Connect with us

Motorsports

History Beckons for IMSA Competitors Racing the 2025 24 Hours of Le Mans – Speedway Digest

The link between IMSA and the ACO extends to the headline race of the FIA World Endurance Championship: the 24 Hours of Le Mans. As ever, a strong volume of IMSA competitors make the trip to the Circuit de la Sarthe to compete in the 24-hour endurance race classic. It’s not the only IMSA componentry […]

Published

on


The link between IMSA and the ACO extends to the headline race of the FIA World Endurance Championship: the 24 Hours of Le Mans. As ever, a strong volume of IMSA competitors make the trip to the Circuit de la Sarthe to compete in the 24-hour endurance race classic. It’s not the only IMSA componentry of the race week in Le Mans, France; several IMSA-sanctioned series drivers will compete in Le Mans support races, including the Michelin Le Mans Cup’s Road to Le Mans and Ford’s Mustang Invitational.

The headliners, though, are in the FIA WEC’s Hypercar class, which allows for both Le Mans Hypercar (LMH) and Le Mans Daytona h (LMDh) specification prototype cars to compete for overall honors across both IMSA and the FIA WEC. Most of the full-season IMSA top-class prototype drivers will make the trip to Le Mans, including last year’s Grand Touring Prototype (GTP) championship winning team, while two other IMSA entrants garnered automatic invitations for their efforts in 2024.

Three Automatic Invites

Three IMSA entrants – Porsche Penske Motorsport, Nick Boulle and Orey Fidani – received automatic invitations to the 2025 24 Hours of Le Mans from their 2024 IMSA successes.

Porsche Penske Motorsport secured a slot for the No. 4 Porsche 963, driven by IMSA full-timers Nick Tandy and Felipe Nasr alongside Pascal Wehrlein, courtesy of the team’s 2024 GTP class championship achieved by Nasr and Dane Cameron.

IMSA recognizes the top-scoring Bronze-rated drivers in Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) and Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) with the Jim Trueman Award and Bob Akin Award, respectively. Boulle secured the Trueman Award winning the LMP2 title in 2024, driving the No. 52 Inter Europol by PR1 Mathiasen Motorsports ORECA LMP2 07. Fidani was the Akin Award winner in GTD aboard his No. 13 AWA Corvette Z06 GT3.R.

Boulle, who races with United Autosports USA in 2025 IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup races, returns to Inter Europol for Le Mans. He’ll share the No. 34 ORECA LMP2 07 with Jean-Baptiste Simmenauer and Luca Ghiotto as a Pro/Am entry within the LMP2 class. Fidani has an easier car to follow; his same No. 13 AWA Corvette entry alongside IMSA co-drivers Matt Bell and Lars Kern. It shifts liveries from its usual black and gold colors to a striking red and white honoring the team’s Canadian roots.

Tandy and Nasr (GTP) and Fidani, Bell and Kern (GTD) also won this year’s Rolex 24 At Daytona and are among several drivers across the three Le Mans classes who can double up with both 24-hour race wins this year (more on that in a bit). Tandy and Nasr also sit on the precipice of history if they can win Le Mans to complete an unprecedented single season sweep of the traditional endurance sports car racing “Triple Crown” at Daytona, Sebring and Le Mans.

“You think it would be totally out of this world to be able to win the three ‘Triple Crown’ races in one season. But we look at it today and the stuff that’s happened already this year is just quite unbelievable. So why not?” Tandy said. “It would just be it would be an amazing thing that would be in the history of books forever, of course.”

Pair of Cadillac GTP Teams

Two additional IMSA GTP cars head to Le Mans after being awarded an invitation by the selection committee: the pair of Cadillac V-Series.R cars fielded by Cadillac Whelen (Action Express Racing) and Cadillac Wayne Taylor Racing.

This will be the Whelen entry’s third straight trip to Le Mans, and has a relatively young lineup of Jack Aitken, Frederik Vesti and Felipe Drugovich slated to drive the team’s No. 311 Cadillac. Drugovich is also the Aston Martin Formula 1 reserve driver.

For WTR (pictured left; photo courtesy Cadillac Racing), it’s a first trip for the family effort with Wayne Taylor and sons Ricky and Jordan Taylor, the latter two sharing the team’s No. 101 Cadillac with Filipe Albuquerque. It’s been a long time coming for the organization, having had a winter of change with the shift back to the General Motors family after a four-year period and beginning the logistical prep for this race.

“When they asked me to apply for the Le Mans entry, I was really pleasantly and happily shocked that that they accepted us,” Wayne Taylor said. “(WTR Vice President, General Manager) Travis Hogue on our team has done a really good job of getting the logistics and everything together, and we’ve been working with people in Europe as well.

“As far as people are concerned, there’s a lot of people going, probably about 80 people. (Cadillac Hertz Team) JOTA has helped us in a big way as well as Cadillac, and I believe we’ve got everything under control right now. It will be a week of building, and I think we can handle it pretty well.”

Heavy Contingent of IMSA GTP Drivers

While nearly 100 drivers who have started at least one 2025 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship race count in the 62-car, 186-driver 24 Hours of Le Mans entry list, the highest percentage of full-season IMSA drivers racing in France come from the GTP class. No less than 18 of the 22 full-season IMSA GTP drivers are racing at Le Mans.

Porsche Penske Motorsport’s quartet of Tandy, Nasr (No. 4 Porsche 963), Mathieu Jaminet (No. 5) and Matt Campbell (No. 6) appear, although are split among all three Porsche 963s.

All four Cadillac WTR drivers will race too, with the two Taylors and Albuquerque racing together. Meanwhile, last year’s Le Mans LMP2 polesitter Louis Deletraz shifts to the No. 199 AO by TF ORECA LMP2 07, which he’ll share with last year’s IMSA GTP champion Dane Cameron and AO Racing co-founder PJ Hyett – who share “Spike,” AO’s popular, dragon-liveried LMP2 car in the WeatherTech Championship.

Cadillac Whelen’s other full-season driver, Earl Bamber, is in another Cadillac for Le Mans: the No. 38 Cadillac Hertz Team Jota entry he races during in the FIA World Endurance Championship.

BMW M Team RLL drivers Dries Vanthoor (No. 15) and Sheldon van der Linde (No. 20) resume with their FIA WEC team, BMW M Team WRT, aboard their BMW M Hybrid V8s.

Aston Martin THOR Team drivers Ross Gunn (No. 007) and Roman De Angelis (No. 009) join the respective WEC lineups there, Gunn as part of an all-British No. 007 Aston with De Angelis joining fellow Aston GT graduates Alex Riberas and Marco Sorenson in the No. 009.

And then there’s Acura Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian, which sees all four of its GTP drivers at Le Mans, split among four different LMP2 cars.

The No. 60 Acura ARX-06 pair of Colin Braun and Tom Blomqvist will be in the No. 24 Nielsen Racing ORECA (Braun) and No. 37 CLX Pure Racing ORECA (Blomqvist).

Meanwhile the No. 93 Acura ARX-06 duo of Renger van der Zande and Nick Yelloly will shift to the No. 22 United Autosports ORECA (van der Zande) and No. 43 Inter Europol ORECA (Yelloly).

The four full-season GTP drivers not racing at Le Mans are BMW’s Marco Wittmann and Philipp Eng, and JDC-Miller MotorSports’ Gianmaria Bruni and Tijmen van der Helm.

There are also a bevy of other IMSA drivers competing at Le Mans, most of whom are shifting from their WeatherTech Championship team to another one across the three classes at Le Mans.

2025 Rolex 24 Winners Look to Add 24 Hours of Le Mans Wins

A unique aspect of this year’s 24 Hours of Le Mans is the eight Rolex 24 At Daytona-winning drivers who can win both marquee 24-hour endurance sports car races in the same year.

Tandy, Nasr and Laurens Vanthoor can do so, with Tandy and Nasr racing together in one car (No. 4 Porsche) and Vanthoor in another (No. 6 Porsche).

Fidani, Bell and Kern can win Daytona and Le Mans as well; they are in the same No. 13 AWA Corvette (different class, chassis and livery, but same car number, team and car type) as at Rolex 24.

Two other Rolex 24 winners in 2025 can double-up at Le Mans. Dennis Olsen was part of the Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO)-winning No. 65 Ford Multimatic Motorsports Ford Mustang GT3 at Daytona. At Le Mans, the 2024 podium finisher will share the No. 88 Proton Competition Ford Mustang GT3. Paul Di Resta, too, was part of the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2)-winning No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA LMP2 07 in Daytona. He’ll be in the Hypercar class No. 93 Peugeot TotalEnergies Peugeot 9X8.

With last weekend’s scrutineering and test day now in the rearview mirror, on-track action from Circuit de la Sarthe resumes on Wednesday with official practice and the start of qualifying.

IMSA Wire Service PR



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Motorsports

What Morgan-McClure Motorsports Represented About NASCAR’s Identity

Wednesday (June 25) was a sad day for many in the Southern Virginia racing season and beyond, as longtime NASCAR fixture and three-time Daytona 500 champion car owner, Larry McClure, died at the age of 81. McClure was the co-owner of longtime NASCAR Cup Series team Morgan-McClure Motorsports, which became known as a dominant force […]

Published

on


Wednesday (June 25) was a sad day for many in the Southern Virginia racing season and beyond, as longtime NASCAR fixture and three-time Daytona 500 champion car owner, Larry McClure, died at the age of 81.

McClure was the co-owner of longtime NASCAR Cup Series team Morgan-McClure Motorsports, which became known as a dominant force on superspeedways in the early 1990s and had a number of great drivers take the wheel.

Considering the long tenure of Morgan-McClure at NASCAR’s highest levels, it was more than worth examining all that the team accomplished upon McClure’s passing. And in some way, it was fairly easy to: After all, the team to this day has an unmistakable identity that in some ways perfectly represents what gave NASCAR its mass appeal.

No one can think of Morgan-McClure Motorsports without thinking of its longtime sponsor: Midway through the 1986 season, Morgan-McClure picked up sponsorship from the Eastman Kodak Company, bringing one of the biggest and most recognizable brands in photography to NASCAR at a time where the sport was still finding its way from regional to national appeal. From that point onwards, the Kodak car – with its red No. 4 easily distinguishable from the company’s shade of yellow – became easy for everyone from the layman to the heartiest of race fan to pick out of the pack.

Kodak was just one of the many consumer brands that redefined NASCAR sponsorship, and it certainly helped that their car ran up front and was a contender to win any given week, especially when it came to the sport’s biggest and fastest tracks. From 1991 to 1996, few cars were faster on superspeedways than the Morgan-McClure No. 4.

With nine wins between Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway during this time period — including three Daytona 500s in five years — you could be assured that the Morgan-McClure car would be up at the front on the sport’s biggest stages and that its driver would be among the contenders.

Even as Morgan-McClure lost its advantage on superspeedways and gradually tailed off in overall performance, their car still had a sort of constant quality to it: The No. 4 Kodak Chevrolet had a look all its own, a reputation of performance and a history of winning drivers behind the wheel. It remained that way until the end of the 2003 season, when Kodak left the team after 17 years in favor of a third car at Team Penske.

When viewed through a certain lens, the Morgan-McClure Kodak car actually represents quite a bit of how much NASCAR sponsorship has changed and some of what was lost along the way. The changing business of NASCAR and its necessities, combined with outside economic factors, have created an environment where full season sponsors and full season paint schemes are few and in-between.

Most teams now employ a platoon of sponsors, with some multi-car teams now rotating their sponsors across each of their different cars. And while there remain some constants — Kyle Larson‘s HendrickCars No. 5 and Joey Logano‘s Shell/Pennzoil No. 22 come to mind — it’s become increasingly rare for a car to not only keep the same sponsor, but retain the same look from year to year.

Along those same lines, consumer brands aren’t the same seemingly bottomless well of sponsorship opportunities they once were, and that vacuum has been filled by business-to-business partnerships encompassing manufacturing, technology, and other parts of how race teams make themselves viable businesses.

While those sorts of sponsors are more than welcome, as they keep cars on the track and lights on at the shop, it isn’t a stretch to say that the average race fan doesn’t quite connect to them the same way they do with a consumer brand. As was the case with Kodak, whose cameras they could go out and buy and make a part of their lives if they weren’t already.

This isn’t to lament the current state of NASCAR sponsorship, the dizzying pace that cars change paint schemes and sponsors or to make some type of argument about its effect on stock car racing’s identity: It’s simply the way things are, and the way the sport has had to adapt in the face of a world and an economy that has changed immensely since the 1990s.

Still, it’s easy enough to miss those simpler times, and to appreciate the contributions that the Morgan-McClure Kodak car made in helping NASCAR affirm and market its identity as the top form of auto racing in the U.S. And surely, that’s just one more thing to remember and admire about what Larry McClure brought the sport in his lifetime.


Donate to FrontstretchDonate to Frontstretch



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Judge Delivers Scathing Reality Check as NASCAR’s Charter War With Michael Jordan’s 23XI Turns Volatile

Tensions exploded in a Charlotte, North Carolina, courtroom on Tuesday, June 24, as NASCAR’s bitter charter battle with Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing reached a boiling point. Twelve NASCAR Cup Series teams fought desperately to shield financial records from the sanctioning body, calling disclosure “catastrophic” for competitive survival. The hearing exposed raw nerves in NASCAR’s franchise […]

Published

on


Tensions exploded in a Charlotte, North Carolina, courtroom on Tuesday, June 24, as NASCAR’s bitter charter battle with Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing reached a boiling point. Twelve NASCAR Cup Series teams fought desperately to shield financial records from the sanctioning body, calling disclosure “catastrophic” for competitive survival.

The hearing exposed raw nerves in NASCAR’s franchise model war. U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell’s closing remarks cut through the legal sparring.

Judge Kenneth Bell Blasts Legal ‘Arsonists’ in Fiery Courtroom 23XI vs. NASCAR Battle

After nearly two hours of arguments over financial secrecy, Bell’s frustration erupted. “I am amazed at the effort going into burning this house down over everybody’s heads,” Judge Bell declared. “But I’m the fire marshal and I will be here in December if need be.”

The “house” refers to NASCAR itself. Teams fear revealing driver salaries, sponsorship deals, and manufacturer payments would cripple their operations. Attorney Adam Ross argued NASCAR’s demand for 11 years of records crossed a red line.

“It would be absolutely devastating to these race teams if their competitors were able to find out sponsorships on the cars, driver salaries, and all revenue streams,” Ross said. “It cannot make its way into the public realm. … NASCAR has gone a step too far.”

NASCAR claims it needs the data to counter 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports’ antitrust lawsuit alleging economic unfairness. Yet Bell questioned the scope, asking NASCAR’s attorney, “Why is not enough to know it costs X to run a car?”

Anonymized Compromise Fails to Douse Flames of Distrust Within NASCAR Teams

In a partial victory for NASCAR teams, Bell ordered limited disclosure through a neutral accountant. Organizations must provide anonymized per-car averages for revenue, costs, and profits since 2014, far narrower than NASCAR’s original subpoena. The data will hide team identities, accessible only to attorneys and experts.

But trust remains filled with tension. Ross emphasized teams feel “torn to pieces” by NASCAR’s request, noting they compete directly for sponsors. He warned redactions wouldn’t prevent identification, and said, “This is the opposite of what they want – all the teams are torn to pieces that NASCAR wants them to disclose this information, and they don’t want to upset NASCAR.”

The hearing followed Bell’s refusal to dismiss NASCAR’s explosive counterclaim, labeling the teams (23XI and FRM) as an “illegal cartel” aiming at Jordan’s business manager, Curtis Polk, during charter negotiations.

NASCAR cited Polk’s alleged boycott threats and cited a quote from Benjamin Franklin to teams: “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”

“NASCAR knows it has no defense to the monopolization case so they have come up with this claim about joint negotiations, which they agreed to, never objected to, and now suddenly it’s an antitrust violation,” Jeffrey Kessler, an attorney representing the teams, said.

With a December trial date looming, teams face agonizing calculations. Protecting secrets risks judicial wrath. Disclosure could arm competitors, including NASCAR itself, which now owns teams.





Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

4 things to know heading into NASCAR weekend in Atlanta

HAMPTON, Ga. (WSPA) – It’s one of the most thrilling stops on the NASCAR schedule for both Xfinity and Cup Series drivers. Atlanta is home to some of the tightest finishes in NASCAR history, massive wrecks, and unpredictable outcomes. The newly named EchoPark Speedway, formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway, is known for its unpredictability. Here are […]

Published

on


HAMPTON, Ga. (WSPA) – It’s one of the most thrilling stops on the NASCAR schedule for both Xfinity and Cup Series drivers.

Atlanta is home to some of the tightest finishes in NASCAR history, massive wrecks, and unpredictable outcomes.

The newly named EchoPark Speedway, formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway, is known for its unpredictability. Here are four things to look for this weekend.

Historical Home Track Success

One driver has historically had great success at the track. Look for Xfinity Series driver, and Georgia native, Austin Hill to maintain his home track dominance.

Hill claimed victory in the February race at Atlanta, marking his third straight win and fifth overall at the track. Some other drivers said the 21 car is the one to beat.

Austin Hill climbs out of his car in Victory Lane after winning the Xfinity Series race on February 22, 2025 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. (Courtesy: NASCAR, Chris Graythen with Getty Images)

“We have a pretty good idea of what we’re going to bring to the track and, you know, shout out to Joe Gibbs Racing’s motor department. They’ve helped us here these last couple of weeks making our motor program a little bit better to get closer to battle that 21 car. He’s always the one that we see that’s fast at this style of race tracks,” said Brandon Jones, NASCAR Xfinity Series driver.

The Drafting Dynamics

Wins in Atlanta don’t come easy, which leads us to our second focus of the weekend: the drafting dynamics.

Since its track reconfiguration in 2022, Atlanta features 28-degree banks and narrow superspeedway-style racing. It’s setting up what’s expected to be a weekend of action under the lights.

Recent NASCAR Cup Series races at Atlanta have delivered dramatic finishes, which include Daniel Suarez’s 0.003-second win in 2024 and Christopher Bell’s last-lap overtime pass in 2025.

As the sun goes down, the conditions are expected to change, including the temperature on track, which makes execution and pit stops elements that can make or break a race.
Three-time Cup Series Champion Joey Logano will look to lock up another win at the track.

“We continue wanting to bring more to the record books and to our fans, our race team, our sponsors, and all that,” said Logano.

That factors into the importance of Cup qualifying, the first thing to look for.

Competitive Qualifying Session

Expect a fiercely competitive qualifying session Friday afternoon that will determine critical track positioning that will be needed to stay up front and avoid wrecks.

Cup Series driver Ryan Blaney won the spring pole in Atlanta at 170 mph.

Debut of Cup Series In-Season Challenge

Saturday marks the debut of the first-ever Cup Series in-season tournament.

It’s a NASCAR-style spin-off of March Madness. The first bracket round kicks off at EchoPark Speedway with 32 drivers battling for a $1 million prize over the next five races.

The field of drivers was set based on points through the Pocono race last week, and drivers were seeded based on performances at Michigan, Mexico City, and Pocono, according to NASCAR.

The race carries dual significance: traditional season points and knock-out tournament elimination. One bad day could eliminate even the top drivers from the million-dollar chase.

The green flag will drop for the Xfinity Series Focused Health 250 on Friday night at 7:30 p.m. EST on CW and the Cup Series Quaker State 400 will follow Saturday night at 7 p.m. Eastern.



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

Auto Parts Supplier, My Auto Store, Backs Boyd for Back Half of Season – Speedway Digest

Spencer Boyd announced today that My Auto Store has signed on to be a sponsor for the remainder of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season. Their marketing campaign will be highlighted with a primary paint scheme at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in addition to associate races in the Northeast. My Auto Store is one […]

Published

on


Spencer Boyd announced today that My Auto Store has signed on to be a sponsor for the remainder of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season. Their marketing campaign will be highlighted with a primary paint scheme at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in addition to associate races in the Northeast.

My Auto Store is one of the largest OEM auto parts recyclers in the USA. With over 200,000 parts, My Auto Store has a variety of high-quality drivetrain, auto body panel and interior parts. Headquartered in Camden, NJ, My Auto Store offers FREE shipping in the US and a standard 6-month part only warranty.

Spencer Boyd, Driver and Co-Owner of the No. 76 Truck commented on the addition to the sponsor lineup, “Auto Parts and NASCAR is always a great match. The way My Auto Store does business is all about quality and fast & free shipping so as to deliver what you need. Every used part they have is thoroughly inspected and their engines and transmissions are cleaned with dry ice. I can support that approach!”

My Auto Store – Order OEM Replacement Auto Parts online including used axles, transfer cases, AC compressors, used engines, and used transmissions. The My Auto Store online inventory has thousands of used auto parts ready to be shipped right to your door for free. No matter what you are looking for all of our parts pass a 4-step quality control process before they are listed on our website – myautostore.com.

As this announcement comes out just prior to the Lime Rock Park race with Freedom Warranty as the primary sponsor, it is timely to note that My Auto Store is a preferred vendor in Freedom Warranty’s system as they provide repairs for warranty claims.

The team at My Auto Store wanted Indianapolis as their primary race because of the motorsports history that is ingrained in the city. “I love the beating and banging of short track racing at IRP,” added Spencer Boyd. “I’m looking forward to the race after the upcoming summer break in the schedule!”

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Race at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park is scheduled for Friday, July 25, 2025 at 7:00pm CT. Catch the action in person with tickets still available or on TV live on FS1.

Spencer Boyd PR



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

NASCAR part of legal fight | News, Sports, Jobs

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A federal judge has 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. U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell says the information will allow NASCAR to have “much of the […]

Published

on


CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A federal judge has 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.

U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell says the information will allow NASCAR to have “much of the arguably relevant substance of the requested information” while still protecting private details.

The teams will provide only top-line data — total revenue, total costs, and net profits and losses — dating to 2014.

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 Michael Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports, owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins.

Elsewhere in sports:

n The Trump administration says California must change its policies allowing transgender girls to compete on sports teams consistent with their gender identity. The U.S. Education Department says the policies violate a federal law banning sex discrimination in education. U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon says California could lose federal funding if it does not comply. But the state says all students should have the opportunity to play. The issue garnered renewed attention in California after a trans athlete recently participated in the state high school track and field championship. The sports governing body running the meet allowed more girls to participate and medal in events in which the trans athlete was competing.

The Associated Press



Link

Continue Reading

Motorsports

NASCAR in-season tournament: A look at first-round matchups for Elliott, Bowman, Larson and Byron at Atlanta

CONCORD N.C. – The upcoming race at Atlanta Motor Speedway marks the first of five races for the NASCAR In-Season Challenge with 32 drivers competing head-to-head for a $1 million prize. The single elimination, bracket-style event will take place at five tracks over the next five weeks. The first being Atlanta Motor Speedway, followed by the Chicago Street […]

Published

on


CONCORD N.C. – The upcoming race at Atlanta Motor Speedway marks the first of five races for the NASCAR In-Season Challenge with 32 drivers competing head-to-head for a $1 million prize.

The single elimination, bracket-style event will take place at five tracks over the next five weeks. The first being Atlanta Motor Speedway, followed by the Chicago Street Course, Sonoma Raceway, Dover Motor Speedway and ending at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. 

Hendrick Motorsports has found success at all five venues, especially Atlanta. The organization boasts the most wins of any team at Atlanta with 17 trips to victory lane and also has the most top fives (67), the most top 10s (106) and the most laps led (3,690). 

Among Hendrick Motorsports’ current roster of drivers, William Byron has gone to victory lane twice at Atlanta, while Chase Elliott also has a victory at his home track.  

RELATED: NASCAR in season tournament matchups

This week’s race is scheduled for a 7 p.m. green flag on Saturday night. 

With the seeding completed, let’s see how the four Hendrick Motorsports drivers have fared at Atlanta going into race weekend: 

Chase Elliott

Chase Elliott is the highest-seeded Hendrick Motorsports driver, entering as the fifth seed. He will go up against Austin Dillon, the 28th seed, this weekend.

Hailing from Dawsonville, Georgia, Elliott will look to impress the home crowd. He nabbed a win in the 2022 summer race and along with that achievement, has garnered two top fives, eight top 10s and has led 164 laps at the 1.54-mile quad-oval. 

Since a reconfiguration ahead of the 2022 season, Atlanta, now a drafting track, has created chaos an unpredictability for drivers in the field. For Elliott however, neither the venue nor the in-season tournament has affected his mentality going into race weekend.

RELATED: New look for No. 9: See Chase Elliott’s colors for Atlanta

The No. 9 team performs a pit stop during a 2024 race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

“If we are doing our job, that’s going to take care of itself,” Elliott said. “My mindset is to go out and try and win the race on a weekly basis.”

Elliott has outraced Dillon in 86 in 118 races in the Next Gen Era (2022-present) and 14 times at drafting tracks. 

Here’s a look at Elliott’s history at Atlanta:

Chase Elliott averages, statistics at Atlanta

Starts: 13
Wins: 1
Poles: 0
Top fives: 2
Top 10s: 8
Laps led: 164
Average start: 14.2
Average finish: 12.2

Alex Bowman 

Alex Bowman is seeded eighth and he will be facing the 25th seed, Joey Logano. 

Logano’s recent numbers at Atlanta since its reconfiguration are impressive, Bowman may have an edge over his opponent when looking beneath the surface. 

Bowman has shown remarkable consistency in drafting/superspeedway races. He was up front for a majority of the race at Atlanta earlier this spring, leading six laps and overtaking Logano for the lead at one point. A crash not of his own doing damaged the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet, but despite the setback, Bowman and the No. 48 team got back out on track. 

Bowman has six top 10s in the last 11 races at drafting tracks. Since the start of the 2024 season, he is ranked third of all drivers in points at drafting tracks and leads all drivers in laps without a win at 132. He has finished better than Logano in three of the last five races at drafting tracks.

RELATED: Check out the paint schemes for Atlanta

Even though Atlanta is lumped into a set of wildcard tracks, Bowman has found success there, with three top fives and four top 10s. 

Coming off a 11th-place run at Pocono Raceway, Bowman is sure to use that momentum to navigate toward the front of the pack at Atlanta. 

Here is an overlook of Bowman’s statistics in the Peach State:

Alex Bowman averages, statistics at Atlanta

Starts: 14
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Top fives: 3
Top 10s: 4
Laps led: 11
Average start: 18.3
Average finish: 18.0

Kyle Larson

Coming off a seventh-place run at Pocono and with the lead in the NASCAR Cup Series playoff standings, Kyle Larson looks to convert that push into a win on Sunday. Seeded 10th, his opponent is Tyler Reddick who is seeded 23rd. 

Larson seems to be rewriting the narrative of his relationship to drafting tracks. His recent run at such facilities has proven that he can master pack racing that Atlanta Motor Speedway will bring this Saturday night.

Larson finished third at Atlanta in the spring and second at Talladega Superspeedway this year. He has finished higher than Reddick in three of the last five drafting races and has beaten his opponent 71-53 in the Next Gen era. He looks to take that momentum and carry it into this weekend’s race along with some impressive statistics.

RELATED: From Winner to Champion, Part 5: Gordon vs. Earnhardt, ‘The rivalry was real’

The No. 5 HendrickCars.com driver has three top fives, five top 10s and an average starting position of 8.9 at the track. Larson is looking forward to the tournament. 

“I like the concept of the in-season bracket challenge, I feel like it’s a race within the race,” Larson said. “This is something you pay attention to and with money and a trophy on the line, we all want to win.”

Watch out for Kyle Larson this Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway:

Kyle Larson averages, statistics at Atlanta

Starts: 15
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Top fives: 3
Top 10s: 5
Laps led: 452
Average start: 8.9
Average finish: 19.0

William Byron

Even though he is seeded 18th, William Byron is still the atop the NASCAR Cup Series points standings. He sits 54 markers above second-place Larson and in the opening round of the in-season tournament, will battle with Ryan Preece, who holds the 15th seed.

Since the 2022 season, the two-time Daytona 500 champion has finished higher than Preece in 12 out of 15 drafting races. He also has beaten his opponent in 10 of 17 events in 2025. 

At Alanta, Byron is well acquainted with the winner’s circle, parking his No. 24 Chevrolet on the checkered floor twice in the Next Gen era (spring 2022, summer 2023). Along with his success, he has two top fives, four top 10 and 181 laps led in Georgia. 

RELATED: All-Pro Auto Reconditioning becomes primary sponsor of NASCAR points leader William Byron

While the next four races following this weekend are challenging, Byron looks to put in as much effort as possible to win each event, extend his points lead and set himself up to win the prize money. 

“Those are decent tracks for us, but they are also tracks that we could use some work at too. Atlanta we’ve has success at, but it also has an unknown element to it,” Byron said. “The summer has been a bit tough for us in the past, so I know we’re putting focus into those this year.”

Here is an overview of how he’s done at the track in the next gen era:

William Byron averages, statistics at Atlanta

Starts: 12
Wins: 2
Poles: 0
Top fives: 2
Top 10s: 4
Laps led: 181
Average start: 14.8
Average finish: 17.8

NASCAR in season tournament bracket

  • Matchup 1 – Denny Hamlin (1) vs. Ty Dillon (32)
  • Matchup 2 – Kyle Busch (16) vs. Brad Keselowski (17)
  • Matchup 3 – Bubba Wallace (9) vs. Daniel Suarez (24)
  • Matchup 4 – Alex Bowman (8) vs. Joey Logano (25)
  • Matchup 5 – Christopher Bell (4) vs. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (29)
  • Matchup 6 – Ross Chastain (13) vs. Erik Jones (20)
  • Matchup 7 – John Hunter Nemechek (12) vs. Josh Berry (21)
  • Matchup 8 – Chase Elliott (5) vs. Austin Dillon (28)
  • Matchup 9 – Chase Briscoe (2) vs. Noah Gragson (31)
  • Matchup 10 – Ryan Preece (15) vs. William Byron (18)
  • Matchup 11 – Kyle Larson (10) vs. Tyler Reddick (23)
  • Matchup 12 – Ryan Blaney (7) vs. Carson Hocevar (26)
  • Matchup 13 – Chris Buescher (3) vs. Todd Gilliland (30)
  • Matchup 14 – Zane Smith (14) vs. Austin Cindric (19)
  • Matchup 15 – Michael McDowell (11) vs. AJ Allmendinger (22)
  • Matchup 16 – Ty Gibbs (6) vs. Justin Haley (27)

Where is NASCAR racing this weekend?

The ARCA Series and the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series are both at Lime Rock Park. The NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series will race at Atlanta Motor Speedway. 

What channel is the NASCAR race on today?

(All times listed in eastern time)

Friday, June 27
  • 1:05 p.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series practice, FS2
  • 3 – Xfinity Series qualifying, CW
  • 5:05 – Cup Series qualifying, truTV
  • 7:30 – Xfinity Series race, CW
Saturday, June 28
  • 9:30 a.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series qualifying, FS1
  • 1 p.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race, FOX
  • 4 – ARCA race, FS2
  • 7 – Cup Series race, TNT 



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending