Motorsports
MLB and NASCAR ambassadors discuss Speedway Classic
The 2025 MLB Speedway Classic is just over a month away, and the process of transforming Bristol Motor Speedway from a racetrack to a baseball field has begun. Construction is underway at Tennessee’s iconic NASCAR track in preparation for the one-of-a-kind Major League game between the Braves and Reds on Aug. 2. Soon, The Last […]

The 2025 MLB Speedway Classic is just over a month away, and the process of transforming Bristol Motor Speedway from a racetrack to a baseball field has begun.
Construction is underway at Tennessee’s iconic NASCAR track in preparation for the one-of-a-kind Major League game between the Braves and Reds on Aug. 2. Soon, The Last Great Colosseum will be ready to host Ronald Acuña Jr., Elly De La Cruz and other MLB stars for the first time.
Ambassadors from MLB and NASCAR — including Braves legend Andruw Jones, three-time Reds All-Star Sean Casey, longtime outfielder Nick Swisher, NASCAR driver and 2023 Daytona 500 winner Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and former driver and two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip — gathered on Wednesday at MLB headquarters in New York to talk about how the Speedway Classic is bringing together the worlds of baseball and NASCAR.
“We’re bringing a couple of NASCARs of our own: Elly De La Cruz and Ronald Acuña Jr. — with the speed, the power, the whole nine,” Swisher said. “So I think we’re doing a pretty good job of bringing two great fan bases together. The NASCAR world and the MLB world could not be a better fit together.”
Bristol is about halfway between Atlanta and Cincinnati, but the Braves have been big among Tennessee baseball fans since Jones’ days playing for the great Atlanta teams of the 1990s. So Jones is expecting a big turnout.
“You can call it Braves country, to be honest with you,” Jones said. “We built a big fanbase. We started by playing good baseball for a long time, and we built all these fans. Those fans are gonna show up.
“We hosted some of those NASCAR Nights at the stadium back in the day, at Turner Field, a bunch of times. A lot of those NASCAR guys are big Braves fans. So we’re looking forward to it. I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of fans out there rooting for the Braves.”
Casey compared the Speedway Classic to some of the unique experiences of his career, like getting to play in front of over 115,000 fans at the Los Angeles Coliseum in 2008, when his Red Sox faced the Dodgers in an exhibition commemorating the 50-year anniversary of the Dodgers’ move to L.A.
“I hope that the Braves players and the Reds players really lean into that,” Casey said. “Man, you’re two teams that are getting to experience Bristol and this historic track and play a baseball game that none of the other 28 teams will get to appreciate.”
Bristol Motor Speedway is a unique venue for a unique game. The track is known for its short oval with high banking, which makes for exciting races different from the ones you’ll see at other tracks, with drivers ripping around those steep corners at speeds close to 150 mph.
“It’s the one you want to win,” Stenhouse said. “I’ve finished second at Bristol a handful of times — so one of these two teams is going to win there at Bristol before I do. That’s kind of a bummer. But I can’t wait to tune in and watch these guys. Hopefully if they get one over the walls, see where that ball ends up landing. But just a really cool venue and something that I’ll be looking forward to watching.”
Waltrip knows firsthand how intense the racetrack can be. He had an infamous crash there in 1990. He laughs about it now — and even encouraged baseball fans to Google it and watch the video before the Speedway Classic.
“I think I hit the wall about dead center field, 400 feet, and about left that place,” Waltrip joked. “It’s amazing to everybody that watches that video — that was a Saturday afternoon Busch [Series] race; the next day, I competed on Sunday.”
Stenhouse, who grew up playing baseball as a left-handed pitcher and first baseman, said Bristol is both his favorite track to race at and his favorite track to watch a race at — especially the famous Bristol Night Races.
This year’s Bristol Night Race will come about a month after the Speedway Classic, on Sept. 13.
“We run Bristol, when we’re qualifying, we’re in the 14 seconds or low 15 seconds for a half-mile racetrack,” Stenhouse said — aka, about the same time it takes De La Cruz to circle the bases for an inside-the-park home run. “So the speeds are up there. The first time I ever went there, I forgot to breathe for about 10 laps. You’re just trying to figure out where you’re at.”
The atmosphere at Bristol for a NASCAR race is unparalleled and it should be the same when baseball comes to the speedway.
“Bristol is a unique venue for NASCAR,” Waltrip said. “It’s one of the tracks you circle as a place where you want to be successful at and win at, because it’s so electric. There’s so many people there. The track is tough. It has everything you want.”
When it becomes a Major League ballpark, Bristol Motor Speedway will look like a traditional baseball field. For the Speedway Classic, it will be 330 feet down the lines, 400 feet to straightaway center field and 375 feet to the left-center- and right-center-field gaps.
“Gaps 375 is really good,” said Jones, who won 10 Gold Glove Awards in center field with Atlanta. “When you get those gaps to 380, it’s a big field.”
But Stenhouse hopes the Reds and Braves players will take a moment to appreciate the venue in all its glory as a racetrack.
“I’d encourage the players to watch a couple of Bristol Night Races before they get there,” Stenhouse said. “When they get in the [racetrack] infield to play baseball, I hope they go to the center and each corner and walk up the banking.”
Jones, Swisher and Casey don’t have much experience driving racecars, but Swisher joked that he would “weasel my way into the pace car” for a race. And Jones said that if he could pick one Braves player from his day who’d be most likely to be a NASCAR driver, it would be … himself.
“I drive fast,” Jones said. “Sorry, I shouldn’t say that, but I drive fast.”
Swisher volunteered his old A’s teammate, pitcher Rich Harden.
“Threw 100 miles an hour and drove 100 miles an hour,” Swisher joked. “That was definitely his M.O. Speed was his thing.”
Motorsports
Kyle Larson Very Much in the Hunt for Regular-Season Championship
NEWTON, Iowa. – Three Hendrick Motorsports drivers are 1-2-3 in the NASCAR Cup Series standings with four races left in the regular season—the closest competition for the 15-Playoff-point bonus that goes to the regular-season winner since the current system was installed in 2017. Chase Elliott has a four-point lead over teammate William Byron in second, […]

NEWTON, Iowa. – Three Hendrick Motorsports drivers are 1-2-3 in the NASCAR Cup Series standings with four races left in the regular season—the closest competition for the 15-Playoff-point bonus that goes to the regular-season winner since the current system was installed in 2017.
Chase Elliott has a four-point lead over teammate William Byron in second, with Kyle Larson 15 points back in third.
Byron finished second in last year’s Iowa race, and Elliott ran third, but Larson, despite his 34th-place finish, arguably had the fastest car in the field.
Larson won the pole for the inaugural Cup race at the 0.875-mile track and scored a stage win before contact from Daniel Suarez’s Chevrolet spun Larson’s No. 5 Camaro into the outside wall and ruined his race.
“I feel like our team was really, really strong to start the year (this season),” Larson said. “We had those five or six weeks where we had fallen off a bit, but these last two have gone well. We were competitive here at Iowa last year…”
In all probability, the teammates will battle for the regular-season title until the final regular-season race at Daytona. If there’s a spoiler, it’s likely to be Denny Hamlin, who trails Elliott by 20 points despite missing a race for the birth of his son.
“It’s great to see Hendrick Motorsports atop the standings right now—at least three of us are—with just a few races left till the end of the regular season,” Larson said. “That’s something to be proud of, but there’s still a lot of racing left, and the Playoffs can be crazy.”
Source: Reid Spencer | NASCAR Wire Service
Motorsports
How to Watch Iowa Corn 350: Stream NASCAR Cup Series Live, TV Channel
Chase Elliott leads the NASCAR Cup Series onto Iowa Speedway for the Iowa Corn 350 for the second ever race in the state of Iowa. The NASCAR Cup Series heads into Iowa Speedway for the 23rd race of the regular season. Chase Elliott leads the field into the Iowa Corn 350 with a slight lead […]

Chase Elliott leads the NASCAR Cup Series onto Iowa Speedway for the Iowa Corn 350 for the second ever race in the state of Iowa.
The NASCAR Cup Series heads into Iowa Speedway for the 23rd race of the regular season. Chase Elliott leads the field into the Iowa Corn 350 with a slight lead over the rest of the field in the season points standings. This is the second edition of the Iowa Corn 350, which is the first on Iowa Speedway and in the state of Iowa in NASCAR Cup Series history. In the first edition of the Iowa Corn 350 last year Ryan Blaney became the inaugural champion. He held off William Byron, Elliott, Christopher Bell, and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. for the win.
How to Watch Iowa Corn 350 today:
Game Date: Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025
Game Time: 3:30 p.m. ET
TV: USA Network
Location: Iowa Speedway
Live stream Iowa Corn 350 on Fubo: Start watching now!
Heading into this race Blaney is seventh in the points standings. He has one win this season and is coming off back-to-back top eight finishes to build momentum. Blaney has 14 total wins in his NASCAR Cup Series career.
Elliott leads the field with 726 points, just four ahead of the rest of the field. Byron is right behind him 722 points with Bell in third place (664 points). Those four drivers, Blaney, Byron, Elliott, and Bell head into the second edition of the Iowa Corn 350 with momentum and experience on the track.
After this race there are just three more regular season races for the drivers to earn points and qualify for the playoffs. Up next is the Go Bowling at The Glen at Watkins Glen International in New York.
What Time Is the NASCAR Cup Series Iowa Corn 350 Race?
The Iowa Corn 350 race will take place on Sunday, August 3, 2025, at 3:30 p.m. ET. Tune in and catch some great NASCAR action.
What Channel Is the Iowa Corn 350 Race On?
Looking to watch this game? Fans can tune into USA Network to see the action. Make sure you subscribe to Fubo now to watch this matchup, as well as numerous other sports leagues.
Live stream Iowa Corn 350 on Fubo: Start watching now!
Regional restrictions may apply.
Motorsports
Bubba Wallace turned down rare offer from Richard Petty – Motorsport – Sports
Bubba Wallace turned down a contract extension that would have given him an ownership stake in Richard Petty Motorsports before joining Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing from the 2021 season. Wallace, 31, completed three full NASCAR Cup seasons at Richard Petty Motorsports before joining the NBA legend Jordan’s new team, which was co-owned by Denny Hamlin. […]

Bubba Wallace turned down a contract extension that would have given him an ownership stake in Richard Petty Motorsports before joining Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing from the 2021 season. Wallace, 31, completed three full NASCAR Cup seasons at Richard Petty Motorsports before joining the NBA legend Jordan’s new team, which was co-owned by Denny Hamlin.
Richard Petty Motorsports had hopes of retaining the then-26-year-old NASCAR star, and at one point, were confident Wallace would remain with the team beyond the 2020 season. Wallace was SportsPro’s 2018 list of the world’s 50 most marketable athletes and a trailblazer in NASCAR as an African-American driver.
Richard Petty Motorsports even offered Wallace an ownership stake in the team to keep their racing and marketing powerhouse. However, it wasn’t enough to deter Wallace from joining Jordan’s 23XI, where he has won three Cup races, including the recent Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis, which NASCAR legend Petty refused to congratulate his former driver on.
“We’re in discussions with him about an extension that includes ownership in the team,” Andrew Murstein, an owner of Nascar outfit Richard Petty Motorsports at the time, told Forbes. “There’s a plethora of drivers. There is only one Bubba.”
Wallace remained grateful to his former team for giving him his first Cup opportunity. He debuted in the Cup Series in 2017.
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“This was not an easy decision as I have nothing but the utmost respect for Richard Petty and his family, but I believe it’s time for someone else to take over the reins of the No. 43,” Wallace said in a statement.
“Thank you to the King and everyone at Richard Petty Motorsports for giving me the opportunity to start my Cup Series career. I’ve grown so much as a driver and as a person since joining them. We’ve got nine more races together, and I hope we can finish the 2020 season on a high note.”
Wallace, now in his 30s, a father, and a three-time NASCAR Cup Series race winner, will compete in this year’s playoffs. His win in Indy booked his place in the postseason after missing last year’s playoffs following a winless 2024.
DON’T MISS:
Before the Brickyard 400, Wallace’s last NASCAR win came in Kansas in 2022. “Oh, my gosh, I’m just so proud of this team,” Wallace said after taking the chequered flag following double overtime. “That adrenaline rush is crazy, ’cause I’m coming off that right now — and I’m worn out.”
“It’s unbelievable,” he added. “To win here at the Brickyard, knowing how big this race is, knowing all the noise that’s going on in the background, to set that all aside is a testament to these people here on this 23 team. It’s been getting old right around the cut line (for the playoffs).”
Motorsports
Bubba Wallace hate started with a lie, but NASCAR fans won’t admit it
Bubba Wallace. No name in the NASCAR Cup Series, at least over the past five-plus years, evokes reactions from the average NASCAR fan quite like this one does, when the two words are merely spoken. Wallace has emerged as one of NASCAR’s most polarizing characters, specifically during his time at 23XI Racing. The team co-owned […]

Bubba Wallace.
No name in the NASCAR Cup Series, at least over the past five-plus years, evokes reactions from the average NASCAR fan quite like this one does, when the two words are merely spoken.
Wallace has emerged as one of NASCAR’s most polarizing characters, specifically during his time at 23XI Racing. The team co-owned by three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan, which formed in 2021 as a result of an online rumor, made Wallace their first-ever driver, signing him away from Richard Petty Motorsports.
At that time, Wallace had already emerged as one of NASCAR’s most hated figures. He was the low-hanging fruit when it came to fans’ inevitable quips of “he’s only here because…” – you know the rest of the line.
So when Jordan came right out and said “we don’t sign checks for losers”, it elicited further reactions from the fans already hell-bent on rooting for the No. 23 Toyota to end up in the wall on any given race weekend.
But if not for what happened in June 2020, less than a year after that very driver ironically received an ovation from the crowd for spinning out Kyle Busch at Watkins Glen, it might not have been that way.
NASCAR fans’ Bubba Wallace hate based on a lie
Every single driver in the Cup field is, for one reason or another, hated by some fans. That’s the nature of the beast. No driver is going to be loved by everybody, no matter what. This isn’t any sort of a groundbreaking concept that’s exclusive to NASCAR.
The problem with an overwhelming majority of the Wallace hate, even more than five years later, is that it’s based on a lie. It’s based on a misconception that NASCAR willingly promoted (and the mainstream media willingly sensationalized), all under the guide of “standing behind” Wallace amid an act of racism that never existed.
The saga, which some still call “The Great Noose Hoax”, “Fake Noose”, you name it, was started on a Sunday night at Talladega Superspeedway: June 21, 2020. The race had been rained out to Monday.
That evening, NASCAR put out a statement, first sending into the media, and then releasing it publicly.
“Late this afternoon, NASCAR was made aware that a noose was found in the garage stall of the 43 team. We are angry and outraged, and cannot state strongly enough how seriously we take this heinous act. We have launched an immediate investigation, and will do everything we can to identify the person(s) responsible and eliminate them from the sport. As we have stated unequivocally, there is no place for racism in NASCAR, and this act only strengthens our resolve to make the sport open and welcoming to all.”
Most NASCAR fans can agree on one thing: this boils our blood to read. But not all in the same way, and that’s where the major disconnect is happening. It’s why Wallace is still on the receiving end of so much completely unwarranted hate.
At face value, the statement is angering because of what supposedly went down. But as more and more time passed without any hard evidence or additional information regarding the so-called crime, suspicions began to arise. Fans began to wonder if the situation was really what NASCAR said it was, in no uncertain terms.
But any such suspicions were shot down, primarily by the ever-divisive media. No; a crime happened here. You better believe it. And if you don’t, you’re a racist hack who has no place in this sport.
Ahh, of course. So goes the party line, right?
NASCAR flat-out made an accusation. In what was one of the most racially charged environments in recent history back in the summer of 2020, they stirred the pot without doing any due diligence. They knew exactly what would come of their accusation, and with no evidence whatsoever, they did it anyway.
That is what should boil your blood reading that statement now. And that, in and of itself, has absolutely nothing to do with Bubba Wallace.
FBI confirms no crime committed
As pretty much everybody other than NASCAR and the media expected, no crime was committed. The “noose” was a garage pull rope that had been in that stall for who knows how long, at least since the previous year’s October race at the track.
NASCAR made a knee-jerk reaction to one individual’s misunderstanding, and instead of simply looking into it (we’re not saying they shouldn’t have) and confirming the obvious, they turned it into a national story.
Over nothing.
What amazes me, to this day, is how, after the FBI sent those 15 agents to Talladega (and wasted everyone’s time in doing so), it took no time at all for Fox Sports’ Bob Pockrass to resurface a picture from the October race at the track, with the exact same pull rope, back when the garage stall belonged to Paul Menard and his No. 21 team.
I’m still grateful for Pockrass’ transparency here. Because there is no way on earth I believe that absolutely nobody thought of doing this between the time the so-called “noose” was discovered, up until the time NASCAR got through wasting those 15 agents’ time. Absolutely no way.
I firmly believe NASCAR wanted the publicity, and that they, plus a chunk of the media, wanted to believe an act of racism was committed. They wanted the clicks and the media engagement and the national praise, especially at a time when accusations of racism were already rampant across the country.
They wanted the “NASCAR” to stand not for National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, but for National Association for Stock Car Anti-Racism. They wanted to virtue signal, to pat themselves on the back.
Facts never mattered.
Seeing as how NASCAR was more than happy to soak up the national spotlight after banning the Confederate Flag from race tracks less than two weeks prior, you have to believe they were loving the added publicity, which once again quickly elevated to the national scale. It was a “Look at how not racist we are again!” play if ever we’ve seen one.
Yea, no kidding. Because no racist act was committed. Just conveniently leave that part out, though, and dismiss anyone who dare suggest it possible that this was all a big nothingburger.
I recall, shortly after the whole thing unfolded, bringing it up to a close friend. He didn’t even want to talk about it, and it was obvious that it wasn’t because he hated Bubba, but because of the fact that this was the single most mismanaged off-track situation NASCAR has seen in recent history.
There were several members of the media who took to social media to not only dismiss, but to berate, attack, insult, and completely vilify anybody who dared suggest this wasn’t a hate crime. There were others who didn’t go that far, but still fully fed into the narrative that week, arms raised high to battle an evil that never existed.
Never mind the fact that the whole narrative was made next-to-impossible by the COVID-limited access to the garage to begin with. But again, if you dared bring that up, you risked losing your job or, again, being vilified on social media. Because clearly somebody had to be the villain here. Clearly there was a racist on the loose. Someone had to pay.
Do you really believe it’s not exactly what NASCAR wanted?
Unfortunately, all along, it was the very individual they supposedly sought to defend who paid the biggest price. Because NASCAR and the sensationalist, always-divisive media turned Bubba Wallace the victim, a role he never wanted nor embraced.
I have to admit that, yes, in hindsight Wallace going on various talk shows that week to talk about the “noose” (and, like NASCAR, criticize fans who doubted the party line) was not a good look.
But you have to understand something. He was told what everyone else was. NASCAR’s statement that night did not include the word “alleged”. They stated, plain and simple, again in no uncertain terms, that a “heinous act” had been committed, despite having absolutely nothing to back up that particular claim.
Of course, they referenced Wallace’s skin color in the release, and spoke about “racial injustice”. Again, there’s no way I don’t believe they didn’t know exactly what they were doing.
Wallace was merely reacting to what he was told as indisputable fact. Nothing he was doing involved embellishment of anything. Again, he didn’t even see the “noose”.
I’m not saying Wallace – as a person or as a driver – is innocent. He has had his polarizing moments in situations other than NASCAR’s so-called “heinous act”, both on and off the race track. Who hasn’t?
But when the first thing he’s associated with is the “noose”, you have to wonder just how much hate he’d get if fans actually stopped to consider how that all went down, and the fact that he was no different than you or me when it came to watching how that situation unfolded.
And what most outlets won’t tell you is that while Wallace did speak out about the so-called “heinous act” from the time it was “confirmed” by NASCAR to the time the FBI actually confirmed the opposite, he later admitted that the whole thing “kind of looks bad”.
He’s a realist; we all know that. We see him wear his emotions on his sleeve every week. He knew how it was perceived. He knew that those criticized and vilified for their suspicions were actually right. And he knew how it all made him look, even if he had personally done nothing wrong.
Yet all NASCAR did, and all the media did, was inexplicably double down, treating the vast majority of the fanbase with a condescending level of tone deafness that implied they saw them as nothing more than oblivious and ready to stand shoulder to shoulder in a battle against something that never happened to begin with.
Instead of being grateful beyond words – like anybody should have been – that no racist act was committed against NASCAR’s lone African American driver, that’s the reaction we got.
If there was ever an example of the infamous “Believe in something, even if it didn’t happen” meme, this was it. This was the epitome. This was the poster child.
NASCAR could have handled it a lot better. Instead, they sold Bubba down the river, all under the guise of “standing behind him”, without acknowledging any sort of accountability for a mistake, misjudgment, and overreaction of gargantuan proportions.
More than a year later, Jimmie Johnson spoke out about NASCAR’s sensationalism, stating that all NASCAR needed to do was include the word “alleged”, and things would have been different.
It really would have been that simple. As we all know, they didn’t.
And guess what? Credit where credit is due: NASCAR president Steve Phelps ended up admitting the same thing as well. NASCAR knew they messed up, and they finally admitted it.
But unfortunately, the damage was done. “Alleged” would have implied the possibility that something didn’t happen, and even though that’s what was true, NASCAR didn’t want to leave the door open to that.
I feel as strongly about the whole thing as anybody. But none of that is Bubba’s fault. This is, and always was, the farthest thing from a Jussie Smollett situation.
I just hope more fans can come to terms with that, five-plus years later, and that the justified frustration with NASCAR and the media doesn’t continue to translate to unjustified hate toward Bubba.
I’m not saying you should suddenly root for him. I’m not saying his Brickyard 400 win – another interesting irony shared with Paul Menard, for whatever that’s worth – makes him the greatest driver ever.
What I am saying is that the facts and the reality of why Wallace is so hated don’t match up with the facts and the reality of what actually happened back in June 2020.
In fact, they couldn’t be farther apart.
Motorsports
Shipman goes three in a row with Race 1 win at NJMP in F4 U.S.
After sweeping the weekend at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course just a few weeks ago, Cooper Shipman carried momentum into the New Jersey Lottery SpeedTour weekend to win the opening race for Formula 4 United States Championship on Saturday afternoon. In a race with intense competition and attrition, Shipman (No. 14 Kiwi Motorsport Ligier JS F422) kept […]

After sweeping the weekend at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course just a few weeks ago, Cooper Shipman carried momentum into the New Jersey Lottery SpeedTour weekend to win the opening race for Formula 4 United States Championship on Saturday afternoon. In a race with intense competition and attrition, Shipman (No. 14 Kiwi Motorsport Ligier JS F422) kept his focus forward to minimize his mistakes and capitalize on the misfortune of others. Turn 2 was a gremlin for several competitors throughout the race, with both Demitri Nolan (No. 5 Crosslink Motorsports Ligier JS F422) and Alex Popow (No. 55 Dr. Michael Thompson MS DDS PPLS / MLT Motorsports Ligier JS F422) eliminated from competition after contact with the tire barrier.
Kekai Hauanio (No. 29 N-E-Where Transport / Crosslink Motorsports Ligier JS F422) paced the field for most of the race, but a late-race restart changed everything, as Clemente Huerta Raab (No. 17 Velox USA / Kiwi Motorsport Ligier JS F422) pulled tight on his bumper and dove to the inside entering Turn 1. Hauanio dropped two wheels, giving the advantage to Caleb Campbell (No. 68 Kids Help Phone / Camtacc Properties / Legacy Foundation of Canada / LC Racing Ligier JS F422), who had darted forward from third. As Huerta Raab dropped all four wheels off the racing surface, Shipman slid into the runner-up position to take chase of Campbell. For the next three laps, Campbell and Shipman raced wheel to wheel, until finally, with just over four minutes left on the clock, Shipman drove deep into Turn 1 to complete the pass. When the checkered flag waved, Shipman led, with Campbell in second and Hauanio in third.
Following the event, the stewards issued Campbell a penalty for causing a collision. The drive-thru penalty was converted into a 30-second time penalty, which dropped Campbell to fourth in the final results and promoted Huerta Raab to the third and final podium position.
Notes of Interest:
- Cooper Shipman earned his third-career F4 U.S. win during the opening race at New Jersey Motorsports Park to extend his lead in the points championship.
- After finishing second in all three Ligier Junior Formula Championship races at NJMP last season, Kekai Hauanio finished second in F4 U.S.’s Race 1 to mark his seventh podium of the season.
- Clemente Huerta Raab earned his third podium of 2025 with a third-place finish in Round 9.
> SEE MORE: Race 1 Official Results
“It was a pretty crazy race out there,” said Shipman. “I thought we gave it away there in the beginning, but I just kept my head down and waited to capitalize from the mistakes. Thanks to the Kiwi Motorsport team for giving me a great car—one that allowed us to come through from the back. I’m super excited to win today and super proud of our effort.”
> WATCH THE STREAM: Stream Round 9 from NJMP
F4 U.S. returns to the track tomorrow morning at 10:25 a.m. ET for Race 2 from the New Jersey Lottery SpeedTour. The race will be live streamed on SpeedTour.TV.
Motorsports
Braves-Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway suspended due to rain
BRISTOL, Tenn. — It was a red flag for Major League Baseball at Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday night. The Speedway Classic between the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds was suspended in the first inning because of rain, soaking a record-breaking crowd for the first regular-season game in Tennessee. The plan is to resume the […]

BRISTOL, Tenn. — It was a red flag for Major League Baseball at Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday night.
The Speedway Classic between the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds was suspended in the first inning because of rain, soaking a record-breaking crowd for the first regular-season game in Tennessee. The plan is to resume the game on Sunday at 1 p.m. ET.
The first delay at the historic bullring of a racetrack came after the ceremonial first pitch featuring a pair of Hall of Famers in Johnny Bench and Chipper Jones, joined by NASCAR drivers Kyle Busch and Chase Elliott. The second with one out in the bottom of the first led to the game being pushed back a day.
Fans who stuck out the first delay of 2 hours, 17 minutes started heading toward the exits before the game was postponed with the Reds holding a 1-0 lead.
It was an unwelcome detour for the long-planned event mixing baseball and NASCAR.
“We’re going to suspend tonight’s game. … We are optimistic for a better weather forecast for tomorrow,” Michael Hill, MLB’s senior vice president of on-field operations, told Fox.
The rain made life difficult on the players before the suspension. A bat flew out of TJ Friedl’s hands as he led off for the Reds. A pitcher seemed to catch his footing going to cover first base.
The Speedway Classic was announced nearly a year ago as part of commissioner Rob Manfred’s push to take MLB to places where baseball isn’t played every day live. MLB played a game at the “Field of Dreams” movie site in Iowa in 2021 and 2022. Games have been held in Alabama and North Carolina too.
Reds pitcher Andrew Abbott showed up Saturday afternoon at Bristol wearing a cutoff version of a NASCAR race suit. Born in Lynchburg, Virginia, Abbott said he wanted something to wear in for a special game.
“I grew up around NASCAR,” Abbott said. “Just went on eBay and found a couple options, and luckily that was the one that arrived in time. I had a couple of backups. I know who Rusty Wallace is too, so I actually do know the backstory behind it.”
Long before the fans departed in the rain, they were entertained by a 110-foot Ferris wheel along with food trucks, live music, pitching tunnels and batting cages. Fans also had a chance for photos with the Commissioner’s Trophy and Clydesdales outside the historic racetrack.
Inside, star Tim McGraw performed and was joined by Pitbull.
Before the weather moved over the area, players stood in the back of pickup trucks with their numbers emblazoned on the side and rode around the half-mile racetrack. Some used their phones to document the moment. For introductions, the Braves and Reds walked between a pair of cars decked out in Atlanta and Cincinnati colors.
Then the tarp came out as rain that had been falling around Bristol much of Saturday turned heavy and delayed the start.
The first delay led to the Braves switching starting pitchers. Spencer Strider, who grew up in nearby Knoxville, got a bigger ovation than Reds starter Chase Burns, who is from Hendersonville and played at the University of Tennessee. The Reds stuck with Burns despite the delay.
Strider warmed up. The Braves chose not to risk his third start in this situation coming off a second elbow surgery and turned to Austin Cox.
The rain stopped long enough to take off the tarp and start the game.
Michael Waltrip, who raced plenty at Bristol, restarted the festivities by quoting his brother Darrell: “Boogity, boogity, boogity. Let’s play baseball, boys!”
Atlanta went down in order in the top of the first inning. But there was another rain delay after Austin Hays hit an RBI single for Cincinnati in the bottom half.
MLB didn’t try to sell every ticket inside the speedway that drew 156,990 for the Battle of Bristol college football game in 2016. The track with a racing capacity of 146,000 could host 90,000 or more even with sections blocked off.
Officials announced Monday that more than 85,000 tickets had been sold, topping the previous paid attendance of 84,587 set Sept. 12, 1954, when Cleveland Stadium hosted the New York Yankees.
A batter has to clear 400 feet to hit anything out of center field, 375 in the alleys and 330 down each baseline. Pulling a ball down the line raises the prospect of a ball bouncing off the racetrack beyond the outfield wall.
“Honestly, my first thought: I can’t believe they did all this for one game,” Braves first baseman Matt Olson said of his first visit to Bristol. “To be able to set all this up, get a playing surface ready, set the stands up in order to have the proper viewing, it’s pretty incredible.”
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