What’s Happening?
On Wednesday Morning, Team Penske announced the “departure” of several executives, including Tim Cindric, a long-time staple of the…
Bowmanville, ON – NASCAR Canada is back, and the 2025 season kicks off in full force at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (CTMP) with the highly-anticipated Clarington 200 on May 18th. Fans can expect a thrilling weekend, as the grid features a mix of returning champions, seasoned veterans and rising stars ready to push their limits. […]
Bowmanville, ON – NASCAR Canada is back, and the 2025 season kicks off in full force at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (CTMP) with the highly-anticipated Clarington 200 on May 18th. Fans can expect a thrilling weekend, as the grid features a mix of returning champions, seasoned veterans and rising stars ready to push their limits.
Defending champion Marc-Antoine Camirand returns in the No. 96 Paillé Racing Chevrolet, looking to carry the momentum from his 2024 title-winning season. Among his fiercest challengers will be Kevin Lacroix in the No. 74, last year’s runner-up and pole-position leader, with five poles in 2024. Andrew Ranger, No. 27 Paillé Racing driver, a three-time series champion, and veterans D.J. Kennington, driver of the No. 17 Castrol Edge Dodge, and Louis-Philippe Dumoulin, No. 47 WeatherTech Canada/Omnifab driver, who rounded out the top-five in last year’s standings, will also be ones to watch.
Adding to the excitement are two newcomers: American sensation Ryan Vargas, who joins the series in the No. 28 Critical Path Security Canada Dodge Challenge with DJK Racing, after a full-time season in the NASCAR Euro Series, and GT racing driver Josh Hurley, making his series debut in the No. 24 BC Race Cars Chevrolet.
Also in the spotlight is Gary Klutt, with the No. 59 Legendary Motorcar Company Dodge, who grabbed pole position at CTMP last season. Hometown driver Sam Fellows will be looking for a podium, a feat he came close to achieving while commanding the No. 87 AER/POLYSLEEP Chevrolet machine in last year’s WeatherTech Canada 200.
A strong contingent of returning drivers round out the grid, including crowd favourite Alex Tagliani, sharing the No. 80 St-Hubert/The UPS Store/Impression Mirabel/Dryshine/Grand Royal Wôlinak/BetGRW.com/Vulcain/Garoy Construction car with Donald Theetge this season. Young talents Alex Guénette, in the No. 39 GL Électricité Automatisation Chevrolet, and Jean-Philippe Bergeron, in the No. 1 ERACER Drink/JC Perreault Ford, are set to make their presence felt, while Simon Charbonneau embarks on his second part-time season in the No. 88 TransGestion/NAPA St-Jérôme Chevrolet.
EHR will be represented by Jason Hathaway, driver of the No. 3 Fast Eddie/Leland Industries Chevrolet, and Danny Chisholm, in the No. 8 Jani King Chevrolet. MBS Motorsports also fields a strong lineup, with Kyle Steckly in the No. 22 car and Domenic Scrivo driving the No. 69 Sierra Excavating Chevrolet.
“There’s an incredible energy heading into the 2025 season,” said Alan Labrosse, NASCAR Canada General Manager. “The mix of young talents, returning champions, and fan-favourite veterans sets the stage for one exciting season.”
Saturday’s on-track activities will start at 12:30 p.m. for Practice, followed by Qualifying at 4:45 p.m. Sunday’s Clarington 200 will take place at 2 p.m. Catch all the action live on REV TV, TVA Sports and tape-delayed broadcasts on TSN.
About NASCAR
Celebrating its 75th Anniversary in 2023, the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States and owner of 16 of the nation’s major motorsports entertainment facilities. NASCAR sanctions races in three national series (NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series™), four international series (NASCAR Brasil Sprint Race, NASCAR Canada Series, NASCAR Mexico Series and the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series), four regional series (ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East & West and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour) and a local grassroots series (NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. NASCAR also owns Motor Racing Network, Racing Electronics, and ONE DAYTONA. Based in Daytona Beach, Florida, with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races annually in 12 countries and more than 30 U.S. states. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).
What’s Happening? With the shocking announcement of Tim Cindric’s unceremonious departure from Team Penske, NASCAR fans are wondering if his absence could affect the career of his son, Austin Cindric, the driver of Team Penske’s iconic No. 2. Tim Cindric Out at Penske Very rarely does NASCAR news come from INDYCAR, let alone the Indianapolis […]
With the shocking announcement of Tim Cindric’s unceremonious departure from Team Penske, NASCAR fans are wondering if his absence could affect the career of his son, Austin Cindric, the driver of Team Penske’s iconic No. 2.
Very rarely does NASCAR news come from INDYCAR, let alone the Indianapolis 500. However, this story found its way to the NASCAR news cycle in a roundabout way.
Tim Cindric, a longtime staple of Team Penske, has left the team following a dramatic cheating scandal in Indianapolis. Alongside the now-former President of Penske’s IndyCar efforts, two other executives have also left the team.
Of course, this has raised questions about the future of his son, Austin Cindric, who has had a rather disappointing time behind the wheel of Penske‘s most iconic NASCAR Cup Series ride. However, this isn’t the first time this conversation has happened this year.
On Jan. 31, Team Penske announced Cindric was stepping away from his day-to-day role as the President of their multifaceted racing pursuits while retaining his role in INDYCAR. However, today’s announcement is unlike the decision from January, which had the tone of a personal decision. This time, it seems as if there could be tension in his departure.
As Roger Penske stated Wednesday morning:
“Nothing is more important than the integrity of our sport and our race teams. We have had organizational failures during the last two years, and we had to make necessary changes. I apologize to our fans, our partners and our organization for letting them down.” — Roger Penske
So, is there any real reason to think this departure will affect Austin Cindric’s NASCAR career?
What’s Happening?
On Wednesday Morning, Team Penske announced the “departure” of several executives, including Tim Cindric, a long-time staple of the…
Austin Cindric’s turnaround from NASCAR National Series rookie in 2017 to full-time Cup Series driver in 2022 was no easy feat. Despite his father’s role in the team, Cindric had to earn his spot at Team Penske; this included four full-time seasons in the NASCAR Xfinity series.
Over these four seasons, Cindric rose from winless to consistent to dominant. In his third season, 2020, Cindric had 26 top-10 finishes and walked out of Phoenix with the championship. While waiting for a Cup Series seat to open in 2022, he put together yet another championship-caliber season, ultimately falling short at Phoenix.
Though he made a splash immediately upon arrival, winning Penske’s second Daytona 500, Cindric quickly showed signs of regression. Despite a strong ability to race at superspeedways, Austin seemed to have lost his skill on the other tracks, including his acumen for road course racing.
These struggles are acceptable for any driver, especially when making the transition during the NASCAR Gen Seven era. However, Cindric yet again showed an overall statistical decrease in 2023, going with less in 2024.
Despite all these factors, and to the surprise of nobody, he reportedly received an extension at Team Penske in late 2023. At the time, this could have been viewed as Penske giving their former top prospect, the son of a longtime executive, a longer leash to figure things out at the Cup Series level, though some viewed it as NASCAR nepotism in action.
But after another disappointing yet slightly better 2024, most viewed this as a foolish decision. With the announcement of his father’s departure from the NASCAR side of the team in January, fans quickly claimed that, in their opinion, Cindric had no choice but to pick up the pace in 2025. So, how has the 26-year-old performed this season?
The young 2025 season has been up and down for the No. 2 team. After a strong showing in the first two races, both at superspeedway-style tracks, he had led 106 laps and scored one top-ten finish. However, at Circuit of the Americas, Cindric received a major penalty for intentionally wrecking Ty Dillon.
Putting this 50-point penalty behind him, Cindric has had quite the rebound season. He has shown improvement on intermediate tracks, including consistent qualifying speed, and was the first in-house Team Penske driver to win a race. A quick look at his stats through the first 12 races of the season shows a driver who is improving on his past seasons but still struggles for consistency on race day.
What’s Happening?
NASCAR has fined and penalized Austin Cindric for intentionally wrecking Ty Dillon on the front stretch at Circuit of…
Factoring in his first three full-time seasons at the Cup Series level, and his partial 2025 season, is there any real need to worry for Austin Cindric?
As of right now, probably not.
Though some could point to his surface-level stats as a reason the No. 2 team is the worst car at Team Penske, a deeper look at the numbers shows that Cindric is by no means the team’s weak link.
For example, Cindric’s 17.3 average finish is the second-best of his career, just behind his rookie season, and his 11.3 average starting position is the best of his career and is the second-best among full-time Cup Series drivers. Cindric also has 226 laps led, good for fifth best in the Cup Series.
Cindric currently has the second-most top-ten finishes at Team Penske, the second-most laps led by anyone at Team Penske, the best average starting position of anyone at Team Penske, but the worst average finish of the three drivers in the Penske stable.
If you want to look at his 13th-place point position, the worst on the team, here’s an interesting thought. Had Cindric not had the 50-point penalty after COTA, he would not currently be 13th in points. Rather, he would be a career-best ninth, with 323 points, one spot above his teammate and reigning Cup Series champion, Joey Logano.
While it’s easy to deduce that this could save his spot at Penske in the future, the case could be made that he is the most unstable driver at the team.
His inconsistency on race day, combined with job security supplied by the championship legacies of Ryan Blaney and Logano, could be enough to make Cindric the odd man out at the three-car team should a major name hit the free agent market.
Right now, Austin Cindric’s future looks secure, but that by no means confirms he is in a safe spot. He will have to keep up his solid pace in 2025 if he wants to secure his long-term future with the organization.
What’s Happening?
Like any other sport, Free Agency is a key part of NASCAR. However, driver-free agency is not covered like…
Let us know your thoughts on Austin Cindric’s NASCAR future! Join the discussion on Discord or X, and remember to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube for more updates.
Team Penske dropped a bombshell days before the Indy 500, which could shake up NASCAR, too. High-ranking firings, rule-breaking revelations, and a Hall of Fame twist involving a current Cup driver with deep family ties to the scandal. This one hits every corner of the motorsports world. Why did Penske clean house just before the […]
Team Penske dropped a bombshell days before the Indy 500, which could shake up NASCAR, too. High-ranking firings, rule-breaking revelations, and a Hall of Fame twist involving a current Cup driver with deep family ties to the scandal. This one hits every corner of the motorsports world.
This episode packs drama, history, and speculation from the fallout at Indy to the Class of 2026. Are we witnessing the start of a major shift at one of NASCAR’s top teams? And are the Hall of Fame standards changing in real time? Drop your thoughts in the comments — who would you put in the Hall today, and who still has something to prove?
Watch Also:
Christopher Bell and Brad Keselowski each will have a new spotter in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Joe Gibbs Racing confirmed Wednesday that Matt Philpott has replaced Stevie Reeves as Bell’s spotter. Reeves had been Bell’s spotter in Cup since Bell made his series debut in 2020. Cup drivers will compete in the […]
Christopher Bell and Brad Keselowski each will have a new spotter in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Joe Gibbs Racing confirmed Wednesday that Matt Philpott has replaced Stevie Reeves as Bell’s spotter. Reeves had been Bell’s spotter in Cup since Bell made his series debut in 2020.
Cup drivers will compete in the longest race of the season Sunday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Bell won last week’s All-Star Race and is the defending winner of the Coca-Cola 600.
Todd Brewer will fill-in for T.J. Majors as Keselowski’s spotter. Majors said on this week’s Dale Jr. Download that he would be out about a month due to a medical procedure.
When it comes to iconic NASCAR races, the 2005 running of NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 is up there as one of the wilded and most bizarre. It was May 29th, 2005, a few hours after Dan Wheldon had won his first Indianapolis 500 earlier in the day. 43 drivers took part in NASCAR’s longest race and […]
When it comes to iconic NASCAR races, the 2005 running of NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 is up there as one of the wilded and most bizarre. It was May 29th, 2005, a few hours after Dan Wheldon had won his first Indianapolis 500 earlier in the day.
43 drivers took part in NASCAR’s longest race and through 5+ hours of chaos, it came down to an aging champion searching for one last moment of glory and a new superstar on the cusp of greatness.
The race kicked off in the daylight with Ryan Newman and Jeff Gordon leading the field to the green flag. Seven laps were run before the caution flew and the safety vehicles were deployed in what would be a very busy night for them. Martin Truex Jr. rubbed the wall and while it was nothing major, it was the beginning of the most caution-filled race in NASCAR history.
The first 100 laps were fairly subdued and nothing peculiar occurred. But as Kyle Busch defended the lead against then-teammate Gordon, a multi-car pileup ensued on the backstretch. No big names collected, but the free pass did go to 2000 NASCAR Cup Series champion Bobby Labonte, who had started back in 34th. And you’re going to want to remember that name for later.
Things began to unravel from that point onward. The race could hardly go 20 laps without an incident. Ten cautions flew between lap 115 and 240. Perhaps the most notable incident happened on the 247th lap, when Dale Earnhardt Jr. and then-teammate Michael Waltrip were battling for position. A misjudged crossover move by Earnhardt sent Waltrip spinning wildly down the frontstretch, destroying both cars in the process. Former Cup champions Matt Kenseth and Terry Labonte also got swept up in the mess and had their nights ended prematurely. Terry’s brother Bobby was able to weave through the chaos and just barely avoid the out-of-control race cars.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Dale Earnhardt Inc. Chevrolet
Photo by: George Tiedemann via Getty Images
When the race returned to green flag conditions, the carnage began to subside (for the moment) and everyone finally got the chance to take a breath after 375 miles of almost non-stop destruction. The cautions continued to trickle in, but they were for minor things such as a piece of debris or oil on the track. But when Kasey Kahne blew a right front tire and threw debris all over the track, NASCAR was forced to display the yellow once more. How was this yellow more significant than the others? Well, it happened in the middle of green flag pit stops and just like that, the running order was turned upside down.
All four Hendrick cars were trapped deep in the running order, as were many other top contenders. One driver was told to pit by his crew chief seconds before the caution was displayed, but that driver called an audible and decided to wait after seeing Kahne limping around on the apron. That driver would be veteran Bobby Labonte, who now ran second to Carl Edwards. With the rules as they were back then, cars that stayed out to get a lap back weren’t waved around the pace car. Instead, they restarted just ahead of the leaders at the tail-end of the lead lap, putting Edwards and Labonte in the middle of the field — and the eye of the storm.
On lap 364, Joe Nemehcek fought his way through the traffic and took over the race lead. With the drivers tired and the race running incredibly late, tempers began to flare. Under caution, Edwards and Dale Jarrett got into a shoving match with their cars over some earlier contact.
Another massive pileup took place with just twenty laps remaining. Seven cars in total received damage including notables such as Gordon, Brian Vickers, Kevin Harvick, and Mark Martin. Jimmie Johnson was lucky to be directly in front of the accident as few behind it made it through. That wreck officially broke the old NASCAR record for cautions in a single Cup race, and they weren’t even done tearing up equipment yet.
Brian Vickers, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet damage
Photo by: Getty Images
As for Johnson, he had been quietly avoiding drama throughout the race. He entered the event as the favorite, and not just because the track was called Lowe’s Motor Speedway at the time, which was also his primary sponsor. Johnson was the defending winner of the Coke 600 and swept both races at Charlotte the previous year. He was now one of the few drivers left standing in the closing laps.
And this race wasn’t done surprising us just yet. As the laps ticked down to under ten laps remaining, race leader Nemechek lost control and backed it into the wall due to a tire failure. His mangled No. 01 machine slid down the track and directly into the path of Johnson. The No. 48 somehow made it through the blinding smoke, inches away from what would have been a terrible impact.
Joe Nemechek crashes from the lead
Photo by: Getty Images
The lead was put into the hands of none other than Bobby Labonte. That weekend was weird for him, even before the green flag flew. His bright green Interstate Batteries car was replaced with FedEx colors for this race because his teammate Jason Leffler, who had originally carried the scheme, failed to qualify for the event. The company then made an unusual deal with Gibbs to be placed on the No. 18 car. Labonte was also facing a winless streak that dated back to the end of the 2003 season and he was eager to return to Victory Lane.
The race was red-flagged with nine laps to go and the commentators decided to speak with Labonte, but as they quickly found out, he wasn’t in the mood for chatting.
“You got me Bobby?” … “Yeah.” … “Do you think you can hold him off?”… “I’m gonna try.” … “How good is your car? As good as it’s been all night I guess?” … “Yeah.”
He was so focused on the mission ahead of him, knowing he had the inferior car. But he was not about to bow down in the face of such odds. That weekend was also the tenth anniversary of Labonte’s first win at the Cup level, which came at this same race in 1995. He knew that behind him, he had a hungry rookie in Edwards and Johnson’s Hendrick-powered No. 48. Johnson also had slightly fresher tires than those ahead of him.
The race resumed with just six laps left. Johnson quickly moved forward, taking second with four laps and six miles left to run Labonte down. Well, he was on him in a single lap.
Labonte fought with everything he had, but he also had a reputation as one of the cleanest drivers in the field. He wasn’t about to get physical in this tense battle for the win. Johnson sent it to the inside of Labonte in Turn 1 on the final lap, but he got too tight and had to lift. It looked as if the battle was over, but Johnson was not finished yet. He sent it deep into the final set of corners on the outside, sparks flying out from under his No. 48 Chevrolet. He clawed forward, pulling alongside Labonte out of Turn 4 as the stands erupted with camera flashes.
At the line, just 0.027s separated them in the closest finish in the entire 65-year history of the Coke 600. Johnson enjoyed the sweet taste of Victory Lane champagne that night, while Labonte endured the bitter agony of defeat, kicking the side of his car in disgust. It was not the celebration he had hoped for to commemorate his first NASCAR Cup win from ten years prior. And as fate would have it, Labonte raced on for another decade, and never won again.
The 46th running of the Coca Cola 600 was a riveting, but bizarre event that lasted five hours and 13 minutes. It featured a record number of cautions at 22, which has yet to be beat. 21 of the 43 drivers that started the race led at one point and the driver who led the most laps [Vickers] never even made it to the finish. And when the smoke cleared, only 36 inches stood between the first and second place cars. It signified the clashing of two eras with Labonte, one of the last stars of the Winston Cup era losing to the man who would turn the newly introduced NASCAR playoffs into his personal playground.
And while there have been plenty of weird and wild Coke 600s, nothing compares to what went on this Sunday evening in 2005.
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SALISBURY — First Selectman Curtis Rand agreed to sign approvals for changes in traffic patterns and a “hauler parade” for Lime Rock Park’s NASCAR event June 26 to 28 after a lengthy and detailed discussion at a special meeting of the Board of Selectmen Wednesday, May 21. Lime Rock Park is hosting a weekend of […]
SALISBURY — First Selectman Curtis Rand agreed to sign approvals for changes in traffic patterns and a “hauler parade” for Lime Rock Park’s NASCAR event June 26 to 28 after a lengthy and detailed discussion at a special meeting of the Board of Selectmen Wednesday, May 21.
Lime Rock Park is hosting a weekend of NASCAR events. In anticipation of a larger than usual crowd, park leadership has asked to have one-way traffic on Route 112 — Lime Rock Road — from the junction of Route 7 and Route 112 to White Hollow Road and the main track entrance between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. and one-way traffic in the opposite direction between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. on Friday, June 27 and Saturday, June 28.
On Thursday, June 26, there will be a hauler parade. The trucks will form up at Salisbury School and proceed west on Route 44 starting at 4:30 p.m., with state police cars in the lead and bringing up the rear. Westbound traffic on Route 44 will be stopped as the parade gets underway.
Rand expressed frustration with many aspects of the plans. He was critical of park leadership for setting up arrangements with local businesses for the parade prior to coming to the town for a discussion.
Selectman Chris Williams said Lime Rock Park should have come to the town considerably earlier than the first notification a couple of weeks ago.
Selectman Kitty Kiefer said she has not heard anything positive from anyone she has talked to about the plans.
Lime Rock Park President Dicky Riegel and facility safety director Tom Burke, a retired State Police sergeant with Troop B, answered the questions and criticisms as they came.
Burke said there will be 30 state troopers both along the roads and at the track, and there will be 11 variable message boards deployed to alert motorists several days ahead of the events.
Asked why park representatives had not sent out plans to their immediate neighbors, Riegel said they couldn’t do that until they had an approval. With approval, the track will publicize the information about the traffic flow and the parade.
Riegel also apologized for not coming to the town sooner.
Public comment was uniformly negative.
After an hour or so, Rand asked the selectmen for their opinions.
Kiefer said she would deny both requests.
Williams said he would approve them but reiterated his earlier criticisms.
Rand made up his mind.
“I will sign these.” He said he was “going on good faith.”
“But if it comes up again I might easily say no.”
May 21, 2025 May 21, 2025 – After an action-packed weekend at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, Nitro Motorsports is ready to regroup and reload as the Trans Am Series Presented by Pirelli heads east to Lime Rock Park for the next round of the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series championship. With a powerful eight-driver roster, including a pair of NASCAR ladder series drivers, […]
May 21, 2025 – After an action-packed weekend at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, Nitro Motorsports is ready to regroup and reload as the Trans Am Series Presented by Pirelli heads east to Lime Rock Park for the next round of the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series championship. With a powerful eight-driver roster, including a pair of NASCAR ladder series drivers, the North Carolina-based outfit looks to return to the top step of the podium on the historic Connecticut circuit in the Memorial Day weekend event.
Racing out of the Nitro Motorsports stable at Lime Rock will be:
“We’ve got a deep lineup of talent heading into Lime Rock, and I’m excited to see what we can do as a team,” expressed Nick Tucker, Team Owner of Nitro Motorsports. “After a tough end to a promising weekend at Laguna Seca, everyone is fired up and ready to fight back.”
Last time out, Gian Buffomante turned heads by charging from 21st on the grid to finish third, earning his first career Trans Am podium and the Basset Hard Charger of the Race Award in the process. Boris Said Jr. showed his consistency as well, finishing fourth in class after penalties reshuffled the final order. Meanwhile, early front-runners Thomas Annunziata, the current TA2 championship point leader, and Sam Corry showed winning pace with Annunziata, a two-time race winner this season, looking to rebound after a disappointing event.
Julian DaCosta and Cale Phillips will pilot Nitro Motorsports machines at Lime Rock Park this weekend as they look for their best results of the season, as a pair of new names will join them in the series in 2025. Coming from the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and the ARCA Menards Series, Corey Heim and Thad Moffitt will race for Nitro Motorsports this weekend.
“We welcome Corey and Thad to our program this weekend as they have a slight break in their NASCAR schedules and can join us,” Tucker continued. “We’ve shown speed at every track this year. Now the goal is to put it all together—and get back to our dominating ways. With eight talented drivers in the paddock, I have no doubt we’ll be right in the mix this weekend.”
Set to hit the track on Friday for three test sessions, Saturday will be the home of qualifying and race one. Tune in LIVE all weekend long at GoTransAm.com.
For more information on Nitro Motorsports, please visit them online or contact Nick Tucker via email HERE or visit them online at www.RaceNitro.com.
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