Motorsports
“Pissed off” Joey Logano calls out Bell, ‘gimmick’ All-Star Race caution
Joey Logano did not go and win back-to-back in the NASCAR All-Star Race, but he certainly gave it everything he had. The Team Penske driver was in control of the race until the promoter’s caution was displayed with just under 40 laps to go. The controversial new rule for this non-Championship points exhibition race allowed […]

Joey Logano did not go and win back-to-back in the NASCAR All-Star Race, but he certainly gave it everything he had. The Team Penske driver was in control of the race until the promoter’s caution was displayed with just under 40 laps to go.
The controversial new rule for this non-Championship points exhibition race allowed for the race promoter to throw one caution, whenever they want, between Lap 100 and 220 in the 250-lap event.
Logano ended up finishing second to Christopher Bell, and he wasn’t too thrilled with him or Speedway Motorsports CEO Marcus Smith.
“I’m glad you had a blast,” Logano told a NASCAR on FOX reporter. “I’m pissed off right now. Just dang it, we had the fastest car. The Shell-Pennzoil Mustang was so fast. You get to — I’m trying to choose my words correctly on the caution situation. Obviously I got bit by it, so I am the one frustrated obviously.
“Gosh, I don’t know. I felt like the falloff wasn’t too bad as the sun went down, and yeah, six cars or so stayed out with us. Thought maybe we could hold him off but the 20 [Bell] had a good enough restart, cleared too many of them too fast. I couldn’t get away in time. It took me six, seven laps to get my car up and rolling again.

Joey Logano, Team Penske Ford, Christopher Bell, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Photo by: David Jensen / Getty Images
Logano continued, struggling to hold back his annoyance. “I did all I could do to hold him off and he got under me and released the brake and gave me no option. Kind of just ran me up into the wall, and if I could’ve got to him, he was going around after a move like that, I just couldn’t get back to him. Just too much to try to make up with the tire deficit.
“Just frustrated after you lead so many laps and the car is so fast and you don’t win, it hurts quite a bit.”
In a later media scrum, Logano spoke more about Bell’s race-winning move. “It is what it is,” said Logano. “I don’t know. I mean, sure. Sure. He did it good enough that I couldn’t get back to him because I was gonna show him what fair was, but I just couldn’t get there. I just couldn’t get there with the tires. I couldn’t get away fast enough. It took me six or seven laps after that restart to get rolling again and then he passed too many cars there the first couple laps and then he was there. I was doing all I can to play defense until my rear tires would come in and it just took too long, and then he was gone. I couldn’t catch back up.
“It’s frustrating when you lead that many laps, you had the fastest car and a gimmick caution beats you. It just sucks, but it is what it is. You move on and we’ll be happy that we had the best car the last two times that we’ve been here. I wish we had two wins, though.”
When the promoter’s caution flew (via Michael Waltrip, who actually dropped it on the race track), most of the field pitted for fresh rubber. Logano was among five drivers who chose to stay out on old tires, hoping to hang on.
“I’m all about no gimmicks with the caution,” said Logano, who chuckled as he said it, but the frustration was clear in his voice. “I am all about that. I’m a little — me and Marcus Smith aren’t seeing eye to eye right now, okay? I’ve got to have a word with him.”
Photos from All-Star Race
In this article
Nick DeGroot
NASCAR Cup
Joey Logano
Christopher Bell
Team Penske
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Motorsports
NASCAR in-season tournament: A look at first-round matchups for Elliott, Bowman, Larson and Byron at Atlanta
CONCORD N.C. – The upcoming race at Atlanta Motor Speedway marks the first of five races for the NASCAR In-Season Challenge with 32 drivers competing head-to-head for a $1 million prize. The single elimination, bracket-style event will take place at five tracks over the next five weeks. The first being Atlanta Motor Speedway, followed by the Chicago Street […]

CONCORD N.C. – The upcoming race at Atlanta Motor Speedway marks the first of five races for the NASCAR In-Season Challenge with 32 drivers competing head-to-head for a $1 million prize.
The single elimination, bracket-style event will take place at five tracks over the next five weeks. The first being Atlanta Motor Speedway, followed by the Chicago Street Course, Sonoma Raceway, Dover Motor Speedway and ending at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Hendrick Motorsports has found success at all five venues, especially Atlanta. The organization boasts the most wins of any team at Atlanta with 17 trips to victory lane and also has the most top fives (67), the most top 10s (106) and the most laps led (3,690).
Among Hendrick Motorsports’ current roster of drivers, William Byron has gone to victory lane twice at Atlanta, while Chase Elliott also has a victory at his home track.
RELATED: NASCAR in season tournament matchups
This week’s race is scheduled for a 7 p.m. green flag on Saturday night.
With the seeding completed, let’s see how the four Hendrick Motorsports drivers have fared at Atlanta going into race weekend:
Chase Elliott
Chase Elliott is the highest-seeded Hendrick Motorsports driver, entering as the fifth seed. He will go up against Austin Dillon, the 28th seed, this weekend.
Hailing from Dawsonville, Georgia, Elliott will look to impress the home crowd. He nabbed a win in the 2022 summer race and along with that achievement, has garnered two top fives, eight top 10s and has led 164 laps at the 1.54-mile quad-oval.
Since a reconfiguration ahead of the 2022 season, Atlanta, now a drafting track, has created chaos an unpredictability for drivers in the field. For Elliott however, neither the venue nor the in-season tournament has affected his mentality going into race weekend.
RELATED: New look for No. 9: See Chase Elliott’s colors for Atlanta

“If we are doing our job, that’s going to take care of itself,” Elliott said. “My mindset is to go out and try and win the race on a weekly basis.”
Elliott has outraced Dillon in 86 in 118 races in the Next Gen Era (2022-present) and 14 times at drafting tracks.
Here’s a look at Elliott’s history at Atlanta:
Chase Elliott averages, statistics at Atlanta
Starts: | 13 |
---|---|
Wins: | 1 |
Poles: | 0 |
Top fives: | 2 |
Top 10s: | 8 |
Laps led: | 164 |
Average start: | 14.2 |
Average finish: | 12.2 |
Alex Bowman
Alex Bowman is seeded eighth and he will be facing the 25th seed, Joey Logano.
Logano’s recent numbers at Atlanta since its reconfiguration are impressive, Bowman may have an edge over his opponent when looking beneath the surface.
Bowman has shown remarkable consistency in drafting/superspeedway races. He was up front for a majority of the race at Atlanta earlier this spring, leading six laps and overtaking Logano for the lead at one point. A crash not of his own doing damaged the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet, but despite the setback, Bowman and the No. 48 team got back out on track.
Bowman has six top 10s in the last 11 races at drafting tracks. Since the start of the 2024 season, he is ranked third of all drivers in points at drafting tracks and leads all drivers in laps without a win at 132. He has finished better than Logano in three of the last five races at drafting tracks.
RELATED: Check out the paint schemes for Atlanta

Even though Atlanta is lumped into a set of wildcard tracks, Bowman has found success there, with three top fives and four top 10s.
Coming off a 11th-place run at Pocono Raceway, Bowman is sure to use that momentum to navigate toward the front of the pack at Atlanta.
Here is an overlook of Bowman’s statistics in the Peach State:
Alex Bowman averages, statistics at Atlanta
Starts: | 14 |
---|---|
Wins: | 0 |
Poles: | 0 |
Top fives: | 3 |
Top 10s: | 4 |
Laps led: | 11 |
Average start: | 18.3 |
Average finish: | 18.0 |
Kyle Larson
Coming off a seventh-place run at Pocono and with the lead in the NASCAR Cup Series playoff standings, Kyle Larson looks to convert that push into a win on Sunday. Seeded 10th, his opponent is Tyler Reddick who is seeded 23rd.
Larson seems to be rewriting the narrative of his relationship to drafting tracks. His recent run at such facilities has proven that he can master pack racing that Atlanta Motor Speedway will bring this Saturday night.
Larson finished third at Atlanta in the spring and second at Talladega Superspeedway this year. He has finished higher than Reddick in three of the last five drafting races and has beaten his opponent 71-53 in the Next Gen era. He looks to take that momentum and carry it into this weekend’s race along with some impressive statistics.
RELATED: From Winner to Champion, Part 5: Gordon vs. Earnhardt, ‘The rivalry was real’

The No. 5 HendrickCars.com driver has three top fives, five top 10s and an average starting position of 8.9 at the track. Larson is looking forward to the tournament.
“I like the concept of the in-season bracket challenge, I feel like it’s a race within the race,” Larson said. “This is something you pay attention to and with money and a trophy on the line, we all want to win.”
Watch out for Kyle Larson this Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway:
Kyle Larson averages, statistics at Atlanta
Starts: | 15 |
---|---|
Wins: | 0 |
Poles: | 0 |
Top fives: | 3 |
Top 10s: | 5 |
Laps led: | 452 |
Average start: | 8.9 |
Average finish: | 19.0 |
William Byron
Even though he is seeded 18th, William Byron is still the atop the NASCAR Cup Series points standings. He sits 54 markers above second-place Larson and in the opening round of the in-season tournament, will battle with Ryan Preece, who holds the 15th seed.
Since the 2022 season, the two-time Daytona 500 champion has finished higher than Preece in 12 out of 15 drafting races. He also has beaten his opponent in 10 of 17 events in 2025.
At Alanta, Byron is well acquainted with the winner’s circle, parking his No. 24 Chevrolet on the checkered floor twice in the Next Gen era (spring 2022, summer 2023). Along with his success, he has two top fives, four top 10 and 181 laps led in Georgia.
RELATED: All-Pro Auto Reconditioning becomes primary sponsor of NASCAR points leader William Byron

While the next four races following this weekend are challenging, Byron looks to put in as much effort as possible to win each event, extend his points lead and set himself up to win the prize money.
“Those are decent tracks for us, but they are also tracks that we could use some work at too. Atlanta we’ve has success at, but it also has an unknown element to it,” Byron said. “The summer has been a bit tough for us in the past, so I know we’re putting focus into those this year.”
Here is an overview of how he’s done at the track in the next gen era:
William Byron averages, statistics at Atlanta
Starts: | 12 |
---|---|
Wins: | 2 |
Poles: | 0 |
Top fives: | 2 |
Top 10s: | 4 |
Laps led: | 181 |
Average start: | 14.8 |
Average finish: | 17.8 |
NASCAR in season tournament bracket
- Matchup 1 – Denny Hamlin (1) vs. Ty Dillon (32)
- Matchup 2 – Kyle Busch (16) vs. Brad Keselowski (17)
- Matchup 3 – Bubba Wallace (9) vs. Daniel Suarez (24)
- Matchup 4 – Alex Bowman (8) vs. Joey Logano (25)
- Matchup 5 – Christopher Bell (4) vs. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (29)
- Matchup 6 – Ross Chastain (13) vs. Erik Jones (20)
- Matchup 7 – John Hunter Nemechek (12) vs. Josh Berry (21)
- Matchup 8 – Chase Elliott (5) vs. Austin Dillon (28)
- Matchup 9 – Chase Briscoe (2) vs. Noah Gragson (31)
- Matchup 10 – Ryan Preece (15) vs. William Byron (18)
- Matchup 11 – Kyle Larson (10) vs. Tyler Reddick (23)
- Matchup 12 – Ryan Blaney (7) vs. Carson Hocevar (26)
- Matchup 13 – Chris Buescher (3) vs. Todd Gilliland (30)
- Matchup 14 – Zane Smith (14) vs. Austin Cindric (19)
- Matchup 15 – Michael McDowell (11) vs. AJ Allmendinger (22)
- Matchup 16 – Ty Gibbs (6) vs. Justin Haley (27)
Where is NASCAR racing this weekend?
The ARCA Series and the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series are both at Lime Rock Park. The NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series will race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
What channel is the NASCAR race on today?
(All times listed in eastern time)
Friday, June 27
- 1:05 p.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series practice, FS2
- 3 – Xfinity Series qualifying, CW
- 5:05 – Cup Series qualifying, truTV
- 7:30 – Xfinity Series race, CW
Saturday, June 28
- 9:30 a.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series qualifying, FS1
- 1 p.m. – CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race, FOX
- 4 – ARCA race, FS2
- 7 – Cup Series race, TNT
Motorsports
4 things to know heading into NASCAR weekend in Atlanta
HAMPTON, Ga. (WSPA) – It’s one of the most thrilling stops on the NASCAR schedule for both Xfinity and Cup Series drivers. Atlanta is home to some of the tightest finishes in NASCAR history, massive wrecks, and unpredictable outcomes. The newly named EchoPark Speedway, formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway, is known for its unpredictability. Here are […]

HAMPTON, Ga. (WSPA) – It’s one of the most thrilling stops on the NASCAR schedule for both Xfinity and Cup Series drivers.
Atlanta is home to some of the tightest finishes in NASCAR history, massive wrecks, and unpredictable outcomes.
The newly named EchoPark Speedway, formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway, is known for its unpredictability. Here are four things to look for this weekend.
Historical Home Track Success
One driver has historically had great success at the track. Look for Xfinity Series driver, and Georgia native, Austin Hill to maintain his home track dominance.
Hill claimed victory in the February race at Atlanta, marking his third straight win and fifth overall at the track. Some other drivers said the 21 car is the one to beat.

“We have a pretty good idea of what we’re going to bring to the track and, you know, shout out to Joe Gibbs Racing’s motor department. They’ve helped us here these last couple of weeks making our motor program a little bit better to get closer to battle that 21 car. He’s always the one that we see that’s fast at this style of race tracks,” said Brandon Jones, NASCAR Xfinity Series driver.
The Drafting Dynamics
Wins in Atlanta don’t come easy, which leads us to our second focus of the weekend: the drafting dynamics.
Since its track reconfiguration in 2022, Atlanta features 28-degree banks and narrow superspeedway-style racing. It’s setting up what’s expected to be a weekend of action under the lights.
Recent NASCAR Cup Series races at Atlanta have delivered dramatic finishes, which include Daniel Suarez’s 0.003-second win in 2024 and Christopher Bell’s last-lap overtime pass in 2025.
As the sun goes down, the conditions are expected to change, including the temperature on track, which makes execution and pit stops elements that can make or break a race.
Three-time Cup Series Champion Joey Logano will look to lock up another win at the track.
“We continue wanting to bring more to the record books and to our fans, our race team, our sponsors, and all that,” said Logano.
That factors into the importance of Cup qualifying, the first thing to look for.
Competitive Qualifying Session
Expect a fiercely competitive qualifying session Friday afternoon that will determine critical track positioning that will be needed to stay up front and avoid wrecks.
Cup Series driver Ryan Blaney won the spring pole in Atlanta at 170 mph.
Debut of Cup Series In-Season Challenge
Saturday marks the debut of the first-ever Cup Series in-season tournament.
It’s a NASCAR-style spin-off of March Madness. The first bracket round kicks off at EchoPark Speedway with 32 drivers battling for a $1 million prize over the next five races.

The field of drivers was set based on points through the Pocono race last week, and drivers were seeded based on performances at Michigan, Mexico City, and Pocono, according to NASCAR.
The race carries dual significance: traditional season points and knock-out tournament elimination. One bad day could eliminate even the top drivers from the million-dollar chase.
The green flag will drop for the Xfinity Series Focused Health 250 on Friday night at 7:30 p.m. EST on CW and the Cup Series Quaker State 400 will follow Saturday night at 7 p.m. Eastern.
Motorsports
Judge orders NASCAR teams to turn over financial data to stock car series, limits details
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered a dozen NASCAR teams to provide 11 years of financial data to the stock car series as part of an ongoing legal fight but sharply limited what they need to share. A day after hearing arguments from both sides, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of […]

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered a dozen NASCAR teams to provide 11 years of financial data to the stock car series as part of an ongoing legal fight but sharply limited what they need to share.
A day after hearing arguments from both sides, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the Western District of North Carolina said the information will “allow NASCAR to have much of the arguably relevant substance of the requested information, while protecting the legitimate interests” of the 12 teams. They had raised concerns that the private financial details could end up being made public and would hurt competitive balance.
Under the decision, the teams must provide top-line data — total revenue, total costs, and net profits and losses — dating to 2014. The teams and NASCAR were ordered to settle on an independent accounting firm to handle the details by Friday, with that work paid for by NASCAR.
Earlier this week, attorneys for 12 of the 15 overall race teams argued against disclosing their financial records to become part of NASCAR’s antitrust lawsuit. They are not parties in the ongoing suit filed by 23XI Racing, which is owned by the NBA Hall Jordan and three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, and Front Row Motorsports, owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins.
23XI and Front Row are the only two organizations of the 15 that refused last September to sign take-it-or-leave offers on a new charter agreement. Charters are NASCAR’s version of a franchise model, with each charter guaranteeing entry to the lucrative Cup Series races and a stable revenue stream. Of the 13 teams that signed, only Kaulig Racing has submitted the financial documents NASCAR subpoenaed as part of discovery.
Teams have long argued that NASCAR is not financially viable and they need a greater revenue stream and a more permanent length on the charter agreements, which presently have expiration dates and can be revoked by NASCAR. Two years of negotiations ended last fall with 13 teams signing on and 23IX and FRM instead heading to court.
___
AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
Motorsports
Warsaw’s Sparc Engineers Focuses On Aerospace, Motorsports Work
Leah Sander, InkFreeNews Warsaw’s Sparc Engineers wants to support the orthopedic industry and not compete with it.It’s why the business at 715 Orthopedic Drive, mainly focuses on work for the motorsports and aerospace industries, said CEO Matthew Townsend.The Kosciusko Chamber of Commerce had a ribbon-cutting for Sparc on Tuesday.Sparc started and moved into its 18,000-square-foot […]

Leah Sander, InkFreeNews
Warsaw’s Sparc Engineers wants to support the orthopedic industry and not compete with it.
It’s why the business at 715 Orthopedic Drive, mainly focuses on work for the motorsports and aerospace industries, said CEO Matthew Townsend.
The Kosciusko Chamber of Commerce had a ribbon-cutting for Sparc on Tuesday.
Sparc started and moved into its 18,000-square-foot space last year, with half of it for manufacturing.
Townsend said the company’s seven employees have done work for Dallara.
“They make all of the IndyCar chassis, and we’ve done work for Penske racing (and) AJ Foyt Racing and for aerospace for Vast and York Space Systems,” he said.
Townsend added Sparc, named after a Disney World attraction, does “provide manufacturing engineering services and also automation integrations for the orthopedic industry.”
He and others at Sparc previously worked in the orthopedic industry.
Townsend said Sparc is different from its competitors in that it’s focused on “transparency.”
“A lot of contract manufacturers hold things close to the vest, and we are very open to communication and using technology to do so,” he said.
Plans are continued growth, with Townsend mentioning half of the building’s manufacturing space isn’t being utilized yet.
“We only have four machines, but we’re working on deals where we might have to quadruple in size quickly,” he said.
Townsend said he hopes to bring in several motorsports companies to work out of Sparc’s building and “(have) us run their facility for them, so it’s their product, so dedicated equipment, dedicated people for them, and we’d have everything.”
People may learn more about Sparc at sparcengineers.com. Sparc should have an open house in the next month for people to view the facility, which they will announce on LinkedIn and Facebook, said Townsend.
Motorsports
Chicago’s racing history – NBC10 Philadelphia
From the first auto race to NASCAR street racing: Chicago’s racing history – NBC10 Philadelphia Skip to content Close Menu Contact Us Link 0

Motorsports
Winning NASCAR team owner Larry McClure passes away
Any long-time NASCAR fans know the name Larry McClure, as he was the co-owner at Morgan-McClure Motorsports alongside Tim Morgan and brother Jerry McClure, which operated a NASCAR team from 1983 through 2012. Larry’s family confirmed that he passed away on Wednesday at Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Virginia. McClure’s race team won 14 Cup races […]

Any long-time NASCAR fans know the name Larry McClure, as he was the co-owner at Morgan-McClure Motorsports alongside Tim Morgan and brother Jerry McClure, which operated a NASCAR team from 1983 through 2012. Larry’s family confirmed that he passed away on Wednesday at Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Virginia.
McClure’s race team won 14 Cup races including three Daytona 500s. They earned their first 500 win with Ernie Irvan in 1991, and then two more with Sterling Marlin in 1994 and 1995. They are one of just ten teams to ever won three or more Daytona 500s. They utilized the No. 4 car, which became iconic with its Kodak paint scheme.
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While most of their race wins came at the superspeedway tracks, they also earned wins at Bristol, Watkins Glen, Sonoma, Darlington, and Martinsville. Bobby Hamilton earned their final win in 1998, winning from pole at Martinsville and leading 378 of 500 laps — their most dominant victory.
They also finished as high as third in the championship standings, courtesy of Marlin in 1995. The team’s first driver in 1983 was NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin, but it wasn’t until Irvan’s arrival in 1990 when they finally reached Victory Lane.
Larry’s nephew Eric McClure competed as a driver for many years, running almost 300 NASCAR Xfinity Series races, and he tragically passed away a few years ago at the age of 42.
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