Motorsports
The top short tracker in America is making his NASCAR debut
Statistically speaking, the most successful Super Late Model driver in the country is set to make his NASCAR debut in the Craftsman Truck Series on Thursday night at Bristol and it might not be his last.
Cole Butcher is driving the Halmar Friesen No. 62 with veteran crew chief Bruce Cook calling the shots. However, also on the pit box will be Bond Suss, the Toyota Racing pavement development director who has also served as crew chief on their Donnie Wilson Motorsports No. 28.
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Together, Butcher and Suss have dominated the national short track scene the past two seasons with seven ASA national victories and seven more in the ASA Southern Super Series over that period. This doesn’t even include his prestigious Oxford 250 victories in 2023 and 2024.
While most casual racing fans are familiar with Bubba Pollard, Butcher has matched and exceeded some of the greats in their shared discipline over the past 24 months. And at 29-years-old, it was getting to be now or never in terms of a potential NASCAR career.
“A lot of it was confidence,” Butcher told Motorsport.com on Wednesday night. “Sure, its money and most of my partners are Canadian so it’s always making sure the exchange makes sense but we’ve had some mediocre years compared to what I thought my expectations were.
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“A lot of this is my confidence right now and being in the head space of believing we can do this. I’ve been racing drivers who pass through on their way to NASCAR and we have a good record against them, and it was just confidence in believing I can be there too.”
What’s even more impressive is how Butcher responded to a health scare last year when he lost two months of his season due to Afib surgery. He did not miss a beat upon his return but the time also arguably denied him an extra two to three wins given their performance during this time.
“I think everyone around me was more scared about it than I was,” Butcher said. “I wanted to push it back to the end of the season, but my wife, who is in healthcare, convinced me to do the right thing because we had our son on the way and I just didn’t need to be reckless with having him to think about.
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“I feel like I could have raced that next weekend but I was on blood thinners.”
Still, that’s a testament to how determined and maybe even stubborn of a racer Butcher can be. Certainly, he has a reputation that would call him ‘hard-nosed’ at best but also ‘dirty’ from a historical standpoint.
Butcher races hard but he doesn’t disagree there was a time in the not too distant past where he earned his ‘Canadian Snow Plow’ nickname.
“I made some mistakes and lost a lot of respect over the years,” Butcher said. “But I also think I’ve started to earn a lot of it back the past couple of years. When you race down south against Bubba Pollard and Stephen Nasse, you learn a lot about the right way to do things and everyone I race against here are very good and have made me better.”
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For Thursday night, Butcher simply wants to complete all the laps and hopefully finish on the lead lap. Butcher very much hopes to be on the grid full-time next year at Daytona and is in active conversations across the garage in search of a home.
“I’m the type of person that I don’t want to get my hopes up,” Butcher said. “It has to make sense from a financial standpoint and tomorrow night is a big first step in proving that I belong out there too. I do want to race at Daytona and I want to be full-time in a Truck next year.
“I can’t say what I’m doing next year because I honestly don’t know. If I could race full-time and make a living racing against Bubba and Stephen, that is a good life as far as I’m concerned but who doesn’t want to race in NASCAR? We’re working really hard to make that happen.”
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Above all else, for those who have heard of Butcher and even those who don’t, he wants you to know he is a definition short track minded kind of racer.
“I just want them to know I’m a hard-nosed racer,” Butcher said. “I know there are some people out there who think I’m dirty but I want everyone to know I can dish it out but I can take it too. I was racing a CARS Tour race against Nick Loden, I gave him the bumper and he came right back and moved me out of the way.
“I got out of the car and said ‘good job buddy, that’s racing’ and I honestly live for this. That’s entertainment. Classic short track racing. Dale Earnhardt at Richmond.”
To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.
Motorsports
Alex Bowman 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season in review: 48 team notched 16 top 10s and a playoff appearance
https://www.hendrickmotorsport…Editor’s note: This is part of a series from NASCAR.com reviewing the top 30 drivers in the NASCAR Cup Series in reverse order of the 2025 final standings.
- Driver: Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
- Crew chief: Blake Harris
- Final 2025 ranking: 13th
- Key stats: six top fives, 16 top 10s
How 2025 ended: Bowman made the Cup Series Playoffs for the second year in a row, earning the final spot available on points.
RELATED: Jeff Gordon 1 of 1 trading card to be released by Panini
Best race: Suffering a major crash in the previous race at Michigan International Speedway, Bowman participated in the inaugural Cup Series event in Mexico City in obvious pain. Not feeling 100%, Bowman overcame a 29th-place starting position to finish fourth at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, earning what was his third top five of the season. It began a streak of seven top-11 results over the next eight races. Odd timing for sure, but Mexico City paved the way toward his 2025 playoff spot.

Other season highlights: Bowman’s stellar summer certainly stood out, but his superb start to the season was equally impressive. The Tucson, Arizona, native earned top 10s in five of the first six races, including a runner-up at Homestead-Miami Speedway after earning the pole. During the summer months, he finished third twice and added a second-place at Richmond Raceway, nearly besting Austin Dillon for the win. Down the stretch, he finished seventh at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, adding another plus result to what’s historically been one of his best tracks.
RELATED: Check out all of Hendrick Motorsports’ 2026 paint schemes right here!
Quotable: “The biggest strength is the momentum that we have behind us … the year that we’ve been able to put together, the speed that we’ve had at some race tracks that I’ve been pretty bad at before. At Homestead(-Miami Speedway), we’ve never been good and we almost won. Richmond, we’ve been pretty bad with the Next Gen car, and we were strong there. So, I think that shows me that we can go to places that we haven’t been good at before and be really strong.”
Looking ahead: Bowman will return to Hendrick Motorsports in 2026 for his ninth full-time campaign with the organization.
Motorsports
F1 Engine row erupts over ‘alleged’ 2026 compression loophole
(GMM) Formula 1’s 2026 engine rules have been thrown into early controversy after reports that Honda, Ferrari and Audi are challenging Mercedes and Red Bull over an alleged compression-ratio loophole.
According to German outlet motorsport-magazin.com, the three manufacturers have lodged a complaint with the FIA claiming Mercedes and Red Bull Powertrains have found a way to effectively retain an 18:1 geometric compression ratio under the new regulations, despite the mandated limit of 16:1.
The allegation centers on thermal expansion. While the 2026 rules cap compression at 16:1, measurements are specified to be taken at ambient temperature. Rivals suspect that once the engines reach operating temperatures, component expansion allows Mercedes and Red Bull to regain a higher effective compression ratio – potentially restoring levels similar to 2025.
Estimates cited in the report suggest the advantage could be worth around 15 horsepower, translating to as much as three tenths of a second per lap at a circuit like Albert Park.
Editor’s Note: This smells like the typical F1 off-season bullshit that comes up every winter to keep F1 in the news. The regulations define the materials you can use for most of the internal internal compbustion engine components – pistons, piston connecting rods, crank, etc. – and even the size of any inserts in the cylinder heads. Thermal expansion of about 0.5mm needed to get to a 1:18 compression ratio should be the same for everyone. If Mercedes and Red Bull have found another way to do it then, good for them. That is what we call genius engineering and it’s what we come to expect from F1.
The FIA has acknowledged the issue is under active discussion. A spokesperson said: “Thermal expansion can influence dimensions at operating temperature, but current regulations do not require measurements under hot conditions.
“That said, the issue has been and continues to be discussed in technical forums with manufacturers.”
French newspaper L’Equipe reports that all five 2026 power unit suppliers – Mercedes, Red Bull-Ford, Ferrari, Honda and Audi – are meeting with the FIA on Monday in an extraordinary technical session. If Mercedes and Red Bull reach an understanding with the governing body, the other manufacturers are still expected to retain the right to protest ahead of the Australian GP.
Engineers quoted in the German press warn that if the FIA rules against the interpretation, Mercedes and Red Bull could be forced to mechanically reduce compression back to 16:1 – a change that would likely cost performance, given that the power units are already homologated for 2026.
The timing is significant. Red Bull’s in-house power project, backed by Ford, had been widely expected to face early difficulties under the new rules. However, Max Verstappen’s manager Raymond Vermeulen has played down those fears.
“We’ve heard good things about the engine,” Vermeulen said – a remark now gaining added weight as scrutiny intensifies over Mercedes and Red Bull’s alleged behind-the-scenes confidence.
Motorsports
As Forza Motorsport Winds Down, Gran Turismo Is Experiencing A ‘Phenomenon’ At PlayStation

Much has been said about how Forza Motorsport is essentially winding down after two years on the market, with the team recently confirming that no major new content would be added to the game in 2026.
That obviously comes as a shame for those who enjoy a more simulation-focused experience than what Forza Horizon offers, but it also indicates that 2023’s FM reboot hasn’t managed to prove as popular as Xbox had likely hoped.
Meanwhile, PlayStation’s Gran Turismo 7 — a game that’s very similar to Forza Motorsport — is apparently experiencing a “phenomenon” right now due to how many players are still engaging with it. That number is growing as well.
Here’s what series producer Kazunori Yamauchi had to say in a recent roundtable interview (via GTPlanet):
“Gran Turismo 7 has been released for several years, but still, the active users are currently over 2 million people, and the new users are increasing. The status that Gran Turismo 7 is in now is probably the best of any Gran Turismo titles that we’ve had in the past. We’ve never experienced this phenomenon before, and neither has PlayStation.”
What’s the reason for Gran Turismo’s immense success and Forza Motorsport’s drop-off, then? According to GTPlanet, Yamauchi apparently attributed GT’s continued appeal to “the studio’s evolving relationship with its community and a shift in how it supports titles long-term”, while the outlet also highlighted the game’s recent update, Power Pack DLC and the millions of people who are watching Gran Turismo World Series events.
And just to be clear, we’re not ragging on Forza Motorsport in terms of the game itself here. We’ve mentioned numerous times how we think FM has an excellent base to it, but it just didn’t quite evolve in the way that we’d hoped.
It also makes sense that Xbox would rather prioritise Forza Horizon these days, and you can bet Forza Horizon 6 will be a best-seller across all platforms that it’s available for, including PlayStation. Sony might have the dominant sim racer of the two companies, but Forza Horizon is in a league of its own in terms of casual open-world racers.
Still, we’ll keep our fingers crossed that Forza Motorsport can make a return with GT7 levels of success in the future!
Motorsports
Teams expected to hide true performance in pre-season testing
Despite being called the winter ‘break’, there is hardly any rest for teams during this period. If anything, the weeks between the season finale and pre-season testing are some of the most intense.
For aerodynamic and engine-focused personnel alike, the next few months are a race against time to prepare the first F1 2026 machines.
At surface level, pre-season testing will provide the first glimpses of next year’s challengers. Crucially, however, it is reliability – not outright performance – that will be most representative.

Reliability first, performance to come later
After this season’s conclusion, Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur gave a series of declarations about F1 2026.
Some of his most interesting commentary focused on pre-season testing and the opening rounds of the year. According to Vasseur, the 2026 hierarchy will be impossible to predict until later in the season.
The Frenchman predicts most teams will focus on reliability in the early months of 2026.
This sentiment is clearly prevalent, with Cadillac, Audi and even Mercedes suggesting they will bring relatively basic packages in Barcelona testing – with more sophisticated iterations to arrive in the subsequent months.
For some teams, this will be out of necessity.
Due to limited wind tunnel hours and financial restrictions, some teams are at relatively early stages in their 2026 development.
Consequently, there will be some assembly lines still producing the first components to be used in pre-season testing. In some cases, only after the first few rounds will more serious upgrades be in the pipeline.
This is not to say all teams will be conservative in their rollout. Those who started early on their 2026 challengers, such as Williams, are already finalising their a-spec and b-spec cars.
Still, even in these cases, reliability will be the first order of business in testing. From hydraulics to suspension to engines, teams must ensure they have avoided any massive blunders when the cars first take to the track.
The near-faultless reliability F1 has become accustomed to will not be present in 2026. Much like at the start of the hybrid era in 2014, some outfits could be in serious trouble with their chassis and powertrains.
Because of this, it will be easier to spot the teams struggling in pre-season – whilst those in a stronger position will be more understated.

A game of cat and mouse to start F1 2026
As previously assessed on LWOS, teams began working towards 2026 at different times. This means some teams will be several steps ahead in terms of how they plan to evolve next year’s cars.
Others, meanwhile, will be trying to make up for lost time.
However, regardless of when teams made 2026 their development focus, there could be a dramatic range in how teams approached the new regulations.
In some cases, this could manifest itself in more obvious differences in visible parts of the car. In others, more disguisable areas – such as engine power – could be critical in separating teams.
Because of this, those who believe they have found something others have overlooked will avoid drawing attention to themselves with flashy lap-times.
This was Brawn’s approach when they first tested their title-winning 2009 car. Jenson Button recalls that after his first lap in Barcelona testing, he went six tenths faster than anyone else – much to the team’s surprise.
At that point, Brawn did not complete another low-fuel run. This was integral in keeping the team under the radar in pre-season, and meant rivals only began to emulate their game-changing double diffuser several months later.
Though an extreme example, this case study is relevant for the coming months. Teams that are struggling will have less to hide, and can work on testing their cars with slightly more freedom.
However, whichever engineering department has nailed the 2026 regulations will spend much of pre-season testing trying to avoid attention from elsewhere on the grid. After all, teams naturally protest to the FIA when someone else introduces an innovation they missed.
READ MORE: Lawrence Stroll says “patience” necessary for Aston Martin project
Main photo: Steven Tee/LAT Images (McLaren Racing Media Centre)
Motorsports
Founding family fends off shakeup at UniFirst
While one family feud over the future of a multibillion-dollar local company played out in Delaware last week, another one came to an end in Massachusetts.
In the Delaware Chancery Court, all eyes were on a trial that involved recently deposed Market Basket chief executive Arthur T. Demoulas, and his fight with the supermarket chain’s board and his sisters to get his job back. The Demoulas family was left hanging once the trial wrapped up: A decision from the Chancery Court judge isn’t expected until sometime next year.
Back in Massachusetts, however, there was a more definitive ending for the Croatti family and UniFirst, the Wilmington-based uniform supplier that’s publicly traded but controlled by family members. A hostile campaign by New York hedge fund Engine Capital to put its founder as well as a son of beloved former CEO Ron Croatti on UniFirst’s board fell short of the votes it needed.
That’s not to say shareholders didn’t like the idea. Most did, judging from the fact that Engine Capital founder Arnaud Ajdler and Michael Croatti received more common-stock votes. But the slate of two incumbent board members, chief executive Steven Sintros and Joseph Nowicki, prevailed. That’s because key Croatti family members, including Michael’s mother Carol Croatti and brother Matthew Croatti, own preferred shares that carry much more weight in the voting, and they supported the Sintros-Nowicki ticket.
Michael Croatti rose through the ranks of the uniform company over three decades working under his father, who died in 2017. But in 2024, the son’s role changed from executive vice president to consultant, while Kelly Rooney was brought on board to be chief operating officer.
Then, in January of this year, larger rival Cintas made an unsolicited bid for UniFirst. That bid was ultimately rejected, and the UniFirst stock tumbled. Ajdler and his firm then showed up, buying shares, and eventually allying with Michael Croatti with an effort to get on the board and potentially put the company on the market.
Ajdler knew it would be tough, because certain Croatti family members control 70 percent of the voting rights. He appealed to them to change their minds, saying the company has struggled since Ron Croatti’s death and even more so since Michael Croatti’s departure from the executive ranks. But it was not meant to be.
After the vote, the board issued a brief statement portraying the proxy fight in positive terms, saying it appreciated the “active dialogue” with UniFirst shareholders, and that it looks forward to “further constructive engagement.”
Ajdler was less diplomatic in his statement, saying the shareholder vote “represents an unequivocal rebuke” of UniFirst’s “value-destructive standalone strategy” and sends a message that the board should put the company on the market and meet with potential buyers — and, at the very least, eliminate the shares’ dual-class structure. He said UniFirst is struggling and needs to team up with a competitor to flourish again. “Selling the Company,” Ajdler concluded, “is the best path to achieving Ron’s goals and honoring his legacy.”
Then on Monday, Cintas announced that it has submitted another bid for UniFirst for just over $5 billion, the same price that it offered nearly a year ago.
Maybe the saga isn’t over after all.
This is an installment of our weekly Bold Types column about the movers and shakers on Boston’s business scene.
Jon Chesto can be reached at jon.chesto@globe.com. Follow him @jonchesto.
Motorsports
BigRock Motorsports retains its Championship title at ISRL Season 2 Grand Finale in Calicut
Calicut (Kerala) [India], December 21 : The Indian Supercross Racing League (ISRL) Season 2 concluded in spectacular fashion with a historic Grand Finale at the EMS Corporation Stadium, Calicut. Megastar and ISRL Brand Ambassador Salman Khan was present on ground, adding star power to an electrifying night of high-octane racing and live entertainment, as per a release.
The finale witnessed a record-breaking turnout of over 32,000 fans, marking the highest-ever attendance for a motorsporting event in India and reinforcing Kerala’s strong connection with motorsport and large-scale live sporting experiences, the release said.
Amid roaring crowds and intense on-track action, Team Bigrock Motorsports were crowned ISRL Season 2 Champions, capping off a fiercely competitive championship that unfolded across Pune, Hyderabad and Calicut. The season showcased a compelling blend of international excellence and emerging Indian talent.
The Calicut round delivered thrilling racing across all categories. Matt Moss from team BigRock Motorsports (Australia) claimed victory in the 450cc International class aboard the Kawasaki KX 450, while Calvin Fonvieille from team Apollo Indewheelers (France) dominated the 250cc International category on the Yamaha YZ 250. The 250cc India-Asia Mix class was won by Delvinator Alfarizi (Thailand) riding the KTM 250 SX – F, drawing thunderous applause from the packed stadium.
Megastar Salman Khan, Brand Ambassador, ISRL, said, “Watching the Grand Finale in Calicut was truly special. The passion of the fans and the intensity of competition show how far Indian motorsport has come. ISRL is creating a platform where Indian riders can compete confidently alongside the world’s best,” as quoted from a release.
Reflecting on the season, Veer Patel, Managing Director, ISRL, said, “Season 2 reflects the growing belief in Supercross across India. From Pune to Hyderabad and now Calicut, the record-breaking fan response shows the sport has truly found a home here, while we continue building strong pathways for Indian riders alongside world-class racing.”
Over the course of Season 2, 36 international riders from 21 countries, including Australia, France, the USA, Germany, Thailand and South Africa, competed alongside India’s top riders such as Rugved Barguje, Ikshan Shanbhag, Prajwal Vishwanath and Shlok Ghorpade, highlighting ISRL’s growing global stature, as per the release.
Beyond the races, the Reise Moto ISRL Fan Park transformed EMS Corporation Stadium into a complete motorsport festival, featuring live music, racing simulators, interactive brand zones, food experiences, merchandise and rider interactions, creating an immersive fan experience for families and enthusiasts alike.
With Season 2 concluding on a historic high, the Indian Supercross Racing League now looks ahead to expanding its footprint, strengthening grassroots development and further positioning India on the global Supercross map.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
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