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Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma

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Toyota/Save Mart 350

Location: Sonoma, Calif.
Course: Sonoma Raceway
Format: 1.99-mile road course
Laps: 110

NASCAR Toyota/Save Mart 350 Race Preview

The NASCAR Cup Series goes road racing again this week at Sonoma Raceway as Shave van Gisbergen attempts to win back-to-back races. The Trackhouse Racing driver took his second win of the season a week ago on the streets of Chicago and has an opportunity to join Christopher Bell and Denny Hamlin as the only drivers to consecutive races this season. Kyle Larson won at Sonoma last season, capturing his second series win at the track after the race started with a flurry of cautions before going yellow free for the entirety of the final stage. Larson led 19 laps that afternoon and became the sixth straight driver to win at Sonoma from a top-10 starting spot. No driver has won starting lower than 12th at the circuit since Martin Truex Jr. won from the 14th position in 2013. This week’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 will be the fourth of six road course contests this season as everyone tries to stop Van Gisbergen’s train of success.

Key Stats at Sonoma Raceway

  • Number of races: 35
  • Winners from pole: 6
  • Winners from top-5 starters: 18
  • Winners from top-10 starters: 26
  • Winners from 21st or lower starters: 2
  • Fastest race: 83.922 mph

Previous 10 Sonoma Winners

2024 – Kyle Larson
2023 – Martin Truex Jr.
2022 – Daniel Suarez
2021 – Kyle Larson
2019 – Martin Truex Jr.
2018 – Martin Truex Jr.
2017 – Kevin Harvick
2016 – Tony Stewart
2015 – Kyle Busch
2014 – Carl Edwards

Unlike the streets of Chicago, Sonoma Raceway is a purpose-built racetrack that snakes through the hills of northern California’s wine country. The track is narrow and features many challenging off-camber and blind-apex turns. Despite the track’s relative lack of passing opportunities, two specific areas (turns 7 and 11) see significant action due to heavy braking at corner entrance. These are places where use of the bumper can net a driver a position if they are close enough and aggressive enough. Like most road courses, track position and pit strategy are key elements of success. The prerequisite to those keys is having a fast car to begin with, though. Qualifying is a good indicator of success. No driver has started outside of the top 15 and won this race since 2008 and most victors start inside the top 10. Once track position is secured through a top qualifying effort, pit strategy will help teams maximize the advantage. Last year, Kyle Larson was last to pit on the final run to the finish, which gave him fresh tires and maximum grip to climb back to the lead for the win. Saving grip to keep competitors behind in the final miles is likely to be the aim again this season.

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NASCAR Projections

DraftKings Value Picks for the Toyota/Save Mart 350 (Based on Standard $50K Salary Cap)

DraftKings Tier 1 Values  

Shane van Gisbergen – $12,500
Kyle Larson – $10,500
Tyler Reddick – $10,300
William Byron – $10,000

DraftKings Tier 2 Values  

Chase Elliott – $9,800
Ty Gibbs – $9,500
Michael McDowell – $9,300
Christopher Bell – $9,000

DraftKings Tier 3 Values

AJ Allmendinger – $8,800
Chris Buescher – $8,600
Ross Chastain – $8,400
Kyle Busch – $8,000

DraftKings Long-Shot Values

Denny Hamlin – $7,700
Ryan Blaney – $7,500
Joey Logano – $7,200
Ryan Preece – $6,700

NASCAR DFS Picks for the Toyota/Save Mart 350

Chase Elliott – $9,800
Ty Gibbs – $9,500
Chris Buescher – $8,600
Ross Chastain – $8,400
Carson Hocevar – $7,000
Ryan Preece – $6,700

Shane van Gisbergen’s talents on road courses command a high price again this week. With two victories under his belt this season, it may not be a bad move to absorb the cost this week, but this lineup presents a different option. Sonoma is a different track than any the series has raced on so far this season, and this will be SVG’s first race in the Cup car at the circuit. Sonoma is also very familiar to the Cup regulars who have been racing here for many years. In short, the Cup Series veterans won’t be as easily overcome this week as they were at Mexico and Chicago, which may offers fantasy players more value by avoiding SVG this week. 

With this in mind, Chase Elliott (DK $9,800, FD $12,000) is a confident Sonoma selection. The former series champ once dominated road courses but has never won at Sonoma. However, he has been returning to form on these tracks and has three top-five finishes from his last four Sonoma tries, including a runner-up result in 2021. With six top-10 finishes from eight starts, and laps led in the last five at this track, Elliott could be one that gives SVG a run for his money this week. 

Ty Gibbs (DK $9,500, FD $12,500) should also feature. He was second at Chicago just a week ago and started in the top 10 in both Sonoma series starts. Last year, contact ended his day prematurely, but Gibbs has the road course talent that should regularly result in top-five finishes. He has four Xfinity Series road course wins and a track like Sonoma could be a likely spot for his first Cup Series win. 

One driver that has already gone head to head with SVG and come out on top is Chris Buescher (DK $8,600, FD $11,000). His 18th-place finish at Chicago was his first road course finish outside of the top 10 this season. He was seventh at COTA and 10th at Mexico. At Sonoma, since introduction of the current generation of car, Buescher hasn’t finished outside of the top five. Last year, despite starting 26th, he finished the race third. Remarkably, Buescher is still a relatively underrated racer on road courses (even after beating SVG at Watkins Glen), which is an advantage for fantasy players until his price starts to match his potential.

There is also value to be had for fantasy rosters in choices like Ross Chastain (DK $8,400, FD $8,500). Chastain is a road course winner at COTA and Sonoma has treated him very well, too. With four top-10 finishes from five Sonoma series starts, Chastain should be expected to finish toward the front again. Last season, he scored his career-best finish at the track of fifth, which was his fourth consecutive top-10 at the circuit. 

Speaking of potential, Carson Hocevar (DK $7,000, FD $7,000) has been showing a lot of it this season. Last week, he put his car third on the grid at the street course but made a mistake early in the race that ended his day. Mexico was also a rough race for him with numerous on-track incidents, but his 13th-place finish at COTA in March lends credence to the road course potential we saw a flash of last week. Last year he qualified 13th and finished 17th in this race, and a top-15 should be within his reach Sunday, but he is likely the riskiest selection in the lineup this week. 

Ryan Preece (DK $6,700, FD $6,200) should offer more confidence, though. In his last two Sonoma starts, he finished 13th and 18th despite starting 22nd and 30th. He qualified inside the top 10 last week and finished seventh and finished 15th at Mexico. Preece has shown improvement on road courses this season and should offer top-15 potential at Sonoma this week despite being the least costly driver of our choices.

NASCAR Best Bets for the Toyota/Save Mart 350

Odds via DraftKings Sportsbook as of 4:00 PM ET Friday

Race Winner – Shane van Gisbergen +130, Chase Elliott +1400
Top-Five Finish – Ty Gibbs +150
Top-10 Finish – Denny Hamlin +275
Group Winner – Ross Chastain +240, Kyle Busch, Ryan Blaney, Chase Briscoe
Winning Manufacturer – Ford +650

After two victories this season, Shane van Gisbergen is beginning to approach the point where wagerers may want to grab odds at +130 for the win. However, anything can happen in NASCAR and Sonoma is a different circuit than Mexico and Chicago. While SVG is certainly the worthy favorite, such low odds remain tough to swallow for now. 

A better bargain would be Chase Elliott. The Hendrick Motorsports driver has three top-fives from his last four Sonoma starts and has been approaching a return to wins on road courses, too. He has never won at this track, but his third-place finish at Mexico shows what he may be capable of this weekend. Elliott is likely to return to Victory Lane at a road course at some point and Sonoma is a track where his experience and past success gives him a better chance than usual versus Van Gisbergen.

Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Ty Gibbs and Denny Hamlin both offer decent odds for top finishes. Gibbs has plenty of road course potential and is on a nice run of form leading into this week’s race. He was second a week ago at Chicago and finished 11th at Mexico after qualifying inside the top five. Gibbs has shown top-five speed on road courses this season and needs to go for the win to get into the playoffs. Denny Hamlin doesn’t have that same playoff need, but he is also a regular feature in the top 10 at road courses. Prior to having DNFs in the last two Sonoma visits, Hamlin finished in the top 10 at the track five of the prior six times. He also has four top-fives from the last five races heading into the weekend.

Another attractive wager is Ross Chastain as group winner. Chastain has a habit of consistently finishing well at certain tracks, and Sonoma Raceway is one of those. In five series tries, Chastain finished in the top 10 four times, including once from the 29th starting spot. The only blemish on his Sonoma resume is his first Cup visit in 2019 when he qualified 37th and finished 33rd. Since then, he has been a top-10 machine. This track is also a good one for Kyle Busch, but Chastain’s Sonoma consistency makes him the best option in this grouping.

Lastly, Chevrolet is pulling very low odds due for this week’s win due to having Shane van Gisbergen and others behind the wheel. However, Sonoma doesn’t have a favored manufacturer. The last time Ford won at the track was with Kevin Harvick in 2017, but Ford drivers finished second and third last year, fourth and fifth in 2023, and second through sixth in 2022. There is no reason a Ford-powered driver can’t win at this track this weekend, and the manufacturer’s significantly better odds make it worth a small gamble.

The author(s) of this article may play in daily fantasy contests including – but not limited to – games that they have provided recommendations or advice on in this article. In the course of playing in these games using their personal accounts, it’s possible that they will use players in their lineups or other strategies that differ from the recommendations they have provided above. The recommendations in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of RotoWire. C.J. Radune plays in daily fantasy contests using the following accounts: DraftKings: cjradune, RaceDayScore: cjradune.



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“I Hope It Does Happen”: Top JGR Official Floats Unprecedented NASCAR Playoff Scenario

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Joe Gibbs Racing and Hendrick Motorsports, the only teams in the Cup Series to field four entries, are also the most successful teams in NASCAR. In any given season, they are expected to get at least one of their drivers to the championship finale. But what are the chances that they get all four drivers there?

All four drivers of a team reaching the finale is unprecedented, no doubt, even for JGR and Hendrick Motorsports. Recently, Dave Alpern, the president of Joe Gibbs Racing, discussed this ‘perfect’ scenario in a video for his team media.

“There are only two organizations that could happen, and that’s Hendrick Motorsports or Joe Gibbs Racing,” said Alpern.

“Because we are the only ones with four. We are the only ones that have ever put three in. I can tell you one thing. It’s really stressful,” added Alpern, before explaining how dynamics and resources get stretched in the process.

Alpern likened it to having multiple children participating in the same competition, knowing that all except one is going to lose. As stressful as such a scenario would be, he recognizes that it would be an amazing problem to have.

“I would love to try it one year. I am sure our friends down the road will love that as well,” continued Alpern.

The logistics and the sheer workload that would go into such a setting would be massive, to say the least. Moreover, the current format will require three of the cars to each win a race in the playoffs’ Round of 8, while the final car will have to qualify on points for this to happen.

Yes, technically, it could happen. Alpern hopes it does happen. But the question is if it ever will.

“I hope it does happen. In some ways, it’d be great because you’d clinch the championship the week before. But it sounds like the playoff format might change. So, we may never get to find out,” said Alpern.

NASCAR is on the verge of announcing key changes to the existing playoff format. Word around town is that a multi-race championship round is on the cards instead of a single race.

However, speculations will have to wait until official word comes from Daytona. Until then, Joe Gibbs Racing fans can look back at the historic 2019 season, when the team put three drivers in the Championship 4.

Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., and Denny Hamlin had competed for the title alongside Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick. Busch eventually won that year.



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Connor Zilisch feelings on working with ex-Busch crew chief – Motorsport – Sports

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Connor Zilisch is preparing for his rookie NASCAR Cup Series campaign, and he’ll have veteran crew chief Randall Burnett on pit road after leaving Kyle Busch and Richard Childress Racing mid-way through 2025. Zilisch, 19, was confirmed by Trackhouse Racing mid-season, long before the Xfinity Series Championship 4 race in Phoenix, where he fell painfully short to Jesse Love despite dominating the competition year-long.

To support the teenager, Trackhouse made immediate moves to provide Zilisch with veteran experience in the Cup Series. And so, they hired Burnett to be Zilisch’s crew chief.

Burnett and Busch parted ways after underwhelming seasons and missed back-to-back playoff appearances. Zilisch is pleased to have Burnett in his corner, with the crew chief bringing a wealth of experience, having joined RCR in 2020. Before that, Burnett had several years of experience as a crew chief in the Xfinity series.

“He’s a great guy. He worked with a lot of younger guys. He was with Tyler and Xfinity and worked with him in Cup as well, and then he’s also worked with guys like, obviously, Kyle Bush, one of the most pronounced guys in our sport, and so he’s got a lot of experience,” Zilisch said.

Burnett isn’t a rookie when it comes to working with first-year drivers, either. “I think that experience is gonna help me, and the fact that he’s worked with a rookie before, he understands the growing pains. That way, I kinda know what to expect. I think that’s gonna be really helpful for me and him in our relationship,” Zilisch added.

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Likewise, Burnett is looking forward to his “fresh start” with Zilisch. “I’m excited about my opportunity over there, and you know, obviously, something’s got to change on this 8 car,” Burnett told NASCAR.com. “We haven’t been performing the way we needed to.

“I think everybody needs a fresh start. I got a really good opportunity with where I’m going. Obviously, Connor’s a great young talent. I miss working with the younger guys. So, you know, just kind of all worked out.”

Before Zilisch’s Xfinity championship heartbreak, Burnett identified that the Cup Series won’t be plain sailing for the NASCAR phenom. “I think he’s going to have a lot to learn in the Cup Series,” Burnett said.

“Obviously, the races are longer. These cars definitely race a little different than what he’s used to on the Xfinity side right now, and the talent level over here is incredible, you know what I mean.

“I think he’ll have a pretty steep learning curve when he gets over here, but I want to help guide him with that and try to coach him up. Obviously, the kid’s got an immense amount of talent — there’s no question about that.

“So it’s just going to be taking that and harnessing it and trying to get the wins and the finishes he deserves over here, and we’re going to work hard on that this winter.”



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NASCAR Driver, team and schedule changes for 2026 summarized

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The 2026 NASCAR Cup Series sees relatively few driver swaps compared to prior years, with the lineup largely stable and no open full-time chartered seats (barring any lawsuit outcomes). Key moves include one major driver switch, several crew chief shuffles, and some team alliances/manufacturer changes. Here’s a breakdown by category:

–by Mark Cipolloni–

NASCAR Cup Driver Changes

– Daniel Suárez: Leaves Trackhouse Racing (No. 99 Chevy) after mutual agreement and joins Spire Motorsports (No. 7 Chevy), replacing Justin Haley.
– Connor Zilisch: Promoted from Xfinity (JR Motorsports No. 88) to full-time Cup with Trackhouse Racing (No. 88 Chevy, formerly van Gisbergen’s number).
– Shane van Gisbergen: Stays with Trackhouse but switches car numbers from No. 88 to No. 97 Chevy.
– Cody Ware: Returns full-time to Rick Ware Racing (No. 51 Chevy) for a second season.
– No other full-time driver seats are changing hands; veterans like Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, and Chase Elliott are locked in with extensions.

Shane Van Gisbergen, driver of the #88 WeatherTech Chevrolet, drives during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix at Circuit of The Americas on March 01, 2025 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)
Shane Van Gisbergen, driver of the #88 WeatherTech Chevrolet, drives during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix at Circuit of The Americas on March 01, 2025 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)

NASCAR Crew Chief and Personnel Changes

– Ross Chastain (Trackhouse No. 1): New crew chief Brandon McSwain (formerly an engineer with Hendrick’s No. 24). Previous chief Phil Surgen moves to another role at Trackhouse.
– Kyle Busch (RCR No. 8): New crew chief Jim Pohlman (from JR Motorsports Xfinity). Randall Burnett shifts to Trackhouse for Zilisch.
– Connor Zilisch (Trackhouse No. 88): Crew chief Randall Burnett (from RCR No. 8).
– Daniel Suárez (Spire No. 7): Retains Ryan Sparks as crew chief; Matt McCall promoted to competition director at Spire.
– Erik Jones (Legacy No. 43): New crew chief Justin Alexander (RCR veteran); Ben Beshore moves to race engineering director.
– Noah Gragson (Front Row No. 4): New crew chief Grant Hutchens; Drew Blickensderfer becomes competition director.

Ross Chastain, driver of the #1 Jockey x Folds of Honor Chevrolet, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 25, 2025 in Concord, North Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)
Ross Chastain, driver of the #1 Jockey x Folds of Honor Chevrolet, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 25, 2025 in Concord, North Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR)

NASCAR Team and Manufacturer Changes

– Trackhouse Racing: Expands effectively with Zilisch’s promotion; car number swap (88 and 97); new Red Bull sponsorship for Zilisch and van Gisbergen (25 races total).
– Haas Factory Team (No. 41): Switches from Ford to Chevrolet with Hendrick alliance; Cole Custer full-time.
– Rick Ware Racing: Switches from Ford to Chevrolet with RCR alliance; ownership shift to T.J. Puchyr; Corey LaJoie runs partial schedule in No. 15.
– Other Stables: Front Row, Hendrick, Joe Gibbs, Penske, Roush Fenway Keselowski, 23XI, Legacy, and Kaulig see no major team expansions or folds, but various sponsorship renewals (e.g., Dollar Tree/Family Dollar through 2028 for Legacy).
– Technical Boost: NASCAR increases horsepower to ~750 on short ovals (<1.5 miles) and road courses (up from 670).

Changes in Other Series (Xfinity/O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and Trucks)

For completeness, here’s a high-level overview of notable shifts mentioned in broader silly season coverage:
– O’Reilly Auto Parts Series (formerly Xfinity): Rebranded with new sponsorship. Key driver moves include Brent Crews to Joe Gibbs No. 19 (29 races), Rajah Caruth splitting JR Motorsports No. 88 and Jordan Anderson No. 32, Corey Day to Hendrick No. 17 full-time, and Harrison Burton to Sam Hunt No. 24. Teams like Viking Motorsports expand to two cars, Kaulig pauses operations, and RSS switches to Chevrolet. Age minimum lowered to 17 for certain tracks.

NASCAR OReilly Auto Parts Series Logo
NASCAR OReilly Auto Parts Series Logo

– Craftsman Truck Series: Michael McDowell heads to Trucks (as noted in your article), Ross Chastain gets a new crew chief in some reports, and Justin Haley joins Kaulig full-time. Other moves: Rajah Caruth leaves Spire No. 71; expansions at Jordan Anderson and Young’s Motorsports. Additionally, RAM returns as a manufacturer for the first time since 2012, partnering with Kaulig Racing and Cummins; they’ve introduced a reality show (“Race for the Seat”) to select a driver for one of their entries.

2026 Schedule Highlights

Several tracks shift dates: Chicagoland returns (July doubleheader), North Wilkesboro hosts first Cup points race in 30 years, All-Star at Dover, In-Season Challenge back with new tracks ending at Indy. Trucks add St. Petersburg and San Diego; finale at Homestead.



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Guven Completes Manthey GTD PRO Entry at Rolex 24 — PorscheSport

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Guven joins the already confirmed trio of Thomas Preining, Ricardo Feller and Klaus Bachler in the “Grello” liveried No. 911 entry.

In a post on social media, Manthey wrote: “A new season, a new chapter — and we’re rolling into Daytona with serious intent. Before we hit the High Banks, there’s one more update to our driver line-up for the first 24h race of the year: reigning DTM Champion Ayhancan Güven joins the No. 911 crew at Daytona. The No. 912 is fully prepped as well, ready to take on our IMSA debut season.”

Guven made his IMSA debut in the 2025 Rolex 24 At Daytona, finishing second in Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) with Wright Motorsports.

Meuspath “After the first IMSA test in Daytona in November, we are now looking forward to the official start of the season in January. We are particularly pleased to be able to count on a very strong driver line-up with close ties to Manthey: with Ryan, Riccardo, Morris and Richard as the fourth man for the 24-hour race, we are relying on absolute constants in the Manthey 1st Phorm car – we have gained a lot of experience and celebrated many successes with each of them. Well-known and proven faces will also be at the start for us at the wheel of the starting number 911. Alongside Thomas and Klaus, we are delighted to welcome on board Ricardo, who joins us with valuable IMSA experience.  We are excited to see what we can achieve in the coming season,” says Patrick Arkenau, Director Racing at the Manthey Racing GmbH.

Nicolas Raeder, Managing Director of the Manthey Racing GmbH, adds: “With the start of the IMSA season, a new and exciting chapter will begin for us very soon. We can rely on experienced drivers, most of whom already know our team from the DTM, WEC and the Nürburgring, and we are proud that these seven will represent us in America next year. I am looking forward to laying the foundation for a successful season with this team at the first race in Daytona.”

After the official Daytona pre-test, known as ROAR, from 16 to 18 January, the IMSA season opener for Manthey is scheduled for 24 January 2026 with the 24 Hours of Daytona. This event will be followed by four more endurance races in Florida, New York, Wisconsin and Georgia, each lasting between six and twelve hours.



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IndyCar Leaders Circle Program Expands Funding

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In a major boost for team finances, head of Penske Entertainment, Roger Penske, has committed an additional $11 million to the IndyCar Leaders Circle program over the 2026, 2027, and 2028 seasons. This increase effectively adds $500,000 per qualifying contract annually, providing critical support as teams prepare for the significant costs of introducing the all-new ‘spec’ Dallara IR-28 chassis in 2028.

–by Mark Cipolloni–

The Leaders Circle program, established in the early 2000s, delivers guaranteed prize money to the top 22 finishers in the annual entrants’ championship. These payouts reward full-season participation and help offset the high costs of competing in the NTT IndyCar Series. The program is exclusive to the series’ 25 charter entries, which compete for the 22 available contracts.

In 2025, Penske Entertainment allocated $31.9 million for the Leaders Circle, with each contract valued at approximately $1.145 million. Starting in 2026, the per-contract amount rises to $1.645 million — an increase of $500,000 per team. This marks the largest single-year jump in the program’s history since its inception in 2002 and will apply through 2028.

IndyCar President Doug Boles highlighted the significance of the move, stating: “Roger [Penske] made a pretty big commitment to the charter teams and the Leaders Circle by increasing the Leaders Circle by $11 million in ’26, ’27, and 28 from where it was in ’25. That was just Roger doing the right thing to help IndyCar teams, his partner teams, be more successful and have a little more cash to move forward.”

Roger Penske - IMS Museum Celebrates Grand Reopening - Photo By Chris Owens/Penske Entertainment
Roger Penske – IMS Museum Celebrates Grand Reopening – Photo By Chris Owens/Penske Entertainment

The timing of this financial enhancement is particularly strategic. Teams currently face annual operating budgets ranging from $8-10 million (and up to $11-12 million for top programs) per entry, driven by factors like engine leases, hybrid technology (introduced in 2024), and general inflation in racing costs. The $500,000 boost represents roughly 17-20% of a typical team’s budget, offering meaningful relief.

More crucially, the increase aligns with preparations for the 2028 chassis transition. The current Dallara DW12 chassis, in service since 2012 (with updates like the aeroscreen and hybrid integration), will be replaced by the new IR-28. Teams are expected to budget upwards of $1 million per car for the switch to the updated Dallara model. The IR-28 promises a lighter overall weight (targeting an 85-100 lb reduction, including a 25-lb lighter gearbox), a more powerful 2.4-liter twin-turbo V6 engine (up from the current 2.2-liter), and continued hybrid evolution — all aimed at enhancing performance, safety, and fan appeal.

On-track testing for the new chassis is slated to begin in early 2026, with prototypes potentially ready by late 2025 and manufacturer testing targeted for mid-2026. The full rollout in 2028 will mark the first clean-sheet chassis redesign in over 16 years, addressing accumulated modifications and setting the stage for future competition.

This Leaders Circle enhancement follows smaller adjustments in recent years, including a $100,000 increase for 2025 (bringing contracts to $1.2 million) and prior fluctuations tied to hybrid upgrades and economic factors. With the series benefiting from a recent 33% stake sale to Fox Corporation and ongoing growth efforts, the commitment underscores Penske Entertainment’s focus on team stability and long-term competitiveness.

As IndyCar continues its upward trajectory—highlighted by competitive ‘spec series’ racing, the iconic Indianapolis 500, and expanding visibility — this financial support positions charter teams to invest more effectively in development, talent, and operations ahead of the exciting 2028 era. Stay tuned to AutoRacing1.com for further updates on the IR-28 rollout, engine developments, and the 2026 season.



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4 changes already made to 2026 NASCAR Cup Series playoffs – Motorsport – Sports

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Four changes have already been made to the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series playoffs ahead of Monday’s announcement of the championship format. NASCAR is set for a potentially landscape-changing week, with the governing body poised to announce changes to its championship format following sustained discontent from fans, as well as past and present drivers.

Pressure on NASCAR to change its championship format increased following last November’s finale in Phoenix, Arizona, which saw Denny Hamlin fall painfully short of being crowned Cup Series champion to Kyle Larson. The Joe Gibbs Racing star dominated proceedings and was a few laps away from the checkered flag when a caution threw his victory into doubt.

Hamlin’s No. 11 was then undercut by Kyle Larson on pit road, with the Hendrick Motorsports star taking two tires instead of four. Larson finished ahead of Hamlin, therefore being crowned Cup Series champion for a second time. The finish sparked outrage over Hamlin’s heartbreak, as the race was his last chance to be crowned champion before his father, Dennis, passed away. Dennis was seriously ill last year, but died last month on Dec. 28, following a devastating house fire that also left his mom hospitalized.

Hamlin was one of many critics of NASCAR’s playoff format and had long called for changes to be made. It was speculated shortly after that changes would be made to NASCAR’s championship format.

Still, official confirmation won’t come until Monday, which also follows last month’s bitter antitrust lawsuit between Hamlin and Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing/Front Row Motorsports against the governing body, which was eventually settled.

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However, before Monday’s format announcement, four changes have already been made to NASCAR’s playoffs. Homestead-Miami will replace Phoenix as the host of NASCAR’s championship races in 2026. Phoenix will be pushed back to the Round of 8.

Phoenix Raceway is taking over as the opening race of the Round of 8 (Race 33), replacing Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Talladega Superspeedway and Martinsville Speedway remain unchanged and will continue to close out the semifinal round as Races 34 and 35.

Las Vegas is still part of the postseason, but its role has been pushed back to the Round of 12, filling the spot vacated by New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

New Hampshire had long been in a traditional position as the round opener, but Las Vegas will instead host the middle race (Race 31). Kansas Speedway will open the Round of 12 (Race 30), while the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval will once again serve as the cutoff race (Race 32) in that stage.

The Round of 16 remains untouched, with Darlington Raceway opening the playoffs (Race 27), followed by stops at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway (Race 28) and Bristol Motor Speedway (Race 29).

New Hampshire is the lone race on the 2025 playoff schedule that will not carry over into the 2026 postseason.



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