Motorsports
NASCAR insider names front-runner replacement for Xfinity Series title sponsor
This is the last season that we will have the NASCAR Xfinity Series as the Xfinity Series. A new title sponsor is around the corner for 2026. Right now, there appears to be a favorite according to “people familiar with the matter.”
The NASCAR Xfinity Series has been known as such since 2015. But Xfinity is on the way out. With the racing at an all-time high in the series, The CW media deal, and the great personalities each week, it is going to be a hot commodity.
NASCAR insider, Adam Stern of Sports Business Journal, reported today on who is in “pole position” to take over for Xfinity. How about the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series?
“[O’Reilly Auto Parts] is in pole position to replace [Xfinity] as title sponsor of the [NASCAR Xfinity Series] starting next year, per people familiar with the matter,” Stern posted today.
So, is Xfinity leaving NASCAR completely? No. According to Jordan Bianchi of The Athletic, the internet provider is set to remain a premier sponsor of the Cup Series, along with Busch Light and Coca-Cola. NASCAR did lose support from GEICO at the end of last season.
Bianchi took things further and said that a deal has been reached between NASCAR and O’Reilly Auto Parts. The news is expected to be officially announced early next week.
A lot of this has to do with The CW coming on to broadcast the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Nextstar Media Group, which owns CW, is a competitor of Xfinity and Comcast.
NASCAR Xfinity Series to change names in 2026
The NASCAR Xfinity Series will soon be the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. NOAPS for short, I guess? While it is going to be tough to say, the new deal should continue the positive momentum that the sport’s second-tier series has had recently.
It is becoming the norm for Xfinity Series races to pull in audiences of over 1,000,000. Each week, the series proves that it is the second-most-popular motorsport in the country. There are many online who will happily say that the action in that series is the best thing in racing right now, regardless of series.
O’Reilly Auto Parts is a great partner to have. It just makes sense for an auto parts store to take on this role. Over the years, the company has sponsored races, cars, and has been a good friend to stock car racing. Now, that relationship takes a whole new step.
The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, only on The CW. Get ready to hear that a lot in the next year and beyond.
Motorsports
Can EV Technology Compete in Motorsports? Inside the Electric Racing Future & EV Performance
Electric vehicles are no longer confined to city streets and commuter use. EV motorsports now operate as high-stakes laboratories where engineers push batteries, motors, and software to absolute limits under race conditions. These competitions are changing long-held assumptions about speed, endurance, and performance in professional racing.
As the electric racing future unfolds, EV performance metrics increasingly rival or exceed traditional combustion-based race cars. Instant torque, near-total energy efficiency, and rapid innovation cycles are forcing motorsport organizations and fans alike to rethink what competitive racing looks like in the coming decade.
Can EV Technology Compete in Motorsports?
EV motorsports already demonstrate that electric platforms can compete at elite levels of racing. Formula E cars accelerate from 0–60 mph in approximately 2.8 seconds, delivering up to 600 kW of peak power that rivals modern Formula 1 hybrid systems. This performance advantage comes from instant torque delivery, eliminating lag and gear-shift delays inherent in internal combustion drivetrains.
The electric racing future extends beyond paved circuits. Extreme E showcases electric SUVs climbing steep 250 kW off-road sections without thermal lag or mechanical stress from traditional engines. EV performance efficiency further strengthens competitiveness, converting roughly 99% of stored electrical energy into wheel motion, compared to combustion engines that waste most energy as heat through exhaust and cooling systems.
What Is Formula E and How Does It Work?
Formula E stands at the forefront of the electric racing future by enforcing strict efficiency and sustainability standards. Gen3 cars regenerate up to 40% of race energy through braking and aerodynamic downforce, surpassing traditional kinetic energy recovery systems. This regenerative focus rewards precision driving and strategic energy management rather than raw fuel consumption.
EV motorsports regulations also mandate sustainable tire compounds and tactical features like attack mode, which adds a 50 kW power boost at the cost of altered racing lines. EV performance remains consistent across 45-minute races thanks to dual-motor AWD systems, enabling lap times comparable to high-performance combustion sports cars while operating within tight thermal limits.
EV Performance Advantages and Challenges in the Electric Racing Future
Electric racing is no longer a simple comparison between electric and combustion engines. EV performance now sets new benchmarks in acceleration, efficiency, and thermal control, while also introducing fresh limitations tied to batteries and infrastructure. As the electric racing future evolves, strengths and constraints shape race strategy just as much as raw speed. Understanding both sides explains why EV motorsports are advancing rapidly but still face unique trade-offs.
- Instant acceleration advantage: EV performance dominates launch and mid-corner exits due to instant torque and the absence of multi-gear transmissions, reducing mechanical losses and improving reliability.
- Higher power density systems: Advanced axial-flux motors and silicon carbide inverters deliver superior power-to-weight ratios compared to many combustion race engines.
- Thermal stability edge: Liquid-cooled battery packs maintain consistent output lap after lap, while combustion engines suffer efficiency loss from rising oil and piston temperatures.
- Energy density limitation: Large battery packs add significant weight, reducing race duration flexibility compared to lightweight liquid fuel systems.
- Strategic energy management: EV motorsports require lift-and-coast tactics and controlled pacing to balance speed with battery conservation.
- Infrastructure and fan engagement challenges: High-output charging demands precise battery preconditioning, while the lack of engine sound drives experimentation with synthetic audio solutions.
From EV Motorsports Innovation to Road Car Impact
Technological breakthroughs in EV motorsports rarely stay on the track. Racing environments accelerate development cycles, stress-testing hardware and software far beyond road conditions. As innovations mature, they rapidly filter into consumer vehicles, reshaping everyday driving experiences. This tight feedback loop is a defining advantage of the electric racing future.
- High-efficiency motor technology: Near-lossless electric motors developed in EV motorsports reduce driveline complexity and improve durability for road vehicles.
- Next-generation battery research: Solid-state and advanced lithium battery designs tested in racing promise longer lifespans, higher safety margins, and improved thermal stability.
- AI-driven vehicle control: Predictive traction control and regenerative braking algorithms enhance grip and efficiency, later improving stability systems in consumer EVs.
- Wireless and rapid charging concepts: Experimental track-based charging systems influence future fast-charging standards for public infrastructure.
- Race-proven hardware adoption: Inverters, steering-by-wire, and brake-by-wire systems transition directly from competition to high-performance road cars.
- Software-first performance upgrades: Over-the-air updates enable continuous EV performance improvements, mirroring motorsport-style development cycles for consumers.
Conclusion
EV motorsports prove that electric racing future concepts are not theoretical but operational today. Superior EV performance in efficiency, torque delivery, and thermal stability positions electric platforms as genuine competitors rather than experimental alternatives. Racing environments accelerate innovation in ways traditional automotive development cannot replicate.
As technologies mature, lessons from electric racing will increasingly shape mass-market vehicles. The convergence of sustainability and speed ensures that EV motorsports remain central to the future of competitive racing and everyday transportation alike.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can EVs really outperform gasoline race cars?
Yes, EVs excel in acceleration due to instant torque and simplified drivetrains. They also convert energy far more efficiently than combustion engines. Over short and medium race distances, EV performance often surpasses gasoline counterparts. Endurance remains the main area where ICE still holds advantages.
2. Why is Formula E important to EV development?
Formula E serves as a controlled testing ground for batteries, motors, and energy management systems. Technologies proven in races are quickly adapted for consumer vehicles. This short feedback loop accelerates EV performance improvements. It also promotes sustainability-focused innovation.
3. What limits the electric racing future today?
Battery energy density and charging infrastructure remain the biggest constraints. Heavy battery packs affect vehicle weight and race length. Charging logistics add strategic complexity. However, ongoing research continues to reduce these limitations.
4. How does EV motorsports benefit everyday drivers?
Racing innovations improve battery durability, software control, and thermal management. These upgrades enhance range, reliability, and safety in consumer EVs. Motorsport testing also speeds up adoption of new technologies. As a result, road cars improve faster than through conventional development alone.
Motorsports
Driver Development Programme aims to provide girls with support to enter motorsports
A dozen girls whizzed around a karting track during a special test day in Nottingham, England, part of a pioneering drive to draw women into motorsports and maybe even race to the top in male-dominated Formula One.
Italian Lella Lombardi was the last woman to compete in a F1 Grand Prix in 1976, and the absence of women on the circuit is linked to young girls’ limited exposure to motorsports, according to gender parity organisations.
More Than Equal, a non-profit that supports women drivers, said girls start karting two years later than boys on average. Seven-time F1 champion Lewis Hamilton, for example, started karting aged just eight.
“We know that the pathway for female drivers hasn’t successfully got a woman into Formula One competitively in the last 50 years,” More Than Equal’s head of driver development, Lauren Forrow, said.
That means girls are “not thriving within” the current system, she said.

The organisation has pledged to “make history” by training a woman not just to compete but to win.
Motorsports
Port Alberni filmmaker wins award for motorsport media
Port Alberni filmmaker wins award for motorsport media
Published 5:30 am Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Port Alberni’s Warwick Patterson and his production company, Formula Photographic Inc., based in the city have earned the RACER Creator Award for their work on Subaru Launch Control, a long-running documentary series produced for Subaru Motorsports.
The award recognizes excellence in storytelling and production in motorsport media.
Subaru Launch Control is on its 13th season and takes a behind-the-scenes look at Subaru’s factory racing efforts, following drivers Travis Pastrana, Brandon Semenuk and Scott Speed through the challenges, triumphs, and chaos of top-level competition. The series focuses on authentic storytelling, cinematic visuals and the human side of motorsports. Over those 13 seasons there have been more than 160 episodes and the series has a worldwide audience.
“This award means a lot because it recognizes not just Subaru’s commitment, but the creative effort that goes into telling these stories,” said Patterson in a news release. “It’s great to see work produced from right here in Port Alberni reach audiences around the world.”
The RACER Creator Awards were made to honour the best in motorsport filmmaking, photography and digital storytelling across North America. Winners are selected by an independent panel of industry professionals for their innovation and impact.
New episodes of Subaru Launch Control are available on YouTube at youtube.com/Subaru.
Alongside managing his production company, Warwick Patterson is also active in the local community as owner of the Vancouver Island Soaring Centre and a board member of the Alberni Valley Tourism Association.
Motorsports
Titus Sherlock’s Late-Season Surge Leads to FR…
Motorsports
Myles Rowe Breaks Through With Historic First Win
Note: The Penske Entertainment editorial staff is looking back at the five biggest moments of 2025 in INDY NXT by Firestone in this year-end series, with one installment appearing on the site per day in countdown fashion from Dec. 27-31.
Myles Rowe ended the 2025 INDY NXT by Firestone season in style, scoring a commanding victory in the season finale Aug. 31 at Nashville Superspeedway.
Rowe led 20 of 65 laps to earn his second career win in the INDYCAR development series – both coming during a breakout 2025 season.
That feat marked a satisfying conclusion to a year defined by growth and resilience. ABEL Motorsports originally signed Rowe following a difficult rookie INDY NXT campaign with HMD Motorsports/Force Indy in 2024, when he went winless in 14 starts despite entering the series as the reigning USF Pro 2000 champion.
In 2025, he rewarded ABEL’s confidence by delivering two wins in his final six races, providing a timely boost to his upward trajectory.
Winning once – his breakthrough July 12 triumph at Iowa Speedway – would have been meaningful on its own. Winning twice made a stronger statement.
“It’s nice when the results start to match what you believe in your heart,” Rowe said.
Rowe’s rise has been anything but typical. After beginning in karting, he advanced to the Lucas Oil Formula Car Race Series in 2017 and 2018, but financial limitations forced him to step away in 2019. The COVID-19 pandemic further complicated sponsorship prospects, and Rowe shifted his focus to photography while attending Pace University, unsure if he would ever return to racing.
That changed with the launch of Penske Entertainment’s Race for Equality & Change initiative in 2020, which created new pathways for minorities and women in motorsports. From that effort, Force Indy was established. In 2021, Rod Reid – founder of NXG Youth Motorsports – offered Rowe a lifeline with a USF2000 opportunity.
Rowe seized it, becoming the first Black driver to win a race in the series with a breakthrough victory at New Jersey Motorsports Park. He remained in USF2000 in 2022 with Pabst Racing, while Force Indy moved up to INDY NXT. Rowe delivered five wins that season and finished just six points short of the championship, placing second to Michael d’Orlando.
His ascent continued in 2023 with Pabst and continued Force Indy support in USF Pro 2000. Five more wins secured the title and made Rowe the first Black driver to win a North American open-wheel championship.
That achievement earned him a career enhancement scholarship to step up to INDY NXT in 2024. But his rookie year proved challenging, as he finished 11th in the standings. In 2025, he rebounded convincingly with six podium finishes, including an impressive 2.5 average finish across four oval starts. He added three podiums on road and street circuits, underscoring his versatility.
Rowe returns to ABEL Motorsports in 2026, aiming for the championship.
Motorsports
DeLuca, Padroff, Collins: Recent Death Notices From Brookfield
BROOKFIELD, CT — Recent death notices from Brookfield.
Barry David Padroff, 85, died Dec. 21, 2025, the founder, president and CEO of BrewMaster Coffee Service, which he launched in 1965 and led for 28 years, and a longtime enthusiast of stock-market tracking, cruising, beachgoing, estate sales, landscape design and stamp collecting.
Kevin Shail, 70, died Dec. 16, 2025, a longtime lithographic printer with Modern Printing and Quebecor Printing and an avid “Fan Man” known for collecting antique hot air fans and mechanical devices and for regularly attending steam-engine and antique machinery shows.
Christian Richard Chemero, 59, died Dec. 15, 2025, an artist and craftsman educated in studio art whose pursuits included drumming, woodworking, photography, mountain climbing, biking, fishing, wildlife rescue, and documenting the natural world through his lens.
Virginia M. “Ginny” DeLuca, 90, died Dec. 10, 2025, a business owner of NAPROCO LLC and lifelong auto-racing enthusiast who sponsored drivers, founded Petty Cash Motorsports, followed weekly races at the track or on Flo, and centered her days around motorsports, faith, and Christmas.
Francis J. (Fran) Collins, 92, an attorney and longtime public servant who founded a private law practice, served in the Connecticut General Assembly, and enjoyed golf, skiing, hiking and fitness, died Dec. 6, 2025.
Judith “Judy” Bradley, 79, died Nov. 15, 2025, after a long illness, a career executive secretary most recently in municipal Parks and Recreation whose sharp wit, quick humor, and gift for keeping gatherings lively defined her days beyond work.
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