SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Ryan Blaney and Chase Briscoe claimed the stage wins in the NASCAR Cup Series Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Follow here for live race updates.
NASCAR Cup Series’ Brickyard 400 at Indy Final Stage
Getty Images/NASCAR Media
Chase Briscoe in 7th reports a right-rear tire vibration, lap 148.
Bubba Wallace cycles out to the lead with Tyler Reddick, Kyle Larson, William Byron, Denny Hamlin, Josh Berry, Chase Briscoe, Christopher Bell, Chris Buescher and Carson Hocevar in 10th with 16 laps to go. Larson takes second from Reddick, who is still trying to save fuel.
Ryan Blaney is pitting this lap, lap 142.
Keselowski, Haley come in, anticipating a caution for Logano who got the car re-fired. 23 to go now.
LAP 134: Joey Logano with a right-rear tire down! He was set to be leading the race! Bubba Wallace will take that spot.
Bubba Wallace is told: “We are good on fuel, the 22 is concerned. Push hard.”
Kudos to Katherine Legge who has stayed on the lead lap and has had a solid race through all the strategies shuffling around. As everything is still in flux, Legge sits fifth.
Joey Logano emerges with the lead after making a shorter pit stop than everyone else. Prospective top-10 is now Logano, Bubba, Reddick, Larson, Berry, Byron, Hamlin, Briscoe, Bell and Buescher… Hocevar is set to be 11th.
Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin, Carson Hocevar and Tyler Reddick all pit on lap 122… the last time for fuel.
Josh Berry pits on lap 117, Logano pits on 118, Byron pits on 119. Briscoe also pits. Byron had a slower stop.
Kyle Larson hung on to the lead after the first restart of the final stage. Larson leads Denny Hamlin, William Byron, Carson Hocevar, Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, Chris Buescher, Ryan Preece and Christopher Bell. Reddick and Preece each gained four spots while Bell gained two. John Hunter Nemechek dropped two spots to 11th, Chase Briscoe dropped four to 11th.
Here is the top-10 as the final stage will start on lap 106:
Kyle Larson
Denny Hamlin
William Byron
Carson Hocevar
Joey Logano
Chris Buescher
Bubba Wallace
Chase Briscoe
John Hunter Nemechek
Chase Elliott
The first driver who pitted during the stage caution is in 18th — Alex Bowman. The fuel window is 40 laps but drivers have gone 43 laps on fuel.
NASCAR Cup Series’ Brickyard 400 at Indy Stage Two Winner: Ryan Blaney
Photo by Joseph Eigo/TRE
Ryan Blaney hangs on to win Stage Two at Indy. Top 10: Blaney, Larson, Hamlin, Byron, Keselowski, Bowman, Hocever, Logano, Buescher, Bubba.
LAP 97: Brad Keselowski stayed out too. He’ll be on the outside front row with Ryan Blaney with William Byron, Alex Bowman, Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, Carson Hocevar, Chris Buescher and Bubba Wallace rounding out the top-10.
John Hunter Nemechek in 13th is the first guy who pitted under caution.
Blaney stays out, lap 93. Preece, Haley come in with the others mentioned in the first group below.
LAP 91: Chase Briscoe, Tyler Reddick, Ryan Blaney, Christopher Bell, Zane Smith, John Hunter Nemechek, Brad Keselowski, Shane van Gisbergen and Katherine Legge didn’t pit before the caution came out. William Byron in 10th will cycle to the lead for what will be less than eight laps to go in the second stage.
Rounding out the top-10 will be Alex Bowman, Ryan Preece, Kyle Larson, Justin Haley, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, Carson Hocevar, Chris Buescher and Bubba Wallace.
Erik Jones has crashed with a right-front tire issue on lap 89. Caution flies. It appears he had a brake rotor that exploded his wheel. Free pass goes to Todd Gilliland.
Leader Austin Cindric blows a right-rear tire in turn one. Joey Logano takes the lead… Lap 84. No caution yet. Joey Logano, Chris Buescher, Ty Gibbs pit expecting a caution. Denny Hamlin also pits.
Kyle Larson pits on lap 80, Carson Hocevar on lap 81. They both ran inside the top-10 before pitting.
TOP-10: Austin Cindric, Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace, Chris Buescher, Josh Berry, Ty Gibbs, Chase Briscoe, Erik Jones, Denny Hamlin, Tyler Reddick. Kyle Larson and Carson Hocevar were trapped a lap down after their stops.
Ty Dillon goes a lap down with nose damage from the restart wreck. Cole Custer has a tire problem. Lap 78… William Byron to pit road seeing the tire issue.
Ryan Preece pits on lap 63. Alex Bowman and Justin Haley pit on lap 64. Preece went 42 laps on fuel, Bowman and Haley went 43. They had a few caution laps helping them. Preece and Haley are now a lap down.
William Byron to fifth. He now leads the drivers on the standard strategy, lap 60.
Austin Dillon, Ty Dillon, Tyler Reddick, Cody Ware Ricky Stenhouse Jr. have damage after a bad restart for Josh Berry. Reddick and Ty Dillon are the only ones who don’t pit. Ty Dillon is facing Ty Gibbs for the $1 million grand prize in the NASCAR in-season tournament.
Top 10 is now Preece, Bowman, Haley, Hocevar, Cindric, Byron, Wallace, Logano, Buescher and Berry, who fell from near the top-five to 10th.
Staying out: Ryan Preece, Alex Bowman, Justin Haley, Austin Cindric, Josh Berry, Joey Logano and Erik Jones. Preece last pitted on lap 21, Bowman and Haley on lap 20 — Cindric on lap 42, Berry on lap 43, Logano on lap 41 and Jones on lap 46.
Off pit road: Carson Hocevar (two tires), Chase Briscoe (four), William Byron, (four), Tyler Reddick (four), Bubba Wallace (four), Kyle Busch (four), Kyle Larson (four), Daniel Suarez (four), Chris Buescher (four), Ty Gibbs (four).
NASCAR Cup Series’ Brickyard 400 at Indy Stage One Winner: Chase Briscoe
Getty Images/NASCAR Media
Chase Briscoe wins the first stage at Indy.
Stage One Top 10 (LAP 50): Briscoe, Bubba Wallace, William Byron, Tyler Reddick, Chris Buescher, Kyle Busch, Carson Hocevar, Kyle Larson, Austin Dillon, A.J. Allmendinger
The top-10 drivers will likely pit amd restart behind Austin Cindric, Josh Berry, Joey Logano and Erik Jones. They pitted before the stage end. Free pass goes to Josh Bilicki.
LAP 47: Chase Briscoe leads Bubba Wallace, William Byron, Tyler Reddick, Chris Buescher, Kyle Busch, Carson Hocevar, Kyle Larson, Austin Dillon and A.J. Allmendinger. Erik Jones pits to join the Penske strategy. Jones just managed to stay on the lead lap.
Cindric, Berry and Logano stay on the lead lap. Berry leaped Logano with taking less fuel to stay on the lead lap.
LAP 41: Joey Logano pits for the first time. Austin Cindric and Josh Berry, who are on the same strategy, pit a lap and two laps later, respectively.
Austin Cindric isn’t saving at all. He leads by 1.8 seconds and counting as he is running lap times around three tenths faster than everyone else. He stayed out with second-place Joey Logano and fifth-place Josh Berry during the first caution. Mostly everyone took two fresh tires, except for Ty Gibbs and others who took four and have mostly stalled out.
Top 10: 2 22 19 23 21 43 24 45 17 8. McDowell with tire issues and coming to pit road, lap 26. Seems to be extenuating issues from what happened with Chastain who is in the garage after an incident. Noah Gragson has an unscheduled pit stop. His team reports smoke coming from the car.
Joey Logano, Austin Cindric and Josh Berry stayed out and will lead the field to the green flag. Behind them are Chase Briscoe, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, Erik Jones, William Byron, Chris Buescher, Kyle Busch, A.J. Allmendinger, Carson Hocevar and Kyle Larson.
TOP-10, LAP 20: Chase Briscoe, Tyler Reddick, Bubba Wallace, William Byron, Erik Jones, Ty Gibbs, Chris Buescher, Carson Hocevar, Austin Cindric and A.J. Allmendinger. Pit stops underway under caution…
Ross Chastain drives away after safety crews pump up the shocks so he can get back to pit road after crashing in turn three. That pump was something NASCAR put in place as an option for teams after drivers had issues driving away from crashes with the Gen 7 car.
Chastain has crashed entering turn three. Chastain appeared to block a run from Michael McDowell who bumped him on the entry to the corner, setting off the wreck.
Tyler Reddick jumps to second, lap 8. The first stage is 50 laps.
Chase Briscoe takes the early lead, leading the first few laps ahead of Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick, William Byron, Erik Jones, Ty Gibbs, Chris Buescher, Carson Hocevar, Austin Cindric and A.J. Allmendinger.
Denny Hamlin is up nine spots to 30th. He crashed in qualifying and had to go to a backup car after being fastest in practice. If he can win, it’ll be the worst start for one any of his Cup wins.
Brickyard 400 Race Start
Getty Images/NASCAR Media
Chase Briscoe is starting on the pole for the Brickyard 400 after a series-high fifth pole on the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season. Briscoe is the first driver to win the pole for NASCAR’s three biggest crown jewels — the Brickyard 400, the Daytona 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 — in the same year.
Toyota claimed the first five starting spots, with Briscoe leading the way.
Getty Images/NASCAR Media
Meanwhile, teammate Denny Hamlin will start 39th — last — after a crash in qualifying. He will race in a backup car.
Michael McDowell, John Hunter Nemechek, Zane Smith and Jesse Love will also start in the rear of the field for “unapproved adjustments.”
Could rain affect the Brickyard 400?
Possibly. According to Brian Neudorff, the NASCAR weatherman, there is a chance of rain about two hours after the expected command to fire the engines. There is a good chance of getting the race in, as what happened Saturday in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race and last week in the NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover:
Brickyard 400 Info
Here’s how you can watch the NASCAR Cup Series’ Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis and more info:
TV: TNT, Radio: IMS Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Ch. 90 (More: NASCAR at Indianapolis 2025: Odds and more info)
160 laps (Stages: 50 / 100 / 160)
Fuel Window: 40 laps
Green flag: 2:20 p.m. ET
Average time of race: Three hours, 29 minutes and nine seconds
Carl Edwards’ career sits among the sport’s great what-ifs, defined less by a lack of ability than by timing that never quite broke his way. That reality is why Denny Hamlin has often felt a kinship with him. Edwards came agonizingly close to a Cup championship, only to see it slip away in 2016 after a late caution reshaped the finale and left him fourth in the standings. That moment effectively closed his Cup chapter. Long before that, however, Edwards had already stepped away from NASCAR’s second tier.
Edwards’ final Xfinity Series start came at Watkins Glen in 2012, despite the fact that he had thrived in the series. When asked what prompted that decision, Edwards pointed directly to his 2011 championship duel with Tony Stewart.
That season grew with contrasting arcs. Edwards, driving the No. 99 Ford for Roush Fenway Racing, entered the playoffs as one of the most consistent drivers in the field. Stewart, meanwhile, barely scraped into the postseason. He reached the cutoff without a single win and openly questioned whether he belonged there at all.
However, everything changed once the playoffs began. Stewart won the opener at Chicagoland Speedway, a result that flipped his outlook. He followed it with another victory at New Hampshire, suddenly transforming from an afterthought into a contender.
As Stewart gathered steam, Edwards sensed the shift. While Edwards had built his campaign on steady top-10s and top-5s, Stewart’s resurgence introduced a new threat at the top of the standings.
Stewart did little to downplay it. He issued a warning to Edwards, who continued to rack up solid finishes without frequent trips to victory lane. “He’d better be worried. That’s all I can say. He’s not going to have an easy three weeks.” Stewart backed up those words on track, winning three more races, including the championship finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Throughout that same year, Edwards remained deeply involved in the Xfinity Series. He won eight races there, reinforcing how strong he was in the Tier 2 division. Yet when the season ended, he chose not to continue that dual role. In a 2016 interview, Edwards explained the turning point in his own words.
“What really stopped that for me was my battle with Tony Stewart in 2011. Here I was in the middle of the greatest battle I’ve been in of my career. I was having so much fun. I wanted to win that championship.”
He began to recognize the cost of splitting focus. Edwards described finishing Happy Hour in his Cup car, speaking briefly with crew chief Bob Osborne, then rushing off to climb into the Xfinity car. That routine forced a realization.
“I noticed I was getting done with Happy Hour in the Cup car, talking with Bob Osborne, my crew chief, for maybe five minutes and then rushing off to the Xfinity car. I thought, ‘What am I doing? I’m diminishing my opportunity to win this Cup championship.’ I did it for seven years full-time, almost 500 races straight. I felt like I got everything out of it that I could.”
When asked whether he ever considered returning to the Xfinity Series, Edwards did not rule it out entirely. He said he would have liked to secure a Cup championship first, then revisit the Xfinity schedule, focusing on the races he found most enjoyable.
What held him back was the same calculation that shaped his decision in 2011. He refused to compromise his Cup program, even if it meant leaving behind a series where he had once been at his best.
(WJHL) — Motorsports journalist and ETSU alumna Deb Williams joins Kenny Hawkins and McKenzie Kane to unpack the NASCAR antitrust lawsuit settlement. The three talk about the institution of evergreen charters and what the deal means for the future of the sport.
Later in the show, McKenzie and Kenny talk about the 2025 Heisman Trophy winner, ETSU men’s basketball, and Scottie Scheffler winning his fourth PGA Tour player of the year title.
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Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. and Nissan Motorsports & Customization Co., Ltd. (NMC) today announced new initiatives aimed at enhancing Nissan’s overall brand power through new motorsport activities and the expansion of the NISMO car lineup.
As part of the Re:Nissan product strategy, ‘heartbeat models’ are key to sparking emotion and define Nissan’s brand DNA. NMC strives to support this by showcasing the pursuit of performance in motorsports and driving passion in NISMO products through new business initiatives.
The pursuit of performance through motorsports Under the motto “Road to track, track to road,” Nissan leverages technology and driving spirit cultivated through top-tier racing series such as Super GT and Formula E. Insights and innovations are pulled from the track and leveraged in the NISMO car lineup.
Nissan will continue to challenge itself in series like the Super Taikyu and expand into new types of racing.
NISMO car lineup: Emotion and excitement at the wheel Continuing the success of the NISMO car lineup, Nissan aims to double the number of cars available globally, from five to ten. Nissan also plans to expand market availability of NISMO cars. Nissan aims to increase annual shipment volumes from approximately 100,000 units to 150,000 units by 2028, with overseas sales rising from approximately 40% to 60%. In pursuit of added customer value, Nissan will actively consider collaborations with external partners to expand its NISMO car lineup business.
Beginning from fiscal year 2026, Nissan introduce prototype vehicles for racing activities to accelerate technological advancements in both hardware and software development for racing purpose and car lineup expansion.
Heritage and restoration programs The global auto restoration market is valued at approximately 500 billion yen and is projected to grow upwards of 1.2 trillion yen by 2032. NMC will grow its restoration, restomod, and parts sales businesses with an initial focus on expanding around the Skyline GT‑R R32, R33 and R34, with more vehicles and regional offerings to follow.
Yutaka Sanada, President and CEO of NMC, stated, “NISMO continues to elevate the excitement and innovation of Nissan vehicles. Moving forward, we aim to infuse our passion and driven excitement into Nissan’s other product lines.”
Through ongoing motorsports activities, expansion of customization, and growth of the heritage and restoration business, NMC will aims to deliver new excitement to Nissan and NISMO fans worldwide.
About Nissan Motorsports & Customization Co., Ltd. (NMC) Founded in 2022, NMC formed through the integration of Nissan’s motorsports activities dating back to 1936, the birth of the NISMO brand in 1984, and the establishment of AUTECH JAPAN in 1986. Nissan’s philosophy of using motorsports as a way to develop people, technology, and cars drives our passion for innovation. NISMO inherits this DNA, continuously taking on new challenges, leveraging its expertise and spirit to enhance brand value.
The Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 can add the Canadian Tire Motorsport Park to its list of steadfastly growing lap records. The ‘Vette team paid a visit to the track, which is near Toronto, Ontario, last month to prove once again that the twin-turbocharged, flat-plane V8 is king of the hill when it comes to daily-drivable supercars. With veteran racing driver (and Canada’s native son) Ron Fellows behind the wheel, the hot Corvette lapped the Toronto-area track in just 1 minute and 18.22 seconds, a number that smashed the previous record by nearly four ticks.
Base Trim Engine
5.5L V-8 ICE
Base Trim Transmission
8-speed auto-shift manual
Base Trim Drivetrain
Rear-Wheel Drive
Sprinting Through The Corners
That former record also belonged to Chevrolet, incidentally. Fellows himself set the previous production car benchmark in 2023 with a Corvette Z06. In that outing, he crossed the finish line in 1:22.16, the car’s naturally aspirated V8 screaming near its 8,600-rpm rev limit the whole time.
The ZR1 borrows a lot from the Z06, starting with its 5.5-liter LT6 V8 engine. But a pair of turbochargers and a host of supporting upgrades bring the V8 from its already impressive 670 horsepower and 460 pound-feet of torque to an unbelievable 1,024 hp and 828 lb-ft – numbers that exceed the three-times-as-expensive Lamborghini Revuelto, much less anything close to the Corvette’s $200k starting price.
Where research meets the right deal
The ZR1 is so blisteringly quick that Fellows beat his previous record by nearly two seconds – a mere seven runs into the session. The times got faster and faster from there, before the retired professional driver capped his day off with a 1:18.22 lap time, 3.96 seconds faster than the Z06. That’s an incredible achievement for a track that measures only 2.5 miles from start to finish. The track’s fast, sweeping layout and big altitude changes are a recipe for drama, which Fellows avoids thanks to his longtime familiarity with the Grand Prix layout – he hosts a professional driving school right there.
The Latest In A Long Series Of Track Records
By this point, the Corvette ZR1 is very familiar with the view from the top of the podium. In February, Chevrolet announced that its budget-priced supercar had captured five lap records at four different tracks: Watkins Glen, Road America, Road Atlanta, and Virginia International Raceway (where it took both the Full Course and Grand East Course layouts). Fellows added his name to the record-breakers list, applying a decal to a special ZR1 festooned with the car’s various feats – including its lap time at the Nürburgring, where the even faster, hybridized ZR1X punted the Mustang GTD out of top billing even without a professional racing driver behind the wheel.
Ron Fellows and Canadian Tire Motorsports Park RecordChevrolet
The Corvette family is clearly having a good time with its products, and we wonder how much longer it’ll be before it starts taking down even more expensive machines like the Czinger 21C, the other all-American supercar that just recaptured its Laguna Seca fastest lap from Koenigsegg. Given how much record-breaking the existing Corvette lineup is doing, we doubt it’ll be too long before a world-beating hypercar comes from the Chevy camp, exceeding even the power of the ZR1X.
The Fastest Corvette Ever Made Came Out Over 35 Years Ago
Richard Childress did not need to say a word to make his message clear.
His appearance alongside Bass Pro Shops founder Johnny Morris at the high-profile Army–Navy Game, an event also attended by President Donald Trump, served as a quiet reminder of where his influence still sits as NASCAR navigates one of its most uncomfortable moments in years.
For the 80-year-old NASCAR legend, the timing was hard to ignore. NASCAR recently settled its antitrust lawsuit with Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, agreeing to make charters “evergreen” and closing a case that had dragged the sport through months of courtroom scrutiny.
While the settlement brought relief for many teams, it left Childress in an awkward position after he was unexpectedly pulled into the proceedings.
During testimony, Childress was questioned about potential discussions involving the sale of Richard Childress Racing, information he believed was protected by a non-disclosure agreement and had never intended to disclose in court.
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Judge Kenneth Bell acknowledged Childress’ frustration, noting that the veteran owner “certainly thought it shouldn’t have been in their possession.” The moment further strained an already tense relationship between Childress and NASCAR leadership.
That tension escalated when leaked text messages from NASCAR president Steve Phelps became public.
In those messages, Phelps referred to Childress using offensive language, calling him an “idiot,” a “stupid redneck,” and suggesting he should be “flogged.” Phelps later testified that he apologized, but the damage had already been done.
One of NASCAR’s most powerful partners reacted swiftly. Bass Pro Shops, a cornerstone sponsor of the sport for nearly three decades, issued a blistering statement defending Childress and condemning the remarks.
Morris accused NASCAR leadership of disrespecting “one of the pillars of the sport” and warned that the comments were irresponsible toward sponsors, teams, and fans.
Childress’ public alignment with Morris, and by extension Trump, carried added weight. Childress has long been open about his friendship with the president, introducing Trump at a Charlotte campaign rally last year and hosting him in the Richard Childress Racing pit box during the Coca-Cola 600. Trump has repeatedly praised Childress, pointing to his success as proof of leadership and talent within motorsports.
Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (CTMP), formerly known as Mosport Park, one of Canada’s most historic motorsport venues, has been sold to a new ownership group. The transaction was announced on December 11, 2025, marking the end of a 15-year ownership period by a group led by Canadian racing legend Ron Fellows.
–by Mark Cipolloni–
Background and History
Opened in 1961 as Mosport Park (a contraction of “motor” and “sport”), the facility quickly became a cornerstone of Canadian motorsport. Located north of Bowmanville, Ontario, approximately 100 km east of Toronto, it features a challenging 3.957 km (2.459-mile) road course with 10 turns, along with a driver development track and karting center.
The track hosted the Formula One Canadian Grand Prix from 1967 to 1977 (alternating with Mont-Tremblant initially), multiple Can-Am races, and has been a staple for series like IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, NASCAR Canada, and various sports car events.
In June 2011, Canadian Motorsports Ventures Ltd. – comprising businessman Carlo Fidani, Ron Fellows, and initially Alan Boughton – purchased the venue from the Panoz Motorsports Group. Shortly after, in 2012, a long-term naming rights partnership with Canadian Tire Corporation renamed it Canadian Tire Motorsport Park. Under this ownership, significant investments were made in infrastructure, including paddock improvements, resurfacing, and new facilities.
1977 Canadian GP at Mosport, Mario Andretti leads from James Hunt
The Sale
The previous owners, through Canadian Motorsports Ventures Ltd., sold the facility to a new group led by Peter Thomson, a venture capitalist, rally driver, and member of the Thomson family (associated with Woodbridge Company, part of Canada’s wealthiest families). Joining Thomson as partners are Chris Pfaff, owner of Pfaff Automotive Partners and the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship event promoter at CTMP, and Alek Krstajic.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
The existing management team, led by President and General Manager Myles Brandt, will remain in place. Operations and scheduled events will continue uninterrupted.
Statements from New Owners
Chris Pfaff stated: “Canadian Tire Motorsport Park is a place with deep heritage and a loyal community. Our team is proud to be its next steward. We’re committed to respecting everything that makes CTMP special today, while building the foundation for an elevated experience in the years ahead.”
The new owners emphasized their commitment to preserving the track’s history while supporting fans, teams, and partners.
Future Plans
Detailed plans for long-term development, investments, and an enhanced role in Canadian motorsport and entertainment will be unveiled at the Canadian International Auto Show in Toronto (February 13–22, 2026).
This sale ensures continuity for one of North America’s classic road racing circuits, positioning it for future growth under passionate, motorsport-connected ownership.