Motorsports
NASCAR text scandal brings Richard Childress into pre-trial saga
- Race teams 23XI and Front Row Motorsports are suing NASCAR in an antitrust case.
- Text messages from NASCAR executives, including CEO Steve Phelps, were uncovered during the legal discovery process.
They tell us all the time: Be careful with those text messages.
Some of them, if uncovered, could lead to extreme embarrassment, perhaps even shame.
In the right environment, some could even have legal ramifications.
In this particular case, you have it all.
Man oh man, talk about a “discovery” …

The antitrust case against NASCAR — brought by race teams 23XI and Front Row Motorsports — begins this coming Monday (Dec. 1) in Charlotte, N.C., barring a very-last-minute settlement. A settlement would eliminate the possibility of each side’s worst-case scenarios, but it wouldn’t erase the damage that’s already been done.
Michael Jordan, Denny Hamlin and even Long John Silver (in a way) are part of NASCAR lawsuit
A quick “tale of the tape,” as the boxing folks call it …
23XI Racing: The team is co-owned by basketball legend Michael Jordan, Jordan’s longtime business partner Curtis Polk and longtime NASCAR star Denny Hamlin, who still races for a different team — Joe Gibbs Racing.
The 23XI team fields three Toyotas in the Cup Series. They’re driven by Tyler Reddick, Bubba Wallace and Riley Herbst.

Front Row Motorsports: The team is owned by Bob Jenkins, who owns some 250 restaurant franchises — KFC, Taco Bell and Long John Silver’s among them. The team fields three Cup Series Fords for drivers Noah Gragson, Todd Gilliland and Zane Smith.
NASCAR: The organization was founded in late-1947 by a group of racers brought together by Bill France, who was selected to lead the organization at those December meetings in Daytona Beach, where the headquarters remain today.
In 1972, France passed along control of NASCAR to his oldest son, Bill Jr., who passed away in 2007. Bill Jr.’s son Brian followed his father as head of NASCAR but took an “indefinite leave of absence” in 2018 after a DUI arrest in Sag Harbor, N.Y.
Brian’s uncle Jim, Bill France Jr.’s younger brother (and only sibling), was brought in to steady the organization and today remains CEO and Chairman of NASCAR. He’s now 81 and has a racing background involving both cars and motorcycles, and has always been considered to enjoy wide popularity throughout the sport, from boardrooms to the garages.
Jim’s niece, Lesa France Kennedy, is NASCAR’s executive vice president. Her son, Ben, is also an executive vice president and serves as the organization’s chief venue and racing innovations officer. His public role has increased in recent years, and he’s served as front-man for various scheduling moves to new locations.
An overview of NASCAR teams’ claims
It’s complicated, as they say, but the plaintiffs are hoping to prove to a jury that NASCAR doesn’t play fair with the 15 team owners who, combined, own the 36 “franchises” (they call them charters) that race in the Cup Series.
The race teams, plaintiffs say, could be much more profitable if not for the alleged monopolistic practices of the sanctioning body.
NASCAR has responded accordingly, saying they run the operation in a manner that benefits all of the participating parties. They point to the fact that 13 of the 15 team owners agreed to the newest charter agreement, which coincided with the beginning of the newest media contract with TV networks Fox and NBC, along with TNT and Amazon Prime.
As happens in such cases, there was a “discovery” phase, allowing the sides to discover information deemed essential to proving their point. Early in the long proceedings, things took an ugly turn when some of Hamlin’s text messages — deemed pertinent to the process — detailed his personal animosities toward NASCAR’s hierarchy.
“My despise of the France family runs deep,” one of his texts read.
More recent texts, uncovered by Hamlin’s legal team, appear to hit even harder and could have long-lasting effects.
A wide range of texting among NASCAR higher-ups — including Commissioner Steve Phelps and President Steve O’Donnell — have become major headlines in the days leading up to trial. That’s partly due to the potential legal implications they may have at trial, but for the general fan base, they’re explosive for entirely personal reasons.

As for the potentially legal ramifications, some texts show the officials’ negative feelings toward a three-year made-for-TV series called the Superstar Racing Experience (SRX), which ran six summertime races in 2021, 2022 and 2023 before folding. The first two years were broadcast on CBS, the third on ESPN — neither of those networks currently broadcast NASCAR races, a fact not lost on the NASCAR leaders, particularly when some of NASCAR’s star drivers moonlighted in SRX events.
In one text chain, Phelps expressed NASCAR’s need “to put a knife in this trash series.” But a group text involving a few other officials, it seems NASCAR feared SRX would soon announce plans to race at two former NASCAR speedway staples: North Wilkesboro and Bowman Gray Stadium, both in North Carolina.
Soon thereafter, NASCAR announced returns to North Wilkesboro (midseason All-Star Race) and Bowman Gray (preseason “Clash”).
Along with texts about SRX, the legal discovery took a personal turn in 2023 when texting chatter turned to team owner Richard Childress, who during a national radio interview expressed frustration with the ongoing high cost of fielding race teams.
In a text attributed to Phelps, Childress was alternately called a dinosaur, idiot, stupid redneck and ass-clown “who owes his entire fortune to NASCAR.” On top of that, it was suggested the team owner needed “to be taken out back and flogged.”
If you ever need an Exhibit A as to why opposing groups often settle before getting too deep into the legal proceedings, this is it.
The fallout has included a less-than-forgiving reply from the Childress camp.
Richard Childress takes on texting shrapnel
Richard Childress Racing, a NASCAR competitor since 1969, owns two Cup Series charters and fields Chevrolets for drivers Austin Dillon (the owner’s grandson) and Kyle Busch.
The team’s namesake served as the team’s lone driver for 285 Cup races through 1981, when Childress, who’d never won a NASCAR race behind the wheel, changed his career path. In short order, he became a Victory Lane fixture when he left the cockpit and eventually handed the keys to Dale Earnhardt.
Of Earnhardt’s 76 career victories, 67 came in RCR’s black No. 3 Chevy, which became a truly iconic vehicle that Earnhardt also wheeled to six of his seven career championships.
Childress, who turned 80 in September, has been in NASCAR since before the “modern era” arrived in 1972. Along with the highly successful driver-owner partnership with Earnhardt, the two became close friends over the years, and that connection helped build much of the popularity the owner has maintained through the decades.
Childress grew up in Winston-Salem, N.C., and not on the right side of the tracks. He took odd jobs just to buy school lunches. He sold refreshments in the grandstands of historic racetrack Bowman Gray Stadium. In his teen years, he unloaded the trunks of moonshiners and took the hootch on the journey’s final leg — to the illegal beer halls and gin joints around Winston-Salem.
He witnessed horrible altercations at times, and says he quit the gig after seeing a man blow another to bits with a shotgun.
He’s a throwback, and a proud one, and didn’t take kindly to the publicized text messages from NASCAR’s corner offices. There obviously wouldn’t have been NASCAR millions for Richard Childress Racing without a NASCAR, but he feels the gratitude should cut both ways, and certainly found no gratitude flowing from Phelps’ texting fingers.
His team issued a press release Monday saying as much.
“RCR and Richard Childress are equally disappointed for the NASCAR fans, with whom Mr. Childress closely identifies given his humble and hard-working background. Mr. Childress and the organization will issue no further statements regarding these or other defamatory text messages that have recently surfaced, as legal action is being contemplated and discussed with legal counsel.”
And to think, the trial hasn’t even started yet.
∎ Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com
Motorsports
Toyota to Debut GR Corolla Rally Car as Second Manufacturer Team in ARA’s 2026 Season

Gazoo Racing gears up to challenge Subaru’s long-standing American stage rally dominance
I will never forget my first rally race, partly because nearly half the competitors were Subarus. Anytime a different make or model flew by, usually in the 2WD class, it felt like an event.
From small local teams to top national entries, Subaru dominates the American Rally Association. Until now, Subaru America has had the only manufacturer-backed team in the series (with “Vermont SportsCar” as its technical partner).
After that race, I spent time talking with drivers and longtime rally fans. I asked what other cars could realistically compete. The answer came quickly. “Ford Fiestas and the GR Toyota Corolla. Man, an AWD GR Corolla would be fast.”
It’s almost as if Toyota was listening. The automaker announced it will develop a GR Corolla RC2 rally car and enter one or two of them in the 2026 ARA season. This makes it the second manufacturer-backed team in the ARA.
“TGR will enter the American Rally Association (ARA) National Championship for the first time with a rally car based on the GR Corolla, taking on the challenge of making ever-better motorsports-bred cars on American roads.” — Toyota Gazoo Racing
Why Toyota chose the GR Corolla for ARA
The AWD GR Corolla, powered by a 300-horsepower turbocharged three-cylinder engine, should be a legitimate contender. Toyota did have an easier option. The company already campaigns a GR Yaris Rally2 car in other global series.
So why not use that platform? Because the mission of a manufacturer-backed team is simple: win on Sunday, sell on Monday.
“By developing a GR Corolla rally car, TGR-WRT is harnessing the pedigree of the Corolla model within rallying and further expanding its efforts to use motorsport to help make ever-better cars for the road,” Toyota said. “It also hopes to support the development of rallying in North America, where the GR Corolla is available as a rally-bred performance car for the road.”
Toyota’s new ARA effort will debut at the 100 Acre Wood Rally in March 2026. The team’s co-driver will be Finnish rally veteran Topi Luhtinen. Seth Quintero, fresh off driving the DKR GR Hilux at Dakar, will pilot the car. Something tells me Toyota Gazoo Racing will fit right in.
Motorsports
William Byron 2025 season in review: Third-straight Championship 4 appearance caps another strong year
Editor’s note: This is part of a series from NASCAR.com reviewing the top 30 drivers in the NASCAR Cup Series in reverse order of the 2025 final standings
- Driver: William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
- Crew chief: Rudy Fugle
- Final 2025 ranking: 4th
- Key stats: 3 wins, 11 top fives, 16 top 10s, 1,330 laps led
- How 2025 ended: William Byron’s evolution behind the wheel of the No. 24 Chevrolet led him back to the Championship 4 for the third consecutive season after his fourth straight multi-win campaign.
- Best race: Indeed, the year’s penultimate race at Martinsville Speedway produced an absolute masterclass by Byron, Fugle and the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team. Entering NASCAR’s final race of the semifinal round beneath the provisional cutline, Byron won the pole, swept the stages and led a career-high 304 of 500 laps en route to winning his way into the Championship 4. Byron muscled past Ryan Blaney with 44 laps remaining to reclaim the lead for the final time, ousting Blaney from Champ 4 contention and propelling Byron to Phoenix.
RELATED: Panini issues 1 of 1 Jeff Gordon trading card
- Other season highlights: Byron began the season by winning the 2025 Daytona 500, becoming just the fifth driver to win the “Great American Race” in consecutive years. In addition to an impressive win at Iowa Speedway in which he led 141 of 350 laps, Byron also had dominant performances equate to runner-up finishes at Darlington Raceway in the spring and the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The No. 24 Chevrolet led the first 243 laps of the Goodyear 400 at Darlington but ultimately could not reclaim the lead late. At Charlotte, a fierce battle between Byron, Denny Hamlin and Ross Chastain resulted in a Chastain victory despite Byron leading 283 of 400 laps that evening. The No. 24 team showed notable resolve throughout the season’s opening 26 races, overcoming stretches of adversity and inconsistency all the way to clinch the Regular Season Championship one week early.

- Stat to know: Byron ended his campaign with a series-best 1,330 laps led — bettering his previous high mark (1,016 led in 2023) by over 300 laps. The No. 24 Chevrolet was out front more than any other driver this season, leading 224 more circuits than 2025 champion Kyle Larson, Byron’s teammate, who led the second-most laps this year with 1,106 laps out front.
- Quotable: “Winning the regular season championship and winning the (DAYTONA) 500 (and) three races a year is something to really be proud of. So yeah, I feel like it was our best year yet, honestly, but it was a lot of adversity and a lot of things that happened all the way to the end. I mean, it seems like a lot changed for us in the results column with about three laps to go this year. We’ve just got to learn from that – and a lot of it was kind of out of our control. But yeah, just gotta move past it. But I think overall, yeah, it was our best year.”
RELATED: Check out William Byron’s Liberty University Chevrolet for 2026!
- Looking ahead: Few drivers have maintained a consistent year-over-year level of performance, as Byron has in recent seasons. That level of production and sustained championship contention should remain prominent for him and the No. 24 team entering the 2026 campaign. There is some history on the line in February as he attempts to become the first driver to win three straight DAYTONA 500s. But the biggest question remains: Will 2026 will be the year Byron breaks through for his first NASCAR Cup Series championship? There are very few reasons to think he won’t.
Motorsports
Aaron Rodgers Gave This $20K Christmas Gift to Steelers’ Offensive Linemen
NEED TO KNOW
- Aaron Rodgers gifted his Steelers’ offensive linemen Can-Am Maverick X3 off-road vehicles from Mosites Motorsports
- Mosites Motorsports shared videos and photos of the linemen receiving the gifts, which retail at a starting price of $19,999
- Other NFL quarterbacks like Lions’ Jared Goff and Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes also gave gifts to their linemen this year
Aaron Rodgers rang in Christmas with a special surprise for his Pittsburgh Steelers’ offensive linemen.
The NFL quarterback, 42, gifted his linemen Can-Am Maverick X3 off-road vehicles from Mosites Motorsports, the powersports dealership highlighted in Instagram photos of Rodgers and his teammates riding in the vehicles.
The Pittsburgh dealership revealed the news in a Christmas day Instagram video showing the linemen speeding off in the vehicles in the roadway nearby the dealership and inside the parking lot. Over the video were the words, “Aaron Rodgers’ gift to his lineman came with horsepower.”
The dealership echoed this in its caption, writing, “This Christmas, Aaron Rodgers gave his offensive line the gift of horsepower. Safe to say, it delivered.”
The vehicles also came with a hefty price tag. The Can-Am Maverick X3 retails at a starting price of $19,999 and can go up to just under $29,000, according to the company’s website.
Steven King/Icon Sportswire via Getty
In the Instagram photos shared by Mosites Motorsports, Rodgers can be spotted wearing a red Christmas sweater and gifting his teammates with the vehicles. In one photo, he could be seen shooting a thumbs-up to the camera as he rode shotgun in one of the vehicles.
Additional photos showed the lineman testing out the vehicles on the roadway and them hugging Rodgers to thank him for the gift.
“Aaron Rodgers rewarding the guys who protect the pocket,” Mosites Motorsports wrote. “Can-Am Maverick X3s built for work, power, and play. Tough to top this kind of gift.”
This comes as the Steelers are projected to clinch a spot in the 2025 NFL Playoffs. according to ESPN. The team is scheduled to take on the Cleveland Browns on Dec. 28, and if they win the game, they will be guaranteed a spot in the AFC playoffs.
Rodgers isn’t the only quarterback to have given his lineman special gifts this year. Detroit Lions’ quarterback Jared Goff surprised his linemen with state-of-the-art golf carts for Christmas, according to a video on X shared by the team.
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The linemen could be seen hugging Goff and riding around in the vehicles. The team captioned the video, “Santa Jared came through with the Goff carts.”
Patrick Mahomes also gave his Kansas City Chiefs’ linemen several gifts that included bicycles, watches, sunglasses and shoes. The Chiefs shared a look at the lineman receiving the gifts in the locker room with the caption, “Christmas came early for the o-line! Shoutout to QB1 for the gifts.”
Motorsports
Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s ex-rival shares hope after humbling – Motorsport – Sports
Dale Earnhardt Jr is one of NASCAR’s most vocal critics of the sport’s frequent changes at the Cup level and beyond, arguing that their experiments often hinder the sport. Now, one of his former rivals noted that NASCAR may be leaving its experimental phase and entering a period of correction.
Kenny Wallace expressed frustrations but also noted that NASCAR’s leadership has been significantly humbled by recent decisions that did not meet expectations. He mentioned that he knows for certain the league is actively working to address its major problems. Dale Jr. also shared his thoughts on what lies ahead after NASCAR settled its antitrust lawsuit.
“I know for a fact that NASCAR is all hands on deck,” Wallace said on his YouTube channel. “They realized what happened, and it took them a while, but they definitely made some decisions that were not the way to go. They just went all in, all in, and now you look back and realize how much they messed up.”
Wallace added that despite past missteps, positive changes may still come. He said, “NASCAR has been humbled mightily. I know for a fact they hear y’all. They are going to go on tour in 2026, and they’re going to make it right.”
Earnhardt Jr. previously said NASCAR tries a bunch of things…that don’t pan out.”
The 2026 season will already see big changes previous season. NASCAR is increasing engine horsepower from 670 to 750 on tracks under 1.5 miles and on road courses, including Bristol, Darlington, Dover, Nashville, and Gateway. Safety updates, including the introduction of mandatory A-post flaps at all tracks, are being implemented after years of concern.
Eligibility criteria were also relaxed next season to allow full-time Cup drivers with a minimum of three years of experience to participate in up to 10 O’Reilly Auto Parts Series races and eight Craftsman Truck Series races, while continuing to protect playoff events.
Chicagoland Speedway makes its return for the first time since 2019, while a new street race at Naval Base Coronado near San Diego brings NASCAR back to Southern California. The Chicago Street Course and Mexico City were skipped, with Homestead-Miami Speedway once again serving as the championship finale instead of Phoenix.
Earnhardt Jr. cautions that changing rules and structure alone won’t be enough to revitalize NASCAR. He previously stated his vision for the sport to have more notable “rock stars,” as evidenced by drivers like his father, Jeff Gordon, Richard Petty, and Jimmie Johnson, who have ascended to superstardom beyond the track.
“We need some rock stars,” he said. “It’s all about having some driver come in here and captivate the hell out of us and make people who aren’t watching go, ‘Who the hell is that?'”
Dale Jr.’s 2026 season with JR Motorsports will feature playoff driver Justin Allgaier returning to the No. 7 car in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, alongside Sammy Smith, who is in his third season with the team. The team aims to secure a championship after a 2025 season where three of four drivers, including Conor Zilisch, competed for the title but ultimately fell short against Jesse Love.
Motorsports
NASCAR world rocked by deaths of 3 drivers. Here’s what we know
NASCAR is closing out the year with one of its most tragic Decembers ever.
The latest heartbreaking incident came on Dec. 18 when legendary driver Greg Biffle, his family and some friends were killed when their plane crashed at the Statesville Regional Airport in North Carolina.
Biffle’s Cessna 550 was reportedly attempting to land at around 10:15 a.m. at the airport just outside of Charlotte when the crash occurred.
Fans flocked to social media to remember Biffle, 55, who made headlines in 2024 when he flew his helicopter into hard to reach areas in North Carolina to provide relief to those trapped following Hurricane Helene.
Biffle had a 16-year career behind the wheel in the NASCAR Cup Series, starting 515 races and winning 19. He had 175 top ten finishes.
His last race with the series came in the 2022 Geico 500 in Talladega.
Biffle also drove 244 races on the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. He won 20 of those and logged 149 more top 10 finishes. He also was behind the wheel for 83 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series races, winning 17 of those with 55 top 10 finishes.
His death followed the passing of Nick Joanides on Dec. 5 and Michael Annett on Dec. 2.
Joanides, 55, was a star on the West Coast scene most recently making three starts in the ARCA West Series. He also drove in the NASCAR Xfinity Series when it was called the Nationwide Series.
Annett, 39, drove for JR Motorsports from 2017 through 2021 and the team shared the news of his death on social media.
A native of Des Moines, Iowa, Annett was behind the wheel for 106 NASCAR Cup Series races, but never managed to finish in the top 10. While his results at that level were not eye-popping, Yahoo Sports noted he drove for a pair of “underfunded teams” in Tommy Baldwin Racing and HScott Racing.
Annett had more success on the Xfinity Series where he drove in 321 races with 95 top-10 finishes. His lone win came in the 2019 NASCAR Racing Experience 300 at Daytona International Speedway.
He also drove in nine NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series races with two top-10 finishes.
ARCA posted a statement on X about both the deaths of Joanides and Annett that read, “We extend our deepest condolences to the family, friends and colleagues of ARCA Menards Series driver Michael Annett and ARCA Menards Series West driver Nick Joanides, both of whom passed away recently.”
Motorsports
Kyle Larson’s protégé puts NASCAR on notice in Australia – Motorsport – Sports
Kyle Larson’s Hendrick Motorsports protégé, Corey Day, put NASCAR on notice following a standout debut in Australia in the Burson Auto Parts Boxing Day Bonanza ahead of the 2025 High Limit Racing International at Perth Motorplex. The 20-year-old is enjoying the NASCAR offseason ahead of his first full-time season in stock car racing at Hendrick Motorsports in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series.
Day, dubbed 2025 NASCAR Cup Series champion Larson’s protégé, enjoys competing on dirt and did so Down Under, making his debut in Australia. The California-born motorsport star started the Burson Auto Parts Boxing Day Bonanza from 28th and managed to fight his way all the way up to second, finishing behind race winner Buddy Kofoid in the 30-lap affair.
Day will return to action in Perth on Sunday when High Limit kicks into gear. “First night in the books down under, and it was a wild one. P28 to P2 in a non-stop feature. Ready to go with High Limit starting Sunday,” Day said on X.
Day will be hoping to stake a big claim in NASCAR’s second-string national series, following in the footsteps of Connor Zilisch, who has made the jump up to a full-time Cup Series seat. HMS have high hopes for Day, who could be a Cup driver in the near future.
“That was what I was working towards this year,” Day told NASCAR.com. “It wasn’t announced or anything, but my contract was written as next year was an option if this year went well. I guess I did a good enough job to get that option picked up. To say I’m going to run a NASCAR series full-time next year is something I’ve dreamed about doing since I was a little kid. It’s really cool.”
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“I’m ready, I’m excited,” Day added. “This year, I ran a lot of different race cars, which is really challenging to be able to progress a lot in all of them.
“I learned a lot in each and every one of them. It’s hard to be really good at one of them when you only get to do it a certain amount of times per year.”
Day can also lean on the experience of Larson, who claimed a second Cup title last month in Phoenix. Larson was left impressed by Day’s early exploits in the Truck Series this year.
At Nashville and Indianapolis Raceway Park, Day finished fifth and second, prompting praise from Larson. “It was good to see him have a strong run there. It was a track that I thought may, you know, suit his style, being able to move around and search for grip and things,” Larson said.
“He was probably one of the first, if not the first, running below the apron that night and found some speed that way. So, it just lends itself to a dirt guy’s background, probably. But yeah, he’s been slowly getting better here lately in the stock car stuff, and I’m sure gaining confidence. So yeah, I’m hopeful and excited to see how he keeps going in the #17 car,” he added.
This weekend’s action Down Under will pit Day against Larson, who won the $100,000 High Limit International at Perth Motorplex last year.
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