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Inside the chaotic Texas finish for a NASCAR Cup team that didn’t win but had reason to celebrate

Sitting 18th ahead of the overtime restart last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, a rough day was about to come to an end for Ty Dillon and his No. 10 Kaulig Racing team. “I was pouting pretty much in my head inside the car,” Dillon told NBC Sports this week. “We had so much opportunity […]

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Sitting 18th ahead of the overtime restart last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, a rough day was about to come to an end for Ty Dillon and his No. 10 Kaulig Racing team.

“I was pouting pretty much in my head inside the car,” Dillon told NBC Sports this week. “We had so much opportunity for this day to be a strong day. Now we’re back to … 18th on this last restart. Man, that’s not going to feel good if this is where we end up.”

But something special happened over the next minute of the race. By the time the checkered flag waved, there was celebratory screaming on Dillon’s radio channel.

The only other team with such excitement on its radio was winner Joey Logano’s team. Many of the other team radio channels were filled with apologies, attaboys or, in some cases, silence after the race.

Ty Dillon stackup on restart.gif

As the field came to the green flag to begin overtime, disaster nearly struck Dillon.

The outside line — where Dillon was in the ninth row — got bunched coming to the restart zone. Cars hit the brakes. Riley Herbst, restarting in the row ahead of Dillon slowed to avoid slamming the car in front of him.

With what had happened to Dillon and his team in recent weeks, it wouldn’t have been surprising if he had ran into the back of Herbst’s car and been unable to continue.

The previous two races — Bristol and Talladega — proved painful for the team. Dillon ran out of fuel twice at Bristol, including a few laps before the finish. He was set to score his first top-10 finish of the season — and possibly a top-five finish after two cars were disqualified — when he ran out of fuel on the final lap at Talladega.

Now this, the field stacking up on the restart.

“I didn’t hit him,” Dillon said of Herbst. “Luckily, I got stopped. Sometimes when that happens, it kills your momentum. The RPMs drop out and you never get going. Luckily, I was able to keep the RPMs up … and we were able to keep the momentum of the run.”

Dillon’s charge was about to begin.

Ty Dillon 4 wide TX.gif

Cole Custer restarted behind Dillon and moved a lane up after crossing the start/finish line. Dillon mirrored Custer’s move to protect his spot.

“I knew the momentum (Custer) had behind me coming to the start/finish line, which helped me kind of maintain my speed,” Dillon said. “ … I see him going up, so I cover his nose. When I do, Riley hesitates up. I just got a little bit further and that puts me in the spot where, OK, now I can see clean track in front of me. Let’s make this thing happen.”

Entering Turn 1, Dillon heard spotter Joe White tell him: “Top of four. Top of four. Top of four.”

Dillon had three cars underneath him.

It was only about 30 laps earlier when he had one car underneath him entering Turn 1 and that nearly ruined his race.

Brad Keselowski drifted up the track and Dillon said he either got hit from behind or that the car behind was so close it disturbed the air on his car. Either way, Dillon drifted up the track, lost his momentum and fell from 13th to 27th in a few seconds.

That seemed to be it for Dillon, who had overcome a penalty for a crewmember over pit wall too soon on the team’s first pit stop at Lap 22. He ran 30th or worse for much of the next 100 laps. A two-tire pit stop helped him climb into the top 20 but obstacles continued.

A slow pit stop on Lap 221 dropped him from 10th to 18th. Getting forced up the track put him almost back to where he had been stuck earlier in the race.

“Frustration is setting in,” Dillon said, “because you climb this mountain three times already and now you’re running out of laps, you don’t really see how it’s going to get any better, but my team did a good job of keeping me in the game and that’s something we’ve been preaching to each other.”

But it almost got worse.

Ty Dillon exit Turns 2 TX.gif

In Turn 2, the message was the same to Dillon from his spotter. “Still top of four. You’ve got the momentum, though. Top of four.”

It was on the exit of Turn 2 that Carson Hocevar, running beside Ryan Preece, made contact with Preece, causing an accident that brought out the caution on Lap 238.

As Dillon exited the corner after the overtime restart, he had three cars to his inside.

But it’s what William Byron, running ahead of Dillon, did that made the difference between Dillon exiting that corner cleanly or crashing.

“The biggest thing that helps is when (Byron) slides down just a little bit in the middle of the corner,” Dillon said. “I’m able to attach air to the nose of my car, which keeps front grip in it. This whole time I’m trying to keep air on the front of my car to make sure my front tires have feeling in (them). … If (Byron) comes up into my lane in front of me, covers my nose, I’m done. I’m going to have to lift all the way out or probably hit the wall.”

With Byron staying a lane lower, Dillon squeezed out of Turn 2. By the time Dillon reached Turn 4, he had passed Zane Smith, Chris Buescher, Ty Gibbs, Justin Haley and Herbst, putting him 13th.

Ty Dillon beats Byron at the line TX.gif

Todd Gilliland and Byron engaged in a spirited duel ahead of Dillon on the final lap.

“I’m starting to expect maybe these two are going to crash in front of me,” Dillon said. “I need to be checked up. I kind of back my corner up (entering Turn 3) to get a big run, get some air back on my nose, and I think William gets tight over the bump (in Turn 3).”

Dillon was on the inside line, while Byron ran a lane up. Dillon got his car underneath Byron’s car as they headed for the checkered flag.

“I knew he had some splitter damage (from a pit road incident earlier),” Dillon said. “Then it was just a matter of using the air on his door (coming to the finish). We did not hit. There was no contact there, but it was super close.”

Dillon nipped Byron for 12th, triggering an excited and colorful celebration on the team’s radio.

“Nice … work man! P12! Come on!” crew chief Andrew Dickeson shouted on the radio.

“ … Yeah!” Dillon responded.

“What a … restart man,” White said on the radio.

“Way to go boys. That’s something to be proud of,” Dillon radioed.

A few days removed from that emotional moment, Dillon reflects on what the restart and even passing Byron, the points leader, meant.

“The thing about me beating William to the line there, it’s probably insignificant at the end of the day, it’s one point different that’s it … but for me it was a check on my list,” Dillon said. “OK, I feel confident in making that move for when it is for something super important.

“That was just another (element) added to the emotion at the end of the day because you have such an up-and-down day, you really want to leave with some positives.”

After he the finish, there were high-fives and fist bumps for the team.

“This is what we can do,” Dillon said. “And that’s kind of the conversations, like, ‘Hey, let’s remember this moment for the future. This is what we’re capable of in good situations.”





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NASCAR star Kyle Larson crashes for the second time in the lead-up to the Indy 500 – Action News Jax

INDIANAPOLIS — (AP) — NASCAR star Kyle Larson crashed for the second time in the lead-up to the Indianapolis 500 on Friday when he lost control of his Arrow McLaren entry and hit the wall in the final practice session before this weekend’s qualifying runs. The damage was relatively minor, though, and it only took […]

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INDIANAPOLIS — (AP) — NASCAR star Kyle Larson crashed for the second time in the lead-up to the Indianapolis 500 on Friday when he lost control of his Arrow McLaren entry and hit the wall in the final practice session before this weekend’s qualifying runs.

The damage was relatively minor, though, and it only took Larson’s team about an hour to make repairs to the front and rear of the car. That allowed him to get in some precious laps with about 30 minutes left in the 6-hour session.

Larson, who also crashed on April 24 during an open test at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, is taking his second shot at trying to complete “the Double” by running the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. Larson finished 18th in the rain-delayed 500 last year, but he never ran a lap in the NASCAR race in Charlotte when rain there ended the race early.

“Obviously it’s tricky. I spun,” Larson said after leaving the care center. “I don’t know. Kind of caught off guard a little bit there, but I think we’ll be fine. I tend to get over things pretty quickly. I know I spun but my balance felt pretty close to being good.”

Larson waited until there were about 90 minutes left in Friday’s practice, which was marked by high temperatures and gusty winds that made for treacherous conditions, before trying his first qualifying simulation. He wasn’t far into the run when his No. 17 car went skittering up the track, bumped nose-first into the wall and then spun around and hit it again.

The crash came several hours after Kyffin Simpson hit the wall hard and nearly flipped his car.

Larson’s damaged car was put on a hoist and taken to Gasoline Alley, where Arrow McLaren went to work fixing it. Along with the late laps he got Friday, the team will have an hour-long practice Saturday morning before qualifying begins at 11 a.m. EDT.

“I’m sure at this point, we’ll want to get out there and shake it down,” Larson said. “If not, you still get time to make a few runs tomorrow. The track conditions will be better and I’m sure we’ll pack a little extra downforce to be safe that first run, and get a run in. Not too worried about it.”

___

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





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Dale Earnhardt Jr. Shocked by $50M NASCAR Cost: “Hard for Me to Believe”

NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. claims that the version of the sport he once knew and grew up with has gone. Earnhardt Jr. has noted the staggering cost behind fielding a car in the Cup Series, which he explains starts at approximately $50 million to get the charter, arguing that it has “become […]

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NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. claims that the version of the sport he once knew and grew up with has gone.

Earnhardt Jr. has noted the staggering cost behind fielding a car in the Cup Series, which he explains starts at approximately $50 million to get the charter, arguing that it has “become this place where only people with that kind of money can play.”

During an appearance on the Harvick Happy Hour podcast (below), Earnhardt Jr. explained:

“I have been around long enough to remember that if you and I just woke up one day and said, ‘Man, we’re going to enter a Cup car in any race we want,’ we can go find us a car, find us a driver, get all the parts and go do it, right?

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. speaks onstage as SiriusXM and Dirty Mo Media broadcast from Daytona Speedway for the 2025 Daytona 500 on February 13, 2025 in Daytona Beach, Florida.

Meg Oliphant/Getty Images for SiriusXM

“Now, there’s some couple hoops. You’ve got to get licensed and got to enter the car, pay the money, the entry fee, all that good stuff. But it was pretty much an understandable challenge.

“Today, to just get out there and compete, you need that $50 million charter, and that charter is going to be $100 million and $150 million and $200 million — it’s going to go to the moon over the next several years.

“It was a good time to buy it 10 years ago. I regret that I didn’t. But it’s become this place where only people with that kind of money can play.”

Claiming that it is “hard” for him to believe the changes, Earnhardt Jr. continued:

“The world, the NASCAR that I knew, in terms of just being able to field the car and go race, doesn’t exist anymore. That’s hard for me to just believe, that we’re in that — for me to go run an open car isn’t realistic. It’s not realistic for anybody to do it every single week.”

Despite this, the 50-year-old former driver acknowledges that this is a great position for the sport to be in. He concluded:

“But while that is tough for me to stomach, it is incredibly great for the current people that are involved in the sport. Great for NASCAR, great for the France family, great for the owners and teams that have those charters that are appreciating year after year, hour after hour.

“They’re just going up. But for somebody who’s trying to get in? You can’t play unless you got a big entity behind you. Somebody with real cash.”



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NASCAR star Kyle Larson crashes for the second time in the lead-up to the Indy 500

By DAVE SKRETTA INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — NASCAR star Kyle Larson crashed for the second time in the lead-up to the Indianapolis 500 on Friday when he lost control of his Arrow McLaren entry and hit the wall in the final practice session before this weekend’s qualifying runs. The damage was relatively minor, though, and it […]

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By DAVE SKRETTA

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — NASCAR star Kyle Larson crashed for the second time in the lead-up to the Indianapolis 500 on Friday when he lost control of his Arrow McLaren entry and hit the wall in the final practice session before this weekend’s qualifying runs.

The damage was relatively minor, though, and it only took Larson’s team about an hour to make repairs to the front and rear of the car. That allowed him to get in some precious laps with about 30 minutes left in the 6-hour session.

Larson, who also crashed on April 24 during an open test at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, is taking his second shot at trying to complete “the Double” by running the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. Larson finished 18th in the rain-delayed 500 last year, but he never ran a lap in the NASCAR race in Charlotte when rain there ended the race early.

“Obviously it’s tricky. I spun,” Larson said after leaving the care center. “I don’t know. Kind of caught off guard a little bit there, but I think we’ll be fine. I tend to get over things pretty quickly. I know I spun but my balance felt pretty close to being good.”

Larson waited until there were about 90 minutes left in Friday’s practice, which was marked by high temperatures and gusty winds that made for treacherous conditions, before trying his first qualifying simulation. He wasn’t far into the run when his No. 17 car went skittering up the track, bumped nose-first into the wall and then spun around and hit it again.

The crash came several hours after Kyffin Simpson hit the wall hard and nearly flipped his car.

Larson’s damaged car was put on a hoist and taken to Gasoline Alley, where Arrow McLaren went to work fixing it. Along with the late laps he got Friday, the team will have an hour-long practice Saturday morning before qualifying begins at 11 a.m. EDT.

“I’m sure at this point, we’ll want to get out there and shake it down,” Larson said. “If not, you still get time to make a few runs tomorrow. The track conditions will be better and I’m sure we’ll pack a little extra downforce to be safe that first run, and get a run in. Not too worried about it.”

___

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





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Kyle Larson crashes on Turn 3 on Fast Friday – Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather | Indiana Traffic

SPEEDWAY, Ind. (WISH) — Kyle Larson went into the wall on Turn 3 on Fast Friday. Larson had both left tires below the white line of the track. He spun and the front of his car hit into the wall. Larson said he is OK after the crash. “Just got loose in 3,” Larson said. […]

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SPEEDWAY, Ind. (WISH) — Kyle Larson went into the wall on Turn 3 on Fast Friday.

Larson had both left tires below the white line of the track. He spun and the front of his car hit into the wall.

Larson said he is OK after the crash.

“Just got loose in 3,” Larson said. “Just kind of had a lot of front grip and just kind of swung the back around on me. Ended up spinning and getting into the wall a couple times. Yeah, bummer, but I think it didn’t look like too major damage I think as we quickly drove by the car. I’m sure we’ll be fine tomorrow.”

Larson was asked how he mentally resets after crashing.

“I race so often and I honestly crash a lot,” Larson said. “I feel like I get over things pretty quickly. I was happy right there that the speed didn’t really bother me. When you go from race trim to qualifying trim here, the boost feels like way more power and I was a bit nervous about that. It didn’t feel crazy to me. I like that the speed aspect didn’t scare me. You can deal with the crash.”

Larson was able to get back on the track before the end of practice on Fast Friday.

Larson is attempting to do “The Double,” racing in both the Indianapolis 500 and NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 in the same day. This is his second attempt. Larson qualified fifth for the 2024 Indianapolis 500 and finished in 18th.

Larson won the NASCAR Cup Series championship in 2021. He leads NASCAR in points in the 2025 season.

Qualification for the Indy 500 is on Saturday and Pole Day is on Sunday. The 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 is scheduled for Sunday, May 25.



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Worms Disrupt NASCAR: 1979 Holly Farms 400 Postponed – Speedway Digest

Editors Note: This is a multi-part series looking back on historical events at North Wilkesboro Speedway as the 2025 NASCAR All Star Race approaches NORTH WILKESBORO, NC – The North Wilkesboro Speedway was poised to host the 1979 Holly Farms 400, a key event in NASCAR’s Winston Cup Series, but an unusual natural phenomenon brought […]

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Editors Note: This is a multi-part series looking back on historical events at North Wilkesboro Speedway as the 2025 NASCAR All Star Race approaches

NORTH WILKESBORO, NC – The North Wilkesboro Speedway was poised to host the 1979 Holly Farms 400, a key event in NASCAR’s Winston Cup Series, but an unusual natural phenomenon brought the weekend to a halt. Heavy rainfall soaked the track, canceling qualifying and threatening the race. Yet, it wasn’t just the rain that stopped the show—millions of earthworms and nightcrawlers invaded the speedway, creating a slippery, chaotic scene that delayed the event.

The newly sponsored Holly Farms 400, set for the 0.625-mile oval in Wilkes County, drew thousands of fans eager to watch stars like Richard Petty, Darrell Waltrip, and Cale Yarborough compete. Persistent downpours left the infield waterlogged, driving countless worms to the surface as they fled flooded soil. The worms blanketed pit road, clogged drainpipes, and littered the racing surface, making it treacherous for drivers. During practice runs, tires lost grip on the worm-covered asphalt, raising safety concerns.

Crews worked tirelessly to clear the track, but the sheer number of worms overwhelmed their efforts. With qualifying already scrapped and conditions deemed unsafe, NASCAR officials postponed the race to October 14, a rare decision that disappointed teams and spectators but prioritized safety.

Two weeks later, under clear skies, the race went off without a hitch. Benny Parsons dominated, leading 167 of the 400 laps to secure his 19th career victory, edging out Cale Yarborough by half a second in a dramatic finish. Richard Petty took third, as over 20,000 fans filled the stands, undaunted by the earlier setback.

The 1979 Holly Farms 400, forever dubbed “The Worm Race,” stands as a bizarre chapter in NASCAR history, where tiny creatures upstaged high-powered machines and reminded everyone that nature can still call the shots.



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Brad Keselowski on pole for All-Star Race, McDowell’s pit crew wins $100,000 bonus

After Shane van Gisbergen earned a shock pole for the Open race, it was time for the 20 All-Stars to go out and qualify for NASCAR’s annual exhibition race. Made up of two laps including a four-tire pit stop in the middle of it all, It takes every part of the team to go P1 […]

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After Shane van Gisbergen earned a shock pole for the Open race, it was time for the 20 All-Stars to go out and qualify for NASCAR’s annual exhibition race. Made up of two laps including a four-tire pit stop in the middle of it all, It takes every part of the team to go P1 at North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend.

Several drivers sped on pit road, derailing their entire runs. This included SVG’s Trackhouse Racing teammates Daniel Suarez and Ross Chastain, as well as Chris Buescher, Austin Cindric, and Ryan Blaney.

But the No. 6 RFK Racing crew and driver Brad Keselowski were perfect. After what has been the worst start to a season ever for the former Cup Series champion, Friday provided some relief as he secured pole position with a wildly impressive lap, almost one full second quicker than the nearest competition. 

“Yeah, it’s pretty freaking cool man,” said Keselowski. “To win the pole for the All-Star Race — I’ve never done that. It’s one of the things I’ve never done in my career, and to do it by so much — like nine tenths — it’s a total team effort. The pit crew and [crew chief] Jeremy Bullins and the team gave me a rock solid car and said here you go, here’s the ball. I nailed the lap, and just really proud. Really happy for everybody.”

Beyond Keselowski, the No. 71 Spire Motorsports pit crew also had reason to celebrate. While driver Michael McDowell is in the Open, his pit crew had the fastest stop of any team, which earned them the honor of winning the Pit Crew Challenge. As a result, they will be awarded $100,00 and a pretty cool trophy. They beat the No. 99 Trackhouse pit crew by just 0.013s for the big prize.

Michael McDowell, Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Michael McDowell, Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Photo by: David Jensen / Getty Images

Christopher Bell qualified second, Alex Bowman third, Chase Briscoe fourth, and William Byron fifth. Joey Logano, Austin Dillon, Denny Hamlin, Tyler Reddick, and Chase Elliott filled out the remainder of the top ten.

These drivers will be split into two heat races tomorrow, which will officially set the full lineup for the main event on Sunday, but no matter where he finishes in his heat race, Keselowski will still start from pole position for the All-Star Race.

Photos from All-Star Race – Practice


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