What’s Happening?
A new rumor claims that a top NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team is looking to downsize its operation, meaning…
A new rumor claims that Spire Motorsports will start an Xfinity Series team in 2026. Though the team has yet to confirm, this is not the first rumor claiming the team will undergo major changes for next season.
On Tuesday evening, a well-known NASCAR community member posted on X that Spire Motorsports is selling a large portion of its NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series equipment. According to the listing, this equipment includes significant items such as chassis, engines, and “race-ready” trucks for every type of track.
While this could be a surprise to some, this is not the first time that Spire has been mentioned as downsizing its four-truck operation. Last week, a well-known NASCAR rumor mill account posted that the team was looking to downsize soon and that those plans could include the number No. 77 entry, driven by rookie Andrés Pérez de Lara, within the coming weeks.
There have been no developments on that end of the story since that post. That all changed Wednesday morning when BrakedHard responded to the initial post with a claim that the team will add an Xfinity Series team in 2026.
As with any rumor, it’s always important to approach it with caution. Even if Spire is planning on entering an Xfinity Series team in 2026, many factors can change between now and the season opener at Daytona next February.
But one thing is for sure: this rumor leaves NASCAR fans with more questions than answers.
What’s Happening?
A new rumor claims that a top NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team is looking to downsize its operation, meaning…
The addition of another competitive top team to the NASCAR Xfinity Series is one of the most significant 2026 silly season rumors to date.
Most expect the NASCAR Cup Series garage to remain rather quiet leading into the 2026 season, with a few drivers on the move and teams making changes. That being said, fans have turned their attention to the ever-changing Xfinity Series garage.
While Spire has yet to confirm any plans for an Xfinity Series operation, it doesn’t seem like an unlikely step for the team.
Most fans would be quick to assume that Rajah Caruth, Spire’s top Truck Series talent, could be the driver. But it could even be theorized that Corey Day, who is making part-time starts for Hendrick Motorsports in the Xfinity Series alongside starts with Spire in the Truck Series in 2025, could get behind the wheel.
While the addition of an Xfinity Series team may shock some, it does provide Spire with an opportunity to develop talent, such as Caruth, end-to-end. As of right now, they are one of two NASCAR Cup Series teams to run full-time Truck Series entries.
What’s Happening?
Hendrick Motorsports Top Prospect Corey Day is in his first NASCAR season. The 19-year-old dirt racing prodigy is racing…
Another question stemming from this rumor and the team’s relationship with HMS is who their technical alliance will be with. Spire has well-known ties to Hendrick Motorsports, specifically with its NASCAR Cup Series operation. However, on the Xfinity Series side, HMS is already deeply rooted in JR Motorsports’ operations.
Perhaps most importantly, fans are wondering if the team, which operates out of the former Kyle Busch Motorsports shop, will abandon the Truck Series entirely. If they were to do so, it would leave a power vacuum at the top of Chevrolet in the series.
The closures of both Kyle Busch Motorsports and GMS Racing after the 2023 season left a similar hole at the top of Chevrolet’s pecking order in the Truck Series entering 2024. Despite other Chevrolet teams at bat, such as McAnally-Hilgemann Racing and Niece Motorsports, Spire quickly took over that mantle in 2024.
If Spire were to leave the series entirely, Niece, who has already denied rumors of a switch to Ram in 2026, could take that spot. However, Chevrolet will have little say in this, as Truck Series teams have very few ties to their actual manufacturer.
Of course, Spire’s departure from the Truck Series would be an interesting twist for Chevrolet, all while Ram gears up to find its teams for the 2026 season.
What’s Happening?
One major storyline to keep up with during the 2025 NASCAR season and beyond is the ongoing saga of…
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Unlike mainstream sports that thrive on open fields and basic equipment, motorsports demands far more than raw talent and free afternoons. It requires machinery, beginning with go-karts for young drivers, along with teams, transport, crews, and a steady stream of sponsorship capable of covering staggering expenses. For drivers without a deep-rooted racing lineage, that climb becomes even steeper. Ross Chastain understands that reality better than most.
While Chastain’s father had some familiarity with grassroots racing as a hobby, the family’s livelihood came from watermelon farming, a demanding trade that left little room to bankroll a national racing career. Chastain grew up surrounded by agriculture rather than asphalt.
An eighth-generation farmer from southern Florida, he followed a lineage of fields and harvests, with his father, grandfather, uncle, and generations before them tied to watermelon production. That heritage instilled work ethic and resilience, but it did not come with the financial runway typically associated with professional racing paths.
In 2017, when Chastain began dipping his toes into NASCAR competition on a part-time basis, the financial gap became impossible to ignore. While driving JD Motorsports’ No. 4 Chevrolet in the Xfinity Series, he spoke candidly with Inc. about the numbers behind the dream. His father’s farming operation could support occasional starts in Trucks or Late Models, but the cost of NASCAR racing at higher levels gave a wake-up call. The family immediately searched for ways to bridge the gap and their first stop came naturally.
They approached the National Watermelon Promotion Board, which had previously supported their Late Model efforts, though those contributions covered modest budgets. Melon 1, a distributor and broker, stepped in as well, providing noteworthy backing. Even with that help, the funding puzzle remained incomplete.
Chastain recalled a moment that crystallized the challenge. One evening, the family pulled up a blank image of a race truck on a computer screen and began penciling in potential sponsors. They listed names they believed might contribute five thousand dollars, two thousand five hundred dollars, or perhaps ten thousand dollars.
Before long, the realization hit. The truck simply did not have enough space to fit every name required to cover the costs. “So we figured we might be able to run one race, but after that we would be out of people and money,” he admitted.
He confessed that “That struggle never really ends.” Even while competing nearly full-time, the grind of funding continued. Chastain explained that his team ran thirty-three races each year near the highest level of the sport, yet sponsorship conversations never stopped.
Their vice president of marketing stayed glued to the phone, constantly searching for partners. Progress came, but the financial weight remained severe. “For my team to be competitive costs about $50,000 a race,” he said.
Chastain acknowledged that the figure sounded enormous, yet it remained conservative compared with bigger organizations. Teams like Roush, Gibbs, or Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s operation operated in a different financial universe, often spending between $150,000 and $175,000 per race.
Drivers unable to reach those numbers simply raced with what they could gather, understanding that money directly translated into speed.
Today, Chastain’s circumstances look different. As a Cup Series driver for Trackhouse Racing, sharing the garage with talents such as Shane van Gisbergen and rising prospect Connor Zilisch, his footing has grown firmer. Strong performances over recent seasons have elevated his profile, probably easing the constant scramble for backing.
The engines have cooled, and the grandstands are quiet, but for the team at Speedway Motorsports, the work never truly stops. As the 2025 season officially comes to a close, the industry giant took a moment to pause and recognize the men and women who keep the gears turning behind the scenes.
In a company-wide town hall that felt less like a corporate meeting and more like a family reunion, Speedway Motorsports leadership handed out its most prestigious hardware. It was a day to celebrate the grit, creativity, and sheer determination that define the sport. From the high banks of Bristol to the safety command centers in Dover, the winners of the O. Bruton Smith Award, Promoter of the Year, Speedway of the Year, and Acceleration Award represent the absolute best of the business.
There is perhaps no greater honor within the company than the award bearing its founder’s name. The O. Bruton Smith Award isn’t just about performance metrics. It’s about character. It’s for the person who embodies the drive, enthusiasm, and heart that Bruton Smith used to build an empire.
This year, that honor went to Jim Hosfelt, the Vice President of Safety and Security at Dover Motor Speedway. If you know race day, you know that safety and security are the invisible foundations of the entire experience.
When fans walk through the gates, they expect to be safe. It’s a massive responsibility, and Hosfelt has shouldered it with a quiet, professional intensity since joining the Monster Mile in 2014.
Hosfelt isn’t your average security executive. He’s a Cumberland, Maryland native who spent a quarter-century in law enforcement, retiring as the Chief of Police for the Dover Police Department. He’s an Air Force veteran and a graduate of the FBI National Academy.
When Speedway Motorsports acquired Dover in 2021, they quickly realized they had a star on their hands. Hosfelt didn’t just manage Dover. He stepped up as the Director of Safety and Security for the entire company, acting as the critical link between the tracks, NASCAR, and federal agencies.
Speedway Motorsports COO Mike Burch put it best when he noted that while Hosfelt’s work is often low-profile, it is arguably the most vital thing the company does. Ensuring families can come to a race, feel safe, and go home with happy memories is a heavy burden, and Hosfelt carries it with grace.
The H.A. Humpy Wheeler Promoter of the Year award is special. Humpy was the P.T. Barnum of stock car racing, a man who believed that if you weren’t thinking big, you weren’t thinking at all.
Jerry Caldwell, the President and General Manager of Bristol Motor Speedway, proved he has that same wild spark of creativity in 2025. Caldwell took home the hardware after pulling off one of the most audacious crossovers in sports history: The Speedway Classic.
Turning “The Last Great Colosseum” into a baseball diamond sounded crazy on paper. But Caldwell and his team didn’t just make it work. They made history. The event shattered records, selling over 91,000 tickets, the highest single-event sales figure in Major League Baseball history.
It was a massive swing that connected for a home run, proving that Bristol isn’t just a race track; it’s a global entertainment destination. Marcus Smith noted that Humpy Wheeler himself would have loved the ambition behind building a stadium inside a speedway.
Consistency is the hardest thing to achieve in the sports business, yet Las Vegas Motor Speedway makes it look routine. For the 11th time in 14 years, the Las Vegas team took home the Speedway of the Year award. This year was unique for the Vegas crew.
They navigated a significant leadership transition as longtime boss Chris Powell retired, passing the baton to Patrick Lindsay. Usually, a changing of the guard leads to a momentary dip in momentum, not in Vegas. Under Lindsay’s leadership, the track continued its dominance, excelling in attendance, fan friendliness, and financial performance.
To edge out 10 other world-class facilities is no small feat. It requires firing on all cylinders from corporate sales to operations. The fact that Las Vegas continues to hoard this trophy speaks volumes about the culture of excellence embedded in that team.
For the second year running, Sonoma Raceway claimed the Acceleration Award. This recognition is all about year-over-year growth, taking what you have and making it significantly better. Accepted by GM Brian Flynn, the award highlighted Sonoma’s impressive strides in 2025.
The raceway has turned its Turn 11 facility into a hub of activity, driving up track rentals and finding new ways to monetize the beautiful California property. It wasn’t just about making more money, though. It was about smart operations. The team implemented cost-efficiency measures that streamlined the business without sacrificing the fan experience.
As 2025 closes, these awards serve as a reminder that while the cars are the stars on Sunday, it’s the people working on Monday morning who keep the sport alive and thriving. Cheers to many more years of success.
Emily Mikkelsen and Michaela Ratliff
STATESVILLE, N.C. (WGHP) — Officials offered an update Saturday after a deadly plane crash that claimed the life of NASCAR star Greg Biffle and six other people, including his children, on Thursday morning.
The Statesville Regional Airport confirmed a crash just after 10 a.m. Thursday on social media.
NASCAR said that the seven people who died in the crash were Greg Biffle, his wife Cristina Grossu, their son Ryder Jack and his daughter from a previous marriage Emma Elizabeth. Craig Wadsworth, as well as Dennis Dutton and his son Jack Dutton, were also killed in the crash.
The NTSB says a preliminary report should be available within 30 days, but a full report will take closer to a year.
During a conference on Friday, the NTSB said that initial findings showed that the plane took off, turned west and then turned again, back towards the airport. It was flying low, according to witnesses, and then it hit the approach lighting at the airport and trees before coming to rest near a runway and catching fire. The debris field is described as very large and scattered. The crash happened about ten minutes after takeoff.
At Saturday’s conference, officials confirmed that they still do not know the cause of the crash.
“We do not know the circumstances which led the aircraft… to attempt to return to the airport, but that is the focus of our investigation,” officials said.
They also confirmed that a text reading “Emergency landing” was sent from someone on the plane.
“I can confirm that the NTSB is aware of one brief text from a passenger on board the aircraft to a family member that read, and I quote, ‘Emergency landing.’”
“We are not aware of any other communications from passengers on board the aircraft to those on the ground.”
The NTSB also says that at this time, it does not know who the pilot of the plane was.
You can watch the news conference in the video player above.
William Byron emerged as one of the better drivers in the 2025 season, especially after winning the regular season championship. Byron even managed to make it into the Championship-4, but a last-moment incident caused him to lose out on the title win. Now, with the 2026 season start right around the corner, the #24 driver is facing a massive sponsorship setback with Liberty University.
Notably, Liberty University has been backing William Byron for more than a decade now. The educational institution has been sponsoring him since his junior NASCAR days, as he continued to achieve success leading up to the Cup Series. Even for the 2026 season, Liberty was believed to continue the alliance, but potentially at a reduced commitment with the HMS star.
Liberty University had sponsored 12 of William Byron’s races in the 2024 season. But it was significantly cut down to just six races in the 2025 season. Now, for the 2026 season, the educational institute is sponsoring him for just three races. This might mean that the sponsor is looking to back out of the deal completely in the near future, following Byron’s championship-less streak in the Cup Series.
The three races that William Byron will be supported by Liberty University are the Watkins Glen Race, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and the Martinsville Speedway over the 2025 season. The three-race sponsorship means that the number of races sponsored is cut down to half of what it was in the previous season. As such, Byron must look for other primary sponsors for more races to continue to fund his Cup Series dream with Hendrick Motorsports.
In the dim glow of the dyno cells at Brackley and Milton Keynes, alarming whispers had started circulating weeks before the Christmas lights went up in 2025. Formula 1’s 2026 power unit regulations were meant to usher in a new era: more sustainable, more electric, and—crucially—more equal.
–by Mark Cipolloni–
The FIA had dropped the geometric compression ratio of the internal compression engine portion of the overall F1 power unit from 18:1 to 16:1, a deliberate step to curb outright power from the internal combustion engine while ramping up the hybrid contribution to nearly 50/50.
But in the high-stakes world of F1 engine development, rules are never just words on paper. They are battlegrounds.
The rumor began as a quiet murmur among technicians: two power unit manufacturers—Mercedes and Red Bull Powertrains—had allegedly cracked a way to bend the new limit without breaking it.
The key? Thermal expansion.

By crafting connecting rods (or possibly other components in the piston assembly) from exotic alloys that swell dramatically when the engine hits full operating temperature, the piston could be pushed fractionally higher at top dead center during a hot run. On the cold dyno bench, where the FIA measures compression statically at ambient temperature, the ratio stays safely at 16:1.
But on track, under race conditions, that clever expansion could squeeze the combustion chamber tighter—effectively restoring an 18:1 ratio and unlocking an extra 15 horsepower, or roughly three-tenths of a second per lap.
It was brilliant, if true. And infuriating to the others.
Ferrari’s engineers, poring over their own dyno data in Maranello, were the first to raise the alarm. “If they’re doing this,” one senior figure reportedly told the FIA technical working group, “it’s not just an advantage—it’s a gulf.”
Honda, preparing to supply Aston Martin, and Audi, gearing up for their debut with Sauber, echoed the concern. They lobbied for clarification, arguing that the rules’ static measurement method—unchanged since the hybrid era—left a loophole wide enough to drive a turbo through.
The FIA’s response was measured: “The regulations clearly define the maximum compression ratio and the method for measuring it, based on static conditions at ambient temperature.”
They acknowledged thermal expansion as a natural phenomenon but noted no hot-condition testing was required, or even possible. Yet behind closed doors, discussions intensified. Some feared protests at the first race in Australia; others worried that if the “trick” was allowed, rivals wouldn’t have time to retrofit stronger pistons and rods without compromising reliability.
In the paddock, the rumor grew legs. Anonymous sources pointed fingers at Mercedes’ meticulous engineering culture and Red Bull’s aggressive development under their new in-house program. One engineer joked, “It’s like the old days of blown diffusers—clever, but someone always cries foul.” Another dismissed it as mind games: “Spread enough doubt, and you slow your rivals down chasing ghosts.”
As the first pre-season test approached in late January 2026, the tension was palpable. Teams will be arriving at Barcelona in January with engines humming at new volumes, but eyes will on the dyno logs. Would the FIA demand hot measurements? Would they close the loophole? Or would the clever ones start the season with an invisible edge?
In F1, the line between genius and cheating is often drawn in microns. And in 2026, that line just got a little hotter.
A young man and woman wearing life jackets pose together on a bright green and black Sea-Doo Spark personal watercraft on a calm lake.
Epic Boat Rentals & Motorsports Repair announces fleet expansion and service enhancements for Lake Austin and Lake Travis, including new Sea-Doo watercraft, extended hours, and professional captain services for Central Texas water sports.
Jet ski rental Lake Austin services have reached a new level with Epic Boat Rentals & Motorsports Repair’s announcement of significant enhancements to its watercraft rental operations. The company is positioning itself as a premier destination for water recreation on Lake Austin and Lake Travis. The expansion includes upgraded equipment, extended service hours, and enhanced customer accessibility, addressing the growing demand for Austin water sports rentals in the Central Texas region.
New Fleet Additions Transform Lake Austin Recreation Options
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Extended Hours Meet Rising Demand for Water Recreation
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Professional Captain Services Expand Group Activity Options
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Strategic Location Serves Two Major Central Texas Lakes
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No License Requirement Removes Barriers to Water Recreation
A significant advantage of Epic Boat Rentals & Motorsports Repair’s service model is the elimination of boating license requirements for watercraft rentals. This policy opens water sports access to visitors and residents without formal boating credentials. The company provides safety briefings and operational instructions before each rental, ensuring customers understand handling procedures and lake regulations. This approach has proven effective in attracting first-time riders and tourists unfamiliar with Texas waterway requirements. The ease of access contributes to the company’s growth among Austin water sports rental options.
Combination Packages and Flexible Booking Address Customer Preferences
Epic Boat Rentals & Motorsports Repair has implemented a booking system that displays real-time pricing and availability, streamlining the reservation process. Customers can combine watercraft options with captained boat charters for comprehensive lake day experiences. The flexibility in rental duration-from two-hour minimum periods to full-day adventures-accommodates various schedules and budgets. Pricing starts at $250 for two hours on the Sea-Doo Spark 3-seater, $260 for the Sea-Doo Trixx 2-seater, and $300-$330 for captained boat charters, depending on the lake. The transparent pricing structure and online booking capability reflect industry trends toward customer convenience and accessibility, making it easier for those searching for boat rentals near me to secure watercraft without lengthy phone negotiations.
The company’s expansion reflects broader trends in outdoor recreation as Central Texas residents and visitors increasingly seek water-based activities. Epic Boat Rentals & Motorsports Repair’s investment in modern equipment and service infrastructure positions the business to meet this demand while maintaining safety standards and customer satisfaction. The combination of quality watercraft, professional captain services, and accessible booking systems creates a comprehensive offering for water recreation enthusiasts in the Austin area.
Location: https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!1m18!1m12!1m3!1d232819.71099728424!2d-97.71989245!3d30.296113950000002!2m3!1f0!2f0!3f0!3m2!1i1024!2i768!4f13.1!3m3!1m2!1s0x8644c956647d680b%3A0x4f61d9a883e7a25e!2sEpic%20Boat%20Rentals%20%26%20Motorsports%20Repair!5e1!3m2!1sen!2sph!4v1766071478036!5m2!1sen!2sph
Media Contact
Company Name: Epic Boat Rentals & Motorsports Repair
Contact Person: Mitchell
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Website: https://epiclakerentals.com/
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