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Schedule, drivers, track layout – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

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¡Bienvenidos a México!

The Cup Series is heading south of the border for the first ever race in Mexico for NASCAR’s top series.

Held at the iconic Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City, the world’s best stock car drivers will compete at a track that has been a staple on the Formula One calendar since 1962.

So, what’s in store for Mexico City? What’s the TV and streaming schedule for the weekend? And who could contend for the win on Sunday? Here’s everything you need to know for Viva México 250:

When is the NASCAR race in Mexico City?

The Viva México 250 is set for Sunday, June 15 at 3 p.m. ET.

Before the race, there will be practice on Friday and qualifying on Saturday. There will be two practice sessions for all drivers, first for 50 minutes and then for 25 minutes. The following day, the 37 drivers will be split into two groups for qualifying. Each group will have 20 minutes to set a fast lap, with the starting lineup determined by combining the two groups using each driver’s fastest lap.

NASCAR TV, streaming schedule this weekend for Mexico City

This weekend marks the fourth of five races streaming exclusively on Amazon Prime Video. Adam Alexander (play-by-play), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (analyst) and Steve Letarte (analyst) will be on the call, with Danielle Trotta, Carl Edwards and Corey LaJoie providing pre- and post-race coverage.

Here’s the full schedule for Mexico City:

Friday, June 13 (Amazon Prime Video)

Saturday, June 14 (Amazon Prime Video)

Sunday, June 15 (Amazon Prime Video)

NASCAR Mexico City track layout

The Cup Series will use a similar track layout to the one that F1 uses for its grand prix — with one slight difference.

The NASCAR circuit will be 2.49 miles, compared to 2.67 miles for F1. The change comes at turn four, where drivers will make a sweeping right-hander and eliminate two corners that F1 uses.

Here’s a map of what the track will look like:

NASCAR Mexico track layout
A look at the track layout for the NASCAR race in Mexico City. (NASCAR Mexico)

Sure all major racing circuits have cars that are extremely fast. But do you know the difference between INDYCAR, F1 and NASCAR?

NASCAR entry list for Mexico City

Thirty-seven drivers will race in Mexico City – the 36 full-timers, plus one “open” entry.

Katherine Legge is the anomaly on Sunday, as the 44-year-old British will make her second career start for Live Fast Motorsports. Since there are fewer than 40 cars entered, all 37 teams will make the race.

Here’s the full entry list for Mexico:

Car number Driver Team Sponsor
1 Ross Chastain Trackhouse Racing Wendy’s
2 Austin Cindric Team Penske Menards
3 Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing Boot Barn
4 Noah Gragson Front Row Motorsports Long John Silver’s
5 Kyle Larson Hendrick Motorsports Valvoline
6 Brad Keselowski RFK Racing Castrol
7 Justin Haley Spire Motorsports Gainbridge
8 Kyle Busch Richard Childress Racing Lucas Oil
9 Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports Llumar
10 Ty Dillon Kaulig Racing Ohio Logistics
11 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing Yahoo!
12 Ryan Blaney Team Penske Wurth
16 AJ Allmendinger Kaulig Racing LeafFilter
17 Chris Buescher RFK Racing Body Guard
19 Chase Briscoe Joe Gibbs Racing Bass Pro Shops
20 Christopher Bell Joe Gibbs Racing Mobil 1
21 Josh Berry Wood Brothers Racing DEX Imaging
22 Joey Logano Team Penske Shell/Pennzoil
23 Bubba Wallace 23XI Racing Chumba Casino
24 William Byron Hendrick Motorsports Valvoline
34 Todd Gilliland Front Row Motorsports Long John Silver’s
35 Riley Herbst 23XI Racing Monster Energy
38 Zane Smith Front Row Motorsports Benebone
41 Cole Custer Haas Factory Team Haas Tooling
42 John Hunter Nemechek Legacy Motor Club Pye-Barker
43 Erik Jones Legacy Motor Club Family Dollar
45 Tyler Reddick 23XI Racing Xfinity Mobile
47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. JTG Daugherty Racing Fun Pops
48 Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports Ally
51 Cody Ware Rick Ware Racing Arrowhead Brass
54 Ty Gibbs Joe Gibbs Racing Monster Energy
60 Ryan Preece RFK Racing Kroger/Colgate
71 Michael McDowell Spire Motorsports B’laster
77 Carson Hocevar Spire Motorsports Totalplay
78 Katherine Legge Live Fast Motorsports E.L.F. Cosmetics
88 Shane van Gisbergen Trackhouse Racing Safety Culture
99 Daniel Suárez Trackhouse Racing Telcel
2025 Viva México 250 entry list

NASCAR picks, predictions, favorites for Mexico City

Usually, it’s easy to point out who could contend on any given weekend. Most NASCAR tracks have years of data, history and trends to study. Well, not this week.

No drivers have raced on this track in the current Cup car. So, how do we narrow down the contenders? Let’s take a look at the best road course races and go from there.

It all starts with Shane van Gisbergen, the New Zealander who won his Cup debut at the Chicago Street Race two years ago. He’s now a full-time NASCAR driver, and it’s been a rocky rookie season outside of the one road race in Austin, Texas — where he led 23 laps and finished sixth. Expect a strong showing for SVG, who desperately needs a win to make the playoffs.

Elsewhere, recent road course winners Christopher Bell (Austin 2025), Kyle Larson (Charlotte 2024) and Chris Buescher (Watkins Glen 2024) are three drivers to watch. Bell has the only road win this season after two runner-up finishes last year. Larson is a six-time road winner, including twice last season. Buescher only has one road win, but he’s finished top-11 in 15 of his last 17 starts.

Chase Elliott (7 wins), Tyler Reddick (3 wins) and AJ Allmendinger (3 wins) have historical success at road courses, though neither has won much lately. They’ll always be contenders, and perhaps a trip to a new track could be just what they need.

If you’re looking for a longshot, look no further than Daniel Suárez. The only Mexican driver in the field will surely want to show out for his home crowd, and he’s performed well at road courses before. His first career win came at Sonoma in 2022.

History of NASCAR international races

There’s been just two international races in Cup Series history — held in Canada way back in the 1950s.

The first was at Stamford Park dirt track in Niagara Falls in 1952. Then, they went to Exhibition Stadium in Toronto in 1958, where future seven-time champion Richard Petty made his debut.

Since then, there have been no points-paying Cup races held outside the U.S. There have, however, been several exhibition events across the globe.

In 1988, drivers went down under to Calder Park Thunderdome in Melbourne, Australia for an exhibition won by Neil Bonnett. Nearly a decade later, NASCAR went to Japan for three straight years from 1996-98. The first two races in Japan were at Suzuka Circuitland, then the series concluded at Twin Ring Motegi Superspeedway in 1998.

Darrell “Bubba” Wallace is one of the most recognized names in NASCAR. Here’s what you need to know.



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Motorsports Bombshell Lindsay Brewer Heats Up Laguna Beach in Skimpy Tank and Bikini Top – Star Magazine

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Lindsay Brewer/Instagram

Lindsay Brewer grabbed attention with a playful new Instagram post shared on Monday, December 29.

“I’m your Uber driver, get in!” the professional race car driver and social media personality, 28, captioned photos in which she posed inside a parked vehicle in Laguna Beach, California. Brewer sat sideways in the driver’s seat with the door open, smiling directly at the camera as palm trees and a bright blue sky framed the background.

For the look, Brewer wore a fitted white cropped tank that highlighted her toned midsection, layered over a bright yellow bikini top. She paired the top with loose-fitting, light-wash jeans. White sneakers completed the outfit, keeping things sporty and practical while still photo-ready.

Lindsay Brewer/Instagram

Her long blonde hair was styled in soft waves that fell over her shoulders, and her makeup appeared natural, with a fresh glow that fit the sunny beachside setting. Brewer accessorized minimally, letting the outfit and setting do most of the talking.

Known for balancing her racing career with a strong social media presence, Brewer has built a loyal following by blending high-speed motorsports with lifestyle content.





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Rockenfeller, Ford Seek to “Write Some More History Together” – Speedway Digest

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Although he’s now 42, Mike Rockenfeller is practically ageless. He still looks as young and drives as fast as his younger teammates within the Ford Multimatic Motorsports stable of Mustang GT3 drivers. He can easily be viewed one of sports car racing’s greatest drivers, ambassadors and gentlemen of the millennium with his affable attitude and incredible insights.

The German driver best known as “Rocky” made his early mark coming up the sports car ladder with two distinct German brands: Porsche and Audi. In 2010, he won both the Rolex 24 At Daytona and 24 Hours of Le Mans overall in the same year; the Rolex aboard an Action Express Racing Riley-Porsche closed cockpit Daytona Prototype and Le Mans in a factory Audi R15 TDI Plus diesel LMP1 open prototype. He’s the second most recent driver to do that, as Fernando Alonso did so in 2019 with a Cadillac DPi-V.R at the Rolex 24 and a Toyota TS050 Hybrid in LMP1 at Le Mans.

But in recent years, “Rocky’s” manufacturer presence has been distinctly American. He raced both GT and Daytona Prototype Corvettes off-and-on through the mid-2010s, and then was the sports car expert who guided Jimmie Johnson, Jenson Button and the Hendrick Motorsports collaborative Garage 56 Chevrolet Camaro ZR1 to take NASCAR back to Le Mans in 2023. He also ran select NASCAR Cup Series races for Johnson’s Legacy Motor Club team when it still ran Chevrolets.

Since 2024, “Rocky” has been a “blue oval” man through and through. He’s been back in a full-time seat in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship as part of Ford’s Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) effort, and through the end of 2025, was the only driver Ford kept in that full-time role for both seasons.

For 2026, things change a bit. After Rockenfeller and Harry Tincknell shared the No. 64 Ford Mustang GT3 in 2024 and Rockenfeller and Seb Priaulx then partnered to be the proverbial veteran and young charger pairing in 2025, both “Rocky” and “Sebby” shift to Michelin Endurance Cup roles in 2026 split between the Nos. 64 and 65 cars.

Rockenfeller seems to feel something different with Ford than he did with the German brands he raced with earlier in his career. As he reflected during the IMSA-sanctioned November test, being part of Ford means going back more than a century and building on it as Ford continues its global motorsports ramp-up to be one of the world’s most pre-eminent motorsport manufacturers.

“Where I’ve come from, I was not surprised… but at Charlotte when they did the season launch two years ago, I’d just joined the program so I only understood it somewhat,” Rockenfeller explained. “But they do NASCAR. Off-road. Baja. Obviously sports car racing. They will do F1. Then Hypercar/GTP… yes, it’s Europe for now, but hopefully they come to the U.S. It’s unreal how big their program is. The Red Bull F1 thing I hope will be very successful, super cool and exciting. The range they go is unreal.”

Ford’s perception is changing globally, too, he noted.

“For me coming from different brands and joining a new one, in Europe, Ford is a different brand than what it is in the U.S.,” Rockenfeller said. “Here, it’s massive. There, the Germans are quite big. That’s normal.

“But I always had friends driving Ford. A friend of mine in go-karts has three Ford dealerships. I always looked at it, but I never imagined I’d race for Ford. To get to know the family and Jim Farley and all of them, (Mark) Rushbrook, it’s such a family. And they’re emotional with racing. They really love it, and you can see it in the programs they do.”

Rockenfeller then proceeded to tell just how much of the Ford family presence the manufacturer wanted to share with its drivers.

“The first year in Detroit, we went to the Henry Ford House, where he basically lived. It’s kind of a museum almost,” he said. “It’s unreal to hear the stories; Edsel and that. It’s unreal. To hopefully write some history together is great. I feel such a part of it. To identify, it takes a bit of time. You need to know the cars, the people, and success and not success together. Year three … this year changed a lot for me. I feel like I’m there now.”

Indeed, the leap Ford made in IMSA from year one in 2024 to year two in 2025 with the Mustang GT3 was paramount. Rockenfeller won the Motul Pole Award for the Rolex 24 and the duo finished third with third driver Austin Cindric, who was deputizing for the injured Ben Barker. The sister No. 65 car won the Rolex with Frederic Vervisch, Christopher Mies and Dennis Olsen.

Ford’s No. 64 car enjoyed major success as the year progressed with two wins on the streets of Detroit – notably cast against the corporate headquarters and backdrop of crosstown rivals General Motors – and then the six-hour TireRack.com Battle On The Bricks in Indianapolis. With one other podium (second at Road America), Rockenfeller and Priaulx finished third in GTD PRO points.

“Every victory is special in its own,” Rockenfeller admitted. “Detroit is the only street circuit (for GTD PRO). It’s cool scenery and it’s different. I love to race in cities anyway but that’s the only chance on the calendar to do so. We don’t do Long Beach. Then obviously that’s the home race for Ford Motor Company and GM is there. It’s a big battle between us. To come out on top was the highlight.

“Indy was so cool; we were second the year before. We knew it was a strong place for us. To win with ‘Sebby’ was good as we just started working together this year and it turned out to be a pretty good combo.

“Then at Indy, it was special to have the whole family (as part of new IMSA Resilient Racers program) there enjoying it, taking the pictures, being on the podium. Especially as a father of three, you understand what matters in life. You think racing is the most important or when you’re doing it. But there’s a lot more in life, to share emotions and give something back. That’s very special.”

For 2026, Rockenfeller will share the No. 64 car with Olsen and Barker, who are set to embark on the full-season effort. That means Rockenfeller’s IMSA goal for 2026 is trophy hunting at the three longest Michelin Endurance Cup rounds, and notably, adding another Rolex watch to his 2010 one. Missing out in 2025 stung, he admitted.

“In the end, to win you need to be perfect,” he said. “The other car had a better setup and we didn’t. The last two tenths, probably. They deserved it! I’m happy they did. Obviously, I’m a Ford driver, so it’s good for all of us if the car wins.

“In the end we had a strong season. I’m sure the big goal is to win the championship. If you ask me what do you prefer, I don’t know if I would pick between 24 and the championship. Probably the championship. It gives a better picture of the whole year.

“But at Daytona, I’d like to get a free watch and not have to buy one!”

IMSA Wire Service PR



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“I’ve Got to Try”: Rick Hendrick Tried to Recruit Dale Earnhardt In the Initial Days of Hendrick Motorsports

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When Rick Hendrick entered the NASCAR Cup Series competition in 1984 with Geoff Bodine piloting the No. 5 car, Dale Earnhardt had already etched his name into history with a Cup championship in 1980. Hendrick initially set his sights on bringing Dale Sr. into his fledgling operation, but timing and circumstance shut that door.

When Hendrick made his pitch, Dale Sr. remained aligned with Bud Moore Engineering, a team with history in the sport since the 1960s, and by the time Hendrick officially launched his effort, Senior had already committed to the more established Richard Childress Racing.

Revisiting that crossroads on the Dale Jr. Download, Hendrick recently detailed how close the paths briefly ran. When Dale Earnhardt Jr. referenced a photo of Hendrick and Earnhardt standing together in the garage at Charlotte Motor Speedway, with Dale Sr. dressed in blue while testing a Cup car, Hendrick explained that he had asked him to shake the car down.

As the conversation extended, Hendrick admitted his interest in landing Dale Sr. Still, Hendrick Motorsports was little more than a blank page at the time, without results or reputation to lean on, and Dale Sr. chose not to take the gamble. Hendrick acknowledged he understood the odds, noting that his chances were “zero,” before adding, “But I’m a car salesman. I mean, I’ve got to try, right?”

The connection between the two, however, predated Hendrick Motorsports’ Cup debut. In 1983, when Hendrick first dipped his toes into stock car racing ownership with Robert Gee, the duo had called on Dale Sr. to drive their No. 15 at Charlotte in the Late Model Sportsman division, now known as the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

That decision paid immediate dividends as Dale Sr. won in his first outing for the team, delivering Hendrick his first-ever victory as a stock car owner. Later that same year, Dale Sr. climbed into the No. 5 again, this time to test for All-Star Racing. One season later, that program officially went racing, marking another early chapter in Hendrick’s ascent.

Years down the line, the storyline came full circle when the elder Earnhardt’s son, Dale Earnhardt Jr., eventually joined Hendrick Motorsports and took over the No. 88. In his first race with the organization, the exhibition event ahead of the Daytona 500 in 2008, he drove straight to victory lane.

Hence, father and son both won on debut for Rick Hendrick, separated by 25 years, and did so in cars carrying the same name. The original 1983 entry was called “Emma,” named after Gee’s mother, and in 2008, the No. 88 chassis carried the same name as a tribute.



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House Fire Claims Life of Denny Hamlin’s Father; Mother Remains Hospitalized

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Dennis Hamlin, father of NASCAR Cup Series driver Denny Hamlin, died Sunday night at the age of 75 from injuries sustained in a house fire at the family’s home. Hamlin’s mother, Mary Lou, remains hospitalized in critical condition.

The Gaston County Office of Emergency Management and Fire Services issued a press release stating that first responders were dispatched to the home in the Stanley community at 6:19 p.m. ET. They arrived eight minutes later and found the residence engulfed in flames. There were two occupants discovered outside the home who were transported to a nearby hospital.

Dennis Hamlin later died at the hospital. Mary Lou Hamlin, 69, was transferred to Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Burn Center in Winston-Salem, where officials said she is “actively being treated.”

Denny Hamlin’s parents were instrumental in helping him pursue his career in NASCAR. In 2006, he signed with Joe Gibbs Racing and has claimed 60 Cup Series wins with the team.

He dedicated his victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to his father.   

“He’s the one that got me into racing,” Hamlin said, “He just took me to a racetrack when I was 5 and then made all the sacrifices financially to keep me going. Sold everything they had. We almost lost our house a couple times, just tried to keep it all going. I’m glad he was able to see 60. That was super important to me.”

Due to extensive damage, the cause of the fire has not been determined as the investigation continues.

NASCAR issued the following statement on Dec. 30: “NASCAR extends its deepest condolences to Denny Hamlin and the entire Hamlin family. Dennis Hamlin instilled a love of racing in his son, and sacrificed greatly to develop Denny into a world-class talent in the sport. We also continue to offer our thoughts and prayers to Denny’s mother, Mary Lou, and hope for her full recovery.”



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“We Have to Make It Happen”: Natalie Decker and Husband Derek Share One Dream They Talk About Daily

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Natalie Decker and her husband, Derek Lemke, are embracing life as new parents, spending the holiday season between Christmas and New Year focused on family while keeping one eye firmly on the road back to NASCAR. Decker last took the green flag in August 2025 at Daytona, where she finished 22nd, marking her return to competition months after welcoming their son in February. While she is currently savoring motherhood and marriage, another long-held ambition remains front and center, one she shares with her husband and intends to chase down.

A year ago, during an interview with Frontstretch, Decker sat down with Wyatt Watson ahead of her second career start at Charlotte Motor Speedway and laid out several personal goals. She spoke about a dream partnership with Bikini Zone, highlighted the importance of promoting sponsorship alongside her family, reflected on married life, and opened up about a shared vision with Lemke, which is lining up against him on the racetrack.

As Decker put it, “That’s literally our goal and dream. We talk about that daily. So here’s the thing: Derek has never beaten me. We talk about that all the time.” She explained that the two have raced each other only a handful of times so far, but they plan to settle the score properly by competing head-to-head in either a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race or an Xfinity Series event in the near future.

The intention, she said, is “We have to make it happen, and then we can then determine who is better after that race.”

When discussing married life, Decker shared that very little has changed beyond the wedding bands now on their fingers. Their lives, she noted, had already been connected long before the ceremony. Once Lemke was fully committed to supporting her racing career, they immediately approached everything as a team.

Decker added that they have been together for more than eight years (now over nine), and married for some time, and she finds it deeply fulfilling. For the 28-year-old, one of the highlights of getting married was celebrating alongside friends and family, hosting a large gathering that turned into an unforgettable occasion.

In 2025, Decker also joined a select group of women who returned to NASCAR competition after becoming mothers.

Beyond Shawna Robinson, one of only 17 women to start a NASCAR Cup Series race, who had two children in the late 1990s before competing in 21 races across NASCAR’s three national divisions between 2001 and 2005, drivers such as Sara Christian, Jessica Friesen, Tina Gordon, Ethel Mobley, Alli Owens, and Kelly Sutton also raced after entering motherhood.

Backed by sponsorship from Wawa, Decker drove the #92 DGM Racing Chevy in the NASCAR Xfinity Series event at Daytona International Speedway, and might be ready to do that in 2026 as well.



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Six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon receives a knighthood from his native New Zealand

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon was awarded a knighthood Wednesday in New Zealand’s New Year honors list.

“I’ve been called a lot of things, but I never thought that ‘Sir’ was going to be one of them,” Dixon said. “That was kind of crazy. Totally out of the blue … You automatically go back to the start like the first time driving a go-kart and then all the rest of the memories happened at warp speed.”

Scott Ronald Glyndwr Dixon, now a Knight Commander of the New Zealand Order of Merit, was born in Australia to New Zealand-born parents who later returned to live in Auckland.

Dixon, who won the Indianapolis 500 in 2008, received the knighthood for services to motor sport. He was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2024.

“Sir Scott is a hero to young New Zealand motor sport fans and his work fundraising for children’s charities is invaluable,” New Zealand’s Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said.

Dixon won karting titles in Australia and New Zealand before heading to the United States where he raced in Indy Lights and CART series before moving to IndyCar in 2003.

Dixon has had 23 consecutive seasons for Chip Ganassi Racing in IndyCar with 58 wins and 142 podium finishes from 380 starts. He has started 32 times from pole position and won the championship in 2003, 2008, 2013, 2015, 2018 and 2020.

“It’s all about outside racing giving back to the community and the partnerships you make away from the track and causes you get involved in,” Dixon said.

___

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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