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NASCAR returns from only break of season with drivers hoping to stop Bell, Hamlin and Larson

TALLADEGA, Ala. — NASCAR is back in action following its only weekend off of the 38-race schedule with a Sunday showdown at Talladega Superspeedway, where the drivers will try to halt the early domination shown by Christopher Bell, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson. The trio arrived at the Alabama track with seven combined victories through […]

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TALLADEGA, Ala. — NASCAR is back in action following its only weekend off of the 38-race schedule with a Sunday showdown at Talladega Superspeedway, where the drivers will try to halt the early domination shown by Christopher Bell, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson.

The trio arrived at the Alabama track with seven combined victories through the first nine races. Bell reeled off three consecutive wins in the first month of the season, then Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Hamlin won two in a row. Larson has won two of the last four Cup Series outings, including a victory at Bristol Motor Speedway, the last race before the brief Easter break.

Larson hasn’t slowed down — he did two days of Indianapolis 500 testing earlier this week and then won a World of Outlaws race in Florida on Friday night — but he’s not sure he’s bringing any momentum into the race.

“It’s just a normal-ish week for me, sitting in a race car every day,” Larson said Saturday. “I race so often that a week of racing can make the week before feel like a long time ago.”

He’s definitely on roll, which would be trouble for the rest of the field if Larson didn’t loathe superspeedway racing. His third-place finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the second race this season is his career best on a superspeedway. He’s twice finished fourth at Talladega, and has never cracked the top-10 at Daytona International Speedway.

“I enjoy coming here because the crowd is into it here,” Larson said. “I don’t enjoy the racing, honestly. I don’t know if many people do. I come to these tracks, we haven’t finished well the majority of the time.”

It’s been nine consecutive different winners at Talladega — the longest streak in the history of the 2.66-mile track — which hasn’t had the same driver in victory lane back-to-back since Ryan Blaney in 2019-20. Since then, the races have been won by Hamlin, Brad Keselowski, Bubba Wallace, Ross Chastain, Chase Elliott, Kyle Busch, Blaney, Tyler Reddick and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

The style of racing at Atlanta, Daytona and Talladega, where the 40-car field runs in a pack and drivers must draft off one another to slice through traffic, has many believing luck plays a critical role in deciding the race winner.

A driver must avoid the crashes — last year’s playoff race at Talladega featured the biggest crash in NASCAR history when 28 cars were part of a demolition derby with four laps remaining in regulation. Stenhouse won in overtime.

“Luck is more important now, certainly, than it has ever been in history,” Hamlin said. “But it’s always had a role. It is just that the (percentage) numbers have grown.”

Zane Smith continued the qualifying dominance shown the last two years at drafting tracks by winning the pole for Sunday’s race at Talladega. It is the first career pole for the second-year Cup Series driver.

Smith turned a lap of 182.174 mph in a Ford during Saturday qualifying to bump Busch in a Chevrolet and Joey Logano in a Ford. Ty Gibbs was the fastest Toyota driver and qualified 10th.

Smith’s pole-winning run marked the third consecutive pole at Talladega for Front Row: Michael McDowell, who now drives for Spire Motorsports, swept the pole in both races last year. Front Row has actually won the pole at six of the last eight drafting tracks.

Justin Haley said he had no role in the decision at Spire Motorsports this week to part ways with championship-winning crew chief Rodney Childers, who got nine races with Haley before the team decided the pairing wasn’t a match.

“I showed up on Tuesday, we had our normal Tuesday, 8 a.m. meeting with the No. 7 team to see how we’d come here and try to win the race,” Haley said Saturday. “And then after my meetings on Tuesday, I was notified. It was unexpected, but to be honest with you, I don’t think anything in this sport surprises me anymore, so you have to deal with adversity and change.”

Haley himself was a change in the Spire organization when he replaced Corey LaJoie in the middle of last season.

“I came to Spire Motorsports midway through the year, and somehow, it was a way crazier thing that happened to me than this week,” Haley said. “I think at the end of the day, we’re in the Cup Series to compete, and on a Sunday in the Cup Series, everything has to be right. If one little thing isn’t right, you’re not going to win races, and that’s what we’re trying to do.

“That’s what Spire is trying to do. They’ve been putting so much time, effort and resources, money, ability, put people in the right places to try to win races. I don’t think they’re scared to do anything to win a race.”

Blaney at +900 is the betting favorite to win Sunday, per BetMGM Sportsbook, followed by Keselowski and Logano at +1200. … Keselowski came to Talladega ranked 31st in the Cup standings, the worst start to a season since his 2010 rookie year. He leads active drivers with six victories at Talladega. … Bell’s victory at Atlanta was the first at a drafting track for Joe Gibbs Racing during the Next Gen era that began in 2022.

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

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Motorsports

NASCAR to make appearance at Michigan International Speedway

BROOKLYN, Mich. (WILX) – NASCAR is coming to Michigan, and fans can expect to see quite the crowd. Tens of thousands of visitors are planning on making their way to the Michigan International Speedway (MIS) on Friday. MIS officials are expecting the speedway to be almost full with spectators, along with a full infield camping […]

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BROOKLYN, Mich. (WILX) – NASCAR is coming to Michigan, and fans can expect to see quite the crowd.

Tens of thousands of visitors are planning on making their way to the Michigan International Speedway (MIS) on Friday.

MIS officials are expecting the speedway to be almost full with spectators, along with a full infield camping site.

Joe Fowler, MIS’ president, said he’s looking forward to having NASCAR back in Michigan.

“You know it’s always good to have our fans back, and we have a passionate group of fans here in the state of Michigan, you know, seeing them all here having a good time and here for NASCAR racing, it’s what we work for all year long,” said Fowler.

The speedway is going to host three races:

ARCA Menard Series: Friday. June 6

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Saturday, June 7

NASCAR Cup Series: Sunday, June 8

Tickets are still available for purchase for the races. Click here for more information.

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NASCAR Michigan full weekend schedule, TV schedule for Cup Series race

The NASCAR Cup Series, Craftsman Truck Series and ARCA Menard Series are all at Michigan International Speedway this weekend for three days of racing at the 2-mile track. ARCA opens the weekend with practice, qualifying and racing on June 6, while the Truck Series qualifies and races on June 7 alongside Cup practice and qualifying. […]

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The NASCAR Cup Series, Craftsman Truck Series and ARCA Menard Series are all at Michigan International Speedway this weekend for three days of racing at the 2-mile track.

ARCA opens the weekend with practice, qualifying and racing on June 6, while the Truck Series qualifies and races on June 7 alongside Cup practice and qualifying.

The Cup Series races in the FireKeepers Casino 400 on June 8, the 15th race of the 2025 season.

The Xfinity Series is off this weekend ahead of next week’s trip to Mexico City.

Here is the full on-track schedule in Michigan:

All times Central; on-track activity at Michigan International Speedway.

Friday, June 6

12 p.m. — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series practice, No TV

1 p.m. — ARCA Menards Series practice and qualifying, No TV

7 p.m. — Henry Ford Health 200 ARCA Menards Series race (100 laps, 200 miles), FS1 (Watch FREE on Fubo)

Saturday, June 7

7 a.m. — NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series qualifying, FS1 (Watch FREE on Fubo)

8:30 a.m. — NASCAR Cup Series practice and qualifying, Amazon Prime Video (Watch Amazon Prime Video with a free trial)

11 a.m. — DQS Solutions & Staffing 250 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race (125 laps, 250 miles), FOX (Watch FREE on Fubo)

Sunday, June 8

6:15 p.m. — FireKeepers Casino 400 NASCAR Cup Series race (200 laps, 400 miles), Amazon Prime Video (Watch Amazon Prime Video with a free trial) and MAX (in-car cameras)



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Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing charter in jeopardy after court ruling – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions

A United States appeals court on Thursday vacated a preliminary injunction that allowed Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing and another NASCAR team to be treated as chartered teams, putting the teams’ futures in NASCAR in question. 23XI Racing — whose owners include Jordan and NASCAR driver Denny Hamlin — and Front Row Motorsports refused to sign […]

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A United States appeals court on Thursday vacated a preliminary injunction that allowed Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing and another NASCAR team to be treated as chartered teams, putting the teams’ futures in NASCAR in question.

23XI Racing — whose owners include Jordan and NASCAR driver Denny Hamlin — and Front Row Motorsports refused to sign a take-it-or-leave-it charter agreement NASCAR presented in September, while the other 13 organizations in the Cup Series proceeded to sign.

The two holdouts filed an antitrust lawsuit against NASCAR the following month. In December, U.S. District Judge Kenneth D. Bell granted the teams’ request for a preliminary injunction to be recognized as chartered teams while their lawsuit was active.

NASCAR slammed that decision and brought an appeal to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va. On Thursday, a three-judge panel unanimously ruled in NASCAR’s favor and vacated the preliminary injunction.

“In short, because we have found no support for the proposition that a business entity or person violates the antitrust laws by requiring a prospective participant to give a release for past conduct as a condition for doing business, we cannot conclude that the plaintiffs made a clear showing that they were likely to succeed on the merits of that theory,” the decision read in part. “And without satisfaction of the likelihood-of-success element, the plaintiffs were not entitled to a preliminary injunction. … We therefore conclude that the district court abused its discretion in entering the preliminary injunction that it did.”

23XI Racing and Front Row are still allowed to compete in the Cup Series, but having charter status guarantees them automatic spots in races and they would earn more money with a charter than as “open” teams. An open team must qualify their way into each race.

They can also file for a petition for rehearing.

–Field Level Media



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NASCAR Teams 23XI And Front Row Must Qualify On Speed, For Now

DARLINGTON, SOUTH CAROLINA – SEPTEMBER 01: 2024 Regular Season Champion, Tyler Reddick, driver of … More the #45 Upper Deck Toyota, poses with Curtis Polk, 23XI Racing co-owners, NBA Hall of Famer, Michael Jordan, and Denny Hamlin, driver of the #11 Sport Clips Haircuts Toyota, after the NASCAR Cup Series Cook Out Southern 500 at […]

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The NASCAR charter war took another dramatic turn Thursday as the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled in favor of NASCAR, overturning a lower court’s decision that temporarily granted 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports the right to compete as chartered teams in 2025.

In short: NASCAR wins this round. The two teams that dared to sue the sport they compete in have now lost their guaranteed place in the field—again.

According to the ruling, the December 18 decision by a lower court that handed each team three charters for the 2025 season—including one each purchased from the now-defunct Stewart-Haas Racing—has been vacated. That means no automatic starting spots, and no guaranteed slice of NASCAR’s multi-billion-dollar media rights pie. Not unless 23XI and Front Row can convince the court to reconsider.

The teams have 14 days to petition for a rehearing. Failing that, the judgment becomes final 21 days from now—on June 26, just two days before the Cup Series hits the newly rebranded EchoPark Speedway in Atlanta. A symbolic gut punch? Perhaps. But also a logistical nightmare for two multi-car operations with Daytona-sized ambitions and no guaranteed starting spots.

This is only the latest twist in a legal saga that started last October when 23XI and Front Row filed a lawsuit against NASCAR, arguing that they were unfairly shut out of charter ownership despite purchasing charters from Stewart-Haas Racing. When the Dec. 18 ruling gave them the green light, it looked like they’d successfully stuck it to the establishment.

But NASCAR quickly appealed that ruling, calling it “fraught with errors, both legally and factually” in a Feb. 12 brief. When oral arguments were heard on May 9, early indications hinted that the appellate judges were skeptical of the teams’ position. That skepticism has now translated into a full reversal.

ForbesNASCAR’s Charter War Heats Up As 23XI, Front Row File LawsuitForbesNASCAR’s Defense To 23XI, Front Row Lawsuit Revealed In Court Filing
ForbesNASCAR’s Charter Drama Shifts Gears With Court Ruling

ForbesNASCAR Countersues 23XI And Front Row As Charter War Escalates

NASCAR’s charter system, which functions like a franchise model, guarantees certain teams a spot on the starting grid and a share of media revenue. But the current system also hinges on participation in the NASCAR Charter Agreement. When 23XI and Front Row declined to sign the most recent iteration of that agreement, NASCAR took the position that they had forfeited any charter-related benefits—even for charters they claimed to own.

The Dec. 18 ruling temporarily rewrote that narrative. Now, the appellate court has rewritten it again.

The decision throws another wrench into 2025 plans for both teams. Without charters, their drivers must qualify on speed each week. Sponsorship deals become trickier. And any illusion of stability in the garage has been vaporized by legal fumes.

As it stands, 23XI Racing, co-owned by Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports, which expanded aggressively by acquiring SHR assets, now find themselves staring at the same uphill legal road they thought they’d already climbed. It’s unclear whether they will file for a rehearing or take the fight all the way to the Supreme Court.

In a statement, Jeffrey Kessler, attorney for 23XI and Front Row Motorsports, said the teams were “disappointed” in the ruling but remained confident heading into their December 1 trial date.

“We are disappointed by today’s ruling by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals and are reviewing the decision to determine our next steps,” Kessler said. “This ruling is based on a very narrow consideration of whether a release of claims in the charter agreements is anti-competitive and does not impact our chances of winning at trial scheduled for December 1. We remain confident in our case and committed to racing for the entirety of this season as we continue our fight to create a fair and just economic system for stock car racing that is free of anticompetitive, monopolistic conduct.”

What is clear: NASCAR has reclaimed the high ground—for now. And with the next round of Charter Agreements expected to shape the sport’s financial future for a decade, the battle lines are only getting deeper.



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NASCAR Picks & Michigan International Speedway Predictions

We’re heading to the fastest two miles in NASCAR. Michigan International Speedway is all about raw speed, clean air, and who brought the biggest engine to the party. Long green-flag runs are the norm here, so you need drivers who can hold pace, manage track position, and punch hard on restarts. Here’s who I’m backing […]

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We’re heading to the fastest two miles in NASCAR. Michigan International Speedway is all about raw speed, clean air, and who brought the biggest engine to the party. Long green-flag runs are the norm here, so you need drivers who can hold pace, manage track position, and punch hard on restarts.

Here’s who I’m backing this week: two favorites, two mid-tier values, two longshots, and three props that are too sharp to ignore.

 

 

 

The Favorites

Denny Hamlin (+600 at BetMGM)
He’s been flirting with wins for weeks, and Michigan has treated him well. Two wins, six top-six finishes in his last seven starts here, and speed every single week when the car doesn’t fall apart. The 11 team was clean at Nashville and grabbed third. If they…



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Judges side with NASCAR in antitrust lawsuit | News, Sports, Jobs

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A three-judge federal appellate panel ruled in favor of NASCAR in the antitrust lawsuit filed by two teams, one owned by Michael Jordan. The judges at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Richmond, Virginia, on Thursday vacated an injunction that required 23XI and Front Row be recognized as […]

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A three-judge federal appellate panel ruled in favor of NASCAR in the antitrust lawsuit filed by two teams, one owned by Michael Jordan.

The judges at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Richmond, Virginia, on Thursday vacated an injunction that required 23XI and Front Row be recognized as chartered teams as their case snakes through the legal system.

Both race teams sued NASCAR late last year after refusing to sign new agreements on charter renewals. Jordan owns 23XI. The charter system is similar to franchises in other sports, but the charters are revocable by NASCAR.



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