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NASCAR Through the Gears: Denny Hamlin has gas, a border needs crossing, and yes, that’s a Hemi

In the end, Denny Hamlin had enough horsepower to get by William Byron at Michigan. And then he had enough gas in the tank to complete the 400 miles and bag his third trophy of the season. It’s also the 57th win of his career, which is 11th best all-time and three away from catching […]

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In the end, Denny Hamlin had enough horsepower to get by William Byron at Michigan.

And then he had enough gas in the tank to complete the 400 miles and bag his third trophy of the season. It’s also the 57th win of his career, which is 11th best all-time and three away from catching Kevin Harvick and reaching the top 10.

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After the checkers, he revved it and smoked it just enough to run out of gas and his No. 11 Toyota needed a tow to Victory Lane. No big deal, you likely say.

Well, probably not. But all the same, Denny might want to start saving on that Sunoco bill because his accompanying NASCAR job — team co-owner — might come with some financial headwinds in the coming weeks.

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Denny Hamlin's third win of 2025 was the 57th of his Cup career.

Denny Hamlin’s third win of 2025 was the 57th of his Cup career.

That’s right, Denny will be going right from post-victory interviews to a chat with the lawyers. But not before first checking in with the obstetrician.

Huh?

Let’s get up to speed …

First Gear: Worried? Not Denny

Michigan International Speedway is NASCAR’s fastest track, and no, we couldn’t say that if speeds weren’t restricted at the two highest-banked superspeedways (Daytona and Talladega) as well as the newest too-fast-for-sanity track (Atlanta).

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In-car telemetry showed cars tickling and even surpassing 200 mph on the Michigan straights. Stressing the horses to such degrees naturally takes a lot of fuel, which is why Michigan occasionally comes down to who’s done a better job of calculating the mileage and, when needed, loosening the laces on the right shoe in order to feather that throttle.

A final caution with 53 laps remaining around the 2-mile oval left no room for error on fuel. William Byron, who reluctantly gave up the lead to Hamlin with four laps left, ran out of gas and had to quickly dive to the pits coming off Turn 4 with the white flag in sight.

Denny being Denny, he claimed afterward he wasn’t worried about his own gas gauge, even after Byron disappeared from his mirror for obvious reasons.

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“No, not really,” he suggested.

He has other issues on his mind, you know. Longtime fiancee Jordan Fish spent the weekend back home, awaiting the birth of the couple’s third child.

And there’s that other thing …

Second Gear: Courtroom setback precedes on-track victory

We haven’t revisited the courtroom for a few weeks, so let’s check in.

Uh-oh, we have actual movement, and not just paperwork involving the ongoing antitrust case filed by 23XI and Front Row Motorsports against NASCAR.

Last week, a federal appeals court overturned an earlier judgement that allowed 23XI (owned by Hamlin and Michael Jordan) and Front Row to keep their coveted charters and all the benefits that come with those Cup Series “franchises” — each is a three-car team.

The teams were given until June 19 to file for a rehearing. If they don’t file, or if they do file and get another negative judgement, the appeals court’s verdict is set and the two teams can have their charters stripped by NASCAR, which would take away their automatic entry into each race and, more importantly, cost them the financial benefits of being a chartered team (bigger weekly payouts, etc.).

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The automatic race entry isn’t likely a big deal, since Cup races rarely reach the maximum 40-car limit. Lost revenue streams, however, is another thing entirely.

Beyond the current dust remains the early-December trial date that will ultimately settle the ugliness, unless something is worked out before then.

Third Gear: NASCAR stretches its southern boundary

For the first time since early March, the Cup Series visits a road course this coming weekend. But this isn’t Watkins Glen, Sonoma or any of the other familiar layouts. It’s the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City.

Hopefully we’ll talk more about those Rodriguez brothers later in the week.

Meanwhile, if it all sounds a tad familiar, it’s because NASCAR’s Xfinity Series raced at the Mexico City track four straight years, from 2005-2008. The race winners were Martin Truex Jr., Juan Pablo Montoya, and two dudes still very active today — Kyle Busch and, yes, Denny Hamlin.

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This effort poses a ton of logistical lifting for the Boys in Operations, who must navigate the distance and, more cumbersome, the chore of getting those packed haulers through customs at the border. What could go wrong?

Hopefully nothing.

Fourth Gear: Dodge racing back to NASCAR … in a Ram

“That thing got a Hemi?”

Man oh man, you could hardly go to a commercial break 20 years ago without hearing that phrase during an ad for Dodge Ram.

And now it’s coming back. About every half-generation, it seems, there’s a breakthrough in NASCAR’s manufacturer roll call. Dodge is the newest, announcing this past weekend that the Ram is returning to the Truck Series next season.

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Dodge was last in the Truck Series in 2013, and last raced the Cup Series in 2012. The Ram returns next February at Daytona. How long before the Charger makes its way to the Xfinity or Cup Series? No word yet, but you have to assume it’s part of the grand plan.

And yes, they’re also bringing back the 5.7-liter Hemi V-8.

Hubba-hubba.

Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com

This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: NASCAR: Denny Hamlin gives it the gas. Mexico next. Yep, it’s a Hemi



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Taylor to make Truck Series debut with Spire at Lime Rock

Jordan Taylor will make his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut at Lime Rock Park this weekend with Spire Motorsports. The organization announced Monday that Taylor will drive the No. 7 Chevrolet, sponsored by Gainbridge at Lime Rock (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET) in the inaugural event for the Truck Series at the Connecticut road circuit. “I’m […]

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Jordan Taylor will make his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut at Lime Rock Park this weekend with Spire Motorsports.

The organization announced Monday that Taylor will drive the No. 7 Chevrolet, sponsored by Gainbridge at Lime Rock (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET) in the inaugural event for the Truck Series at the Connecticut road circuit.

“I’m eager to join Spire Motorsports for the LiUNA 150,” said Taylor. “I have spoken with a few members of the team for a few years now, so it’s great (that) things have finally come together. I know it’s going to be tough jumping into the series mid-season, but I know I am joining one of the top teams in the Craftsman Truck Series.

“Our Gainbridge Chevrolet Silverado will for sure be competitive, I just hope I can adapt to the truck quickly on the short weekend. Lime Rock Park is a track I know really well, but obviously all my experience around there is in much different types of cars, so I’m looking forward to the new challenge.”

Taylor is a four-time IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar champion and 24 Hours of Le Mans class winner. He is a decorated road course racer and currently competes full-time for Wayne Taylor Racing in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Series.

“Jordan Taylor’s body of work speaks for itself,” said Spire Motorsports co-owner Jeff Dickerson. “His accomplishments at the global level are more than impressive so we’re obviously thrilled to have Jordan drive our No. 7 Gainbridge Chevy Silverado this weekend at Lime Rock Park. This is also a great opportunity to connect with our friends at Wayne Taylor Racing and shine a bit of a spotlight on the TWG Motorsports family.

“There is no doubt Wayne and Jordan set a very high standard when it comes to road racing and can only help us be better. Expectations are high and, collectively, we’re looking forward to the challenge.”

Lime Rock will be Taylor’s fourth NASCAR national series start. Taylor made two Xfinity Series starts in 2023 (Portland and Charlotte Roval) in addition to a Cup Series start (Circuit of The Americas).



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Where All 36 Cup Drivers Stand After Pocono

RACE RESULTS: The Great American Getaway 400 at Pocono Using an average of rankings between Racing America On SI’s Toby Christie, Joseph Srigley, and Zach Evans, here’s where all 36 full-time NASCAR Cup Series drivers stand heading into this weekend’s race at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway). Estimated Reading Time: 9 minutes 1. Denny Hamlin […]

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RACE RESULTS: The Great American Getaway 400 at Pocono

Using an average of rankings between Racing America On SI’s Toby Christie, Joseph Srigley, and Zach Evans, here’s where all 36 full-time NASCAR Cup Series drivers stand heading into this weekend’s race at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway).

Estimated Reading Time: 9 minutes

1. Denny Hamlin

Denny Hamlin didn’t miss a beat, although he didn’t compete at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez, finishing second to his teammate Chase Briscoe at one of his best racetracks. In his last three races, Hamlin has started and finished inside the top-three. (Previously: 4th)

2. Chase Elliott

Back-to-back top five finishes for the first time this season for Chase Elliott. Now, this is what we’ve expected to see from the ultra-consistent driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. One more week of this, and who knows… he could take the top spot in the rankings. (Previously: 3rd)

3. Chris Buescher

Chris Buescher is like a shark circling a puddle of blood in the ocean right now. The blood that Buescher has been sniffing in recent weeks is his first win of the season, and it feels like a certainty that one is coming sooner rather than later. (Previously: 6th)

4. Christopher Bell

Another so-so afternoon for Christopher Bell, but at the same time another afternoon where crash damage hasn’t stopped the No. 20 from recording a solid top-20 result. Bell is hoping for success in the series’ return to Atlanta, where he won in the Spring. (Previously: 1st)

5. William Byron

It was a truly valiant effort for William Byron and the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team as they rebounded from damage sustained in qualifying to work their way into the conversation for the win at Pocono. However, things didn’t pan out, and Byron was mired deep in the field late and finished 27th. (Previously: 2nd)

6. Ryan Blaney

Ryan Blaney persevered to a third-place finish despite his cool suit failing just 15 laps into the race. That made for a long, hot day, but not enough to keep Blaney off the podium. (Previously: 7th)

7. Chase Briscoe

The weight has been lifted from Chase Briscoe’s shoulders, after saving a massive amount of fuel to win Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series event at Pocono Raceway. The victory locks the No. 19 Toyota Camry XSE and Briscoe into the post-season. (Previously: 9th)

8. Kyle Larson

At times, it wasn’t pretty. But Kyle Larson got a much needed seventh-place finish a week after he was wiped out early in the event at Mexico City. (Previously: 8th)

9. Ryan Preece

Another week, another impressive Ryan Preece performance. The driver of the No. 60 RFK Racing Ford came home in eighth, and he continues to showcase the speed and ability capable of making it into the Playoff field. (Previously: 12th)

10. Ross Chastain

There’s not much to say about Ross Chastain’s afternoon at Pocono other than it was a pretty quiet one. Obviously, the finish isn’t what the team wanted, but staying out of the headlines isn’t always a bad thing. (Previously: 5th)

11. Erik Jones

Erik Jones has been on one lately. His 13th-place finish on Sunday at Pocono continues a recent string of consistent finishes. Over his last seven starts, Jones has five finishes inside of the top-15, and just one finish outside of the top-20. He’s sliced his way from 30th in the championship standings to 18th over that span. (Previously: 14th)

12. Joey Logano

Logano finished 16th to snap a trend of finishes outside the top-20, but didn’t exactly get back on track. He did pick up some stage points and led five laps during the first half of the race to salvage some points on the day. (Previously: 13th)

13. Tyler Reddick

After brake issues for both of his teammates, Tyler Reddick spent time in the garage addressing that to prevent any further issues on that front. Reddick ultimately finished 32nd after crossing the line third at the end of Stage One. (Previously: 10th)

14. Josh Berry

Josh Berry finished second in Stage Two and brought home the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford in the 12th spot. Oddly enough, that is his third 12th-place finish in the last five races. (Previously: 19th)

15. Bubba Wallace

About a dozen laps after teammate Riley Herbst hit the wall with a flat tire, Bubba Wallace’s day also ended after a right-front issue put him in the fence in turn two. Wallace had put together three straight solid finishes, so the DNF at Pocono was certainly disappointing. (Previously: 11th)

16. Alex Bowman

A drama-free 10th-place run is just what the doctor ordered for Alex Bowman, who estimated going into Sunday’s race that he is operating at about 85-90% health following his hard hit at Michigan. (Previously: 20th)

17. Austin Cindric

On a day where the storylines were streategy decisions and mistakes made on and off the track, Cindric kept his head down and fought to a 10th place finish. It’s Cindric’s first top-10 since his win at Talladega. (Previously: 18th)

18. John Hunter Nemechek

John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt was a man that everyone knew the name of. If John Hunter Nemechek keeps putting up performances like his sixth-place result on Sunday, he may rival ole John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt as the most recognizable John there is. (Previously: 24th)

19. AJ Allmendinger

AJ Allmendinger finished 21st, a solid recovery from a weekend that started with issues during his qualifying lap. While they’ll have some chagrin with the result, the June stretch has been a big turnaround for the team after some disappointing results in May. (Previously: 17th)

20. Brad Keselowski

After recording no top-10 finishes through the opening 12 races of the season, Brad Keselowski has now chiseled in three top-10s over his last five starts. He finished ninth at Pocono, but had it not been for a couple of pit road blunders, he very well could have been in the conversation for a race win. (Previously: 25th)

21. Ty Gibbs

It’s definitely a step in the right direction from the early-season performances for Ty Gibbs, but a 14th-place result, when your teammates finish first and second, isn’t ideal. At this point, Gibbs will have to secure his first career victory in order to make the post-season. (Previously: 22nd)

22. Michael McDowell

Michael McDowell was another driver who suffered a brake issue at Pocono, going behind the wall 75 laps into the race. It’s a tough break for the No. 71 team coming off a top-five finish at Mexico City. (Previously: 15th)

23. Carson Hocevar

Carson Hocevar had plenty of pace throughout the day, but fell to 18th in the final run of the race. If there’s any consolation, he arguably had the save of the year after nearly spinning exiting turn three. (Previously: 23rd)

24. Kyle Busch

Kyle Busch spinning was the catalyst of the biggest incident (in terms of cars involved) in Sunday’s race. Fortunately, Busch was able to rebound to finish a respectable 20th. (Previously: 21st)

25. Shane van Gisbergen

After a victory last weekend in Mexico City, Shane Van Gisbergen returned to the harsh reality of learning how to race on ovals in Pocono. Although things were going solidly at times, running inside the top-20, a late spin put him a lap down and left him to finish outside the top-30. (Previously: 16th)

26. Daniel Suarez

Much like his teammate Ross Chastain, Daniel Suarez had a quiet afternoon at Pocono Raceway, but the No. 99 was able to score a top-15 result. This week showed some major improvement for the team, especially when it comes to their speed on Saturday. (Previously: 27th)

27. Cole Custer

An eighth-place finish at Mexico City was looking like it would get backed up pretty early, after Cole Custer qualified inside the top-five, and spent a lot of the first-half of the race running there. However, the No. 41 got shuffled back in the scrambling of multiple strategies, but still scored a respectable P22. (Previously: 30th)

28. Zane Smith

No major issues for Zane Smith on Sunday, finishing 25th. The No. 38 didn’t have the speed that they have become accustomed to as of late, but no doubt, with a superspeedway up next, Smith (the polesitter at Talladega) has to be excited. (Previously: 28th)

29. Justin Haley

Justin Haley recovered from a flat tire to finish 19th at Pocono, his first top 20 finish since a 15th-place result at Texas Motor Speedway. (Previously: 32nd)

30. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Since being wrecked by Carson Hocevar at Nashville Superspeedway, the season has seemed to fall apart for Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. and HYAK Motorsports, as the No. 47 recorded a 30th-place result at Pocono and dopped three spots to 24th in points. (Previously: 26th)

31. Austin Dillon

A 24th-place finish for Austin Dillon in Sunday’s race at Pocono isn’t bad. But it isn’t particularly great either. Dillon and the No. 3 team are still trying to get their legs underneath them this year. (Previously: 31st)

32. Noah Gragson

Nothing terribly exciting to write home about for Noah Gragson, finishing a respectable 23rd-place finish. In a season that has involved lots of adversity, the Las Vegas, Nevada-native is likely happy to have an uneventful afternoon. (Previously: 34th)

33. Todd Gilliland

It wasn’t a super exciting day for Front Row Motorsports across the board, with all three drivers finishing from 23rd to 28th. Gilliland was the lowest of the three drivers after sustaining crash damage. (Previously: 29th)

34. Ty Dillon

After the disappointment in Mexico City, Ty Dillon was collected in the multi-car incident just past halfway and finished 33rd on Sunday at Pocono. The No. 10 team will be eager to turn things around at EchoPark Speedway. (Previously: 33rd)

35. Cody Ware

It looked like it was shaping up to be a rough weekend for Cody Ware and the No. 51 Rick Ware Racing team after Ware backed his car into the Turn 3 wall in practice. However, Ware kept the car clean on Sunday, ran in the top-25 for a small chunk of the race, and finished top-30 for the eighth time this season. (Previously: 36th)

36. Riley Herbst

Brake issues put Riley Herbst in the wall shortly after the start of the second stage, throwing a wrench into his day at Pocono. Herbst finished 37th in the final rundown. (Previously: 35th)

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NASCAR set for summer stretch March Madness style. Will new tournament end summer schedule malaise?

LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — It’s time to bust out the brackets, pick an upset or two, and follow winners on the road — a journey over city streets, concrete and bricks — to the final four and beyond. LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — It’s time to bust out the brackets, pick an upset or […]

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LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — It’s time to bust out the brackets, pick an upset or two, and follow winners on the road — a journey over city streets, concrete and bricks — to the final four and beyond.

LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — It’s time to bust out the brackets, pick an upset or two, and follow winners on the road — a journey over city streets, concrete and bricks — to the final four and beyond.

Totally awesome, baby?

Forget all the upset specials in March.

NASCAR will find out soon enough if its attempt to snap out of a mid-summer malaise with its first in-season tournament is a success with drivers and fans as it strives to boost engagement and build buzz in the staid regular season.

The concept has already juiced enthusiasm in NASCAR to levels not seen since the halcyon days when Donnie Allison and Cale Yarborough duked it out in the 1979 Daytona 500.

“To be really honest with you,” 2020 NASCAR champion Chase Elliott said, “I have not paid any attention to it.”

Maybe a look at the matchup will get NASCAR’s most popular driver pumped!

Elliott is seeded fifth against No. 28 seed Austin Dillon in the first round of the head-to-head showdown in the race-within-the-race set for this weekend at the track better known as Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Here’s a refresher for Elliott and any other sports fan who missed out on the specifics of NASCAR joining the in-season tournament party, much like attempts in the NBA, NHL, and, of course, throughout the world in soccer.

NASCAR is set to start the engines on a five-race, bracket-style tournament called the In-Season Challenge in the midst of the summer slate, which comes with a $1 million prize to the winner.

The final 32-driver field was set by results of the last three races at Michigan, Mexico City and Pocono. The drivers are paired in head-to-head matchups based on seeding, with the winners advancing to the next round in a bracket format that mirrors the NCAA basketball tournaments.

Buoyed by a win at Michigan and a runner-up finish at Pocono, Denny Hamlin earned the top seed. He’ll square off — race off? — against No. 32 seed Ty Dillon. Pocono winner Chase Briscoe is the No. 2 seed and is pitted against No. 31 seed Noah Gragson.

Chris Buescher is third, Christopher Bell fourth and Elliott fifth, among notable names.

The format is single elimination with the field cut to 16 at the street race in Chicago, eight at Sonoma, four on the lone concrete track in the series at Dover and the final two over the yard of bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

The Challenge is part of NASCAR’s media rights deal that includes TNT, and the Atlanta-based cable network will broadcast all five races in the tournament, starting with the 400-miler in Atlanta.

Aside from a shrug from Elliott and a few others, drivers are intrigued by the idea of increasing the stakes in each race beyond a playoff berth, trophy and the winner’s purse.

“I love it. I think it’s great,” three-time Cup champion Joey Logano said. “I think it’s placed perfectly where it is in the season. This is kind of that moment where the newness is worn off. We’re into the rhythm, we’re racing every week. It’s starting to start a little bit of, who’s going to be in the playoffs, who’s not, the cutoff line all those types of things. But it’s not really the main story quite yet.”

Stories are what sell, of course, and the sizzle in Pocono over the weekend had little to do with which drivers or teams are the ones to beat for the 2025 championship. Rather, it was whether two pedestrian drivers were going to fight, the end of Amazon Prime’s run of wildly-popular telecasts and Hall of Fame driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s win in his first race as a crew chief.

“This really spices up the mid-part of the season,” Logano said.

So does placing a few bucks on No. 11 to win.

But as of Monday afternoon, most sports gambling sites did not offer odds on specific matchups headed into Atlanta. NASCAR is offering $1 million to a winning fan with a perfect bracket in its fantasy game.

There are some quirks to the bracket: Shane van Gisbergen won the Cup race in Mexico City and is not in the field while series points leader William Byron is only a No. 9 seed. The tournament boasts matchups in the first-round of past Cup champions (Kyle Busch-Brad Keselowski), former teammates (Briscoe-Gragson), and even best friends (Bubba Wallace-Daniel Suarez).

The idea for the challenge was largely championed by Hamlin, a three-time Daytona 500 champion who floated the idea of a mid-season tournament on his “Actions Detrimental” podcast. When NASCAR bought into the idea and announced the creation of the tournament last year, Hamlin called the tournament on social media “such a win for our sport and drivers.” He jokingly added, “I will collect my 1M royalty next season.”

Hamlin’s on deck and clearly a favorite to win it all, with three wins this year for Joe Gibbs Racing and the top seed.

(And let’s not haggle over who gets credit in court.)

“I’m a sports guy, so I’m going to be engaged with it,” Hamlin said. “I’ll know who I will have to beat next week. I’ve told the team, we are going to try and do what we can. We are going to be up against it because we are going to tracks that aren’t very favorable to me. But we are going to try to do our best to beat that one car for the next four to five weeks.”

NASCAR will present the tournament winner at Indianapolis with a ring, jackets, trophy and — oh yeah, a million bucks.

That’s enough cash to get anyone’s attention — even Elliott’s.

“I don’t know what you get. You get anything,” Elliott asked.

“Oh, a million dollars to the winner? Then yeah, we want to win.”

___

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

Dan Gelston, The Associated Press







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Teen racer speeding toward NASCAR dream | Sports

He may only be 16 years old, but a Port Charlotte teen is making big noise on the track. Greyson Greaves is turning heads in the NASCAR Weekly Series, speeding past expectations in his rookie season. “I love speed,” Greyson Greaves said. “I loved it, because there was a lot of competition and just a […]

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He may only be 16 years old, but a Port Charlotte teen is making big noise on the track.

Greyson Greaves is turning heads in the NASCAR Weekly Series, speeding past expectations in his rookie season.

“I love speed,” Greyson Greaves said. “I loved it, because there was a lot of competition and just a lot of adrenaline.”

He’s speeding his way to the top of the pro-truck division of the NASCAR Weekly Series at New Smyrna Speedway.

In only his first year racing short-track ovals, he’s earned several top-five finishes. 

“With a lot of veteran drivers, coming from being a rookie, there’s a lot of competition now that I have to get used to — and it’s just a really big learning experience,” Greyson Greaves said.

Greyson is no stranger to racing itself. The Port Charlotte High School junior started racing in karting events when he was nine years old. 

This year, it was time to level up.

“We had to take another step, because in karting I was winning a lot and there wasn’t as much competition anymore,” Greyson Greaves said. “We got a couple of championships, won a couple of those and we needed somewhere to go and pro truck was it.”

Only a few months into pro-truck racing, Greyson is currently in first place for Rookie of the Year and third in the championship standings.

Greyson’s success on the track wouldn’t be possible without the support of his family — Team Greaves.

“It’s been awesome,” Greyson’s father, Phillip Greaves, said. “I mean, just to see where he’s come from to where he’s at now, it’s just amazing to watch. Definitely a great bonding experience. It’s really brought our whole family together even closer.”

And it’s only the beginning for this rising star.

“I would definitely like to be picked up by a NASCAR team,” Greyson Greaves said. “I would love to get to NASCAR, get to Xfinity. Definitely be a top driver in NASCAR.”

For Greyson Greaves, it’s New Smyrna now and it could be Daytona next.

Greyson’s next race is July 19 at New Smyrna Speedway.

In the fall, he will also suit up for the Port Charlotte High School football team.



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Nitro Motorsports Powers to Strong Team Performance at Mid-Ohio in Trans Am TA2 Competition

June 23, 2025 June 23, 2025 – Nitro Motorsports continued its impressive 2025 campaign in the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Trans Am Series Presented by Pirelli, placing five drivers inside the top-ten during the Round 6 event at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. With strong qualifying efforts and consistent pace across the weekend, the team showed depth, determination, and execution at one of […]

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June 23, 2025

Nitro Motorsports Powers to Strong Team Performance at Mid-Ohio in Trans Am TA2 Competition

June 23, 2025 – Nitro Motorsports continued its impressive 2025 campaign in the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Trans Am Series Presented by Pirelli, placing five drivers inside the top-ten during the Round 6 event at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. With strong qualifying efforts and consistent pace across the weekend, the team showed depth, determination, and execution at one of the most technical tracks on the calendar.

Leading the Nitro charge was Thomas Annunziata, who started fourth and battled within the lead pack throughout the 42-lap race to finish fourth overall. Right behind him, Sam Corry started fifth and finished fifth, showcasing a composed drive in the hot and slick conditions. Ben Maier, in the #80 Ford Mustang, gained four spots from his qualifying position to bring home a sixth-place result, continuing his strong season.

Laguna Seca race winner Gian Buffomante added another top-ten finish for Nitro Motorsports in eighth, while Cale Phillips placed 11th, but that result netted him a third-place finish in the Pro / Am class, adding another podium result for Nitro Motorsports. Also flying the Nitro banner were Mia Lovell (17th), Julian DaCosta (18th), and Boris Said Jr.(21st).

“This was a tough but ok weekend for the team,” explained Nick Tucker, Team Owner of Nitro Motorsports. “We had drivers throughout the top-ten and showed strong pace and while we did not come home with a win, we did add another podium result to our resume at the hands of Cale Phillips. We tried some things this weekend, and it didn’t work like we thought. Next week, we will get back on track at Road America. Our entire operation continues to grow, and I’m proud of the effort everyone put in at Mid-Ohio. We’re building great momentum heading into the second half of the season.”

Tucker added, “We have little time to regroup as we are back on track next weekend for another chance to stand atop the podium.”

The team will now shift focus to the upcoming round of the championship this weekend at Road America. Traveling to Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, Road America provides a fast and flowing 4.014-mile layout, and the longest track on the calendar for the 2025 season, as the season continues.

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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NASCAR set for summer stretch March Madness style. Will new tournament end summer schedule malaise?

LONG POND, Pa. – It’s time to bust out the brackets, pick an upset or two, and follow winners on the road — a journey over city streets, concrete and bricks — to the final four and beyond. Totally awesome, baby? Forget all the upset specials in March. NASCAR will find out soon enough if […]

Published

on


LONG POND, Pa. – It’s time to bust out the brackets, pick an upset or two, and follow winners on the road — a journey over city streets, concrete and bricks — to the final four and beyond.

Totally awesome, baby?

Forget all the upset specials in March.

NASCAR will find out soon enough if its attempt to snap out of a mid-summer malaise with its first in-season tournament is a success with drivers and fans as it strives to boost engagement and build buzz in the staid regular season.

The concept has already juiced enthusiasm in NASCAR to levels not seen since the halcyon days when Donnie Allison and Cale Yarborough duked it out in the 1979 Daytona 500.

“To be really honest with you,” 2020 NASCAR champion Chase Elliott said, “I have not paid any attention to it.”

Maybe a look at the matchup will get NASCAR’s most popular driver pumped!

Elliott is seeded fifth against No. 28 seed Austin Dillon in the first round of the head-to-head showdown in the race-within-the-race set for this weekend at the track better known as Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Here’s a refresher for Elliott and any other sports fan who missed out on the specifics of NASCAR joining the in-season tournament party, much like attempts in the NBA, NHL, and, of course, throughout the world in soccer.

NASCAR is set to start the engines on a five-race, bracket-style tournament called the In-Season Challenge in the midst of the summer slate, which comes with a $1 million prize to the winner.

The final 32-driver field was set by results of the last three races at Michigan, Mexico City and Pocono. The drivers are paired in head-to-head matchups based on seeding, with the winners advancing to the next round in a bracket format that mirrors the NCAA basketball tournaments.

Buoyed by a win at Michigan and a runner-up finish at Pocono, Denny Hamlin earned the top seed. He’ll square off — race off? — against No. 32 seed Ty Dillon. Pocono winner Chase Briscoe is the No. 2 seed and is pitted against No. 31 seed Noah Gragson.

Chris Buescher is third, Christopher Bell fourth and Elliott fifth, among notable names.

The format is single elimination with the field cut to 16 at the street race in Chicago, eight at Sonoma, four on the lone concrete track in the series at Dover and the final two over the yard of bricks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

The Challenge is part of NASCAR’s media rights deal that includes TNT, and the Atlanta-based cable network will broadcast all five races in the tournament, starting with the 400-miler in Atlanta.

Aside from a shrug from Elliott and a few others, drivers are intrigued by the idea of increasing the stakes in each race beyond a playoff berth, trophy and the winner’s purse.

“I love it. I think it’s great,” three-time Cup champion Joey Logano said. “I think it’s placed perfectly where it is in the season. This is kind of that moment where the newness is worn off. We’re into the rhythm, we’re racing every week. It’s starting to start a little bit of, who’s going to be in the playoffs, who’s not, the cutoff line all those types of things. But it’s not really the main story quite yet.”

Stories are what sell, of course, and the sizzle in Pocono over the weekend had little to do with which drivers or teams are the ones to beat for the 2025 championship. Rather, it was whether two pedestrian drivers were going to fight, the end of Amazon Prime’s run of wildly-popular telecasts and Hall of Fame driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s win in his first race as a crew chief.

“This really spices up the mid-part of the season,” Logano said.

So does placing a few bucks on No. 11 to win.

But as of Monday afternoon, most sports gambling sites did not offer odds on specific matchups headed into Atlanta. NASCAR is offering $1 million to a winning fan with a perfect bracket in its fantasy game.

There are some quirks to the bracket: Shane van Gisbergen won the Cup race in Mexico City and is not in the field while series points leader William Byron is only a No. 9 seed. The tournament boasts matchups in the first-round of past Cup champions (Kyle Busch-Brad Keselowski), former teammates (Briscoe-Gragson), and even best friends (Bubba Wallace-Daniel Suarez).

The idea for the challenge was largely championed by Hamlin, a three-time Daytona 500 champion who floated the idea of a mid-season tournament on his “Actions Detrimental” podcast. When NASCAR bought into the idea and announced the creation of the tournament last year, Hamlin called the tournament on social media “such a win for our sport and drivers.” He jokingly added, “I will collect my 1M royalty next season.”

Hamlin’s on deck and clearly a favorite to win it all, with three wins this year for Joe Gibbs Racing and the top seed.

(And let’s not haggle over who gets credit in court.)

“I’m a sports guy, so I’m going to be engaged with it,” Hamlin said. “I’ll know who I will have to beat next week. I’ve told the team, we are going to try and do what we can. We are going to be up against it because we are going to tracks that aren’t very favorable to me. But we are going to try to do our best to beat that one car for the next four to five weeks.”

NASCAR will present the tournament winner at Indianapolis with a ring, jackets, trophy and — oh yeah, a million bucks.

That’s enough cash to get anyone’s attention — even Elliott’s.

“I don’t know what you get. You get anything,” Elliott asked.

“Oh, a million dollars to the winner? Then yeah, we want to win.”

___

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