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Joe Gibbs Racing NASCAR Cup Series Race Preview – Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway – Speedway Digest

JGR AT NASHVILLE: Joe Gibbs Racing has recorded two top-five finishes and six top-10s in 16 combined NASCAR Cup Series starts at Nashville Superspeedway. The team’s best result was a second-place finish by Martin Truex Jr. in 2023. JGR leads all organizations with two pole awards and 597 laps led at the 1.333-mile tri-oval. DENNY […]

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JGR AT NASHVILLE: Joe Gibbs Racing has recorded two top-five finishes and six top-10s in 16 combined NASCAR Cup Series starts at Nashville Superspeedway. The team’s best result was a second-place finish by Martin Truex Jr. in 2023. JGR leads all organizations with two pole awards and 597 laps led at the 1.333-mile tri-oval.

DENNY HAMLIN

No. 11 Progressive Insurance Toyota Camry XSE

700 STARTS: Sunday’s race will be Denny Hamlin’s 700th NASCAR Cup Series start – all coming behind the wheel of the No. 11 entry for Joe Gibbs Racing. Hamlin will be the 22nd driver in NASCAR history to reach 700 starts in the Cup Series.

HAMLIN AT NASHVILLE: Hamlin leads all drivers with 265 laps led at Nashville Superspeedway since the track was added to the schedule in 2021. He also owns a pair of pole awards (2022 and 2024) in addition to one top-five finish and two top-10s. Last season, Hamlin was in position to win until a late caution sent the race to an unprecedented five-overtime finish. Following the third overtime, the No. 11 team was forced to pit for fuel. He recovered to finish 12th.

CHARLOTTE RECAP: The No. 11 team finished 16th in last Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. After starting 20th, Hamlin quickly worked his way into the top 10 thanks to a fast car and great pit stops. He earned valuable stage points by finishing seventh in stage one and second in stages two and three. Overall, he led eight times for 53 laps before a late pit stop for fuel relegated him outside the top 15.

CHRIS GAYLE: Crew chief Chris Gayle led Kyle Busch to a NASCAR Xfinity Series pole award and victory at Nashville Superspeedway in 2021. One year later, he oversaw a top-five finish for Ty Gibbs in the Xfinity Series race at Nashville. In 2023 and 2024, Gayle and Gibbs finished 14th and 23rd, respectively, in two Cup Series races at the 1.333-mile tri-oval.

PROGRESSIVE: Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota Camry XSE will feature Progressive Insurance as the primary sponsor this weekend at Nashville Superspeedway. In March, Joe Gibbs Racing announced that Progressive will be the primary sponsor of the No. 11 Toyota for 18 races this season. For more information on Progressive, visit www.progressive.com.

CHASE BRISCOE

No. 19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry XSE

BRISCOE AT NASHVILLE: Chase Briscoe has four career NASCAR Cup Series starts at Nashville Superspeedway with a best finish of 21st in 2024.

CHARLOTTE RECAP: Briscoe earned a season-best finish of third on Sunday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Briscoe started the Coca-Cola 600 from the front row after claiming his second pole award of the season. He ran inside the top five until an uncontrolled tire penalty on the first pit stop of the day sent him to the back of the field and a 27th-place finish in Stage 1. At the halfway point of the race, Briscoe had worked himself up to 17th. During Stage 3, Briscoe cracked the top 10 again and earned stage points with a ninth-place finish in the stage. Briscoe ran inside the top five for the majority of the final segment to secure his fifth top-five finish and a career-best finish at Charlotte.

2025 SO FAR: The third-place finish at Charlotte was Briscoe’s fifth top-five finish of the 2025 season. The Indiana native is one of only six drivers to record five or more top-five finishes so far this season. It also ties the number of top-five finishes the No. 19 team had in all of 2024 and gives Briscoe two more top-fives than he had all of last season. Briscoe’s 14.2-average finishing position ranks sixth amongst all full-time drivers. Last weekend’s race also moved Briscoe up to 11th in the driver points standings, 34 points above the cutline.

JAMES SMALL: 2025 marks James Small’s sixth season as a NASCAR Cup Series crew chief. The first five years of his tenure as crew chief were spent with Martin Truex Jr. as Small led the No. 19 team to eight wins, 46 top-fives, 86 top-10 finishes, and four NASCAR playoffs appearances. The Australia native led Truex to a runner-up finish in the 2021 championship and to the 2023 regular season championship.

BASS PRO SHOPS: Bass Pro Shops is North America’s premier outdoor and conservation company. Under the visionary conservation leadership of Johnny Morris, Bass Pro Shops is a national leader in protecting habitat and introducing families to the outdoors and has been named by Newsweek as “America’s Most Trusted Retailer for Outdoor Gear”. For more information or to shop online, visit www.basspro.com.

CHRISTOPHER BELL

No. 20 DEWALT Concrete Solutions Toyota Camry XSE

BELL AT NASHVILLE: Christopher Bell led a race-high 131 laps and won both stages of last year’s race at Nashville Superspeedway. Unfortunately, an accident during the final segment left him with a 36th-place result. In the first three NASCAR Cup Series races at the track, Bell posted three top-10 finishes.

CHARLOTTE RECAP: Bell recorded his sixth top-10 finish in the last seven races with an eighth-place result in last Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

DEWALT CONCRETE SOLUTIONS: The No. 20 Toyota will have a new look this weekend featuring DEWALT Concrete Solutions. From prep to placement, DEWALT is the only brand to offer a full range of high-performance power tools, storage, hand tools, accessories, software, and anchors. To learn more about DEWALT Concrete Solutions, visit www.dewalt.com/trade-solutions/solutions-by-trade/concrete-solutions.

DEWALT HOOD: DEWALT will feature Hensel Phelps on the lower hood of the No. 20 Toyota this weekend in Nashville. For more information, visit www.henselphelps.com.

DEWALT DECKLID: DEWALT will feature The Comfort Group on the decklid of the No. 20 in Nashville. For more information, visit www.thecomfortgroup.com.

TY GIBBS

No. 54 Interstate Batteries Toyota Camry XSE

GIBBS AT NASHVILLE: Ty Gibbs has competed in two NASCAR Cup Series races at Nashville Superspeedway with a best finish of 14th in 2023. In three NASCAR Xfinity Series starts at the track, Gibbs’ best finish was a fourth-place result in 2022. Last year, he won the pole award for the Xfinity Series race at the 1.333-mile facility.

CHARLOTTE RECAP: Gibbs started seventh and finished 24th in last weekend’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

SOLID STARTS: Gibbs’ seventh-place qualifying effort at Charlotte Motor Speedway marked his fifth consecutive top-10 starting position.

TYLER ALLEN: Crew chief Tyler Allen is in his first year leading Gibbs and the No. 54 team. While this is Allen’s first experience as a crew chief at the Cup Series level, he had a standout season in 2024 in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Allen led JGR’s No. 20 Xfinity Series team to eight victories and a runner-up finish in the owner’s championship. Last season, Allen led John Hunter Nemechek to an Xfinity Series victory at Nashville Superspeedway.

INTERSTATE BATTERIES: Interstate Batteries, the leading replacement battery brand with the largest independent battery distribution system in North America, is in their 34th consecutive season as a primary partner at Joe Gibbs Racing. Earlier this season, the ‘Outrageously Dependable’ brand was featured on Christopher Bell’s No. 20 Toyota at Daytona International Speedway, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, and Texas Motor Speedway. Following this weekend’s race with Gibbs, Interstate Batteries will close out 2025 with Bell and the No. 20 team in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway (November 2).

JGR PR



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Motorsports teams fear ‘catastrophic’ impact of disclosing financial records during court fight

(Adobe Stock) Attorneys for 12 of NASCAR’s 15 race teams argued in federal court Tuesday that disclosing their financial records to the stock car series would be “catastrophic” to competitive balance and warned that making such details public would put them all in danger. The hearing was over a discovery dispute between NASCAR and the […]

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(Adobe Stock)

Attorneys for 12 of NASCAR’s 15 race teams argued in federal court Tuesday that disclosing their financial records to the stock car series would be “catastrophic” to competitive balance and warned that making such details public would put them all in danger.

The hearing was over a discovery dispute between NASCAR and the teams that are not parties in the ongoing antitrust suit filed by 23XI Racing, which is owned by retired NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports, owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins.

23XI and Front Row are the only two organizations out of the 15 that refused last September to sign take-it-or-leave offers on a new charter agreement. Charters are NASCAR’s version of a franchise model, with each charter guaranteeing entry to the lucrative Cup Series races and a stable revenue stream. Of the 13 teams that signed, only Kaulig Racing has submitted the financial documents NASCAR subpoenaed as part of discovery.

The other 12 organizations are fighting against releasing the information to NASCAR and even argued that NASCAR asking for them violates the charter agreement, which claims all disputes must go to arbitration.

U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the Western District of North Carolina promised a quick ruling but, just like last week, seemed exasperated at the lengths being taken in this brawl that for now is heading toward a December trial.

“I am amazed at the effort going into burning this house down over everybody’s heads,” Bell said at the end of the nearly two-hour hearing. “But I’m the fire marshal and I will be here in December if need be.”

Attorneys for the teams say their financial records are private and there is no guarantee the information won’t be leaked; in a hearing last week, information learned in discovery was disclosed in open court.

“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,” attorney Adam Ross said. “It cannot make its way into the public realm.”

Ross said NASCAR has asked for 11 years of records and communications—including what Hendrick Motorsports spent on both its Garage 56 project building a car to race at the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the cost of Kyle Larson running both the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 the last two seasons.

“NASCAR has gone a step too far,” Ross said.

NASCAR argued it needs the financials to understand profit margins and whether teams are actually unable to make ends meet under the charter agreement. NASCAR vowed to redact details to conceal team identities, a suggestion that was met with skepticism from team attorneys who contended it would be easy to connect the dots and, for example, figure out which contracts belong to, say, Team Penske.

Attorneys also argued that money is not often distributed equally across the board with each team. For example, Team Penske might use an engineer for a NASCAR team, an IndyCar team and a sports car team.

Bell asked NASCAR why it would not be satisfied with just “topline” numbers.

“Why is not enough to know it costs X to run a car?” Bell asked.

Attorneys for the 12 teams also noted that their clients are extremely uncomfortable to be dragged into the suit.

“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,” Ross said.

Teams have long argued that NASCAR is not financially viable and they needed multiple concessions, including a greater revenue stream and a more permanent length on the charter agreements. Those presently have expiration dates and can be revoked by NASCAR. Two years of negotiations ended last fall with 13 teams signing on but 23IX and FRM instead heading to court.

The hearing came one day after Bell declined to dismiss the teams’ request to toss out NASCAR’s countersuit, which accuses Jordan business manager Curtis Polk of using “cartel”-type tactics in the most recent round of charter neg



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NASCAR legend, three-time Daytona 500 winner, dead at 81

Former NASCAR car owner Larry McClure has died. He was 81. McClure died Wednesday morning at Johnson Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, VA, according to Sports Illustrated. “The Family of Larry A. McClure, former co-owner of Morgan McClure Motorsports, announces with great sorrow his passing on Wednesday, June 25 at Johnson Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Virginia,” […]

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Former NASCAR car owner Larry McClure has died.

He was 81.

McClure died Wednesday morning at Johnson Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, VA, according to Sports Illustrated.

“The Family of Larry A. McClure, former co-owner of Morgan McClure Motorsports, announces with great sorrow his passing on Wednesday, June 25 at Johnson Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Virginia,” the family also announced in a statement. “We would like to thank everyone for their prayers and support during this most difficult time.”

Sports Illustrated said that McClure partnered with his brother, Jerry McClure and Tim Morgan in 1983 to form a part-time NASCAR Cup Series team. That part-time team quickly became a full-time team and was in operation for 28 years before shuttering in 2012.

McClure remained until 2007.

Along the way, Morgan McClure Motorsports was able to win 300 Daytona 500s. The first came in 1991 with Ernie Irvan behind the wheel, and then Sterling Martin won the 500 back-to-back in 1994 and 1995.

The team competed in a whopping 703 races.

“My heart hurts finding out Larry McClure passed away,” Marlin wrote on X. He took a chance on me saying, ‘I know you’ll drive the hell out of it.’ He gave me a fast race car & back to back Daytona 500s. He was innovative, smart & a hell of a guy. Glad I got to see him last year. Gonna miss him.”

“I send my deepest condolences to the family of Larry McClure,” Hermie Sadler posted on X. “Many years ago, I went to Chicagoland with one car and one engine. My engine blew in practice. He gave me an engine to run. He said, ‘if you out qualify my car, you can race that engine for free.’ RIP.”



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Inaugural moonshine and motorsports event coming to Kings Mountain

Kings Mountain Historical Museum is holding its inaugural Moonshine and Motorsports Car Show this weekend. The event, which celebrates colorful North Carolina history, will be held at the former post office located at 100 E. Mountain St., from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. Admission is free.The “Moonshine and Motorsports Car Show” celebrates North […]

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Kings Mountain Historical Museum is holding its inaugural Moonshine and Motorsports Car Show this weekend.

The event, which celebrates colorful North Carolina history, will be held at the former post office located at 100 E. Mountain St., from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday.

Admission is free.The “Moonshine and Motorsports Car Show” celebrates North Carolina and Kings Mountain’s historical connection between the moonshine industry and motorsports, particularly NASCAR’s roots.

There will be late modified race cars and drag street cars lined down the road of East and West Mountain streets. The event will offer a meet and greet and autograph session with motor sports drivers, pit crew members, engine builders, antique and classic cars. There will be a 1940s and 50s cooking demonstration at the Barber Cabin at the Kings Mountain Historical Museum. There will also be food vendors on site.

For more information, visit the Kings Mountain Historical Museum at kingsmountainmuseum.org.



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Time, TV channel, as TNT takes over for Amazon

Dale Earnhardt Jr. debuts as NASCAR crew chief, turns to TNT on TV The guys break down Chase Briscoe’s win and Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s crew chief debut at Pocono. They also review the five-week Amazon Prime Video stint. NASCAR’s Cup Series returns to cable television on TNT after a five-week stint on Amazon Prime Video. […]

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  • NASCAR’s Cup Series returns to cable television on TNT after a five-week stint on Amazon Prime Video.

The NASCAR blackout has been lifted.

Yep, that sounds a tad dramatic, but for many NASCAR fans, it’s true. After five weeks of Cup Series races on Amazon Prime Video, the cables are plugged back in and things return to normal.

Kind of.

For starters, this week brings the first Saturday night Cup race of the year — at Atlanta Motor Speedway, or, as it’s now known, EchoPark Speedway. And you’ll find it on a familiar old cable channel, TNT, which begins its own five-week run with the Quaker State 400.

But it’s not just TNT and not just the Cup Series this week. In fact, it’s not just Atlanta, where the Cup and Xfinity cars are racing. In Connecticut, at Lime Rock Park, NASCAR’s Truck Series and ARCA are tackling the historic road course.

Friday: Cup Series qualifying, Xfinity Series race in Atlanta

1:05 p.m.: Truck Series practice from Lime Rock (FS2).

3 p.m.: Xfinity Series practice from Atlanta (CW).

5:05 p.m.: Cup Series qualifying from Atlanta (Tru TV).

7:30 p.m.: Xfinity Series, Focused Health 250 (CW).

Saturday: Truck Series race at Lime Rock, Cup Series race at Atlanta

9:30 a.m.: Truck Series qualifying from Lime Rock (FS1).

1 p.m.: Truck Series, LiUNA! 150, from Lime Rock (Fox).

4 p.m.: ARCA Series race from Lime Rock (FS2).

7 p.m.: Cup Series, Quaker State 400 (TNT).



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Heat accelerates NASCAR Chicago street closures – NBC Chicago

Facebook Instagram TikTok About NBC Chicago Telemundo Chicago Our News Standards Submit Tips for Investigations Newsletters Connect With Us Xfinity: Internet, TV, streaming, more WMAQ Public Inspection File WMAQ Accessibility WMAQ Employment Information Send Feedback FCC Applications Terms of Service Your Privacy Choices Privacy Policy Advertise with us CA Notice Ad Choices Copyright © 2025 […]

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Copyright © 2025 NBCUniversal Media, LLC. All rights reserved





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Judge orders NASCAR teams to turn over financial data to stock car series, limits details | News, Sports, Jobs

Denny Hamlin drives through Turn 3 during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Pocono Raceway, Sunday, June 22, 2025, in Long Pond, Pa. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton) CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered a dozen NASCAR teams to provide 11 years of financial data to the stock […]

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Denny Hamlin drives through Turn 3 during a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Pocono Raceway, Sunday, June 22, 2025, in Long Pond, Pa. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton)

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday 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.

A day after hearing arguments from both sides, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the Western District of North Carolina said the information will “allow NASCAR to have much of the arguably relevant substance of the requested information, while protecting the legitimate interests” of the 12 teams. They had raised concerns that the private financial details could end up being made public and would hurt competitive balance.

Under the decision, the teams must provide top-line data — total revenue, total costs, and net profits and losses — dating to 2014. The teams and NASCAR were ordered to settle on an independent accounting firm to handle the details by Friday, with that work paid for by NASCAR.

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

23XI and Front Row are the only two organizations of the 15 that refused last September to sign take-it-or-leave offers on a new charter agreement. Charters are NASCAR’s version of a franchise model, with each charter guaranteeing entry to the lucrative Cup Series races and a stable revenue stream. Of the 13 teams that signed, only Kaulig Racing has submitted the financial documents NASCAR subpoenaed as part of discovery.

Teams have long argued that NASCAR is not financially viable and they need a greater revenue stream and a more permanent length on the charter agreements, which presently have expiration dates and can be revoked by NASCAR. Two years of negotiations ended last fall with 13 teams signing on and 23IX and FRM instead heading to court.



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