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Mexico’s altitude will test engines for NASCAR Cup, Xfinity Series teams this weekend

Drivers and teams will have more than each other to contend with when the NASCAR Xfinity and Cup Series race this weekend at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City. They’ll also have to contend with the elevation. The road course is about 7,500 feet above sea level — the next highest track in NASCAR is […]

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Drivers and teams will have more than each other to contend with when the NASCAR Xfinity and Cup Series race this weekend at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City.

They’ll also have to contend with the elevation. The road course is about 7,500 feet above sea level — the next highest track in NASCAR is Las Vegas at about 2,000 feet elevation.

The higher elevation means thinner air. Air plays a key role in horsepower and cooling and those will be significant issues for teams.

Doug Yates, president and CEO of Roush Yates Engines, estimates that the thinner air could reduce horsepower as much as 20% for the 670-horsepower Cup engines.

Danny Lawrence, long time engine builder for Richard Childress Racing and its director of the Xfinity Series and vice president of alliance operations, said maximizing horsepower is challenging at such a high altitude.

“You’ve got to fool the engine to make it think that the conditions are better,” he told NBC Sports.

Daniel Suarez said the horsepower reduction will be minimal for drivers.

“I don’t think you have to drive different, but the cars are going to have more mechanical grip especially on the exit of the corners because you have less power,” he said. “We’re going to lose like 80 to 100 horsepower. That’s a lot. … But at the same time, in the high-speed corners, we’re going to lose a lot of downforce. We’re going to lose a little bit of everything.”

Racing at such elevation is new for the Cup Series. The Xfinity Series raced in Mexico City from 2005-08. The series averaged nearly seven engine failures per weekend (practice and the race) the first three years. The final year racing at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez saw no engine failures during the weekend.

“I would say we’re more concerned about the cooling and the components and the other things we have to ensure are properly set up,” Yates told NBC Sports.

NASCAR will allow each manufacturer to have two sets of hood louvers to run during practice Saturday to see which best cools the engine. Each manufacturer will select which hood louver it will use and all of its teams must use the one selected on its cars.

NASCAR Cup Series Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum

The only time the NASCAR Cup Series has had a podium celebration was for the Clash at the LA Memorial Coliseum exhibition races from 2022-24.

“The problem we have with the engine is the caution laps,” Trent Owens, crew chief for AJ Allmendinger, told NBC Sports. “It gets so hot under the caution laps, more so than the green laps.”

Under green flag conditions, the cars are at higher speeds and can get more air to cool. The slower speeds under caution means less air gets to the engine to cool it. As engines start to overheat, several problems can ensue.

“What happens with the engine management software is it goes into protection (mode) if you don’t get it cool enough before the restart,” Owens said. “So you’re trying to prevent that. It doesn’t shut the engine off, but it starts feeding it fuel and changing the timing and stuff like that where you lose horsepower.

“So, just having that stuff right is probably our concern that we normally don’t have to worry about at any (other) event.”

With NASCAR’s rule that engines must run two races, most of the engines that will run in Sunday’s Cup race will be that engine’s second race.

Yates said a lot of the Ford engines for the 2.42-mile road course in Mexico were run earlier this year at Martinsville, a half-mile short track.

Yates says the two courses share some similarities so that running one engine at both tracks makes sense.

“We shift at Martinsville every straightaway, every lap,” Yates said. “So the power curve actually shifted up quite a bit from years ago. As the engine group, we have the opportunity to change the intake manifold and the exhaust system today, so we can tune around the base engine and have power lower RPM range or higher RPM range with those two tuning tools.”





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NASCAR Transcripts: Chase Elliott – 6.29.25 – Speedway Digest

THE MODERATOR: We are now joined by the race-winning driver, Chase Elliott. We are going to open right up to questions. Q. Chase, the reaction from the crowd after 44 races not hearing them do that, the chanting, what does it mean to you personally that even after 44 races without winning, you’re still the […]

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THE MODERATOR: We are now joined by the race-winning driver, Chase Elliott. We are going to open right up to questions.

Q. Chase, the reaction from the crowd after 44 races not hearing them do that, the chanting, what does it mean to you personally that even after 44 races without winning, you’re still the face of the sport, the only one that can get the crowd like this?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, thanks.

It was, yeah, truthfully a pretty surreal moment. There’s really only been one other time in my career that I felt like — I don’t know. I’m not sure anything has ever matched that. It was crazy. I’ve never, like, been onstage and been a singer or anything like that. I would have to imagine it would feel something like that. It was such an incredible experience.

To your point, I think it just kind of goes to show how great our fans have been to me and to us. It just kind of really makes you appreciate them even more for really sticking with us and not giving up hope, ultimately being able to give both me and my team an experience like that, because their determination and unwillingness to quit on us is really cool.

Yeah, grateful to have experienced that. Something I’ll remember for the rest of my life. Winning at home was incredible the first time. They feel different. But this one, Saturday night under the lights, been a while since we won, just getting ourselves a win and advancing up on the Playoff thing. Just all the things that have come with this, that one was up there, for sure.

Yeah, just grateful to have experienced it.

Q. Do you think that was the loudest you’ve ever heard the crowd after any of your wins?

CHASE ELLIOTT: It was for me, for sure. I can’t think of one that was any louder than that. That one was different. There was one time throughout the night, they were like taking out their cell phones and have the lights on. We were coming to a restart. Visibly from my seat it caught my attention. Typically it’s hard to get a good angle at that. That just caught my attention. Man, this place looks good tonight.

Yeah, to see them that excited after the race for me, it was crazy. It was crazy. It was surreal. I don’t really know how else to describe it. It’s just one of those moments you wish you could bottle up, get it out every now and again, relive it.

Yeah, I try to box it up the best I can and make sure I never forget it.

Q. You said after the race it was a wild race. Any more satisfaction from just a driver standpoint to win a wild race?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Just to win a race is nice in general. I’m not going to go picky whether it’s wild or boring. It was nice to come out on the good end of that. It could have been one of five of us, five or six of us, there at the end. I think for me, fortunately, the runs just really timed up at the perfect time. We were able to do something with them.

I’m proud of race wins, whether they’re wild or boring or lucky or whatever, anywhere in between.

Q. How would you rate your burnout? Did you have a plan for it? It seemed to be pretty sweet.

CHASE ELLIOTT: Was it? That’s cool. I’m glad to hear that.

I did not have a plan. There was no plan. It was, yeah, very much in the moment. Tried to do what I could to make it cool, hoped that everybody enjoyed it. That was all. I definitely didn’t have time to think what kind of a burnout I would do if we won that race. It was just chaos.

Yeah, hope it was good for everybody.

Q. Is this a night that you fly home, or do you stay in the motorhome? If you’re responsible for your own transportation when you win a race, how does that change?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I’m just going to drive home tonight.

Q. Tonight?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, whenever we get done.

Q. Man, that’s wild.

CHASE ELLIOTT: It’s not that far. Sleep in my bed (smiling).

Q. I know the moment at the start/finish line was special. I wanted to ask you about the design and drive program. Almost 10 years now since you started it. What was the inspiration with you and NAPA then? How special is it to bring one of those schemes to Victory Lane tonight?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, the whole thing has been incredible. We had an event this week. It was the ninth year of the “DESI9N TO DRIVE.” Yeah, there have been a lot of influential people that have made that foundation effort what it has become today.

I think it far outgrew our expectations of what we thought it would ever be. That’s largely, in part, to NAPA. They literally pay for a race and say, Here, you take this, do whatever you want with it.

How often do you see that? Not very much. I think that’s very special.

We just thought it was time to get everyone together and just say thanks the other night. We did. That included partners. That included relationships that have been built through the program. My mom deserves a lot of credit for my foundation in general and kind of getting that going. Some of her relationships with Chilla, really just kind of to get the ball rolling.

Since then, it has become very much a team effort. To grow to be what it is… It started off as a shoe program that we auctioned off. All four Hendrick drivers wore ’em. Then NAPA got involved. When they got involved, that really allowed us to take the whole designing process to another level and get more engagement in it and through it.

Just incredible. Rhealynn and her family were just amazing people. I’m always inspired by those stories and the things that you hear her say. The things that motivate her I think are things that should be contagious to all of us and lessons that can be taken in anyone’s life.

So grateful to have her here. I told her this is not normal, so make sure you enjoy this as much as she could. Those types of moments and all the stars aligning, that stuff doesn’t happen every day. I recognize that. I try to cherish that stuff, because it’s just hard to come by.

Q. What kind of impact do moments like that have on you as a person getting to work with kids? Are those the kind of moments that just let you step back and give you that perspective of how many other things are bigger than the sport?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I think there’s a lot of things bigger than the sport. That’s certainly a great reminder, being one of ’em.

Like I said, so many of those kids have had just extremely tough roads. It’s no fault of their own, right? It’s important to recognize, too, it’s not just the individual, it’s the entire family, right?

Rhealynn brought her brother out. She was just excited to have him out here, because she said that, He’s missed so many things because of me that I want him to go and have fun, right?

I think that those types of moments are just important to recognize the type of attitude that it takes to endure those journeys as a family unit and not break apart. Just a lot of good lessons in all that stuff. Grateful to have witnessed it and to have lived tonight with them and hopefully give them a day that they’ll never forget.

Q. I know there was debate towards the end of the first stage whether to pit or not. When you looked up and saw the chaos in the back of your mirror, did that assure you you made the right decision?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I mean, hindsight is always 20/20, right? Of course, you could have been caught up in that crash. The crash doesn’t happen, maybe the calls that ended up pitting those guys work out, so…

Q. Your mom had a special four-legged friend in Victory Lane. How cool was that?

CHASE ELLIOTT: That’s awesome. That is his first win. He got to experience a dub here in Atlanta. It’s cool. He’s a great dog. I don’t take him a ton. Obviously, it’s kind of hard to travel with a big Doberman. Yeah, he’s been a good pup. Really cool to have him in Victory Lane, have some pictures with him there.

Q. Amid this winless streak, do you find yourself appreciating the wins more often because they don’t always come in bunches?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I think there’s definitely been lessons throughout that that certainly have made me enjoy them. But truthfully, I was already to a point even before Texas or the road to that, even the road to tonight, that I think I knew that to a pretty large degree.

Truthfully, I think the road to one was long enough, and there had been enough close calls and enough just gut-wrenching losses, all those second places that led to Watkins Glen.

Fortunately, I think I got a pretty good taste of that. Or unfortunately, however you want to look at it. But I got a pretty good taste of it early on.

I don’t think that has necessarily bothered me. I just want to be competitive. It’s like I told you guys before, for me satisfaction and showing up on a weekend is relevant. Were we in contention? Did we actually have a shot? Were we up there with pace, doing the right things?

I believe that in this sport, if you’re doing all those right things, A, that’s something to be proud of, and B, if you’re doing them regularly, you’re going to get return. I thought tonight was a great example of that. Truthfully, the past three or four weeks have been a good example of that.

We’ve had some good runs. We’ve put together some great races, had some good finishes. Just had ourselves in the hunt tonight, and the cards fell our way. That’s the goal every week, is to just keep yourself in the hunt, be right there in the mix.

Certainly if things work out, I’ll always cherish and enjoy them as much as possible, because they are hard to win. Nobody has anything promised to them. I recognize that. I’ll never take that for granted in those moments, especially to do that here at home.

Q. When you have this stretch where it can be frustrating, how do not start pointing fingers, whether at yourself or the team, questioning things going on? How do you maintain the focus forward that you seem to have?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Well, I think that’s in large part due to Alan, our relationship together. A large part of our group has been the same since I got here. Obviously Alan and I have been working together for 10 years now. There have been some personnel changes here and there. Totally understand that.

When you’re fortunate enough to climb the mountain and be able to stand at the top of the mountain with someone, that’s an incredible achievement, right? That’s something that he and I will always cherish and remember that we did that together, right?

Since then, we have failed to climb that mountain again like we want. We have fallen off of it a few times. For me it’s really, really important to climb that mountain with the same people that we did the first time and know that we never quit on each other. That’s just a really important piece of the puzzle for me.

I’m not sure it would even really feel the same if we all jumped ship. I alluded to it on TV earlier, but I’m just really proud of all of our guys for not doing just that, just showing up every week and having great attitudes, just doing everything in their power to put the car, the product on the racetrack that they do, the effort they put in going over the wall, the way Alan brings intensity to the racetrack, calling races, meetings, making sure he’s getting everything out of me. It’s all right there.

We have such a good, talented group of people that are motivated, good people away from the racetrack, too. You can’t quit on that.

Q. At stage two, you were just inches behind Reddick. You think you have maybe a chance to have overtaken him earlier?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Maybe. I mean, I tried. Yeah, I mean, I tried my best. I came up short. So I don’t know. What am I going to do? Try again.

Q. Shortly after the restart after the last caution, you were for one or two laps in the sandwich of two RFK cars. Were you thinking at that time that could be a little bit risky for you?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I mean, certainly the numbers were not in my favor at that point. I knew that. Alex did, too. It was kind of me and him against the 17 and the 6. Both Brad and Chris are great speedway racers. They’re really fast. They were doing a really good job controlling the race.

It was really difficult for me to get and have any sort of control. I just felt like they always had a big run on me anytime I got the lead. I didn’t really know how to defend that. I was just hoping that Alex and I could somewhere, somehow get in the middle of that, give one of us a shot.

Fortunately, all the cards kind of fell right there in the closing laps to get a couple big runs. Got two for one there getting into one. Got to second. Somehow Alex got to third. At that point I think whether roles were the way they were or roles were reversed, if he and I did anything but push one another in that situation, we were handing the race to Brad, right?

He did me a huge solid, lining up, giving me a big shove. It was enough for me to get by Brad and get back around there to finish it off.

Q. If you didn’t have Alex behind you on the last lap, we saw big moves, how might that have changed or what would that have allowed you or limited you in what you could have done with not having Alex in this case?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I mean, yeah, who knows in that situation, right? I think off of four coming to the white, I alluded to it a second ago, but if he takes me too wide right there, the race is over more than likely. We’re going to drag each other back. There was a pretty big gap back to fourth, if I’m not mistaken. I haven’t watched it back closely. The way I remember it, there was.

We’re kind of letting Brad get away. At that point we would have been side by side down the front and probably side by side through one and two. We’re never going to have enough time.

He and I both knew that the only shot we as a company had at that juncture was to line up and push and hope that something worked out good in our favor because at that point it was two, one, and one. Whether it was he or I, obviously we both want to win. I recognize that he gave me a great shove. I recognize that he took his run on Brad, too, to try to get himself to second, which ultimately helped me as well.

Yeah, those are all things that I remember. We’ll do everything we can do to try and bring fast cars over the course of the next number of weeks. Hope those guys can get a win. I think they deserve it. They’ve been fast. He’s had a terrible run of lucky feel like over the last month. It would be nice to see him grab a win and get in.

Q. We saw a lot of emotion after your win. You went into the crowd and celebrated with them, which we rarely see. Where does this win stack up in the wins you’ve had in your career in the Cup Series?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, it’s up there for sure. Just the whole thing. I talked about it a little bit. It’s always such a whirlwind from the time the race ends to the time I get in here. I just haven’t had a minute, you know what I mean? Sometimes it takes a minute.

To Doug’s point, I’m going to get to drive home, have a minute to myself. I’m looking forward to that. I’ll probably have a better answer for you later on.

But tonight was really special, I can tell you that. Just the way the stars aligned, everything that went into the deal. Having the Mills family here, a lot of people from NAPA, Genuine Parts, Kelley Blue Book, Coca-Cola. It’s not just home for me, it’s kind of home for the entire car. That’s a rare thing to share with your sponsors. It’s just a special deal.

Have my mom here tonight. That was really cool. Just a lot of stuff. I haven’t even thought about all of it. As I reflect, I’ll probably give you a better answer, but it was pretty special.

Q. Inspection is clear and you’re good.

CHASE ELLIOTT: That’s good. I’ve been on the other end of that, so…

Q. According to the broadcast, you were one of only four drivers who was not involved in some sort of incident. With the ability that you had to make aggressive moves, slice and dice with the field, how did you pull that off?

CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I mean, honestly I think just good fortune, luck at certain points. I mean, there’s certain times when accidents happen. There’s just very little you can do, truthfully.

We were in good positions at good points in time for us. There will be some point down the road that we won’t be. That’s just racing.

Fortunately it worked out for us tonight, was able to stay out of the mess. Alan made some good calls early to make good track position. That’s bettering your odds. You can do some stuff, but you’re never totally safe.

I don’t have a good answer for you other than it kind of worked out. Fortunately I had a fast car. All our cards fell our way there at the end.

Q. I want to talk about towards the end of the race working with Alex Bowman at the end. Before the caution, seemed like Brad and Chris Buescher were up there with you guys fighting to take the lead. Once Buescher faded off, how big was it having Alex there in your back pocket to get around Brad?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I mean, talked about it a little bit a minute ago.

He was a great teammate in that moment, for sure. Like I said, we’re coming off four to the white. If he takes me two-wide, we are all but saying, Here, Brad, you can win. If the roles were reversed, I can guarantee you that wouldn’t have been the case other way around, right?

At that point in time it’s our job as a company to try to get Hendrick Motorsports a win at that point in time, whether it was he or I or however that transpired, right? Naturally it did just that.

He had a run. He gave me a huge shove, like all night. I was able to do something with it. Fortunately it was enough to hold on.

Q. Next two races road courses. What kind of momentum are you rolling off of Mexico City going into the next two road course races?

CHASE ELLIOTT: I’m excited. I mean, I’m really just kind of proud of the last four weeks. Honestly, we had a really fast car at Michigan, thought we were really respectable up there. Good in Mexico. I thought we were also really respectable up at Pocono.

We weren’t as good as the 11 or 12. I certainly understand that. I thought we were right there in the hunt. Maybe a little adjustment away from getting right up there with them. Tonight we were right there in the mix. I understand this is a little different ballgame.

Those are a lot of different styles of racetracks that I feel our team has done a solid job. We’re really close of having all the pieces of the puzzle there. There’s really nowhere I’m not looking forward to going to, embracing whatever challenge comes next.

NASCAR PR



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Racing Roundup: Granite Staters Sprint to sweep in Vermont | Motor Sports

State AlabamaAlaskaArizonaArkansasCaliforniaColoradoConnecticutDelawareFloridaGeorgiaHawaiiIdahoIllinoisIndianaIowaKansasKentuckyLouisianaMaineMarylandMassachusettsMichiganMinnesotaMississippiMissouriMontanaNebraskaNevadaNew HampshireNew JerseyNew MexicoNew YorkNorth CarolinaNorth DakotaOhioOklahomaOregonPennsylvaniaRhode IslandSouth CarolinaSouth DakotaTennesseeTexasUtahVermontVirginiaWashingtonWashington D.C.West VirginiaWisconsinWyomingPuerto RicoUS Virgin IslandsArmed Forces AmericasArmed Forces PacificArmed Forces EuropeNorthern Mariana IslandsMarshall IslandsAmerican SamoaFederated States of MicronesiaGuamPalauAlberta, CanadaBritish Columbia, CanadaManitoba, CanadaNew Brunswick, CanadaNewfoundland, CanadaNova Scotia, CanadaNorthwest Territories, CanadaNunavut, CanadaOntario, CanadaPrince Edward Island, CanadaQuebec, CanadaSaskatchewan, CanadaYukon Territory, Canada Zip Code Country United States of […]

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Chase Elliott passes Brad Keselowski on final lap to win NASCAR Atlanta race

Associated Press  |  Associated Press Hampton, Ga. — Home-state favorite Chase Elliott passed Michigan native Brad Keselowski on the final lap and won the the crash-filled NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night for his 20th career victory. Elliott, the popular driver from Dawsonville, Georgia, earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs with his […]

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Hampton, Ga. — Home-state favorite Chase Elliott passed Michigan native Brad Keselowski on the final lap and won the the crash-filled NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night for his 20th career victory.

Elliott, the popular driver from Dawsonville, Georgia, earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs with his first victory since April 2024 at Texas. It was his first win in Atlanta since 2022.

“I’ve never in my whole life, this is unbelievable,” Elliott said. “This is something I’ll remember the rest of my life.”

Keselowski was second, followed by Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet teammate, Alex Bowman, and Tyler Reddick. Bowman helped block Keselowski following Elliott’s last-lap pass.

“The 48 and 9 just got together,” Keselowski said, referring to Bowman and Elliott. “At they end they were able to double-team me.”

Elliott climbed into the stands to celebrate with fans after ending a 44-race winless streak.

“I’m happy for the 9 team,” Bowman said. “It’s a big win for him in his hometown. … I’m glad to have a Hendrick car in victory lane. I wish it was us.”

The race’s second crash early in Stage 2 took out many of the sport’s biggest names and left others with damaged cars. Pole-winner Joey Logano, who led the first 36 laps before light rain forced the first caution, was among the many drivers caught up in the big crash.

Among others knocked out of the race: William Byron, Austin Cindric, Ross Chastain, Josh Berry, Corey LaJoie and Daniel Suarez.

“It wrecked the whole field,” Logano said. “I still don’t know exactly how it started … but it was total chaos. Cars were sideways and on the brakes. I got hit from every corner possible.”

Added Denny Hamlin, who suffered damage to his Toyota in the crash: “Some zigged. Some zagged. Most crashed.”

The Atlanta race at EchoPark Speedway, formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway, was the debut of the 32-driver In-Season Challenge, a five-race, bracket-style tournament.

The parade of highly regarded drivers to be knocked out so early in the race showed the perils of trying to pick NASCAR winners on a March Madness-style bracket sheet. The top two seeds were among the early casualties.

Hamlin, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, finished 31st and lost to Ty Dillon, who finished eighth.

Chase Briscoe, who held off Hamlin for his first win for Joe Gibbs Racing last week at Pocono Raceway, was the No. 2 seed before being knocked out in a crash and losing to Noah Gragson in the tournament.

A $1 million prize awaits the winner as part of a new media rights deal that includes TNT.

Elliott and Keselowski were on the front row when a caution with 33 laps to go forced a decision on whether to pit for fresh tires. Both stayed on the track and Elliott faded following the restart until making his decisive charge at the very end.

Ryan Blaney, the race favorite according to BetMGM Sportsbook, was knocked out on a wreck late in the first stage. Christopher Bell hit the wall, triggering the crash that ended the stage with Cindric in the lead.

Cindric was involved in the bigger crash early in Stage 2. Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin and Bubba Wallace were among others involved in the crash.



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Austrian GP contract extended 11 years to 2041

The circuit dropped off the calendar in 2004, but in 2010 the late Dietrich Mateschitz invested in the Red Bull Ring, funding renovations that revitalized the facility and led to its return in 2014. Since then, the race has become a favorite among fans and drivers alike. A roll call of greats from Formula 1’s […]

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The circuit dropped off the calendar in 2004, but in 2010 the late Dietrich Mateschitz invested in the Red Bull Ring, funding renovations that revitalized the facility and led to its return in 2014.

Since then, the race has become a favorite among fans and drivers alike. A roll call of greats from Formula 1’s 75-year history have taken the top step in Austria, including Alain Prost, Niki Lauda, Michael Schumacher and Alan Jones.

Four drivers from the current grid have also claimed victory in Austria. Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton, Charles Leclerc and George Russell have all triumphed at the Red Bull Ring, with Verstappen holding the record for the most wins on five (four under its guise as the Austrian GP and once when it featured as the Styrian Grand Prix in 2021).

Stefano Domenicali, President and CEO of Formula 1, said: “Austria has long been an incredibly special race for Formula 1 so it’s fantastic we have secured the long-term future of a Grand Prix so deeply rooted in the sport’s history.

“The vision and passion of Dietrich Mateschitz gave the race the investment and attention that allowed it to return as an incredible event on the Formula 1 calendar.

“Each year, returning to the stunning Styrian mountains is a highlight – an experience that evokes incredible emotion among our drivers, teams, and fans alike, creating an atmosphere unlike any other.

“I want to extend my sincere thanks to Mark Mateschitz and Thomas Überall and his team for their unwavering dedication to excellence, and to our incredible Austrian fanbase, whose enthusiasm and loyalty continue to elevate this iconic race.”

Mark Mateschitz added: “I am delighted that Formula 1 will remain at the Red Bull Ring for many years to come. I am proud to continue my father’s legacy and to preserve the rich history of motor racing in Styria and at the Red Bull Ring – with and, above all, for the people of the region.

“Austria’s close ties to Formula 1 are an excellent foundation for our long-term partnership. Working together, we intend to continue this success story for many years to come.”

Thomas Überall, General Manager of the Red Bull Ring, said: “This long-term commitment to us by Formula 1 is a great honor and a wonderful challenge that we are happy to undertake on behalf of the fans and the Murtal region.

“The new contract is of inestimable importance for the future. The long-term security of the Austrian Grand Prix will trigger further investment in infrastructure and means tremendous added value for the Murtal region, for Styria and for Austria.”

Current F1 Event Statistics with Austrian GP Update

Rnd 2025 Date Event Circuit Location Annial Hosting Fee ($) Contract Good Thru 3-Day Attendance Length (km) Length (Miles) Turns Laps
1 March 16 Australian GP Albert Park Circuit Melbourne 40 million 2037 465,498 5.279 3.280 16 58
2 March 23 Chinese GP Shanghai Intl Circuit Shanghai 50 million 2030 220,000 5.451 3.387 16 56
3 April 6 Japanese GP Suzuka International Racing Course Suzuka 50 million 2029 266,000 5.807 3.608 18 53
4 April 13 Bahrain GP Bahrain International Circuit Sakhir 45 million 2036 105,000 5.412 3.363 15 57
5 April 20 Saudi Arabian GP Jeddah Street Circuit Jeddah 55 million 2030 150,000 6.175 3.837 27 50
6 May 4 Miami GP Miami International Autodrome Miami $45M-$60M 2041 275,480 5.410 3.362 19 57
7 May 18 Emilia Romagna GP Imola Imola 20 million 2025 242,000 4.909 3.050 21 66
8 May 25 Monaco GP Circuit de Monaco Monte Carlo 32 million 2031 250,000 3.340 2.075 19 78
9 June 1 Spanish GP Circuit de Barcelona Montmeló 25 million 2026 300,286 4.655 2.892 16 66
10 June 15 Canadian GP Circuit Gilles Villeneuve 14 turns Montreal 29 million 2035 352,000 4.361 2.710 14 70
11 June 29 Austrian GP Red Bull Ring Spielberg 30 million 2041 304,000 4.326 2.688 10 71
12 July 6 British GP Silverstone Circuit Silverstone 40 million 2034 480,000 5.891 3.660 18 52
13 July 27 Belgian GP Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps Stavelot 32 million 2031 380,000 7.004 4.352 19 44
14 August 3 Hungarian GP Hungaroring Mogyoród 40 million 2032 303,000 4.381 2.722 14 70
15 August 31 Dutch GP Circuit Zandvoort Zandvoort 32 million 2026 305,000 4.459 2.771 14 72
16 September 7 Italian GP Autodromo Nazionale di Monza Monza 32 million 2031 304,135 5.793 3.600 17 53
17 September 21 Azerbaijan GP Baku City Circuit Baku 55 million 2026 95,000 6.003 3.730 20 51
18 October 5 Singapore GP Marina Bay Street Circuit Singapore 35 million 2028 264,108 5.063 3.146 23 61
19 October 19 United States GP Circuit of the Americas Austin 25 million 2026 432,000 5.513 3.426 20 56
20 October 26 Mexico City GP Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez Mexico City 30 million 2028 400,639 4.304 2.674 17 71
21 November 9 Sao Paulo GP Autódromo José Carlos Pace São Paulo 30 million 2030 267,000 4.309 2.677 15 71
22 November 23 Las Vegas GP Las Vegas Street Circuit Las Vegas Owned by F1
Assume $45M
2033 315,000 6.120 3.803 17 50
23 November 30 Qatar GP Losail International Circuit Losail 55 million 2032 120,000 5.380 3.343 16 57
24 December 7 Abu Dhabi GP Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi 40 million 2030 165,000 5.554 3.451 21 55
   w/o Madrid  $894 million  6,761,146 Averages  3.234 mi.  18  60
25 TBD Spanish GP IFEMA Madrid Circuit Madrid 65 million 2035 330,000 5.474 3.401 20 56
   w/Madrid  $956 million 7,091,146 Averages  3.240 mi.  18  60

Note: Some Event Statistics are estimated based on media reports because contracts are not made public



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Elliott is in position to contend for 2nd NASCAR title following ‘surreal’ last-lap win in Atlanta

By CHARLES ODUM HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) — Chase Elliott couldn’t have picked a better setting for a drought-breaking win. Fans roared in approval after Elliott, the home-state favorite, passed Brad Keselowski on the final lap to end a 44-race drought by winning the NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night. Elliott’s 20th career victory […]

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By CHARLES ODUM

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) — Chase Elliott couldn’t have picked a better setting for a drought-breaking win.

Fans roared in approval after Elliott, the home-state favorite, passed Brad Keselowski on the final lap to end a 44-race drought by winning the NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night.

Elliott’s 20th career victory pushed him to second place in the Cup Series points race, putting him in prime position to return to the top of the NASCAR world after winning his first championship in 2020.

Elliott earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs with his first victory since April 2024 at Texas. He said he’ll always remember the win as a career highlight, in part because of the ovation from fans who chanted “Chase! Chase! Chase!”

Elliott, a Dawsonville, Georgia, native, climbed into the stands at EchoPark Speedway, formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway, to celebrate with the fans.

“It was, truthfully, a pretty surreal moment,” Elliott said. “Something I’ll remember for the rest of my life. … Saturday night under the lights, been a while since we won, just getting ourselves a win and advancing up on the playoff thing.”

It was his first Atlanta win since 2022.

Elliott has 594 points, 37 behind Hendrick Motorsports teammate William Byron, who has 631. A third Hendrick Motorsports driver, Kyle Larson, is third.

Another Hendrick driver, Alex Bowman, played a key role in Elliott’s comeback win. Bowman, who finished third, gave Elliott a push and then helped block Keselowski on the final lap.

“I’m happy for the 9 team,” Bowman said. “It’s a big win for him in his hometown. … I’m glad to have a Hendrick car in victory lane. I wish it was us.”

Elliott said he’ll try to repay the favor by helping Bowman join the other three Hendrick drivers in the playoffs.

“I recognize that he gave me a great shove,” Elliott said. “I recognize that he took his run on Brad, too, to try to get himself to second, which ultimately helped me as well.

“Yeah, those are all things that I remember.”

Elliott advanced to the second round of NASCAR’s new In-Season Challenge, a five-race, bracket-style tournament. With the field cut from 32 to 16 drivers, Elliott will be paired against John Hunter Nemechek when the Cup Series moves to the Chicago Street Race next Sunday.

A $1 million prize awaits the winner, and Elliott’s odds improved after Atlanta wrecks knocked out the top two seeds, Denny Hamlin and Chase Briscoe.

Elliott wouldn’t be the first family member to win a $1 million bonus. In 1985 his father, Bill Elliott, became the first winner of the Winston Million as a reward for claiming wins in three of the circuit’s top four races at the time. The bonus earned the elder Elliott the nickname “Million Dollar Bill.”

Now the younger Elliott is a strong contender to become first in line for another $1 million prize.

“It’d be a really cool thing to win for sure and hope it works out that way,” Chase Elliott said.

Elliott’s victory drought came after he needed surgery to repair a broken tibia in his left leg suffered in a snowboarding accident and missed six races in 2023. He said the support of longtime crew chief Alan Gustafson was “in large part” responsible for helping him retain his confidence and reclaim his winning form.

Gustafson said the win was more important for the 2025 playoff race than for ending the victory drought.

“The points were getting tight for the playoffs, for sure,” Gustafson said. “I think that’s probably the biggest thing. I think all the cars contending to win, I don’t think any of them had won. I think that’s probably the biggest thing we needed was that cushion.”

Saturday night’s win was Elliott’s third consecutive top-five finish.

“When you’re fortunate enough to climb the mountain and be able to stand at the top of the mountain with someone, that’s an incredible achievement, right?” Elliott said. “That’s something that (Gustafson) and I will always cherish and remember that we did that together.

“For me it’s really, really important to climb that mountain with the same people that we did the first time and know that we never quit on each other. That’s just a really important piece of the puzzle for me.”

___

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





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Kris Carroll Claims POWRi Stock Non-Wing Micro KKM Challenge Championship Night Victory – St. Louis Racing

– Advertisement – Sweet Springs, MO. (6/28/25) Kris Carroll would double down on weekend wins to clinch the $10K-to-Win Championship Night in the third yearly installment of the Eibach Racing Keith Kunz Motorsports Challenge presented by Start2Finish TV to claim his second straight career victory with the POWRi Stock Non-Wing Micro League at the outstanding […]

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Sweet Springs, MO. (6/28/25) Kris Carroll would double down on weekend wins to clinch the $10K-to-Win Championship Night in the third yearly installment of the Eibach Racing Keith Kunz Motorsports Challenge presented by Start2Finish TV to claim his second straight career victory with the POWRi Stock Non-Wing Micro League at the outstanding hosting Sweet Springs Motorsports Complex.

Going through an impressive field of fifty-seven entries of the POWRi Stock Non-Wing Micro division in the KKM Challenge would find Noah Carpenter set the quick qualifying time with a time of 12.492 seconds. Garrett Benson, Neal Allison, Bryant Wiedeman, Cale Cannon, Quinn Jones, Steven Snyder Jr, and Noah Carpenter would each emerge victorious in heat racing action, with Noah Carpenter, Cullen Hutchison, Cale Cannon, and KJ Snow all earning wins in qualifier competitions, as Cameron Campbell would gain the c-feature victory with Sam Johnson and Brecken Reese taking the b-feature checkers.

Flying onto the smooth Sweet Springs Motorsports Complex surface for Championship Night feature racing in the Eibach Racing Keith Kunz Motorsports Challenge presented by Start2Finish TV, event high point qualifier and night one winner Kris Carroll would battle outside front-row contender Trevor Cline as the green flew, with Kris Carroll holding the front of the field.

Taking the preferred position with intense action, Kole Kirkman would shoot to the front of the field for with outstanding battles behind the leader all over the field as Kirkman would appear to be the fastest on track while leading for twenty-eight laps.

Triumphant after a thrilling battle for the top spot, Kris Carroll would hold the front of the field for the remaining pair laps after starting pole position to claim his second career POWRi Stock Non-Wing Micro victory as Trevor Cline would finish in the closely contended second spot after starting second with tenth starter Justis Sokol finalizing the podium placements.

Driving from a seventh starting spot, Isaiah Garcia would finish in the fourth spot as ninth starting KJ Snow rounded out the top five finishers in the POWRi Outlaw Micro League feature in the Championship Night of the Eibach Racing Keith Kunz Motorsports Challenge presented by Start2Finish TV at Sweet Springs Motorsports Complex.

POWRi Stock Non-Wing Micro | Sweet Springs Motorsports Complex | 6/28/25:
Eibach Racing Quick Qualifying Time: 42C-Noah Carpenter(12.492)
Hyper Racing Heat Race One Winner: 75B-Garrett Benson
Rush Race Gear Heat Race Two Winner: 15N-Neal Allison
Hoosier Racing Tire Heat Race Three Winner: 12X-Bryant Wiedeman
Engler Machine and Tool Heat Race Four Winner: 1S-Cale Cannon
Driven Midwest Heat Five Winner: 17-Quinn Jones
Start2Finish Heat Six Winner: 95-Steven Snyder Jr
PageKC Heat Race Seven Winner: 42C-Noah Carpenter
Driven Midwest Qualifier One Winner: 42C-Noah Carpenter
Engler Machine and Tool Qualifier Two Winner: 83H-Cullen Hutchison
Eibach Racing Qualifier Three Winner: 1S-Cale Cannon
Max Papis Innovations Qualifier Four Winner: 89-KJ Snow
Hoosier Racing Tire C-Feature Winner: 24-Cameron Campbell
MPI B-Feature One Winner: 72-Sam Johnson
Rush Race Gear B-Feature Two Winner: 20Q-Brecken Reese
Hyper Racing High Event Qualifier: 5-Kris Carroll
Hoosier Racing Tire Hard Charger: 20Q-Brecken Reese(+11)
Eibach Racing Feature Winner: 5-Kris Carroll
Event Information: https://www.myracepass.com/events/551301

Eibach Racing A Feature (30 Laps): 1. 5-Kris Carroll[1]; 2. 21S-Trevor Cline[2]; 3. 25S-Justis Sokol[10]; 4. 21G-Isaiah Garcia[7]; 5. 89-KJ Snow[9]; 6. 95-Steven Snyder Jr[6]; 7. 20Q-Brecken Reese[18]; 8. 48-Chase Cabre[12]; 9. 72-Sam Johnson[17]; 10. 1S-Cale Cannon[8]; 11. 75B-Garrett Benson[21]; 12. 15T-Tylen Trammell[11]; 13. 15-Jase Randolph[24]; 14. 12-Brant Woods[16]; 15. 32K-Brian Lunsford[19]; 16. 18-Aidan Leingang[22]; 17. 41-Colton Hardy[15]; 18. 24S-Colby Sokol[4]; 19. 42C-Noah Carpenter[5]; 20. 12U-Tyler Devenport[20]; 21. 22K-Kole Kirkman[3]; 22. 15N-Neal Allison[14]; 23. 97-Charlie Leffler[23]; 24. 83H-Cullen Hutchison[13].

MPI B Feature 1 (15 Laps): 1. 72-Sam Johnson[2]; 2. 32K-Brian Lunsford[5]; 3. 75B-Garrett Benson[1]; 4. 97-Charlie Leffler[3]; 5. 95B-James Roselli[4]; 6. 88M-Max Crabdree[16]; 7. 75-Blayne Buntin[7]; 8. 17-Quinn Jones[6]; 9. 87-Mack Leopard[9]; 10. 24-Cameron Campbell[15]; 11. 28P-Gunnar Pio[17]; 12. 74X-Caleb Edington[14]; 13. 5P-Luke Porter[18]; 14. 2Z-Zac Zeller[8]; 15. 27-Zachary Taylor[10]; 16. 7H-Austen Raybourn[13]; 17. 1H-Brody Mclaughlin[12]; 18. 00T-TJ Stark[11].

Rush Race Gear B Feature 2 (15 Laps): 1. 20Q-Brecken Reese[7]; 2. 12U-Tyler Devenport[2]; 3. 18-Aidan Leingang[9]; 4. 15-Jase Randolph[3]; 5. 15B-Quinton Benson[6]; 6. 67JR-Waylon Phillips[4]; 7. 14K-Kyle Hooper[11]; 8. 11K-Shawn Mahaffey[14]; 9. 22-Jesse Pate[10]; 10. 48S-Trey Schleicher[18]; 11. 97B-Donnie Burrows[17]; 12. 19J-Justin Robison[8]; 13. 73-Wyatt Miller[15]; 14. 7C-Phillip Cordova[16]; 15. 12X-Bryant Wiedeman[5]; 16. 21-Keegan Osantowski[1]; 17. 26-Jayedan Basaiaj[12]; 18. 14H-Heath Walton[13].

Hoosier Racing Tire C Feature1 (10 Laps): 1. 24-Cameron Campbell[1]; 2. 73-Wyatt Miller[9]; 3. 88M-Max Crabdree[6]; 4. 7C-Phillip Cordova[2]; 5. 28P-Gunnar Pio[5]; 6. 97B-Donnie Burrows[11]; 7. 5P-Luke Porter[12]; 8. 48S-Trey Schleicher[8]; 9. 127-Chase Hough[3]; 10. 31Z-Dylan Kadous[13]; 11. 126-Autumn Criste[7]; 12. 25AU-Brady Argles[4]; 13. 81-Frank Flud[10].

Hyper Racing Heat 1 (8 Laps): 1. 75B-Garrett Benson[4]; 2. 83H-Cullen Hutchison[2]; 3. 22-Jesse Pate[1]; 4. 12-Brant Woods[5]; 5. 32K-Brian Lunsford[6]; 6. 14H-Heath Walton[7]; 7. 127-Chase Hough[8]; 8. 73-Wyatt Miller[3].

Rush Race Gear Heat 2 (8 Laps): 1. 15N-Neal Allison[2]; 2. 48-Chase Cabre[3]; 3. 87-Mack Leopard[4]; 4. 14K-Kyle Hooper[1]; 5. 41-Colton Hardy[5]; 6. 15B-Quinton Benson[7]; 7. 28P-Gunnar Pio[6]; 8. 5P-Luke Porter[8].

Hoosier Racing Tire Heat 3 (8 Laps): 1. 12X-Bryant Wiedeman[2]; 2. 15-Jase Randolph[1]; 3. 89-KJ Snow[4]; 4. 19J-Justin Robison[7]; 5. 20Q-Brecken Reese[3]; 6. 2Z-Zac Zeller[5]; 7. 88M-Max Crabdree[6]; 8. 97B-Donnie Burrows[8].

Engler Machine & Tool Heat 4 (8 Laps): 1. 1S-Cale Cannon[1]; 2. 97-Charlie Leffler[4]; 3. 11K-Shawn Mahaffey[3]; 4. 25S-Justis Sokol[8]; 5. 26-Jayedan Basaiaj[5]; 6. 24-Cameron Campbell[6]; 7. 48S-Trey Schleicher[7]; 8. 81-Frank Flud[2].

Driven Midwest Heat 5 (8 Laps): 1. 17-Quinn Jones[2]; 2. 15T-Tylen Trammell[4]; 3. 27-Zachary Taylor[1]; 4. 18-Aidan Leingang[3]; 5. 1H-Brody Mclaughlin[5]; 6. 7H-Austen Raybourn[7]; 7. (DNS) 31Z-Dylan Kadous.

Start2Finish Heat 6 (8 Laps): 1. 95-Steven Snyder Jr[3]; 2. 21G-Isaiah Garcia[4]; 3. 67JR-Waylon Phillips[1]; 4. 75-Blayne Buntin[7]; 5. 95B-James Roselli[5]; 6. 7C-Phillip Cordova[6]; 7. 25AU-Brady Argles[2].

PageKC Heat 7 (8 Laps): 1. 42C-Noah Carpenter[4]; 2. 21-Keegan Osantowski[1]; 3. 72-Sam Johnson[3]; 4. 00T-TJ Stark[2]; 5. 12U-Tyler Devenport[7]; 6. 74X-Caleb Edington[5]; 7. 126-Autumn Criste[6].

Qualifier 1 (10 Laps): 1. 42C-Noah Carpenter[4]; 2. 25S-Justis Sokol[5]; 3. 15N-Neal Allison[2]; 4. 12-Brant Woods[7]; 5. 95B-James Roselli[9]; 6. 97-Charlie Leffler[3]; 7. 19J-Justin Robison[6]; 8. 87-Mack Leopard[1]; 9. 14K-Kyle Hooper[8]; 10. 7H-Austen Raybourn[10].

Qualifier 2 (10 Laps): 1. 83H-Cullen Hutchison[1]; 2. 48-Chase Cabre[2]; 3. 15T-Tylen Trammell[3]; 4. 72-Sam Johnson[5]; 5. 67JR-Waylon Phillips[6]; 6. 20Q-Brecken Reese[8]; 7. 75B-Garrett Benson[4]; 8. 18-Aidan Leingang[7]; 9. 1H-Brody Mclaughlin[9]; 10. 14H-Heath Walton[10].

Qualifier 3 (10 Laps): 1. 1S-Cale Cannon[2]; 2. 95-Steven Snyder Jr[4]; 3. 41-Colton Hardy[9]; 4. 15-Jase Randolph[1]; 5. 32K-Brian Lunsford[8]; 6. 2Z-Zac Zeller[10]; 7. 12X-Bryant Wiedeman[3]; 8. 27-Zachary Taylor[6]; 9. 00T-TJ Stark[7]; 10. (DNS) 11K-Shawn Mahaffey.

Qualifier 4 (10 Laps): 1. 89-KJ Snow[2]; 2. 21G-Isaiah Garcia[4]; 3. 21-Keegan Osantowski[1]; 4. 12U-Tyler Devenport[7]; 5. 15B-Quinton Benson[9]; 6. 75-Blayne Buntin[5]; 7. 17-Quinn Jones[3]; 8. 22-Jesse Pate[6]; 9. 26-Jayedan Basaiaj[8]; 10. 74X-Caleb Edington[10].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 1: 1. 75B-Garrett Benson, 00:12.815[5]; 2. 73-Wyatt Miller, 00:12.867[7]; 3. 83H-Cullen Hutchison, 00:12.893[2]; 4. 22-Jesse Pate, 00:12.941[4]; 5. 12-Brant Woods, 00:13.002[6]; 6. 32K-Brian Lunsford, 00:13.268[1]; 7. 14H-Heath Walton, 00:13.403[8]; 8. 127-Chase Hough, 00:13.601[3].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 2: 1. 87-Mack Leopard, 00:12.625[8]; 2. 48-Chase Cabre, 00:12.756[3]; 3. 15N-Neal Allison, 00:12.827[7]; 4. 14K-Kyle Hooper, 00:12.840[6]; 5. 41-Colton Hardy, 00:12.846[4]; 6. 28P-Gunnar Pio, 00:12.879[5]; 7. 15B-Quinton Benson, 00:12.980[2]; 8. 5P-Luke Porter, 00:13.025[1].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 3: 1. 89-KJ Snow, 00:12.506[7]; 2. 20Q-Brecken Reese, 00:12.520[6]; 3. 12X-Bryant Wiedeman, 00:12.607[8]; 4. 15-Jase Randolph, 00:12.732[2]; 5. 2Z-Zac Zeller, 00:12.854[3]; 6. 88M-Max Crabdree, 00:12.890[5]; 7. 19J-Justin Robison, 00:12.960[1]; 8. 97B-Donnie Burrows, 00:12.974[4].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 4: 1. 97-Charlie Leffler, 00:12.581[2]; 2. 11K-Shawn Mahaffey, 00:12.606[3]; 3. 81-Frank Flud, 00:12.629[7]; 4. 1S-Cale Cannon, 00:12.676[8]; 5. 26-Jayedan Basaiaj, 00:12.731[1]; 6. 24-Cameron Campbell, 00:12.743[5]; 7. 48S-Trey Schleicher, 00:12.869[4]; 8. 25S-Justis Sokol, 00:12.892[6].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 5: 1. 15T-Tylen Trammell, 00:12.694[1]; 2. 18-Aidan Leingang, 00:12.740[6]; 3. 17-Quinn Jones, 00:12.751[4]; 4. 27-Zachary Taylor, 00:12.766[2]; 5. 1H-Brody Mclaughlin, 00:12.840[3]; 6. 31Z-Dylan Kadous, 00:13.010[7]; 7. 7H-Austen Raybourn, 00:13.194[5].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 6: 1. 21G-Isaiah Garcia, 00:12.563[7]; 2. 95-Steven Snyder Jr, 00:12.683[6]; 3. 25AU-Brady Argles, 00:12.690[1]; 4. 67JR-Waylon Phillips, 00:12.699[4]; 5. 95B-James Roselli, 00:12.759[5]; 6. 7C-Phillip Cordova, 00:12.925[3]; 7. 75-Blayne Buntin, 00:12.954[2].

Eibach Racing Qualifying 7: 1. 42C-Noah Carpenter, 00:12.492[4]; 2. 72-Sam Johnson, 00:12.572[6]; 3. 00T-TJ Stark, 00:12.652[5]; 4. 21-Keegan Osantowski, 00:12.876[7]; 5. 74X-Caleb Edington, 00:13.102[1]; 6. 126-Autumn Criste, 00:13.157[2]; 7. 12U-Tyler Devenport, 00:13.197[3].

For additional information, including times, prices, point fund, support divisions, payouts, updates, the broadcast schedule, yearly agenda, and the full format of the KKM Challenge events, visit http://www.powri.com/kkm/.

For more information about Keith Kunz Motorsports and their racing endeavors, visit their website at www.keithkunzmotorsports.com. Also, follow the Keith Kunz Motorsports pages on leading social media platforms.

With cutting-edge technology and a passion for broadcasting, Start2Finish TV aims to provide fans with an immersive and engaging viewing experience | All Things LIVE from Start2Finish | www.s2ftv.com.

Follow along for more information on POWRi items such as race recaps, updates, full results, and press releases online at www.powri.com, or on Facebook at POWRi

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