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Kyle Busch was set to run 2024 Indy 500 before Kyle Larson took his ride

Had sponsorship worked out differently, we would have been talking about Kyle Busch racing the Indianapolis 500 last year. Instead, it was NASCAR rival Kyle Larson who attempted the famous Memorial Day Double. Kyle Busch has openly wanted to do the Double for years. It is one of the few things on his bucket list […]

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Had sponsorship worked out differently, we would have been talking about Kyle Busch racing the Indianapolis 500 last year. Instead, it was NASCAR rival Kyle Larson who attempted the famous Memorial Day Double.

Kyle Busch has openly wanted to do the Double for years. It is one of the few things on his bucket list that he has yet to accomplish. That and the Daytona 500, of course.

On Denny Hamlin’s Actions Detrimental today, Busch revealed his Indy 500 plans that almost were. Instead, it was Kyle Larson who ended up taking the ride meant for the RCR driver.

“No, I had it signed, sealed, and delivered again, and then Larson took it,” Busch explained. “Yes, I won’t release the sponsor but I had a sponsor talking to Zac Brown, the deal was done, and we were about ready to go to contract and Zac Brown was like, ‘Well, hey,’ told the sponsor, he was like, ‘Hey, I need you to buy the car.’ And the sponsor was like, ‘Why do I want to buy the car? I don’t want to buy the car, I don’t need the car, I want to sponsor the car. I’m sponsoring Kyle, he’s going to drive the car. I don’t want to buy the car.’ [Zac Brown said] ‘In case he wrecks the tub, we want you to buy the tub.’”

Kyle Busch in the Indianapolis 500 would be electric. If we had two NASCAR drivers attempt the Double in the same year? That would be even better. Busch was so close to making his dream come true.

“Well, it wasn’t two weeks later that then I’m talking to this sponsor guy, and he was like, ‘Yeah, I guess that we’re too late anyways now that the opportunity’s closed because Larson got it.’ I’m like, ‘What do you mean Larson got it?’ Then I found out Larson signed a two-year deal, and we were only going to do a one-year deal,” Busch said.

Kyle Busch lost out on his Indy 500 ride. Surely, a sponsor is out there who would want to support Busch and his efforts. The only issue is finding a competitive ride. If you can’t race for Arrow McLaren or Team Penske, is it really worth doing?

At this point in his career, Busch is running out of time. If he wants to attempt the Double like his brother Kurt did in 2014, then he will have to put together a deal sooner rather than later. If that deal doesn’t come together in the next couple of years, I’m afraid it won’t ever happen.



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350,000 for the Indy 500: First Sellout in a Decade

With an expected audience of 350,000 for the 109th running of the Indianapolis 500 on May 25th, Indianapolis Motor Speedway officials have declared the race to be a sellout, the first time since the historic 100th anniversary of the race in 2015. Some tickets remain, but so few that all are expected to be sold […]

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With an expected audience of 350,000 for the 109th running of the Indianapolis 500 on May 25th, Indianapolis Motor Speedway officials have declared the race to be a sellout, the first time since the historic 100th anniversary of the race in 2015. Some tickets remain, but so few that all are expected to be sold by Monday. The race itself has typically been televised in the Indianapolis market on a tape delay, but it will be shown live this year in that market.

Wait, IndyCar fans might be saying: The Speedway has 350,000 seats? Good question. They don’t, but the grandstands can hold a still-enormous 232,000 people. Add in another 20,000 who will be watching in suites, another 12,000 who are employees on race day, fans who will watch from the infield, the Fox TV crew, team employees in the garages and on pit lane, and “You can see how quickly we get to that 350,000 number,” said Doug Boles, president of both the Speedway and the IndyCar series, at a press conference today.

In tandem with this historic update, event organizers have also lifted the local broadcast delay of the race. Expanded coverage of the first Indy 500 to air on FOX starts on Sunday, May 25 at 10 a.m. ET across the country, including Indianapolis, with the green flag set for approximately 12:45 p.m. ET.

Indy-500-Fans entering stands
Jeff Dean/AFP/Getty Images

Penske Entertainment President and CEO Mark Miles proclaimed that this is a “terrific showcase for the IndyCar series and a great milestone to supercharge our relationship with Fox Sports. It is also absolutely a fitting tribute to the continued leadership and investment of Roger Penske.” This is the first year of a multi-year contract with Fox, and Roger Penske is the owner of both the track and the series. Billionaire Penske, 88, is expected to be on his usual perch for IndyCar races, on top of a pit box helping with strategy for his three-car team, which includes Josef Newgarden, who is hoping to do something never before done in the Indy 500, and that’s win three of them in a row.

Josef Newgarden, Team Penske Chevrolet prior to the NTT IndyCar Series 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Josef Newgarden in his Penske Chevrolet.Phillip G. Abbott/Lumen/Getty Images

“I love living here for three weeks. I almost wish it was longer,” Newgarden said. “It’s definitely one of my favorite times of the year, if not the favorite. It just gets better when you win it. We have an opportunity to make history, which would be tremendous.”

This year, there are multiple solid story lines to follow between now and the race, one of them being NASCAR Cup driver, and past champion, Kyle Larson, who will attempt for the second year in a row to be the first driver since Tony Stewart, in 2001, to complete all 500 miles of the Indy 500, and all 600 miles of the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Larson tried it last year, but a rain delay at the 500 had him board the private jet to North Carolina too late to race in the 600. Like last year, he’s driving for Arrow McLaren at Indy and for Rick Hendrick’s NASCAR team at Charlotte.

The rain delay that made Larson miss the 600 last year meant that he earned no season points for that day; this year, Hendrick has made it clear that Larson will be at the 600, even if it means getting yanked out of the IndyCar mid-race. Should that happen, and likely only would with another rain delay, Indy winner Tony Kanaan will be standing by.

In practice for the 500, there had been no serious crashes, and only one minor one, until today, when Chip Ganassi Racing driver Kyffin Simpson crashed hard into the turn 4 outside wall, getting airborne and very nearly flipping before landing upright, and sliding down into the inside wall. Simpson was shaken but uninjured, but the car suffered a lot of damage, meaning Ganassi Racing must get the backup car ready for qualifying on Saturday and Sunday.

Another storyline to watch is another attempt by Helio Castroneves to win his fifth Indy 500, which has never been done. Castroneves, who is semi-retired from racing, will be in the Meyer Shank Racing car, run by the team that gave Castroneves his last victory at the Speedway.

More things to watch: Can anyone stop Alex Palou? The Spaniard has won four of the five IndyCar races so far this year, with his only loss coming at Long Beach to Kyle Kirkwood. Also, Pato O’Ward, who drives for Arrow McLaren, was leading last year’s race until the very last lap, when Newgarden seemed to come from nowhere to pass him. The TV coverage caught a devastated O’Ward on pit road after the race, and his fans think Indy owes him one.

And finally, 33 cars will start the Indianapolis 500, not 34, as a reporter who asked Boles whether or not the track will make an exception, as it has before, and let all 34 cars entered this year in the race. Absolutely not, Boles replied, “Not as long as I’m the president here.” So one car will go home after this weekend, and as Boles pointed out, some very big names over the years have failed to make the race.

Saturday, televised coverage from the track will begin at 9:30 a.m. on Fox Sports 1, with coverage throughout the day shifting to Fox Sports 2 at 1:30, and then at 4 p.m., to the Fox network. Sunday, coverage will air on the Fox network from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. As mentioned, coverage of the race on May 25th will begin on Fox at 10 a.m. ET, with the green flag scheduled for 12:45 p.m. Fans who want to watch Larson’s performance at the NASCAR race in Charlotte will need Amazon Prime, which will televise the next five NASCAR races.

109th Running Of The Indianapolis 500 - Practice and Previews
Brandon Badaroui/Lumen/Getty Images



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Kyle Larson’s barnstorming includes commuting between 3 tracks for IndyCar and NASCAR |

Kyle Larson’s barnstorming begins this weekend when he undertakes a trying commute between three racetracks in two national motorsports series. Larson is bidding to become the fifth driver to complete the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. To accomplish the feat, Larson will miss NASCAR All-Star Race preparations Friday and Saturday at […]

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Kyle Larson’s barnstorming begins this weekend when he undertakes a trying commute between three racetracks in two national motorsports series.

Larson is bidding to become the fifth driver to complete the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. To accomplish the feat, Larson will miss NASCAR All-Star Race preparations Friday and Saturday at North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, to focus on Indy 500 practice and qualifying at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

After attempting to qualify for the field of 33 for “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” on Sunday at more than 230 mph in an IndyCar, Larson will hustle to the Indianapolis airport for a flight to tiny North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Carolina, where he will race against the Cup Series’ best for $1 million in the NASCAR All-Star Race.

Larson will return to Indy for Monday practice, spend Tuesday in New York on a media tour and bounce between Indy and Charlotte Motor Speedway three times from Friday to Sunday ahead of the Coca-Cola 600.

It’s a daunting journey, but Larson is ready for the harried itinerary.

The Hendrick Motorsports star has squeezed in several dozen dirt races around his annual NASCAR schedule of 38 Cup Series weekends for the past decade.

“Yeah, I mean honestly it just feels like another week for me,” Larson said. “If anything, it’s a little easier of a week than normal.”

That’s in part because Indy 500 qualifying will end an hour later this year, so Larson will be unable to run for the pole position at North Wilkesboro, even if he were to advance to the final round of six drivers.

He already will be on the way to North Wilkesboro as a favorite, along with defending series champion Joey Logano, who led 199 of 200 laps to win last year’s NASCAR All-Star Race. Larson led 145 laps to win the 2023 All-Star Race debut at North Wilkesboro.

After the runaway wins, NASCAR has spiced up this year’s race by adding 50 laps to the distance and a random caution flag that will bunch up the field.

The format changes don’t faze Larson, who has won three of the past six All-Star Races, nor does the lack of track time. He missed practice and qualifying for last year’s All-Star Race and then drove from last to fourth on the recently repaved track.

“I think you could plug any of us in without practice, and by Lap 10 you’re going to be up to speed,” he said. “Last year was probably more of a disadvantage because I hadn’t made a single lap on that surface, but we were able to move forward right off the bat. So, hopefully we’ll have an opportunity to win like we did last year.”

Justin Allgaier will practice and qualify Larson’s No. 5 Chevrolet, but the team will skip Saturday’s 75-lap heat races that set the lineup for Sunday’s main event because Larson will start from the rear for using a replacement driver Friday.

Coming off a dominant victory May 11 at Kansas Speedway, Larson leads the points standings with three wins – making him even more confident of handling his jet-setting lifestyle.

“Every year, there’s one or two weekends where it’s either late nights or cutting it close to making it to a dirt race because practice and qualifying got done later in NASCAR,” Larson said. “This week and next week feel pretty normal to me.”

But what he’s trying to do is far from normal. He crashed Friday — after wrecking last month in a test at Indy — while trying to get up to speed with the extra horsepower that he will have for Indy 500 qualifying.

“Obviously it’s tricky. I spun,” Larson said after leaving the Indy 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.”

Last year, his attempt at the feat known as “The Double” was scuttled because the Indy 500 was delayed four hours by rain, preventing him from racing in a rain-shortened event at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“It’s something that not many people have gotten the opportunity to do and it’s a challenging day of racing,” he said. “I love the challenge. I’ve looked up to a lot of the guys that have done it, and you want to add your name to the record book somehow. Hopefully, it all goes well, and we can complete ‘The Double’ and live out a dream, but also try and do a good job with it.”

Fresh start

Harrison Burton will be making his All-Star Race debut Sunday, even though he last raced the Cup Series in the 2024 season finale. After three years in the No. 21 Ford, Burton lost his ride with Wood Brothers Racing and dropped to the Xfinity Series.

But he was guaranteed a spot in the All-Star Race because of his victory at Daytona International Speedway last August, so Rick Ware Racing hired Burton to drive its No. 51 Ford at North Wilkesboro in a one-off deal.

“You kind of never know if an opportunity will come and having an automatic bid into the All-Star Race is such a big deal to me,” Burton said. “Especially how my story has gone with the ups and downs. This is such a cool moment for me. I really wanted to make this deal work out, and I’m really happy it did.”

Title barometer

The All-Star Race winner has gone on to win the Cup championship in three of the past five years (Chase Elliott in 2020, Larson in ’21, Logano last year), which adds another layer to the race’s prestige. The select field will feature 23 drivers (20 qualified with wins, two transfer from a warmup race and the final slot is a fan vote winner).

“Just being a part of the race against some of the biggest names in the series is big and important,” said Team Penske’s Austin Cindric, who missed last year’s main event. “It’s not a points race but there’s a lot of cash on the line and definitely a cool title to go with it.”


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





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Kyle Larson’s barnstorming includes commuting between 3 tracks for IndyCar and NASCAR

Kyle Larson’s barnstorming begins this weekend when he undertakes a trying commute between three racetracks in two national motorsports series.… Kyle Larson’s barnstorming begins this weekend when he undertakes a trying commute between three racetracks in two national motorsports series. Larson is bidding to become the fifth driver to complete the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola […]

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Kyle Larson’s barnstorming begins this weekend when he undertakes a trying commute between three racetracks in two national motorsports series.…

Kyle Larson’s barnstorming begins this weekend when he undertakes a trying commute between three racetracks in two national motorsports series.

Larson is bidding to become the fifth driver to complete the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. To accomplish the feat, Larson will miss NASCAR All-Star Race preparations Friday and Saturday at North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, to focus on Indy 500 practice and qualifying at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

After attempting to qualify for the field of 33 for “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” on Sunday at more than 230 mph in an IndyCar, Larson will hustle to the Indianapolis airport for a flight to tiny North Wilkesboro Speedway in North Carolina, where he will race against the Cup Series’ best for $1 million in the NASCAR All-Star Race.

Larson will return to Indy for Monday practice, spend Tuesday in New York on a media tour and bounce between Indy and Charlotte Motor Speedway three times from Friday to Sunday ahead of the Coca-Cola 600.

It’s a daunting journey, but Larson is ready for the harried itinerary.

The Hendrick Motorsports star has squeezed in several dozen dirt races around his annual NASCAR schedule of 38 Cup Series weekends for the past decade.

“Yeah, I mean honestly it just feels like another week for me,” Larson said. “If anything, it’s a little easier of a week than normal.”

That’s in part because Indy 500 qualifying will end an hour later this year, so Larson will be unable to run for the pole position at North Wilkesboro, even if he were to advance to the final round of six drivers.

He already will be on the way to North Wilkesboro as a favorite, along with defending series champion Joey Logano, who led 199 of 200 laps to win last year’s NASCAR All-Star Race. Larson led 145 laps to win the 2023 All-Star Race debut at North Wilkesboro.

After the runaway wins, NASCAR has spiced up this year’s race by adding 50 laps to the distance and a random caution flag that will bunch up the field.

The format changes don’t faze Larson, who has won three of the past six All-Star Races, nor does the lack of track time. He missed practice and qualifying for last year’s All-Star Race and then drove from last to fourth on the recently repaved track.

“I think you could plug any of us in without practice, and by Lap 10 you’re going to be up to speed,” he said. “Last year was probably more of a disadvantage because I hadn’t made a single lap on that surface, but we were able to move forward right off the bat. So, hopefully we’ll have an opportunity to win like we did last year.”

Justin Allgaier will practice and qualify Larson’s No. 5 Chevrolet, but the team will skip Saturday’s 75-lap heat races that set the lineup for Sunday’s main event because Larson will start from the rear for using a replacement driver Friday.

Coming off a dominant victory May 11 at Kansas Speedway, Larson leads the points standings with three wins – making him even more confident of handling his jet-setting lifestyle.

“Every year, there’s one or two weekends where it’s either late nights or cutting it close to making it to a dirt race because practice and qualifying got done later in NASCAR,” Larson said. “This week and next week feel pretty normal to me.”

But what he’s trying to do is far from normal. He crashed Friday — after wrecking last month in a test at Indy — while trying to get up to speed with the extra horsepower that he will have for Indy 500 qualifying.

“Obviously it’s tricky. I spun,” Larson said after leaving the Indy 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.”

Last year, his attempt at the feat known as “The Double” was scuttled because the Indy 500 was delayed four hours by rain, preventing him from racing in a rain-shortened event at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“It’s something that not many people have gotten the opportunity to do and it’s a challenging day of racing,” he said. “I love the challenge. I’ve looked up to a lot of the guys that have done it, and you want to add your name to the record book somehow. Hopefully, it all goes well, and we can complete ‘The Double’ and live out a dream, but also try and do a good job with it.”

Fresh start

Harrison Burton will be making his All-Star Race debut Sunday, even though he last raced the Cup Series in the 2024 season finale. After three years in the No. 21 Ford, Burton lost his ride with Wood Brothers Racing and dropped to the Xfinity Series.

But he was guaranteed a spot in the All-Star Race because of his victory at Daytona International Speedway last August, so Rick Ware Racing hired Burton to drive its No. 51 Ford at North Wilkesboro in a one-off deal.

“You kind of never know if an opportunity will come and having an automatic bid into the All-Star Race is such a big deal to me,” Burton said. “Especially how my story has gone with the ups and downs. This is such a cool moment for me. I really wanted to make this deal work out, and I’m really happy it did.”

Title barometer

The All-Star Race winner has gone on to win the Cup championship in three of the past five years (Chase Elliott in 2020, Larson in ’21, Logano last year), which adds another layer to the race’s prestige. The select field will feature 23 drivers (20 qualified with wins, two transfer from a warmup race and the final slot is a fan vote winner).

“Just being a part of the race against some of the biggest names in the series is big and important,” said Team Penske’s Austin Cindric, who missed last year’s main event. “It’s not a points race but there’s a lot of cash on the line and definitely a cool title to go with it.”

___

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

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



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

INDIANAPOLIS — 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 […]

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INDIANAPOLIS — 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.”

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



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Eddie Motorsports’ Safe And Stylish CNC Fire Extinguisher Bracket

It’s easy to get caught up in horsepower and cool looks when building a car, but safety gear like a fire extinguisher is a must-have as well — even to display at some car shows. Having that extinguisher bracket mounted securely and easy to grab in a hurry matters, and Eddie Motorsports offers a CNC-machined […]

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It’s easy to get caught up in horsepower and cool looks when building a car, but safety gear like a fire extinguisher is a must-have as well — even to display at some car shows. Having that extinguisher bracket mounted securely and easy to grab in a hurry matters, and Eddie Motorsports offers a CNC-machined aluminum bracket for one-pound extinguishers that aims to do exactly that.Eddie Motorsports extinguisher bracketEddie Motorsports says its bracket stands out thanks to its clever design. The company CNC-machines each bracket from tough, 6061-T6 aluminum for strength and a precise fit. A neat feature is that builders can mount it anywhere they need it, providing lots of installation flexibility.

Here’s how it works: one part of the bracket clamps tightly and permanently around a compatible, 1-pound extinguisher (which Eddie Motorsports sells separately). That assembly then snaps into a base that bolts to the vehicle with four fasteners. If an emergency arises, a quick-release pin allows the driver or passenger to yank the extinguisher free in a second.Eddie Motorsports extinguisher bracketTo match different styles, Eddie Motorsports offers the bracket in a machined-aluminum finish, a highly polished version, or in a range of durable, Fusion-coated colors. Units specifically designed for roll bar mounting are on the way soon.

A well-made CNC aluminum part, like this Eddie Motorsports extinguisher bracket, isn’t just for looks; it’s about having that important piece of equipment held securely but still ready to grab instantly when accidents happen. It adds real protection and a bit more peace of mind when you’re out there driving.





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Wilkesboro businesses see boost before NASCAR All-Star Race

Fans from Maine to Montana are pouring into the North Wilkesboro area, and fueling up local businesses ahead of the NASCAR All-Star Race. WILKESBORO, N.C. — Local businesses in Wilkesboro are already seeing a surge in customers ahead of this weekend’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway. In 2023, visitors spent nearly $29 million […]

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Fans from Maine to Montana are pouring into the North Wilkesboro area, and fueling up local businesses ahead of the NASCAR All-Star Race.

WILKESBORO, N.C. — Local businesses in Wilkesboro are already seeing a surge in customers ahead of this weekend’s NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway.

In 2023, visitors spent nearly $29 million during race week in the area, according to the North Carolina Department of Commerce. That influx of race fans makes a major impact on longtime favorites like Glenn’s Diner.

Stephanie Yates, who has worked at Glenn’s Diner for more than 30 years and now owns it, said the team prepares weeks in advance and brings on extra staff just to keep up with the crowd.

“That will extend through the early part of next week. Campers come in, they get ready to leave. Generally, we’re not open on Sunday, but we are during race week,” she said. “Some days a little more, some days a little less, but still impactful overall to a small business like us.”

The boost is also true for the ’50s Snack Bar in downtown Wilkesboro.

Owner Keith Johnson, who grew up just down the road from the track and remembers watching his uncle – Junior Johnson — race. Keith Johnson said the business is seeing a 5 to 10% increase so far.

“Wednesday and Thursday were great, above average. It’s exciting to see it,” Johnson said. “I’ll go down and see if I see some old friends maybe today or tomorrow.”

Both owners said they’ve met people from Maine to Montana, as well as many regular customers, all drawn to the excitement around the race. 

The NASCAR All-Star Race this weekend marks the third year the historic North Wilkesboro Speedway has hosted the event since its revival.  



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