Motorsports
Key questions for NASCAR Cup playoff drivers
A look at the 16 Cup playoff drivers, key facts and a key question for each as NASCAR’s postseason begins this weekend at Darlington Raceway.
USA Network’s coverage of the Southern 500 will begin at 5:30 p.m. ET Sunday. The race is scheduled to begin shortly after 6 p.m. ET.
1. Kyle Larson
Points: 2032 (25 points above cutline)
Wins: 3 (Homestead, Bristol, Kansas)
Key number: 25 — Percentage of playoff races (10 of 40) Larson has won since 2021.
What to know: Larson has led 873 of the last 1,000 laps at Bristol, winning the last two races there, including earlier this season. Bristol is the cutoff race in the opening round. … Of the 885 laps Larson has led this year, 78.6% (696) were at tracks that also will host a playoff race. … Larson has made it to the Round of 8 in three of the last four years.
Key question: Can he lead Hendrick Motorsports to its first Cup championship since his 2021 title?
2. William Byron
Points 2032 (25 points above cutline)
Wins: 2 (Daytona 500, Iowa)
Key number: 11 — Number of top-five finishes, including one win, in the last 20 playoff races (2023 and ’24)
What to know: Byron seeks to reach the Championship 4 for a third consecutive season. … He led a season-high 915 laps. … He won the pole, won the first two stages, led the first 243 laps and finished second at Darlington in the spring. The playoffs open this weekend at Darlington. … He led the points after 21 of 26 races in the regular season.
Key question: Since 2020, the champion has had at least two playoff wins. Byron has one career playoff victory. Is this the year Byron can score multiple wins on the way to a title?
3. Denny Hamlin
Points: 2029 (22 points above cutline)
Wins: 4 (Martinsville, Darlington, Michigan, Dover)
Key number: 44 — Hamlin’s age (he turns 45 about two weeks after the season). The oldest Cup champion is Bobby Allison at 45 years, 11 months, 17 days in 1983. Hamlin would be a year younger than Allison if he won the title this year.
What to know: Time is running out for Hamlin to be a Cup champion. He signed a two-year contract extension for after this season and that likely will be it for his Cup driving career. However, Hamlin often thrives in chaos. What could be more chaotic than the ongoing lawsuit Hamlin’s 23XI Racing, along with Front Row Motorsports, has against NASCAR? The trial is scheduled to begin Dec. 1. Could Hamlin be in the courtroom as the current champion? … Two of his four wins came at playoff tracks (Darlington and Martinsville). … Hamlin has made it to the Round of 8 six consecutive seasons.
Key question: Same as in past years. Is this the year he wins a Cup championship?
4. Ryan Blaney
Points: 2026 (19 points above cutline)
Wins: 2 (Nashville, Daytona II)
Key number: 3 — Consecutive seasons a Team Penske driver has won the championship. Blaney won in 2023 and Joey Logano won in 2022 and 2024.
What to know: Blaney seeks to make the championship race a third year in a row. … He finished second in points in the regular season (before the reseeding) despite failing to finish seven of the 26 races. … Blaney enters the playoffs with six consecutive top-10 finishes, the longest active streak. … Blaney has scored points in nine consecutive stages. … Blaney finished fifth at both Darlington and Bristol earlier this season. Both are in the first round. … Blaney had 10 top-five finishes in the 19 regular season races he finished (52.6%).
Key question: Can Blaney avoid the DNFs that plagued his regular season?
Daytona win gives Blaney eight-playoff point swing
Ryan Blaney’s Daytona win vaulted him into second in the regular season standings, including an eight-point playoff swing that could prove vital in the race for a second Cup Series championship.
5. Christopher Bell
Points: 2023 (16 points above cutline)
Wins: 3 (Atlanta I, COTA, Phoenix)
Key number: 0 — Cup championships won by Joe Gibbs Racing since Phoenix began hosting the title race in 2020.
What to know: Bell won at Phoenix earlier this season — the second consecutive season he’s won the track’s spring event. … Bell is the only driver other than Shane van Gisbergen to win on a road course this season, taking the checkered flag at Circuit of the Americas in March. … Bell has 15 top-five finishes in the last 30 playoff races (2022-24). … Bell narrowly missed making the championship race a third consecutive season last year.
Key question: Will Bell return to victory lane for the first time since March during these playoffs?
6. Shane van Gisbergen
Points: 2022 (15 points above cutline)
Wins: 4 (Mexico City, Chicago Street Race, Sonoma, Watkins Glen)
Key number: 6 — Pit road speeding penalties van Gisbergen has had this season, most among playoff drivers.
What to know: If he makes it into the second round, he’ll be the favorite to win at the Charlotte Roval. A victory there would send him into the third round. … He’s never raced at World Wide Technology Raceway, which is the middle race of the opening round.
Key question: Will his 22 playoff points be enough to help him advance beyond the first round?
7. Chase Elliott
Points: 2013 (6 points above cutline)
Wins: 1 (Atlanta)
Key number: 11.9 — Elliott’s average finish this season, best in the series.
What to know: Elliott has made it to the Round of 8 the last seven times he’s been in the playoffs (he did not make the playoffs in 2023). … This is Elliott’s 10th season paired with crew chief Alan Gustafson, the longest active driver/crew chief pairing in the series.
Key question: With only two wins since 2023, can Elliott score multiple victories in the playoffs to make it to the championship race?
8. Chase Briscoe
Points: 2010 (3 points above cutline)
Wins: 1 (Pocono)
Key number: 10.3 — Briscoe’s average start this season, best in the series.
What to know: He won last year’s Southern 500, which was the final race of the regular season. … Briscoe qualified fourth at Darlington in the spring before finishing 28th. … Briscoe has three runner-up finishes this season (Sonoma, Dover and Iowa). … Had one win, three runner-ups and five top-five finishes in the last 10 races of the regular season. … Briscoe has a series-high six poles this year.
Key question: Can he become only the third driver in the 2000s to win a Cup title in their first year with a team (joining what Kevin Harvick did in 2014 with Stewart-Haas Racing and Kyle Larson did in 2021 with Hendrick Motorsports)?
Darlington the ‘toughest test’ to open playoffs
Leigh Diffey, Jeff Burton, and Steve Letarte analyze the tracks taking center stage in the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs, explaining why Darlington is the “toughest test” to open the playoffs.
9. Bubba Wallace
Points: 2008 (1 point above cutline)
Wins: 1 (Indianapolis)
Key number: 100 — Race winless streak snapped with his Indianapolis victory.
What to know: Has failed to finish seven races this season. … Made the playoffs with rookie Cup crew chief Charles Denike, who came from the Truck Series. … Finished the regular season with four top 10s in the last six races.
Key question: Team has been up and down this season. Can it be more consistent to make a deep playoff run?
10. Austin Cindric
Points Position: 10th
Points: 2008 (1 point above cutline)
Wins: 1 (Talladega)
Key number: 2 — Top-10 finishes in the 16 races since his Talladega victory.
What to know: He is the defending winner at World Wide Technology Raceway, the second race in the opening round. … Darlington is one of three tracks (Kansas and Phoenix are the others) where Cindric has made at least six starts and has yet to score a top-10 finish.
Key question: He’s made it to the Round of 12 the two previous times he’s been in the playoffs. Can he go beyond that?
11. Ross Chastain
Points: 2007 (0 points above cutline)
Wins: 1 (Coca-Cola 600)
Key number: 21.9 — Average starting position this season. Only teammate Shane van Gisbergen has a worst average starting position (22.7) among the playoff drivers.
What to know: Ranks 13th among the 16 playoff drivers in stage points scored this season (78). … Did not finish better than 10th in the final 11 races of the regular season, doing so at the Chicago Street Race and Watkins Glen.
Key question: Can the team find enough speed to make a playoff run?
12. Joey Logano
Points: 2007 (On cutline)
Wins: 1 (Texas)
Key number: 40.5% — Fifteen of Logano’s 37 career Cup wins (40.5%) have come in playoff races.
What to know: Few, if any, thought of Logano as a strong title contender last year after winning only once in the regular season, but he won three times in the playoffs to claim his third Cup title. … Logano’s championship spurred debate about NASCAR’s playoff system and led to NASCAR forming a committee to examine the issue. No announcement has been made if next year’s playoff format will be different. … Logano has never made it to the championship race in an odd-numbered year.
Key question: Can Logano continue his playoff success and score multiple wins this year?
13. Josh Berry
Points: 2006 (1 point below cutline)
Wins: 1 (Las Vegas)
Key number: 2 — Top-10 starts in the last 15 races.
What to know: Making his first Cup playoff appearance. … Has not led a lap in the last 15 races. … He has scored back-to-back top 10s for the first time since March, placing eighth at Richmond and ninth at Daytona in the regular season finale.
Key question: Can the team make it out of the first round?
14. Tyler Reddick
Points: 2006 (1 point below cutline)
Wins: 0
Key number: 99.78 — Percentage of the 6,511 laps in the regular season that Reddick has completed (6,497 laps), best in the series.
What to know: Reddick made the championship race last year after winning the regular season title. … He has made it to at least the Round of 8 each of the past two seasons.
Key question: Only once has Reddick had more than back-to-back top 10s this season. Can this team find the consistency to make a deep playoff run?
15. Austin Dillon
Points: 2005 (2 points below cutline)
Wins: 1 (Richmond)
Key number: 2014 — The last year a Richard Childress Racing driver finished in the top 10 in points (Ryan Newman placed second that season).
What to know: Dillon is the only playoff driver not to have a pit road speeding penalty this season. … This is his first playoff appearance since 2022.
Key question: Can he end RCR’s top-10 drought?
16. Alex Bowman
Points: 2002 (5 points below cutline)
Wins: 0
Key number: 42 — Race winless streak, the longest winless streak among the playoff drivers.
What to know: Bowman did not secure a playoff spot until Ryan Blaney won last weekend’s regular season finale at Daytona. … Bowman scored seven top-10 finishes in the last 11 races of the regular season.
Key question: Bowman has one playoff win (Martinsville 2021). Can he win to advance in this year’s playoffs?
Motorsports
IHRA Acquires Heartland Motorsports Park
FAIRFIELD, Ohio — The International Hot Rod Association announced the acquisition of Heartland Motorsports Park in Topeka, Kansas, reinforcing IHRA’s long-term commitment to preserving motorsports history while reimagining legendary venues.
Originally opened in 1963 as Topeka Dragway, the facility later evolved into Heartland Motorsports Park and became one of the most versatile motorsports complexes in the country. Over the decades, Heartland has hosted major national drag racing events, road racing, karting, motocross, and countless grassroots competitions, earning its reputation as a cornerstone of Midwest motorsports.
With this acquisition, Heartland Motorsports Park enters a new chapter — one that honors its storied past while positioning the property as a modern destination entertainment complex.
“Heartland Motorsports Park is one of those places that simply matters to racing,” said Darryl Cuttell, owner of the International Hot Rod Association. “It has history, soul, and a footprint that allows us to think bigger than just a race track. Our goal is to restore this facility with respect for its legacy while building something that serves racers, fans, and the community for generations.”
IHRA’s long-term vision for Heartland Motorsports Park extends well beyond competition weekends. Planned restoration and redevelopment efforts will focus on creating a year-round destination that blends motorsports with live entertainment and community engagement, including:
- Revitalized drag racing operations with improved racer and fan amenities
- Expanded motorsports and special event programming
- Live music, concerts, and festival experiences
- Enhanced hospitality, vendor, and fan-experience areas
- Community-focused events designed to drive tourism and economic impact
“Motorsports has to evolve to stay strong,” Cuttell added. “The future is about creating places where racing, music, entertainment, and community come together. Heartland has all the pieces to become one of the premier motorsports and entertainment destinations in the country.”
The acquisition aligns with IHRA’s broader racer-first philosophy, which includes direct investment in facilities and infrastructure that strengthen grassroots racing, elevate national competition, and create sustainable motorsports ecosystems.
Renovation planning will begin immediately, with additional announcements regarding redevelopment phases, event schedules and community partnerships expected in the coming months.
Motorsports
Andres Perez de Lara’s 2026 NASCAR Truck Series season preview
Dec. 31, 2025, 12:00 a.m. ET
Andres Perez de Lara is expected to drive for Niece Motorsports during the 2026 NASCAR Truck Series season. De Lara started the 2025 campaign with Spire Motorsports, but parted ways en route to Niece Motorsports. The driver of the No. 44 truck performed well following his departure from Spire Motorsports.
In 2026, de Lara should focus even more on his development while becoming a weekly fixture in the top 10 spots. When Niece Motorsport is running at its best, the drivers are capable of winning Truck Series races. However, the NASCAR organization hasn’t been as strong since Carson Hocevar left for the NASCAR Cup Series.
De Lara wants to become a household name in the Truck Series, and Niece Motorsports could help him reach that goal. It may not be in 2026, but de Lara is seeking to win his first Truck Series race sooner rather than later. If Niece Motorsports can provide faster trucks in 2026, that certainly seems like a possibility.
Motorsports
Anthony Alfredo’s 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Series season preview
Dec. 31, 2025, 6:07 a.m. ET
Anthony Alfredo is moving to a new team for the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Series season. After spending one year with Young’s Motorsports, Alfredo is moving to the No. 96 car for Viking Motorsports. The former Young’s Motorsports driver will be the second full-time entry for hte organization alongside Parker Retzlaff.
Alfrredo has been all over the place in NASCAR over the last six years, so another new team isn’t new to him. The driver of the No. 96 car is a part of a new second team for Viking Motorsports, so the 2026 NASCAR season might start slowly. However, Alfredo has proven his ability to run well in mid-tier equipment.
Alfredo should focus on developing the second team with Viking Motorsports and earning more top-20 finishes throughout the season. By the end of 2026, the hope is that Alfredo is competing for top-10 finishes. There is optimism that Alfredo can help turn Viking Motorsports into a more recognizable destination.
Motorsports
Just Call Him ‘Sir’ Scott Dixon
On a quiet New Year’s Eve in 2025, an email pinged into Scott Dixon’s inbox that nearly ended up in the spam folder. “New Year’s Honors,” it read. The six-time IndyCar champion and New Zealand racing icon thought it had to be a hoax. “That was kind of crazy,” Dixon later admitted with his trademark humility. “Totally out of the blue—I didn’t even know if the email was legit.”
–by Mark Cipolloni–
But it was very real. As the clock struck midnight into 2026, Dixon was officially knighted in New Zealand’s New Year Honors List, earning the title Sir Scott Dixon for his extraordinary services to motorsport.
Born in Australia but raised in New Zealand, Dixon chased the American dream in 1998, crossing the Pacific to compete in America’s premier open-wheel series. What followed was two decades of dominance: 59 race wins, six championships, and that unforgettable 2008 Indianapolis 500 victory that cemented his legend. Now, at 45 (turning 46 in July), he’s just one title shy of tying A.J. Foyt’s all-time record of seven—and after finishing third in the 2025 standings with a win, no one is betting against him adding to the tally in 2026.

IndyCar fans already know Dixon as one of the greatest ever, a master of fuel strategy, tire management, and ice-cool precision on ovals where speeds push the limits of human and machine. But now, track announcers will have a new prefix: “Sir Scott Dixon.”
He wasn’t alone in the motorsport honors. Track owner and philanthropist Tony Quinn—whose foundation has helped launch careers like F1’s Liam Lawson—and veteran official Brian Rex Davies, with over 50 years keeping races safe, also received recognition.
Motorsport New Zealand President Deborah Day captured the moment perfectly: “Sir Scott Dixon represents the very pinnacle of international success and inspiration.”
From a wide-eyed Kiwi kid to a knighted global superstar, Dixon’s journey is the stuff of racing dreams. Whether he claims that elusive seventh crown or not, one thing is certain: from here on out, just call him Sir Scott Dixon. The title fits a true champion.

Motorsports
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Motorsports
The Failed NASCAR Superteam Everyone Forgot
The collapse of two promising, historic teams led to a failed superteam. That team was HScott Motorsports. Started in 2013 after Turner Scott Motorsports’ shutdown, co-owner Harry Scott Jr. bought out long-time Cup Series backmarker Phoenix Racing to form the team. Moves like moving the team’s operations from Spartanburg, South Carolina, to Mooresville, North Carolina, and hiring young, promising drivers with sponsorship.
Like Justin Allgaier and Michael Annett, plus getting equipment from the most outstanding NASCAR team in history, Hendrick Motorsports. With such a successful history behind him from TSM, and all this behind him. It looked like a sure success. But it was a failure, so why did it fail?
The Lawsuit That Ended Turner Scott Motorsports
The Ganassi-aligned team was a superteam in and of itself. The team won the 2012 Truck Series title with James Buescher, who moved up to the Nationwide Series to race with the team. They also had great success, with eight total wins, only beaten by their truck series success, where they had eleven total wins, plus three wins in the ARCA series.
Even helping to develop drivers like Kyle Larson, Jeb Burton, Brandon Jones, and Justin Allgaier. But then the owners sued each other, which put the brakes on the whole superteam. Turner Scott’s other co-owner, Steve Turner, accused Harry Scott of owing the team 2 million for a debt he agreed to in 2012, but two years later, he still hadn’t paid.
Scott sued Turner in a North Carolina court soon after. But the suits wouldn’t last long. As Harry Scott won the lawsuit against Turner, Scott took the remaining equipment from the team to start HScott Motorsports with Chip Ganassi.
Harry Scott’s Attempt At A NASCAR Superteam
It wasn’t only HScott’s beginnings that showed Harry Scott’s ambitions to become a NASCAR superpower. In 2015, HScott collaborated with Chip Ganassi again to run the No. 42 Xfinity team together, which did actually win with Kyle Larson in the finale. However, the partnership would end after 2015.
Where Harry Scott showed his ambition, and the series where HScott was actually a superteam was the K&N Pro Series East, which was also in partnership with Justin Marks, who now co-owns Trackhouse. They won the 2015 title with future Hendrick star William Byron and his Liberty University sponsorship, establishing themselves as a fourth-tier superteam.
The team would include future Cup driver Justin Haley, who Braun Auto Group sponsored. Scott Heckert finished second in the points, while Rico Abreu, fresh from his Chili Bowl win, joined the thriving team. Bringing his sponsors, Accu-Doc Solutions and GoPro Motorplex.In 2016, they signed on Harrison Burton, the son of former driver Jeff Burton, who began driving the No. 12 DEX Imaging Chevy.
HScott also signed promising dirt drivers Tyler Dippel and Hunter Baize. But along with the Cup team, the K&N East Series superteam would also shut down due to a lack of viable driver/sponsor options for 2017. This showed how massive a priority sponsorship was, which, of course, is essential for starting any kind of superteam.
Living and dying by the sponsorship dollars!
HScott Motorsports made sure there was as much sponsorship as possible for a mid-2010s NASCAR team. With the team’s two Cup drivers, Allgaier and Annett, both came with sponsorship. Michael Annett’s father, Harrold, was the CEO of TMC Transportation, which sponsored Michael’s racing efforts. Justin Allgaier was sponsored by Brandt, which he earned by being the best young driver from Illinois. BRANDT’s home state.
This was, on paper, a very savvy move by Harry Scott. NASCAR in the mid-2010s was going through an all-time ratings drop, and full-season sponsorship was something valuable that used to come easily to teams but was now incredibly rare. So, it brought short-term stability to the attempted superteam.
But HScott would become the best example of a struggle many teams have faced before and since. The struggle between sponsorship and development. Annett and Allgaier showed promise in the Nationwide Series; both had top-five points finishes in Nationwide, and Allgaier even earned a few wins. Some of which were even with Harry Scott’s old team TSM.
But while they were fast, they weren’t the fastest and were constantly beaten by those who went on to have success in the Cup Series, like Stenhouse and Austin Dillon. Anyone could see they needed more development, but when you value sponsorship money above all, that becomes something you can figure out later. But could they really?
That was always going to be hard, but it would be even harder on a new team with no veterans to lean on and with high expectations. At this point, they’d have to call Tom Cruise for this mission impossible. So was it a shock that it backfired?
From 2014 to 2015, between them, HScott only got a single top ten, an eighth at Bristol by Allgaier. Never even finishing top 25 in points. By 2016, the team was already on the ropes due to the terrible twos of bad results mixed with ambitious expansion, so in 2016, they went on an all-out push.
HScott’s 2016 Hail Mary Run
HScott tried everything they could to finally establish themselves as the superteam Harry Scott wanted them to be. They cut ties with CGR and aligned with Hendrick Motorsports, the consistently dominant team in NASCAR history.
Their most shocking move, though, was signing Clint Bowyer, which best showed Scott’s superteam ambitions. A driver who almost won the title a couple of times and had a handful of Cup wins. Expect they didn’t really sign him well permanently.
Bowyer really signed with SHR, a real NASCAR superteam to replace co-owner Tony Stewart, but he was on his retirement tour for 2016, and HScott swooped in and got the rights to sign him through a loophole in his contract. His old team, MWR, shut down after 2015, which is why he was a free agent.
The Contract That Changed Everything For Bowyer
According to his contract, Bowyer and his sponsor, 5-Hour Energy, were signed to the #15 car. So HScott flipped the #51 they started with after buying out Phoenix, who used 51 around to 15, and like that, Bowyer and Five Hour Energy were HScott. Plus, there weren’t any good rides open for 2016 from anything close to a superteam, so Bowyer didn’t buy out his deal and decided to rock with them for the year.
While that would result in Bowyer’s career-worst year, it would be HScott’s best in the Series. Bowyer in the HScott 15 had three top tens throughout the year, and heading into the regular-season finale, they were still in contention for the playoffs, though it was a long shot. But that hope was significant.
Scott had used the money from Five Hour Energy to pay off his debts, so if Bowyer got into the playoffs and got HScott those playoff winnings. They could sign a good driver to replace him and rebuild from there, while keeping their young talents to become a superteam in a few seasons. However, HScott’s last hope of becoming the superteam they were aiming to be would be gone when Bowyer crashed with Bayne in Indy. Eliminating him from the playoffs.
HScott’s Shutdown And Legacy
In December 2016, Harry Scott announced HScott’s shutdown to the world, a somber and sobering moment. Ending his dream of a NASCAR superteam, “Over the past several months, I considered a number of options for moving forward with the team,” Scott said in the statement. “Regrettably, there are no viable sponsor/driver options immediately available to allow the team to participate in 2017.”
“I love this sport and being part of it. I invested in NASCAR because I truly believe it represents the best racing competition in the world and the best people in all sports.” Justin Marks hoped their hiatus from the K&N East Series would be temporary, but tragically, the whole racing world would learn how permanent it really was.
At the beginning of August 2017, news began to spread that Harry Scott Jr. had been confirmed dead at the age of 51. This only came months after TSR’s other owner, Stevie Turner, was also confirmed dead.
Justin Marks’ Take On HScott
Team co-owner Justin Marks posted on Twitter: “I know he took tremendous pride in seeing every one of our drivers at HScott Motorsports … realizing their dreams and starting their journey in our cars. Harry loved racing and was truly committed to seeing success across all of his teams.
Without his commitment to the sport, many would not have had the opportunity to ascend to the positions they hold today. My thoughts are with Harry’s friends and family during this difficult time.
“I’ll always remember my first business partner in NASCAR with gratitude, pride, and joy.”Marks is correct: despite his failed superteam ambitions, his legacy can be seen all over the sport today, with Byron and Larson winning races and titles with Hendrick now.
Final Thoughts
Justin Marks used this experience to co-own a legit NASCAR superteam in Trackhouse, Allgaier winning races regularly in the Xfinity Series with JRM, even earning a title of his own, and the likes of Brandon Jones, Jeb, Harrison Burton, and Rhodes, who also drove with them in K&N, being regulars in the lower series.
And all the races and titles he won as HScott’s owner in K&N, plus the Truck and K&N titles he earned as co-owner with TSR, put him in the history books forever. Thanks a bunch for reading!
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