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Hughes Breaks Through for First INDY NXT Victory at IMS – Speedway Digest

Rookie Lochie Hughes led all 35 laps of the Indianapolis Grand Prix Race 1 to earn his first career INDY NXT by Firestone victory on Friday on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. 2024 USF Pro 2000 champion Hughes, from Australia, drove his No. 26 McGinley Clinic/USF Pro Championship car fielded by Andretti Global to […]

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Rookie Lochie Hughes led all 35 laps of the Indianapolis Grand Prix Race 1 to earn his first career INDY NXT by Firestone victory on Friday on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.

2024 USF Pro 2000 champion Hughes, from Australia, drove his No. 26 McGinley Clinic/USF Pro Championship car fielded by Andretti Global to victory by .7229 of a second over the No. 76 HMD Motorsports car of veteran Caio Collet.

SEE: Race Results

“This is an awesome weekend so far,” Hughes said. “I can’t thank the whole team enough. It’s been a tough jump to this series. It’s a big step from what I was in, so I’ve been playing catch-up for a while.

“It’s nice to finally get a win, especially around here. What a day. My parents are here, as well, this weekend, and they’re not usually here, so I think it’s the first time they’ll see me win in a long time because they don’t come over (to America) much. Pretty cool.”

Veteran Myles Rowe finished a career-best third in the No. 99 Abel/Force Indy machine. Callum Hedge (No. 17 Abel Motorsports) and Salvador de Alba (No. 27 Grupo Indi of Andretti Global) rounded out the top five.

Hughes started from the pole and opened a 1.6813-second lead before a caution on Lap 10 when Juan Manuel Correa and Niels Koolen went off course in Turn 1. Hughes then led the field to green on the Lap 12 restart and quickly built a 2.3395-second advantage by the halfway mark on Lap 18. His lead blossomed to 2.6693 seconds before teammate James Roe crashed in Turn 14 on Lap 29, collecting 16-year-old Nikita Johnson and triggering the second and final caution of the race.

Hughes kept the lead on a restart, this time on Lap 31, and held off Collet for victory. Andretti Global has won 12 of the last 14 INDY NXT by Firestone races, dating back to Race 2 of last year’s Indianapolis race weekend.

“I was pretty annoyed when I kept seeing the yellow come out,” Hughes said. “I was just trying to get a good jump off the last corner there and brake late into (Turn) 1 and make sure I don’t get passed.”

Hughes pulled to within three points of series leader and Andretti Global teammate Dennis Hauger with the victory. Hauger, who won the first two races of the season, finished eighth in the No. 28 Rental Group car.

Hauger started second but had contact with Hedge in Turn 1 on the opening lap, forcing his car off track. He returned to the racetrack last in the 21-car field. He steadily climbed through the day and was in 13th at the first caution and eighth by the second yellow.

Race 2 of the doubleheader, another 35-lap contest, starts at 1 p.m. ET Saturday on FS1, the FOX Sports app and the INDYCAR Radio Network. Hughes and Hauger once again will share the front row, with Hughes on the pole.

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Corey LaJoie to make nine NASCAR Truck Series starts with Spire Motorsports

Surprise, surprise! Corey LaJoie is going to make nine NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts for the remainder of the 2025 season. He is joining up with his old Cup Series organization, Spire Motorsports. First up, this weekend at Michigan International Speedway. Corey LaJoie will pilot the No. 07 Chevy Silverado for Spire. He has races […]

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Surprise, surprise! Corey LaJoie is going to make nine NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts for the remainder of the 2025 season. He is joining up with his old Cup Series organization, Spire Motorsports. First up, this weekend at Michigan International Speedway.

Corey LaJoie will pilot the No. 07 Chevy Silverado for Spire. He has races lined up for Michigan, Richmond, Darlington, Bristol, New Hampshire, Charlotte, Talladega, Martinsville, and Phoenix.

This will put LaJoie in the majority of the final 13 races of the season. He will be in the final two races of the year at Martinsville and Phoenix. Given his comments at the beginning of the year about racing in Truck or Xfinity, this is a good thing to see. I’m sure working for Prime Video has only made him want to race even more.

Corey LaJoie reportedly passed up the No. 19 truck of McAnally-Hilgemann Racing. Daniel Hemric is in that truck this season and has a win at Martinsville to show for it this year. Good on Corey, he should be able to run well and show that he is still a capable race car driver for a team out there somewhere.

“I’m looking forward to getting back in the seat and chasing some NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series wins,” said LaJoie in a team press release. “I put in a lot of work in the early days to help shape Spire Motorsports, and I still have some friends that have been there since day one, so it’ll be good to see them.

“The No. 07 team has been bringing some fast trucks to the track this year and are looking for a spot in the owner’s playoffs. It’ll be nice to have some consistency with the team to get acclimated to these vehicles, chase some wins, and hopefully, a Craftsman Truck Series owner’s championship.”

So, there you have it. While he has been out of a NASCAR race car since the Cup Series race at Bristol, he looks ready to get back in the seat. He also raced at Daytona and Atlanta earlier this year. All three of those races came with Rick Ware Racing and Ford. However, he’s back in a Chevy and back with Spire now.

This year has been a little different for Spire in the Truck Series. They haven’t had that same speed that they have had in the past. Of course, this organization’s Truck program is just the leftovers from Kyle Busch Motorsports. Then again, at this point, they have put in their own program and personnel. So, that’s not entirely fair to say.

Earlier this year, Kyle Larson earned a win at Homestead in the No. 07 truck that Corey LaJoie will drive. He was P2 at Bristol. William Byron earned a P2 finish at Kansas and Kyle Busch put the truck in P9 at North Wilkesboro.

Michael McDowell and Justin Haley are the other Cup Series drivers to compete in the No. 07 truck in 2025. Other drivers this season include Sammy Smith, Nick Sanchez, and B.J. McLeod.

Spire Motorsports picked up a win at Nashville with a full-time Truck Series driver for the first time this season. Rajah Caruth and the No. 71 team put together an excellent race to win in Music City. Even if it is just the Truck Series, Corey LaJoie will have a lot of pressure to perform.



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Ryan Blaney Wins in Music City – Speedway Digest

Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney won Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway, marking his first win of the 2025 season and the 14th of his NASCAR Cup Series career. This victory also represents Ford’s 745th all-time win in NASCAR Cup Series history and the 104th Cup Series triumph for Team Penske with Ford. “Congratulations to […]

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Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney won Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway, marking his first win of the 2025 season and the 14th of his NASCAR Cup Series career. This victory also represents Ford’s 745th all-time win in NASCAR Cup Series history and the 104th Cup Series triumph for Team Penske with Ford.

“Congratulations to Roger, Michael, Jonathan, Ryan, and everyone at Team Penske on the race win at Nashville Superspeedway,” said Doug Yates, President and CEO of Roush Yates Engines. “It was an impressive performance by the entire No. 12 Ford Mustang Team —executing race strategy, pit performance, and speed throughout the race. We’re honored to provide the horsepower behind another hard-fought victory.”

“We drove up to seventh there in the first stage, and I thought two tires were great. I thought my car was really good, and that really set us up for the rest of the race, so great job by him (Jonathan Hassler), as always, all the 12 boys, appreciate what they do pit crew was great. Appreciate Menard’s, Cardell, Ford, Ford Motor Company, Roush Yates Engines, Discount Tire, Wabash, Worth, Snap-on, DEX Imaging, Body Armour, Advance Auto Parts, everything what they do. It’s nice that it’s finally happening, so I’m ready to go celebrate,” commented Blaney.

Three Ford Performance drivers rolled off from the top 10 to start Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway: Brad Keselowski (P6) and Chris Buescher (P10) from RFK Racing, and Joey Logano (P9) from Team Penske. The opening stage featured a blend of strategy and long-run speed as drivers settled into the slick concrete surface. The field stayed tightly packed with clean, competitive racing. Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano earned stage points, finishing Stage 1 in seventh and ninth, respectively. Blaney took command in Stage 2, showing strong pace during extended green-flag runs. Despite several lead changes during pit cycles, he led the most laps and secured the Stage 2 win. Four Ford drivers finished Stage 2 inside the top 10: Blaney (P1), Logano (P4), Austin Cindric (P6), and Josh Berry (P9). In the final stage, Blaney maintained control through multiple restarts, managing his tires and track position and closed out a dominant performance—leading a race-high 139 of 300 laps to take the checkered flag 2.830 seconds ahead of second place Carson Hocevar.
Team Penske’s Joey Logano finished the race in P4.

The Xfinity Series also raced at Nashville Superspeedway on Saturday, where Haas Factory Team’s Sam Mayer finished in P3 and Sheldon Creed finished in P4.

The Xfinity Series takes a one-week break while the Cup Series travels to Brooklyn, Michigan this week and races at Michigan International Speedway.

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Ryan Blaney breaks through for first win of 2025

Music City brought the action this weekend. Let’s get into the NASCAR Power Rankings and who is the best of the best this week. There has been a bit of movement lately. A few teams that were really strong early on this year and then fell back in recent weeks found speed again. There were […]

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Music City brought the action this weekend. Let’s get into the NASCAR Power Rankings and who is the best of the best this week. There has been a bit of movement lately. A few teams that were really strong early on this year and then fell back in recent weeks found speed again.

There were issues with passing. However, that was a consistent theme throughout the week, not just a Sunday night thing. Corey Heim lamented that passing was too difficult at the front of the field to fully make a move on Rajah Caruth for the win. Connor Zilisch said much of the same about chasing Justin Allgaier in the Xfinity Series.

The NASCAR Power Rankings have changed, and we are ready to crown a new leader after this week. I’m sure you know who I’m talking about.

1. Ryan Blaney – Team Penske (+3)

Ryan Blaney had a great night at Nashville. He won a stage, led the most laps, and ended up winning the race. Jonathan Hassler called a great race from the pit box, and it paid off in the end. Blaney is the top driver in the NASCAR Power Rankings as a result.

Team Penske has all four cars, including Josh Berry, in the winner’s column this season. As a result, they could be the favorites to win the championship for a fourth straight season.

2. William Byron – Hendrick Motorsports (-)

I really liked what I saw from William Byron and his ability to bounce back after the disappointment of Charlotte a week ago. He finished P5 by the end of the race, but was really fast all night long.

Byron needed a few things to go differently on pit road and on the track in order to contend for the win. However, his battle with Blaney and Denny Hamlin in Stage 2 was really fun to watch and made the race

3. Christopher Bell – Joe Gibbs Racing (-2)

Christopher Bell
Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

After getting into the wall, Christopher Bell rallied to a P10 finish. He was determined to drive back through the field and did just that.

Four straight top-10 finishes and seven in the last eight races. Bell is on the verge of winning another race very soon. Bell drops from the top spot in the NASCAR Power Rankings, but he will likely be back.

4. Kyle Larson – Hendrick Motorsports (-1)

A terribly slow car in qualifying, Kyle Larson had to fight back all day. He dropped down to like 36th at one point and it looked like he was going to be a non-factor all day.

Avoiding getting lapped in Stage 1 definitely helped him rally back. P8 on the day, but he drops for being too slow in qualifying and again, almost getting lapped.

5. Denny Hamlin – Joe Gibbs Racing (+2)

Finally, a race where Denny Hamlin puts it all together again. P3 and a stage win, as well as his third fastest lap award of the season. I believe he leads the series in that stat at this point in the season.

Hamlin is expecting a baby boy any day now. He had Ryan Truex on standby this weekend in case he needed to leave for the birth of his child. Still, he stayed focused and put up his best run since Bristol.

6. Ross Chastain – Trackhouse Racing (-1)

Ross Chastain
Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

This weekend, Ross Chastain was better in qualifying. However, he faded late in the Nashville race and out of the top-10. That’s why he drops one spot in the NASCAR Power Rankings.

Trackhouse Racing is giving him faster cars on Saturdays. That will only help him to win in the future as we enter the second half of the regular season.

7. Chase Elliott – Hendrick Motorsports (-1)

I really do think we are seeing major issues with Chase Elliott, but his consistent top-20 finishes are hiding it. Elliott faded to P15 this week and while it is great that he held onto that streak, what good is it if he can’t win races?

I’m not sure if Elliott can get more out of the cars that he is being given or if Alan Gustafson has to do something differently. Either way, without a points win this year, this team isn’t going to compete for a championship.

8. Joey Logano – Team Penske (+1)

Whenever Joey Logano is happy after a race he didn’t win, you have to be wondering what he is hiding. Logano was all smiles after his P4 finish. He’s really starting to ride this momentum after the win at Texas.

Keep an eye on Logano, he was really strong on Sunday, but almost quietly so. He didn’t defend his Nashville win from a year ago, but walks away with another top-five finish.

9. Chase Briscoe – Joe Gibbs Racing (-1)

Chase Briscoe
Chase Briscoe (Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images)

I really like what Chase Briscoe is doing lately. While he faded back to P17 on Sunday, he won his second straight pole award of the year. He leads the Cup Series in poles, meaning the speed is there.

Briscoe has to start finishing these races better. He is another driver that I won’t be shocked to see in Victory Lane in the next month or so.

10. Carson Hocevar – Spire Motorsports (NR)

After pissing off Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and finishing P2 for the second time this season, I have to put Carson Hocevar in the NASCAR Power Rankings. Spire Motorsports has a star on their hands.

Hocevar was not going to apologize for his actions on Sunday. Will that come back to bite him? Maybe.



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NASCAR’s new $1M In-season Challenge starts with drivers focused more on winning races

LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — Bubba Wallace sees NASCAR having all the momentum possible right now with different media partners. Perfect… LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — Bubba Wallace sees NASCAR having all the momentum possible right now with different media partners. Perfect timing then for NASCAR’s “In-season Challenge” to debut, right? Well, Wallace forgot that was about […]

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LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — Bubba Wallace sees NASCAR having all the momentum possible right now with different media partners. Perfect…

LEBANON, Tenn. (AP) — Bubba Wallace sees NASCAR having all the momentum possible right now with different media partners.

Perfect timing then for NASCAR’s “In-season Challenge” to debut, right?

Well, Wallace forgot that was about to debut.

“For me to forget about it and remember how exciting it was when they announced, I think it’s going to be big for the fans to tune in and and give them a little bit more … you’re just invested more,” Wallace said.

Kyle Larson just tried his latest attempt at “the Double” of the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600. Count him among those who didn’t realize NASCAR’s new in-season competition had its field of 32 set after Sunday night’s Cup Series race at the Nashville Superspeedway.

“I just really haven’t seen anything promoted about it, so I think it’s easy to forget about it,” Larson said.

NASCAR announced this new in-season competition in May 2024, so drivers can be forgiven for being focused on the second half of the season.

The format is simple: 32 drivers race for seeding over the next three races starting at Michigan on Sunday and concluding at Pocono on June 22. Drivers are seeded by their best finish for the five-race competition starting at Atlanta.

Then it goes to single elimination with the field cut to 16 at Chicago, eight at Sonoma, four at Dover and the final two at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The winner gets $1 million, and that does get drivers’ attention as part of the new media rights deal that includes TNT.

“It’s going to be something fun that you pay attention to, and there’s good money on the line,” said Larson, the 2021 Cup Series champ. “So, you’ve just got to be really consistent throughout.”

Chris Buescher of RFK Racing is among those who didn’t realize this challenge is starting. He needs race victories after losing points for a penalty at Kansas in May. The prize is nice.

“That’s real money,” Buescher said. “But I don’t want that to change how we go to the race track. We need to figure out how to win races. There’s a lot more than that on the line at the end of the year.”

Three-time Cup Series champ Joey Logano compared this event’s prize to the money up for grabs in the All-Star Race and this new competition like a stage win.

“This is a little longer thing, but it’s a race within the race,” Logano said. “So you’re not willing to give up a lot to do that, right?”

Denny Hamlin was excited when the In-season Challenge was first announced. Then he saw the courses for this competition, and his enthusiasm dimmed with the number of road courses included.

“Truthfully, we’re going to get pretty lucky or have such a good draw that just things kind of work out,” Hamlin said. “I wish it was more conventional ovals, but I think that’s just the way the schedule works out. And it’s unfortunately not probably my prime part of the season.”

Brad Keselowski and his No. 6 Ford for RFK Racing went into Nashville at 32 — right on the line to be included in that chase for seeding. He hadn’t given the competition much thought focused on this season. But he thinks it will be fun once it starts.

“It’s good for the sport, good for our fans and it’s a competition,” Keselowski said. “If there’s competition, we want to win it. But that said, I think our heads down on one week at a time, in some ways one day at a time. … And it’s hard to look further ahead than that.”

Team Penske all set for the playoffs

With Ryan Blaney’s first victory of the season at Nashville Superspeedway, Team Penske now has its three drivers qualified for the NASCAR Cup playoffs even with Nashville the first race of the second half of this year.

Blaney, who hadn’t won since November, joined Austin Cindric, who won at Talladega, and three-time Cup Series champ Joey Logano, a winner at Texas. Josh Berry, whose Wood Brothers Racing team has a relationship with Team Penske, also won at Las Vegas.

Michael Nelson, president of Team Penske’s NASCAR operations, said it was nice to have that pressure off all the teams.

“It’s obviously pretty awesome to have a little bit of that pressure off for the guys,” Nelson said. “And again … it gives you a chance to go out and take some chances here and there and try to rack up a bunch of wins. So now we’re grateful to be at this point with our cars this time of year.”

Careful there Hocevar

Carson Hocevar matched his career-best finish driving from 26th to second at Nashville. The 22-year-old driver in his second Cup Series season with Spire Motorsports ticked off Ricky Stenhouse Jr. with his aggressive style.

Hocevar clipped Stenhouse on Lap 106 of 300, sending him into the wall and out of the race. Stenhouse said Hocevar was overly aggressive and will talk to the young driver. Just not after the race.

“No,” Stenhouse said, “that costs too much money.”

___

AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

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© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.



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Lauri Eberhart Exits Friends of Laguna Seca CEO Role | News

Friends of Laguna Seca and CEO Lauri Eberhart have parted ways. The veteran motorsports executive had been in the newly created position for just over a year. An announcement from the nonprofit organization that operates Laguna Seca Recreation Area and its famed WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca indicates that Eberhart will return to the private sector. […]

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Friends of Laguna Seca and CEO Lauri Eberhart have parted ways. The veteran motorsports executive had been in the newly created position for just over a year.

An announcement from the nonprofit organization that operates Laguna Seca Recreation Area and its famed WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca indicates that Eberhart will return to the private sector. A powerful figure in motorsports, she is founder of a major sports and entertainment law firm and served as legal counsel for major race tracks.

In the statement, the FLS board credits Eberhart with updating the facility’s business model, restructuring its management and organizing the financial structure. The nonprofit has a 55-year concession agreement with Monterey County to operate the track, with certain goals to be met over that timeline.

Her last day was Friday, May 30.

Mel Harder, named in March of this year as president and general manager, will oversee day-to-day operations. Before joining FLS, Harder served as team manager for Chip Ganassi Racing.



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Ram Could Return to NASCAR With YouTube Celebrity Cleetus McFarland: Report

Get The Drive’s daily newsletter The latest car news, reviews, and features. Every few months, the NASCAR rumor mill churns up some hearsay claiming that Dodge and/or Ram is returning to stock car racing. Said rumors occasionally gain real traction when someone important comments on them, like NASCAR President Steve Phelps did a few years […]

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Every few months, the NASCAR rumor mill churns up some hearsay claiming that Dodge and/or Ram is returning to stock car racing. Said rumors occasionally gain real traction when someone important comments on them, like NASCAR President Steve Phelps did a few years back. Now, there’s another piece of potential news claiming Ram could soon re-enter the Craftsman Truck Series with hugely popular YouTuber Cleetus McFarland behind the wheel. Here’s why it might be legit.

The report comes from Adam Stern at Sports Business Journal, who is especially well-sourced when it comes to NASCAR. He published the story on Sunday claiming that McFarland, whose real name is Garrett Mitchell, could be a key piece of the puzzle for Ram’s NASCAR efforts come 2026. Stern cites “four people familiar with the matter and a document seen by SBJ” as his sources, and beyond that, the move would make a good deal of sense.

Ram is a lot like Dodge in the sense that manly marketing is everything to its brand image. Whether it’s talking about “premature electrification” in high-value Super Bowl ads or playing up the ever-ballooning machismo of truck ownership, its reputation is strong—for better and for worse. It wouldn’t be surprising to see Ram snag Mitchell, whose 4.4 million subscribers on YouTube triple NASCAR’s own viewership on that platform. Plus, he appeals to the core demographic of horsepower-hungry 20- and 30-somethings that really kinda like the idea of burnouts and Baja trucks alike.

Not only that, but Mitchell has some legit stock car racing experience. (Keyword: some.) As Stern and SBJ point out, Mitchell has made three ARCA starts so far with a pair of top-10 finishes to his credit. NASCAR made the most of that media opportunity last Sunday at Charlotte, where it dedicated a live stream to Mitchell’s in-car feed while also blasting out his post-race interview on every social channel it has. Neither Mitchell nor NASCAR is a dummy when it comes to this.

Still, it could be risky for Stellantis, Ram’s parent company, to bet so much on a relatively new driver. It’s in the middle of a CEO change as we speak, and you don’t need me to tell you that isn’t a sign of a thriving business.

The claim that Ram is seriously considering a NASCAR return isn’t unique to SBJ‘s latest story. Instead, a supposedly leaked dealer memo sparked a fresh batch of headlines saying as much back in March. Importantly, there hasn’t been any news since then saying those plans are off, and the idea that a new celebrity driver could lead the way seems to add credibility to it all. Either way, nothing has been officially announced yet, so we’ll just have to see what comes of this.

I’ll be poking around in the meantime.

Got a tip or question for the author? Contact them directly: caleb@thedrive.com

From running point on new car launch coverage to editing long-form features and reviews, Caleb does some of everything at The Drive. And he really, really loves trucks.




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