Motorsports
Jeb Burton emotional, urges NASCAR to review Talladega finish after Austin Hill win
After a close finish on the last lap at Talladega, Jeb Burton was emotional, pleading his case as he looked at the replay. NASCAR determined that Austin Hill won the race after reviewing multiple camera angles. In his post-race interview, Jeb Burton was certain that he had won this race. It is a race he […]

After a close finish on the last lap at Talladega, Jeb Burton was emotional, pleading his case as he looked at the replay. NASCAR determined that Austin Hill won the race after reviewing multiple camera angles.
In his post-race interview, Jeb Burton was certain that he had won this race. It is a race he has won twice before. But the angles that NASCAR had, showed the 21 car was in the lead at the time of the caution.
“Every angle I keep seeing, we win the race. Just frustrated with that, maybe they can give us a different angle here. I don’t know what’s so complicated, we’re gonna protest, do whatever the hell we can do because I think we won this race,” Burton said after the finish.
“We don’t have a lot of chances to win, you know?” Burton continued as he fought through tears. “That’s what’s frustrating.”
A ton of emotion after this race. Talladega brings out everything in these drivers.
The end of this race was a little wild. Connor Zilisch wrecked hard into the inside wall to bring out the final caution of the race. Then Jesse Love was pretty emotional talking about it given how close he is with Zilisch off the track.
Talladega is a wild ride, folks. Even when there isn’t a 20-car pileup, this track delivers on the drama.
Jeb Burton loses by thinnest of margins
You can’t blame Jeb Burton for pleading his case. He races for the love of the sport. His family has a rich and proud history in NASCAR. To lose a race like that is heartbreaking, and I’m sure that he will take a little time to process.
This could have been the race that put Jeb into the playoffs. That means finishing top-12 on the season as a team. That means a lot more money than finishing 18th or 20th in points. When it comes to that and showing sponsors they are getting value from their investment, nothing beats winning.
This has been a better season for Burton. His third full-time season at Jordan Anderson Racing has more top-10s at this point in the season than he has had since 2021 at Kaulig. It won’t be any solace for him today, but he does have back-to-back top-10s now for the first time since that same 2021 season.
Jeb Burton is doing well on the track. Maybe a win is waiting around the corner for him.
Motorsports
Previewing the NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville
The NASCAR Cup Series makes its lone visit of the year to the Music City this weekend, competing in the Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. Here’s a look at what to expect as the NASCAR starts take on Nashville on Sunday. Date: June 1, 2025Track: Nashville Superspeedway (Lebanon, Tennessee)Time: 7:00 p.m. ETTV: Prime VideoStages: […]

The NASCAR Cup Series makes its lone visit of the year to the Music City this weekend, competing in the Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. Here’s a look at what to expect as the NASCAR starts take on Nashville on Sunday.
Date: June 1, 2025
Track: Nashville Superspeedway (Lebanon, Tennessee)
Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
TV: Prime Video
Stages: 90/185/300
Defending Winner: Joey Logano
Date |
Time |
Session |
TV |
---|---|---|---|
Sat., May 31 |
4:30 p.m. ET |
Practice |
Prime Video |
Sat., May 31 |
5:40 p.m. ET |
Qualifying |
Prime Video |
Sun., June 1 |
7:00 p.m. ET |
Cracker Barrel 400 |
Prime Video |
VIEWING GUIDE: How to Watch the NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400
High Five for Nashville
It’s hard to believe this will already be the fifth year of NASCAR Cup Series competition at the Nashville Superspeedway. The 1.33-mile oval hosted its first event for NASCAR’s premier series in 2021, won by Kyle Larson.
Chase Elliott, Ross Chastain and Joey Logano have since won at Nashville, four different winners in the first four NASCAR Cup Series events at the track. Larson has not finished outside the top 10 in any of those four races, with an average finish 4.5.
Can Chastain Build on Coca-Cola 600 Win?
When Ross Chastain won at Nashville in 2023, he did so from the pole position. That was quite different than last week, when the Florida driver drove from last to first to win the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Chastain’s first win of the season moved him to eighth in NASCAR Cup Series points and ensured he will be part of the NASCAR Cup Series playoff conversation. Now, he returns to one of his best tracks, with three top-five finishes in four races at Nashville.
The one finish outside the top five came last year, when Chastain led 45 laps and was in contention for another victory. However, he was involved in an incident on the first overtime restart of the race and finished 33rd.
A Rare Concrete Challenge
Nashville Superspeedway is one of just three facilities on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule with a concrete racing surface, alongside Dover Motor Speedway and fellow Tennessee track Bristol Motor Speedway. However, it is the only one of the three more than a mile in length.
The concrete surface presents some unique challenges, such as increased temperature sensitivity and usually greater tire wear. The NASCAR Cup Series stars only see this track once a year, limiting their chances to prepare and build a notebook for this unique test.
Add in a 7 p.m. start that will see the track transition from sunset to nightfall like we saw last week with the Coca-Cola 600, and Sunday’s race will keep teams on their toes from start to finish.
Recommended Articles
Motorsports
Justin Bonsignore Set For Return to Seekonk Speedway – Speedway Digest
The Action Track of the East will host the fourth race of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season this Saturday, May 31. The series returns to Seekonk Speedway for the J&R Precast 150 – under the lights in Massachusetts. Justin Bonsignore heads back to Seekonk looking to visit Victory Lane at the third-mile for the […]

The Action Track of the East will host the fourth race of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season this Saturday, May 31. The series returns to Seekonk Speedway for the J&R Precast 150 – under the lights in Massachusetts.
Justin Bonsignore heads back to Seekonk looking to visit Victory Lane at the third-mile for the first time since 2018. That season, Bonsignore won at Seekonk en route to his first series championship. In six career Seekonk Whelen Modified Tour starts, Bonsignore has finished sixth or better in all of them, including three podium runs.
The Holtsville, New York, native enters the race tied for second in the Whelen Modified Tour championship standings, just one point behind the leader, through three events in 2025.
“We won at Seekonk back in 2018, but the track has changed a lot since with the new pavement in the corners,” Bonsignore said. “We’re looking forward to getting back there and improving on how we ran last year. We’ve had a solid start to the year with three top-five finishes and have come away from races that didn’t go our way still with strong finishes. Consistency is key.”
The schedule for NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race day at Seekonk Speedway includes NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour practice from 3-4:10 p.m., followed by qualifying at 5:30 p.m. and the J&R Precast 150 at 8 p.m. Tickets are available online at SeekonkSpeedway.com. The event has a rain date of Sunday, June 1 if necessary. If the event is moved to Sunday, action will begin at 2:30 p.m.
For more information on four-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Justin Bonsignore, visit JustinBonsignore.com and follow him on social media
Justin Bonsignore PR
Motorsports
How Prime is raising the bar for NASCAR coverage
For the first time in the history of the NASCAR Cup Series, a race was featured exclusively on streaming. The numbers are in and they are solid for the first outing. The Coca-Cola 600 peaked a 2.92 million viewers with over one million watching the extended post-race show, but most importantly, the average median age […]

For the first time in the history of the NASCAR Cup Series, a race was featured exclusively on streaming. The numbers are in and they are solid for the first outing. The Coca-Cola 600 peaked a 2.92 million viewers with over one million watching the extended post-race show, but most importantly, the average median age of viewers went down by seven years.
As NASCAR chases a younger demographic, this alone makes it a huge win. There were around 800,000 viewers from the 18-49 demographic, which is more than any race on cable for the last three years (at least). And while the total viewership is down from the 600 on FOX, which is to be expected, it still beat six of the eight Cup races this year that were aired on FOX Sports 1.

NASCAR on Prime
Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images
But what made Prime Video a real winner on Sunday night was how they approached the event. The booth was energetic and informative, and they took the event seriously (aside from the puppet segment). You felt the gravity of it, which FOX managed to do quite well for the Indy 500, but it’s something that has been missing from a lot of their NASCAR events. The commercials were minimally invasive and side-by-side was used constantly. Even with William Byron dominating 283 of 400 laps, the middle portions of the race never felt boring as Prime went around the track to find the action. Stunningly, the final stage went without a single commercial interrupting the final two runs of the event — about 64 consecutive laps.
The addition of personalities like Carl Edwards and Corey LaJoie was a great move while the booth unsurprisingly nailed it between Adam Alexander, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Steve Letarte. And the way they explained things without patronizing the viewer was refreshing as well. They weren’t explaining what stages were or how caution flags at the end of the race work, but they did throw together a highly informative 30-second segment on the fly to explain why Denny Hamlin’s team failed to get their car full of fuel.
The never-ending post-race show

Carl Edwards and Corey LaJoie
Photo by: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images
But the post-race show was the biggest breath of fresh air. On cable, NASCAR fans are used to not getting much of a post-race show due to the constraints of that medium. FOX and NBC have their hands somewhat tied in that regard, but Prime took full advantage of that, giving viewers one hour and 18 minutes of post-race coverage where they brought in race winner Ross Chastain and runner-up finisher Byron for full sit-down discussions. Team owner Justin Marks also joined the panel to discuss the big win for Trackhouse. They even interviewed crew chief Phil Surgen in Victory Lane and were sure to tell the whole story of Chastain’s remarkable comeback, fighting from last to first in a backup car to win NASCAR’s longest race.
Speaking on his weekly podcast, Earnhardt Jr. said of the post-race show: “The other luxury of streaming is that the post-race is fluid. If we feel like we’ve got everything done, and everything we can possibly share in 30 minutes, that’s when it’ll end. if it needs to go longer, it’ll go longer. we don’t have an out … And if there was ever so much going on that we need to be on for an hour and a half, they will. That’s the great thing about the post-race.”
Prime purchased a total of five races this year and for fans not willing to open up their wallets just yet for streaming, they could still opt in for a 30-day free trial that covers the entire run on Prime. Around these events, Prime is doing a ton of activation between commercials and highly-acclaimed documentaries like the new ‘Earnhardt’ docuseries, which quickly became the No. 1 trending series on Prime.
It showed that change is sometimes needed to shake up the status quo, and that’s not a knock on FOX. Just look at IndyCar moving from NBC to FOX and everything FOX has done for the series. Just handing someone else the same ball will result in an entirely different ballgame. So congrats to Prime, who took the expectations for a NASCAR broadcast and hit that ball right out of the park.
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Motorsports
Hendrick Motorsports Media Advance: Nashville – Speedway Digest
5 KYLE LARSON Age: 32 (July 31, 1992) Hometown: Elk Grove, California Last Week: 37th (Charlotte) Crew Chief: Cliff Daniels Standings: 2nd Twitter Instagram Facebook No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet 2025 Cup Career Nashville Races 13 379 4 Wins 3 32 1 Poles 1 22 0 Top 5 8 127 3 Top 10 9 191 4 Laps Led […]

5 KYLE LARSON
Age: 32 (July 31, 1992)
Hometown: Elk Grove, California
Last Week: 37th (Charlotte)
Crew Chief: Cliff Daniels
Standings: 2nd
Twitter Instagram Facebook
No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet
2025
Cup Career
Nashville
Races
13
379
4
Wins
3
32
1
Poles
1
22
0
Top 5
8
127
3
Top 10
9
191
4
Laps Led
851
10,107
264
Stage Wins
8
70
1
Average Finish
11.9
14.0
4.5
Kyle Larson finished the first half of the NASCAR Cup Series regular season as the leader in laps led (851), top-five finishes (eight), stage wins (eight) and playoff points (23). Those eight stage victories are tied with Martin Truex (2017) for the most ever through a season's first 13 events.
In addition to his top fives and laps led, Larson's nine top-10 finishes and three victories are his most through the first 13 races of any season in his career.
Victorious in the inaugural Cup Series event at Nashville Superspeedway in 2021, Larson is the only driver to register top 10s in all four races at the 1.33-mile tri-oval. His average finish of 4.5 is best among all drivers with more than one start.
Larson has won the last four stages on concrete tracks.
Entering Sunday's race, Larson has won six of the last 11 stages including sweeps at Bristol Motor Speedway and Kansas Speedway.
9 CHASE ELLIOTT
Age: 29 (Nov. 28, 1995)
Hometown: Dawsonville, Georgia
Last week: 6th (Charlotte)
Crew Chief: Alan Gustafson
Standings: 4th
Twitter Instagram Facebook
No. 9 Kelley Blue Book Chevrolet
2025
Cup Career
Nashville
Races
13
335
4
Wins
0
19
1
Poles
0
12
0
Top 5
3
107
2
Top 10
7
178
2
Laps Led
76
5,602
56
Stage Wins
0
38
0
Average Finish
11.2
12.8
15.5
Chase Elliott heads to Nashville Superspeedway fourth in the NASCAR Cup Series points standings, 84 markers behind leader and teammate William Byron.
The 2020 Cup Series champion is the only driver to finish in the top 20 in all 13 races this season. His average finish of 11.23 ranks third.
Elliott is a previous winner at Nashville, leading 42 laps en route to a victory in 2022.
The 29-year-old driver is tied with teammate Kyle Larson for the second most wins on concrete tracks in the Next Gen era with two. In addition to his 2022 Nashville triumph, Elliott was also victorious at Dover Motor Speedway that same year.
So far this season on tracks measuring 1-to-1.366 miles in length, Elliott has two top-10 finishes in two starts, placing 10th at Phoenix Raceway and eighth at Darlington Raceway.
24 WILLIAM BYRON
Age: 27 (Nov. 29, 1997)
Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina
Last Week: 2nd (Charlotte)
Crew Chief: Rudy Fugle
Standings: 1st
Twitter Instagram Facebook
No. 24 RAPTOR High Heat Chevrolet
2025
Cup Career
Nashville
Races
12
265
4
Wins
1
14
0
Poles
2
15
0
Top 5
6
60
1
Top 10
8
112
2
Laps Led
669
3,647
5
Stage Wins
6
29
2
Average Finish
9.5
14.9
15.8
After capturing the win Saturday in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race, William Byron continued his domination in the Cup Series, winning the first three stages and leading 283 laps in the Coca-Cola 600 before settling for a runner-up result at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
It marked the most laps Byron has led in a race. He has now led 669 laps in 2025, second-most in the sport.
Through 13 races, William Byron has an average starting position of 8.85 and an average finish of 9.54 – both best of the field. He also is back on top of the 2025 driver points standings.
In the Next Gen era, Byron has the most wins in night races with four.
In four starts at Nashville Superspeedway he has one top-five finish and three top 10s with a best finish of third coming in 2021.
48 ALEX BOWMAN
Age: 31 (April 25, 1993)
Hometown: Tucson, Arizona
Last Week: 29th (Charlotte)
Crew Chief: Blake Harris
Standings: 10th
Twitter Instagram Facebook
No. 48 Ally Chevrolet
2025
Cup Career
Nashville
Races
13
338
4
Wins
0
8
0
Poles
2
7
0
Top 5
2
42
0
Top 10
7
103
0
Laps Led
110
1,478
9
Stage Wins
0
7
0
Average Finish
17.8
19.3
20.3
Alex Bowman sits 10th in the NASCAR Cup Series points standings, 166 markers behind Hendrick Motorsports teammate and series leader William Byron.
The Tucson, Arizona, native has made four Cup Series starts at Nashville Superspeedway. His best finish at the 1.33-mile concrete tri-oval came in 2021, in which he started eighth and finished 14th. Bowman’s average finish at Nashville is 20.3, with an average starting position of 11.8.
For the Best Friends Animal Society programming, Ally and Bowman will be partnering with Monroe County Friends of Animals as their selected shelter for this weekend at Nashville.
Ally and HendrickCars.com are teaming up again to give fans the chance to win prizes with this year’s “Open Road Sweepstakes.” Fans can win VIP experiences at various races throughout the season and one lucky winner will hit the open road in a Chevy Silverado LT Trail Boss with an Airstream camper. Fans can stop by the Ally Fan Zone to enter the sweepstakes in-person and check out the camper. Fans can also enter at ally.com/sweepstakes/nascar.
HENDRICK
MOTORSPORTS /
Hendrick Motorsports
2025
All-Time
Nashville
Races
13
1,394
4
Wins
4
316*
2*
Poles
5*
258*
0
Top 5
19*
1,298*
6*
Top 10
31*
2,218*
8*
Laps Led
1,706*
84,018*
334
Stage Wins
14*
129
1
*Most all time
**Tied for most all time
Combined, Hendrick Motorsports drivers have led 1,706 laps so far this season, most of all organizations by 989 circuits and the team's most since 1996. That number accounts for 46% of laps run through 13 races this year. A Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet has led the most laps in five of the last six NASCAR Cup Series races.
The organization enters Sunday's race at Nashville Superspeedway leading all teams in poles (five), top fives (19), top 10s (31), laps led and stage wins (14), the most stage wins ever through a season's first 13 events.
Hendrick Motorsports is the only team to have at least one car finish in the top five in every race this year with no other organization placing a car in the top 10 in each event. Dating back to last season, Hendrick Motorsports has had a top-five finisher in the last 21 races, the company's third-longest such streak.
With Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott each having a win at Nashville, Hendrick Motorsports has won half of the Cup Series races at the 1.33-mile tri-oval thus far. In addition to having the most wins, the team is also the all-time leader in top fives (six) and top 10s (eight).
Hendrick Motorsports has won seven of 22 night races in the Next Gen era, the most of any team.
QUOTABLE /
Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet, on Nashville Superspeedway: “We’ve been good at Nashville, but we haven’t been great, which you need to be to win there. I know I won in 2021, but since then I think we have some more to work on. Hopefully we can qualify well and build off of that.”
Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet, on what makes Nashville Superspeedway a popular venue: “The town has just gotten so popular. I think that there’s just a lot of energy there right now. Nashville is trendy and has been trendy for a period of time. A lot of people are moving to Nashville. The music scene has become as big as it’s ever been, I would argue, in the country music world. So, you have the opportunity to have some big names out at the track. It seems like we all enjoy it. So, I think all those things are good.”
William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet, on Nashville Superspeedway: “Nashville has been kind of OK for us. I feel like the first year, first couple of years we went there, we were super fast. But then last year we weren’t so good, so just got to keep working on that. It seems like it has some mile-and-a-half characteristics, like the guys who are fast at mile-and-a-halves seem to be pretty strong at Nashville, even though it’s a shorter track. So we’ll see. I think we could run well there. Definitely, the expectation is obviously to go there and try to run top five and try to compete for a win. So, yeah, I think it’s just a matter of looking at what we did last year and kind of where we need to be better.”
Alex Bowman, driver of the No. 48 Chevrolet, on Nashville Superspeedway: “Nashville is a really tough place. The concrete surface makes it feel totally different from most of the tracks we go to. It’s slick, it changes a lot during the race, and it doesn’t give you much forgiveness. But it’s a cool atmosphere with the fans and the city close by. We haven’t had the results we want there yet, but we’re bringing a fast Ally Chevy and hoping to turn that around this weekend.”
Hendrick Motorsports PR
Motorsports
ECR suing former sponsor | RACER
Ed Carpenter Racing is suing former sponsor Milton “Todd” Ault III, whose companies, including BitNile, were carried on ECR’s IndyCar Series entries from 2022-’24. The lawsuit is for alleged non-payment of a seven-figure sum owed to the team. Reached by RACER, ECR team president Tim Broyles said “no comment” when asked about the matter. “Yes,” Ault told […]

Ed Carpenter Racing is suing former sponsor Milton “Todd” Ault III, whose companies, including BitNile, were carried on ECR’s IndyCar Series entries from 2022-’24. The lawsuit is for alleged non-payment of a seven-figure sum owed to the team.
Reached by RACER, ECR team president Tim Broyles said “no comment” when asked about the matter.
“Yes,” Ault told RACER, confirming the legal proceedings. “I sponsored the team for a couple years, and in 2024 I didn’t think I could really do much for that year. It was important to me that ultimately I had a path to ownership, and in its most simplistic form, they sold the team to someone else. And my deal was tied to the idea that I would have naming rights and I would have ownership, and basically, the team was sold to someone else.”
ECR, which formed in 2011 and made its IndyCar Series debut in 2012, was owned by Carpenter, Carpenter’s stepfather Tony George, and Stewart Reed through the 2024 season when Ault-owned brands adorned the team’s Chevy-powered entries.
At the end of the 2024 season, ECR announced the addition of Ted Gelov to its ownership base. Gelov’s investment into the team, appointment as its chairman and co-owner, and primary sponsorship provided for all of ECR’s cars through his Heartland Food Products Group company coincided with the end of Ault’s involvement with the team.
According to Ault, the funds being sought by ECR are limited to last season’s involvement.
“They’re definitely seeking seven figures,” he said. “And I dispute it because it has to be adjusted based on the idea that I never signed the contract for 2024 because they would never put in writing, other than emails, that I had the path to ownership and to be able to partially name the team.”
Ault hopes to find an amicable end to the lawsuit.
“I love Ed Carpenter, and the 22 years he’s been at Indy and his family and everyone involved,” he added. “They’re all people that I care about, and I would hope to settle it with them, but the reality is, they sold the team to someone else, and there’s no path for me to have ownership there, so they’re going to have to figure out how to settle with me, because I didn’t sign a contract for ‘24 and they specifically wouldn’t give me one with naming rights and ownership. And so they want to get something that they have to adjust for, because at the end of the day, they sold the team to someone else. Now that being said, I’m sure we can settle it.”
After parting with ECR, Ault returned with two racing team engagements where his askROI company serves as the primary sponsor on the No. 18 Dale Coyne Racing Honda piloted by Rinus VeeKay in IndyCar, and the No. 60 Meyer Shank Racing Acura ARX-06 GTP car in IMSA’s WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.
Ault says the dispute with ECR will have no impact with his ongoing sponsorship programs in 2025.
“Absolutely not,” he confirmed. “I am committed to IMSA, and I’m committed to Indy. I love Indy. I’ve loved it since I was a little kid, and I’m committing to solving the problem with Ed. They just have to be honest with each other about the fact that I have no path to ownership and no path to naming the team.”
Motorsports
Everything to Know About NASCAR Driver William Byron
The NASCAR Cup Series is headed to Nashville, Tennessee this weekend for the 14th race of the 2025 season! How to Watch Catch up on past episodes of Race For The Championship on Peacock But before the racers can rev up their Next Gen chariots and hit Music City’s superspeedway for the Cracker Barrell 400, […]

The NASCAR Cup Series is headed to Nashville, Tennessee this weekend for the 14th race of the 2025 season!
But before the racers can rev up their Next Gen chariots and hit Music City’s superspeedway for the Cracker Barrell 400, we’re kicking off our profiles of Cup Series wheelmen with none other than Hendrick Motorsports’ elite driver, William Byron.
Who is William Byron?
Born November, 29, 1997 in Charlotte, North Carolina, William Byron is a NASCAR Cup Series driver who discovered his affinity for racing at just the tender age of six, after watching racing broadcasts on TV. That interest led his father to first take “Willy B,” as he’s affectionately known amongst his peers, to his first race at the acclaimed Martinsville Speedway three years later. Having caught the high-octane racing bug, Byron set out to hone his skills on the iRacingsimulator, capturing 100 wins to accompany his nearly 300 top-five finishes in online competitions. From there, the next step was to get Bryon in a car, which happened in 2012. As a 15-year-old, Byron began racing Legends, amassing 33 wins enroute to becoming the Legend Car Young Lions Division champion.
As he ascended the ranks through competition, Byron enjoyed success with every new challenge he undertook. When he signed with Justin Marks’ outfit HScott Motorsports in 2015 to compete in NASCAR’s K&N Pro Series East, now renamed to the ARCA Menards Series East, he notched a quartet of wins before winning the series championship and scoring the Rookie of Year award.
When he moved to the Craftsman Truck Series under Kyle Busch Motorsports, Byron’s skill in the fast lane powered him to win the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rookie of the Year award in 2016 as well.
William Byron and the Xfinity and Cup Series
His successful momentum paved the way for a smooth transition into the Xfinity Series the following year. While everyone knew Willy B was already a force to be reckoned with because of his innate skill behind the wheel, his heroic, overtime win at Daytona amidst a slew of wrecks proved he also had the other requisite ingredient to be an elite driver: intestinal fortitude. Steady in the face of a revolving door of obstacles on the track, Byron scored three more regular season victories before taking home the division’s ultimate prize of the 2017 NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship.
Having climbed all other rungs, Byron’s time to join NASCAR’s coveted top flight came in 2018 after he replaced Hendrick Motorsports’ Kasey Kahne in the No. 5 car before he and that team’s crew moved to the No. 24 car, so his teammate Chase Elliott could claim the No. 9 car. That year, Byron again took home the Rookie of the Year award to become the second driver alongside Erik Jones to score the honor in consecutive seasons in each of the three national series. Now in his eighth year in the Cup Series, with 14 wins and 112 top-10 finishes in 265 total races, including consecutive Daytona 500 wins in 2024 and 2025, Bryon’s flag is firmly planted in the league with many wondering if this season will be his year to take home the grand prize of them all – the NASCAR Cup Series Championship.
What kind of car does William Byron drive?
Having gone from simulator to track in record time with success following him literally everywhere he goes, Byron now drives the No. 24 Chevrolet ZL1 – the brand’s super-charged sixth generation Camaro – in the Cup Series for NASCAR titan, Hendrick Motorsports (HMS). When he participates in Xfinity races, he drives the No. 17 Chevrolet SS, and when competing part-time in the Craftsman Truck Series, he pilots the No. 7 Chevrolet Silverado RST.
Nowadays, Byron, who graduated from Lynchburg, Virginia’s Liberty University, enjoys LEGO’s and snowboarding; counts Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kyle Busch as his mentors; and he likes to drive trucks when he’s at home. After his father convinced him to buy it, Byron’s first recreational vehicle was a 2006 blue Chevy Silverado with a stick shift that Bryon credits to genuinely helping propel his NASCAR career. While he’s no longer dating Ryan Blaney’s sister Erin Blaney, no matter who’s riding shotgun in Willy B’s ride, they better like country music because groups like the Texas-based Eli Young Band will be the prevailing tunes on his Spotify playlist.
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