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Larson crashes out of Indy 500, ending 2nd bid for ‘Double’

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Kyle Larson crashed out of the Indianapolis 500 near the midway point Sunday, ending the NASCAR superstar’s second shot at finishing both “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” and the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte in the same day. Larson had been mired deep in traffic throughout the first half of the race, which […]

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Kyle Larson crashed out of the Indianapolis 500 near the midway point Sunday, ending the NASCAR superstar’s second shot at finishing both “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” and the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte in the same day.

Larson had been mired deep in traffic throughout the first half of the race, which was delayed about 35 minutes because of a rain shower that passed over the speedway. He was going through Turns 1 and 2 when his car wiggled on a downshift, sending him into a spin and into the outside wall, ending his race after 91 laps.

“Just a bit crazy there on the restart,” he said. “I got like, tight behind Takuma (Sato). I was really close in. I got loose and kind of got all over the place, and yeah, so it spun. Just hate that I got a little too eager on the restarter. Hate it for everybody else.”

Kyffin Simpson and Sting Ray Robb also were caught up in the crash.

“When Kyle started losing it and checking up, I tried to go around the outside and there was just no grip out there,” Robb said.

The early ouster at least gave Larson plenty of time to make the trip to North Carolina for the Cup Series race on Sunday night, where he will start on the outside of the front row. If he had made it to the finish in Indianapolis, he would have faced a tight window to make the 550-mile trip because of the rain delay, which soaked up most of the 45-minute buffer that his NASCAR team Hendrick Motorsports and IndyCar team Arrow McLaren projected for him.

It was a rough day for Larson even before the crash. He also stalled the car on pit lane, costing him valuable track positions.

Larson took his first shot on one of the toughest challenges in motorsports last season, when even more rain wreaked havoc with his finely laid plans. That Indy 500 was delayed by 4 hours because of heavy rains that saturated Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and that caused him to be late to Charlotte, where the Cup Series race was underway by the time he landed.

Then, more rain there caused the NASCAR race to be called complete before Larson ever took a lap in his car.

John Andretti was the first driver to try the Indy 500-Coca-Cola 600 double in 1994, and Robby Gordon, Tony Stewart and Kurt Busch also have given it a shot. Stewart is the only one to complete all 1,100 laps, finishing sixth in the 2001 Indy 500 before the helicopter-jet-helicopter jaunt to Charlotte, where he finished third in the Cup Series race.

“Just bummed out,” Larson said. “Try to get over this quickly and get on to Charlotte. Try to forget about it and win tonight.”



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NASCAR Friday schedule at Sonoma

Sonoma Raceway will open its 2025 NASCAR race weekend with the ARCA West and Xfinity series turning laps on the 1.99-mile road course. ARCA West will begin at 1:40 p.m. ET with an 80-minute practice leading into qualifying for a 64-lap race that will start at 6:30 p.m. ET. The Xfinity Series will begin a […]

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Sonoma Raceway will open its 2025 NASCAR race weekend with the ARCA West and Xfinity series turning laps on the 1.99-mile road course.

ARCA West will begin at 1:40 p.m. ET with an 80-minute practice leading into qualifying for a 64-lap race that will start at 6:30 p.m. ET.

The Xfinity Series will begin a 50-minute practice at 4 p.m ET ahead of qualifying for Saturday’s race. Despite moving up to the Cup Series this year, Shane van Gisbergen will be in the Xfinity field to defend his Sonoma win last year.

Xfinity Series regular Sam Mayer is the defending winner of the ARCA West race but won’t be in the field Friday.

Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium

This will mark the second year in a row that the exhibition event will be held at the historic track.


Sonoma Friday schedule

(All Times Eastern)

Friday, July 11

Garage open

  • 10:30 a.m. – 10 p.m. — ARCA West Series
  • 11 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. — Xfinity Series
  • 5:30 – 10:30 p.m. — Cup Series

Track activity

  • 1:40 – 3 p.m. — ARCA West practice
  • 3:10 – 3:30 p.m. — ARCA West qualifying
  • 4 – 4:50 p.m. — Xfinity practice (CW App)
  • 5:05 – 6 p.m. — Xfinity qualifying (CW App)
  • 6:30 p.m. — ARCA West race (64 laps, 127.36 miles; Flo Racing, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Weather

Friday: Mostly sunny with a high of 81 degrees and winds from the south at 5 to 10 mph. It’s expected to be 85 degrees with a 0% chance of rain at the start of the ARCA race.





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BangShift.com FREE LIVE DRAG RACING: Virginia Motorsports Park’s Mega Bucks Triple Threat Bracket Series Racing Action – Friday

FREE LIVE DRAG RACING: Virginia Motorsports Park’s Mega Bucks Triple Threat Bracket Series Racing Action – Friday Jul 11, 2025Chad Reynolds1320 Event Coverage, 1320 Spotlight, 1320 Videos, BangShift 1320, DRAG RACES, Event Coverage, RACING & ACTION, Videos If you want to see live big money bracket racing, this Triple Threat Bracket Series event is one […]

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FREE LIVE DRAG RACING: Virginia Motorsports Park’s Mega Bucks Triple Threat Bracket Series Racing Action – Friday


FREE LIVE DRAG RACING: Virginia Motorsports Park’s Mega Bucks Triple Threat Bracket Series Racing Action – Friday

If you want to see live big money bracket racing, this Triple Threat Bracket Series event is one to watch so check it out LIVE right here thanks to our friends at MotorManiaTV. We love this track, love the staff, and love that the racing action is hot and heavy regardless of the series. If you want a great time, make sure you hit Virginia Motorsports Park.

Video Description:

It’s become one of the go to events for the Mid-Atlantic bracket scene. This is the second schedule race of the series, but the first of the season when the first race was rained out.

With a three day payout structure of $10K/$20K/$10K and 64 car shootout Thursday, what’s not to like? Plus, don’t forget, there will be a points champion crowned at the end of the series with over $10,000 in cash and prizes.


FREE LIVE DRAG RACING: NHRA Division 2 Divisional Lucas Oil Sportsman Drag Racing At South Georgia Motorsports Park – Friday

 






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Maker of iconic NASCAR trophy closing down, report says

ZEELAND, Mich. (WBTV) – The company that makes an iconic NASCAR trophy plans to shut down, according to reports. Howard Miller, a furniture and clock-making company based in Michigan, currently makes the grandfather clocks handed out to NASCAR winners at Martinsville Speedway. The family-owned company plans to close next year after nearly 100 years in […]

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ZEELAND, Mich. (WBTV) – The company that makes an iconic NASCAR trophy plans to shut down, according to reports.

Howard Miller, a furniture and clock-making company based in Michigan, currently makes the grandfather clocks handed out to NASCAR winners at Martinsville Speedway.

The family-owned company plans to close next year after nearly 100 years in business, Furniture Today reported. The company employees nearly 200 people and has two facilities in Michigan, plus locations in Lexington and High Point in North Carolina.

Furniture Today said that Howard Miller plans to continue production through the end of 2025 and will stay open in 2026 to sell off its inventory. The Furniture Today report said the company’s CEO cited a struggling housing market, rising inflation and interest rates, and tariffs as reasons for shutting down.

History of grandfather clocks in NASCAR

Following news of Howard Miller’s impending closure, NASCAR broadcaster Mike Joy took to social media to explain the history of the iconic grandfather clocks at Martinsville.

Joy said that major race winners at the historic short track have been given a Ridgeway clock since 1964, the year Hall of Fame driver Fred Lorenzen won both races and led a remarkable 980 out of 1,000 laps between the two events.

In the decades since, Howard Miller acquired Ridgeway and has continued to supply race winners with clocks.

Martinsville Speedway has given out grandfather clocks to race winners since 1964.
Martinsville Speedway has given out grandfather clocks to race winners since 1964.(Chuck Burton | AP)

Joy posted that he got a text from the Martinsville Speedway president that said the track “will find something just as good.” In the same post, Joy himself said the clock situation “will turn out fine, and the uniqueness of their trophy will be preserved.”

Since Martinsville began giving out the clock trophies to race winners, some of NASCAR’s biggest names have won them. Among the list of drivers to do so are Richard Petty, Darrell Waltrip, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, and both Dale Jr. and Dale Sr.

Dale Jr. was one of the people who publicly commented on the Howard Miller news.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. won his only grandfather clock in October 2014.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. won his only grandfather clock in October 2014.(Don Petersen | AP)

“Whomever makes the next version better make them exactly like the previous versions,” Earnhardt wrote on social media. “Don’t get cute and [expletive] this up.”

Fellow driver Landon Cassill had a bit more humorous approach and joked in a comment on Earnhardt’s post that “[The] next versions gonna be digital and Bluetooth controlled with an app.”

Also Read: NASCAR coming back to historic North Carolina racetrack in 2026



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Carson Hocevar admits friends and family raised concerns over NASCAR move – Motorsport – Sports

Carson Hocevar conceded that his move from the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series to the Cup Series drew considerable backlash from those in his inner circle. Since taking his talents to the top racing series of NASCAR, Hocevar has repeatedly ruffled feathers due to his aggressive driving style. Ryan Blaney described him as a “moron” following […]

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Carson Hocevar conceded that his move from the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series to the Cup Series drew considerable backlash from those in his inner circle.

Since taking his talents to the top racing series of NASCAR, Hocevar has repeatedly ruffled feathers due to his aggressive driving style. Ryan Blaney described him as a “moron” following the Ambetter Health 400, AJ Allmendinger issued him a stern warning at the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix, Ryan Preece warned “he’ll have his day” after the Wurth 400 and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. threatened to ‘beat his a–‘ on the heels of the Viva Mexico 250.

Most recently, Hocevar drew the ire of Austin Dillon, who called him the ‘biggest dumb—‘ in NASCAR upon getting caught up in a wreck during last weekend’s Grant Park 165.

Though Hocevar’s racing tactics haven’t exactly made him many friends on the grid, they have led to respectable results. Over 19 races, he’s amassed four top-10 finishes, two top-5s and one pole — a far cry from the type of production that Spire Motorsports achieved just several years ago.

Back in October 2023, Hocevar inked a multi-year contract with Spire Motorsports to pilot the No. 77 Chevrolet in the Cup Series. The prior season, the team ranked a meagre 33rd in owner points while in the midst of a strenuous rebuild.

Given Hocevar’s prior success in the Truck Series, several people close to him questioned why he was taking such a massive risk by joining a downtrodden organization. “I had people really, really close to me and my family just be like, ‘Congrats, career suicide. Good job,’” Hocevar said while making an appearance on the ‘Dale Jr. Download’ podcast.

“I had people in my inner circle really close to me that aren’t in that inner circle anymore, but they were just like, ‘Are you f—— sure about this? You’re f—— winning truck races and you’re going to do this?’”

Despite receiving pushback from multiple angles, Hocevar remained committed to chasing his dream of racing in the Cup Series. “I’ve always wanted to drive a Cup car,” he explained. “I didn’t get winning stuff in trucks. If I really believe in myself, I can make this stuff winning, or I can make this stuff better… I’ve done it before. Not just be like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna make this winning,’ but I was like let’s just see where it goes. I just got to get in the door, get to Sunday, and see where it goes. If I was wrong, I was wrong at least on Sunday.”

DON’T MISS:

Now that Spire is a legitimate race contender, Hocevar noted that expectations are higher but the internal intensity has remained the same. “This year, it’s just been like, okay, we have to run up front and get stage points. That’s our goal,” he said. “Last year it was like, okay, we’re looking at points and we’re 18th, but it’s 100 to the next guy. It’s because he’s got 100 stage points — we have nothing.

“Our intensity level I feel like has been the same everywhere. It’s just whether our car or me can handle it on the right day. We’re trying to operate on that level now because if you’re expected to win races, I don’t feel like the moment is gonna be too big because our intensity is here. I feel like guys get that winning opportunity and now they have to raise their intensity up. Now they’re uncomfortable and that’s when they bust their a–.”



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Time, TV channel for another road-course race

NASCAR went nearly five decades of modern-era Cup Series racing with just two road courses on the schedule. First it was Riverside and Watkins Glen, then Sonoma replaced Riverside. A third was finally added in 2018 when Charlotte Motor Speedway went road-racing for its second race of each season, and along the way invented the […]

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NASCAR went nearly five decades of modern-era Cup Series racing with just two road courses on the schedule. First it was Riverside and Watkins Glen, then Sonoma replaced Riverside.

A third was finally added in 2018 when Charlotte Motor Speedway went road-racing for its second race of each season, and along the way invented the word roval to define its combination of road course and traditional oval, which is actually a quad-oval, but let’s move along.

Watch NASCAR on Sling TV

These days there are five road courses. Not only that, this weekend the Cup Series runs its second road-course race in seven days. A week after the Chicago Street Race, they disturb the peace in California’s wine country, where Sonoma Raceway is host to a Cup race for the 36th time since 1989.

The best current road-course racer in NASCAR, Shane van Gisbergen, attempts the hat trick after winning the past two Cup roadies — in Mexico City last month and Chicago last week.

And if you’re thinking, “I’d like to watch that, I wonder if I can,” you’re in luck. You can watch that, along with other NASCAR racing, and if you thought we were gonna keep the times and channels a secret, you’re sadly mistaken.

Friday: Right-hand turns for Xfinity Series

4 p.m.: Xfinity Series practice (CW app).

5:05 p.m.: Xfinity Series qualifying (CW app).

Saturday: NASCAR Cup Series qualifying, Xfinity race at Sonoma

1:30 p.m.: Cup Series practice (TruTV).

2:40 p.m.: Cup Series qualifying (TruTV).

4:30: Xfinity Series, Pit Boss/FoodMaxx 250 (CW).

Sunday: Can SVG win a third straight road race?

3:30 p.m.: Cup Series, Toyota/Save Mart 350 (TNT).



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Carson Hocevar reveals team thought he had ‘medical emergency’ amid Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Mexico City incident

Carson Hocevar got into it with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. during NASCAR’s trip to Mexico City in June. During an appearance on the latest episode of the Dale Jr. Download, the Spire Motorsports wheelman revealed his team was so confused about the incident that they thought he suffered a medical emergency. The Portage, Michigan native accidentally […]

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Carson Hocevar got into it with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. during NASCAR’s trip to Mexico City in June. During an appearance on the latest episode of the Dale Jr. Download, the Spire Motorsports wheelman revealed his team was so confused about the incident that they thought he suffered a medical emergency.

The Portage, Michigan native accidentally lost focus and turned the former Daytona 500 winner. According to Hocevar, he went through some serious brain fog at the moment, and didn’t mean to hit Stenhouse Jr. at the time. Still, the Hyak Motorsports wheelman wasn’t hearing any of it.

“Remember when Riley [Herbst], like, hooked around and the No. 47 was really close, and then like he like, putted right? I almost hit him. I thought his car was dead. I thought he hit the No. 35, so he’s putting over. So, he turned left. I was like, ‘Oh f***,’ and I locked up the brakes. We run a bunch of laps, and I’m just trying to get comfortable. The straightaways are so long, our cars are kind of slow with the horsepower, with the elevation and everything, and I noticed he was catching the guys in front,” Hocevar explained.

“I was like, ‘I’m going to earn some back here. I’m going to push him down the straightaway,’ so I was kind of staying close and everything. Just the biggest brain-fade ever. I got in the corner, and I was just like, ‘Oh, there’s a corner here,’ so I went to the break. I locked up. I just got zoned out. I was just like, you know, banging gears. Now there’s like five to go, and I’m just like, ‘Caution’s not going to come out. Yep, yep, yep. This is normal.’ For a minute, my guys thought I like, passed out, because my car just goes straight.

“I am legitimately in there, just holding the wheel straight, either getting ready to turn right to go to the garage. Not actually, but I was just literally sitting there and I’m watching him and I don’t even turn the wheel. I just literally like stop, and I’m just watching him spin. I’m just like, ‘Please for the love of God, save this thing. Even if you lose a spot, just save it,’ and I just watch him spin around.

“I’m just like, ‘Okay, do I just wait for him to go? Do I just get wrecked now?’ So I just stay — my car just stayed there for a while. They thought I legitimately like, a medical emergency, like I passed out from the heat and whatever. But I was just like, no. I was just sitting there watching.”

At the least, it certainly adds an interesting layer to the incident between Hocevar and Stenhouse Jr. in Mexico City. Evidently, Stenhouse Jr. bought Hocevar’s explanation, as there haven’t been any problems between the two drivers since that moment.

Moving forward, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won’t give Carson Hocevar much grace on the track, but he’s put their scuffle in Mexico behind them, it seems. When these two are racing over the course of the summer, though, don’t expect any love, as they’re going to continue racing each other hard regardless.



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