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NASCAR on FOX hits new low with commercial breaks in Talladega race’s final moments

Unless you’re a Liberty Mutual fan, the final laps of the NASCAR Cup Series at Talladega were not a good watch. As FOX winds down its portion of the NASCAR Cup schedule, the critiques have been aplenty: overly zoomed-in camera shots (or crowd shots for no reason), a lack of cohesion and energy in the […]

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Unless you’re a Liberty Mutual fan, the final laps of the NASCAR Cup Series at Talladega were not a good watch.

As FOX winds down its portion of the NASCAR Cup schedule, the critiques have been aplenty: overly zoomed-in camera shots (or crowd shots for no reason), a lack of cohesion and energy in the booth and, of course, commercials.

The conversation about commercials in NASCAR broadcasts isn’t even remotely new — heck, they made fun of the deluge of ads back in 2006 in “Talladega Nights,” when NBC cut to an Applebee’s ad during a crash.

When you have TV slots that sometimes go 3 to 4-plus hours, the ads have to go somewhere. Less would be nice, but there has to be some understanding that sometimes they will come at times that are not ideal.

What FOX did during Sunday’s Talladega race, though, boggles the mind.

FOX went to a side-by-side commercial break twice in the race’s final 20 laps, including the final break, which ended just as the field came to five laps to go.

Going to break this late at any track is unacceptable, and even though Talladega is the series’ longest oval track at 2.66 miles.

The final laps of a superspeedway race should be loaded up with tension and excitement about who makes daring moves to the front and whether or not “The Big One” is going to happen. Instead, fans were forced to hear about the next episode of “The Masked Singer” during a crucial moment in the race.

This could’ve all compounded into an even worse look for FOX if “The Big One” did happen while they were blasting the same Busch ad you’ve already seen 10 times. Instead, FOX got lucky and no big wreck actually came.

The head-scratching decision even caught some NASCAR drivers’ attention.

And of course, NASCAR Twitter had plenty to say.

Fans hoping for a better broadcast package can take solace that NASCAR Cup debuts on Prime for its first-ever race in just under a month for the Coca-Cola 600.





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Motorsports

The Thunder’s anonymous dominance, plus a NASCAR controversy

The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox. Good morning! Gather some assets today. While You Were Clinching: The Thunder have found their final form For years, the NBA had an inside joke of sorts about Sam Presti. The Thunder […]

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The Pulse Newsletter
📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox.


Good morning! Gather some assets today.


While You Were Clinching: The Thunder have found their final form

For years, the NBA had an inside joke of sorts about Sam Presti. The Thunder general manager was always building, always hoarding assets, always making the smart move — but what was it all for? Kevin Durant, Paul George, Russell Westbrook. Superstars all out the door with no rings to show. 

Now, a ring sits four wins away after Oklahoma City thundered past the Timberwolves in a decisive 124-94 Game 5 win at home last night. Consider this arc: 

  • Entering last season, the joke was very much valid. Oklahoma City started the 2023-24 year with a ragtag group of young, talented players no one knew what to do with. Vegas had them winning 44.5 games — they won 57. They leaped ahead of Presti’s originally theorized timeline to contention. He went out and acquired Alex Caruso and Isaiah Hartenstein in the offseason to turn a surprise contender into a legitimate behemoth.

  • And, voila, this year’s Thunder — which still entered the year as the NBA’s youngest team — won 68 games, tied for the fifth-best season in league history. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a return piece from the Clippers in the George trade, just won MVP. The future is fully built. 

Not so suddenly, the Thunder are both the NBA’s best team and the clear favorite entering next week’s finals. They are terrifying to play against. BetMGM has them -750 to win it all. 

OKC isn’t flashy, either, and I’d wager this might be our most anonymous elite team/MVP pairing in recent memory. 

More eyes than ever will be on the Thunder next Thursday when they face the winner of Indiana-New York in Game 1 of the finals. I can’t wait. 

  • Not so surprising? In the NHL, the Panthers advanced to their third straight Stanley Cup final with a boffo win in a tight Game 5 on the road. The last three minutes of this game were a microcosm of Carolina’s entire series: down 4-3, on a power play, unable to score, with the penalized Sam Bennett racing out of the box to score an empty-netter for Florida with less than a minute left to seal the series. Brutal. 

We have two more clinch possibilities tonight. Onward:


News to Know

Vrabel addresses Diggs video
If you have logged on to any slice of sports social media in the last 24 hours, you’ve seen the video of new Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs on a boat partying, handing women a bag of an unknown pink substance. New England coach Mike Vrabel acknowledged yesterday he had seen the video and emphasized he wants players to “make great decisions on and off the field.” Diggs was not present at OTAs yesterday. More on this developing story here.

France scraps NASCAR plan after backlash
Jim France, NASCAR’s co-owner and CEO, was close to a deal that would’ve funded a car in an upcoming Cup Series race before intense backlash led him to step away. According to an exclusive report from The Athletic, France scrapped the deal after our reporters started asking around about the arrangement, which would present pretty obvious ethical hurdles. Owning a series and a team/car is not wholly unheard of — see the Penske dynasty/debacle in IndyCar — but France’s proposed involvement here still made people quite angry. Read the full report here.

More news

  • Baylor redshirt freshman defensive lineman Alex Foster died at just 18. Read our full report.
  • Former Sonic Shawn Kemp could face jail time in connection to a 2023 assault. More details here.
  • Roland Garros has not been nice to Casper Ruud. His French Open exit headlined yesterday’s action, which you can catch up on here.
  • Marlins second baseman Ronny Simon was grateful for the outpouring of support after his three-error game Tuesday. It’s a nice story.
  • The Wrexham documentary series was renewed for a fifth season, which I already assumed was happening.

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Phenoms: The teenager has fully taken over


Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Jonathan Moscrop/Getty Images

In the sports world, there will always be phenoms. Young, shooting stars that take our breath away before making us say, “Wait, how old?” LeBron James posed on the cover of Sports Illustrated at 16. Tiger Woods won the U.S. Amateur at 15. 

Lamine Yamal is different. 

  • Over the last two years, we have seen Yamal go through the awkward stages of adolescence while taking over the soccer universe. Before his 18th birthday, Yamal helped Spain win Euro 2024 and become FC Barcelona’s best player. So much for plebeians like myself, who tended to plants at a local nursery for minimum wage at 17.
  • There is an argument to be made that Yamal is the best soccer player in the world at 17 years old. Many in the sport agree. Yamal has scored 18 goals and dished 21 assists while helping Barca win La Liga this year. He will soon take his talented left foot back to the Spanish squad for Nations League next week. Trust me, watch any game and his play will jump off the screen.

  • This week, Barcelona signed Yamal to a new contract that will keep him at the club until 2031 and pay him $45 million per year, which makes him the team’s highest earner before the U.S. would allow him to buy cigarettes. Off the pitch, he is the emerging face of a brand worth billions

Pol Ballús, our excellent Barca reporter, has the inside story of how the club signed Yamal to such a remarkable deal. It’s worth a read this morning. 

And try to catch this kid on TV soon if you can. 

  • In other phenom news: Woods’ son, Charlie, won his first junior golf tournament at 16 years old yesterday. He beat the top-ranked junior in America by six shots. Watch out.

What to Watch

📺 NBA: Pacers at Knicks
8 p.m. ET on TNT/Max
Do-or-die for the best Knicks season in 25 years. Indiana can book its first finals trip of this century. The atmosphere should be buzzy. This is why we watch sports. 

📺 NHL: Oilers at Stars
8 p.m. ET on ESPN
Copy and paste from above. The road team can clinch a trip to the Stanley Cup Final. The home team plays for its season in front of a home crowd. Fun night. 

Get tickets to games like these here.


Pulse Picks

Mike Sando picked his favorite offseason moves for each NFL team. Hooray for a QB retiring. 

Also, Dane Brugler revisited his 2025 NFL Draft top 50 rankings. See the hits and misses here

🎥 The “No Dunks” guys ranked Tyrese Haliburton’s flawless Game 4 among the best playoff performances so far. Watch it here

The Pirates don’t want to trade Paul Skenes but … they’d have to consider these five packages

Women’s golf has a new star in 16-year-old Asterisk Talley, as Brody Miller writes. The sport is wrestling with how to protect her

Great guest spot: Matt Antonelli was a first-round MLB bust. He gave us five lessons he learned

Sam Blum bought a ticket to attend a Sacramento A’s home game as a fan, and it doesn’t sound like anyone is happy there

Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Antonio Morales’ ranking of every five-star QB in the recruiting era. 

Most-read on the website yesterday: Our latest 2025 NHL Mock Draft.

Ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

(Top photo: Trevor Ruszkowski / Imagn Images)



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NASCAR owner was near deal to fund car in Cup Series race before garage backlash

Jim France, NASCAR’s co-owner and CEO, was near a deal to fund a car in an upcoming race in the league’s top-tier Cup Series before backlash in the garage over the perception of another high-profile conflict of interest in motorsports ownership led him to scrap the plans, The Athletic has learned. France was set to […]

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Jim France, NASCAR’s co-owner and CEO, was near a deal to fund a car in an upcoming race in the league’s top-tier Cup Series before backlash in the garage over the perception of another high-profile conflict of interest in motorsports ownership led him to scrap the plans, The Athletic has learned.

France was set to financially support an entry to be operated by Spire Motorsports, a team that has been competing in various NASCAR series since 2019, for the Cup road-course race in July at Sonoma Raceway in California. Jack Aitken, a 29-year-old road-course specialist who drives for a France-owned team, Action Express Racing, in the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) sports car series, was tabbed to be the driver.

But the deal, which was close to completion, fell apart shortly after The Athletic began asking questions about the arrangement last week.

Spire co-owner Jeff Dickerson confirmed the plans but insisted the car would not have been fielded by France’s team directly; it was intended to be a Spire entry staffed by Spire personnel, he said.

Dickerson emphasized France did not get a “good guy deal” and was going to pay the same price anyone else would for having Spire run an extra car, which can stretch resources and cause distractions to the full-time entries.

“I didn’t really even think it was that big of a deal,” Dickerson said. “I didn’t even think it was that deep.”

Still, the idea of France’s financial participation in a Cup race privately rankled some in the NASCAR garage before the deal was finalized, according to conversations with several high-ranking officials around the sport, and ultimately led France to table the idea.

Many in the garage were uncomfortable with the idea of competing against someone who also owned the series, given the potential conflict of interest. Some team executives and personnel worried that this might be a first step toward France forming his own team in NASCAR, similar to how Roger Penske owns both the IndyCar series and its most successful team. In ownership meetings in recent years, team and league sources say, France has expressed interest in that idea.

France and NASCAR both declined to comment for this story.

NASCAR ownership has not competed in Cup Series racing during the sport’s Modern Era, since 1972, but it’s also not the first time the league has rattled manufacturers and teams with a move onto a track. In 2023, NASCAR partnered with Chevrolet and top Cup team Hendrick Motorsports for a special entry into the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race in France. The announcement of that deal came with little advance notice to rival manufacturers Ford and Toyota or any of their teams.

Rick Hendrick and Jim France


Rick Hendrick, left, and Jim France at the 2023 24 Hours of Le Mans, where the two sponsored an entry — to the surprise of some in the NASCAR garage. (Chris Graythen / Getty Images)

For the Sonoma race, France again tried to partner with Chevrolet and Hendrick — but an extra car would have put Hendrick over the four-car limit for a single race. So Spire, which has a professional alliance with Hendrick, entered the picture. The organization, also a Chevrolet partner, has three full-time cars and room for a one-off spot.

But France teaming with Chevrolet, Spire and Hendrick by affiliation (the car would have used a Hendrick engine) did not sit well with other organizations — which was made clear to France.

It’s not clear why France wanted to enter a car in a Cup race, though people within the industry who know the 80-year-old often refer to him as a “racer” with a deep passion for motorsports. NASCAR’s “open” system — which allows anyone with the means to create a team, show up and compete — gave him an opening to put a Cup entry on the track.

France is also familiar with the complications that arise from either owning or being directly associated with a team competing in a series he owns. Since 2014, his Action Express team has won six championships in the top class of the IMSA series, which the France family also owns.

Whatever France’s intentions, the move would have sparked questions from an already skeptical fan base that scrutinizes every NASCAR decision and in-race call to detect perceived favoritism.

The revelation comes as the other major American racing series, IndyCar, struggles with the aftermath of a conflict-of-interest situation on the eve of the Indianapolis 500 last week in which Team Penske was caught with illegal modifications to its cars for the second time in a year. IndyCar issued penalties to the team, and Roger Penske later fired his three top IndyCar officials in an attempt to restore trust and credibility from both fans and those in the IndyCar paddock.

This conflict has not been an issue for NASCAR, but France was poised to enter those waters by putting his IMSA team’s driver in a Cup race at the same time he’s also embroiled in an antitrust lawsuit with two Cup Series teams — 23XI Racing, which is co-owned by NBA legend Michael Jordan and Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports. The disagreement centers around NASCAR’s system of charters, which are franchise-like licenses that guarantee entry into every race and additional revenue. The other Cup Series teams all signed the agreement, with some claiming they felt pressured after France threatened to revoke their charters if they did not meet a signing deadline.

Jeff Dickerson


Jeff Dickerson, Spire Motorsports’ co-owner, in 2023. Spire was set to operate a car, financed by Jim France, at July’s race in Sonoma. (Jeffrey Vest / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Spire has its roots in a sports agency business that represented drivers, race teams and sponsors — sometimes at odds with each other. Dickerson has been open about navigating that challenge with NASCAR, believing he can “take NASCAR on through negotiations Monday through Thursday and still go race with them, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.”

“To me and to 13 other non-litigant charter teams, the war is over,” Dickerson said. “I’m partners with NASCAR every day of the week. I’m not in a fight with NASCAR. I already signed my charter.”

Race teams have long said NASCAR does not share enough revenue from the billions in broadcast revenue generated by TV deals, but NASCAR increased the percentage in the new charter agreement and believes it is being more than fair. NASCAR and the France family even carved out a provision that allows them to own and operate chartered race teams, if they choose.

Some of those The Athletic spoke to in the NASCAR garage who learned of France’s plans wondered if his Sonoma move was intended to send a message in the lawsuit, proving it did not cost as much as teams claimed.

But Dickerson said the type of arrangement in this case — paying for another team to field a driver rather than running the car under France’s own team banner — wouldn’t prove that point at all.

“Clearly, through the negotiations for the charter, it feels like NASCAR did not believe the teams (about their financial situations),” Dickerson said. “So if the only way for him and for them to believe the teams (is to run a NASCAR-owned race team), then I am all for that.

“But that was not this deal. This deal was just, ‘Here’s my sponsor, here’s my driver. We think he’ll be good at Sonoma. Can we run Sonoma?’ Cool. Yes. Awesome.”

While the France-backed Spire entry isn’t happening at Sonoma, it still could come together for another Cup race later in the season. After Sonoma, two other road-course races remain on the Cup schedule — Aug. 10 at Watkins Glen and Oct. 5 at the Charlotte Roval. Neither of these races conflict with Aitken’s IMSA schedule.

(Top photo of Jim France at last year’s NASCAR Awards ceremony: Sean Gardner / Getty Images)



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NASCAR TV schedule this weekend: Cup, Xfinity and Truck Series head to Nashville Superspeedway

CONCORD, N.C. – Ready to rock and roll? Make sure you have enough fuel! It’s another NASCAR triple header this week with Hendrick Motorsports drivers making starts in the Cup, Xfinity and CRAFTSMAN Truck series.  RELATED: Driver Averages ahead of Nashville Superspeedway Hendrick Motorsports has led a total of 1,706 laps in 2025, the team’s most through […]

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CONCORD, N.C. – Ready to rock and roll? Make sure you have enough fuel!

It’s another NASCAR triple header this week with Hendrick Motorsports drivers making starts in the Cup, Xfinity and CRAFTSMAN Truck series. 

RELATED: Driver Averages ahead of Nashville Superspeedway

Hendrick Motorsports has led a total of 1,706 laps in 2025, the team’s most through the first 13 races of a season since 1989. That’s 989 more than any other team this year. 

Larson has the best average finish at the track (4.5) among drivers who have made more than one start at Nashville, including a win in 2021. Chase Elliott is the team’s most recent Nashville winner (2022). William Byron looks to extend his points lead after a big points day last week in Charlotte and Alex Bowman will make his 268th start with Hendrick Motorsports this weekend, passing Ken Schrader for 6th on the team’s all-time starts list.

RELATED: Points standings after Charlotte

Last year, the race ended after five overtime attempts, so anything is possible going into round 14 of the season. 

Let’s take a look at the weekend’s full schedule: 

Where is NASCAR racing this weekend? 

NASCAR will race at Nashville Superspeedway this weekend.

What time is the NASCAR race on today?

(All times listed in eastern time)

Friday, May 30
  • 4:05 p.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series practice, FS1
  • 5:10 – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series qualifying, FS1
  • 8 – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race, FS1
Saturday, May 31
  • 2:05 p.m. – Xfinity Series practice, CW
  • 3:10 – Xfinity Series qualifying, CW
  • 4:30 – Cup Series practice, Prime Video
  • 5:40 – Cup Series qualifying, Prime Video
  • 7:30 – Xfinity Series race, CW
Sunday, June 1
  • 7 p.m. – Cup Series race, Prime Video



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Prime Video’s first NASCAR race averages 2.72 million viewers, younger audience | Auto Racing

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Sunday night’s Coca-Cola 600 averaged 2.72 million viewers in Prime Video’s first NASCAR race. The race, which was won by Ross Chastain, was the third-highest-watched NASCAR race this season not carried by Fox. FS1 averaged 2.89 million viewers for the March 16 race at Las Vegas and 2.84 million for Phoenix […]

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Sunday night’s Coca-Cola 600 averaged 2.72 million viewers in Prime Video’s first NASCAR race.

The race, which was won by Ross Chastain, was the third-highest-watched NASCAR race this season not carried by Fox. FS1 averaged 2.89 million viewers for the March 16 race at Las Vegas and 2.84 million for Phoenix on March 9.

Fox Sports had the first 12 races of the season, with eight being carried on FS1. Last year’s Coca-Cola 600 on Fox averaged 3.2 million viewers.

According to Nielsen, the audience for Sunday night’s race peaked at 2.92 million viewers near the midway point.

Prime Video’s audience had an average age of 55.8 years, which is more than six years younger than the average median age of viewers watching NASCAR Cup Series races on linear TV (61.9).

The 67-minute postrace show averaged 1.04 million viewers and peaked at 1.26 million.

This was the first of five races that Prime Video will carry this season.


AP NASCAR: https://apnews.com/hub/nascar-racing

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



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Reflections of a NASCAR rockstar

Barnaby’s Lounge & Bar, on the first floor of a West London hotel, isn’t especially high on the list of venues where you’d expect to sit down with Jeff Gordon. But it says much about the four-time NASCAR Cup champion’s role as vice-president of Hendrick Motorsports, the team he drove for throughout an illustrious career […]

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Barnaby’s Lounge & Bar, on the first floor of a West London hotel, isn’t especially high on the list of venues where you’d expect to sit down with Jeff Gordon.

But it says much about the four-time NASCAR Cup champion’s role as vice-president of Hendrick Motorsports, the team he drove for throughout an illustrious career spanning more than two decades, that Gordon is attending the BlackBook Motorsport Forum located downstairs, and has earlier spoken on a panel discussing how to unlock motorsport’s revenue potential. Attracting new partners and keeping current ones engaged is his main brief.

In this article

James Newbold

NASCAR Cup

Jeff Gordon

Hendrick Motorsports

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics



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DirecTV expands sports offerings with Nascar, MLS

US cable TV heavyweight DirecTV has expanded its sports offering with a pair of new rights carriage deals across soccer and motorsports. Courtesy of a new deal with e-commerce giant Amazon’s Prime Video OTT streaming service, DirecTV’s out-of-home business broadcast platform will air the streamer’s slate of live broadcasts from US stock car racing’s Nascar. […]

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US cable TV heavyweight DirecTV has expanded its sports offering with a pair of new rights carriage deals across soccer and motorsports.

Courtesy of a new deal with e-commerce giant Amazon’s Prime Video OTT streaming service, DirecTV’s out-of-home business broadcast platform will air the streamer’s slate of live broadcasts from US stock car racing’s Nascar.

The addition of Prime Video’s five-race package means that DirecTV for Business, which boasts over 300,000 commercial premises as customers, will carry every Nascar race through the remainder of the 2025 campaign, the only commercial broadcast service to do so.

The deal will begin with the June 2 Nascar Cup Series race at Nashville, known as the Cracker Barrel 400, and will be followed by the Firekeepers Casino 400 (June 8), Nascar’s debut race in Mexico at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez (June 15), and the Nascar Cup Series Race at Pocono Raceway (June 22).

The recent Coca-Cola 600, Nascar’s Prime Video debut, averaged 2.72 million viewers and was the third-highest race broadcast of the season among those not aired by major media giant Fox, with which Prime Video splits the rights.

DirecTV has also tied up with Major League Soccer (MLS), the US’ elite competition, to offer its Sunday Night Soccer broadcast slate free to DirecTV customers.

In conjunction with the MLS’s 30th anniversary season, both residential and commercial DirecTV customers will have free access to the slate of Sunday night fixtures throughout the 2025 season.

This expands DirecTV For Business’ current exclusive deal with MLS, through which it carries the MLS Season Pass broadcast service for commercial premises, while the DirecTV residential offering also carries the service on a non-exclusive basis.

DirecTV already sponsors the San Diego FC franchise, the league’s newest expansion team, which will debut in the 2025 campaign.

As the official jersey partner, DirecTV branding will appear on the front of all home and away SDFC jerseys, which will be manufactured by Adidas, throughout the season.

As a “chrome club” tier sponsor of SDFC, DirecTV gains exclusive sponsorship inventory including interior and exterior branding at the club’s 35,000-capacity Snapdragon Stadium, including in TV-visible areas, likely on pitch-side hoardings.

MLS media rights are held globally by tech firm Apple, and disseminated on its Apple TV OTT service, as part of a major 10-year, $2.5 billion media rights deal, one that league commissioner Don Garber back in October said could be “one of the greatest in sports history.”




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