly changing one career forever.
• How did an $8 million per year Tabasco sponsorship unravel before the season even started?
• Why did elite promises like exclusive chassis and top-tier equipment never materialize?
• What red flags during testing exposed deeper problems inside the operation?
• How did missing the Daytona 500 trigger a life-changing opportunity for Jeffrey Baker?
On paper, the team had everything: manufacturer support, high-level personnel, and direct backing from one of the biggest sponsors in the garage. In reality, key deals quietly collapsed, used equipment replaced what was promised, and decision-making behind the scenes raised serious concerns. When the team failed to qualify for the Daytona 500, the entire project effectively imploded under the weight of its own hype. For Jeffrey Baker, the fallout became a turning point. A last-minute move to Penske Racing during Speedweeks led to a career spanning decades, championships, Indy 500 victories, and a permanent place inside one of motorsports’ most successful organizations. One of NASCAR’s biggest sponsor disasters accidentally launched a Hall of Fame-caliber career.
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Motorsports
CarBravo delivers affordability and confidence with new 12-month/12,000 mile warranty
CarBravo delivers affordability and confidence with new 12-month/12,000 mile warranty
2026-01-08
When we created CarBravo, our goal was straightforward: make used car buying and owning more transparent, accessible and predictable.
Now, we’re giving customers more confidence with every vehicle purchased with CarBravo’s standard certification by increasing the warranty coverage from 6-month/6,000-miles* to 12-month/12,000 miles,* whichever comes first. This Bumper-to-Bumper Limited Warranty – with no deductible or added cost – sets a new standard in the used car market. That level of protection helps customers manage the total cost of ownership at a time when affordable vehicle options are at the forefront. Even older, higher-mileage vehicles that fall outside of CarBravo’s standard certification criteria can still qualify for a 30-day/1,000-mile BravoBudget Powertrain Limited Warranty.**
We’ve also included 24-hour roadside assistance and courtesy transportation, because peace of mind and convenience doesn’t stop at the purchase — it’s about keeping customers moving. Even better, unlike many other used car platforms, CarBravo’s warranty repairs are available through GM’s network of over 4,000 dealerships nationwide.
CarBravo is a General Motors program, and that shows up in how we think about quality, transparency and choice. Customers can shop online, in-store or through a seamless combination of both, with access to thousands of vehicles across a wide range of brands and budgets. Every vehicle is inspected, and customers have the information they need to make confident decisions.
In a crowded used-car market, we believe transparency, convenience and protection all go hand-in-hand. CarBravo is designed to deliver on those tenets — and to raise expectations for the customer experience around buying and owning a used vehicle.
*Coverage and terms are different in the State of California. See participating dealer and warranty booklet for limited warranty eligibility and coverage details, including limitations and exclusions. For non-GM vehicles, covered components vary from GM vehicles; please see a participating CarBravo dealer for component coverage details and full terms and conditions.
**CarBravo vehicles that are greater than 10 and less than 15 years old and/or have greater than 100,000 and less than 150,000 miles, are eligible to receive Powertrain Limited Warranty coverage for 30 days or 1,000 miles (whichever comes first).
When we created CarBravo, our goal was straightforward: make used car buying and owning more transparent, accessible and predictable.
Now, we’re giving customers more confidence with every vehicle purchased with CarBravo’s standard certification by increasing the warranty coverage from 6-month/6,000-miles* to 12-month/12,000 miles,* whichever comes first. This Bumper-to-Bumper Limited Warranty – with no deductible or added cost – sets a new standard in the used car market. That level of protection helps customers manage the total cost of ownership at a time when affordable vehicle options are at the forefront. Even older, higher-mileage vehicles that fall outside of CarBravo’s standard certification criteria can still qualify for a 30-day/1,000-mile BravoBudget Powertrain Limited Warranty.**
We’ve also included 24-hour roadside assistance and courtesy transportation, because peace of mind and convenience doesn’t stop at the purchase — it’s about keeping customers moving. Even better, unlike many other used car platforms, CarBravo’s warranty repairs are available through GM’s network of over 4,000 dealerships nationwide.
CarBravo is a General Motors program, and that shows up in how we think about quality, transparency and choice. Customers can shop online, in-store or through a seamless combination of both, with access to thousands of vehicles across a wide range of brands and budgets. Every vehicle is inspected, and customers have the information they need to make confident decisions.
In a crowded used-car market, we believe transparency, convenience and protection all go hand-in-hand. CarBravo is designed to deliver on those tenets — and to raise expectations for the customer experience around buying and owning a used vehicle.
*Coverage and terms are different in the State of California. See participating dealer and warranty booklet for limited warranty eligibility and coverage details, including limitations and exclusions. For non-GM vehicles, covered components vary from GM vehicles; please see a participating CarBravo dealer for component coverage details and full terms and conditions.
**CarBravo vehicles that are greater than 10 and less than 15 years old and/or have greater than 100,000 and less than 150,000 miles, are eligible to receive Powertrain Limited Warranty coverage for 30 days or 1,000 miles (whichever comes first).
Motorsports
NASCAR star opens up on reality of sport – ‘I’ve had so many failures’ – Motorsport – Sports
Toni Breidinger has built a growing presence in NASCAR, but behind the highlight reels and rising profile is a reality she says few fans fully understand.
The 26-year-old NASCAR driver recently opened up about the constant uncertainty that comes with trying to survive in a sponsorship-driven sport, admitting that setbacks have been a defining part of her journey.
“I feel like I’ve had so many failures,” Breidinger, who also explained her concerns about working with Victoria’s Secret, said on The Burnouts podcast. “There’s been times where I’ve lost a sponsor right before a race, and I haven’t been able to race, and I was devastated. And then I got like a whole new opportunity after that.”
Breidinger, who competes full-time in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, said those moments often arrive with little warning. Losing funding can mean missing a race altogether, turning months of preparation into a scramble just to stay on track.
“There’s been times even the past few years where I’m like, I don’t have a partner for this race. How am I going to do?” she said.
“And it’s just like a scramble to make it work. I actually have my hands in everything still. I’m very much kind of a control freak. So I’m very involved in all the pitches and everything.”
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Breidinger became the first Arab American woman to debut in a NASCAR national series race in 2021, and her visibility has grown rapidly. Across Instagram and TikTok, she has a combined following of roughly five million, with additional reach on Facebook and X that rivals, and in some cases exceeds, established Cup Series drivers.
Even with that audience, Breidinger said sponsorship remains fragile. Early in her career, she relied on cold emails and persistence after moving to North Carolina, long before social media traction became a selling point.
“When I first moved to North Carolina, it was a lot of just cold emails, not much success,” she said. “With my social media at the time, I don’t even think I had 10,000 followers. To me, I was like, I just want 10,000 followers, baby steps.”
Her growth eventually caught the attention of Toyota Motor North America, which signed her through its marketing department rather than its traditional driver development ladder. That partnership gives her access to Toyota’s performance resources, including training, nutrition support and simulator time, but it doesn’t remove the pressure to constantly secure race-by-race backing.
On track, Breidinger has delivered results. In 65 ARCA Menards Series starts, she posted 27 top-10 finishes, the most by a female driver in series history, along with four top fives and a fourth-place finish in the 2024 standings.
“I feel like it’s hard because I’m just being in a male-dominated space, you want to be respected,” Breidinger said. “I’ve always been cautious about how I present myself.”
Motorsports
Keselowski to miss Clash, LaJoie to fill in
CONCORD, N.C. — Brad Keselowski will miss the Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium and Corey LaJoie will fill in for him, RFK Racing confirmed to TRE.

Keselowski will miss the Feb. 1 preseason exhibition race due to a leg injury sustained while skiing with his family in December. LaJoie will drive his No. 6 Ford in his absence.
LaJoie recently raced for Rick Ware Racing — a team closely aligned with RFK — in 2025. He previously filled in for a NASCAR Cup Series champion in 2023 when he drove Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 9 Chevrolet at World Wide Technology Raceway Gateway after NASCAR suspended Chase Elliott.
Keselowski is likely to be ready in time for the season-opening Daytona 500, set for Feb. 15. The 2012 NASCAR Cup Series champion is set to make his 17th start in the race. While he has won the Daytona summer race, he has never won the Daytona 500 before.
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Jonathan Fjeld is the co-owner of the The Racing Experts, LLC. He has been with TRE since 2010.
A Twin Valley, MN, native, Fjeld became a motorsports fan at just three years old (first race was the 2002 Pennsylvania 500). He worked as a contributor and writer for TRE from 2010-18. Since then, he has stepped up and covered 24 NASCAR race weekends and taken on a larger role with TRE. He became the co-owner and managing editor in 2023 and has guided the site to massive growth in that time.
Fjeld has covered a wide array of stories and moments over the years, including Kevin Harvick’s final Cup Series season, the first NASCAR national series disqualification in over 50 years, Shane van Gisbergen’s stunning win in Chicago and the first Cup Series race at Road America in 66 years – as well as up-and-coming drivers’ stories and stories from inside the sport, like the tech it takes for Hendrick Motorsports to remain a top-tier team.
Currently, he resides in Albuquerque, N.M., where he works for KOB 4, an NBC station. He works as a digital producer and does on-air reports. He loves spending time with friends and family, playing and listening to music, exploring new places, being outdoors, reading books and writing among other activities. You can email him at fjeldjonathan@gmail.com
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