Motorsports
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Motorsports
Michigan Central Race Days Celebrates the Tech, Talent, and Tenacity of Motorsports; Unique Public Experience Launches January 18 in Partnership with Ford Racing
DETROIT — Michigan Central will become the ultimate destination for motorsports fans this month when Michigan Central Race Days revs up the innovation district from January 18-30, continuing the buzz of the Detroit Auto Show. Presented in partnership with Ford Racing, the immersion brings the world of motorsports to The Station – from Off-Road to Formula 1 – for a hands-on experience for Detroit’s racing die-hards and newcomers alike. Ford Racing is celebrating 125 years of racing as America’s race team in 2026 across 34 different race series on six continents of the world.
For two weeks,The Station will become the place where Detroit’s deep roots in motorsports meet cutting-edge technology and dynamic community programming. Visitors will get an up-close look at the 2026 Ford Racing lineup, experience state-of-the-art simulators, and explore the ideas and technologies shaping the future of motorsports.
“We are thrilled to bring the excitement of Ford Racing’s official season launch to The Station– giving everyone an up-close and personal look at the cutting-edge cars and tech pushing the boundaries of performance,” said Catherine Kelly, head of brand and communications at Michigan Central. “Motorsports in Detroit aren’t just entertainment, they are in our DNA, and we want Michigan Central Race Days to bring this exhilarating sport to everyone.”
EXPERIENCE THE FAST LANE
Throughout Michigan Central Race Days, visitors can explore a range of complimentary must-see exhibits, interactive experiences, and programs, including:
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Vehicle Showcase: A rare public display of six premier Ford Racing vehicles, including the Oracle Red Bull F1 car in its new 2026 livery, marking Ford’s return to Formula 1 after a 22-year absence and featuring the inaugural Red Bull Ford Powertrains power unit. Additional vehicles include the Mustang GT4, Aussie Supercar, Dark Horse R, NASCAR Cup Car, and Bronco DR.
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Racing Simulators: Get into the driver’s seat in one of Ford Racing’s thrilling simulators or feel like a champion with a photo op on our winner’s circle podium.
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Heritage Exhibit: A curated selection of rare racing artifacts and memorabilia tracing Ford’s long history of racing-driven innovation. Check out original documents from the fabled Ford v. Ferrari rivalry, highlights of women in Ford Racing, and artifacts like 24k gold Le Mans cufflinks, documents as far back as 1910, GT program books from the 1960s and more.
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Exclusive Merchandise: The Shop at Michigan Central will feature exclusive race gear including collaborations with Oracle Red Bull Racing and Visa Cash App Racing Bulls, Enchanté, designed and created by former F1 driver Daniel Ricciardo, and Detroit-based Greyson Clothiers.
Exhibits will be open to the public during regular operating hours, Monday through Sunday from 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Free admission except ticketed events on January 18 for Opening Day, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., January 23 for Fridays at The Station 6 p.m.-10 p.m., and January 30 for the Final Lap 6 p.m.-10 p.m.
YOUTH ACTIVITIES TO INSPIRE FUTURE OF RACING
Racing is more than just fast cars; it is the research, development and people behind it. Michigan Central Race Days explore how motorsports innovation is driven by next-generation talent through the following experiences designed with youth organizations and universities.
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Innovation in Motion: The Boys and Girls Clubs of Southeastern Michigan will host a series of experiences for youth starting on January 18 related to engineering, software, autonomy, and design in the field of motorsports like live autonomous racing demos.
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The Science of Speed: In partnership with Michigan State University, the weekend of January 24-25 will explore both the “car machine” and the “human machine” behind elite motorsports. Future innovators and visitors alike will discover the research and development that goes into optimizing driver safety and performance at the Spartan Motorsport Performance Lab. Displays of MSU vehicles, including its Indy Autonomous challenge car, will also hit the floor with students from MSU’s SAE Formula 1 racing team ready to share the ways they keep problem-solving related to racing at the forefront.
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Playful Engineering: Michigan Science Center will extend its Detroit Auto Show programming into the second week of Race Days (January 26-30), inviting kids (and adults) to explore automotive innovation through interactive, imaginative activities, including select after-school experiences.
“As we prepare to open the Michigan Central Club in just a few weeks, we’re thrilled to give the community an early look at how young people can imagine themselves shaping the future of motorsports,” said Shawn H. Wilson, President & CEO, Boys & Girls Clubs of Southeastern Michigan. “Through hands-on experiences during Race Days, we’re sparking youth curiosity and creativity that can continue to be nurtured in our soon-to-be-opened space at Michigan Central as we work together to drive the next generation of talent in mobility and beyond.”
ENTERTAINMENT
Music and culture are core to Michigan Central Race Days, adding energy, rhythm, and a distinctly Detroit identity to two weeks of motorsports programming. High-octane music will activate The Station throughout the event, blending track-side energy with Detroit’s rich musical heritage.
Opening day on January 18 will feature DJ Kid McFly spinning Detroit house and soul from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., while racing fans get their first look at the exciting exhibitions and demonstrations. Tickets for opening day are $10.
Michigan Central will host a special racing edition of its regular Fridays at The Station event series on Friday, January 23 from 6-10 p.m. The evening lineup features Detroit House Collective to fuel the dance floor and a live performance from Sean Blackman who will transport the audience around the world with his global flair. Fridays at The Station tickets are $15.
On Friday, January 30, enjoy extended hours to experience the race cars and exhibits with the Final Lap as Race Days come to a close. LADYMONIX will put you in the fast lane with dance music from 6-10 p.m., and specialty cocktails will be available for purchase. Final Lap tickets are $15.
Tickets for the opening day, Fridays at The Station, and the Final Lap can be purchased at Michigan Central Race Days .
About Michigan Central
Michigan Central is a 30-acre technology and cultural hub in Detroit, where leaders, thinkers, communities and creators come together to accelerate bold ideas and technologies that shape our collective future. By providing access to world-class infrastructure, tools, and resources, Michigan Central inspires innovators and community members to collaborate on real, ground-breaking solutions to global problems. Since opening in April 2023, Michigan Central has grown into a diverse ecosystem of nearly 250 companies and startups working at the intersection of mobility, technology and society. Learn more at michigancentral.com.
Motorsports
Dynisma Partners with Stellantis Motorsport
Dynisma Ltd.® has signed an agreement to supply its high-performance DMG-1 driving simulator to Stellantis Motorsport, strengthening the group’s performance engineering capabilities across both the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) and the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship.
The simulator will be installed at Stellantis Motorsport’s facility in Versailles, France, in Q1 2026. Once operational, the engineering and driver teams will benefit from the DMG-1’s low latency and high bandwidth capabilities, enabling highly accurate vehicle development, race preparation, and program optimization ahead of the 2026 season and beyond.

Stellantis Motorsport’s commitment to cutting-edge simulation aims to accelerate innovation across electric and hybrid racing platforms, where precision, correlation, and engineering speed are essential to competitive success.
Jean-Marc Finot, Head of Stellantis Motorsport, said:
“Simulation is a foundational tool in modern motorsport, especially in championships with extremely limited track time and fast-paced development cycles. The DMG-1 will give our teams a highly correlated, high-fidelity environment to prepare our drivers and advance our engineering programs for both WEC and Formula E. Dynisma is a leader in motion simulation, and we are pleased to formalize this partnership as we build towards the 2026 season.”

Jean-Eric Vergne, Stellantis Motorsport’s Driver (Formula E & WEC), said:
“Today, racing relies massively on simulator preparation, and the level of realism you get makes a huge difference to how quickly you can extract performance on track. The DMG-1 is incredibly responsive which gives us immediate feedback on handling, grip, weight transfer and energy deployment decisions, which is crucial in both WEC and Formula E. Being able to work through setups, tire behaviour and race scenarios in such a realistic environment means we can arrive at each event much more prepared and start closer to the limit from the first lap.”
Emmanuel Ohayon, Stellantis Motorsport Head of Simulation, Control Laws and Powertrain Dynos, said:
Our objective is to provide drivers and engineers with the most realistic and accurate simulation environment possible. The DMG-1’s bandwidth and latency performance is benchmark-setting, enabling true-to-life correlation and unlocking new opportunities in setup exploration, concept validation and driver training. This installation marks a major step forward for our technical capabilities.

Simon Holloway, Commercial Director, Dynisma, said:
“Dynisma’s mission is to create the world’s most immersive and highest-performing simulators. We’re proud to become the Official Simulator Partner of Stellantis Motorsport and to support their programs in both WEC and Formula E – two of the most demanding and innovative series in global motorsport.
The DMG-1 will enable Stellantis Motorsport’s drivers and engineers to prepare at an exceptional level of realism and accuracy, where every millisecond matters. We look forward to working closely with the team as the system is installed and commissioned in the next few months.”

Developed and built by a team of world-class engineers committed to pioneering breakthroughs in motion generation, Dynisma supplies leading motorsport teams and automotive OEMs around the world. Its simulators are available as turn-key solutions or custom-engineered to exact requirements, with the capability to integrate any production or prototype chassis for both motorsport and automotive applications.
Motorsports
Tony Stewart to make NASCAR return at Daytona
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Tony Stewart will make his return to NASCAR in February at Daytona.
Stewart will race Kaulig’s No. 25 Ram 1500 in the Feb. 13 season-opening race for the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series at Daytona International Speedway.

“I’ve raced just about everything with four wheels at Daytona, but never a truck. So when a seat in the new Ram was offered up for their first race back in NASCAR, I didn’t hesitate,” Stewart said. “Ram’s Free Agent program is another great way for me to stay sharp and have a little fun.”
Kaulig’s “Free Agent” program will bring legendary drivers and rising stars to the spotlight. They will announce the driver before every race – and the announcement about Stewart comes a month before Daytona.
“We’re not just returning to the track; we’re rewriting the playbook. Bringing Tony in as the first Free Agent will generate a crazy amount of excitement, which is exactly why we created the program, allowing fans to watch an all-time favorite driver get back into the seat, but this time, it’s a Ram truck,” said Tim Kuniskis, head of American Brands, SRT Performance, North America marketing and retail strategy, Stellantis. “This is about honoring a legacy. Tony represents grit, determination and the spirit of racing — pure adrenaline for the fans.”
Stewart is the fourth driver Kaulig has named to its Ram Trucks program. His teammates at Daytona will be Brenden “Butterbean” Queen, Daniel Dye, Justin Haley and the winner of the “Race for the Seat” reality TV show set to debut and air before the season opener at Daytona.
“Having Tony Stewart in one of our Ram trucks is the kind of thing you dream about,” said Matt Kaulig, founder and owner of Kaulig Racing. “He’s a legend. His name alone brings energy to the sport. We couldn’t be more fired up to have him in our camp as we roll into Daytona for our first race. This is going to be a ride worth watching.”
Stewart has 19 wins at Daytona across the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and IROC. Although he retired from full-time NASCAR competition in 2016, Stewart has continued his racing career in NHRA Top Fuel competition – winning in 2025 and contending for the title.
While Stewart’s last NASCAR national series start was in 2016 at Homestead-Miami Speedway in the NASCAR Cup Series, his last scheduled start was in 2020 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. However, the COVID pandemic scrapped his plans to run the race – setting up his first race in nearly nine years this February at Daytona.
Jonathan Fjeld is the co-owner of the The Racing Experts, LLC. He has been with TRE since 2010.
A Twin Valley, MN, native, Fjeld became a motorsports fan at just three years old (first race was the 2002 Pennsylvania 500). He worked as a contributor and writer for TRE from 2010-18. Since then, he has stepped up and covered 24 NASCAR race weekends and taken on a larger role with TRE. He became the co-owner and managing editor in 2023 and has guided the site to massive growth in that time.
Fjeld has covered a wide array of stories and moments over the years, including Kevin Harvick’s final Cup Series season, the first NASCAR national series disqualification in over 50 years, Shane van Gisbergen’s stunning win in Chicago and the first Cup Series race at Road America in 66 years – as well as up-and-coming drivers’ stories and stories from inside the sport, like the tech it takes for Hendrick Motorsports to remain a top-tier team.
Currently, he resides in Albuquerque, N.M., where he works for KOB 4, an NBC station. He works as a digital producer and does on-air reports. He loves spending time with friends and family, playing and listening to music, exploring new places, being outdoors, reading books and writing among other activities. You can email him at fjeldjonathan@gmail.com
Motorsports
Northampton’s Austin Beers win NASCAR title
The Whelen Modified Tour is the oldest division in NASCAR racing.
It began in 1947, and while it has undergone many name changes over the years, from the Winston Modified Tour to the Featherlite Modified Series to the Whelen Modified Tour in 2005, when Whelen Engineering began sponsoring, it is the only open-wheel division that NASCAR sanctions.
It is a style of racing with great tradition and history, and history was made last year.
Northampton native Austin Beers became the Whelen Tour’s youngest champion at 22 years, seven months, and five days. He broke the record set by current NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece, who was 22 years, 11 months, and 25 days old when he won the title in 2013.
Beers, who grew up in a racing family (his father Eric competed in the series from 1997 to 2012) has earned his share of wins and championships while racing at local tracks.
But this is his biggest accomplishment so far and could be a stepping stone to bigger circuits and championships.
“For sure, this is my biggest,” Beers said. “It’s a 16-race series where you need to be super consistent all year. You can’t have bad races. It’s a long, hard-fought year, and it came down to the last race at Martinsville in Virginia, and I was going against a four-time champion in the series [Justin Bonsignore] and someone who is second on the all-time win list. We were able to do what we needed to do and finished second in that last race at Martinsville. That allowed us to have enough points to win the championship.
“To be the youngest champion ever in the oldest series in NASCAR means a lot. It was not only special for me, but also for my family, who sacrificed all of their weekends throughout the year to support me and for my car owner, Mike Murphy, who got his first championship.”
Murphy is a story in his own right. He is a 68-year-old Irish immigrant who, according to NASCAR.com, bought his first race car in the mid-1990s and underwent a lung transplant last January.
“This is the best year of my life. I got a second chance at life,” Murphy told NASCAR.com. “Hard work, I would say, is all it takes. This is a great country. A country of opportunity. The only thing that is going to stop you is yourself.”
Murphy and his KLM Motorsports team took a chance on Beers in 2021 when he was 18.
So, learning they won the championship was emotional for Beers and Murphy.
“He took a gamble on me, and it has been all good ever since,” Beers said.
It is Murphy who believes in Beers as much as anyone. He said, again to NASCAR.com, “I hope this is a stepping stone. He’s still young. He’s only 22. Hopefully, there is somebody out there watching and will see how good he is, and maybe they’ll offer him a ride somewhere along the way.”
Beers was a model of consistency throughout the year.
In 16 races, he never finished lower than ninth. He scored two wins along with 12 top-5s and 16 top-10s. He was the tour’s only driver to finish every led and led all drivers with a 4.6 average finish.
“Hopefully this helps me move into a bigger series, whether it’s the NASCAR truck series or the Xfinity series, but in NASCAR, like in all of racing, it comes down to funding and money,” Beers said. “This is definitely something that should be eye-catching on a resume, I hope. Obviously, it’s only been a couple of months, but hopefully it does catch some people’s eyes. We’ve sent out our resumes to companies, hoping it will attract some sponsorship, and hopefully they can see it and know what I am capable of.”
Beers said the tour championship didn’t sink in until a month after he won it, and he went to the NASCAR Hall of Fame and pulled the tape off, and got to see his name on the championship trophy.
“That’s when it truly sank in, and I got to go to the awards dinner with the higher-ups in NASCAR, and I got to meet the other champions as well,” Beers said. “I talked with them and got some advice from them. I talked to Brenden Queen, who is running full-time on the truck series for Kaulig Racing, and I asked him what I could do because he does a really good job on social media finding sponsorships. It was great to get his advice.”
Beers is getting another avenue to promote his name and boost sponsorship potential.
UFC CEO Dana White is backing an eight-part series called “Race for the Seat,” a new reality competition series featuring 15 aspiring drivers and giving them a chance to compete for a spot on the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series for Kaulig Racing.
Beers is one of the participants in the series, which is sponsored by Ram Trucks. It was already filmed in November, and while Beers can’t reveal the results, he said it was an awesome experience and race fans should watch when it premieres on Fox on Jan. 25 on the day of the NFC Championship Game in pro football. Subsequent episodes will be on Ram’s YouTube Channel through Feb. 6, and the winner is expected to be on the Kaulig team for the Craftsman Truck Series opener Feb. 13 at Daytona.
“I was competing for a NASCAR truck series ride with 14 other talented drivers,” Beers said. “It was pretty special. It was an absolute blast, especially because of the people you’re dealing with. You are basically hanging out with 14 of your friends, and you get to drive race cars some days. For someone like me, that’s a dream. It was so much fun and an awesome experience. It was like a racecar boot camp. I think it will do something not only for my career, but also for the other 14 drivers. It will be huge for our racing careers. I am excited for it to come out and have everybody see it.”
Beers said he can’t go too in-depth on the series, but said it was about racing different types of cars and at different tracks.
“We were competing against each other to see who’s the best,” Beers said.
Meanwhile, Beers just hopes to keep getting better and looking for better and bigger opportunities.
“It’s just like a basketball player practicing 3-pointers or free throws,” he said. “The more laps you do, the better you’re going to get. Over these past two years, I’ve run over 50 races per year. On the asphalt side of racing, that’s a lot. I’ve just been trying to do as many races as possible, trying to perfect my craft and put myself in a situation where if I am in a certain situation, I know what to do because I’ve been in that scenario before. It becomes muscle memory and you know what to do with pit strategy and adjustments. The more laps you make, the better you’re going to get.”
But as good as he gets, you still need someone to notice.
“Winning a championship at a regional touring level is beyond what my dreams were when I started,” he said. “My dream was just to run the Whelen Modified Tour, and to have this kind of success has been amazing. I saw my dad get emotional, and that’s very rare. It meant a lot to my family and to my racing team. We kept building and building toward it. It’s not easy by any means. It’s a lot of work, a lot of hours, and long days at the race track. I owe so much to my sponsors and my family.
“Racing is such a different type of sport. A kid can go outside and shoot free throws or go out and put the ball on the tee in golf. In this sport, it costs money just to go to these race tracks and get practice laps. It’s not something you can practice. You have to be on your ‘A game’ at all times. You have to have a lot of support behind you, funding-wise, just to be able to try to do it. But I love it and hope we can continue to be successful.”
Motorsports
Motorsports: NASCAR Returns To Chase Format This Season
1/13/26
Yesterday, NASCAR announced a return to The Chase format in crowning a champion in its three highest series. From 2014 through last season, NASCAR developed a playoff format that was largely met with a negative reaction amongst the most ardent NASCAR fans. The Chase was used from 2004 to 2013, and The Chase 2.0 has some tweaks in the format from the old format.
In the revamped Chase format, there will still be 16 drivers in the Cup Series, 12 in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, and 10 drivers in the Truck Series, but the win-and-in part of the playoffs is gone. Race winners receive 55 points for a win, up from 40 points. Playoff points are gone, and at the start of The Chase, the regular season points winner earns an additional 25 points. They will start The Chase at 2,100 points, second at 2,075, third at 2,065, and a five-point gap from fourth to 16th place. The Chase is 10 races in the Cup Series, nine in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, and seven in the Truck Series. There are no points reset after a certain number of races, like in the playoff format, and the driver with the most points at the end of The Chase is the champion.
Fans have been opining for a new format, and this change has been met with a positive response. NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell said that “everything was on the table” regarding shaking up the format for determining a champion. The straw that broke the camel’s back was last November’s Championship Race weekend. Corey Heim in the Truck Series won 12 races, but needed a green-white-checkered finish to pull off the win for the Championship after having a dominant season. Connor Zilisch took the NASCAR world by storm with his record-setting year in 2025, but finished second in the Championship Race to Jesse Love, and despite winning 10 races, including The Pacific Office Automation 147 in Portland, didn’t win the championship due to a late restart. The final nail in the coffin came in the Cup Series race. Denny Hamlin, who had suddenly turned into a crowd favorite after news of his father’s deteriorating health, was leading with three laps to go. William Byron’s tire blew, and Hamlin’s three-second lead evaporated as the caution came out, and Hamlin couldn’t get by Kyle Larson in the last two laps to lose the championship.
NASCAR’s history is treasured by its fans more than any other sport or sports league. Fans embrace tradition and don’t welcome unnecessary change. NASCAR is also unique in the sense that it’s a family-run sport, with the France family still owning NASCAR. NASCAR took a leap of faith in bringing the glory days of the sport from the 1980s through the 2000s back into the modern sports cycle, but ultimately it didn’t work. The sport is still trying to create stars that can crossover into the mainstream culture like Dale Earnhardt, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and others were able to do.
Listening to the fans’ complaints and considering their thoughts has been something NASCAR does pretty well at. They’ve made changes to the car (i.e., adding horsepower), attempting to build tires with more tire wear from Goodyear, and now the overhaul of determining a champion. Perhaps other leagues should take a look at the value of not pissing off their most ardent fans at the risk of blindly and wildly adding new ones.
NASCAR won’t be racing in the Pacific Northwest in 2026, but hopefully one of the series will head back. The Cup Series won’t head to Portland International Raceway, as the facilities aren’t up to their standards, but maybe a street race awaits the PNW. Seattle was a city that was brought up in preliminary discussions about future street races. With Amazon streaming five NASCAR races per year in the new media rights deal, maybe they can get a “home race” in the future.
Until then, PNW NASCAR fans will sadly watch from afar. At least there is a more legitimate championship format.
www.elisportsnetwork.com


Motorsports
Hyak Motorsports Announces Multi-Race Sponsorship with Chef Boyardee – Speedway Digest
Hyak Motorsports is proud to announce a multi-race sponsorship with Chef Boyardee, welcoming the iconic brand to the NASCAR Cup Series. Chef Boyardee will serve as the primary sponsor for 3 Cup Series races for driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and the No. 47 team and will be an associate sponsor for the 2026 season.
The collaboration aligns two brands built on consistency, reliability, and connecting with fans across generations. Chef Boyardee, a longtime household name, will be showcased through on-car branding, team assets, and integrated fan-engagement activations designed to reach audiences both at the track and at home.
“We’re excited to welcome Chef Boyardee to the Hyak Motorsports family. They’re a brand everyone knows, and bringing them into NASCAR is something the entire team is looking forward to,” said Stenhouse. “We’re ready to start the season off strong and represent Chef Boyardee throughout the year.”
This iconic paint scheme will debut at NASCAR Clash on Sunday, February 1, at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston Salem, NC. Chef Boyardee’s sponsorship with Hyak Motorsports will then continue at the Daytona 500, a marquee event with added significance for the team and driver. Stenhouse Jr., the 2023 Daytona 500 winner, has established himself as one of the sport’s most competitive drivers on superspeedways, making the regular season-opening event an ideal launch point for the sponsorship.
“Ricky has been an incredible ambassador for our brands in the 12 years that we have been sponsoring his car in the Cup Series,” said Henk Hartong, CEO of Brynwood Partners. “We are excited to bring Chef Boyardee back to the track at Daytona and Talladega this season, both places where Ricky has taken the checkered flag previously. We look forward to bringing the Chef Boyardee 47 to Victory Lane at Daytona in February.”
In addition to race-day visibility, the sponsorship will include digital and social media content, behind-the-scenes features, and fan-focused activations highlighting the connection between Chef Boyardee, Hyak Motorsports, and NASCAR’s passionate fan base.
After Daytona, Chef Boyardee will be on the No. 47 Chevrolet on April 26 at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.
Hyak Motorsports PR
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