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Why Cracker Barrel 400 means more to Nashville area than just title sponsor for NASCAR race

Cracker Barrel has roots in Middle Tennessee, and it will be on full display during the NASCAR race weekend at Nashville Superspeedway. NASCAR’s best drivers from all three national series will be running races at the 1.33-mile oval, highlighted by the Cracker Barrel 400 at 6 p.m. CT on June 1. Advertisement Cracker Barrel got […]

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Cracker Barrel has roots in Middle Tennessee, and it will be on full display during the NASCAR race weekend at Nashville Superspeedway.

NASCAR’s best drivers from all three national series will be running races at the 1.33-mile oval, highlighted by the Cracker Barrel 400 at 6 p.m. CT on June 1.

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Cracker Barrel got its start in Middle Tennessee, actually in the same town that will be hosting NASCAR racing.

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Cracker Barrel first opened on Sept. 19, 1969 in Lebanon, Tennessee, as found on the store’s history page.

Dan W. Evins opened the first “Old Country Store” and made everything from scratch, including the famous corn bread.

In just eight years, Evins saw the success of Cracker Barrel and worked with investors, mostly local friends and other associates, and expanded with 13 stores from Kentucky to Georgia in 1977.

A big step in the company’s growth was becoming publicly traded, which helped the company blossom through the 1980s and 1990s, finally reaching a $1 billion in market value in 1992.

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According to the store’s website, there are nearly 660 locations in 44 states across the country.

Now, Cracker Barrel’s location in Lebanon, the original store from 1969, is just 17 miles from Nashville Superspeedway, approximately a 20-minute drive, and has signed a multi-year deal to be the race’s title sponsor.

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Fifty-one Cracker Barrel stores are located in Tennessee. Cracker Barrel is headquartered on a 98-acre campus in Lebanon.

“Over 55 years ago, we opened our doors in Lebanon, and this partnership with Nashville Superspeedway feels like a homecoming,” Cracker Barrel chief marketing officer Sarah Moore said in a release. “Middle Tennessee is foundational to our beginnings — country hospitality, hard work and a commitment to putting people at the heart of everything we do. The Cracker Barrel 400 lets us share that with NASCAR’s global audience while honoring the community where it all began.”

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This is not Cracker Barrel’s first time to sponsor a NASCAR Cup Race. The Cracker Barrel 500 was run as the fourth Cup Series race of the season at Atlanta Motor Speedway from 1999-2001.

Joey Logano won last year’s race at Nashville Superspeedway.

When is 2025 NASCAR Nashville race?

The 2025 Cracker Barrel 400 is set for 6 p.m. CT on June 1 at Nashville Superspeedway.

NASCAR Nashville race streaming, Amazon Prime

The NASCAR Nashville race is streaming on Amazon Prime with Adam Alexander, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Steve Letarte in the broadcast booth.

If you are subscribed to Amazon Prime, you have access to Prime Video’s NASCAR broadcasts. If you are not yet subscribed to Amazon Prime Video, you can do so here with a 30-day free trial that will cover the remainder of the broadcast partner’s schedule.

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Follow sports writer Austin Chastain on X, formerly known as Twitter, at @ChastainAJ or reach him via email at achastain@gannett.com.

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: NASCAR Nashville race: Cracker Barrel 400 showcases roots, history



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Earnhardt wins in debut as crew chief

MOTOR SPORTS Earnhardt wins in debut as crew chief LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. might already be NASCAR’s most popular crew chief. He’s certainly an undefeated one. Pressed into unexpected service, Earnhardt called the shots for 18-year-old prospect Connor Zilisch in the No. 88 Chevrolet and they landed in victory lane Saturday in […]

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MOTOR SPORTS

Earnhardt wins in debut as crew chief

LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. might already be NASCAR’s most popular crew chief.

He’s certainly an undefeated one.

Pressed into unexpected service, Earnhardt called the shots for 18-year-old prospect Connor Zilisch in the No. 88 Chevrolet and they landed in victory lane Saturday in the second-tier Xfinity Series race at Pocono Raceway.

“It felt good to have some input and decision-making power,” Earnhardt said. “And then helping Connor understand what our plan was so he knew when to push and what he was expected to do.”

Earnhardt — who won NASCAR’s most-popular driver award 15 times — made a pit stop from his day job as team owner at JR Motorsports with normal crew chief Mardy Lindley suspended one race because of a lug nut infraction this month at Nashville.

Aside from his duties as team owner, Earnhardt also was at Pocono for his role on the Prime broadcast for the NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday.

“Lot of fun for me today,” Earnhardt said. “I missed the thrill of competition. I love broadcast, don’t get me wrong. But nothing compares to driving or just being part of the team. Being an owner doesn’t really deliver like this. This is a lot of fun.”

Earnhardt had his wife and two young daughters in tow with him as he made the celebratory walk to victory lane. Oldest daughter Isla Rose clutched the checkered flag while youngest Nicole Lorraine soaked in the scene from her dad’s arms.

“I love that they just get to experience things about NASCAR,” Earnhardt said. “I had such a great time growing up as a kid in this sport, just running around here. I want them to have that opportunity and understand that this is a place where they could create opportunities for themselves down the road.”



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Elliott celebrates $2K win after ‘shock’ NASCAR announcement – Motorsport – Sports

Chase Elliott is still waiting for his first Cup Series win of the season, but the NASCAR star claimed $2,000 after earning pole for the Xfinity Series race at Pocono Raceway. Elliott is making an extra appearance for Hendrick Motorsports by competing in both the Xfinity and Cup races, after finishing third at Mexico City […]

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Chase Elliott is still waiting for his first Cup Series win of the season, but the NASCAR star claimed $2,000 after earning pole for the Xfinity Series race at Pocono Raceway.

Elliott is making an extra appearance for Hendrick Motorsports by competing in both the Xfinity and Cup races, after finishing third at Mexico City last week. Elliott is currently fourth in the Cup Series standings and well-placed ahead of the NASCAR Playoffs despite feeling pressured to claim a race win.

The 2020 champion has a strong chance to make a statement in the Xfinity Series in his second involvement of the season. Victory could boost Elliott’s chances ahead of Sunday’s race after he admitted that being consistent is no longer good enough.

Elliott has finished inside the top 20 in each of the opening 16 races of 2025, with four finishes inside the top 5 and eight inside the top 10. Elliott has led for just 95 laps this season and is now battling a 43-race winless streak, but he’s eager to change that starting at Pocono this weekend.

“The consistency, it’s good, but this deal really rewards winning,” Elliott said. “It’s not where I want to be, no doubt. I think that for us, there’s been some high spots.

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“And to be honest, there’s been weeks where we’ve run well or maybe had a good finish — or even there’s been a couple weeks where we haven’t necessarily had a good finish — and I can go home and be like, ‘Man, we were in the mix. We had good pace today.’

“And those are the weeks that (you want). You want to just feel like you’re in the ball game as it pertains to pace and doing the right things and getting up in there and giving yourself a shot. Those days, I can go home and have something to be proud of.

“It’s the days and weekends where we’re just not even relevant that I think are really the most frustrating to me. And we’ve had more of those than I want to have and that we want to have as a team.

“So I think it’s been good. It’s not satisfactory to myself or to our team, but there’s still a lot of racing left in the season.” Elliott is delighted with the efforts of his team this season, even if the collective hasn’t been rewarded with a win so far.

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“I think our team has done a really good job taking some of those days where we were not having a good day and digging in, and finding a way to just get something halfway decent out of it,” Elliott added. “Sometimes that can be a really hard thing to do, and I am really proud of them for that.

“Because it’s easy to throw in the towel on those days, just lose it and be done and go try again next week. But we as a whole, we don’t know any better and we just keep trying, keep pushing, and make the most out of whatever the day has brought us.”

Elliott’s last win came on April 14, 2024, at Texas Motor Speedway, and he has 19 victories through his Cup Series career. Elliott also came second in his only other Xfinity Series race this year, as Brandon Jones beat him to the line at Darlington.



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Connor Zilisch’s debut Xfinity Series win at Pocono with Dale Jr. as crew chief

Dale Earnhardt Jr. returns to action as a fill-in crew chief at Pocono Raceway this weekend. LONG POND, Pa. — In just his first time here at Pocono Raceway Connor Zilisch has mastered this tricky triangle. Zilisch earned first place in stages two and three in the Explore the Pocono Mountains 250, with Dale Earnhardt […]

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. returns to action as a fill-in crew chief at Pocono Raceway this weekend.

LONG POND, Pa. — In just his first time here at Pocono Raceway Connor Zilisch has mastered this tricky triangle.

Zilisch earned first place in stages two and three in the Explore the Pocono Mountains 250, with Dale Earnhardt Jr. filling in as his crew chief.

“It was a tricky race for sure. A lot of re-starts and chaos and cautions and we had to work for it for sure,” said Zilisch. “Very grateful for my entire JR Motorsports team and Registix for being on the car today. It looks awesome and it looks even better in victory lane.”

When asked if he’d ever fill-in as a crew chief again, Earnhardt Jr. laughed, and said no.

“I always feel confident that, you know, we could go out and get a good result if we needed to do this again, but I’m not going to seek it out,” said Earnhardt Jr.

“It was a lot of fun, a lot of pressure, definitely out of my wheelhouse for sure but just so much good support to be able to succeed. Really really good fortune on his strategy,” said Earnhardt Jr.

The race was chaotic from start to finish with yellow flags waving all around.

With 13 laps to go, Chase Elliot, who led most of the race, made contact with Justin Allgaier’s #7 Chevy and fell behind.

The last re-start gave Zilisch prime position to pass Jesse Love and celebrate in victory lane.

Christian Eckes, Chase Elliott and Ryan Seig round out the top five.

“It was definitely a wild final stage, the whole race was kind of wild with the strategies and everything. It must of been pretty interesting to watch for the fans so, uh – to  have some good results back to back, Miller top-5 and contending here for a win hopefully shows what’s to come for the future,” said Eckes.

NASCAR Race Weekend in the Pocono’s continues on Sunday with the Great American Getaway 400. The Cup series race begins at 2:00p.m.



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Pocono Starting Lineup: June 2025 (NASCAR Cup Series)

NASCAR starting positions for Pocono Raceway Tomorrow, the NASCAR Cup Series will take the green flag in Long Pond, PA. Now, the field rolls to the 2.5-mile triangle of Pocono Raceway for a round of practice and qualifying. View the Pocono starting lineup for the NASCAR Cup Series below. Pocono MenuTruck: Prac/Qual | RaceXfinity: Prac/Qual | RaceCup: Prac/Qual | Race Pocono TV Schedule […]

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NASCAR starting positions for Pocono Raceway

Tomorrow, the NASCAR Cup Series will take the green flag in Long Pond, PA. Now, the field rolls to the 2.5-mile triangle of Pocono Raceway for a round of practice and qualifying.

View the Pocono starting lineup for the NASCAR Cup Series below.

Pocono Menu
Truck: Prac/Qual | Race
Xfinity: Prac/Qual | Race
Cup: Prac/Qual | Race

Pocono TV Schedule

NASCAR Qualifying Report

Cody Ware backs it hard into the wall during practice. The No. 51 will not take part in qualifying.

Josh Berry also will not qualify. The diffuser of the car knocked off the pavement and the team is now going to replace the entire rear clip as the diffuser bracket is bent.

Bubba Wallace is struggling to fire his car. The crew is attempting to give him a push start but the car won’t start. Wallace will not take part in qualifying.

William Byron spins on his qualifying lap. He slams the inside wall. The team will probably unload a backup.

Chase Elliott was on track as Byron hit the wall. He was called to the pit lane and NASCAR will give him an extra set of tires as he makes another qualifying run.

Denny Hamlin will start from the pole position. He turned a laptime at 52.144 seconds.

Pocono Raceway
Starting Lineup
June 22, 2025
NASCAR Cup Series

Pos | Driver | Best Time

1. Denny Hamlin
52.144

2. Chris Buescher
52.227

3. Carson Hocevar
52.379

4. John Hunter Nemechek
52.390

5. Cole Custer
52.436

6. Chase Briscoe
52.444

7. Ty Gibbs
52.464

8. Tyler Reddick
52.500

9. Christopher Bell
52.525

10. Daniel Suarez
52.631

11. Erik Jones
52.632

12. Joey Logano
52.673

13. Ryan Preece
52.727

14. Brad Keselowski
52.781

15. Zane Smith
52.803

16. Austin Dillon
52.811

17. Noah Gragson
52.813

18. Chase Elliott
52.820

19. Austin Cindric
52.836

20. Ryan Blaney
52.837

21. Ross Chastain
52.861

22. Justin Haley
52.927

23. Shane van Gisbergen
52.962

24. Kyle Larson
52.966

25. Alex Bowman
52.978

26. Kyle Busch
53.095

27. Ty Dillon
53.107

28. Michael McDowell
53.140

29. Riley Herbst
53.159

30. Ricky Stenhouse Jr
53.661

31. William Byron
57.645

32. Todd Gilliland
59.181

33. AJ Allmendinger
64.077

34. Bubba Wallace
No Time

35. Josh Berry
No Time

36. Cody Ware
No Time

37. Brennan Poole
No Time


Pocono Raceway
Practice Results
June 21, 2025
NASCAR Cup Series

Pos | Driver | Best Time

1. William Byron
52.706

2. Bubba Wallace
52.931

3. Chase Elliott
52.977

4. Tyler Reddick
53.014

5. Chris Buescher
53.045

6. Michael McDowell
53.071

7. Austin Cindric
53.104

8. Ryan Blaney
53.123

9. Alex Bowman
53.229

10. Brad Keselowski
53.258

11. Ross Chastain
53.266

12. Ty Gibbs
53.290

13. Christopher Bell
53.299

14. Cole Custer
53.319

15. Chase Briscoe
53.324

16. AJ Allmendinger
53.340

17. Kyle Larson
53.366

18. Ryan Preece
53.382

19. Daniel Suarez
53.411

20. Kyle Busch
53.455

21. Erik Jones
53.471

22. Carson Hocevar
53.471

23. Justin Haley
53.513

24. Noah Gragson
53.514

25. John Hunter Nemechek
53.553

26. Shane van Gisbergen
53.555

27. Denny Hamlin
53.562

28. Joey Logano
53.569

29. Riley Herbst
53.571

30. Todd Gilliland
53.595

31. Austin Dillon
53.631

32. Zane Smith
53.659

33. Ricky Stenhouse Jr
53.891

34. Cody Ware
54.015

35. Ty Dillon
54.086

36. Josh Berry
54.453

37. Brennan Poole
55.036

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Carson Hocevar Regretting Disparaging Comments About Mexico? Spire Motorsports Driver Comments After $50000 Fine

It was only a matter of time before Carson Hocevar crossed a line and got punished for his unruliness. The Spire Motorsports driver made an offensive statement about Mexico City ahead of the race weekend there and drew a fine of $50,000. A week later, he explained at the Pocono Raceway what led him to […]

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It was only a matter of time before Carson Hocevar crossed a line and got punished for his unruliness. The Spire Motorsports driver made an offensive statement about Mexico City ahead of the race weekend there and drew a fine of $50,000. A week later, he explained at the Pocono Raceway what led him to make such insensitive remarks.

Shortly after arriving in Mexico, the youngster had begun a livestream on Twitch and called the city a “s—hole.” He had gone on to list various concerns about the hotel he was staying in and the area surrounding it. The comments did not come to light till after Sunday’s race was completed and the bags were packed.

Just as it began surfacing in the real world, Hocevar issued an apology on social media. He said that he was embarrassed by his comments and that they weren’t his first-hand opinion to begin with. He claimed that he’d hastily drawn the wrong image of the city after hearing the opinions of other parties. In Pocono, he doubled down on this reasoning.

“The issue wasn’t for the team having their kind of frustrations, that I’m giving my opinion and putting it out there. It’s just the fact that, you know, my opinion wasn’t my opinion. It was just based on everything else, you know, that I’ve heard or seen, right? I didn’t go do my own homework and voice my own opinion,” Hocevar said.

The mistake he made was that he didn’t give the city a chance. He mentioned that he ought to have walked around town and spoken to people before making such a severe judgment. Things are in the past now, and there’s nothing that can be done to change them. Hopefully, the driver will catch himself by the collar to prevent a harder fall going ahead.

The $50,000 fine was inevitable after NASCAR threatened that it might take stricter action against him if Spire Motorsports didn’t do something about him. The money will be split among three organizations that serve Mexican communities — the Mexican Red Cross, United Way Mexico, and a nonprofit that combats childhood malnutrition.

Hocevar, meanwhile, will undergo cultural sensitivity training to properly understand why what he said won’t be accepted now or in the future. Judging from his skill and talent behind the wheel, it can be assured that he is going to stay on the Cup Series field for a long time to come. It can only be a positive that he learns this lesson early on in his career.





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Hamlin returns from dad duty with Cup Series pole at Pocono

In his return to the seat of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 Toyota, Denny Hamlin will lead the field to the green flag at Pocono Raceway. Hamlin captured the pole Saturday with a lap of 172.599mph (52.144s). A seven-time winner at Pocono Raceway, Hamlin missed the most recent event because of the birth of […]

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In his return to the seat of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 Toyota, Denny Hamlin will lead the field to the green flag at Pocono Raceway.

Hamlin captured the pole Saturday with a lap of 172.599mph (52.144s). A seven-time winner at Pocono Raceway, Hamlin missed the most recent event because of the birth of his first son and third child with fiancée Jordan Fish. It is his fifth pole at Pocono.

“We typically can step up from practice; we make good adjustments,” Hamlin said of earning the pole after being 27th in practice. “I never really panic too much, and obviously, because I was a little more rested than the field right there, I was able to go a little [faster].”

Chris Buescher qualified second and will join Hamlin on the front row. Buescher’s fast lap was 172.325mph.

Spire Motorsports’ Carson Hocevar qualified third at 171.825mph and John Hunter Nemechek fourth at 171.789mph. Cole Custer completed the top five at 171.638mph.

Chase Briscoe ended up sixth at 171.612mph, Ty Gibbs seventh at 171.546mph, Tyler Reddick eighth at 171.429mph, Christopher Bell ninth at 171.347mph and Daniel Suarez 10th at 171.002mph.

It was an eventful qualifying session to set the field of 37.

William Byron crashed during his lap and will go to a backup car for Sunday’s race. Byron had been fastest in practice and in the best 10 consecutive lap averages.

Todd Gilliland hit the wall with the right rear of his Ford during his qualifying lap. He qualified 32nd.

Bubba Wallace was one of four drivers who did not make a lap. Wallace’s car would not fire on pit road and he could not get on track.

Josh Berry and Cody Ware did not make qualifying laps after issues in practice. Berry’s team is still working to repair the diffuser and replace the rear clip of his car. Ware crashed during practice, and his car is also being repaired.

Brennan Poole was not allowed to make a qualifying lap per NASCAR. Poole’s car failed inspection three times Saturday morning.

NEXT: The Great American Getaway 400 at 2 p.m. Sunday.

RESULTS



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